DEVOTED TO THE BEST INTERESTS OF SOUTHPORT AND BRUNSWICK COUNTY. VOL. IV.-NO. 12. SOUTHPORT. K. C THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1S93. PRICE FIVE CENTS. TNTITTAfTlTITV ITI f ill -n m -n-n-k - l- - ; . - ' " ! " ' '" ' THE WORLD'S "NEWS. :o:- U .t'ONDESSKI) SUMMAltY OF A WEUK'S DOINGS IJIr IlMl l Muonahiasrs. Cntiyle HnrrW Executed. Cordnge Trust FalU. Gn- r&l RoMcrui Resign.' Cyclone In Texwi nnd Indian. wkunlWat, MAY 3. President Cleveland has requested Theo dore Roosevelt to withdraw his resignation ;$lr. Roosevelt will therefoie continue to aerve as Civil Service Commissioner. The Charleston, Cincinnati & Chicago rallroadjwas sold yesterday, at Charleston, at private auction, for $555,000, to Charles E. HelHer. representing bondholders. The' tfn ited States Leat .her Com pan y , or Trul,-Las been uctX$orZc&i vcitfc a-apiul stock of $190,000,000. It is a combination of nearly all the sole leather concern? of the country. A tire which, started yesterday morula in the Louisville Power Co' six-story building destroyed that structure and a number of others. The loss will be more than $500,000. .The largest haul of moonshiners ever made in West Virginia by internal revenue officer f was gathered up yesterday in Mc Dermott and Wyoming counties. The prisoners, forty-five in number, are now on their way to Charleston in charge of a strong posse of United States Marshals and guards. FOBEIGN. i; King Benhazin, of Dahomey, -will fuh mit to the French, abdicate, and accept a pension.; ... - Nineteen thousand hands employed in the jute mills at Dundee have gone out ; , on u strike. The Prefect of Marseilles has suspended ' for one month four Deputy Mayors, who, while wearing their insigniu of office, par ticipated in the May Day demonstrations. THURSDAY. MAY 4. Wilford Woodruff, President of the Mor mon Church, is seriously ill at Salt Lake City, Utah- '' First fire at the World's Fair took place yesterday. It was a slight one at the Casino and resulted iu very little damage. Ex-President Harrison has been elected commander for the ensuing year of Ohio Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. The College of Bishops, of the M. E Church South began its annual session at Kansas City, Mo., yesterday morning. It is a secret session which has for its object the arranging of the plan of Episcopal visi tation for the year. Mrs. Anna Maria Young, widow of a Revolutionary soldier, and the oldest pen- sioner of the war for Independence, died at Easton, Pa., yesterday. She lacked four months of being 100 years old. Her hus band died 50 years ago. A break occur ted yesterday in the great reservoir at Lewiston. O., letting loose an enormous volume of water- The reservoir contains 17,000 acres.- Great damage was done by the flood to crops and hundreds of houses were partially submerged. No lives were lost. FOREIGN. Official announcement is made of the be throthal of Princess May of Teck to the ' Duke of York. The whole of the Island of Sicily was shaken by an earthquake yesterday Tele graphic communication Is interupted and the damage donel-annot yet be ascertained A Havana dispatch says: The Governor General has declared Santiago de Cuba in a 6tate of seige and warns the rebels that only a surrender within erght days will se cure exemption from punishment, which means death. FRIDAY, MAY fi. Five failures were announced yesterday oa the New York Exchange. Cincinnati furniture factory employes numbering 10,000 men threaten to strike! ("apt. Richard Park, a hero of three Arc tic, explorations, died yesterday at St. Johns, N. F. . Gov. Flower has denied the application for clemency for Cariyle !W. Harris, the wife murderer, and Harris will be electro cuted during next week. Amid a number of other failures recorded 'yesterday- on the New York Stock Ex Change, the Nati.mal Cordage Trust, capi talized at 435,000,000, was placed in the bands of a receiver. . l ue Episcopal Convention in session at Boston has chosen Rev. Dr. William Lau rence, Dean of the Theological School at Cambridge, to succeed the late Dr. Phil lips Brooks as Bishop of Massachusetts. The blacksmith shop of the Cincinnati & Southern Railroad, at Chattanooga, Tenn was totally wrecked yesterday by the blow ing out of a cylinder head. Two men were Instantly killed and three others injured. " POBEIGX. Marshal MacMahon, ex-President of France, Is seriously ill of influenza: He is 85 years -old.