SBUeklg Jtotr. -'i'Hnui t WILMINGTON, N. C AT V..JU A VAR. IN AOVNCt. &HIAii iJMll 1 Royal makes the food pure, wholesome aad delicious. KLY VOL. XXIX. WILMINGTON, N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1898. NO. 16 'uiiHiumi 1 ii i I i iNS8qBBBasBsgasw The Wee Star qVS88888SS8sXgSSi:i; g 8888888a888giii5 w t gS88888S8888g8ii ,,,, , 888888888888888? ,WM 888888588888888.88 M . 8888e88888888888T A -,D asaagsa888 1 88888888888888? I : : " -tDOOMnvoe v c 5 t nteieH at the Post'Office at ilratrton. V C a Second Oaa M t.1 SUBSCRIPTION P iCE. The subscription price of the We ly Star is as iollowi! Id..... ...........91 m : an Smooth. " " AS AN ENGLISHMAN SEES IT. There are a good., many objections to a high protectiye .tariff, one of which is that it operates unequally and imposes the heaviest burdens on those who are least able, to bear them. In proportion to value it taxes the imported goods consumed by those in good circumstances much less than it does the goods con sujjW by the people who earn their bread by their daily labor. The reason assigned for this, but an un truthful one, is that the classes of goods on which the lighter duties are imposed are not manufactured in this country to any considerable extent if at all, and therefore they do not come into competition with home made goods, for which reason our manufacturers do not need pro tection against therm. That this is a fraudulent reason is shown by the fact that the professed purpose of the protective tariff is not only to protect and foster the indus tries already established, but to en courage the establishment of new ones. It is not simply to take care of the "infants," but to multiply the infants. It is claimed that this policy of protection has been highly success ful in establishing and in increasing the number of industries in this country. There may be some truth in this, and doubtless is. If so then why would it not have some effect in building up manufactories for the production of the lines of goods which arc now imported and pay but a small tax in proportion to Value, because they do not compete with the classes of goods made in this couutry? If the rich or well-to-do must have these goods and the tariff duties were made so high as to discourage their importation, wouldn't this make it an induce ment to establish manufactories for these lines of goods in this couutry? A good many people no doubt would continue to buy the imported goods whatever the tariff might be, but if raey could get the same kind of an artiole at home for a less price of course they would buy that on the same principle that they now buy scores of articles made at home which they once bought from Eunopean manufactur ers; but until they have manufacto ries at home to make the kinds of of goods they desire they will con tinue to buy the imported goods, and until the statesmen who make tariffs treat the goods- of the rich in the same way they treat the goods of the poor, until they handicap the portation of the goods of the rich as they do the goods of the poor, man ufacturers will be content with the the monopoly they .have in the lines they now make and leave the othei'3 to the European manufactnr erspwlth whom they would have to compete in the finer goods.. If there be anything in protection at all it should apply to all lines of manu factures, especially to all lines that can be made in this country, al though they may not now be made. This injudicious discrimination in favor of the goods of the rich fails to encourage the establishment of manufactories for the production of such goods, which is one of the professed objects of the tariff, and it fails to bring in .revenue to the Government which is another of the professed objects. Thus far it is neither a measure for protection nor for revenue. It doesn't hurt the European manufacturers of these kinds of goods for they find a mar ket for them here among people who are compelled to buy them be cause they can't get what they want any other way, and the only effect therefore of the duty is to make American consumers pay more, tne importer charging in proportion to the amount of duty he has to pay. How it works is shown by the fol lowing from an interview in Wash ington by one of the newspaper re porters with a representative of a London exporting house. Speaking of the Dingley tariff he said: "The Dingley tariff has not hurt any angnsb manufacturers in their sales of expensive and fine goods to custo mers in this country. ' There will always be a demand for superior lines of merchandise of every description from the eld country. My house makes a specialty of fine arts, and our trade with the United States w very satisfactory. The firms that send over high-priced woollens are doing a splendid business. They make cloths so much better and finer than they can be produced in America, for climatic reasons, that men who will wear only the best clothing