. o o M B u M O e -PCBUSEXD AT- WILMINGTON, N. C, $1.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. 188888888888888388 ' 88388SS88S888888S 88888888888888888 gwwi ssaS8896SSS88g8aC8 88888888888888888 88888888288888388 qww I -s5SSS8gg8S8888 88888853828888388 8288g832283888388 188833833888888888 2 5 Catered at tha Port Ofllc at . Umtftoa, N. C, ai moomum aaanar.i SUBSCRIPTION PAICE. Th luUcriptioa prica el lbs Weekly Staff liaa Sinjrl Cop t tpostsfls IM W OS SECRETARY SHAW 05 THE TARIFF AND TRUSTS. Since Secretarj Shaw has been in the Cabinet he has done more stamp speaking than any other member of it. He seems to like it, too, and it matt be said of him that he has a shrewd and deceptive way of patting things which is well calculated to mislead the average person who can't tell jait where the deception is. He has a way of stating things of his own knowledge which cannot be dis proved because the statement is based on information on which he seems to have a pre-emption. In nearly every speech he makes he in corporates some such statement as an answer to those who contend for something to which he and the in terests for which he speaks are op posed. He doesn't want any tariff revi sion and he doesn't want the trusts curbed by reducing the monopoly which the Dingley tariff gives them in the home market. He so de clared in his speeches previous to and during the campaign last Fall and he so declares now. He and the inter ests ho represents do not propose to have tbe Dingley tariff modified If they can prevent it, and they are be ginning thus early to check public sentiment which is turning in that direction and are trying to nullify the efforts of those Republicans who are advocating tariff revision, at least on articles and manufactures controlled by combinations which take advantage of the protection they have tn extort high prices and large profits from American consum ers. They are trying to forestall that demand by telling the people that such tariff redaction would not be - effective and that if it were it would be nt a coBt inestimably more than thu American people pay the trusts; in other words a cost that would mean the destruction of these trusts and the paralyzing of the great in dairies which they keep in motion, Tbe Kickapoo Club, of Peoria, 111., gave its annual banquet a few nights ago. Secretary Shaw was the principal speaker there. He devoted his speech mainly to the question of tariff revision, especial ly as a means of breaking trust monopolies. He is thus quoted in part: 'The Democratic demand for a re vision of the tariff at a remedy for monopolies la not a new invention nor a recent discovery. Bills, amend ments to bills, and res)lutions em bodrlng this thought have been of fered without number, certainly by tbe score, by Democrats standing high and Democrats standing low in tbe councils of tbat party. The remedy, however, ii oa a par with many other Th'j all-important question whether a giv-n industry is controlled by a mo nopoly mutt needs be established be fore tbe proposed remedy can be ap plied. "The present prohibitory law against trusts has generally been found ade quate whenever the evidence attain able has been found sufficient to estab lish the ultimate fact. Recent legis lat'oo does not provide new remedies so much as new methods of discover ing a ad establishing facts and ezpedlt ing judicial investigation. Tbe Sher man Jaw contains quite drastic provi sions, applicable botn to persons ana corporations when once proven to bave . combined or to have conspired for the "purpose of monopolizing a business or a trade privilege. "I would like to have our Demo cratic friends who are advocating this remedy explain why they would re move protection temporarily or per manently from monopoly produced goods. Shall the protection be re moved until tbe alleged monopoly goes into bankruptcy and then be re stored, or shall it be removed perma nentlv and our industries, one by one. turned over to foreign competitors? And if the removal of protection is to be temporary, who is to say when it shall be restored I "If, in point of fact, the iron, the steel, the glass, tbe paper, or any other industry has been monopolized, as is claimed, and if the producers are now robbing tbe American people by extortionate prices, and if no one dare build factories in com pelioa with tbesa octopl, will Ameri can courage be extended by the re moval of the tariff so as to Invite these products from abroad! It seems to me, but I may be wroog, tbat American enterprise would be quite as likely to build a factory and compete in the American market under protection. uoder free trade. In point of fact. I hsppen to know independent steel plant?, glass factories, and paper mills, not simply projected but actually in process of construction, but I believe no one of them would be completed if It were known their products were to be placed on the free list. This is very Shaw-like, but it is