- The Bank of Victoria and the City and Commercial Banks, of Melbourne, Austra lia, have reopened their doors. Shipping trade is blocked at Bristol, Eng.. all the union dock laborers having gone out on a strike against the-m ploy meut ot non-union men. SATURDAY.. MAT . Edward, W. Lecompte.Secretary of State of Maryland, died yesterday of consump- tion, aged 62 years. President Cleveland has appointed Mrs. Annie B. Kenna, widow of the late Senator Kenna, postmaster at Charleston, West Va. vice H. C. McWharter, removed. John A. Johnston, who some weeks ago. shot John A. Upchurch, Deputy U S. Karshal, at Raleigh, N. C , gave himself up to the police at Richmond, Va.. yester day. Wilmington, Ohio., was struck by a heavy cyclone yesterday afternoon". Every church iu the town but one was badly wrecked and many houses were damaged. No one was killed, but several people re ceived serious injuries. R, G. Dun & Cos weekly review of trade says that at nearly all points the backward season and bad weather, with slow collec tions, give cause of complaint. Through out the South business is fair. Failures for the past week in the United States and Canada 243; against !S0t for the correspond ing week last year. KOBEIOX. It is officially announced at Madrid that all the Cuban Insurgents bare surrendered. Repeated earthquakes have been felt throughout Eastern Sicily in the last thirty six hours! Many of the villages have been deserted. Mount Etna shows signs of eruption. . The destruction by fire is reported of the British steamship Khiva off the Arabian coast. A large number of Mohammedan pilgrims lost their lives. Sl'XUAY.MAY 7. During a severe storm yesterday at Liberty, Ind.. several people were etruck by lightning and killed. A. D. Jones of North Carolina, was ap pointed yesterday by President Cleveland to be Consul General to Shanghai. The salary is $5,000 a year. E. W Carmack.editor of the Goinniercwd and W. A. Collier, editor of the ApjtcaX Atalandie, of Memphis, Tenn., have been arrested for engaging in a duel. Secretary Carlisle has received the resig nation of Gen. W. S- Rosecrans, Register of the Treasury, to take effect on May 31st The General resigns on account of con tinued ill heal tli. The Mississippi river is rising rapidly at Arkansas City, Ark., and a break in the levees is feared". A break in this vicinity would flood thousands of aeres. To add to the already imminent danger a heavy rain is falling. Total visible supply of cotton for the whole world is 8,(583,306 bales. of which 3,108,106 bales are Ameriean, against 4,116.911 bales, and 3,452,711 bales respectively last year. Receipts of cotton this week at all interior towns 13.351 bales Receipts from plantations 9874. bales; stock in sight 6,223,674 bales. FOREIGN. Ex Minister Robert T. Lincoln sailed from England for New York yesterday. Italy will, it is stated, spend about $20, 000,000 on her navy next year. German Chancellor Caprivi has resigned and Count Von Eulenburg has been sum moned by Emperor William to Potsdam and will probably succeed Caprivi as Chancellor. , MONDAY. MAY 8. Ice in the Fulton chain of lakes, in New York, is still sixteen inches thick. Mrs. Elise Depew, wife of Chauncey 31. Depew, of New York, died at her home on Fifty-fourth street, New York, yesterday afternoon. A cyclone did great damage yesterday at Gainesville, Texas. A train standing near the town was lifted up, turned over and dashed into a ravine. Col. Ward H. Lamon.who was President Lincoln's private secretary, died at his home in Martinsburg, West Va., last night His health had been failing for some time past. An explosion on board a Mississipp river steamer, at Wolf Island, 24 miles be low Cairo, Illinois, scalded six persons to death and fearfully injured about twenty others Edwin T. Swift, teller in the Binning ham National Bank of New Haven, Conn who has been employed by the bank for the past twelve years, was arrested yester day charged with the embezzlement of $10,000 from the bank.. FOREIGN. Eight-hour demonstrations were held in many European cities yesterday. Sir James Anderson, who commanded the Great Eastern during the cable laying of 1865 and 1866,died yesterday at London, Eng. Rector Ahlwardt, the obstreperous mem ber of the last Reichstag, has been arrested