cannot be satisfied with anything that is not im- Eorted. There is no sort of a tariff iw that your Congress can frame that will shut us out of your markets." There are several points inthis,one of which is that the tariff dpes not hurt the European manufacturers of fine woolen goods because they have a good market in this country being without competition in these lines. There is no doubt that they do make certain lines of superior quality for the reason, perhaps, that they take time and care in the manufacture of them. This may have more to do with it than climatic reasons. But the test has not been made to demonstrate the ability or inability of Americans to make equally as fine goods. One of the main reasons assigned for asking a duty on wool was that it would restrict if not prevent the im portation of wool and thus encourage the growing of fine wools in this country. Whether it restricts the im- 1. portatioifeof wools or not this English man insists that it does not ma terially affeot the importation of fine wools woven into goods. There is truth in what he says, I in tbiB extract, and even more in the follow ing remarks on tariffs in general: "At the same time, if I were an American, havine- oniv the hest. inter ests of my whole country at heart, I wouiu jw ior aosoiute tree trade. It is true VOU TJaV VOUr men het.ter wnomt over here, but they are worth more. A Yankee OTer.t.i ve nr lahniwr 'raitAlnaoac an English or continental working- man to an extent that justih.es tne dif ference in compensation. But the pro tec tiff policy does nothing for the la borer,, and under it his wages will eventuallv TO down To the onwatmnnfl of people it brings added cost for all the necessities of life ' and no corres ponding benefit You are too power ful a nation, too great in resources, to Sursue such a coddling policy. Let own the bars by the abolition of your duties and straightway the gates of all countries will be opened to your traders, who are now clamoring: against restricted markets." "In the race for commercial su premacy, with free trade, America might easily beat the world. If any man challenges the statement, I point to free trade England, and it seems to me that, except to the most ignorant auu ure uuiceu. Liiere is neen or no i further argument. The protective 1 .wl w,- 1 f 3a. -1 I arge revenues which invite wasteful expenditure because of their method of collection. Did the United States have the direct system of taxation in vogue in England, doyou suppose your pension budget would run to an an nual amount exceeding the cost of Germany's standing army ?" We must have revenue from some source, a good deal of it. We can't get it in the way Great Britain gets hers. While there is need of so much revenue, we. cannot even ap proximate free trade, but the nearer we get to free trade the better it will be for the people at large, who would then get cheaper goods, and for the manufacturers, who would gain more by the free entry they would have into the markets of the world than they would lose by making our mar ket free to the world. Free trade ought to be the policy of all nations. MINOR MENTION. Mr. L. A. Coolidge, of Boston, who has given much study to the subject of cotton manufacturing in the South as compared with cotton, manufacturing in the North, insists that the South has, with others, an advantage in the matter of wages alone which cannot be over estimated, although some under estimate it, and others think'that it will be but temporary, as operatives in the Southern mills will ere long demand higher wages, approximat ing if not equalling those paid in the New England nulls. Mr. Coolidge, who has been investigat ing the wage question in the South, says the rate is on the average at least 30 per cent, lower than in New Englandj But as a matter of fact, considering the cost of living, steady work, &c, the Southern operative is really better off than the NeW England operative and, if thrifty, can save more money in the course of the year. He calls attention to instances in which families earn as much as twenty dollars a week, children as well as parents being employed. It frequently happens that mills have to employ the ohildren old enough to be useful to secure the services of the parents, although as a rule they do not care to employ children. There is a disposition in some quarters to underrate the advantages in the South, but the fact that mill, build ing goes right along in the South about twice as fast as it does in all the rest of the country put together is pretty good proof that Southern men with money to put into mills are pretty well satisfied with the advantageb, which have been tested and demonstrated by the great in crease in the number of mills in the South and the success the industry has met with. There are to-day in the South more than half as many mills as there were in the whole country in 1890. There were then j in