WILMINGTON. N.C., iy V WMWA 1 no A YEAR. IN ADVANCE. ; , . ' -f- . ?. 8888S88888S888888 mH 81 8SSe888S8f Sfgggg 88888888888888888 ; 88888S88888SS8S8S -.qjaow gS3835gSSSS8g8S8 -88188888888888888 82888S888828S8SS Miaow I noo.aggt;3ga8SSl83S3 8888l88ll88l888 fl88Si8SS88888888 r 88888888888888388 I o g !:is:iiii! ::':5i en . K,..eV-rt .t the P.t Office st W1tt0n' N" C ' ' Second CUss Matter. 1 SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. . . .i WaaVIv RtA i. a The ubcriptioo price oi mc v. j - Single 0py 1 year, postage paid .$1 00 . 60 . 80 B mootnt " 3 monthi Have you received a bill for sub scription to the Weekly Star re cently ? If so, is it correct ? If cor rect, why not pay it ? Is there a man on earth who can print a newspaper for nothing and pay the postage be sides ? Can a farmer give away his rrr.i. and cotton, and wheat, and chickens, and eggs, and keep-out of the. poor-house? If so," let us have tin- r t-efpe. It will be valuable to us HOW IT WORKS IN ENGLAND. There is more resemblance be tween the people of Great . Britain ard the people of this country in their legislative systems and methods . than there is between the people of this and f any other Euro pean country. Great Britain is a monarchy, it is true, but the monar chy is a mere form, a relic of past ages which survives -simply because the people regard it as a mere form which does not materially affect their condition one way or the other. They have not yet progressed far enough to abolish the hereditary system of "nobility," and while that remains, it . doesn't - matter much about letting a nominal - Queen or . King play the empty role of royalty. It costs some money, however, to support so much costly style, and that is about the most inconyenient thing about this lingering relic of former ages. There is no country in Europe where the citizen enjoys more indi vidual liberty or where that liberty is better defined or better protected by law, iwns there any couritryirl Eu rope where the rights of the citizen are more keenly watched by the citi zen or more unreservedly assserted, nor is there any, country where the Parliament is more sensitive to pub lic opinion. The extension of the right orfranchise has brought the Parliament closer to' the people, so close that if it were :ot for the he reditary House of Peers there would bi but little difference between the Parliament and our Congress, if there is much now, with our lordly Senate. Being of common stock and inher iting many of our customs, laws and legislative methods from Great Britain, we have imitated her in many things, sometimes well and sometimes otherwise, and we have sometimes failed to imitate her when we might have profited much by do ing so. She once pursued the pro tective tariff policy which we bor rowed from her, but she abandoned it for the better and a wiser policy of tree trade, whilst we kept on and carried the idea to an extreme that she never dreamed of. By throwing open her ports to the world she be came the ruling spirit in the world of trade, wjille we by showing a disposi tion to close our ports fell back from me prominent position we had at tained to a position where we were entirely overshadowed by the more progressive and broader-viewed Britoti. But there are other things in which we could learn lessons from Great Britain bv which miK much. It is one ot the nations which has studied and orotrresri in th t ot taxation so as to distribute the bur bens of taxation and make the bulk 11 "a on the shoulders best able to bear. it. 1 She derives her revenues from few subjects of taxa MUUi "y'ug ine taxes on incomes. lands and houses, spirits and thines that are classed over there as luxu ries, although some of them, such as coffee and tea, would be regarded here as necessaries. The bulk of her revenue-is derived from the income tax and from the tax on lands and houses, which in that country are owned by a comparatively few people, as the taxable incomes also belong to the comparative few. Thus the wealthy, auu mose wno can afford to" indulge in the luxuries mainly support the Government, while the. necessaries of life, which ire m common use by rich and nnnr ... ' - fww. aimc, are tax free, the opposite of the course pursued in thiscountrv. -v,Ar- n,.tr.! " " thehfaviacf ft r 1 1 .. . idus upon tne neces saries nf life . .1 . uu Uj,oa iDose WnQ are least able to bear it. - Just now there is a big howl raised at the proposition to impose an in come tax in this country, to shift part of the burden of GovrnmAn f --w.hm.vmi mm fk t :-",c naers of the- weak to -..wu.uci oi tne strong, from the vol: xxv. shoulders of those who' feel its weight to the shoulders of tfyose who would not feel it, and the-cry goes up that this is an oppressive, unjust and Inquisitorial proposition: We are told that It would be a failure, and that instead of a . big revenue we would have a big crop" of perjurers. All this was said about it in Eng land half a century ago when an in come tax was proposed there, but the tax came, has been perpetuated and yields more revenue now than it ever did. In his speech on' the tariff in the Senate the other day, speaking in advocacy of the income tax, Sena tor Walsh quoted the following from a paper i)y Mr. .R. A. Spofford, Li brarian of Congress, showing how the income tax has operated la Eng land: y - -. ; "Ttae fiscal experience ol England i chiefly valuable as representing a people singularly