DEVOTED TO THE BEST INTERESTS OF SOUTHPORT AND BRUNSWICK COUNTY. ESTABLISHED 1890. SOUTHPORT. N. C. THURSDAY, JUKE 21. 1894. WHOLE NUMBER 226 IKE WORLD'S NEWS. A 'CONDENSED SUMMARY OF A WEEK'S DOINGS Sultan of Morocco Itead. Hig- Fire at Krt Wlman Fouxl Cwiltjr fctock Yard at Jcney Clt Barned Hearf Powder Kxploaloo. " - WEDNESDAY. JUNK 13. Baltimore, Md., was swept yesterday, by a severe wind and hail storm, a number of persons were injured in wrecked build ings. '. : Columbia. S; C-J has decided to issue licenses for the sale of beer and wine, the statutes prohibiting the sale of whiskey and brandy. Miners in PennsylvaniaOhio and In diana have retJutiai'i the uxn promise their leaders at Columbus, Ohio effected and will not return to work. . Five hundred Coxeyites at Bismark. N. I)., are causing trouble in their efforts to get East, all trains are run through the city at full speed to prevent their being boarded by the army FOREIGN. The death of Muley Hassan Sultan of Morocco, threatens the peace of Europe, three nations have sent war ships to Tan gier. The towns of Granada and Almeria, Spain, were shaken byin earthquake yes terday. Many houses were destroyed and several persons killed THURSDAY. JUNE 14. ' A parlor car was unearthed yesterday at Johnstown, Pa., having been buried by the flood of 1889. ' 5 The Union Stock Yards at Bennings, Washington, D. C, were destroyed by fire yesterday. Loss $125,000 The estimated loss to coal miners in one section of Ohio, alone, since April 21, from the strike is $21 6.000 Charges of embezzlement of $5,000 caused the arrest of E. II. Greve ex-clerk of the Fourth National Bank of St. Louis. Granting a writ of error in the Indiana polis bank wrecking case,1 Justice Harlan, at Chicago, ordered the release under bonds of F, A and Percival Coffin FOREIGN, A band of counterfeiters, just arrested in Hamburg, Ger., had baffled discovery for five years At Panama yesterday a fire broke out destroying 300 houses with estimated loss of $3,000,000; 5,000 people were rendered homeless by the fire. FRIDAY. JUNE 15. A fierce 'fire in the "paper district" in New York yesterday, caused a loss of $200,000 Judge William Walter Phelps is lying at the point of death at his home in Engle wood. N. J. Confession of pension fraunds, which netted $18,000 is made by J. M, Taylor, of Tahiequab. I. T. Reports received at Washington y ester day, state that the Corean rebellion had ended, due to the arrival of Admiral Sker rett on the cruiser Baltimore. An examination of the Schenectady, N. Y., Savings Bank revealed a shortage of $10,000, Teller August Henke, after being questioned disappeared and his body was found the next day ia the aqueduct FOREIGN. Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, died in London yeslerday, after a lingering illness aged 73 A sailing vessel carrying 110 Irish labor ers was capsized yesterday in Clew Bay on OUR COMPETITORS FIND THEIR WATERLOO. OBEAT REDUCTIONS ON A $40,000 STOCK OF DRY GOODS The beauties of which attract the buyers from far and near. We have just opened a car load of merchandise purchased by our buyer of a bankrupt dry goods dealer at fifty cents on the dollar. km i hmi NO. 116 MARKET STREET. WILMINGTON, N. C. the west coast of Ireland, only ..) were saved SATURDAY. JUNE 16. K. G. Dun & Co's weekly review of trade says that there were 232 failures in the United States during the past week .against 313, last year. The soft coal strike in Pennsylvania which tied up 50,000 men is over and the strikers in Ohio are expected to agree also. After a twenty days chase, H. II. Wil- kie, who absconded from El wood, Ind., with $50,000 was caught at Columbus, Miss. I The trial of Erastus Wiman, in New York, for forgery in the second degree ended yesterday in a verdict of guilty ac companied by a recommendation for mercy A party of 14 children in a flat boat were upset in the Kentucky river near Waco, Ky., yesterday. Jack Sewell working near by, by herioc" efforts saved all hut one Child. ! . . FOREIGN. The plague in Hong Kong is said to have all the symptoms of the pest which ravaged Europe in the Middle Ages; 1 .900 people have died of it already. SUNDAY. JUNE 17. The school census just finished in Chi cago gives a population of 1,562,796 souls. The Associated Banks of New York now hold $76,376,575 in excess of the require ments of the 25 per cent, rule The fourmile eight-oared shell race be tween Cornell and Pennsylvania on the Delaware river yesterday was won by Cor nell by 5 lengths in 21 minutes 12J