not honest. You must first estab- FTP VOL. XXXIV. lish the fact, he says, that there is a monopoly before yon oan apply an anti-monopolf law to it. What better proof oonld be asked that a combine is a monopoly than when it absorbs or strangles other estab lishments in the same line, either by baying them or by underselling them and driving them oat of busi ness, and then patting its own prices upon what it sells and bays because it has nooompetition in the buying or selling market? What better proof is needed that it is a monopoly when it ships to foreign markets where it must meet competition and sells at from twenty-five to fifty per cent, less than it tells in the home market, where it has no com petition? Are not these facts known to every reader of the newspapers? And yet he talks about establishing the fact that there are monopolies before they can be proceeded against. "The present prohibitory law against Trusts." he ftajs, "has gen erally been found adequate when ever the evidence attainable was found sufficient to establish the ul timate fact." What a big handful of dust that was to throw into the eyes of his Kickapoo friends. How many trusts were ever brought to taw nnder the present law, or how many were oyer proceeded against before acting General Knox was forced by newspaper exposures and by the evidence furnished by news papers to proceed against the Beef Trust, and then it took him and his legal assistants abont twelve months to secure an injunction to restrain the Trust from doing some things complained of. This is not the only Trust. We have the Steel Trust, the Glass Trust, the Copper Trust, the Lead Trust, the Barbed Wire Trust, the Cracker Trust, the Sugar Trust and dozens of other trusts, trusts that control every article in common use, and yet he tells his Kiokapoo au dience that the present laws are sufficient to hold them down and protect the people from extortion. If they be, why not enforce them, and if they be not, why does he say they are? He knows better. The whole speech as it applies to the tariff and Trusts is a piece of cunningly framed sophistry, in tended to misrepresent the position of those who demand tariff revision, to misrepresent the effect that such revision would have upon our Indus tries and the prosperity of the coun try, holding oat the idea that our industries and prosperity are abso lutely dependent not simply upon a protective tariff, but on the amount of protection which the Dingley tariff gives. ROOSEVELT OH THE TRUSTS. At Milwaukee, where Mr. Boose velt spent Friday, he chose as the subject of his speech the Trusts. This, like his speech, in Chicago, the day before, on the Monroe Doc trine, was practically a defence of the course the administration has has pursued on the trust question It was substantially a reiteration of much that he had said in previous speeches, about the only difference being the review of the steps taken to enforce the anti-trust laws, and the new legislation enacted by the last Congress, which he thinks suffl cient for the time being and about far as that kind of legislation should be attempted for the present, at least, until it is seen how it works or whether any more may be necessary. It is a well known fact that the legislation which hai been enacted did not go as far as he thought it should have gone, but he was pre vailed upon for party reasons, and for others, of a different kind in which he had a more personal in terest, to, accept the compromise and declare himself "satisfied." Now he says this is the best that could be done, all that ought to have been expected in the experi mental stage of proceedings, and that in his opinions it meets all the present requirements, which is sim ply another way of telling the Trusts that they need not be apprehensive of any further hostile legislation, as a result of any recommendations that he may make Henceforth he and the trusts will be friends while they keep within the prescribed limits as laid down by the Sherman law and the new legislation, He is thus endeavoring to placate the trusts,' and make friends of them. He took occasion to pay high tribute to thje faithfulness, and de votion to duty shown by Attorney General Knox in t prosecuting the Beef Trust cases, for his successful management in the Northwest rail road merger case, and for his action against the Salt Trust, which he cited as illustrations or the scope and effectiveness of the laws now on the statute books. As in previous speeches he de clared his opposition to tariff reduc tion on trust controlled articles ex ported, as not only totally useless, bat as calculated to do more harm than good, another assnxanee to the HE trusts that they had nothing to fear on that line from him. The whole.drift of the speech was to persuade the trusts that they had nothing to fear from him or from the Republican party, a studied effort to placate them and allay the resentment his former aggressive attitude had