Kir rl'SLISKID A-" ( WILMINGTON, N. f. A YEAR. IN ADVANCE. (11.00 3888888888888888 88888888888888888 8l888'8S8888888888 '1 r a - m . aiiwuT , i p " . . "188888888888888888 83888888S8S888888 8888888888888888 8888888888888888 -'(-aSSS55S28a88 8888888888888888 li 8- I .-, cn o 23332888 the Post Office St ilmtgton. N. Second Class Ma ier.1 C. at SUBSCRIPTION P ICE. the subscription price of the We .follows: ' ' ,2 ' Single Copy 1 year, postage paid. " S months ' . .. .. ly Btar is . ii BO 30 t . tf 3 months " liK'lix K ITK TICKET. F0 CONGRESS. ah District John D. Bellamy, of New Hanover. FOR SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES. KiVst District Hon. GerirgeH. Brown, of Beaufort. Second District Hon. Henry R. Bry an, of Craven. Kiftli District Hon. Thomas J. Shaw. of Guilford. Sixth District Hon. Oliver H. Allen, of Lenoir, "dentil District Hon. Thomas A. McNeill, of Robeson. --euth. District Hon. W. Alexan- der Hoke, of Lincoln. FOR SOLICITOR. Ji .n District Rodolph Duffy, of Onslow. FORTY NEGRO MAGISTRATES. U.-nublican papers and speakers are u ving to create the impression "that- there are so few negroes hold ing office even in Eastern North Carolina, that the question is "not worth considering. Well; let us see how it is, and we will begin with Xe Hanover county, which in i liuh's Wilmington, the largest city in the State. , The eounty of New Hanover has Forty Negro Magistrates, all duly commissioned and having jurisdic tion and authority over whites and bhu ks alike. The county of New Hanover has six school committees, and on; these confMtteeg there are six negroes whose duties are not confined tefthe . negro schools, but extend to white ji huoljs also'; r: Tluf bounty of New Hanover has four w five Negro Deputy Sheriffs, whose duties bring them constantly in contact with the whites. The only constiible for -the city of Wil mington-is also a negro. ' , The city of Wilmington has Four (ew XegjO policemen,., including fhiee -itbatitutes. The county of New Hanover has a Negro Member of the Legislature anil ;t Negro Register of Deeds; and the ne,xt Republican nominee for tounty Treasurer, it is generally ; onceil.ed, will be a negro. t in. Lity of Wilmington has,three Negro Aldermen, and all the Health Officew, (four) are negroes. The Collector of, Customs of the port of Wilmington is a negro, and in the several departments of the Federal government here there are a least twelve negroes holding positions. ," Forty Negro Magistrates in one county! Think of that, white men of North Carolina! And think how many more there will be unless the Democrats control tho next Legis lature It is New Hanover that stunds at the head of the list in-the number of Kegro Magistrates now. But if negro votes elect a majority of the mem bers of- the 4 next Legislature other counties will be humiliated too. Mecklenburg and Union, Anson and Richmond; Robeson and Columbus, Brunswick and Fender. wil all drink pf the bitter cup. The negroes cast 120,000 yotes for the Republican ticket, in this State.,,, They know their power and they will assert it. We ask eyery Populist in North Caroljua if he ever dreamed that in voting to elect a Fusion Legislature he was voting to make Forty Negro Magistrates f6r the county of Nfw Hanover. No, there is not an "honest Populist in the State who believed that his vete was contributing to the degradation of the wlpttt race, and now that they have tidefr convinced of their mis take these Populists will join with the Democrats in electing a Legiala- re that will undo the great wrong Witt has heen p.nmmit.fcfwl- fe time has come when every decent white man in North Carolina should show the stuff of which he is made. He must decide now whether he prefers white rule or negro rule. The Democratic party is the white man's party because it is composed f white men. The Republican party is the negro party because it V composed mainly of negroes. Forty Negro Magistrates in New Hanover county! Let every white man ' North Carolina know this. tthe white men of North Caro i J!na win the next legislature, Qoy JjusseiliipU be like a bump on 1 iog.big enougr) to attract attention bt not to do anv Wm. ' VOL. XXIX. RTJTNTNG TEX SCHOOLS. The last Legislature in its desire to pander to the negroes struck a hard blow at our public schools when it passed the laws by which negroes can become school committeemen and thug have a voice in the govern ment of white sohools. White peo ple will not, if they can help it, send their children to schools which are governed, by negroes, or where the negroes have a voice in the selection of the teachers who are to havn charge of the children, and teachers of abilitv and resnectabilitv nonn others should be employed) will not, unless forced by necessity, go before a committee on which neerroes sit to y . make application, or stand an ex