seconds The Central Stock Yards and Transit Company's big abattoir in Jersey City.N. J. caught fire yesterday morning and the building and its contents were destroyed. The loss will be $1,500,000 which is be lieved ;to be covered by insurance. The total visible supply of cotton for the world is 3,113,000 bales, of which 2.512, 900 bales are American; against 3,183,573 bales, and 2.582,273 bales respectively last year, j Receipts of cotton this week at all interior towns 9,738 bales; receipts from the plantations 6,664, bales; crop in sight 7,232.338 bales. i i I FOREIGN. : The; Greet bark Agitos and the Russian steamer Marussia collided and sank in the Sea of Azor recently, twenty-four seamen were drowned. i MONDAY. JUNE 18. Mr. and Mrs. John Dilly, of Excelsior, Wis., have been arrested for counterfeiting Three men were killed and two seriously injured by a bolt of lightning at Menomi nee, Mich., yesterday- The coal strikers in Ohio have practi cally agreed to the compromise scale of wages and are expected to resume work to-day Henry Ferguson and son, who were driving in a wagon near Greenville, 111. yesterday were caught up by a cyclone and carried half a mile,they were both injured The1 works of the Chattanooga powder company at Chattanooga, Tenn were scat tered for a quarter of a mile yesterday by the explosion of 720 kegs of powder, the report was heard twenty miles away. FOREIGN. China and Mexico have practically adop ted a reciprocity treaty and a great exodus of Chinese to the republic is likely. I TUESDAY. JUNE 19. One thousand men were thrown out of work yesterday by the closing down of the Mount Claire shops of the B. & O. R. R. The organization of the Southern Rail way Company, the successor of the Rich mond & Danville railroad, was effected yesterday and Sam'l Spencer was elected president. WASHINGTON NEWS. :o:- YOUNG RANSOM ASA SUGAR SPECULATOR. Suicide of au Ex-Rpreentative. Bonds for liullding Road. A New National Banking:, Coinage and Currency Sv ItilU Quay Hand in Sugar. Washington, June 18. Had the Senate investigating committee brought out the fact that Senator Ransom's son had been speculating in the stock of the sugar trust before the testimony of the Havemeyers and other sugar trust magnates was taken it would have created a sensation; but, after the statements of the sugar kings concerning the method of smoothing their legislative path by making liberal contributions to both of the old political parties and of their coming to Washington to get the trust taken care of in the sugar sche dule ot the tariff bill, it could not be expected that the bad taste not to give it a worse name of young Mr. Ransom in using a part of the money he received from his 6 a day sinecure, as clerk to his father's com mittee in speculating in a stock the value of which would be affected by his father's vote would create a sen sation. It was but the splash of a minnow after the blowing of whales. There is a general feeling of sympathy for Senator Ransom, j Senator Quay's cool confession of speculating in sugar stock and his Tweedly manner of saying in effect to the Senate ".what are' you going to do about it?" together with the Ransom episode were about! the only inter esting things brought out by the committee's adoption of Senator Hill's suggestion, to swear all of the Senators although all of them, except two or three absentees, have been asked a series of eight questions covering any possible connection or knowledge they might have of speculation in sugar stock. Among the absentees is Sena tor Gorman, who has been on the sick list ever since directly after the sugar schedule of the tariff bill was reported to the Senate. j The suicide, Saturday morning at his residence here of ex-Representative Thomas M. Bayne, of Pa., was about as unexpected' a thing as could have happened. Since voluntarily retiring from Congress Mr. Bayne has lived here in handsome style, devoting his time to special enjoyment and study, and few ;men have made more friends., or, as ex Speaker Reed aptly put it, "deserved more." His health had been bad for some time and in a fit of despondency following a hemorrhage of the lungs be shot himself. ! The Coxey bill providing for the building of roads by the issue of non interest bearing bonds by the govern ment has been introduced in both branches of Congress in the Senate by Mr. Pefler, of Kans., and in the House by Mr. Geary, of Cal. and Coxey and Carl Browne have been granted hearings by the Senate com mittee on Education! and Labor, but CORSETS 75 STYLES TO SELECT FROM ElMtBMCHCLUfi, GENUINE I jsam-firras. 