aroused. WHAT DID EE MX AH? Milwaukee, Wisconsin, like many of our cities, and especially oitles in the West, has a large number of citizens of foreign birth, and of numerous nationalities, a circum stance of which President Roosevelt took occasion, in response to the ad dress of welcome, to ingratiate him self with those elements of the popu lation by making a speech on ances try, in which he declared "woe will beset a country, if, we draw lines of distinction between. class andLclaas, or creed and creed, or draw any other line save that which divides good citizenship from bad citizen ship." As a sentiment at first sight that may read all right, but what did he mean in the concluding declaration? Was he speaking from a purely po litical or from some other point of view ? There was no special appli cation of these remarks to the local ity in which ho was speaking for the different classes and creeds are not only recognized there politically but also socially, and hence that declara tion must have had its bearing more especially on the South, where a line is drawn on color. He virtually says there should be no such line, and that good citizen ship should be the only test of treatment and recognition, which logically means not only in matters appertaining to citizenship, but in social and other matters, in other words, that there is no room for a race line, and where it exists it should be wiped out. The negro who is good enongh to hold office and to whom white people must look for the transaction of official busi ness, is good enough to associate with those white people outside of his omcial walks, and to be recog nized by them as equals, which sim ply and logically means social equality between whites and blacks, as there is in the West between dif ferent classes and creeds. If it didn't mean this: it was totally irrele vant and out of place on that occa sion. - One of the coolest performances we nave read ox lately is tola in a Berlin dispatch, abont a bank clerk who after a service of 27 years cool ly informed a meeting of the di rectors that he had stolen 170,000 of the bank's money, and gave as a reason that they had lied to him three years ago when they promised to make him a director, and he was after vengeance. He compromised with them, however, on their agree ing to pay him 16.250 cash and an annuity of $900 for life, whereupon he went into another room and lugged ont the stolen $70, 000, counted out his $6,350 and turned over the remainder. What is getting into the Supreme Courts, anyhow ? A short while ago the Massachusetts court set aside a verdict for damages in favor of a woman because her beauty influ enced the jury, and now the Su preme Court of Wisconsin has done likewise because the jury was hoo dooed by the eloquence of the conn sel. Are the legal lights going to freeze oat beauty and eloquence? Hon. Hoke Smith, of Atlanta, doesn't think that Mr. Roosevelt will have smooth sailing for the nomination for the Presidency, bat thinks that Governor Odell, of New York and Hon. Mark Hanna, of Ohio, are strong possibilities. But being in, unless something unex pected happens, Teddy would seem to have the inside track. The Roosevelt family is spread ing over a good deal oi territory about this time. He is on his West" erning jaunty Mrs. Roosevelt and some of the children are takings cruise along the coast, Miss Alice) is on ner way nome irom a visit to Porto Rico, and some of the boys are fishing up in Maine. In noting the fact that Noah Baby, formerly of North Carolina, bat for the last hundred years or so a denizen of New Jersey, celebrated his 131st birthday last Wednesday, the Philadelphia Press presents his picture and publishes a sketch of him. - The new Chinese Minister thinks the best thing he can do is to "fol low the example of his predecessor" The Ting-fang, and has therefore already begun to make friends with the newspaper boys. He is begin ning right. A Cincinnati iudge has granted a warrant to compel a faith ourist to take medicine for the grip. This looks like giving a fellow a double )se of Cincinnati law and grip sons. WILMINGTON, N. 0., FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1903. AN ECA OF BUILDING. Upwifd of im fm CoMiTUC. lion is Now in Progress in Wilmington. INDICATION OP CONFIDENCE. People Are Willi sr. to Pot Their Money Isto Hemes sad Bosiaess Hoosts. MssyFlseResldeaces-Atlaatlc -Coast Use Offices, Etc From time to time daring the past several weeks the Stab has taken oc casion to refer to the great amount of building now in progress In Wilming ton, and has cited that as an Instance of the confidence of the people la tbe future of the city Yesterday a re porter of the Stab had a very inter-. eating interview with Mr. H. K. Boaitz, the well known architect, and gathered from him some actual figures as to what his clients and others are doing in the way of putting money into mortar and brick, lumber and ahingles. Mr. Bonitz said that