and returned to prison to serve out bis sen tence for having libelled the Loewes, small arms manufacturers. TUKSUAY. MAY 0. H. H. "Warner, the well known patent medicine man of Rochester, N. Y., made n assignment yesterday. Carlyle Harris, the wife murderer, was electrocuted at Sing Sing prison, New York, yesterday noon. He protested his innocence to the last. Governor Stone, of Mississippi has sent two companies of militia to Brookhaven to guard the jail. It was feared that an at tack would be made upon the building in an attemot to rescue some White Caps con fined therein. FOBEIGN. j A cable from London says that Mr. Gladstone has offered the place of Poet Laureate, made vacant by the death of Tennyson, to art critic John Raskin. FINANCIAL PANIC. :o:- POLITICIANS TO BLAME SHOULD THERE HE ONE. Extra Session to Kettle the Financial Question. Undesirable Populists Say "I Told Yon So." Chinese Exclu- slon May Be Unconstitutional. Washington., May 8. "If there is a financial panic in this country," said a Senator famous for his conservatism n everything, during a private con versation, "it will Indirectly chargea He to the o!iticians who are more ntejitupon carrying oht their theo ries than upon the welfare of the country at 4ary;e. There exists not the slightest reason for a panic, ami I regard the flurry in Wall street which las crippled the cordage trust and several other similar concerns as lene- ficial to the country rather than in- unons. There was a time when the operators in Wall street were rt-garded as controlling factors in the finances of the country, hut it has long since gone by. and to-day they are known for just what they are gamblers. They got up the recent scare for the sole purpose of frightening the ad ministration into issuing bonds, and in the end they iecaine its victims, and they have few sympathizer? and deserve fewer.' While there is no apparent connec tion between the slump in Wall street and the condition of the National finances there is no question that the situation in Wall street is toeing used as an argument by those who are try to persuade President Cleveland to all an immediate extra session of Congress, to d-al with financial mat ters. On the other hand, some prom inent men who two months ago were strongly in favor of an early extra session now doubt the wisdom of call ing on They argue mat in tlie"pre- sent unsettled state of public sentiment regarding (inance it would but add to the stir to have Congress meet ami fail to aree upon any financial mea sure that would meet the approval of the President, and those who ought to be best informed on the state of Con gressional sentiment insist that such would be the certain result of an extra session at this time. Representative Boen, of Minn., a "middle of the road" populist, says the present situation vindicates the position taken by the populists in the last campaign as to the rear issue, which" they contended was finance, and not the tariff. Mr Boen believes in the remonetization of silver at full legal tender value. There seems to be a general impres sion here that the Geary Chinese Ex elusion act will not result in the de portation of any of the numerous Chi namen who ignored it and refused to register. There are two reasons for this opinion, one being that the Su preme Court, which will hear argu ments on the new law this week, will decide it unconstitutional, and the other that the administration will. even if the law be declared, constitu. tibnal, not attempt to carry out its provisions. If the administration is opposed to the law, as it is said to be, it has a good excuse for not carrying it out by shipping the Chinamen back to China, in the failure of Congress to appropriate sufficient money to pay for their tickets; but should the Su preme Court decide it unconstitutiona no excuse will be needed. The long expected fight between the New York factions for the federa patronage of New York city is ex pected to open in a few days, and both sides are already well represented here. Tammany has by no means abandoned the hope of getting the pestmaster and collector of the port, the two places which control the bulk of the patronage, but the anti-snappers are confident that they will get neither, There are reasons for believing that these appointments have been delayed because Mr. Cleveland has been try