i a ' Hi.-!-. The leicdtls to. PB ISHIO AT : , WILMINGTON, N. C.f $1,00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. 888SS88888S888SS8 8S3g88fSg3fgSgg ,qinow 9 888888888S8SSSS88 VOL. XXXII. WHINGrTON, N. FRIDAY, JULY 12, 1901. NO. 37 I ?S888388888S88888 88888888888888888 " 8288888828S888888 888888S88S8888S8S yM ,.. S53S538833888 8288SS8S888888888 8888888888888388 : f ' a " a i " S s J s - i - s j s : i : : Knteri II at the Port OBc at Umtgtoa, N. C, at Second Clasj Maticr.1 SUBSCRIPTION P. ICE. ... -. The subscription price o( the "Wr Jtj Star Ii u Sin?1e Copy 1 year, pottage paid $1 CO " " 6 month, " 60 " 3 months M " 80 AN IRREPRES8IBLE COUFEICTiT During the- days" of the anti slvery agitation which precipitated the armed conflict between the North and the South, William H. Seward declared that there was an "irrepressible conflict between free dom and slavery." The conflict to which he referred was irrepressible only because, wild-eyed agitators in the North whose fathers had coined money by jkidnapping negroes in Africa and selling them to planters in tne South persisted in assailing the South because she held slaves. The fathers of these agitators had shown the thrift to get rid of their stares by sending them South and converting them into money, before the agitation began. .The con flict became irrepressible not because there was anything in the system of slavery as it existed which made it irrepressible, but simply because the agitators made tan issue in politics and politicians like William II. Seward took it up and made it "irrepressible." That irrepressible conflict hasn't been settled yet. It has got into the arena in a different form, and is yet an issue in politics. Then it wu3 the freedom of the "man and the brother" from involuntary servi tude for the benefit of a master. Now it i3 the freedom to exercise the franchise conferred upon hini by these agitators, the freedom to ex ercise it just as the white man does. That privilege was conferred upon the ex-slave thirty odd years ago, and it is an issue in politics yet and will be until these agitators recog nize the fact that although yon may churn water and oil together they will not blend. When the churning ceases the oil and water will separate and the particles of each will find its kind and they will go together. That's nature's law, and it is as natural for the races to get together as it is for these particles of oil and water. That problem will be eventually ameSectually settled, and the white people of the country in spite of tlie political agitators will settle it their own way and that will be the right way. They will settle it a3 far as the franchise is concerned and time and circumstances will settle the other other phases of it by the scattering of the element over which the contention is. the millions by controlling parties and Congress and Legislatures with their money, not always by the cor-, rupt use of it in buying, votes, but with- the influence it wields by the claims that it promotes the coun try's .prosperity, and progress, . and thug benefits the millions who ob ject to its domination. Under the tariff and the financial policies of .; the Republican party Trusts and combines have been fos tered, and not satisfied with that, the controllers of large capital, to get a more powerful clutch, are con centrating and combining until they practically control nearly all he manufacturing '.and productive in dustries, with the exception of the industry of the farm. Indirectly they control that by controlling the money market and the trad emarkets. The result of this will be organiza tion of labor ona colossal scale, not simply the labor in' one or two indus tries, but the labor in many, per haps all, which will or mutual pro tection make common cause against the combines whioh employ labor. Then the conflict royal will begin and be fought out, unless the com bines foresee and anticipate this by taking measures to prevent it, and remove the impression that the work man is to 'become the serf of the combine. If that conflict should come the sympathies and the moral support of the masses of the people will be with the workers, who in the end will triumph, for mighty as the combines are their very size will make . them more unwieldy and helpless, and compel them the sooner to yield to the demands of organized labor. PRESERVE THE FORESTS. . The forests of our country are more valuable than our gold mines, but they should not be worked in the way the gold mines are, that is, by getting all that is possible out of them and as speedily as possible, without any regard to anything else. That may be all right as to the gold mine, but it is not right as to the forest. The idiot who killed the goose that laid the golden egg didn't get any more golden eggs and was minus a goose, but the f orest slaughterer does worse than that, for he not only destroys what, if properly managed, would be a source of continuous income, but he destroys one of the earth's best pro tectors, one of man's best friends, and either ignorantly or carelessly openllhe way for incalculable injury in the future. This State is pretty well timbered, but we are already beginning to