4.SXTRA LOtiO . 75 cent Corsets 50 cents $1 Corsets at 75 cents. THE CELEBRATED W. B. $1.39. Corset for $1.00. ! mm their arguments made so little impres sion on the Senators that they now speak of the Senate as the twelfth juror does of the obstinate eleven. The supply of food at the camp of the Coxeyites is once more short very short and appeals to the public for contributions are being made. These appeals bring in less and less each time, and it requires no prophet to predict that the time will soon come when they will bring in nothing, and the men wili bo compelled to scatter in order to obtain sustenance. Even those who are in sympathy with the objects sought now say that nothing can be gained by keeping several hundred idle men camped in the suburbs of Washington. If anything can be accomplished anywhere it is in the Congressional campaign and elections, and not in Washington that can be done. Galvin's men have made a leisurely start on foot for the Pacific Coast. - ,x The sub committee of five selected by the House committe on Banking and Currency to prepare a bill pro viding for a new National banking, coinage and currency system, to be reported early next week, are hard at work on the bill. Jt is given out that this bill is to be as nearly free from partisan politics as it can pos sibly be made. It seems that there is a possibility that the bill reported will, instead of providing for a new system, merely provide for the formation of a non partisan currency commission to devote the rest ot this year, to an in vestigation and the study of the question and then report the result to Congress. Representative Coombs, of N. Y., introduced a bill providing for such a commission sometime ago and Treasury officials have been urging the acceptance of the idea. The silver men, while not objecting to the idea, regard it as an attempt to head off any silver legislation at the present session of Congress W ell, that everlasting and tire some tariff bill has not yet been voted upon in the Senate, and there is no probability that it will be during the present week. The wool schedule has been already worked for nearly a week and although an attempt is now being made to force it to a vote there is no certainty that it is going to succeed. There is no indication that the delay is going to be favorable to the sugar trust. On the contrary; the final adoption of the sugar sche dule appears to be daily growing more doubtful, as the sentiment of the people in all sections of the country becomes better known here. As a straw showing the effect of this senti ment it may be mentioned that a proposition has been made by one of the majority Senators to avoid the humiliation of having the House smash the whole schedule by modi fying it before the bill leaves the Senate. The free sugar sentiment is apparently stronger than ever in the House. The official report of the trial of the greatest plate that has ever stood the ballistic specifications of the naval ordnance department was made Fri day. The armor accepted under this trial is 600 tons, curved Harveyized nickel steel one. MOURNING GOODS KATZ & P0LV0GT. 1 1( Market Street. SPECIAL SALE BLACK GOODS. 54 inch Ladies Cloth 69c, worth $1.00 40 inch double Chain Serf e 39c, worth 00 cents 46 inch double Chain Serge 59c, worth 89 cents. Surah Finish $1.43, worth $1.75 40 inch ArmureJe Foi, 85c worth $1.25 ' 46 inch Silk Finished Henrietta 79 cents worth $1.25. 40 inch 69c. worth $1- 40 inch Surah Sere 49c worth 65c. Prcstley's Silk Warp Henrietta $1.43, worth $1.75 40 inch Batiste all wool Silk Finish, 49c, worth 70c, 40 inch 59c, worth 75c, 42 inch 75c worth $1. I 49 inch Wool Challie 59e, worth 75c Xunsveiling Veilings at 50 per cent below cost. This offer is limited to three days. Cotton Mourninc Goods, plaid and striped Black Organdies 10c, worth 15 to 20 cents. French China Silk Finished Batiste 30c. quality only 15c French'Mull, 47 inches wide, worth 75c only 39c per yard. MORGANTON. N. C. -:o:- THE GEM OF THE UPPER CATAWBA VALLEY. A City of Krflneiunt, Culture and 1 -limited Hospitality. Historic Associa tion. State Institution. Meetinc of the X. C. Press Association. ' Tq the casual traveler passing over the Western North Carolina railroad, the call of "Morganton,"as that station on the road is reached, would attract no special attention unless the traveler knew of what lay beyond the little station building, in the charming little city of Morganton. . , Built