ing to find men who while not being exactly identified with either faction will le in a i.ense satisfactory to both, or will at least prevent either from claiming that it was recognized and the other "turned down.'" Washington has a stone cutters' strike on hand, the trouble growing out of the refusal of the employers to agree to certain demands made by the men, one ot them being for a weekly pay day, instead of fortnightly, and another reducing the numler of ap prentices in each yard to two, with out regard to the numler of men em ployed; the old rule allows four to each yard. There is no trouble about wsjf's, as the men have leen receiv- ng forty five cents an hour for eight lours work a a a v. i he strike is a ery serious thing right in the midst of the building season, and the men say they will not return to work until their demands are granted. Attempts are to ie made to bring men in from other places. The postponement of the reassem bling of the International monetary conference until next November ex cited little or no interest here, as no- body seems to expect that it will amount to anything practically at any time. CLOSED ON SUNDAY. Chicago. 111., May 7. Within the precincts of Jacksor Park to-day there were more seagulls than human be ings. Without the gates, however, 60,000 people vainly clamored to get in. Excursion trains brought a large numoer of country people into the city, and most of them went out to the park, expecting to be admitted. They were sorely disappointed. The day being clear and moderately warm. lowever, they gradually found their wav to other amusements". Buffalo Bill s Wild West Show, which is sit- uated within a stone's throw of the park, accommodated 18,000 people during the afternoon. As many as 5.000 more were turned away. The saloons in the neighborhood were crowded, and merry go rounds and other catch penny devices secured liberal patronage. There was more drunkenness in the vicinitv of tiie Park than was ever known before. Brawls were. numerous, and 'he police had their hands full. Last Summer the fair grounds were visited every Sunday by 25.000 jieo pie. Even after '25 cents admission was charged the same iiuiuImt ot peo pie visited the Park, and during the late W inter.after 50 cents was charged. 15.000 people paid to go inside' on pleasant Sundays This L shows how much popular. interest there is in the fair among the common people, whose only chance to visit it is on Sunday. It is especially noteworthy that the' crowds seeking entrance to dav were orderly. Less than 5,000 persons were inside the fences. They were nearly all workmen engaged in rushing the in stallation of exhibits and the comple. tion of booths in the buildings. The strictness with which the rule exclud ing viiitors was enforced may be judged from the fact that at noon Mr. Tucker, Chief of the Bureau of Ad missions, refused to admit the foreign naval officers, who are here on a hasty trip. Thev telephoned to the fair grounds, asking if they might not be permitted to inspect the grounds and buildings to-day. Their request was courteously but firmly refused, and they went to Buffalo Bill's show in stead. - Orders had been issued to keep out everybody whose presence was not absolutely necessary. All the em ployes who could be spared were re fused admission, and even the depart ment officials had to explain why they should be allowed to go in. A Government wagon delivered a load of mail matter at the Post Office within the grounds. Next Sunday and succeeding Sundays, if the .same rule is in force, the Government mail waon will not be allowed to pass the gates. The reason for this is plain the Government put itself on record as withing to have the exposition closed on Sundays. It is only the ex pressed desire of the Federal Govern ment which keeps the gates closed. The local Directory wants them open. And the Directory is of the opinion that if the Government is a Sunday closing Government, it should trans act no business of any nature within the grounds on the first day of the week. If it tries to do so, the Direc tory will see that it does not. There will be a big fight the coming week over this Sunday-closing busi ness. The law will be invoked to open the gates, and no doubt the Sunday closing people will make use of the same means to keep them closed. It is not easy to see what the