pay the penalty bf indiscriminate tree cutting, to which has been attributed the devastating floods that this Summer have caused so much havoc in some of our western counties. As bearing upon this we clip the following from the Popular Science Monthly: "When in our Western forests one is constantly impressed by the change in relative humidity wrought wherever the forest has been removed. Springs have disappeared and canyon and ravine are now dry where there were fnvmnrlv nerennial streams. - Under the leaf mold and other debris of the forest the soil is always moist, while on denuded areas in the same locality it is parched and dry. Everywhere the deep mulch forming the floor of the forest grasps tne aecenaing rams BLACK MARBLE. : Black marble is a very rare stone, but. it seems that there is an abund- ance of it in Cherokee county. )In commenting upon wat the Stab, the Raleigh Post and Charlotte Observer have had to say about the marble deposits of that county the Cherokee Scout, published at Murphy, says: j In a conversation with , Maj. A. G. Kinsey, of the Notla Consolidated Iron, Marble & Talc Co., operating near Murphy, he recently told us that he had plenty of black marble both at bis Kinsey and Culberson quarries, samples of which we nave seen. Ma. Kinsey says this marble, as well as the other colors, . will most favorably compare with any produced in the world. , ' At present his company is quarry ing only the gray marble, which is shipped in huge blocks to finishing works in Georgia, where it is sawed and put on the market. We will not -ouch for the story, but we have been told that the magninceot Jongreasion al Library at Washington, D. C, con tains unerosee marble mat was pre pared for market in Georgia, which State gets the credit for pro ducing it. So little is known about the ex istence of black marble in this State that persons who are pretty well in formed as to the resources of Cher okee county were not aware of the fact that it is found there, but it is therej'and in abundance, too. Our impression is that most of the black marble used in this coun try comes from Russia, either in slabs or blocks to be worked into finished forms, or in mantels, table tops, etc., for which it is admirably adapted. As there is considerable demand for this marble by people who can afford to pay for their fancies there ought to be an opening for a profitable business in getting out this stone in Cherokee, if it is as abundant as this extract from the Scout says it is. CURRENT COMMENT. SEWERAGE COMPANY. COUNTY TREASURfcR'S REPORT 1 . .: :" . ..... i r - - Why it is that the reconcen trado tactics of Great Britian in South Africa do not excite our in-! dignation when the same course pursued by Weyler in Cuba led us to declare war.' Augusta -vnromcw, Dem. . ; -:;;v':-'! Wevcan hardly blame the empress dowager for lefusing te re turn to Pekin, because she thinks a trap has been laid to catch her. After the behavior of the troops of the "Christian" nations in China she has every right to regard us with suspicion. Atlanta News, Dem. ,: - ' - Considering the superiority of this country's manufacturers and facilities for agriculture, together with its commercial boldness and enterprise, perhaps the best' thing fort England to do is to consider the advisability of getting annexed. Washington Star, Rep: v -- It should be . observed' that the threatened war between ',the" Steel Trust and the Amalgamated Labor Trust is not a contest about, wages. It is a question of sovereignty that is in dispute. The real issue to be decided Is whether or not laborers who do not belong to trade unions shall find employment , in TruBt es tablishments. The free right of contract is involved. Philadelphia Record, Dem. - -r Governor Crane, of Massa chusetts, has taken his place among executives of the real reform order of chief executives by vetoing a bill which gave a street car company franchises extending beyond the life time of a generation. The reform governor is coming into evidence very generally, and he didn't come any too Boon. Atlanta Journal, Dem. SPIRITS TURPENTINE. itw Deed of Trust for Security of $150,000 Bonds Was Filed Yesterday Morning. PROVISIONS OF DOCUMENT. the Bond Issue Was Authorized by Stock holders snd Will be "First Mortgage" ; f and Bearing Five Per Cent. In. tereBt Real Estate. In excavating a new railroad in a rough, rocky section of Pennsylva nia, which was a sort of snake reser vation the workmen have unearthed colonies of Bnakes mostly copperheads and rattlers. Every blast throws out a score or two of them and the workmen are kept busy for a while killing them. There are so many that it is necessary to keep patrols moving with clubs to kill the snakes and protect the men at work from being bitten. Mr. Loean, of Chicago, whore- tired from business the other day on reaching the age of fifty years, says every man who has enough to live on ought to retire at that age. We agree with him. When a man is well enough fixed for that, if he has any work to do he ought to hire some body and do it by proxy. That would give the other fellows who are hot so well fixed a better chance. Chatham Record: President McKinley has issued a pardon