amination for the position of teacher. This may be called "prejudice" by some, but it is a fact nevertheless,, and it is with facts we have to deal. It is a fact that is recognized by thoughtful Republicans one of whom is State School Superintendent Me bahe, who in his official report speaks as follows: I "I think we should have an amend ment in regard to the township com mittee. Instead of having five men as we now have, who have charge of all the public schools of the township, I think it better to have six men three white men for the white schools and three colored men for the colored schools of the township. "We must dp all we can to avoid race prejudice. The mixed committees give the enemies of public schools and others something to object to. We must remove all the objects we possi bly can m operating our public schools. "We have two distinct races and must have two distinct systems of public schools, as far as possible with out injury to the general system of the State." During the twenty years of Democratic- rule there were no mixed committees, and the public schools improved year after year, not only the whitebut the colored schools, which received their share -of the public funds and were provided for without discrimination. The white people paid their taxes willingly for the support of there public schools but they will nqt pay taxes willingly for the support for either white . or colored schools if negroes have a voice in the government of the white schools. ' WHAT THE FAST TEACHES. The well-disposed colored people of this State never had a better friend than Zebulon B. Vance, of honored and sacred memory. As Governor he showed a deep interest in their wel fare and was ever ready to encourage then in every commendable move ment by his presence when desired, and bv his counsel when sought. He inaugurated the first' colored agricul tural and industrial fair ever held in this, State and perhaps the first ever held in the United States, and spoke to them only as a man having a sin cere interest in their progress and welfare would have spoken. But he knew the negro better than the negro knew himself, and he talked to him as a counsellor who knew him, knew his deficiencies and his needs better than the negro knew himself, his deficiencies or his needs, and hence he fought negro domination uncom promisingly and persistently while endeavoring in other ways to pro mote the negro's progress and wel fare. He knew what negro rule meant not only for the white man but-for the negro and told it in the following extraot from a speeeh de livered in the Senate of the United States: "Since their admission to citizenship they have been elected to both branches of Congress and have occupied almost every position under State authority. They have controlled entire States, lumnlio anil mn n iri nnl it ifs and in I WWMMuo , every instance their rule was marked by iauure ana ruin. j.t was a wur against property, intelligence and re spectability. The few years of their misrule in the South will be forever remembered in oqr history for their oorruptiqn, retrogression, and will constitute a damnable blot on those who authorized it, and who looked on with comnlacencv so lonar as the thieves were Republicans, the victims were Democrats." There is no honest ROpubJioan in the North now who .does not can didly admit that enfranchising the negroes in a body, as they were, was a. . blunder of the worst type, and there are but few of them who now care to discuss it. They admit that it was not only a failure, but a horrid failure, and that is the very thingnegro domination that the mongrel party nowjn power has done all it could do to subject Carolina to a second time. North Last week -the Monroe Enquirer entered upon its twenty-sixth year, and has well earned the liberal patronage it has received. It is a good paper, a good gleaner of the news, and ably and sprightly edited. It has always been an outspoken de- ,i- n Democracy, but in adai- tion to this is now doing splendid service for white supremacy. We present it the Stab's compliments and good wishes. If the negroes had an absolute irresistible maioritV in North Carolina, how many white men would be in office ? This is a conun drum we would like some of thp white skins who are working to put the negro over tne wmw take a pass at. ' The m NEGRO RULE IN GRANVILLE. Granville is another of the coun ties in which the colored citizen has been asserting himself and waltzing to the front. The following is the roll of negro officials in that county as it stands up to date: Board of Education 1 School Committeemen .. 18 Magistrates ... 17 Constables l In Legislature 1 Jailor . . . . . 