WILMINGTON,, . ' . ' At ; A YEAR. IN ADVANCE. .ipooW 81 88flf888t8888888 SSaa383S38S88g83t8 88881888388888888 82S88888S8SS8888S ""5gSS38a88S888g 88888858828888888 -"SSSS5S88J8888 tqiooK S 8S8te88S288888888 --saaassaa ssaas npAiS 88888888888888888 a. A t H U e in 1, x -B-e0;J3;g i Vnierrd at w row umw " wikw, ... SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. . Th wUcriptioa price of the "Weekly Star U aa u (months " M SO Have you received a bill for.-subscription to the Weekly Star re cently? If so, is it correctf 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 us. have the recipe. It will be valuable to us jus: now. - RAILROAD BUILDING. -The Chicago Railway pub lishes a list of 34 States and Terri tories, with the railroad mileage con strucied in each during the year, the total amounting to 1,919.13 miles which is the least number of miles laid any year within thirty years ex cept in 1865-'66 and '75. There were fourteen States and Territories in which there was none laid. The Territory of Arizona scores the highest number with 193.40 miles, Illinois coming second with 147.20, Pennsylvania third with 128 87, Michigan fourth with 112, Maine fifth with 111.70, Montana sixth with 101.17. These were all that ex ceeded one hundred miles, and but few of the others came near that figure. ' , la the Southern section (in which we iuclude Missouri and the Terri tory of Arizona) there were about 5v3 miles, or nearly one third of the total new mileage. But the past few years have been hard on the railroads a considerable number of them, and among these some of the inost extensive systems in the coun try, havinz gone into the hands of receivers. This will account partly ' for the decreased construction of the past several years. For the past five years there has been a steady decline. In 1890 the new mileage was 5,670 miles; in 1891, 4 282; in 1892. 4,178; in 1893, 2,635; in 1894, 1,919, a pretty big fall from 1887 when the new nrltage was 13,000 miles. - The total mileage in the United States is now 179,672miles, of which 54,300 miles have been constructed in the past ten years, an average of 5,430 miles a year. The States having the largest mile age come in the order as follows : Il linois first, with 10,576 miles; Penn sylvania second, with 9,564 miles ; Texas third, with 9,272; Kansas fourth, with 8,931; . Ohio fifth, with 8,652; Iowa sixth, with 8,513; New York seventh, with 8,150. These seven States have an aggregate of 63,658 miles, or a little over one-' third of the total mileage of the whole country, while they contain less than twenty per cent, of the total area of the country, omitting Alaska. The figures here presented suggest some thoughts in reference to the .future of railroad building. The new mileage of this and for several years past, nas Deen merely snort lines as connections between lines already in efjeration or as feeders to main lines. ibis will in all probability be the character of the work that will be done for some years to come in the oiaer Northern and Western States, which have now about all the rail roads they need, or will need in the near future. The far Western States are not as well supplied as they may desire to be, but there is little temptation to invest mjney in railroad building in those sparsely settled States, whose industries are limited, and, with the exception of mining, not of a very profitable character, in addition to which, from the nature of the coun try and from other causes railroad building is much more expensive in that than it is in other sections of the country, while the prospects Of profits are not so encouraging. cre is neither sentiment, sec l-tional pride nor patriotism in railroad DUIldine. It Is rnM.hlonHoH hnei ncss which has nothing in it nor be w - - wm U Wall "no u Dut dollars. Where there is reasonable prospect of a road pay Inirtk. k.:u - c uunucrs it win oe built some daJ; where there is no such prospect " roan will ever be built. . Capital- ao not build railroads for recrea on, as millionaire FfoirW ..hniMe HMieis, nor to accommodate the pub lie unless the public are willing ohH S3 Dje to patronize them sufficiently to bitionists 219,843. Add up thecom PaF a reasonable dividend on th in. I hini nnnosition vote and It leaves 'Wtnent. Roads Ho wis, and some come far from doing K, but these ar mm. r these are casi.t nf "on, or of contingencies which were VOL; XXVE not anticipated or taken into account when the roads were built. i Capital Is always on the outlook for investments where it will pay and requires little or no 'persuasion to in vest . when the, prospects for pay are good. Capitalists keep a close eye on the present and prospec tive development and possibilities of new fields of enterprise and are care ful readers of the reported business and earnings of enterprises already established. They compare the re turns with the returns of similar , en terprises in other sections and from these draw their own conclusions. For the past year the railroads of the South show a larger percentage of net earnings than the roads of any other-section of the country, which shows that there is work for the