tnaepeadent and jealous oc proscription and of private rights, yec submitting for half a century toa&ind of taxation which is denounced, as of ail other, the most inquisitorial.' Originated in 1798 as a war tax. it continued till 1815. with brief intervals, and was re-established in 1842 to cover deficient revenue in a time of profound peace. From tbat day. to this it has survived under all administrations, in peace and in war. simply because it has proved the most convenient, the most elastic, ana trie most popular of - all taxes that upon liquors alone excepted. It has put into the British treasury every year from $30,000,000 to $80,000,000, and how pays nearly 40 per cent. Of the whole annual cost of the Government. It has been subjected to every ordeal of criticism, of investigation, and of denunciation, in the press, in Parliament, and on the hustings when Parliaments are made.' "Two toyal commissions of inquiry upon the income tax nave reported in 1852 and in 1801, after hearing all the testimony brought against it, that thev could not recommend its repeal. In spite of the alleged . inequalities and inquisitions ot the tax, it has survived that chronic attack of grum bling about ' public affairs which IS the inalienable right of every Eng lishman. There has been no demand from the ereat commercial interests of England for its abolition. It is periodi cally denounced by a pportion of the press, and as periodically re-enacted by Parliament. It has enabled England to reform her entire financial and commer cial system upon the lines which have prevailed in that country, reducing or abolishine all taxes upon consumption (except luxuries), and levying her taxes upon property and upon gains in every iorm. - It was an unpopular proposition when first broached in England, be cause people who also had taxable incomes didn't want to pay taxes on them just as that class of people are kicking against it in this country, but experience proved its wisdom and the result is the tax which was in tended to be temporary has become permanent and will remain, as it will in this country after it has had a fair trial. Have you received a bill for sub scription to the Weekly Star re cently ? If so, is it correct ? If cor rect, why not pay it ? Is there a man on earth who can print a newspaper for nothing and pay the postage be sides ? Can a farmer give away his corn, and cotton, and wheat, and chickens, and eggs, and keep out of the poor-house ? If so, let as have the recipe. It will be valuable to as just now. - - The Gould family has palled ap and migrated to Jersey because It objects to paying taxes on $10,000,- 000 worth of personal property. Al though its sire, Jay, - left an estate worth $70,000,000 he dodged around and managed to get off by .paying tax on $500,000 and kicked like a Kentucky mule when the tax listers increased it to $500,000 from the $300,000 he had. been paying on. Men take different views of these things. We would cheerfully pay taxes on the whole $70,000,000. The practical joker got in some more of his work in Washington the other day when a sensitive young man shot himself because be was unable to keep up bis dues in a mili tary company in Baltimore to which be belonged, and for which he was -made to believe that he would be court-martialled, and perhaps shot. imaginary disgrace preyeo LuPnbim 80 hat he sent a bullet rougn nis neao Col. Breckinridge has succeeded in having the Congressional Conven tion in his district staved off until the 15th of September, which is said to be a victory for him, as he is fighting for time. But that doesn't necessarily mean that he will set the nomina tion. - Mr. Boetler, a German of primi tive ideas, proposes to establish a lazy man's paradise in some of : the South Sea Islands. ,The only re quisite to citizenship will be tbat the applicant live on fruit and grass and wear no clothes. This beats the Coxey idea all hollow. - Jesse Seligman, the millionaire Hebrew recently deceased, was no discriminator against denominations. t- u:- t, a i t XU UIS Will uc wauc UCUUCSW IU ' , .... , . neany every cnantaoie institution m New York In his speech on the tariff Senator Walsh, of Georgia, did some, pretty good advertising for the South, but especially for Georgia. It has been judicially decided in Illinois, that a turtle is not an animal I Altai I but a reptile of the snake species. I That was no snap judgment. TRY BROOM CORN. - - , , ; A SngRestton. to the Farmers of This Sec tion Broom " Corn Will -Pay 'fcbm Twenty to Forty Dollars n Acre. " Now that a broom factory, is to be es tablished in Wilmington, it will be well for some of the farmers in this vicinity to try-the experiment of raisingv broom corn. Begin this year on a small scale; planting from one to five acrrs, and note the. result. In this connection the an nexed from an article in the Savannah News will be of interest : ;t : - c Another product and one of wb icb there is little doubt of making-a suc cess, is Jroom corn, to which attention was called by the Morning News a. few weeks ago. in an "interview . with. Mr.' F." J. Knlman. oi the Savannah Broom Fac tory. This factory, which is compara tively a new enterprise in Savannah, he stated couia utilize me product. ot ao, 000 acres; whereas the annual acreage in this section at the present time is only cbout 1.000 acres. 