1 In addition to these there are from three to nine negroes oh juries Of courts. Geographically Granville is not in the East, but central, but there are a good many negroes in it, and they are strong enough, to assert themselves and make themselves heard. There are'other counties in that section, such as Person, Caswell, Vance, Rockingham, Guil ford and others where they are strong enough to assert them selves and make themselves heard so that this is notan Eastern ques tion at all, but one in which the whole State is interested. It is simply a question of white or black supremacy in which Buncombe or Cherokee ceunties are really as much interested as New Hanover or Cra ven, the only difference being that out there they do not see so much of nor come into much close contact with the negro as we of the East do, but they will be governed by him all the same if this thing goes on. RETRENCHMENT AND REFORM. One of the campaign cries of the Republican-Populist stumpers and papers was retrenchment and re form. They charged the Demo cratic party with extravagance and a waste of the public moneys, and succeeded by their loud and inces sant iteration and reiteration in making a good many people believe it. They promised in the event they were entrusted with power to change all this, and to give the people retrenchment and reform and economical government. As far as the "change" is concerned they have kept their word, not by re ducing expenses but by increasing them. In his speech at Pittsboro, Chat ham county, Hon. C. B. Aycack told the kind of retrenchment they have given tfs by quoting from the Auditor's report, showing that the last three years rule of the "re- trenchers' ' had cost the people nearly $400, 000 more than the pre ceding three years under Demo cratic administration.- The figures stand thus; -' '. Expenses for 1892. ...... . $1,057,933.60 Expenses for 1893. . . . 1,319648.10 Expenses for 1894 1,195,620.25 Total for three years. . $3,573,201.95 For the last three years: Expenses for 1895 $1,349,335.65 Expenses for 1896, ....... 1,246,566.27 Expenses for 1897 1,364,048 29 Total for three years. , .$3,959,950.21 This shows that the retrenchers spent in three years $386,748,28 more than the Democrats whom they charged with the extravagance spent in the same time. What has become of it? They haven't been erecting any Stato buildings, building any railroads, making any turnpikes, clearing swamp lands or any thing of that kind. The increase in thr number of office-holders, depar 3nt at taches, &c, will account f rsome of it, but there still remains a great deal to be accounted for. As re trenchers thev are daisies. HE PROMISED HIS PA. Filial devotion is, an admirable thing. It is beautiful to behold, especially when it attains the age of maturity and is ahle to strut be fore the public and talk for itself. The Charlotte Observer quotes that exemplary son of his father, Hon. Office Hunter Dockery, as saying in his speech at HuDtersville, Mecklenburg county, last Monday, "Nobody need fear I am going back on silver. I pledged my dying father never to go back on silver, the poor man's money." Generally speaking dying people have something else than silver to think about, but it is really touch ing to be told :how this venerable citizen clung to silver so tenaciously and called his son to him and pledged him never to "go back" ou it, which pledge this filial pledgeist then and there tqqk without nental reservation whatsoever If anybody doubts this haven't we the word of the dis tinguished gentleman himself, who surely would not parade a death bed scene for the purpose of fooliner somebodv into the belief o . that he would never, no never, while the blue canopy bent over the green earth "go back on silver" It may not be quite clear what Hon. Office Hunter means by going back on silver. His understanding of it does not seem" to prevent him from running as a candidate for Congress on a gold standard plat form, nor for repudiating the free silver pledge which he made the free silver Populists and Republicans who nominated and supported him for Weekly WILMINGTON, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1898. Lieutenant Governor two years ago. He may have some cute way of harmonizing all this with the pious pledge o' made his pa, even if the man of average intelli gence can't see it. But perhaps it means that this dutiful son would never refuse silver for a bale of cot ton.' The Huntersville anecdote is, however, touching, although some what belated. ASSERTING HIMSELF IN RUTH ERFORD COUNTY. Rutherford is not in the East, it is in the West. The whites are in the majority, but the negroes constitute the bulk of the Republican party and therefore they are beginning to realize their importance, to assert themselves, and to demand their share of the county offices. John F. Carrier is a colored citizen, believes that "the horse.that pulls the plow should have the fodder,'? and therefore addresses a letter, to the white bosses from which the Western