outcome will be. To-morrow night the fair will be open until 1 1 o'clock, and there will' .be music in all the band stands. The buildings will be illuminated and the electric fountain will play. Wilmington, Del., May 7. Sixty, year-old Sarruei Morrison, of No. 1113 Brandy wine street, dropped dead in Kiugswood Methodist Church to-day. An old time "experience" meeting was in progress, and in telling his ex perience Mr. Morrison became greatly excited, and an attack of heart disease was induced. TIRE I) t :o: WILL SEK HE NO MORE O FFICE-SEEKE11S. A StvichtfrMrl Letter Which tUya That Hi Flluc U Exhausted. ; Xothlas Like It Krr Kanwi lie- 1 for. .Politician Aght. 1 I ! President Cleveland last niirht issued a formal announcement to ! I the effect that he would hereafter receive no . i . -'I ' ' : I . j office-seekers at the White HouseJ s i I I The notice was in the following words i i ! 1 ' Executive Mansion, My 8. j It has become apparent, months' experienc;, that after, two .the rules heretofore promulgated regulating in terviews with the President have wholly tailed m their operation The time whica urider those rules was set apart for the reception of Senators' and Representatives has leen almost entirely spent in listening lo applica tions for office which have !een bej wildenng ;n volume, perplexing and; exhausting m their iteration, and imJ i i possible of rememh ance. j j .i -: I A due retsarjJ for public duty, which! must be neclected if! the present con-j ditions continue, and an observance of the limitations' placed upon human en j durance, oblige ine1 to decline from! and after this dale all personal interi 1 '. i i views with those seeking appointment to office, except as I J on mv own mo-! i i I i tion, may especially invite them. The; same considerations make it impossi-j , , , . I , , i ble for mo to receive those who merely , i ' 1 i desire to pay their respects except on; the days and during the hours especi! ally designated for that pu i pose. j 1 earnestly J request Senators and Representatives to aid me in securing 1 'I i for them uninterrupted interviews bvi I i "j declining to introduce their constitu-i enls and friend' when visitimrthe Exj ecu live Mansion during the hours Appli- designated for their reception. cants for office will only prejudice their prospects by reptating impor- tnnit Washmg-; ton to await results j Grover Cleveland. The late hour at which fhe Presi dent issued his semi-official proclama tion last night did not prevent the; tenor of its contents fiom becoming The very) the Presi-: know in the hotel lobbies. boldness and uniqueness of dent's action staggered evtiyoody, and the six or eight Congressmen who; happened to bo found by Post reporters wanted a chance to! get their breath: before making any utterances for pub i i l - I i lication. Jn other words, they were looking toste which way the cat would! jump next. Men from the bouth, the! North, the East, and the West were; -t 1 i equally cautious. It is evident that they regarded the man in the White! House as one who hews to his own pre-' determined line, let the chips fall where they may. It could not be learned last night President; whether the action of the was the result of his personal deter-j unnation, or whether he had consulted t ! ; - his executive advisers. It is not gen- erally supposed that the latter knew nothing of the announcement. The i i i circumstances that have lead to the! issuance of the order an I order, by; i i I i the way, that is without a parallel in American history are familiar to the 11 - i i public. J j " J ; On March 6 the pressure began. It t i has lasted, with little intermission,! until the present. Day after day men who wanted office and were backed by their Senators,! men who wanted office and were backed by their Representaj tives, and men who wanted office and were backed by nothing save their own: trust in their own abilities have thronged the north-facing slope of the White House grounds and insisted! that they be given audience. There has never been anything i like it in American politics, and there will never be acain. The crush at one of the in sufficient exits of a theater nearest like it Through building is - it all the Executive has made no sign of impa tience, j He has listened with an infinite pa tience to many, men who had little tcj .say. He had