the 'country 905; ther$ are now in . the South 483. If it should become J a contest for supremacy or existence j between the mills of the South and ( of the North, then the mills of the North will have to go, for the fells' of the South have the vantage ground and will hold it. In some portions s&f, the world there is a great .prejudice against labor-saving machinery growing out of the belief that it makes-less work for workmerand consequently harder times fertheinl' This opinion is entertained by some people in this country. We read an article a short while ago by a Writer Whose name has escaped us, in which he attributed the business depressions in this country to-the general use of machinery which takes he place of Hand labor. This may be the effect when the machinery is first intro duced but it is not continuous, for in time more people are employed directly or indirectly in the building cl othe machinery ; and in other in dustries which it creates, than are thrown out of employment by the introduction of the machinery. Mr. Horace G. Waldin, Chief of the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics, who has been investigating this subject pre sents some interesting figures as the result of these investigations. He says that in 1850 the textile indus try in the United States employed 146,897 persons; in 1890 the average had risen to 511,897. In 1890 the employes in the iron and steel indus try numbered 77,555; in 1890, 175,' 506. In the shoe industry they numbered, in 1850, 105,254; in 1870, 159,097. The probabilities are that other industries employing labor saving machinery would show "simi lar increases. Instead of making it worse machinery is bettering the condition of the world and of its toilers. We are not surprised that Mr. McKinley, Miv Dingley and others of the yellow tinged statesmen should refer to the bond contracts as "legal technicalities." In times gone by when they found any par ticular clauses of the constitution in their way, they brushed them aside as "legal technicalities." When they want to do anything they let no written law nor techni cality stand in their way. Having quashed the Teller resolu tion in the House, the Philadelphia North American rises to remark that "The gold men should now take the aggressive and pass a bill of their own making." Now it should pro ceed to suggest a way by which such a bill could be got through the Sen ate, which is "agin em." An Indiana Odd Fellows' Mutual Aid Society has closed up shop with liabilities of $100,000 and assets a little over $3. Three is an odd number. Some of the Fellows in side seem to have been running that thing for their mutual benefit. When Miss Richardson, of Ken tucky was cut out of the honor of christening the Kentucky .she took it as philosophically as could be ex pected under the circumstances and concluded to get married. She is bound to have some excitement. In Germany the law . is when a man's life is insured and he loses his hands by an accident, he can claim the life insurance money, be cause as he can't earn a living he is considered practically dead. A pack of cards in the pocket of a New York man caught a bullet aimed at him and saved his life. But ftiis doesn't offset the bullets that packs of cards have caused to be shot into other fellows. A New York statesman has intro duced a bill requiring Chinese laun drymen to give receipts for Washee, washee in English. That is an in sidious attempt to knock John Chinaman out with the vernacular. "Fifty three men are trying to re form the Republican party in New York," remarks the Philadelphia North American. This is a stupen dous job for fifty-three men to un dertake. . - If Gen. Blanco doesn't succeed better as a soldier than as a briber his aspirations to fame will never be realized. So far he hasn't succeeded in buying anything worth carting to Havana. With the wave of "McKinley prosperity" the embezzling indus try picked up considerably last year.. The total of embezzlements was $11,154,550, an increase of $2,000,000 over 1896. The first cargo of American pig 'ron received in Sweden, ar iving at Gothenburg last week, .ame from the South and was dipped from Savannah. If Corbett was cured of dyspepsia by that solar plexus punch from Fitzsimmons, he might try a few punches in the jaw to cure that habit of too much chinning. There are bunglers in all kinds of business. There were 92tt duels in tltaly last year, but one amateur or bungler took it in earnest and killed his man. THE POSTOFFICE. Formal Transfer to the New Postmaster Will Be Made This Afternoon. CHADB0URN TAKES CHARGE. Ex-Postmaster Morton Retires With the Respect and Confidence of the Peo pleHis Management Has the Endorsement of the De- -partraent. The transfer of a postoffice where a large amount of business is transacted is something of an undertaking and is most frequently done on Sunday when there is least business transacted.. So this