Vindicator publishes the following: "We have always been together for -the past thirty-three years in politics. Have we not? And we negroes have been true and loyal to the party. There have not been more than ten out of 1,367 negro voters but who have voted a straight .Republican ticket Because you have fooled us the first time we were permitted to go to the ballot-box to stick to you and stay with you. And that is what we have always done ; is it not? .Yes, sir. And that is what we always will do. We mean to stay with you, so if you hold office we will, and if you don't we won't. J3o, if you will not reach down and catch us by the hand and pull us. up with you, we will reach up and catch your hand and pull you down with us, for we must stay together, for that is what you have always said to the negro, and we have always stayed with you, and now you must stay with us. We will put out our own ticket in this county, and we know we cannot elect ours and you cannot elect yours if we can't get our man in you shan't either." Since Congressman Wliite (black) made that defiant speech in the Re publican State Convention at Raleigh, and gave notice that the negroes (who really constitute the Republican party in North Carolina) were entitled to more offices and must haye them, the negroes throughout the State-have become more assertive and aggressive, even in the central and western counties where heretofore they had nothing to say, but submissively voted solidly l for the white bosses who reaped I all the benefits. The changed attitude of the colored con tingent is rough on the white bosses, but the colored allies seem disposed to bring them to taw. LOOK TO THE LEGISLATURE. Since the days of reconstruction there never has been an election that approached in importance to the people of North Carolina the elec tion to be held in November. It is of the utmost importance because then a Legislature will he elected, on the character of whioh tho future weal or woo of North Carolina will depend, .: Unfortunately, we oannot oust the present incumbent of the Guberna torial office, for he, through the in scru table decrees of fate, is fastened upon us for two years more, and we must simply submit to the affliction, as trying as it maybe, with all the s n patience we can. rortunately, as the occupant of the Governor's of fice is without a veto, he can do the State no material injury without the co-operation of a Legislature. He has done her harm, inestimable harm, but it was because there were men enough in the last Legislature to agree with him and carry out meas ures inspired by partisan scheming or by personal ambition. We can not relieve our State of the Wight of Russell, but we can elect a Legis lature which will protect her, tie Russell's hands, make him power less and a cipher for mischief Four years of Russell is pretty rough, but with a Demooratio Legislature we oan stand Russell for two years more, for then it will be simply Russell without the Russell ism which for the past two years has given North Carolina such an unenviable notoriety. If we elect a Legislature this Fall it will be a comparatively easy mat ter to elect a Democratic Governor two years hence, for it will repeal the election laws which made it pos sible for the party,- or rather, party combine, now in power to pack the registration hooks with imported negro ballot-box staffers and carry elections by frauds the most stupen dous ever perpetrated in this State. There is enough to arouse the tax payers of the State to a determina tion" to rescue her from the infliction of another Legislature like the last, if by . courtesy much strained such a mob can be called a Legislature, f 6 the people have had to meet the ex traordinary appropriations, as hard as the times were and are, made by these squanderers of the public funds, who spent in the three years they h.aye had control nearly $400, 000 more than the Democratic ad ministration did m the three pre ceding years. This should be rea son enough why the people should rise against them and rebuke them for the trust they abused after mak ing such fine promises of faithful and conscientious stewardship. When the owner of a plantation employs agents to attend to the business of managing his plantation and at the end of the year he finds the expenses of operating im mensely increased without anything to show-for it, does he employ that agent or those agents for another year or get rid of him or them and seek the services of men who had previously done better work and more of it for much less money? This is what everv planter with sense enough to keep out of bank ruptcy or a lunatic asylum would do and this is what every business man no matter what his business, employing managers would do. Why then should the tax-paying people who have to pay the expenses of running the State