Newspaper Page Text
i-M Ph O n I-H e V v PQ > 2 3 03
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VOL. XI.
India, Central Asia and China produce'
one-sixth of the 800,000 tons of
ibout ^ annual wool Wip.
the world’s
American company has leased
An the Egyptian Govern
iboukir Bay from
nent to grow oysters therein.
New York has found it necessary to
tocrea se the taxes, and it is now $2.22
the $100, and Philadelphia has done
on increased to $2.96 $100.
^ jse and on
ew
Even Jerusalem is in the nineteen th
century swim, and has a real estate
boom, Land near the city has gone up
five hundred per cent, within the last
few years .
A colored man by the name of Ross,
who was lately convicted of murder in
the first degree and sentenced to be
banged at Brandenburg, Ky., was
granted a new trial on the ground that
he had not been convicted by a jury of
his peers, Theie was no colored man on
the jury that tried him.
The taste for realism is extending,
observes the Commercial Advertiser. In
Eova Scotia the other day three small
boys, under eight years all of them,
bound and gagged another small boy
>nd proceeded to play “killing pig” so
luccessfully that they cut his throat
fatally to get the proper flow of blood.
Lord Wolseley says tbat one of the
bravest men he ever knew is Lieuienant
General Sir Gerald Graham, Y. C., whe
was in chief command at the battle of
El Teb, in Africa. Graham is several
inches over six feet in height, and rather
indolent physically. Many times Wolse¬
ley has seen him endanger his life rathei
than take a few extra steps in safety.
“Five million people upon the globe
lire now dependent on the electric cur¬
rent for their daily bresd,” so said Mr.
W. H. Preece, at the recent meeting of
the British Association held at Bath.
“Scarcely a week passes,” he continued,
“without some fresh practical applica¬
tion of its principles, and we seem to be
only on the shore of that sea of economy
ind beneficence which expands with
tvery new discovery of the properties of
electricity, and spreads already beyond
the mental grasp of any one single
worker,” And what is in store beyond
for man’s research and conquest who
shall say? ■
_
Statistics are not always interesting
reading, observes the New York Graphic ,
yet can any one fail to find cause for
rejoicing when he reads the fact that the
army of American school children'who
have resumed their studies numbers over
11,000,000? The latest data furnished
by the Government shows that there are
nearly 15,000,000 scholars enrolled upon
the lists of our schools, and that the
average daily attendance is fully 11,
000,000. Curiously enough the greatest
progress in this line is evidenced where
one would least expect it. The Territory
of Dakota shows the most marked in¬
crease in the number of her schools and
scholars, and is followed closely by tbat
oft slandered State, Indiana. In New
Hampshire, Vermont, Ohio, Nevada and
South Carolina there has been a marked
decrease in the number of school children
enrolled. The central States of the
North are far ahead of all the rest of the
Inion, and the Southern States, while
making rapid advance, still remain far
in the rear as to the number of their
children attending schools.
The New York Independent presents
its annual statistical exhibit of the vari¬
ous churches in this country, compiled
ttostly from official sources. The foliow
>ng is a general summary by denomina¬
tional groups:
Adventists........ Chs. Min. eotn
Baptists........... 1,563 8155 100,441
Christian 45,434 80,998 8,971,6S5
Congregationalists Union... 1,500 500 120,000
Triends........ 4,414 4,090 457,584
German 700 500 107,968
Lutherans......... Evange’l.. 675 500 125,000
Mennonites....... 7,903 4,215 987,600
Methodists......... 385 605 93,00)
Moravians......... 48,258 28,313 4,690,529
New Jerusalem.... 94 108 10,906
Presbyterians.. 85 101 5,750
bposcopalians. 13,057 9,586 1,136,685
Reformed...... 4.766 3,931 446,785
Roman 2,025 1,345 269,523
Unitarians....... Cathoii cs„. 6,829 5,596 7,200,000
Rniversalists - 375 488 20,000
- 730 677 37,807
Grand total..138 ,885 94.457 19,799,328
Yne net gain for the year was 6434
lurches , 4505 ministers and 774,681
communicants. By far the heaviest gain
am0D o the Baptists— 4587 churches
a ,
a * n ^ s * ;er8 - The Methodists,
4 § i 285 churches, 28,313 min
it fh ^*699,529 communicants, stand
6 6ad Abominations, th<
IW n ^tholics
[V, T. )dSt8 come next, and then
CoiwnV “tUegationalists ’ Mresbjteriana, Lutherans,
and Episcopalians.
CONYERS. GEORGIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1888.
THE WORLD OVER.
INTERESTING ITEMS BOILED
DOWN IN READABLE STYLE.
THE FIELD OF LABOR—SEETHING CAUL¬
DRON OF EUROPEAN INTRIGUE—FIRES,
SUICIDES, ETC.—NOTED DEAD.