4- i:. This manufactory now has to import the broom corn used from the west, as it can make use of twenty times as much of the product as is made irxthis section. The price of the broom-corn at the tac- tory ranges from VA to 4 V-cents, de- 4 ending on the quality; and the quality and amount produced depends on the quality ot the land on which it is grown. The corn brings all the way-from (20 to $40 per acre, and its cultivation is far easier than rice or the products of the truck farm. r ; ' . ;' Many of the rice planters are -putting broom corn in their fields this year, and the probability is tbat the acreage will be somewhat increased, though it will be nothing like the amount that can be used right here at home. The seed is supplied on application at the factory, and there have been numerous applica tions for it this year. Some two or three hundred acres are to be planted on ; Hutchinson's Island this year, and others are using their rice lands for the same purpose... Even the pine land in the sections away from the rivers and creeks produces a fair quality of the broom corn, though it is not so good as that produced on the richer lands. These are suggestions as to some of the uses to which unused rice lands may be put. They are industries which no doubt will be rapidly developed in this section if experiments prove, as they no doubt will, that there is .sufficient profit ic them. .The distribution- of standard novels under the Star's coupon plan is decidedly the most popular one it has introduced. The books are by the very best authors, and are so cheap at four to five cents each, tbat the sales now promise to tun far into the thousands. examine the list. THE KITCHEN MARKET. Prfoea of Perishable Products that People " Purehaee. Spring chickens are active, but some of the faintly feathered birds sent in from the country are slow of sale. A dealer bad a lot, a little too fresh from the nest, that he offered vainly at 5 cents a head. The regulation spring chicken. high-stilted, fat j and - fall feath ered, , commands respect and the highest price from 12 to 25 cents apiece, according to weight and length of days. Ancient j fowls, (age unques tioned), sell at 25, SO and 83 . cents apiece. Eees are going up, and retail now at 12 cents per dozen. ! . 1?t)i rnntinnn In onrk1 innnlv Ann prices yesterday were : For flounders 15 cents a string; trout, 10 cents; perch, 5 cents; sturgeon, 5 cents per pound; rock crabs, 20 cents per dozen; channel crabs, 10 cents. The vegetable market was supplied with cabbage at 5 and 10 cents per head; beets, 5 cents per bunch; snap heaps, 20 cents per peck; peas, 30 cents per peck; new potatoes, 40 cents per peck; sweets, 20 cents per .peck; onions, 5 cents per bunch; squash, 20 cents per dozen. Strawberries were on sale at 5 cents per quart and blackberries at 7 cents. The Beat Ifovela. j Complete novels by Dickens, Haw thorne, Marryatt, ! Thackeray, Dumas, Bulwer, Walter Scott, Rider Haggard,. Mrs. South worth, Jules Verne, Charlotte Braeme and other noted.: writers of fiction, sent postpaid, for from four to five cents each, according to the num ber ordered. Read the Jist in another column of the Star. The STAR has chartered the monitor Nantucket as an aid to its collectors who are engaged in trying to "raise the wind' on the wharf. She is now moored at the foot ol Princess street, within sixty yards of the . Star office, where she is receiving a supply of ammunition suita-. ble for enforcing the demands of cot lectors. . This method of bringiag debt ors to time comes high, but it will be a great thing for the "funeral directors' when the personally conducted pic-nic begins. , i . Eight Parts of the "Famous Paintings of the World" may now be or dered. One coupon and twelve cents for each Part. j Excursion to Kt. Airy. There is to be a big excursion from here on Jnnc 26th to Mt. Airy leaving Wilmington at 9.80 a. ni., arriving at Mt. Airy in time for supper. The ex cursion is to be first-class in. every par ticular and the lowest rates yet offered will exist. Farther particulars as to rates, &c. will be given later. -' Parts 1 to 8 inclusive of the American Encyclopaedic Dictionary are now ready. Send one coupon and 17 cents (which includes postage) for each Part. ' Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, e. 7 & 8 of the I American Encyclopaedic Dictionary are I now ready. Send 6 coupons and $1.02 I for the Six Parts; or one coupon and 17 I - D.,-. Th... i.Vlnrf I (Caw 1W1 .. mvov y.iuw .U.MV.. postage to any address. Persons " sending orders for books or photographic views will bear in mind that they have to be forwarded to the publishers, and a week to ten days will usually be required to fill the orders. . Orders for the spjendld novels offered by the Star at four to five cents each, are coming in by evert mail. When 25 standard novels can be had for one dollar,everybody can have them. . WILMINGTON N; C.V FRID4Yr JUNE 1894. PANDEMONIUM REIGNED,i K ift Panic in the Y. M. O. A. Hall at Charlotte During ; Commencement Exerelaee of '. Charlotte' BemtoaryVt;.:'-?i.::-... 