he now has in process of construction and Is drawing plans and specifications, for $53,800 worth of buildings. In addition to this be has also completed a number of other buildings since Jan. 1st, which with the figures of other archi tects, runs the total amount or con struction up to $130,000. Among the buildings now In process of erection Mr. Bonits gave the following: Howard Relief Company, club build ing northeast corner of Front and Oradge, $7,500. Wilmington Tobacco Warehouse at intersection of old Seacoast and W. Jc W. railroad tracks, $6,500. Mrs. E. Vollers, store on Front street, $7,500. Mrs. EL Vollers, southeast corner of Walnut and Nutt streets for McNair & Pearsall, $6,500. Geo. O. Gaylord, store on Front street, $8,000. Willard Bag & Mfg. Co., new build ing and repairs to factory on South Water street, $5,500. Oicar Pearsall, three-story brick apartment dwelling for family hotel at northeast corner of Third and Market streets, $7,600. It is understood that the building has been leased by Capt W. EL Northrop, Sr. Geo. C. McDougal, residence, north west corner of Ninth and Obesnu streets, $3,000. TJ. O. Ellis, residence, north side of Ohurcb, between Second and Third, $1,800. Some of the other buildings by Mr. Bonitz and others axe the following: Brooks 6t Taylor, store on west side of Water, between Market and Dock, $3,000. Capt J. W. Harper, residence on South Front street, $7,000. L. B. Pennington, residence on Mar ket, between Sixth and Seventh streets, $3,000. Jamea A. Montgomery, residence at Ninth and Market streets. $1,600. Jno. E. Taylor, two residences next to northeast corner of Sixth and Grace streets, $3,600.. 8. W. Banders, store building on North Fourth street, $1,2C0. L Behder, residence on Ninth and Red Cross streets, $1,600. J. F. Rulff, Sr., residence on Wal nut, near Fourth street, $3,000. D. L. T. Oapps, four cottages at Seventeenth and Market streets, $?,- 500. Mrr. Bf. EL Munson, residenoe next to northwest corner of Fourth and Walnut street, $1,800. Hugh MacRae, rebuilding of resi dence on Market, between Seventh and Eighth streets. S-F. Harmon, residence on Fourth, between Princess and Chesnut streets, $3,000. Consolidated Railways, Light and Power Co., power bouse at root or Castle street, S10.000. Atlantio Coast Line, office building, passenger station and enlargement to original office, $30,000. Angola Lumber Co., dry kilns, $$, 000. Other contracts that have been awarded or will be awarded very shortly may have been left out of the above account inadvertently, but the exhibit is enough to show that perhaps never before in the history of Wil mington has the city experienced such an era of building. THE CAPE FEAR IMPROVEMENT. Return of Fayettsvllle CommltteeScheme Entirely Practicable. Yesterday afternoon's Fayetteville Observer says: "The River Improvement Commit tee returned last evening from Wil mington eminently pleased with the result of their mission. The lock and dam sites will be located and purchas ed in time for the new Congress which meets in December. "It is. perhspt, worth saying, in correction of misapprehension in some quarters, that the Government has al ready adopted the' scheme of canaliza tion of the river at a cost of $1,850,000, and that the $50,000 appropriation was all that was necessary for the prelimi nary work. The only uncertain xeai are is the appropriation of money in the future. That Is a matter of legis lation. Capt Wlnslow, of course, laughs at the suggestion that the en gineering scheme is impracticable." Wanted ia FIoreacef S. C. John Bishop, colored, was arrested this morning by Policeman O. K. Wood on a warrant from Florenee, 8. C charging him with burglary. .. Is stated that he was implicated with John Cooper, who was carried to Florence last week, in tbe robbery of the house of the well known old col ored waitress at the. A. O. L. ger station at Florence. THE SCHOONE2 JitO.'ff. BUTTR1CK. Castaia Sprigs ssl Mr. C. D Mafflil Back frost Us Wreck, Kr. a D. Maffitt and Cast. Charles W. Sprague returned yesterday after noon from a trip along tbe coast in search of tbe body of. CapL 8 Prague's brother, First Mate E. EL Bprague,who was drowned last Monday morning in the wreck of th schooner Jno. H. Buttrick oSTrjiaK Pan. They found no trace of the mas and Cs.pt. Sprague hopes to lean for home the first part of this week. Mrs Sprague who was with her husband In the' wreck, was not so well yesterday and that forbade their leaving on tbe New York steamer as was expected. Capt. Sprague and Mr. Mafltt char tered a sharpie at South port Friday and went out to the wreck of Capt Sprague Ifi-fataL vessel. The only thing the; found above water was the main and . mlsEtn masts and the deck load of lumber. The wreckage is constantly washing away and much lumber ia strewn along the coast. Mr. Maffitt is of the opinion that a part of the lumber Is from another Teasel than the Buttriok. One piece picked- up on Bald Head bears