railroads and not tod many rail roads for. the work to be done. i ne indications tor some years past have pointed and they still point to the South as the future field for railroad buildifig, for there is not yet in : this grand and richly-endowed domain one-fourth of the railroad mileage that there will be use for in the near future.' When the revival of business comes in good earnest it will be first felt in the South, for it is in this direction that surplus capital will seek investment in the" working of the mineral and other resources. Into this section Immigration from other sections will continue to flow, and the manufacturing industries will continue to increase even more rapidly than they have in the past. All these will be incentives to rail road building and reciprocally rail road building will be an incentive and give stimulus to these. Rail roads follow population and enter prise, and population and enterprise follow railroads. Unless all the signs are. at fault the great railroad work of this country within the next ten years will be in the South. MIlS OB. MSfiTlOff. A press dispatch published yester day, announced jthat the capital stock of the Whittier Cotton Mills, of Lowell, Mass., had been, increased from $150,000 to $300,000, and that a three-story factory would be built in Georgia, where the same grade of 3oods will be made as in their Lowell factory. This is the third mill to be erected in the South by New Eng land companies,j announcements 'of which have been made within the: past couple months. One of the others is a $600,000 and one a $500r 000 planCWhat better evidence could be asked that the New England manufacturers realize the advantages that the South, presents as a field for cotton manufacturing or that they realize this to.be the center of the cotton manufacturing industry? it must be remembered that these are practical men who know all about the business, and are not going to take chances' in an untried field They know what they are 'doing and are putting' their money and ma chinery in the South in order to be better able jbo keep up in the race of competition. If they could have held their own they would never their own they thus have practically acknowledged the advantages of a location in the Sontb. but would have put their money into enlarging their plants in New England. There is more in these announcements than the mere building of cotton factories, for they mean also Drroeinz to me soma more skilled labor, and valuable ex periencei which will help in the wort '' trr . : ot educating our mm opcravuia iu the manipulating of new lines ot goods. Every new miU started witn - I - . new JMigiana capuai ana uuuci iuc management of practical men from that Section will: become to some extent an educator, and therefore in a double way. This movement, which began sometime ago, will continue until these New England branch 1 establishments, as they migbt be called, will be numer ous in the .South. ; . . With its great triumph in last No vember the Republican party is still, as it always has j been, sr minority; party, and does not represent or nf the neoDle ocaA sv iujwi g of this country. If at any time since? 1 CfiO tViA nnnneitinn to It had been 1UW vrr , - ( united it would have been swept out of existence. It has maintained its hold on power simply because of the I divisions among its opponents and the scattered epposition that was made to it. Its leaders gloried in the "magnificent" victory they won at the late elections; a victory oy whiph they revolutionized the House of Representatives :and recovered nearly . all the ' States : ' which tbey . lost two and four years ago. but this victory' they owe to the fact that the opposition was divided. The summing up of ; the total vote cast in the respective States shows that the Republicans had 5,588,326 votes, the Democrats 4,148,456, the I prtnniuf 1 24B.725. and the From v.nKi.Wn nartw 26.725 in the minority, not connting the- many I a.1 j t n.muni. votes which I k-, r rmnrratic votes which were not polled, i Four years ago the Democratic : party had - a. majority overall of 268,550.' If it were not for the leadership of the Republican party and the failure of the opposi tion to unite against it it would have' been annihilated long ago. ' ; , r . .That is a touching story of desti tution that comes from Southern Ne braska; where' thousands of people are suffering for food and fuel, and dependent upon charity for the neces saries of life. This is . not a new story, for the condition of these peo pie has been k.nown for months. It was predicted last Summer that if no organized effort was made for their relief they would suffer much this Winter. Their condition was so well known ; that the Legislature made, an appropriation to send them seed-wheat to sow last Fall, and it has also been known that yfbrl the past two years there has been a large emigration from that section end also from the adjoining section of Kansas. It seems remarkable that any one would remain in a section where rais ing crops is so uncertain that bat three crops have been raised in nine yaars. The probabilities - are that most of