afternoon has been selected as af fording a good opportunity for the re tiring postmaster to transfer to his suc cessor the control of the Wilmington postoffice. This means that all the stamps will be counted out and the books, keys and everything else that pertains to the active duties of post master will pass from Mr. Morton's hands to Mr. Chadbourn's this after noon. Mr. Chadbourn has not made public his decision, if he has made one, as to who will be his assistant. The present assistant postmaster, Mr. W. C. af t, will most probably remain in the office for two or three weeks. The rest of the force are nearly all under civil service, and will not be removed without cause. Mr. Morton will be occupied for a week orien days making out reports and finally arranging the business of the postoffice so far as it concernsjhim. He will have a desk in the office of the assistant postmaster and will be ready to furnish to the new incumbent such information about the control of the office as he may desire. Mr. Mor ton s term began January 15, 1894. The Retiring Postmaster. In surrendering the trust confided to him for so long a period Mr. Morton may rest assured that he carries with him the high appreciation of the peo ple he has served so faithfully and so well. Painstaking, accommodating, resourceful and vigilant, he has won the respect and confidence of the bus iness men of Wilmington ; and it may be conscientiously said that no pre vious management of this office has ever given more general satisfaction. Mr. Morton has during his term in augurated many reforms in the mail service. Among them may be named the increase of service between Wil mingon and Shallotte from semi-weekly to tri-weekly ; free delivery at Wrights ville Beach, and the system of ex changing pouches of registered letters between Wilmington, Richmond,' Bal timore, Washington and New York, which has proved a great convenience to bankers and business men generally. He has made many other improve ments in the service, most of which have been heretofore mentioned in the Stab. One of the best evidences of Mr. Morton's thorough efficiency is his high standing with the post-office offi cials at Washington. He has been complimented on his good work by the First Assistant Postmaster General and the heads of other bureaux, and during the second year of his term he received the following letter from one of the most capable officers in the ser vice, who came to Wilmington and made a thorough inspection of the office: Post-Office Department, Office of Post-Office Inspectors: Goldsboro, N. C, Dec. 2, 1896 Mr. Geo.-L. Morton, Postmaster, Wil mington, N. C i Dear Sir Allow me to congratu late you on having such a well con ducted office and efficient force, and upon rendering such a very satisfac tory service to the public, as well as to the department. Mr. Craft, Miss Darby, Miss Bell and the other members of your force are so efficient in their respective duties, to say nothing of the postmaster, that I would scarcely know where to begin in paying compliments. Your office is certainly second to none that I have ever visited, and if I find one that is more satisfactorily conducted than yours I will be sure to notify you. Very respectfully, H. T. Gregory, Post-Office Inspector. The New Postmaster. Postmaster Chadbourn, though yet untried, has the elements necessary to success in his new calling. He is a man of education' and intelligence, with excellent judgment, and an am ple fund of good common sense. His business experience, too, extends through a period of many years, and the Star will be disappointed if he does not make an excellent post master. Freedman's Bank Depositors. What is known as the Lamb bill, re cently introduced in Congress, pro vides for the appropriation of $1,000, 000 to pay depositors in the defunct Freedman's Saving and Trust Com pany. If this bill shall become a law the amounts that will come to the North Carolina cities where branches were established will be, approxima tely, as follows: Wilmington, $10, 000 ; Raleigh, $7000 Newbern, $7,000. Receives Diploma from State Pair. Mr. H. Kuhl has received and placed in a handsome frame the diploma award ed by the North Carolina Agricultural Society to his son, Mr. F. W. Kuhl, of Thompson School, Siler City, for the best specimen of ornamental penman ship at the last State Fair. The di ploma is something to be highly prized. It bears the seal of the State and the signatures of R. H. Battle and John Nichols, president and secretary of the Fair Association. I j RUSH OF ORDERS. The Fertilizer Men of WUmington and Charleston Are Doing a Fine Business. NEARLY A TON A MINUTE. The Sales Indicate No Intention of Planters to Materially Curtail Production Prices Have Been Advanced in Charleston Demand Good All Along the Line. If the sales of fertilizers are a fair criterion on which to base estimates of cotton acreage and production, the