the following mark "8,920-95." and is 8x6 inches in size and about 80 feet long. Three notches were cut at one end with a knife. Mr. Maffitt says the wreck Is dangerous to naviga tion in that it is liable to mislead ves sels and he would advise tbat the gorernment take steps to remove It. Friday night Capt Sprague and Mr. Maffitt rode the gale out in the shar pie inside Corn Cake Inlet Mr. Maf fitt says the storm was very severe. Tbe wind reached a velocity of about 45 miles an hour. SOME NEWS OP THE BUILDING Over S108.se Ceastnctloa Work Now ia Profress Nw Front Street Store. Hotel oa Market Street A well known architect remarked last night that, Including the Atlantic Coast Line additional offices, there is now going on in the olty more than $100,000 In new bindings. The show ing thus made is a remarkably fine one. Nearly as much additional build ing is also said to be ia immediate con templation. Within the next few weeks work will be commeneed on a new three story brick store, with basement for Mr. George O. Gaylord next south of the present building occupied by him on North Froat street. Plans for the store are being drawn by Architect EL E. Bonits and the contract will be let wht n all bids are in. The size of the structure will bs 85x130 feet, and it ii rumored that it will be occupied by Mr. N. F. Parker, the well known furniture dealer oa Market street It is said that the new hotel which has been talked of for some months will be erected on the northeast cor ner ef Third and Market streets. The building on that site one of the land marks of tbe city is now being moved, and It is said that $10,000 will be invested in a neat little hotel of S3 rooms. It is not known who Is behind the movement SUDDEN DEATH OP MAIDEN LADY. Aa A pat of Mr. R. P. Gore Passed A way Ssdiesiy Iiteraeit Near Wirsiw. Miss ZUphia 8. Gay, 48 years of age, died suddenly at 4:30 o'clock Sat urday, morning at the home of her nephew, Mr. Et F. Gore, No. SOS North Tenth street A member of the family heard the lady moving about In the room at -the unusual hour and going to Investigate, ho found that she was dying Tbeeoroner was sum moned and it was ascertained tbat death was due to heart failure. The deceased Is survived by a brother, Mr. D. T. Guy, ; of Warsaw, and two sis ters, Mrs. 8arah A. Parker, of War saw, and Mrs. Mary F. Gore, of Wil mington. The remains were taken Saturday morning to Warsaw and interred In the family burying ground three miles from that place. The pall-bearers to the station here were Messrs. A. W. Allen, Jake Mohr, Joseph Benton and Ben j. Hewlett SAFE BLOWItfQ NEAR RALEIQH. Store at Career Broke Opea aad Aboat $48 Stoles-Pottofflce Folds. Special Star Telegram. Raleigh, N. a, April 3. Hal Rand'a store at Garner, ton miles south of Raleigh, on the Southern railway, was entered at 8 o'clock this morning. The safe was blown open and forty dollars In cash taken. A large quantity of stamps and a number of-neifstetttawletters be longing to the postofflce, whkh Is in nearby building, were not taken. Rand allowed the postmaster to use l his safe. There is no due to the burg lars. Cspt W. R. Ketai'a Ceadltloa. A telegram received yesterday by an intimate friend of the family an nounced that the operation upon Capt W. R. .Kenan had been successfully performed in Baltimore and that no trace of a cancer wis found, as had been feared. The news will be re ceived with-great -joy-by hundreds of Uaptara Kenan's friends in Wilming ton, who have Anxiously inquired from day to day concerning his condition since be has been in Baltimore. During the month of March, there were recorded in the office of the: Superintendent of Health -43 deaths (17 white and 81 colored) and 6$ births (18 white and 34 colored). Star. A BANK CLERK AN EMBEZZLER. The Capital City National of At lanta, Ga., Robbed by a Trusted Employe. . DEFALCATION NEARLY $94,000. abstracted at Varloas Times, Extending Back Several Yesrs-Isstltstioa Aft solate Safe .Clerk Admitted His Quill Prosecitloi. Br Tsiacrann to tne Momma star. Atlanta, Ga., April 4. G. 'Hal Urn Sims, collection clerk for the Capital City National Bank, has been placed 'under arrest by United States Deputy Marshal Bcot', upon a warrant sworn out by President Sneer, of the bank, charging Sims with embeziling a sum estimated at nearly $94,000. Sims is now held at tbe Piedmont Ho tel by the deputy marshal. He refuses to talk about the affair. The first suspicion of a shortage in 8lms' accounts arose yesterday. Ex pert accountants immediately began work on the books and it was soon disclosed that large sums had been abstracted at various times extending back several years. The warrant was then sworn out by tbe president of the bank. Bims has been in the ser vice of the bank for eight years and was regarded as one of its most re liable employes. He moved in tbe most exclusive circles of Atlanta so ciety and was popular as a "Young Man of Fashion." Prominent outside