those who remain were too poor to get away. If they were not very poor they would not be living in sod houses, the same they threw up when they took up the land. One of the striking incidents in this con nection is that the South ; which has heretofore been buying corn from the West is now donating corn and other food stuffs to feed people from whom they formerly bought these things. ' "" In the decade from 1880 to 1890 the capital invested in cotton mills in the' Sontb increased from $217 000,000 to $97,000,000. The capital now invested amounts to about $106,- 000,000, a five-fold increase in four teen years. And the bulk of this was in three States, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. There is no campaign assessments nor stuffing the ballot box in Pana ris, one of the islands in the Medi terranean. Padre Michelangelo is priest, mayor, harbormaster, post master, and runs the telegraph with the assistance of his niece. He fills the bill so well that they never think of running any one against him. Congressman ' Goldozier, of Chi cago,' is a reformer, .and proposes to begin in the beer dispensaries of the Capital which have beerr taking ad vantage ot Congressmen Dy giving them short beers and charging them a long nickel. He proposes to have the glasses collared and no foam be low the collar. - Captain Stephenson, of the New York police, who was sentenced to three years and nine months in the penitentiary and to pay a fine of $1,- 000 was convicted of accepting three boxes of peaches, worth $6, from a fruit vender, for permission to obstruct the sidewalk: Somebody peached on him. Senator Turpie Says if the Govern. ment proposes to take any stock in the Nicaragua Canal, it ought to build the canal and run the business Itself. But if that was proposed, Sen ator Turpie would be throwing more oratory and objections at it than an ordinary canal could, hold. . . The power exerted by the engines ot the world (oot including locomo tives) is estimated to equal 46,000,- 000 horse power. This equals the oower of 1.000.000.000 of men, a steam horse oower beinz rated at a - the p0wer of thrte ordinary, horses. An inventor In Switzerland has contrived a device for burning pe troleum for generating steam, Which it is said works so well that it will be practicable with it to use petroleum whereever coal is used for genera ting steam. : ' England is becoming very depend ent upon this country for- the com forts of life.' We send her her best beef, pork, oysters, apples; and just before Christmas we sent her a ton and a haif of plum pudding for her Christmas dinner. Henrv Pomeroy. who recently died in tne city nospitai id . iuumuopuua, was the personal fnend""of three Presidents, Lincoln, Grant and Ar- thnr. but that didn't prevent fate from buffeting him and sending him and his wife to the alms house. f The relations between ' Messrs. Croker and Cockran, of New York, have become so strained that they will not slide down hill on the same toboggan. J Croker says Cockran has hn talking too 'much with his mouth. ' , I The Clubbins Bystem. ; I The Charlotte Observer has some good observations on the "clubbing" system which has been adopted by some of the North Carolina weeklies. Here is an important result of this -foolishness not referred to by the Observer'. -When a "club" subscriber gets the N. Y. World or the N. Y." Timer And compares it with bis borne paper, he begins to think that the home paper js.no paper ai au. New York truck dealers quote I kale at 75c for Norfolk; rand; spinach, 2.002JSO. Katoott Down to rbnrMMi SMNMTM- trd7 ltorntot rwln AIT; Dy- - Oadook lot- Loww Ttmpnttar ThlB The- mercary went dowft yesterday morning to 14 Jegreits abeve aero-two degrees lower f thin ' predicted Friday night by the Weather Bureau, observer. Mr. Graham. ; It was the coldest of the season so far. and not far-away from the" lowest temperature recorded inWilmtDg-? ton in tuenty-fonr years. Jaouanr oth, 1884. the mercury dropped to 9 degrees above zero, and n January. 1393, a mini mum temperature of 18 degrees was re- I corded. The maximum temperature yes terday was x6 degrees; hv nightfall it had fallen to 84, and at 11 o'clock p. ni was at 20 degrees. Observer Grahani tUougbt that the record would be broker , this moroiag and that the mercury Would fall to-six Or eight degrees, although ; possibly, ft might not get loweXuan ten or twelve degrees. " . .. 