on a range of wooded hills, thirteen hundred feet above the sea level, with its handsome residences and beautiful grounds, Morganton attracts at once, and as the place with its many charming surroundings be comes better known to the visitor, the 'appellation "Gem of the Upper Catawba Valley," seems most suitably bestowed upon this city. ' ,i Morganton has much in its history of interest to North Carolinians, being for a long time, so to speak, the Capitol of Western North Caro lina, the Supreme Court of the State holding its' sessions there, thus gath ering within its limits many persons of refinement and culture, and estab lishing business interests that made its citizens prosperous. Looking across the! beautiful Catawba, the visitor sees the .Quaker Meadows, the home of the McDowells, whose struggles during Revolutionary times are still of absorbing interest among history lovers J . t The same spirit of perseverance of local pride, that distinguished the people of Burke in years past, as well the; charming hospitality and refined manners, are to day notable charac teristics of the citizens or Morgan ton. "Swearing allegiance Burke" isjno idle and passing oath among those who have its best interests at heart, and it is this hearty cooperation of its people, men and women, that has se cured for Morganton the State Hos pital for the Insane, and Deaf and Dumb Asylum, and is likely to secure more institutions in the future. ?; The visitor to Morganton must visit both of', these State Institutions and see the(admirable system and care with which North Carolina's unfor tunates are treated. The largest tannery in the South;: is at Morganton, its bills tor bark alone amounting ' to thirty-five thousand dollars a year. The Waldensan settlement, eight miles from Morganton, a little com munity just started, deserves the attention of aH Christian people of the State, and until these colonists can become self-surporting, as they Boon will j be, . every assistance ought to be extended to them . No town or city could have shown such an interest in the arrival, and given its guests such a reception as was given the Editors of the State Press last week at Morganton. From BLAZERS, CAPES, ETON SUITS AT HALF PRICE. I j I i j j ill. Ju 1 m: MM KATZ & POLVOGT. Wilmington, N. C the time o f their arrival until thei departure the editors were given a perfect ovation, and many an editor to day wonders what he had done to ment'such an enjoyable time, and be ille recipient lity. of such pefect hospita- The first afternoon in Morganton the Editors were taken in carriages and shown the beautiful views around the city, also a visit to the nearly completed Deaf and Dumb Asylum, where Pro. E. McK. Goodwin very kmdly showed the new building to many of the visitors. Mayor Pearson on the night of the same day threw open his handsome home and gave the Press a very pleasant reception, and later the young men of the city gk.70 .a. full dress ball in the public hall in honor of their guests, the Editors. The next night, the Chamber of Commerce of Morganton gave one of the finest banquets ever given the Press ot the State which was admirably presided over by Judge J. G. Bynum. The menu was excellent, the music good, and the toasts well responded to. ; On the last afternoon excursions were given to Black Mountain and the Waldensan settlement the Editors having the choice of either trip. The business sessions of the Press were attended with good interest, a number of excellent papers read and matters of particular importance to the editors transacted. President Uurbank presided at all the sessions, and a number of visitors from among the Morganton people took an active interest in the Asso ciation's proceedings- The following officers were elected i for next vear.i President V. C. Erwin. First Vice President C. L. Stevens. 2nd Vice President W.F. Marshall 3rd Vice President V. C. Dowd. Sec. and Treas. J. B. Shernll. Orator John R. Webster. Poet Andrew Joyner. Historian E. J. Hale. Executive Committee- W.C. Erwin, president; J. B. Sherrill; secretary; S. A. Ashe'J. A. Thomas, II. A. London, E. E. Hilhard, Thad R. Manning. Delegates to the National Editorial Convention W. S. Herbert, J. T. Britt, H. A. Latham, Rev. W. L. Grissom, Alternates J. B. Sherrill, H. T. Hernck, J C. Tipton, R. A. Deal. j Greensboro was selected as the next place of meeting. . The following reso lutions offered by Mr. W. F. Marshall and enthusiastically adopted by the Association, well express the feeling of the Editors towards the people of Morganton. j 'The twenty-second annual session of the North Carolina Press Associa tion having met in Morganton, the New World's 'city of the violet crown,' and having experienced on every hand nothing butj the most courteous hospitality and the most regal enter- tain men t, be Association, "Resolved, it, therefore, by this That for the cordial reception, the unrestrained hospitality CONTINUED ON FOCBTH PAGE. I H ERMSD0RF FAST BLACK HOSE For Men, Women and Children MEN'S HALF HOSE. 25c Black This Week 1 5c. 35c Black This Week 25c. 50c Black This Week 3 for $1. CHILDREN'S HOSE. 20 cents Fast Black 15 cents. 