government continue to-employ incompetent and faithless stewards, to manage their business when they know their money has been squandered, and the burdens made heavier upon them, without anything to show for it? A hundred and thirty-three thous and dollars a year is no small sum or the people to put their hands into their pockets and pay, with six cent cotton and other products which they had to sell correspond ingly low, especially when such an extra tribute upon them was entirely unnecessary and without any shadow of excuse. While this mongrel legislature, or mob, was doing this, adding one hundred and thirty-three thousand dollars a vear to the cost of con ducting the affairs of State, . they ooked with an eye single, and with a scandalous greed to their Own interests, and scrambled with an almost ludicrous energy forevery position that had a dollar in it Since the days of the sickening Rad ical orgie just after the war, when soulless adventurers and hungry native renegades raided the treas ury and stole everything in sight there never was. seen such a dis gusting and greedy rush for places large and small as was witnessed during the last legislature when the bartering of office was the order of the dav, and every man who belonged to the mongrel combine became a scrambler for himself or for some ward, or depen dent or henchman. A i hungry tramp begging for a cold snack would pose as a gentleman com pared with this gang of legislators, in their run-over and scrouge-out race for the pie counter. And these were the patriots, the loud-mouth "reformers," who osten sibly went to Raleigh to attend to the business of the people, who paid them for it, and paid some of them more than they ever before received in the same time or ever will again No people endowed with ordinary sense would, after such an experi ence, ever think of again entrusting such a discredited and disgraced gang with the management of their public affairs, and this from a purely businesss standpoint. But there, are other and more vital reasons why the people should look to the Legislature," to which we will refer later. THEY ALL DO IT. .We clip the following from the Monroe Enquirer: "I have said that I would never vote a fusion ticket again, but I swallow fusion now, negro and all." Those words were uttered by Jas. A. Marsh in the Populist convention last Satur dav when he was nominated by that . m . 3 convention ior couniy commissioner. "I swallow fusion, negro and all." What a word for a man to utter when white supremacy in our State hangs in the balanoe. Mr. Marsh may swallow "neero and all" now. but there comes a time when the white people of Union county will show him that the man who makes such an utterance will be repudiated. We have heard a num ber of good citizens express surprise and regret at Mr. Marsh s utterance, but thev don t know Mr. Marsn as well as we do. Mr. Marsh will swal low a great deal for the sake of a little office. He is built that way," As far as we know the swallower herein referred to has not achieved much fame outside of his immediate locality, but he stands as a sample. Every white- man who swallows fusion swallows the negro too. It was that swallowing of the negro which has so much reversed the conditions in this State and made the negroes as assertive and aggressive as they are. The Popu lists who have voted for fusion have "put life into the dead hulk of the Republican party," as Populist Sena tor Atwater, of Chatham county, says, and that put life into tne negro contingent and brought it to the front. These fusion deals were mado by the Populists machine managers, who have just made another at Ra leigh, with a full knowledge of all this. They are willing to swallow the negro for the offices they may get by the swallowing, "and they ex pect every Populist who will obey them to do the same. About the only difference between Mr. Marsh and other white-skinned men who vote the fusion ticket is that he has the candor or the cheek, whichever it may be, to own up and stand a self-confessed, unprincipled spoils hunter. Star THE TRADE CLOSED. As anticipated by those who have kept up with the movements of the engineers who are running the Republican and Populist machines in this State the trade by which they pool their issues in the coming election was closed by their respec tive committees at Raleigh Thurs day night, or rather Friday morning, for it was one o'clock in the morning before they closed the deal. As this was simply a trade for - the offices the people of either of, the parties were not supposed to be interested and were therefore not consulted. The Populist committee which participate in this deal had pre viously submitted a proposition to the Democrats accompanied by cer- tain conditions upon the acceptance of which they were willing to fuse with the Democrats. Practically this