for Mr. Jap L. Johnson, who was sentenced by the Federal Court last December to twelve months in our county jail. The pardon is conditioned upon the payment of the fine of $100 and all -costs. Lewisburg Times: Mr. S. S. Ragan, aged 75 years, less 10 days, died Saturday, the 29th of June, at his home in Harris' township. His wife Nancy, aged 75 years and 15 days passed away also just six hours pre viously. The remains of both husband and wife were taken to Mapleville and interred in the same grave on Sunday following. . Monroe Enquirer: Mrs. J. I. Richardson, of Buford township, and Mrs. Josiah Helms, of Vance town ship are sisters, and, although they do not live more than twenty-five miles apart, they bad not, until last Monday, when they met here in the court bouse, seen each other since the close of tne civil war. Tne sisters naa to be introduced as they did not recog nize each other. Tarboro Southerner: Over the th TC O. road have been shipped this season fifty or sixty crates of feuckel berries. This is simply a beginning. Next year the shipments will probably be very large. In the neighborhoods of Turn8ge and Toddy these berries are said to be very abundant and re markably large. If expectations are realized the profits on the huckieberrv crop of these sections will.) exceed those on cotton and peanuts and to bacco. Chadbouro Messenger: A com pilation from the record of the daily ohinmATits nf the railroad agent shows that 40.000 crates of strawberries have The Russian cotton crop for this year is estimated at 1,556,000 bales, which will give some idea of how il. t : nn IUB xvuaaiauB arc F'-S' u L"" "V;" A tnm r-h.rthm, and 10.. ton growers. The industry is in its 000from Grist't Station, making a to infancy there yet. Ten years ago I tal of 50,000 crates for the past season, the first seed, procured in Georgia, were planted. ' A Kenosha, Wis., man claims to have mastered the problem of "per petual motion" and constructed a machine which couldn't stop if it wanted to. It has been running which is a gain of about 50 per cent. over the shipments of the year lauu, and an increase of about 100 per cent, over 1899. The shipments aggregated in value $106,928. Wadesboro Messenger-Intelligencer: A negro was arrested near Hoffman, Richmond county, Tuesday charged with assaulting a 7-yearTold colored girl. The negro is now in iftil at Rockingham. The crime is said But long before that is done this and meit'ng snows and guides them steadily for eight months without to have been a "very atrocious one. country may be confronted by an- into the deeper, rewssesof the earth. losing a Becondr He has been work- jSged withaftempting to assault CO otlwr problem which may become quite as irrepressible as was the conflict between negro slavery and freedom, perhaps more far-reaching because it will be a conflict involv ing the freedom of the white man and saving him from a condition as bad if not worse than-. was that of the negro slaye in the South. This will be the conflict between organ ized, combined capital and organ ized and unorganized labor, the advance demonstations of which we have already hadK some of which are with ua now in the coniicts in certain branches of the iron and . steel industry, and other callings where skilled labor is employed. This conflict has not lecome irre pres8ible yet; and it will depend much upon the course of the com bines which employ labor whether it do or not. They can prevent it from being irrepressible if they will; but will they?; When the conflict over involun tary servitude ended in the emanci pation of the slaves the foundation was laid for the system which en gendered the other irrepressible con flict, which has become more appar ent year after year until it has asr or even the mulch and litter forming the forest floor, as it so orten is by fire or the excessive grazing of sheep, the rains for the most part, instead, of sinking into the soil, pass over the surface, carrying silt and otb er debris into the streams reser voirs, causing vital injury to irri gation enterprises. So, also, in the semi arid regions, where there are no forests or where they have been de stroyed, the wind has a free sweep, resulting in an enormous increase in evaporation. In some instances the evaporation from a water surface ex posed to the free sweep of the wind reaches a maximum of thirteen inches ;n . .nia- month, in exnosea situa tions snows a foot in depth are fre quently lapped up in a single day without even moistening the soil be neath. We do not appreciate how great the necessity for the preservation of the forests is to the irrigable West. Reservoirs for the purpose of impound ing water to be used in irrigation have been constructed by private enterprise in many prts of the West, and the possibility of governmental construc tion of such reservoirs is by no means improbable. Effective reservoirs are not possible in our irrigable regions without due regard for the forests that feed the sreams which fill them. For esters everywhere are the great pre venters of erosion, and nowhere is this more evident than in our Western mountains. The utility or reservoirs, ing on it for thirty years. A Boston man, and his name