reports from WUmington and Charles ton factories certainly do not indicate any determination on the part of plan ters to materially curtail production. Some days since the STAR showed that the manufacturers of fertilizers in and near Wilmington were doing a good business in fact, that they were a lit tle pushed to keep up with their or ders. Now it is learned that the Charleston factories have a rush of orders, and that there has recently been an advance in the price of fertil izers. The News, and Courier of yes terday thus refers to this question, which is one that possesses peculiar interest at this time-. The movement of fertilizers out of Charleston for the last few weeks has been exceedingly heavy. Some time ago The News and Courier printed an article based upon information gather ed from reliable sources to show that there was no foundation for the belief prevailing in certain quarters to the effect that the product of the mills would be a drug upon the market this season. The views then expressed have been fully sustained by the events of the last few weeks. A well known fertil izer man said yesterday that last week his company shipped out of Charleston nearly a ton of goods a minute for every working hour of the six days of the week. He had the figures with him to substantiate what he said. His records showed that during the week ending last Saturday he had shipped upwards of 3,300 tons of goods out of the city. There are ten working hours in a day, or six hundred minutes. This made him ship 94-100 of a ton of fertilizer every working minute of the week. The demand is reported to be Aod all along the line, and in more man one instance there has been a sharp ad vance, in price recently. Many ofthe companies have just about as much business as they can do, and they are kept in a rush all the time. A few days ago a gentleman who had made a purchase of a Charleston company sent in an order for more stuff "at rock-bottom prices.' A dispatch was sent out informing him that he could have his order filled at an advance of 37 cents a ton on what he had uaid a 1 veek or so before, and that if he wanted the stuff at these figures he had better wire his acceptance before night, as the offer would aot be al lowed to stand over till next day. He wired his acceptance. Similar instances could be multiplied to indicate the activity in the fertilizer business. The cases mentioned are not isolated ones. Leased to the State. The South port Standard says that the State has leased the out standing rice lands at Nayassa belonging to the Navassa Guano Co. and will put a force of convicts to work in getting the fields in readiness for cultivation. The camp will be placed near Navassa on the Cape Fear River about five miles from the city. Mr. George H. Cannon has been appointed manager of the farm RACING EVENTS. Newbern,' Washington, Greenville and Rocky Mount-Big Prases Offered. Washington, N. C, Progress: The Newbern, Washington, Greenville and, Rocky Mount Fair Associations have arranged a circuit of four weeks racing and offer the large sum of elev en thousand and four hundred dollars in purses. The classes range from four minutes to be free for all and the purses range from $100 to $500 each. The races of this circuit commence at Newbern on March 1st; Washington March 9th; Greenville March 18th and Rocky Mount March 28rd. There will be four days racing at each place. The entries for the first two races close on Feb. 12th and the last two on March 1st. Mr. George Green is the Secretary for the Newbern Fair and Mr. R. L. Davis, of Washington, N. C, acts for the other three places." NEWS PROM DUPLIN. Death of Two Prominent Citizens and an 1 Estimable Lady. Mr. F. H. Keathley, ex-chairman of the Board of County Commissioners of Duplin county, died at his home Wednesday, the 2d, of consumption. He represented Duplin in the lower house of the Legislature in 1895. Mr. H. R. Kornegay, for many years past a prominent attorney at the Du plin Bar, died Friday night, 4th inst., at his home in Kenansville. He had been in feeble health for some months. Mrs. Mary Brown, wife of Mr. Isaac Brown, formerly of Warsaw, now of Pilot Mountain, died at her daughter's home in Rocky Mount on the 3d inst. , of heart trouble. She was buried at Warsaw yesterday. Discharged from the Pest House. James Hodge, the colored man who has been confined at the smallpox pest house, was discharged yesterday after noon. He was relieved of his cloth ing, which was burned, and at the city's expense was furnished with a new suit of clothing from shoes to hat. Lam Gotten, the colored nurse, received the same treatment only along with his clothing was burned by Dr. Mc Millan's orders some Confederate bills, as it was not thought perfectly safe to let him keep them. Hodge was driven in a surrey from the hospital to the alley where he lives. I A DESTRUCTIVE FIRE, It Broke Out Early Yesterday Morning in the