2 ' Although the cold .ras intense ft terdav vet toe'-weather-waa clear and dry, and not at all "unpleasant out-of- doors in the warm rays of the sun. Colder weather i was experienced . at many other places. The minimum tem perature at Jacksonville,, Fhw was the same as Wilmington, 14 degreet. At Savannah, Ga 13 degrees, and at Char lotte, 2 degrees above zero. - " It is not at all unlikely that the freeze in Flbrida caused great damage to the orange crop, and to early vegetables. In this section, the cold snap has been ben eficial to truckers in retarding the devel opment of strawberry plants that were already fruiting. . Zero temperatures were recorded by the Weather Bureau in the Ohio Val ley. At Pittsburg, Pa., and at Parkers- burg, W. Va the temperature was 2 de grees below zero. - . ; ' Ooserver Graham said last night that the weather will grow warmer this after noon. J;L. oTV: - Chrlaton Truekera Jjiked It. Whatever may be the opinion of the people who dodged about the city, in a vain effort to keep warm and comforta ble yesterday, says the News and Courier, muffled in Winter wraps and scurrying around corners to avoid the teeth of the biting wind, - from the truck farmers' standpoint the freeze has been a God send. Two weeks ' more of the . balmy weather that the Farmer has been giv ing the public for the last' month would bave brought tli tarty "strawberry crop to a point at which it woold bave fallen an. easy and a sure prey to tne nrst me .andermg cold snap wnicn mignt nave chanced to come this way. Sacs a catastrophe would have been a beaw blOw to the trucking interest ot Charleston, but as matters have fallen out this freeze came in the very nick of time to retard without destroying the plants, and thus it came to pass white or dinary mortals were flapping their arms and stamping their feet to keep their blood in comfortable circulation yester day the vegetable men held a high car nival of tatlzracttonr evenr wbriethcTr teeth chattered and their limbs shivered. They say that the freeze was just the one thing ot all others that they wanted, and they would not have been without it for many dollars. That Cheeks Contest. Referring to the series of games now in progress at Asheville between Mr. H. C McNair and Mr. John A. Murdoch for the checker championship of North Carolina, the; CVWk reproduces what the Star said about Mr. McNair and the rabbit foot, and adds: "John A. Murdoch, who is to play Mr. McNair. has no rabbit foot, but tor years has carried three rings from a rac coon's tail, and what he will do for the rabbit foot will be a plenty. - Then, this is the issue : Can the left hind-foot Of a graveyard rabbit beat three rings from a raccoon's tail ii Well, the Star is content with that but we posi tively protest against the introduction ot even "a hair of the bide of. Vanderbilt s mongoose. - P. S. There is a rnmor here that out of four games thus- far played Murdoch has won three. 11 the report is true, it is evident some sharp Asheville real estate broker has traded McNair an eligible town lot for that rabbit toot. Outlook for Iiumber. Mr Merritt W. Dixon returned yes terday from New York, says the Savan nah News, where he has been for some time on business, and incidentally be has been giving much attention to the condition of this lumber markets. ' ' Mr ' n viin uM '. vtrrtatf that the prospect for the lumber business this season was qaite encouraging. Especi ally were large ' orders expected from railroads in almost all sections ot the country, r Many of ; the' roads have . let their rolling stock run down until much of it is in such condition that repairs are absolutely necessary. .Orders for this purpose, be said, are constantly being filled, and while prices have not materi ally advanced, the mills have a good many orders to nil, ana tney are almost all quite busy. The prospect, be said. Is in every respect bright and encourag ing.. - i; V - Kitchen Markets. , I. ' "The cold weather yesterday was a damper upon market-men and but few of them were in market. Poultry was scarce and in demand. grown fowls (live) retailing at 85 cents each, (dressed) 80 cents per pair. Eggs. 20c. per dozen. In the vegetable market, turnips sold at 5c perbuncb, and 2c per pound for rutabagas; lettuce, 5c per head; collards, ' 5c; sweet potatoes, 15c per peck; celery, 50c per bunch; onions, 5c per quart; cab bage, 10c per bead. ; I The fish dealers sold oysters at 10c to 25c per quart; mullets, 10c; flounders. 20c, and trOut, 20c per bunch. JMed from Her Injartes. - : ' Many friends of Mr. G. B. N. Hudson. one . ot tne worxsnop employes oi tne A. C. L., will learn with regret that his little six-year-old daughter, Mamie Claudie, who was severely burped Fri day afternoon last, died yesterday morn ing of her . injuries. Her clothing caught on fire from contact with a red- hot stove as she passed it. ' Two physicians were in attendance upon her from the time of the. accident nntilher death, but her injuries were too severe for recovery. THE. COTTON MOVEMENT. t - , v- - ' - 3"' Jd-lfofdlnartly Znt Bat TmXOnm Off ; v in Bsoelpu Is Szpeoted Tbe Hew Or- less Sttmt of 0A75,OOQ Belee. '' The movement of the present cotton crop, says the New Orleans Picayune, has been the most extraordinary ever known in the history ol the trade. There has been marketed! up to date, according to the figures ot -Secretary Hester, of the Cotton Exchange. 6.828- 000 bales, an increase over" last year ot 1.801,000 bales, and over the "big crop year of 1891 of 844.000 bales. If the same percentage of the crop has been marketed as was the case.i ia 18di, the total yield will be in the neighborhood ol 9 500,000 bales.- Wnen the unusually fine weather which has prevailed daring the entce9eason is considered, and the many incentives for .marketing the crop rapidly have existed, there is reason to believe that an even greater percentage of the crop has been marketea than was the case in 1891. M;-..l--:i -.