is Smith, has made a discovery which will be worth $250,000,000 to him if it pans out as he hopes it will. He has discovered that he is the owner of 160 acres of land in the heart of Chicago, covered with nice and nobby houses. i Mr. Parsons, the English projec tor of the Parson's Turbine, says if vessels used as war scouts had his wheel they could make fifty miles an hour and need not carry guns. But suppose the chasing vessel had the Parson's turbine what then? a TOiinir ladv of White Store town ship, gave himself up Tuesday morn ing, had a preliminary hearing before I. F. Myers, Esq , later in the day and was by him committed to jail. Nashville Graphic: Reports from the country show that the peaf nut crop,- which has been materially increased in this county this year, is not so good as was expected, and m many sections the stand is very bad. - A bunch of turf oats, grown by Mr. W. T. Rose, has been sent to this office. The specimen is indeed fine. It shows that from one seed one hun dred and fifteen heads were grown, all of which cluster from one root. The average number of heads grown on A deed.: of trust to th West End Trust and Safe Deposit Trust Com pany, of Philadelphia was yesterday filed f or record at the Court House by the W lniiagton Sewerage Company to secure $150,000 of its bonds to be floated for the purpose of establishing its ss stem of sanitary sewerage in this city! The document contains upwards of 10,000 words and is printed iu pam phlet form of date July 1st. The issue of bonds was authorized at a meeting of the stockholders of the Sewerage Company at Wilmington, May I6)h, 1901, all the stockholders having been present in person and action l aving been unanimous in this particular. The bonds are to be first mortgage, five per cent, numbered consecutively from 1 to 300, inclusive, of the denomi nation of $500 each and dated May 1st, 1901, maturing in thirty years and payable at the office of the Trust Com pany in Philadelphia, the interest' being payable also at the same place semi-annually. The property transferred in the deed is all real estate, houses, leases, ma chinery and all other property now owned or that may hereafter be ac quired by the Sewerage Cowpany, all real and personal estate, franchises and property of every kind name and value, wherever situated, now owned by, and which may be hereafter ac quired, and all rights, powers, priv ileges and franchises which may have been granted to or conferred upon the Sewerage company by the city or otherwise, or which may hereafter be acquired, situated in and near the city of Wilmington, all the erections, build ings, machinery, pipe etc., purchased or in any way acquired or may yet be acquired in and about the construction, maintenance and operation of a system of sewerage in Wilmington ; all the net income, rents, profits and money derived or to be derived from any con tracts whatsoever. The real estate owned by the company is set forth as a parcel of land on the west ern edge of Burnt Mill Creek, containing about one-half acre, more or less, with right of way on, in and over Hall street to Wood street, thence southwardly on Wood street for a distance included by the bound aries of the property of Walter G. MacRae, for the laying and building of pipes and manholes. Next follows in the instrument an enumeration of the articles of agree ment between the two parties to the contract, one of which is that should the Sewerage company default in the payment of interest and continue such defalcation for six months or fail to fulfill any other condition of the con tract then then the whole of the prin cipal of the bonds with interest, shall at the option of the Trustee, become immediately due and payable or the Trust Company shall have power to take charge of the property and carry on the business until a sale byJaw is authorized. The document is signed by Wm. E. Worth, president, and Edgar G. Parmele, secretary of the Wilmington Sewerage Company and Horace A. Doan, president, and Chas. E. Wol bert, secretary of the West End Trust and Safe Deposit Company. Examined by Anditlof Committee of Bosrd of County tommlBsIoners Re ceipts and Expenditures, v . The auditing committee of the Board of County Commissioners met yester day afternoon at the usual hour and passed upon the June report of County Treasurer H. McL. Green. Messrs. Holmes and Vollers were the only members in attendance, Chairman Mc Eachern having gone to Raleigh to confer with the Corporation Commis sion relative to certain taxation mat" ters. A summary of the Treasurer's report is as follows: Receipts Balance general fund, $10,079.57; special fund, $3,137.17. Schedule B. tax, $3,171.70; marriage license $15.20; back taxes, $83.19; rants, $36; jury tax, $6. Total, $15,-577.83. Disbursements Public buildings, $34 52; roads and bridges, $79.88; City Hospital, $350; County Home, $132; Superior Court, $160; Criminar Court, $789.20; jail, $147.20; stationery and advertising, $13.05; Magistrates, $1.47; outdoor poor, $382.58; tax listing, $143.80; Commissioners, $27.70; Attor ney, $25; Superintendent of Health, $100; Coroner, $94.10; eleotions,$587. 