'At the Commencement exercises ot the Charlotte Seminary, held" in "the Y. M. C A. hall in that city last . Thursday flight, while Prof. C. R. Harding was de livering an address, there occurred an exciting scene. which is thus described by the. Observer: : - 'Some one in the gallery 2 bearing a noise in the street cried 'Fire!" ? " Instantly there was a stampede. To add to the consternation a loy in the gallery shouted "the gallery is .falling," and the panic which ensued can better be imagined than described The people up. stairs were no less terror-stricken than those down. There was a' wild rush for the doors. The crush was dreadful." Hats were knocked off, dresses caught and torn and the scene was one of graye alarm. :--;V-.r -i ' -'"-..i. '' Bianched-faced people . jostled each other in the ' crowd, and for a few min utes it looked as , if some one must - be hurt. While pandemonium reigned Rev, Mr. Boyd and Dr. Creasy stood upon the platform calling at the top. of their voices to the people to sit down. that there was no danger, and finally 1 Mr. Boyd, by telling- them tbat he bad heard the fire alarm, and if fire there was it was some place else in the city, got the crowd pacified, and gradually the panic subsided. Sixth ConaTeaaional District. . -The Maxton Scottish Chief "says : "The nomination of J. D. Bellamy lor Congress in this District grows brighter every day. . He is nearer the . Demo cratic platform of our "daddies" and the hearts of the great, mass ot the people than any one spoken of for the position. Wilmington is entitled - to the nomina- ihis time. Let her have iU: y Those who are now understood to be candidates are . Hon. S. B. Alexander,- present incumbent, of Mecklenburg, Mr. John D. Bellamy, 3rn of New Hanover, Mr. J. A. Lockhart, of Anson, and -Mr. J. T. Le Grand, of Richmond. There . are intimations that there is a fifth can didate "hid out" in ' Columbus, but his name has not yet transpired. , ; . AK0THEB, ATTEMPT TO MURDER. Mr. , Hintoa Piaford the Victim of a Das- tardly Crime. Special Star Correspondence. . Clinton, N. C May 81st. Mr. Hinton Pigford was the victim of a dastardly crime, committed last night. He was asleep, in a cottage on his father's farm three miles north of Clinton, when an unknown villain entered his room and with some tool, evidently a hatchet, or an axe, struck him a terrible blow on the forehead, cutting to the skull. Mr. Pigford's brother Tom was sleeping with him and was awakened by bis brother s moaning. . . There is no cine as yet that would jus tify making an arrest. Dr. A.M. Lee was called to the young man s side and rendered surgical aid. Mr. Pigford is a son of W. K. Pigford, Esq., of Clinton, one of the most prominent citizens oi Sampson county. His wound is a dan gerous one, but it is hoped that'its result will not be iatai. - i v s - " .. A STE0NG TESTraOJTIAL. What a Leading Educator Thinks of the American Encyclopaedic Dictionary. The high standing of Capt. Washing ton Catletf , Principal of the Cape Fear Academy, both as a scholar and an edu- ator, gives a real value to the annexed testimonial: Wilmington, April 11, 1894. Mr. W. H. Bernard: Dear Sir.' I have examined very carefully the 1st Part of the American hji cyclopaedic Dictionary- I am really surprised at the excellence of the work. both for itsintrjnsic merit and its price. I have made a parallel comparison with Webster's Unabridged; and with the Century, published also in parts, costing me $2.50 per volume; or, complete, $60. I find the American ,ncyclopaedic Dictionary superior in many respects to Webster's Unabridged, and for general purposes equal to the Century. The type is distinct and lull, the illus trations numerous, the derivation of words scholarly and accurate, the defini tions exceedingly complete and verified by many extracts from leading -modern authors, the. encyclopaedic information very full, the diacritical marks plain. with prominent equivalents at bottom of each page. 1 unhesitatingly endorse tne first fart of this Dictionary as meeting the require ments of the scholar and filling the wants of the general reader and man of busi ness needing general information in a compact and reliable presentation. No one need lear tnat ms money will be misspent, who invests in this work. ,i Yours truly, Washington Catlett. FOIL Y0TJS SCEAP BOOK. Some TJaefal Beolpes They Are worth Trying. ". The housewife is always interested in anything .that pertains to improved cooking, and she may find the annexed recipes valuable if preserved in her scrap book: ; r : BROILED HAM WITH CUCUMBER,: Cut thin as many juicy'sliCes of ham as desired, broil evenly over hot coals until well done, and pepper and buttef each slice. Around the slices arrange chopped cucumber that has been steeped in salted vinegar several hours. : SHRIMP ' BISCUITS. . Have in teadiness as many delicate biscuits as desired, and spread them with shrimp filling. For one pint ot prepared shrimps add five ounces of butter, a dust of pepper and salt and ' pound to smooth paste.- Add one teaspoonfnl of cider vinegar and spread upon ' tne biscuits.' ' j . v; : HAM SANDWICH. - . - Mince fine with a meat chopper equal portions of pickled cucumbers and lean, boiled ham. . Add celery, salt and. pep per and spread between slices of a fresh roll nicely buttered. An extra supply of these will be needed. - CHEESE AND BUTTER ROLLS. Select evenly baked fresh rolls and split them.. Grate half a pound of good cheese, either cream or Swiss, into half a pound of butter, and- beat until -thor onghly mixed. Spread -between the sides of the rolls. ; Do not miss the. opportunity offered by the Star of securing at a low price, and on easy terms, the American Encyclopaedic Dictionary. , There i nothing of the kind its superior in the English language. Read the announce ment in another column. lJ1I,I1 wflliam H: isjtrtui JCillad. by . Andrew - Cowan at Begrd Bali Sear Wrlshta- ', '1 yille The ' Murderer Arrested and. :' IiOdKed in Jail Coroner tnaueaU ! ; A negro ball was broken ilp by a mur der, about 11 o'clock. Wednesday night on Wrightsville Sound, eight .miles from this crry?5 ine murderer was Andrew. wOwan, a negro, 10 years old,: whose home' is ia Charlotte, N. C, and who was brought here about five months ago' by -Mrs. T, H. Pritchard as a servant.. - :.'