-.t;': Practically, every , weekly crop sum-. my issued by the New York Chronicle tor two months past has reported rapid progress to marketing the crop. It must also be remembered that the transporta tion and shipping' facilities for handling cotton are better how .. than they were three years ago. It is, moreover, a fact. wnicn nas oeen apparent irom tne very tsted in. the country a desire to market the crop as rapidly as possible, owing to the general belief which has prevailed in extremely low prices.. : . It is. consequently, very easy to ex plain why the movement! has been so large, without accepting the extremely large estimates which have, been issued by some . authorities. , Thar the crop would be a large one was evident from the commencement of the season, the increased production in Texas in partic ular contributing to that result; but there is every reason to expect that the new year will find a smaller .percentage of the total yield, on plantations .than ever before in the history oi the indns- trV.V iw.v: ':.,.;.?i 1 . -. . . r i The phenomenal movement of the past week, has been no doubt due to the anxiety to market, as much cotton as possible prior to the holidays, and also to enable the farmers to meet obliga tions falling due between the ; 15th of December and January 1, such as farm mortgages, .advances : by country mer chants and the like. Nearly .'all the reports now ..being received from the interior by merchants report an un usual .exhaustion of cotton on planta tions. and the general opinion among fictors is that the crop will turn out much smaller than is indicated by the present rate of marketing . The average ot the crop estimates of .xbe factors - of New. Orleans, as published some days, ago, is 9 175 000 bales. These men have ttteiT'correspondeats all through the country, and certainly ought to be as well, it not setter, posted tnan any other class in the cotton trade. Moreover, the estimates of the factors have usually come quite near to the actual yield, and there is no good reason why they should be far wrong this season. An Episcopal Church Burned. The Fayetteville - Observer reports the destruction by fire last Saturday of St, Thomas' Church (of which Rev. Dr. Huske is pastor) on Hy ban's Hill, near Fayetteville. . A number of young people had just qoitteo tne cnurcn, - alter oeautuuiiy decorating it for the Christmas service. Tney left a colored boy in the church to start a fire In the stove, to which a new pipe had been attached, and to report ho it burned. The bov after building the fire set an arm-full of fat ligbtwood by the stove and lelt the church. It is supposed that the stove got very hot and ignited the lightwood. The fire was discovered by two colored men, who barely bad time to remove the organ and a few chairs. The building was in sured - for 1500. We ncderstand that work on a handsome little building will commence immediately. The Evening Dispatch. . A prospectus of the Evening Dispoich, a new paper to be published here, ap peared yesterday. . It will be published by a joint . stock company of practical printrrs, and the first regular issue is an nounced for January 10th. provided the projectors meet with sufficient encour agement. The prospectus, which is neatly gotten up, is issued as . a five-column folio, and is intended as a sample of the style and size -of the paper. The price will be 25 cents per month. "Bioeud Is Bleoted."' " j . Mr. W. 5. O n. Robinson received a telegram from the Comptroller of the .Currency yesterday, notifying him that Mr. A. G. Ricaud had . been appointed Receiver of the late First National Bank. Mr,, Robinson will be ready to turn over all the effects of the bank next Monday, the 81st. "Just! as we expected,' Ricaud is elected." He will make an excellent oflScer-.,.- j THE GRATEFUL VETERANS. They Bxnieae Their Thenks Tor the Christ maa Contribution Bent '1W , Wilmington. - - , j ; , - " Soldier's Home. Raleigh. N. C I- - December 26. Editor News and Observer. We. the old "soldiers of the home," de sire to give expression of our apprecia tion for the many kindnesses of which we have been the recipients from Col. Ed. Hall and Mrs. Holmes, of Wilming ton, and to put on record our assurance of the deep gratitude we feel for their unremitting and untiring kindness. Cut off as we are from home and. friends and all that is near and dear to us, we feel very deeply grateful for any Hall and the dear good lady but have witnessed our enjoyment of the nice things they sent us, as we assembled around the tables to partake of them, and bave beard their praises sung from all sides, they would have been forced to exclaim, truly it is "more blessed to give than to receive. Should any of those who are near and dear to those good people, who have on so many occasions so kindly remem bered us, ever by the withering and blighting band of misfortune be so afflicted as we have been, to seek an asylum here, may they always find as good friends as we have ever found in the kind-hearted Col. Hall and the dear good Mrs. Holmes, of Wilmington. God bless Mrs. Holmes and Col. Hall too, and all who show us any kindness. The Old Bovs at j the Soldier's Home. The British brig Isabella Balcont cleared yesterday for Jeremie, Hayti, with 121.762 feet lumber, 20,000 shingles, (casks spirits turpentine. 