52; permanent road improvement, $689.39; Clerk, $50; Janitor, $45; Treasurer's commissions on receipts, $28,76; on disbursements, $44.92. Total, $3,667.69. The balance to July account is, general fund, $8,712.97; to special fund, $2,137.17. Prominent Duplin Citizen Dead. News was received here yesterday of the death of Mr. Luther R. Matthews, a prominent citizen of Duplin county. Mr. Matthews was a gallant Confeder ate soldier, serving faithfully the Lost Cause till wounded and taken prisoner , at Fort Anderson. He married Miss Mary C. Craft, - of this city, and she with four children, Mrs. J. J. Robin son, of Black River, and Messrs, L. R., W. C. and Archie E. Matthews, sur vive him. Elected Representative. Mr. Albert B Guy ton has been elected representative from Branch No. 64, of the Letter Carriers' Associ ation, of this city, to the National Convention which meets at Chatta nooga, Sept 7th. Mr. Guy ton at one time previous represented the Winston branch at a National Convention. THE CHARBON PLAQUE. Surrender of Oeneral Ballarmino With One Thousand Men and Arms to Colonel Wlnt, By Cable to the Morning star. Manila, July 6. The forces of the insurgent leader Bellarmino, which ,t have recently been operating around Donsol, province of ttorogon, ' were driven across the . mountains by the Second infantry and finally captured - by the Bixth cavaUy. Ballarmino, with l.uuu men and 284 guns, surren dered to Colonel Wint at Albay, capital of the province of that name. One hundred more rifles will be sur rendered to-morrow. Later in the day the official an nouncement of the surrender of Bal larmino was made. According to this account, Ballarmino, who has been operating in the province of Sorogon, surrendered Thursday last LYNCHING NEAR SMITHFIELD. Negro Brnte Hanged by a Mob for Crimi nal Assault Un a Young White Woman. A Twine Battleship. A full-rigged battleship, armed and ready for action, forms an attractive display in one of the windows of Mr. Charles D. Foard's hardware store, on South Front street. The hull is formed with two pieces of galvanized iron, filled with balls of jute twine, two sledge handles form the mast and the yard arms are made of buggy spokes and hammer handles; the funnel is a joint of stove pipe; the deck rail is made of bolts and brass jack chain ; T bolts are used for anchors; the guns, twelve in number, are black pipe, four on each side, two each forward and after turrets. The furled sails are balls of cotton twine. In the window the vessel is surrounded with hanks of twine so arranged to represent the sea. The ship was designed and rigged by Mr. P. Heinsberger, Jr., a salesman with the house. Negro Brutally Assaults Another. Justice Fowler yesterday sent to jail for the forthcoming term of the Superior Court, Harrison Brownrcol ored, charged with murderous assault upon Eddie Eggerson. his room mate at a colored dwelling in "Brooklyn.1' Eggerson bad lost a sum of money from a trunk in the room and had in timated that Brown had stolen it. On the morning of June 28th, while Eggerson was standing in front of the bureau in the room arranging his cravat, Brown went into the yard, secured an axe handle and approach ing the negro at the glass from the rear, felled him to the floor by a heavy blow across the left eye and struck him three times while his victim was on the floor unconscious. He was only yesterday able to be up to prose cute his assailant. Painting Walker Memorial Hospital. Mr. J. E. Hatch, the well known painter and decorator, has the contract for repainting the interior of the James Walker Memorial Hospital and expects to complete the work by Tues day or Wednesday of this week, when it is expected that the splendid new institution will be formally turned over to the new board of managers. The transfer would have been made before but the painting was done by another party than Mr. Hatch and was unsatisfactory. Mr. Hatch was then given the contract and hopes to have it completed as stated. State Officials of Mississippi Itave Taken Hold of the Situation. By Telegraph to tne Morning Star. Jackson, Miss., July 6. The State has taken hold of the charbon situ ation in Bolivar county and by quar antining the affected district and burn ine the carcasses of dead animals hopes to stamp out the disease before further damage is done. The State board of health, board of public contracts, and oitizens of Bolivar held a joint, meet- incr to dav to discuss the situation The board of contracts is composed of the attorney general, treasurer and auditor of the State. They petitioned the Governor to spend $1,000 in this cause.