.-" The murdered man . was -Wm. ; Henry Martin, negro, about twenty-four years of age? i Son of John Martin, farmer and fisherman, living near Seaside "Park. , Yesterday morning about ten jo'clock news reached the city that a murder had occurred , at : Wrightsville' and Sheriff Stedman, Deputy Sheriff W." T. Hafker and Coroner Jno. C Walton left at once -for the; scene, where they found .the negro tied. He: was,' delivered' to the StaenfLC;VMft " j5" CORONERlS" INQUEST,' Coroner Walton at ouceproceeded to hold an inquest on the body of the mur dered man, with a jury as follows : . ; ' W. H. Stokley (foreman), Jos, Lippitt, R. B. Cameron, W. A. Wright, W. T. Harkerand N. N. Bryan. . ' Margaret McCabe, colored, being duly sworn. testified that she was in the pavilion " where the shooting occurred. "I said to George Mandy, Andrew has a pistol and you had better take it away from him before he does some damage with it, and then: Geo. Mandy tried to take it away from him and then Wm Henry Martin who was standing near them looked towards Andrew Cowan, and then Andrew Cowan fired the pistol and he (Wm. Henry Martin) fell, and I left immediately. I heard no quarrelling or any words between them at any time. I know Andrew Cowan. He was drink ing; both were drinking. I smelt the whiskey. I was' raised with Wm. A. ,Martin. Carrie Jones, colored, testified: "I was in the pavilion when the shooting occurred. . I beard no remarks, but heard -the pistol fire and saw when Wm. H. Martin fell, but did not see who fired it, and do not know what became of the person who fired' the' shot. I . know Wm. H. Martin, and testily that this is his body, and also know Andrew Cowan, and testify to his good character. I do not know: whether -either was drunk or drinking. Rachel Fair, colored, testified: "I was sitting in the pavilion with Geo. Mandy when Mag McCabe spoke to Geo. Mandy. Geo. Mandy got up and went to Andrew Cowan, and then I saw Geo. Mandy take Andrew Cowan by the. hand, and then Wm.. Henry Martin, who was sitting on the other side 1 of the pavilion, came over when Andrew Cowan was returning the pistol to his pocket, ' and Wm. Henry Martin reached Over Geo. Mandy's arm and said; you ; -.why don't you put up that pistol?' I walked off and heard a pistol fire, and saw Wm". Henry Martin lying , "n the floor. I then left. Both parties were drinking, but I do not know whether either was drunk. I am no relation to Andrew Cowan,, but he and I came to Wilmington together. I never heard any threats between the parties about Carrie Jones. Never heard' the parties quarrelling together. Edward McCabe, colored, testified "At a festival on my place, I heard from some parties that Wm. H. Martin was shot about half past ten o'clock Wednes day. May 80th, at night. Some parties, not remembered, notified me in. my house near the pavilion that Wm. Henry Martin was shot. I went to the pavilion and found Wm; H. Martin dead. Then, about three-fourths of an hour after wards. Geo. Mandy came to my house and I asked him who shot Martin. He said it was Andrew Cowan; Then I said to George Mandy, Charles Hines, John Martin and Thos. H. Brown, let us go and arrest him. Then we went to Solomon Mandy's house and heard he was there. - We then sent Scott Holland to Magistrate E. W. Manning's for ; information,: who sent an swer that he did not "at pres ent do anv business in that way. We in the meantime were guarding-the house. Receiving no information from E. W. Manning we entered the bouse and took and tied Andrew Cowan and brought him to the pavilion and guarded him until 8 o'clock Thursday, May 31. After daylight I went around the pa vilion and found a pistol near the turn pike about twenty feet from the pavilion, Previously I searched Andrew Cowan at the house where he-was taken. Sarah Mandy, Colored, testified: "! was at the pavilion; during the festival. Left the house before the shooting. An drew Cowan came to my mother's house sometime during the 'night. I asked him where was Sarah. He answered; j'l left her by Mrs. Brown's.' Then I asked. him where was Wm. H. Martin, and he answered, 'Dead, dead, dead,' and then mother called me.and I left him in the room. ' He-also said he wished he knew who killed him." - - Geo. Mandy, colored, testified: fl was sitting in the pavilion. Mag McCabe came across the pavilion and asked me to go to Andrew Cowan to get him to put his pistol in his pocket. I went to him and caught hold of the hand that the pistol was in. and told him to put it in his pocket, or I would have tojake it away. He turned around with his face to me ' and placed it in his hip pocket, Wm. Henry Martin ran L across the hall and said 'you , put your pistol in your pocket,' and Andrew Cowan answered, 'what?' and took his pistol out and shot him. i The jury, after having heard the testi mony of the foregoing witnesses, 're turned a verdict that deceased came to his death by a pistol ball, at the hands of one Andrew Cowan. ; : 1 Coroner Walton then recognized the witnesses to appear at the . Criminal Court for New Hanover; the 3d Mon day in July next, and ordered that the prisoner, Andrew Cowan, be committed to fail on the charge of murder. . Star Sheriff Stedman broueht" Cowan to the city about 5 o'clock in the afternoon and placed htm in tail. - An- eye-witness of the affair (not a witness at the inquest) tells the follow ing story: TheT occasion' was a ball and" festival given by Parr est Jones in a pavilion on the left-band side of the turnpike coins towards the Sound, about one-fourth of a mile from jbe Seacoast crossing, some seven .miles . from -town.'