10 bbls. tar and -80 bbls. pitch. I value $1,967.93, shipped by James H. Cbadbonrn & Co. THE C0TT02T TRATJ&. C Hubbard's Weekly Report on? Conditions ''. " Affoetms the Ittrket. : ' - j New York, December: 2?. With the approach of the New Year the tendency on the part of all interested in the mar ket has been to await the movement of January, with airmail an interest in the market as possible, as this season of the year is always a critical, time in' the movement ot the market. On one hand is advanced the theory that the price has already discounted a 9,500 000 bale crop, and witk the knowledge that in all human probability the acreage for the. coming year will be largely red Deed, and that the use of fertilizers will be greatly curtailed, while on the other hand it is stated that the lack of speculation in all commodities in America and the fact that by the 1st of January there will, be 6,900.000 bales of American cotton in sight, which, added to the visible supply on the 1st of September will furnish 8 500 000 bates lor the consumption ol the wona aariog me year,, leaving me re maining portion of the crop as yet un marketed, to be carried over as a surplus either in the visible or invisible supply. These ire the lines of thought which Sss. through the minds of members of e cotton trade as they consider, the question of the fluctuations of the mar ket for the coming year, and either ol these propositions at the moment seems to be of sufficient weight to bring about a sudden change in values, acd it will probably be left to the question of trade conditions to decide-whether the falling off in the last week of December is only a spasmodic interruption ot the market ing of the crop, or is brought about bv exhaustion of the supply. Were it not for the. present . trade conditions in America, where the prices of all com modities are ranging upon an extremely low level, we believe that: the cotton trade would be disposed to anticipate a sharp advance as the result of the enoru btcb will undoubtedly be made to restrict the- planting operations in the Spring, but those who think well of cot ton are confronted with the fact that all other articles are similarly cheap, and that:there appears in no line any anxiety to anticipate the' future wants of con samers. It Is this feature which discour ages the holders of cotton as they other wise would consider the crop as having been discounted in the prices at present- current, un tne otner hand, there is un doubtedly a slowly , increasing demand on the part of many not connected with the cotton trade to invest in cotton. At the present time this demand, with no pressure to anticipate any further de cline, causes steady market s and im proved prices. It is felt that throughout the country there is a slow improvement ia trade, which is reflected in- the in creased -railway, earnings of all . sec tions of the country east of the Mis sissippi river, but as vet this im provement in business has not led merchants to anticipate any advance in the prices of the commodities which tbey handle, and is considered by all as simply pointing to the slow but constant improvement in the conditions ot trade. It has been this feature of the situation upon which the basis of the demand for cotton by 2 those not directly con nected with the trade rests, and the strength of ; this demand will be tested - should the movement dur ing January increase to the proportions anticipated by close observers, as up to this time the spinners of the world have come to the relief of the market and ab sorbed all of the cotton pressing for sale, so that the visible supply at the present time is only 100.090 bales in excess of what it was last year, in spite of the fact that 1.250 000 more bales of cotton had appeared up to last week than in 1893. A MURDERER LYNCHED. James Bergeron Swans np by His Neigh bors in Beaufort County. Special to the News and Obeerver Newbern, N. C. Dec, 27. At Idalia. twenty-two miles from Newbern, on Christmas evening. lames i F. Bergeron, unprovoked, brutally mnrdered James H. Watson, a constable, who arrested him for assault with a deadly weapon. Bergeron was tried and held under guard of tour to be taken to Washington jail Thursday. Wednesday at midnight seventy-five masked men took Bergeron from the guard, hung him to a tree half a mile away, riddled his body and left it banging till midday Thursday. Watson was a good, peaceable citizen. Bergeron was a quarrelsome , bully and the people of the neighborhood generally say that be only got his deserts. WELDON'S WATER POWER. Preparations to .Establish 7sotories at One. Star Correspondence. Weldon, N, C December 28. Mr. Bullard and sons and another gentleman of Boston, were here, -the other day . to visit Roanoke Rapids, formerly known as Great Falls. They were much pleased with this water power, and thought it strange that it bad never been developed. This water