proposition embraced accept ance of the Populist platform and an agreement to give the Populists all the offices, federal and State which they now- hold. VeTy properly it was promptly rejected by the Democratic State convention to which it was made. The question may now be asked, did the Republican machine mana gers swallow the whole thing or. only the part of it which provideT for dividing the spoils. The sum and substance of this whole business means that these Populist dickerers who profess to be in favor of free silver, against trusts, monopolies, &c, agree to support goldbng -candidates who are in favor of the gold standard, trusts, monop olies, &c, and the Republicans who favor the gold standard, trusts, mo nopolies, &c, agree to support can didates who are opposed to all that and to nearly everything else that they believe in, and yet these merce nary traders in votes have the brazen effrontery to talk about "principle." 'NO TIME TO TALK ABOUT PRINCIPLES," That is what S. Otho Wilson said when Mr. Wynn, an anti-fusionist pf Wake county, said that f usion with goldbug Republicans was against the principles of the Populist party. S. Otho Wilson is the leader of the anti-Butler faction of the Populist party. He has been a trader from the" word go and thoroughly un scrupulous as to his methods to attain his ends, Such a man is not expected to have anv regard for principles or to have any patience witn people who may have more conscience than he has, or who. object tq bartering principles at the dictates of greed for office. b. Utho has played his game so long and with so little opposition that he has come to regard himself as a sort of mogul, and expects Pop ulists to quietly let him and others in collusion with him fix up thejobs, and then endorse And vote for them without question, because that means a stronger pull on the Repub lican party for Otho, and a chance either to be elected to some office which he wants or to get some fed eral job later if he should fail in be ing elected. Like Senator Pritch- ard, if he ever had any principles. he holds them "in abeyance" until he sees how the office-grabbing busi ness pans out. When deals are on it is "no time to talk about princi ples," which, to say the least of it, is candid on the part of S. Otho. Republicans Will Nominate. The Republicans of the Third Con gressional district have decided that thev cannot stomach Fowler, and will hold a convention at Fayetteville, Sept. 29th, to nominate a straight Re publican candidate. S. H. Buchanan, of Moore, and A.. H. Slocumb, of Cumberland, are aspirants. The can didate, however,, ought to be a negro, as the negroes poll nine-tenths of the Republican vote of the district Bellamy at Pireway John D. Bellamv. the white man's Democratic candidate for Congress in this district, will address the people at Pireway, Columbus county, Wednes day next, Sept 7th. He will discuss the great issues of the day, chief among which in North Carolina is the supremacy of the white race. As ireway is almost on ine line neiween Columbus and Brunswick a large at tendance is expected from both counties. ENTHUSIASM FOR BELLAMY. His Visit to Richmond County Has Worked Wonders. Lauririburg Exchange. Mr. John D. Bellamy, the white man's candidate for Congress in this district is gaining strength every day. His visit to old Richmond has put new life in her and it is not consid ered a thing impossible for him to re ceive a majoritv vote in it His speeches and house to house campaign have worked wonders and he bas received pledges of support from many that have never cast a Democratic ballot. The Star, received by Ex press last night a basket of 1 use ious grapes from the garden of Miss Kate Ochiltree, of Fayetteville. And we take occasion to say now that we had previously received from Miss Ochil tree the earliest ripe Scuppernong grapes seen in Wilmington this sea son. 1 NO. 47 DIRECTORS' MEETING. New Charter Read and Accepted Other Natters of Importance. The Board of Directors of the East Carolina Fruit and Truck Growers' Association met yesterday morning at 11 o clock at lne Urton. inose pres ent were J. H. Moore, Chairman; T. J. Armstrong, Secretary; J. AS. Brown, J. A. Westbrtfok, J. S. Westbrook, G. W. Westbrook, S. H. Strange, W- J. Hollings worth, W. J. Boney. D. W. Fussell, and M. P. Taylor. The meeting was for the purpose of reorganizing under the new charter. Mr. J. H. Moore, of Burgaw, was re elected chairman, and Mr. T.,J. Arm; strong, of Rocky Point, was re-elected secretary Mr. Armstrong was also elected treasurer pro tern. The charter was read and accepted,' and some of the stock was taken. The directors were authorzied, on motion to solicit subscribers to stock and re port at the next meeting. Messrs. J. A. Brown, C. M. Stein- metz and W. J. Boney were appointed a committee to prepare a set