welcomed with cordial obligingness 10,000 Democrats wbd have labored in the earnest belief that. i i - ' they had only to ask and the London; consulate would be granted. He has remained upon his feet like the veriest dry goods cleric in the United States Like the veriest dry j goods clerk b has pulled down his stock time and again, and unrolled it for the inform tion of people who He has had a unique would not buy i experience, en joyed it whiie the novelty lasted, and has grown tired of itJ Theday of the OLKVELA'XI) IS t . . office-seeker ' mt the White Hous?, so iar as Mr. i.ieveunu is concerned, has passed. WThile President Cleveland's order barring office-seekers from his presence henceforth, unless specially invited, has aroused the ire of that class, it is not confined to such persons. Senators and Representatives themselves say that if he had promptly olieyed the in junction of the American people to turn the Republicans out Mr. Cleve land would have been spareo much of the annoyance of which he so com plamingly speaks. However Mr. Cleveland may feel about it, there is no doubt that Secre tary Carlisle and Secretary Hoke Smith are sound on the question, and firm in the faith of putting Democrats in office. Secretary Carlisle, afraid of his own well-known tender heart, but strong in the conviction that his party ad her ents should have every office that can legally be turned over to them, has put his clever and resourceful son Logan forward to attend to the distribution of the patronage, and Logan is doing it -to the Queen's taste." while the father looks approvingly on with his beaming Democratic eye. In fact, it wasieported around the Treasury Department today that Sec retary Carlisle, when some of the chiefs of division whose resignation had been called for complained of the short notice, said: -'You received notice on the 8th of last November in tones loud enough for all to have heard." And the woik goes on with spirit. Treasury chiefs of division and high grade clerks who have served in that department for many years are being swept out to make room for Demo crats, while men who were retained on the score of unusual efficiency by Secretaries Manning and Fairchild are not considered now. And so far as the Civil Service law will rnn it. Secretary 1 loke Smith, of the Interior Department, has got his ax sharpened to a keen edge.and seems leased at the smoothness with which it removes Republican heads. !- To a prominent Democrat who called to ask the retention of a Repub lican friend, Secietary Smith said: 'I'm surprised that you should plead for the retention of a Republican. Now, that's not the way to assist me in getting rid kof them. I believe there are Democrats capable of filling every position in this depart ment.aucr- I want to get these Democrats in. That's my policy, and I look to Demo crats like you to aid and sustain me in carrying it out. George Bartle, of Virginia, who has kept the great seal of the State De partment since Daniel Webster's day, has not been reduced from his $1800 snap to a $1200 clerkship as errone ously published. Civil Service Reformers are greatly stirred up by the removal from the Treasury Department of George Stur- tevant, who never voted in Ins life and was born in office almost. Third Auditor of the Treasury Hart, of Ohio, tired of waiting for his sue cessor to be named, is going to quit anyhow and give the President a hint. Benjamin Fleishman, of Philadel phia, to day filed at the Treasury an application for a position as Special Treasury Agent. It appears that all captains of the watch in the various departments were put under the classified service by Mr. Harrison just before his term expired. When Secretary Morton, last week, appointed a captain ot the watch to succeed the man discharged at the Weather Bureau on account of his ap propriation of public property, Mr. Morton was informed that he had no authority to make the appointment, the Civil Service Commissioners noti fying him that the order of the Presi dent came too late to be inserted in the last annual report and rules of the Commission BOUGHT OFF THE LEADERS Madrid, May 7. It is reported that the collapse of the revolt in Cuba is due to the Government's buying off the leaders. This method was adopted during the last revolt because it is cheaper than fighting. The Government tound