power is . within five miles of Weldon, and .is owned by Mr. Thomas L. Emry and a Northern party. Tbey are mak ing preparations to establish factories at once. Messrs. Habbeston and Cohen. of Petersburg, are largely , interested. Weldon is surrounded by fine water powers. " : ALWAYS IN THE LEAD. The Atlantic Coast Line to Pat on Fire Sew .Wind-Burners. The Atlantic Coast Line system, says the News and Courier, has a reputation for fast running, and in order to sustain it the management of the road always keeps its equipment-supplied with every modern improvement. When the heavy Winter travel begins the Coast Line will put into service five new engines which it has recently ordered.: It is believed that these engines are the fastest rail road locomotives in the South, : and that they will be able to carry the Coast Line' patrons from the North to the South at the rate of sixty miles an hour without trouble. The new engines were ordered in November and are ready for delivery to the company. . j General Manager., R. Kenlv, of the Atlantic Coast Line system, was in the city yesterday. Mr. Kenly came down to Charleston in his private car and spent the day attending to business for his road. He returned to Wilmington in the-afternoon.. The Coast Line is getting ready, to handle the big Winter travel which will begin early in the new year, and . General Manager Kenly is making preparations tor the rush. Twelve games Out of the thirty had been played up to Friday , night in the checker contest at Asheville, . Of these, Murdoch had won three, McNair one. and eight ; were draws. From the preponderance of "draws," it . is ! very dear that McNair has drawn his rabbit foot at last. ROTTJTHEBLH COTTOff KILLS : Great Growth of the Industry The Num ber ol Stills Has Increased fa fourteen i ' -Years; from 180 to 405 The Capital . Xnraeted Increased from, 921,000,000 . to $97,000,000. .... ; y. ' Slowly but surely the belief is grow ing, says the" Savannah News, that the South is to be the cotton manufacturing section of this country. The great cot ton mill owners of New England are finding it necessary to establish cotton mill plants in the South in order to hold their trade, and the Southern people, as they accumulate surplus wealth, are putting money into cotton mills. The announcement was made the other day that two cf the strongest cotton mill companies in Massachusetts had decided to butld large mills in the South to cost about $600,000. Each cotton mill that is bnilt is an in ducement for the building of other cot ton mills, because all of the well man aged mills pay a good interest on the money invested ia them.4 The reason of this is that the Cost of maeutactunng in the South is less than in "the North. Cotton costs less and labor is cheaper, v. For along time it was thought that satisfactory labor could not be obtained in the South. It is now well understood that as skillful operatives can be made out of the labor to be obtained in the South as there are to be iound in the New England States, and, besides, many operatives from the New England mills are seeking homes in the South. Tbey like the Southern climate and find the labor conditions more satisfactory. Southern - operatives are becoming better all the time, and it will not be long before the manufacture of the finer Grades of goods will be undertaken. While the progress of the cotton in dustry in the South was slow for years after the war, owing to the lack of cap ital and the ucssttled state of political affairs, it has not been slow within the last ten years.-" ,' V Fourteen years aeothe whole South bad only 180 cotton mills, with 600 000 spindles,1 14 800 looms and a total cpi tal of $21)00.000. A careful inquiry made six months ago showed that there were'405 mills in the Southern State, with 2,700,000 spindles and 62.000 looms and a total capital of $97,000,000. It is stated that besides the foregoing there are 20 new mills under construction that will require an outlay of $6 000000 and will add 285000 spindles and 6.000 looms to those -'already in operation. Surely this is a showing that iustifies the South in expecting the time is near at band when . she would - manufacture the greater part of her cotton crop. y There has been a large and steady in crease in the Somh's consumption of cotton. : Fourteen years ago the S6utb- ern mills consumed only about one- fourth as much as those of New England, while last year they consumed nearly one half as much, v y j The South produces fully 60 Der cent. ot the cotton of the' world, and there is no good' reason why she should not manufacture at least a third of the cot ton goods consumed in. the world. Her cotton, when manufactured, is worth about three times as much as it is in the raw state. A great part of the hundreds of millions of dollars annually that is ad ded to the value of her raw material in the mills of New England and Europe could be kept at home, and the South would become the richest and most pros perous part of the world. HOUSEHOLD KECLPES, I ; . APPLE PIE. Maxe your pie as usual, adding your spice and a little salt, and then bake. Pat your sugar , in a tin and