- Should be agree, the board of health will take immediate charge. It is nossible the Governor will decline. as the legislative appropriation is available only on recommendation of the board of public contracts approved by the Governor and they did not con template an expenniture on live siock, MURDEROUS ATTACK atLegaspi, on Albay bay, with,; 82 officers, 215 guns and 8,000 : rounds of ammunition. The insurgent presidentes of that section of the coun- try ana many r liipmos accompamea Ballarmino, who gave himself up to Colonel Theodore J. Wint oi. the Sixth cavalry. In all, since June 1st, 1881 insurgents have surrendered in that district. Colonel Wint's regi ment came from China with General Chaffee. Before disembarking at Legaspi, Colonel Wmt went to Gen eral Chaffee and asked the latter if he desired him to clean up that part of the country. General Chaffee re plied: 'Ye8, but I do not command until July 4." In three weeks Ballarmino was cor nered, in spite of the theories of many officers that cavalry could not be used in effective operations in such a coun t'y- .. . . . Former Fuinino omcers wno De- longed to Malvar's command, report that fifty insurgents were killed and that many were wounded by the com mand of Lieutenant Manaci m during a recent two days' fight in the province of Batangas. The Twentieth infantry has been ordered irom xsorwern Luzon to Batangas. Civil Governor Taft and military Governor Chaffee are working agree ably together. They are holding in formal conferences and are arriving at mutual understandings, a state of affairs hitherto almost unknown. The insurgent general Cailhs, who surrendered at Santa Cruz, Laguna Eroylnce, June 24th, and his friends, ave offered to negotiate with Mai- vara, the insurgent leader in ooutnern Luzon, for the latter's surrender. - THE HEAT WAVE BROKEN. Made by a Netro With an Ice Axe On a White Girl. By Telegraph to the Morning star. Potjghkehpsie, N. Y., July 6. . James H. Oliver, a negro 23 years old, made a murderous attack yesterday on Miss Esther Sleight, seventeen years old. in the yard of the Staatsburg hotel. He struck her with an ice axe and inflicted a terrible wound. Prompt work in sending the negro to mil nrevented a lynching. Oliver went to Poughkeepsie from Nawnort News. va.. a short time ago. and was employed about the hotel stables. Miss Sleight was also em ployed in the hotel, and the negro often found fault with the food given him by her. Yesterday Miss Sleight was in the hotel yard hanging up clothes and Oliver was washing a wagon. Suddenly he left his work and seizing an ice axe, stole over to the girl and struck her on the back of the head. NEWS OF THE NAVY. Cruiser Newark at New York Orders to ReE8tablish European Station, By Telegraph to the Morning Btar. New York, July 6. The United States cruiser Newark, Captain Mc Calla, flying the homeward bound Smnant, arrived this afternoon from ong Eong via Gibraltar after a fine run of forty-seven days. The New ark left Hong Kong on May 25th, passing through the Suez canal. She left Gibraltar on June 25th. Washington, July 6. Captain B. H. McCalla has been detached from the command of the Newark and or dered to command thejKersarge. The Navy Department has issued formal orders re-establishing the Euro pean station with Rear Admiral J. B. Cromwell in command. The cruiser Chicago is ordered to proceed from Rio and will be the flagship of the Admiral. THREE MASKED MEN Governor Stone," of Pennsylvania, vetoed a divorce bill passed by the Legislature on the ground that the divorce business was already over Anna in t.hn State and didn't need any more fostering. Alabama is, getting the oil fever w "NnmfiTons convDanies nave lWUI mmv A By Telegraph to the Morning star. Chaelottk, N. C, July 3. A negro named Jim Bailey, was lynched near Smithfield, N. C, last night for assaulting a white girl. Yesterday at noon Maud Strickland, the fourteen- this peculiar variety is about eighty- year old .daughter of a farmer living five to ninety. . Uearl BiHtto th to Fayetteville Observer: Sher- S&SSl tatET riff Burns received J6 J?" ahead. Her little sister was with her. morning from D. J- Griffith, auperin- Tna neePO told the sister to go on or tendent of the South Carolina peniten- - km her He caus;nt Maud iia-Kxr at rVilnmhia saving tuftl IQ6 , , , j tnnJ ku TTn description of Richard Nigger, in jau lufl Bistep rjm back to her father and hora answers the description OI Kicn I ... . . , . .A .ann-A Qtriftlr- , A. j fmm I uiui uu u.Prv. ard Simmons, an cboic his penitentiary, who was servinga ..nhnis fnr hiirorl&rv. CaPU W. G. McLauchlin owns a dog that is a to bacco chewing fiend. When or how this animal acquired the accomplish MAnt i9 tim known The dog. which is a fine pointer named Don, was brought here from the estate of the late Capt. T. J, Green, at White Hall. Riarian nnnntv. Wnet) ne Iir8fc nit : and to a lesser extent of distributing i . , , qn.:- I thA ftnjm9i would almost go into Canals and laterals, become, destroyed been organized to bore for Oil. Th s the imal woum v,. All oritH.Bilt Trt nrnvent this I kouim no o. hnnnc business and It I ,, . . t,nm White " r ia uuuuutiu n am thA fill with.ailt. filling the rorests must ne preserveu, they must be protected from fire in so far as an emcieni lores, service cau is spreading, too. aumed such proportions .that make tnenlt and also from grazing it plain to every one who is capable doing any thinking or gives any thought to such subjects. 