- The trouble started about 10.45 p. - m. Andrew Cowan, the one - accused ot the killing, had a pistol. -flourishing it about, when Geo; Mandy, the floor manager, remon strated with him and caused him to put the weapon back into , his pocket. The argument then became . general, when William Henry Martin used: the. Words The wind blew out one of the two lampsthe one nearest them and immediately the pistol went off andMar tin fell dead. Cowan asked, who shot this man?: No one . made answer. - There were those there who knew that he did the deed but did not speak up. A call was made for water, and Cowan went and got some. More 'water was called for and Cowan;- remarked .'He is dead now, and commenced to console Mar tin's sister whom he afterwards took . to her bomeand went next door to Mandy's honse and fell asleep, and where he was tied and taken back to the pavilion and kept until morning. Cowan and Martin were said to be intimate friends. Both were drunk, but Cowan was the drunker of the two. After Cowan shot Martin he kept snapping his pistol in the crowd. - Fortunately it bad but one ball in it, and that one killed Martin. . . , THE PRISONER S STORY. ' After he was put in iails Cowan made the following statement to a reporter for the Star: . 'I was at the dance at McCabe's pavilion. Am a particular friend of deceased, Andrew Cowan. He was fat the dance. His father lives on the Sound, and I see him often. I was in toxicated, and know nothing from the time I had the pistol until five o'clock in the morning, when I was tied. I never had a better friend since I've been here than the man they say I killed. 1 don't remember shooting. I was tied in Mandy's yard, four hundred. yards from the place where the shooting occurred." ;;-" -' . . ; -" ":. , - He said his father was a well-to-do farmer, owning sixty acres of land forty four miles north of Charlotte, and had been telegraphed for and he expected him to come to-day and employ and ar range counsel for him. ' Have you received a bill for sub scription to the Weekly Star re cently? If so, is it correct? If cor rect,7 why not pay it? Is there a man on earth who can print a newspaper for nothingand pay the postage be sides? Can a farmer give away his corn, and cotton, . and wheat, and chickens, and eggs, and keep out of the poor-house? If sov iet us have the recipe. It will be valuable to as just now. - GET Iff THE BANS WAGON. How to Keep TJp with the Proceaaion in these Hustling- Time A Oreat Dio tionary at s TriflmffJCoat. This is a -fast age" and if we want to keep up with the time's we have to hurry along with the rest of the world or be distanced in the race. There" is little time for ordinary, eyery-day people to study the beginnings and the develop ment of things and words are things. They are as necessary to the life of busi ness and society as a carpenter's tools are to the wprk of his hands. But no one has the time to go word-bunting and there is no reason why hs should do so when all the words in ordinary or extra ordinary use have all been collected to gether and are' preserved in such handy form as they are found in the American Encyclopaedic Dictionary. :: ' 'y This is a dictionary for the people as well as scholar, for the man who lives by the work of his hands as well as for him who lives by cudgelling his brains. It is convenient in form,' comprehensive in treatment, It is a thorough" dictionary. The his tory of every word is traced step by step and the steps shown, ft has all the ob solete words, and all the newest up to date. No other accepted-as-standard dictionary has either. . It explains not only words it explains things encyclo paedic fashion, but in a terser and easier way. It is easy for the simplest of us deep enough1, for the most learned. It is printed on first-class book paper; the type is clear and plain; the ink clean and deep; the illustrations . better than those usually appearing in such works; the cov ers of each Part (published in'forty Parts) of stiff paper tinted. And this is how it can be obtained in better shape than Its English form, at a cost of one-seventh to one-tenth of the price of the English edition : Elsewhere in this paper will be found a' Dictionary coupon." One ol these coupons, when accompanied .with 17 cents, Will entitle the holder to one Part ot this Diction ary. The whole work will, be .complete in about 40 farts ot Do pages each, hound in heavy paper covers. A new Part will be issued each week and coupons will be published daily until the Dictionary is comolete. ' Anv one of these coupons, with 17 cents, entitles you to any Part of the Dictionary, Parts 1 to 8 are now ready. ' YOTJ MUST GET THIS. A! Dictionary That la an En tie Library . ' ; . In itself. .".. "A little learning is dangerous," per haps.; Even the best educated of us make an occasional "bull." : But those of us who are continually making dan gerous "breaks" in conversation or in writing we need help, the kind ot help that allows us to help ourselves. The best help for anyone, whether 'yarsity graduates or less fortunate, is "The American Encyclopaedic Diction ary," a library in itself, a college educa tion in itself (almost) all this over and above a mere dictionary. . It is a priceless work, distributed at a marvelously low price to readers of the Star. v Kead advertisement in to-day s paper. . - - . ,- . - The standard novels offered by the Star at four to five cents each are "going off like hot cakes." It seems hardly possible, but it is so, that you can getjthrough the Star, for one dollar. 