bankers have made a thorough investigation of the bank's condition and have given out a signed statement that it is absolutely safe. A portion of the defalcation Is covered by Sims' bond, and he also owns some property which will be turned over to the bank. The directors state that the amount of the defalca tion has already been charged to un divided profits. National Bank Ex aminer Deaaussure also states that the bank Is in no danger. Sims, who has admitted his guilt will be prosecuted by the United States government. He is unmarried and is the son of Thomas T. Sims, a promi nent resident of Kirkwood, one of At lanta's suburbs. P1RB KAQINQ NEAR POINT CASWELL. Heme of Mr. W. W. Malpross Destroyed and Other Damsf e Wroafht Special Star Correspondence. Point Caswell, N. C, April 3. To-day about noon, while members of tbe family were cooking dinner at the home of Win. W. Malpaif , the bouse took fire and before help could arrive the house with everything Inside was completely deatroyed. There was a high wind at the time and the nre soon spread to the pine woods, and this afternoon at 4 o'clock a terrific fire is raging, going in a northeasterly direction. As tbe wind is blowing a gale there is no telling what damage will be done. The loss falls very heavy on Mr. Malpass, who is quite an old man and an old Confederate veteran. He was a gallant soldier, and was with Lee's army from tbe beginning to the end of the war. The loss falls partic ularly hard on the family, consisting of wife and six children, who lost everything they had except the clothes they wore. Died Pridsy Nlibt. Mrs. Henrietta Green, wife of Mr. G. W. Green, No. 614 Castle street, died at 10:85 o'clock Friday night, after a long illness with cancer. She leaves to mourn their loss, her husband, and three daughters, one brother, Mr. William Bhew, of Marion, S. 0., and three sisters, Mrs. Rillie Burnett of Myrtle Grove, Mrs. "Rebecca Spooner and Miss Sue Bhew, of this city. A MESSENQFR BOY ROBBED. Held Up by Two Men la New York City and $1,400 la Mosey Taken from Him. bt Telegraph to the Morning Btar. Nnw York, April 4. Under the walls of the Tombs prison, Warren 8mitb, aged 14 years, employed as messenger by Sargent & Co., hardware manufacturers, was held up by two men to-day and robbed of $1,400 be longing to his employers. The boy was returning from the Mercantile Na tional Bank, where be had been sent to eaah a $1,400 check, and was carry ing the money in a large leather wal let chained to his waist - The boy's story as told to the police is that the robbers, after holding him up, dragged him into the rear room of store near by, pointed a revolver at him, took the money from him and tied his hands with a handkerchief and his feet with a toweL As soon as they left him he managed to free himself and notified his employers of it, CHATTAN00QA SENSATION. Two Promlaeat Citizens Asssalted by Stste Senator Walter J. Peak. By Telegraph to tbe Mornlns Btar. Chattanooga, Tex., April 4. State Senator Walter J. Peak to-day assaulted John EL Cantrill and Wm. Dowling, prominent citizens, on the principal thoroughfare, lie carried heavy stick with which he struck Mr. Dowllng upon the face, seriously injuring his eye and it is said breaking the bones in one of bis hands. This assault occurred at a drug store. where many ladles were seated and caused great excitement Cantrill was as saulted while he was walking upon the street- Peak struck him several blows in the face. The trouble is theoutoome of arti cles published over the signatures of Oan trill and Dowllng, attacking Peak for; his position oa the water works question. The City Gas Company, of Norfolk, Va., has just filed with the Interstate Commerce commission a petition against the Baltimore and Ohio rail road, alleging excessive and unreason able rates, and mat me defendant is receiving more for transporting coal for the Olty uas company than it de mands or others ror nxe service. NO. 24 SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Lumberton Argus: Mr. Lewis Jenkins, aged 65, died last Thursday evening at his home near Ashpole. Thu death was unexpected, he having just come from the field where he had been to see about some work. Fayetteville Observer: Besides the increase in the post office receipts, a still greater sign of tbe prosperity of Fayetteville and Cumberland county ia in the great decrease in the number of delinquents as published by Sheriff Cook to-day. The list contains ex actly half the usual number of names heretofore advertised for taxes, Statesville Landmark: It is stated tbat Judge Howard, of Tar- bore, haa given $4,000 for the erection of a cottage at the Barium Orphans' Home in memory of his wife. - About $50,000 of the $100,000 stock of the proposed new cotton mill has been subscribed and tne promoters oi the enterprise are encouraged to hope hat their efforts will be crowned witn success. . . Monroe Enquirsri A little two year-old daughter of lr. Charlss