of by-laws. - The meeting adjourned at 1 :30 P. M., to meet again in Wilmington on October llth. BLADEN COUNTY DEMOCRATS. Met in Convention Wednesday and Put Out a Strong Ticket. , Special Star Correspondence. Clabkton, N. C, Sept. 1. The Democratic County Convention met in Elizabethtowh yesterday and nominated a county ticket. Notwith standing the heavy rains and almost impassable swamps, there was a large attendance. From every ,part of the county comes the news that the stray sheep, Populists, are comine: back into tne fold. Old Bladen will do Her share in redeeming the State next November. A good ticket was put up by the convention. Mr. Geo. H. Lhirrie was nominated for the House of Represen tatives. Masonboro Yesterday. The white men of Masonboro town ship met yesterday afternoon at Mel- ton's store; near Whiskey creek, and, Organizer with the assistance of Brooke Empie, formed a White Gov ernment Union, with a large number of members. Among the members was a former Republican, a former Populist and a gentleman .who had not cast a vete in ten years. MARRIED IN CHARLOTTE. Wilmington Young Lady Becomes the Bride of Mr. Ira B. Andrews. r" -v:"f - Charlotte Observer. Mr. Ira B. Andrews and Miss Lisette J. Bonitz were married last night at Tyron Street Methodist Church by Rev. Dr. Chreitzberg. The groom is an agent for the Im mediate Life Insurance Company, of Baltimore. He came to Charlotte from Wilmington about seven months ago. The bride is the daugnter of Mr. J . H. W. Bonitz, of the Bonitz House, Wilmington. She has been visiting for a short period at Mrs. Calloway's, who moved here a year or so ago from Wilmington. Mr. Andrews has many friends j among the life insurance fra ternity, where he is best known. They will make Charlotte their home. -4- THE RIEDSVILLE MEETING. Ponr or Five Thousand People Attend the Great Democratic Rally and Barbe cueThe Country Aroused. A gentleman who formerly resided in Wilmington but who now lives in the West in a private letter gives th folio wine encouraeine news unde date of September 2 : "It was my pleasure to attend the great Democratic rally and barbecue at Reidsville, September 1st. They had the best order I ever saw, and if any one thinks the people in this part of the State are not interested, they ought to come and see. I talked with one old gentleman 82 years old who said the last Populist had disappeared from his neighborhood, and every one I spoke to about the matter wouia say the Pop? are getting back where they used to be. During the last ten,-days I have been in Moore, Harnett and Chatham, and unless people are tell ing lies, there will be a change up this 1 way in JNoVember. Ue gentleman, always a Republican, from Chatham, told a friend in Greensboro, last week, that Chatham county would go Democratic fas sure as there was an election, l talked, witn a minister to-day who was at the speaking, and he said if the State. at large was as it was where he had been, t was bound to be redeemed. I have been following up the campaigns since vance ran tor uoveraor in iat and I never saw the people show the interest and the determination they are showing now so long before the" election. I'll tell you, Jarvis. Watson, Brooks, Kitchin and others made the people think at the mass meeting at Reidsville Thursday. It has been a long time since I saw such a political gathering there were four or five thousand people but if I live, I ex pect to see another next Thursday at Asheboro, Randolph county. GOLD IN THE TREASURY. The Total Reserve the Highest on Record, Amounting to $220,916,282. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Washington, September 3. The gold in the Treasury is steadily climb ing upward, and to-day again broke a record with the total reserve jot $220, 916,282, the highest in the history of the reserve fund. United States Treasurer Roberts, speaking of the up ward trend of the gold in the Treasury, said that out of about $40,000,000 yet to be paid in for the new war loan, it is likely that $25,000,000 or $30,000,000 will be in gold. It would not be at all strange, he said, if, before the tide turns, our total gold will be consider ably over $260,000,000. REP'POP CWJFEREKCE Plan of Fusion Arranged by Com mittees Representing the Two Parties. " MANY POPULISTS REPUDIATE Middleof-theRoad Men Preparing Straight Ticket for Wake County Norment to Be Pulled Down Other Raleigh News. - Special Star Correspondence. . Raleigh,' N. C, September 2. It was after 1 o'clock this morning when the Populist and Republican conference committees submitted their report to the Republican ex ecutive committee and had it ratified by that body. The agreement is as follows: The agreement was written by Auditor Hal Ayer. After being rati fied by the Republican committee, it was given out by Chairman Holton as follows i . The conference