25 novels by such masters ot action as Dickens,Thackeray, Hawthorne, Charles Reade. Rider Haggard. .Dumas and other noted authors i. T?j ' " -, NO. 31 SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Durham Sun: Mrs! Margaret Morris, relict of i Henderson Morris aged 01 years, died Tuesday at her resi- dencenear massheid, presumably from old! ?r i- s. .-T-' 4-Raleigh jPrr: . Mr. Thomas Webb, one of the most, prominent citi zens of Hillsboro, died at his home last Tuesday afternoon, aged 60. He was at one time President;of the North Caro lina Railroad. , ' . ; - - Henderson Goldi Leaf: " ' Mr. John W. Vauehan. an old and well known citizen of Henderson. Was found dead in his bed Monday morning. Heart disease is supposed to have been' the caiise of his death. . - 4 Rockingham Rocket : " Com plaint are numerous of poor prospects for cotton m this county. The recent heavy rains and cold weather have hurt the crops.and in some places the plants arb dying. The corn crop is reported as dfting very well. 5j '' ' .::- -r I Salisbury Herald : A promi nent farmer, told the Herald yesterday that the wheat was dying fast and falling TdjjWn. A kind of . rust is attacking it. la many places the damage, is so ereat that there will I hardly be any wheat csade. Cotton is also badly damaged by the cold. . - 4 .; - . J- Mount Airy News ; Up ; in ffloyd county a few days ago three horses were sold at auction and the lot only brought $15.00. t They were said to be Jairly good work horses. A car load of iorses were shipped some time since trom Pulaski county, Va., to a Northern market and only averaged $20 a head. I StatesviHe Landmark: Geo. W. Kerr, . aged 67 years, died suddenly at the residence of Rev. T. H.trobecker. it Barium Springs, last Thursday even ing. Mrs. Emma Lawrence -King. wue ot k. a., rung, one ot ireaeirs Kep ivsentatives in the Legislature of-1893, pied at her home m Sharpsburg town- nip about l o clock last Thursday morn- ng. ' Charlotte News: The death of rs. Gen. Younsr. which occurred at her home on North Tryon street to-day at 110.30 o'clock, removed from the scenes pi Charlotte one of the most prominent and most esteemed personages. . Mrs. Young, before her marriage, was Miss Malvina Graham, and was a daughter of apt. John Davidson Graham, of Lin- oln, who was a brother of William A. ham. Weldon News: Sixty convicts ave been received and put to work at reat vails. This company is now at ork in earnest digging foundations for he two large mills to be erected at once. The force of convicts just received will pe put to worR laying the foundations for the mills, making brick and buildine the race ways, i The company has on fand one and a half million brick already po De laid, and the work will be pushed napidiy forward. j ; Charlotte News: Daring the munder storm Monday afternoon Mr. Gephus Fife, of Mt, Holly, received a stroke of lightning which paralyzed him xfipr some time. I He was near his house wnen tne peai oi tnunaer ana tne nasn of fire ali came at one time and shocked the whole town. He was knocked down ahd remained speechless until yesterday afternoon. Mr. Fife says he did not hfear the thunder at all, -but the last thing he remembers of the storm Was a ftyme of fire and a ndise something like m)eat frying in a pan. , It was a narrow escape tor him. ! Newbern Journal: A live alliga tor ten feet four Inches in length was brbught to this city yesterday. He was captured six and a half miles above the city, at the mouth of Haywood's creek, Trent river, Monday afternoon by Capt, Af Tillman and two colored -men. who were fishing with a drag net. When they felt the alligator in the net -they had a sturgeon. .The alligator was with difficulty pulled ashore, made secure by thfee ropes around his body, kept there ailpigbt and then towed like a log be mad tne boat to the city yesterday. I Durham Sun: Bob Madkins. i - the Burlinsrton racist, was carried through Durham this morning on the eaf y train to Raleigh for sale-keeping. i be train stayed here "until some time after sunup, and it being rumored that helwas on board attracted alarce crowd cuiious to see the human fiend. Hels a sum, ordinary lookmg darxey and talks abiut the matter with the. most aban doned indifference. He displays every evidence of being a brute in human form. We are told that he was secreted in the woods last night and put on the ine wooos last nignt ana put on tne train some d,s ance this sideof Burling- ll,idTsbvLigJSxckans;e: Mr. John Patterson, one of the oldest citizens- of Richmond county, died last Wednesday after a very short illness. For sev eral months some one has been breaking into cars on this railroad and stealing goods in transit. The