Strawn, who lives on Mr. J. O. Bikes' farm, about a mile east of Monroe, had an almost miraculous escape from death yesterday. She fell Into a well 65 feet deep and remained for half an hour or more before she was rescued, but was unhurt except being slightly blistered where she struck the water. There was about 85 feet of water in the well. Newton Ent&rprise: Straw berry growers say a good many young berries were killed by the frost last week, but new blooms are coming on every day and they expect an early and full crop. Mrs. P. O. Shu ford of this place has a Plymouth Rock hen that up to last Thursday had laid 100 eggs. The hen began to lay November 15th and is still at it. Mr. M. M. Cliae says he has the best wheat this year he ever saw. It was knee high a week ago and as thick as it can stand. Ail the farmers we have talked with are jubilant over the wheat this year, Sanford Express: The Balelgh and Cape Fear Railway has filed a mortgage to secure $310,000 of 5 per cent bonds to provide for the exten sion of the road to Fayetteville, which is about twenty-five miles beyond LUling ton, to which place the road is now being extended. The P. H. Laufman Gold Mining Company, of Southern Pines, was chartered by the Secretary of State Tuesday, with an authorized capital stock of $1,000,000, of which $970,000 is subscribed by P. H. Laufman and George Hutchison, of Southern Pines, and W. K. Jack son, oi (Jarthage. Rockingham Headlight: Quite a number of our farmers tell us that they have planted some corn, and some of them have planted their en tire corn crop. . - The country around Laurinburg will plant 8,000 acres in melons, cantaloupes, Irish ?otatoes, beans and tobacco. he result of Our inquiries among the farmers from different sections of the county, is that the cotton acreage in the country has not been greatly In creased this season. Red Springs has a charter for an oil and fertilizer company with a capital of $50,000 of which $20,000 has already been sub scribed. GEORGIA PEACH CROP. Said to Have Been Bsdlj Damsged by the Freeze la February. 8v Teiegrapn to tbe Mornlns Btar. Atlanta, Ga., April 4. Reports from the vicinity of Fort Valley, Ga. the headquarters of one of the richest sections of the fruit belt In this State, are to the effect that the prospect there is discouraging for the peach crop and in some instances the outlook is gloomy for fruit growers. it is stated that the freeze oi ecru- ary damaged the peacn crop to a greater extent than was at first real ized. Excessive - rains during the blooming period have alao left their detrimental effects. In some sections it Is reported that the brown root, or momlia dlsease.has attacked the bloom and a considerable percentage of the blossoms were killed. BURNED IN THEIR HOME. Poor Children of a Colored Family Near Fraakllntoo, S. 6. By Telegraph to tbe Morning Btar. Raleigh, N. O, April' 4. A special from Franklinton, N. C, says: A tenement house on the land of Mr. L H. Kearney, about two miles west of here, was destroyed by fire about 9 o'clock last night. The house was occupied by Rums Daniel, col ored, his wife and seven children. Four oi tne children, wno were sleep ing up-stairr, 'were bnrned to death. The roof was falling in before the oc cupants of the lower room were awak ened. There were no windows in the un-atsira room, and the children be ing cut off from tbe atair-way by fire were unable to escape a terrible death. Bids were opened in Washington yesterday for the construction of steam engineering shops at tne Charleston, S. O, naval station. The bid of the Uiarx construction uom pany, which was the lowest of the five presented, was $297,751, the build ing to be completed within eighteen months. ooooooooooooooo$ 9 Money ! Are you indebted toTHE WEEKLY STAR? If SO, when you receive a bill for your subscription send us the amount you owe. Remember that a news paper bill Is as much en titled to your considera tion as Is a bill for gro ceries. teppsiJBt ! BePDiMlliI TEMPESTUOUS VOYAGES OF OCEAN STEAMERS. DasMged fty Heavy Ssas Several Uvea Lest Decks Swept Fere and Aft Castas and Saloons Plesded. , by Tsissrasb to tM BUurm&x star. . Hautax, N. a, April 4. A dis patch from Bt Pierre says that the passage of the steamers Burgaadia and Notre Dame de Balut from France was tbe roughest ever experienced One man was lost at sea and four others were drowned In the harbor of St. Pierre after the arrival of the steamer oa Friday. Tbe Notre Dame de Balut left Bt Malo, March 18th and experienced sixteen days continuous rough weath er. On March 26th a tremendoua sea boarded the ateamerl-and r swept fore and aft, carrying three men overboard besides a large quantity of deck gear and other portable material.. Two of the men were washed back again by the next sea and a third was lost During the height of the storm tbe steering gear broke and the steamer labored and plunget ia the trough of the ses. The cabin and saloon were flooded