water enough to make a syrup; let it cook, and when you take your pie from the Oven insert a small funnel in the, pie and pour in the syrup hot, and yon have a moist. finely-seasoned pie, without any juice in the oven. - Limon Pie. Grate the rind of one lemon (or if you prefer, chop it very fine), take the juice and pulp, add one cup of white sugar, piece of butter the size of a nutmeg, yolks of three eggs (well beaten), and two thirds of a cup of sweet milk, and one tablespoonf ul of flour; bake as a custard pie. How to Cook Cranberries. Wash one quart of cranberries and put them in a covered saucepan with one pint of water. Let them simmer until each cranberry bursts open; remove the cover and add one pound of sugar and let them boil twenty minutes uncovered. The cranberries must never be" stirred from the time tbey are placed on the fire. Follow this recipe ex-ctly and yon will have a most delicious preparations of cranberries. r THE DEPRESSION DT COTTON, What fa Said About It by Cotton Men in ..'-. Boaland. Messrs. Beer, Cowell & Co., of Liver pool, in a circular dated December 12, say: -I y "Our market continues to suffer from Neill's huge crop estimate of 10.260.000 bales, which seems to receive confirma tion from? the heavy movement, and upon which Manchester buys only from hand tQ month; so strong is the feeling that lower prices will prevail for this and the next crop .that there are free and large sellers . of cotton for 1895-96, be fore a single plow has' been put in the ground." . . ' ' "Thenrice now ruling, 8 8-16d for next October, is equivalent to about 1 cents on plantations. , We call your at- .ention to these figures because we be lieve that if ever there has been a chance to profit by bnying 1 any commodity so far as I twelve months ahead without having to pay storage or interest charges, cotton now affords that opportunity." "It looks to us as though the South would buy all these new crops at the S rices established (4Jc.) for them by lanchester and the Liverpool specula tors, instead of planting the next crop, if the theory is correct that the above quo tatiobs are below the cost of production. The quantity of these new crops sola daily would seem to indicate a strong belief on the part ot the sellers that cot ton cannot be raised much under ruling prices lc on plantations. Contributions for the Confederate Veterans Some. . ; 1 1 Mrs. A. H. Holmes, of this city, one of the Board of Lady Managers ot the Confederate Veterans Home at Raleigh, has received acknowledgment of receipt of Christmas contributions collected and sent by her, as follows : .f- ' Raleigh, N. C DeCi 26. 1894. Mrs. A.H. Holmes Wilmington, N. Ci My Dear Madam The four boxes and package contributed by the citizens of Wilmington to The Soldiers' Home were dnly received. f Please accept-the thanks of tne man agement for your continued interest Witn very best wisnes,i am. . ii - Yours, truly, I W.C Stxonach. ' 'SqNp .GEORGIA R, R. Direotors' tteetmg-Tfte Boajl'a Stoning. ;:';'' Br Telegraph te the storatag Stat. - New York. pec. 29. At' a meeting of the directors of . the . South Carolina end Georgia; Railroad Co. to-day, Mr. AshburyBurr, 'of Augusta,", Ga.. was elected a director to fill a vacancy. The statement of six months ended December 81st, 1894." partly estimated, shows : C Gross earnings, $618452 40; net earnings. $214 044 69; interest and taxes, $116,250. Surplus. $57,794.69. . By a recent act of the Legislature the company is - authorized to purchase, lease.1 own and operate a line of steam ships between Charleston and New York, and between Charleston -and foreign ports, and is also authorized to lease or purchase wharves and erect elevators and cotton presses, and lease or consol idate with any railroad in South Carolina or adjacent States. A MURDERED MAN Toond In the Woods Near Genera, ' Altbtm. By Telegraph to the Morning Star.' Montgomery, Ala , December 29. A; special to the ' Advertiser, from Geneva, Ala., says a -party of bird hunters, on Thursday, while walking through the woods, in this county, discovered the dead body ot Mr. T. C Lyon, lying! by a little mound. His head had been smashed all all out of shape by some blunt instru ment, presumably an axe, and his ap pearance - indicated that he had been dead at least a week. - ; Dick Stanford was arrested on suspi cion, as he had been seen talking with Lyon about the time he (Lyon) disap peared, and at the Same time had an axe on his shoulder. I . Stanford is in jail at Geneva, but stoutly denies bis guilt. !A PHYSICIAN'S MISHAP. Tell Into aVell While on a Visit to a . Bring Woman and . Narrowly Kaaaped - Drownings . " " By Telegraph to the Morning Star. . Upper Sandusky. Ohio, Dec 29. Dr. Alexander, ot Wyandotte, was sum moned in great haste last night to the bedside of a dying woman at Morral. He drove near the house and started to walk across the ; field. In doing so he stepped into anjuncovered well and Was only saved from drowning by Catching hold of an offset just above the water. He was kept a prisoner in the well until morning, when a searching party found him. 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