Railroad Co. em ployed a detective to work up the case and. last night he captured three of the rogues on Capt. welsh s trainj netween here and Wilmington. Alter oeing ar retted, they were locked up in a boxcar, but, unfortunately, two of the rascals succeeded in breaking out and got away. The third one-didn t happen - to such good luck. ' FAMOUS PAINTINGS." it Attractive Offer-Parts One to Z!lht, Inclusive Bow Beady Send f Twelve Cents and One Coupon for Each lavine conducted the Stoddard "Trip Arbund the World" successfully, to the delieht of thousands, the Star has made arrangements with the publishers to sup- Plf its readers with the "Famous Paint- ings oi tuc vvuriu, . uctng a kuucluud ui Photographic , Keproductlons of threat Mdern Masterpieces, embracing 820 oi the finest specimens of American, 'French, English, German, Austrian, Ital ian. Scandinavian and Russian Art, from the principal public galleries, famous prsyats collections, and studios of emi nent artists. Famous Paintings of the world" will comprise Twenty Portfolios of 16 Photographic Reproductions each. It has been carefully examined, and . the Star unhesitatingly recommends it as one of ithe most' attractive and valuable schemes ever offered to the puDiic- The coat of "Famous Paintings will be twelve cents and one coupon for each part. Parts One to feignt. inclusive, are now ready. Try them. See advertise ment and coupon in another column. 4- No coupon scheme ever offered to tfie.people of the South equals the American Encyclopaedic Luctionary dis tribution. . It has been adopted by such papers as the Charlotte Observer, the Au- - -7-- a .1 - i m. ." gusa K,nrtmictc, - ana . uic vuaricsiua Nevts and Courier. And the Star is "in it'ftoo. 4-The standard notels offered by the Star at from four to five cents each arekheap, you must admit. Send one coupon and 25 cents for five of these books selected from the list, in another .column. NATAL SfOBES OUTLOOK. . .' - - .' i . , : "... K . j ' A Brighter Protpeet-The Situation atead fly Impronn-The Demand Good, ' Mr. J. P. Williams, who recently re turned to Savannah from a lour pf the; Northern cities, gave Iht News the foU- lowing in regard to the cntlook for naval tores:.-..; v's-'i ; ; ''".!: V How do you find the. naval stores sit uation?" was askedl' -v. ; a.:'';;-":1 "The situation is undoubtedly-ateadily improving. It is now -pretty : well con ceded that the crop ;will not be larger thai last year, and the purchases since the opening of the season have been for immediate consumption. ..The specula tive feature has not entered into the trade so far as 1 can learn. The stocks at the ports in the United States are less than. they were. a year ago, and the visible sup ply is not larger than it was at'that time. As we baye ieen able to advance the ' market slightly since the beginning of " the present season through a demand in -' a general way for immediate' consump tion, and with sl prospect of no .'larger crop than last year, and a prospect for continued improvement in trade for some time to come, we may reasonably expect slightly better prices to prevail than are now being paid. - ;. , , "The New York naval stores people are very much encouraged over the situ-; ation.1 The largest receiver ' of- naval stores in New York told me that be had , had a quiet but a steady trade during the entire season", but that he had sold more goods than in - four years before. TheTeasoh he gave is that parties want the goods, for immediate consumption, . and such a demand for the products is . oound to better the market. MARK DOWNEY'S WILL. Handsome -Beaneeta to Catholio 'Inailtu- tions im Biohmond, Va. By Telegraph to the Morning Star.' ; . Richmond, June 3. Thewill of Mr. MarkDowney was probated to-day. It gives" $40,000 to the" Little Sisters of the Poora Catholic ' home here; $5,000 ' each . to-the Male Orphan asylum and the Friend's Asylum for colored orphans, of Richmond; $15,000 to Arabella Gordanich (Mr. Downey's cousin), of yueenstown, Ireland; f4,000 to the Catholic Bishop of this diocesi and the remainder, to- relatives and friends of the deceased, including $3,000 each to William A. Piet.of Balti more, and Edward F, Cullen, of Texas. and $5,000 each to Honora and Julia O'Sullivan, of Brooklyn, N, Y. It also gives $5,000 to each of the children of Mr. Downey s late cousin, Florence T. Downey, of Charleston, ;S. C. The es- tate is valued at $300.000. T' The American ENCYCLOPEDIC DICTIONARY. Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 8 Hbw Reali- Cheaply and easily obtained through -"The Star." . j It Contains 250,000 Worils, Covering nearly 4,000 pages, and was compiled at an expense aggregating $600,000, extending over nearly 0 years continuous labor ol men well qualified to undertake such an exact- .. ing task. Its Distinctive Features Are Tfs thoroughly enclycopaedic char acter, being not only a comprehen sive Dictionary, but also a very com plete Encyclopaedia. Its vndeness of v. range not. only of 'modern words of an ordinary, technical or scientific nature, but alsd of all obsolete words and phrases to be met with in the works of English writers from the Thirteenth to the present century. The complete history of each word and its various uses and meanings is traced out. The richness of the il lustrative quotations is increased by the fulness and exactness of the ref erences. 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