with water which continuous ly broke over the steamer and several - men were injured. The 1,800 fisher- r' V men, passengers on the steamer .never experienced such weather on the banks. The steamer Burgandia left Bt " Malo a day ahead of the Notre Dame de Balut and arrived a -day behind. Bh was also consider bly damaged by heavy seas on the. voyage. A ooat's crew of fifteen men of the Burgandia left the vessel ia the harbor ofBt Pierre and was capsized; - Four were lost The two ships carried a total of 8,600 passengers. THE MONROE DOCTRINE. Oermsa Press Treat Presldest Roosevelt's Chlciro Speech Friendly. BT Cable to tne Horning star. Bbbun, April 4. The German press treats President Roosevelt's speech at Chicago on the Monroe doc trine in a kindly way, tbe irritation caused by the Dewey Interview hav ing passed, and although one or two of the commentators take the Presi dent's reference to boasting aa being an arrow shot at Admiral Dewey, the foreign office informs the Associated . Press that this Is not the view of the German official world, where no one attached an unfriendly impulse to the admiral's remarks. The Taaeblatt. in the course of a long and carefully phrased editorial, avers that those who are responsible for making German publie opinion cannot say too often that "Germany hu not even remote aims for territorial acquirements, and that she only wants opportunities to employ her capital and sell her pro- duats." STEAM YACHT CZARINA. Ssld to be the Strosiest Yscht Ever Msde la This Coastry. Bt Telegraph to tbe Mornlns star. New York, April 4 Ohas. Bryan's steam yscht Czarina was successfully launched to-day from tbe Orescent shipyards, Elisabethport. N. J. The Czarina, designed personally by Lewis Nixon and built under his super vision, is said to bs the strongest yacht ever built in this country and probably in tbe world, and will always be known as the first vessel of the auxiliary yacbt navy, a class built under the ex acting specifications of the United 8tates government and which . the Navy Department may convert into warablps within a rew days. The new yacht has a large double bottom, with a capacity of fifty tons of water bal- las', and ia structurally as strong as a 1,000-ton cruiser, though she measures only a little over 300 tons. In speed she will probably reach nineteen knots or over. i THE BALKAN TROUBLES. Balfariaa Qovernmest Taking Active Steps Aialnst Mscedonlan Bands. By Cable to tbe Morning Btar. Salonica, Euhojkan TtJBKET, April 4. It is reported that the Russian consul at Mitrovitza, who was shot in the back by an Albanian sentry there, Is dead. VieiTCa, April 4. Advices received here from Bofia say the.' Bulgarian government Is taking active' measures against the Macedonian bands and has seized a large quantity of their arms which were hidden in Bofia. Bulgarian gendarmes on the frontier near Dub- nitza have fired upon insurgents who were attempting to smuggle guns into Turkey. Fresh insurgent bands have ap peared in the district of Djuma (Rou mania) and a strong detachment of Turkish cavalry, with artillery, has started in pursuit, going towards tbe Kresha Fais. MHvMWSBsBBrBBBPB)BSsaSMHHMM ' A M1SS1NQ STEAMER. Believed to Have Been Blown Up oa Her Trip to West Africa. Bv Cable to tbe Morning Btar. Lojtdon, April 4. It is believed that the steamer Bambara, on her first trip from Marseilles to Daks, French West Africa, with a cargo of 90,000 pounds of gunpowder and two cases of dynamite, has been blown up at sea and has lounderea. Jioyas says mere is reason to fear that this has occurred, although no confirmation Is at hand. The Bambara naa not been reported from Gibraltar, although she should hare been sighted there March 81st. The captain of tbe French schooner Assumption, or juarseuies, reports that on March 28th. when sixty miles off Palmier, he saw a brilliant flash of light which was followed by a loud explosion. The captain of the Nina makes a similar report. The crew of the Bambara numbered thirty-five men and ahe carried six passengers. RECEIVER APPOINTED. Failure of AnltmsD, Miller Co , Mass- f sctarers of Af ricaltorsl ImpUnJests.;. bv Telecrapb to tne Morning Btar. Akeoit, O., April 4. The plant of Aultman, Miller & Company, manu facturers of agricultural Implements, was late to-day placed in the hands of a receiver, on application of Hon. Geo. B. Grouse, president of the company. He andH. P. Mcintosh, of Cleve land, were appointed receivers. The liabilities are placed at IL800.000, with assets exceeding that amount The failure was brought about by a few creditors refusing to grant an exten sion of time. An amicanie aojusimcm of tbe difficulties is looked for and ar rangements have been made wnereny I the company will continue at work, pending a nnai adjustment. nti.himnnA PMnnn. the newly ap pointed American minister to Persia, has arrived at Genoa, Italy. Ai2lp. short slay In Italy he will proceed di rect for Persia. i 4 I" I As St V