committee ap pointed by the People's party State Convention and the People's party State Committee and the conference committee from the State Executive Committee of the Republican party met! in Raleigh on September 1st, 189S. The conference resulted in a unanimous and harmonious conclu- sion to the effect that it was advisa- ble and necessary to effect a com- plete co operation of the two parties in the election of 1898, the details pf such co-operation to be arranged iu deference to the expressions of the va rious conventions of the two parses. It is respectfully recommended that the counties and districts p rooted to nominate co-operative tickets on mu tually agreeable conditions and the as surance is authorized by the com mittees and hereby made that their best offices and assistance will be given in any! matter necessary to effect the co-operation above recom mended and advised. Cyrus Thompson, Chni'n. People's Party Ex. Com. A. Et HoiiTON, , Chm'n. Rep. State Ex. Com, The above report was unanimously adopted by the full Republican State Executive (Jommittee. "2. E. Holton, Chm'n. w. S. Hyams, Secretary. Sept. 1st, 1898. Congressman Skinner was expected, but did not arrive". The Populist conference committee was the same old crowd Thompson, Ayer, 'Schul ken, Garrett and Peace. Some of the Republicans want Lloyd to come down in White's favor. A Pritchard Pop said to-day, -'No; Lloyd will not come down. I think it is to White's advantage for him to remain in the race." The chairmen of the executive com mittees will arrange the Lockey and other matters. - The Republican committee is in session at Its headquarters this morn ing, discussing questions of party policy. The A. & M. College, of this city, opened yesterday with a fine atten dance', One hundred and sixteen students were present yesterday at noon. The middle-of-the-road Populists are preparing to put their straight Popu list county ticket out this week and claim that many Populists will re pudiate the Republican deal and vote witTi them. ' 'A Republican officeholder J said to day that there is much dissatisfaction over, the delay in opening the cam paign "This nigger racket is going1 to play thunder if something ain't done, he said. J Mr. Richard Young, of Henderson, is mentioned for the Democratic Con gressional nomination in this district. The Republicans openly declared last night that Stroud and Fowler could not get anything like the full Radical vote. An un authenticated report says that the State committee will certainly take Dr. Norment down! but not before October. The Governor, so Dockerys friends .say will assist if necessary in lowering Norment's congressional colors. , t Special Star Telegram. A Washington special here says the Second regiment' is ordered to Raleigh and will be here in its in tirety within ten days. The Republican executive commit tee adopted a resolution requesting all Republican candidates to hold no joint debates, with Democrats. The resolution further advised union meet ings and speakings between Populists and Republicans when possible. THE SECOND REGIMENT. Wiil be Mustered Out and the Wihning- ton Boys Wiil Soon be at Home Again, The Naval Reserves have hardly gotten here before the news comes that Company K is also to be mustered out. Reference to the Star's tele graphic news will show that among the latest army orders is one directing the mustering, out of the Second North Carolina Regiment with headquarters on St. Simons Island. The regiment will go to Raleigh to be mustered out i With both her Reserves and Light Infantry back again, Wilmington's cup of joy should actually run over. BRUNSWICK DEMOCRATS ; Met in Convention Thursday and Pol Oat a Strong Ticket Telling Speech by Jno. D. Bellamy. -- Special Star Correspondence. Supply, K C, September 2. The Democratic county convention was called to order at Lockwood's Folly by;Dr, D. B. McNeill; Mr. Frank Gore was made permanent chairman, and Mr. Jno. H. Mintz secretary. The -., following are the candidates nomi nated for the different offices of the county: For Senator, Capt W, J. Davis; Representative, Dr. D. B. Mc Neill; Sheriff, David Ward; Treas urer, A. S. Kirby; Register, J. J. Pigott; Clerk of Court, Wij O. Mc Keithan County Commissioners, A. M. Moore, Warren Murrill and Chas. Frink ; Coroner McD. Turner ; Sur veyor, Jno. H. Mintz. The ticket is a good one, and can't be beaten. There was much enthusiasm and perfect harmony throughout the meeting. Jno. D. Bellamy, Democratic candi date for Congress, made a strong and telling speech here yesterday to as large an audience as has assembled at this place in years. He is a fine ora tor. 'He held his audience spell-bouird-for more than an hour and a half. His speech has done lasting good. He is in Boone's Neck to-day, and speaks at ShaHotte to-morrow and Shingletree Monday. 7!i f I