1 It was then that the system of legislation was entered upon that facilitated the accumulation of great fortunes rapidly, and the drawing ot lines between the classes, the rich' and poor, the menv who coined money by sharp planning and prac tices and the men who wrang it out " their muscle and sweat. This condition has become more and more developed year after year nn- til now we have millionaires bv the shAMver it seriously Interferes with the effectiveness of the forest floor as a water absorbent," , While this is said about the West it is as applicable to the South, which does not yet suffer from earth There are 346 miles of railroad in operation in China with conces sions for about 4,000 more, some sec tions of which have been constructed. Mark Hanna & Co. are not, since exposure as the West does, but will the strikes have set in, orating so . ruthless I mnth Ahont the working man s ID LlliiU IX CUIO wmm.- j i ; forest destruction is not checked. "full dinner pail. V X A. C .1. Zn aYvn Q. There are about 250,000 recog- nized criSiaais in this country and Ii i At. an1Mt nonirinrv hn QlTi Amk. a great many who are not recognized wot -no u,w i e as criminals, but they are, all the same. They are the fellows who thousand and poor men by the mil- J plunder the people under the forms Marion Butler says the Populists wn ania out to the Democrats a UtIIV sort of gold brick bunco. day an old negro arrived from Wnite Hall, and hearing tne aog mao rible racket, be pulled a large plug oT tobacco from his pocket and tearing ott a good size chew, gave it to Don. ine animal began chewing ravenously and remained quiet the rest of the day. The old man left the plug, remarking that he had brought it for the dog, and went without further explanation. The dog now has his daily allowance of tobacco, and he does not disturb the household arrangement. The statement of the associated banks for the week ended yesterday u . Tono tRR9.466.900: decrease $2,9140. Deposits,:$965,285,l()0 . de crease $7,096,900. Circulation, $30,- 578.800; increase, 43,uuu. j tc cr 7V. W.rease S2.349.4UU. Specie, $169,864,100; decrease $2,447, wLoro 4246.532.800: decrease $4,795,900. Reserve required $?4l, sli 275. decrease $1.524.225. . Surplus $5,211,522, decrease $3,274,675. -. Strict land and his two brothers found that the negro was Jim Bailey and mat ne, was at work in the field. They tried to capture him. Bailey was armed with a hoe and hatchet and escaped. Later, he met two negroes who dis armed him. Strickland ana unaries Powell seized Bailey and put him in a buggy to carry him to Smithfield to deliver him to Sheriff Ellington. While on their way a mob met them four miles from town, took the negro from them and hung him to a - tree. Powell went on to Smithfield and told the sheriff of. the lynching. The sheriff and coroner went out at mid night and brought the body to Smith- field. It is said the lyncnmg occurreu about ten o'clock last night. It is also said that Bailey used a knife upon his victim. STORM IN GEORGIA. Terrific Hail and Cloud Burst in Quitman County. By Telegraph to the Morainn Btar. Eufaula, Ala. July 6. A terrific hail storm and cloud burst passed over a portion of Quitman county, Ga., to day at noon. The storm covered an area of four miles and swept the farms in its path. Mill dams were washed away, fences demolished and lowlands submerged. Farmers will be forced to plant oyer or relinquish their crops. To Confederate Veterans. Hon. Walter Clark writes Capt, J. I. Metts, commander of Cape Fear Camp U. C. V., that copies of the History of North Carolina Regiments in the war between the States can be obtained from the State Librarian, Raleigh, at cost one dollar per volume and sug gests that to save postage or high ex pressage, clubs of ten, fifteen or twenty in each neighborhood might send the money to the State Librarian and thus have the books sent cheaply by freight. Wilmington District Conference. Rev. R. B. John, Presiding Elder, informs the Stab that he has changed the time of holding the Wilmington District Conference from July 17th to 19th to Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, August 7th to 9th. All con cerned are requested to take notice. The opening sermon will be preached Tuesday evening, August 6th, at 8.30 o'clock, by Rev. A. J. Groves, of Bladen circuit Raided Illicit Distillery. Deputy Collectors G. M. Babbitt and W. J. Sutton arrived in the city yesterday from Pireway, Columbus county, near which place they made a raid on an illicit distillery, the name of whose proprietor is unknown. The officers were shot at three times and returned the fire but no one was hurt A still of 100 gallons capacity and a 700 or 800 gallon beer outfit were des troyed. Made an Unsuccessful Attempt to Rob a Bank In Oklahoma. ' By Telegraph to the Horning Btar. Stroud, Okla., July 6. An un successful attempt was made early this morning by three masked men to rob the Stroud State bank. The rob bers entered the room adjoining the bank building where Amos Beaton, assistant cashier, and Earl Heath were aniann. The voung men were awaken ed, bound hand and foot and told if they made any noise they would be shot by the fellows wno siooa over them with a gun. The robbers then in jected nitro-glycerine into the safe r . l V . A three times ana ine explosions wuint totally destroyed the sale, but tney failed to get the money in the vault. They relieved Heath and Seaton of their watches and a small amount of money. JESSIE MORRISON. Showers and Thunder Storms Swept Over the Atlantic States and the "Mercury Fell Everywhere. By Telegraph to the Morning Btar. Washington, Jaiy 6. The back bone of the hot waWis been broken, at least temporarily, by showers and thunder storms that swept over the Atlantic States and the upper Lake re gion this afternoon ; but the Weather Bureau holds out no assurances as to the permanency of the break. Up in Nova Scotia the barometic high pres sure area is banked up tonight, giv ing promise of winds from the east ward, with cooler weather in its train. It is much cooler to-night throughout New England, and the storms this afternoon and evening, according to Forecast Official Frankenfield, give promise that the next day or. two at least will not be so abnormally hot as the record breaking days of the past week. The mercury has lauen an greater or less degree everywhere to the east of the Mississippi, while went of the Mississippi, except in the ex-J treme Southwest, the temperature is considerably warmer. . , The maximum temperature for the day in Washington was reached at half past two this afternoon, when the Weather Bureau thermometer record ed 95, which is two degrees less than the maximum for the corresponding day last year. But the storm that broke a little later caused a drop of 24 degrees within three and a half hours. The night was cool, with a refreshing breeze. Mortality In Baltimore. Baltimore, July 6. The number of deaths in the city for the week ended to day is 451, the highest of' which the health department has any record. Of these 236 were children under five years of age. At least fifty per cent of the mortality is said by the health department officials to be due either directly or indirectly to me in tense heat which has prevailed during the period menntioned. The hot spell was at least tempora rily ended this afternoon by a thunder storm, which came up at about 3.30 and sent the mercury down from 96 to 69 in less than an hour. Five deaths and seven prostrations is the record for the day. LARGE ATTENDANCE. Woman Convicted of Manslaughter Sen fenced to Five Years Imprisonment. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Eldorado, Kas., July 7. Jesse Morrison, convicted of manslaughter in the second degree for the murder of Mrs. Clara Wiley Castle, on June 22d, 1900, was to-day sentenced to five years in tne penitentiary in uiuoe u nnement at nara lanor. j.uibs jnorri son took the sentence calmly. Judge Ackman overruled successively mo tions for a new trial, for postpone ment of sentence and for arrest of judgment. , A cablegram from "United States Minister Lord at Buenos Ayres con firms the report of the establishment of martial law in that city. The min ister says that the occasion was dis turbances growing out of the pendency of a bill to refund the national debt, and the town will be under martial law for a period of six months. International Convention of the Christian Endeavor Society at Cincinnati. By Telegraph to tne Morning Btar. Cincinnati, July 6. With the largest attendance on record, the 20th international convention of the Chris tian Endeavor Society began here to- . day. Cool weather favored the dele gates and the business session with which the convention began was car ried on in a pleasant atmosphere, after the severe hot weather of the past ten -days. During the early hours recep tions and rallies were held at different State headquarters. The dejegaisr then marched by States to the audito rium where the opening session of the convention was held. Rev. A. M. Miyaki. of Osaka, Japan, the secretary of the Christian Endeav or Society in that country, brought greetings from that far off land in a scroll of Japanese which he tread in his native tongue. v The climax of the meeting was reach ed when Bishop Fallows, as chairman, arose to nresent President Clarke, who delivered to the convention his annual address. "Let us all take our handkerchiefs,", said the chairman, "and all stand and wave them in a joyous acclaim for the man we love, the man who has started this great s work," and the audience did so with cheer after cheer. President Clarke was deeply affected by the evident affection of his hearers and began his report with his slow but forcible manner. At its conclusion Secretary John Willis Baer read his annual report. STEAMER AGROUND. Mr. Jeff Sessoms, of Stedman, N. O., was here yesterday. Tuesday Mr. Sessoms lost his store by fire at Stedman. His loss is $4,000 with about $3,000 insurance. The steamer Orlando, of the Mem phis White River Packet Company, sunk in White river yesterday, about twantv- seven miles above Des Arc. The water is over the main deck and the hull is badly broken. : No lives were lost The cause of the accident was probably a snag. Passengers Landed on Boats and Sent to . New York by Rail. Br Telegraph to the Morning Btar. New YoRk, July 6. The Joy Steamship Company's steamer, Old Dominion, ran aground in a thick fog to day near Rye Point The passen gers numbered about ten and were landed at Bye Beach in the steamer's boats and were sent to new xora oy train. The vessel lies on an even xeei and her captain thinks she will float with the next nigh tiae. It! v mm ' . ... -'ft'-! if.. un, the millionaires controlling I of law.