Town of -Laurinburg. LOSSES ESTIMATED AT $30,000. Several Business Houses, Two Livery Stables and Other Buildings De stroyed -Insurance About Ten .i Thousand Dollars. Specidt Star Telegram. Laurinburg, N. C, February 4. Once more Laurinburg has been in vaded by the fire fiend and her citi zens made to weep over the wreck of a night. Fire was discovered this morning at 1 o'clock breaking through the sides and roof of J. W. McNair's warehouse, join ed toj the main body of the store-room. Before anything could be done to stay its progress; the flames had made the leap across Fairley street and set the two-story building occupied by the J. K. ,Britt Harness Company on fire. From there it soon spread to the next building, occupied by the McDougald Furniture Company. In quick suc cession went the two livery stables in the rear, and the building occupied by Anthony Harris on the south side. Only by the hardest kind of work were" the flames here controlled. The loss is estimated at $30,000, with $10,000 insurance. J. W. McNair was the largest loser, having a $15,000 stock with but $5,000. There was no insurance on the livery stables; the other property was partially insured. THE PEANUT OUTLOOK. The Norfolk Market Nervous and Prices Advanced. Norfolk Pilot: "The peanut mar ket is nervous and, owning to the small receipts, advancing. An advance of about a quarter of a cent last week has been followed by another of about the same within the past day or two. Con siderable sales are reported as having been made of fancy farmer's stock yes terday as high as 3 cents, and a good many sales at 21 cents. These figures indicate an upward movement, which will be very gratifying to farmers. THE WILMINGTON HIGH SCHOOL. Miss Rose, One of the Teachers, Resigns on Account of III Health. The resignation of Miss Annie Lee Rose as teacher in the Wilmington High School has been accepted and Miss Rose left yesterday morning for & protracted visit to relations in Gra ham county. Miss Rose's resignation is occasioned by ill health. Ttye School Board has elected a suc cessor to Miss Rose, but owmg to the fact that the party has not yet accepted, the name is withheld from the public s Miss Rose has been a teacher in the High School here for the past four years and the School Board, her asso ciate teachers and the children who have been underher. tutelage, all speak of her in the very highest terms, not only as a highly successful teacher, but also as a lady of rare culture and admirable disposition. 0 She came to Wilmington in 1894 as one of the first teachers in, the High School, having just completed her course in the Greensboro Normal and Industrial College, and during her stay here has won many admiring friends who regret exceedingly that she has been forced to give up her position and leave the city. It is hoped that her health may very soon materially improve and that she will again assume , the duties of the position from which she now retires. Death ot Mrs. S. E. S. Willson. The Star notes with sorrow the death of Mrs. Sarah E. S. Willson, relict of the late William Willson. She passed away last night, in her 79th year, at 11 o'clock, at the resi dence of her son, Mr. J. E. Willson. She had been in feeble health for years and death resulted as much from a general break down of the system as from anything else. Mrs. Willson had lived in Wilming ton all her life. Her husband pre ceded her to the grave in 1882. Those of her children who survive her are Mr. J. E. Willson, of this city, Mr. Charles D. Willson, a travelling sales man, and Messrs. Walter and Benja min Willson, who live in Florida. Mrs. Willson was a faithful member of Grace M. E. Church The f uneral will take place Monday at 3.30 P. M. from the residence of her son, Mr. J. E. Willson, 615 Princess street. V Dead Man in a Box-car. A colored man was lound dead m a box-car yesterday morning at South Rocky Mount. Ten other colored men, evidently tramps, were found in the same car. Some of them said that their companion had frozen to death, but there were other accounts that con flicted with theirs. All the negroes are under arrest, awaiting the coron er's inquest. Fruit and Track Growers. A called meeting of the Executive Committee of the East Carolina Fruit and Truck (growers Association was held' here yesterday. Among those present were Messrs. J. A Brown, chairman. J. H. Westbrook, G. . W Westbrook, W. L. Hill. "It Grows More Vigorous." Christian Herald: "The Wilming- j ton Daily Star put on a new and most i becoming dress recently. Though one ' of our oldest dailies, it renews its youth i and grows more vigorous and attrac tive as it advances in years j ACTION POSTPONED. Result of the Conference at the Governor's Mansion on the Hancock Scandal. ANOTHER MEETING FEB'Y 22. All Admit That Hancock Will Be Bounceed s. Other Raleigh News Retainers Paid to Governor's Attorneys in " the Case Against the 7 Southern. Special