25 cents Fast Black 17 cents. i 40 cents Fast Black 25 cents. LADIES'S VESTS. 20 cent Quality 10 cents. 25 cent Quality 15 cents. 40 cent Quality 23 cents 50 cent Quality 39 cents. MEN'S FURNISHINGS. Nobby Line of Men's Negligee Shirts 96 cents each. ! 75 cent men's balbrigan Shirts and Drawers 39 centsL 1.000 50 ind 75 Ties this week 18c. HOUSE FURNISHING. 40c Knotted Fringe Towels 23c 25c Linen Towels 12c 75c Bleached Linen Damask 49c. $4 and $5 Linen Lunch Sets, 1 Cloth and 1 dozen Napkins, for $2.&y. Our Entire Stock ofJMattingDat NewaYork Cost. STATE NEWS. -. -Gr A FINE SHOWING FOR THE TRUCK FARMERS. A Uood Crs Report Irons Cola as bus Co. Some Tall Blackberry II u tars. A Long Chase lor a Crane. A Chance Ahead " For Shad In the Yadkin. On all sides we hear that croos have never been better at this season of the year than at present, with the exception of cotton. Whiteville News. The casting flew in every direction, one piece tearing a big hole in the foundry and another making a simu- ar hole in CapUin Jl'jfehbop. M t. ; Airy News. 'H.r . vo- On application toThe different trans portation lines, and without going into close calculation, reveals the fact that about 25,000 barrels of potatoes had been, shipped from this, port up to Wednesday evening. Washington Gazette. The grape crop in the gardens and vineyards will be short on account of the freeze, but it is said that the crop of wild grapes this year. waa never excelled. These grapes make excellent wine. Charlotte News. The tallest blackberry bushes that we ever saw were found, a few days aE y some boys on ex-sheriff Brewers farm, near here. There were two growing up a tree, and one measured 25 feet and the other 24 feet in length. Pittsboio Record. A few days ago J. K. Spaugh tried to oreak up an old iron retainer and emy loyedjdynamite to do the breaking. He used about a pound ot dynamite and now all that is left to tell the tale is a piece of casting about the size of a flat iron and a big hole in the ground. One dry last week 316,000 young shad were turned loose in the Yadkin near the railroad bridge. As it is shad nature return at spawning time to the river in which it spent their childhood days, so to speak, the pros pect for fishing ought to, be greatly improved when the small fry grow up. Lexington Dispatch. "No good!" is the universal answer of farmers when questioned about the wheat' crop. The harvest began the first of last week earlier than usual on account' of the condition of the crop. The "bearded" wheat is re ported much better than the 'smoth head," and what there is of it will make trom a half to two-thirds of a crop. But unfortunately there is much more "smooth-head" than "bearded" wheat in this county. Statesville Landmark. A whooping crane, measuring C feet from tip to tip, and standing 4 1 feet in heightb, was killed last week i by a colored man at Belo's pond . Jerry Respass is reported to have run it down after it was shot The race is said to have been a lively one and lasted several hours. Jerry was out on the water works property in search of snails. He will have Maj. Young to "momnt" the crane for him. -Winston Sentinel. LADIES' HOSE. 20 cents Fast Black 15 centsT 40 cents Fast Black 25 cents. 75 cents French Lisle AH cent. -:0: WHITE GOODS DEPARTMENT 10c India Linens 8c. . 15c India Linens 10c. 20c India Linens 15c. 25c India Linens 18c. 15c Checked Nainsook 10c. 20c Checked Nainsook 18c. '60c French Nainsook 39c. 12 yards of Long Cloth for $1.50 50c Pkiue 40c 40c Pique 25c 25c White Duck 15c 40c White Duck 20c Lace Department- 1.000 yards of Point Venesse Insertion in batter color, black and white, worth 25 to 50c 13c per yard Great Drives in Laces Our 18c assort ment embraces lines worth 30 to 40c Embroidery DeparUaent 75c and $1.00 Children's Shirt Flouncings at 48c 30c and 40c Swiss Edgings at 19 cents per yard. We ask a call from every Soutbporter. 13