it impossible to bring about a decisive battle with the gueiriila bands. The rebels hid in the forests and murdered all soldiers straying from the army, which was decimated, moreover, by malaria and typhoid iever. The Sartoiius brothers are land owners in the village of Ye lasco. They weie easily bought, owing to the coldness of the population to ward them. STATE NKWS. :o:- HESTIfi UCTI VK C YCXON E AT OXFOHIVX. C. Accident mnd Fire l Gaatonl. AmIm- . uirat r Haliri. Receiver f Clin ton Loan AaeocUtlon Paying I' p. Lrr Truck Shipment. The Winston Sentinel says that the outlook U very encouiaging for the Hotel Zmzendorf recently destroyed by fire. j A cyclone 6truck Oxford on Wed nesday afternoon, destroying about fifteen buildings and damaging other property. Other towns suffered in like proportion ... Mr. W. A. Dunn began on Tuesday the payment of the first dividend that has been declared by the suspended Clinton Loan Association. Holders of certificates are receiving 33$ per cent, on their deposits, and Mr Dunn is; kept busy in paying out to each his quota. Sampson l)cmocmt. " Fiiday the steamer Newberne of the N. N. & W. Line took out alout 2,500 packages of truck principally peas. The Sir. Neuse of the E. C. D. Line took out 4,600 packages of peas and G0U crates of asparagus, turnips and cabbages. The total shipment for the day was about 8,000 packages. Not a bad shipment for April! New Berne Journal ' . While Mr. J. M. McCall, a guard, was out with a detachment of convicts, last Saturday, three of them, Brown VVallace. Will J, Robinson and Joe Bogaiu broke and ran into the bushes. Mr. McCall unloaded his shot jjun at them. Joe Bogan escaped, but Wal lace and Robinson fell to the ground after running about half a mile. Both of jthem were seriously wounded, hut not fatally. Charlotte 7iW. i . ... jTwo little colored boys, Otho Tur ner ami Arthur Hauser, got2 into a1 difficulty in the vicinity of the colored i graded school buiding last Friday, in which the Turner boy cut Flauser with a knife, making a gash six inches ' n ilength on the right side of his breast and extending through the ribs. The wound is serious but not dangerous. The boy was bound over to court. Statesville landmark. ! . Joe Carson, aged about thirteen years, son of Mr. J. H. ('arson, who ives about a mile north of Pilot Mountain, was accidently shot by ids brother Bob on Tuesday morning of ast week. They were fooling with a 32 calibre pistol when it was suddenly discharged, the ball striking Joe in the breast, about two inches below the heart. He is dangerously but not necessarily fatally hurt. Mt. Airy News. Mr. J. S. Spencer yesterday morn- ing received a telegram from Mr. S. B. Tanner, of Henrietta Mills, stating that fire broke out in the lower end of the warehouse Wednesday night, and a part of the building and COO bales of cotton were consumed. The origin of the firo is not known, but it was supposed to have occurred from com bustion. The loss is fully covered by insurance. Charlotte Observer. Mr. T. T. Gaskins, the largest lum ber-mill owner in this county made an assignment last week, with Captain J. M. Grizzard, of Halifax, assignee. Mr. Gaskins mills are located on the Coast Line, near Halifax, and gave employment to a large number of hands. He carried on an extensive saw mill business and owned about twenty miles of railroad over which he handled his logs to the mill to be converted into lumber. Weldon Sews. Mr. Robt. Queen was accidentally shot in the breast and face last Thurs day. He was out squirrel hunting with his two sons and Lee Friday, Jr., when a gun in the bands of his son Edmund Queen was discharged with the above mentioned result- One shot struck Mr. Queen in the eye. inflicting a j painful wound. Drs. Smith and Reid were summoned but on making examination did not think the injuries were serious. At last accounts he was doing well. Last Sunday night, Mr. John N. Hanua's barn was totally destroyed by fire. His cows, three horse', corn and roughness were burned with it. Only a wagon and harness were caved. The loss without insurance of any kind, falls heavily on Mr. Hanna at this time of the year. Aj subscription paper was started by a neighbor, and friends in Gastonia and elsewhere subscrileJ liberally for his assistance. The Cre is thought to have been of incendiary origin. Gastonia Gazette.