Star Correspondence. , Raleigh, N. C, Feb. 5. The expense accounts made by the new railroad commissioners would make very interesting reading matter just now. There is no way of gaining access to these accounts. I understand that some of the aceounts are most ab surd. Among others is the following : "Paid J. L. Mott, $25 for services as guard to the commission office." Now young Mott is a son of the doctor and holds a regular position in the peni tentiary. At the Governor's sugges tion he was stationed at the commis sion office for two weeks to hold off the ; Wilsons and the enemy the Southern Railway. About all young Mott did was to draw breath and the twenty-five dollars salary. collector Duncan is appointing1 store keepers and causers in various narts of the district. The eligibles on the civil service list have been exhausted and appointments are made now of persons who have never stood the civil service examination. Secretary of State Thompson licensed the Pacific Fire Insurance Company of New York to-day. lhe Kau way Commission report will make its appearance next week. Clerk Brown is preparing some matter from the report for use by the press. The colored people are to be given better accommodations in the Union depot here. ' 1 he directors of the Atlantic Sc North Carolina Railroad met again this morning. It had been decided at the conference at the Executive Mansion last night, which lasted past midnight, that the Hancock matter should be postponed. At the meeting this morn ing a motion was made to adjourn until February 22, and the same pre vailed. The sessidn was a short one. Special Star Telegram. Nearly all the directors of the At lantic and North Carolina road ad mit that Hancock will be bounced at the meeting on the 22d; only two of the members of the Board are for him. The Governor would have had him ousted to-day, but desired to let him down easy. 1 The Governor's attorneys, Messrs. Cook and Douglass, have been paid three hundred dollars 1 each as re tainers' fees in the prosecution of the, case against the Southern Railway Company. STABBED IN THE SHOULDER. Colored Stevedore Cut With a Knife by a Negro. Yesterday afternoon about four o'clock Bristow Hurst, a colored steve dore aged 35 years and an employe in the Champion Compress, was stabbed by another colored man on Water streetbetween Dock and Orange .Hurst says he does not know who the man wasthat stabbed him, but others said that itwas a young colored man named Floyd Cole. After being stabbed Hurst ran to Front street and up Front to Mr. R. R. Bellamy's drug store. He was bleeding freely and his clothes were saturated with blood. Dr. J, C. Shep ard and a colored physician, Dr. T. R. Mask, were called in to dress the man's wound. They found a stab two or three inches deep in the left shoulder four inches above the heart. After the physi cians had rendered the necessary ser vices, Hurst was placed in a carriage and driven to his home on Fourth street, between Church and Castle. He says the man who stabbed him had changed some money for him and claimed that he had given him too much. Hurst denied this, and when he did, Cole, if this was the man, whipped out a pocket-knife and drove it to the handle in Hurst's body. Officers are in pursuit of Cole. J Track Dealers Here. Several gentlemen from Northern cities have recently come to Wilming ton for the trucking season- for the purpose of representing extensive truck dealers North. Among them are Mr. W. A. Sharp, of Chattanooga, Tenn., Messrs. O. C. Stevens and S. A. Townsend, of Philadelphia, and Mr. A. S. Maynard, of Chicago. All these gentlemen are stopping at the Orton. ALABAMA POPULISTS. Agitating Movement for Returning to the Democratic Party. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Chattanooga, Tenn., February5. A special to the Times from Birming ham, Ala., says: A conference of i score or more leading Populists of this county was held to-day. They issued a call for all the Pops of the country, February 19th, to consider a system of returning to the Democratic party, and participating in Democratic primaries. The leaders of the move ment say the Democrats adopted thi ropuusnc principles at me unicago convention and that the best thing for Populists to do is to return to. Demo cracy, act as a faction of the party and by united action wield a strong in fluence on the party primaries and conventions. It is said similar efforts will be made in various counties. Jerry Fountain, former Populist county chairman, is the leader of the move ment which is now opposed by the State Populist Organization. Monsumor Edward McCohran. bv virtue of his title an honorary member of the f ontihcai household, vicar-gen-eral of .the arch diocese of Baltimore. and for more than half a century pas tor of at. .Peters (Jathohc Church Baltimore, died yesterday; aged 86 years. turn POWDER Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKING POWOCtl CO., JEW YORK. SPANISH TROOPS - SENT TO CUBA. Minister of Foreign Affairs Says There Is No Aggravation of the Situation. U. S. MINISTER WOODFORD. Presented An Official Note, To Which Premier Sagas ta Replied in Vigorous Terms Work on Naval Anna- ments Being Rushed. By Cable to the Morning Star. Madrid -February 5. Senor Gullon, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, de clares there is no reason to fear any aggravation of the Cuban situation. The despatch of 15,000 men to Cuba, the minister asserts, was decided upon before General Blanco's departure. Havana, February 5. Captain General Blanco and General Pando have arrived at Puerto. Principe. General Blanco is expected to reach Havana m three, days. Madrid, February! 5. El Heroldo says that Gen. Stewart L. Woodford, the United States minister, to-day' pre sented an official note to the Spanish government, to which Premier Sagasta responded in vigorous terms. The work on the naval armaments is being actively rushed, and the Span ish squadron will proceed shortly tor the Canary Islands. Havana, February 5. Among the passengers who arrived here to-day on board tbe Spanish steamer Maria Chris tina were Senor Edouardo Dolz, sec retarv of norts and teletrraohs in the colonial government; Senator Elisee Giberg and thirty officers and 1,450 soldiers. The Secretary and benator were received by the Central and other companies and by the Autonomist Commission, who went out on a tug boat to meet them. The new arrivals were cheered by crowds of people on the wharves. i Cant. George A. Converse? of the United States cruiser Montgomery, ac companied by Lieut. Bamsey and U. S. Uonsul Uryce, visited the uovernor of Matanzas yesterday, and to-day the Governor, his secretary and the other authorities of of Matanzas, where the cruiser is at anchor, returned the visit of the American officers. London, Feb. 5. Special dispatches from Madrid say that the Spanish Government has decided to send two additional cruisers to the United States. The vessels selected will probably be the Cristobel Colon and the Almirante Oquehdo. Havana, February 5. (via Key West Fla.) The reported action of ex-Secretary of State Olney in contri buting $100 for the relief of sutrermg Cubans through the Spanish minister in Washington, ignoring Consul Gen eral Lee, is criticised by Americans here as tending to cast discredit upon the contributions through the State Department. The announcement that the gift was made through the Spanish minister was cabled here and given publicity and a prominent American resident, speaking of the matter said that the cable dispatch cost as large a sum as the gift. Insurgent (Jol. (Jamejo, a country man of Gen. Maximo Gomez, who suc ceeded leader Cuervo, has already or ganized two squadrons of cavalry in the districts of Guannor, Vogas and San Nicolas, in Havana province. Jill JJiano jjeia manna which has hitherto refused to admit that an an nexation sentiment existed among res ident Spaniards in Cuba, now recog nizes the fact that many Spaniards here believe that annexation is a ne cessity to save their lives and property. SPAIN'S TORPEDO BOATS. No Significance Attached to the Sending of a Merchant Ship With the Flotilla. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Washtnotom. Fhiunrv 4. At. t.liA Spanish legation no significance is at- i i u a- i . wkjucu iu uic souuiug oi a mercnant shin alrtiaor with fhn Innuuln flotilla which is about to cross the Atlantic. It is said at the legation that the sending, of the torpedo boats has been contemnlated for a Inner timo and Kaa been repeatedly announced through me press. iney are, however, Small craft to undertake thn hardship of an ocean voyage and it is essential that they be accompanied by a larger vessel to serve as a transport for extra supplies, particularly coal, which the tiny craft cannot carry in sufficient quantities for a long voyage. The merchant vessel will serve merely as a transport. She belongs to a merchant company having a large number of ships, so that one of them can be readily spared for this service. AH of these ships belong to the auxiliary navy and are subject to call at any time. The one now being brought into service is a small affair, by no means formidable, and useful mainly for carrying sup plies. The Populists in Congress have completed an organization, with Rep resentative Bell, of Colorado, as chair man of the joint caucus, Representa tive Shuford, of North Carolina, as secretary, and Senator Harris, of Kan sas, as chairman of the Congressional Committee. CONSUMPTION To the Editor: I have an absolute Cure for CONSUMPTION and all Bronchial. Throat and Lung Troubles, and all conditions of Wasting Away. By its timely use thousands of apparent ly nopeies cases nave ooen SO proof -positive am I of its power to will send l-tusu to anyone afflicted. 1 upon receipt of Btprwaa and Postoffice a.,. w.w&nreJyx. !