Rear Admiral Baldwin died in New
York.
Warren F. Copp, ex-tax collector "S
Saugus, Mass., is a defaulter to the e A
tent of $23,000.
Brotherton’s cotton mill, at Preston,
England, Loss has been destroyed by fire.
$200,000.
Dispatches Indiana, from points in Northern Il¬
linois, and Eastern Iowa, re¬
ports the first heavy fall of snow of the
season.
The sentence of one month’s imprison¬
ment, of imposed on J. D. Sbeh&n, member
Parliament for East Verry, Ireland, for
has refusing to give bail for good behavior,
been confirmed on appeal.
The Arbeiter Bund is the name of a
new anarchist organization formed in
rible Chicago, affray III., only a block from the ter¬
at the Haymarket, where so
many policemen were killed two years
ago.
United States Marshal E. S. Mund, of,
Iowa, is at Fort Dodge, Iowa, with Wari
rants for the ejectment of twelve hun¬
dred families on Des Moine’s land.
Trouble is feared on the attempt to exe¬
cute the writs.
The mayor of Havana, Cuba, has issued a
proclamation imposing consumption taxes
on all eatables, drinkables and fuel, to
take effect on the first of January next,
The press and public opinion condemn
the measure.
John W. Keoley. of motor fame, who
was sent to jail at Philadelphia for con
tempt of court in refusing to give'to ex
perts appointed his by the court information
regarding leased bail. mysterious motor, was re
on
At Greene, Chenango Matthews, county, N.Y., on
Monday, George F. while
temporary his insane, committed suicide w/s by
cutting throat with a razor. Be
a native of Sava a nab, Ga., and forty
eight years old.
FredS. Simpson, night clerk of the
Northern Park Exchange Co., at Lacona,
W. T., who absconded with $12,000 of
the company’s money a few days and ago,
was caught jit Manloops; B. C., all
the money recovered.
Hughes county, Dakota, subject has a is genuine child
case of leprosy. The a
of Mrs. Bansum, born while she was a
■ missionary in China. The neighbors with re
fuse to have communication mem
bers of the afflicted family.
Three young girls, Mamie Tann, Allie
Sedman and Emma Nickens, while pass
ing oSo, over the canal bridge I train at Circleville, of carso^
were caught by Muskingum Valley
the Cincinnati/and
Railroad and killed.
The stage, near San „ Luis r • Obispo, Pol
was stopped by alone highwajmao t and
he went through four passengers. He
took all the registered mail matter Ee
» thought to be the same man that rob
Mtwc stages,last week.
The Beaver Falls Rolling Mills, at Bea
ver Falls, Pa., was burned on Monday
night. Loss $15,000. Six men were se
riously burned, two of whom will expert- proba
biy die. The fire was caused by
men ting with Lima oil for generating gas,
The police have expelled from Berlin
two French journalists, M. Latapan and
M. Ooriot, editors of Berlin correspond- ofii
ence with French newspapers. The
cial reason given for their expulsion is
that they made themselves obnoxious.
informed
a numoer or J3U ga fo
.
Russia renounces from the
and tfiat tmsi ae dH .tes
time of Lmperoi \v lui visit to Vien
na, Russia hav g - 1
German mediation.
A shock of earthquake people that was hotels sharp
enough to cause many in
and private houses to run out into the
streets, was felt at San Francisco, Lai.,
on Sunday afternoon. The direction
was northwest to southeast; duration ten
seconds. The shock was felt throughout
Central California.
Two lighters, Mary Hand and Charles
Whitney, loaded with 800 bales of cot
ton, intended for the Hamburg line of
steamers, took fire in New' 1 ork harbor
and were towed out into the East river.
feefore the flames could be extinguished,
about $5,000 damage was done.
It is stated in Mexican journals that
nc more railway subsidies will be granted
hv r/adv that government, as the railways ah
nrovided for are sufficient for all
needs A number of concessions al
readv granted fnabilitv are likely to lapse because
of the of the parties
....
meh pipe, fitter, Heng Winters, laborei
and fatally injuring Richard Wing, ma, and
chinist, John Eusticd, George orpenter, Heckman, pipe and fitter Foreman
Hank Pickering. .
.
Ten thousand people assembled at near and
Cross, County Tipperary on Monday
attempted to hold a meeting. Thegatn
bring had been proclaimed by the British
eovernment, and before the proceedings of
were far advanced, a strong force po
lice arrived on the ground, crowd. and charged During
unon and dispersed the
the affrav many persons were mjured.
'
Some fstallv. '
T , - court 0 { Port-au-Prince,
Hayti, after trial, has condemned the
American steamer Haytien Republic to
confiscation for violating the blockade of
the Port of St. Marc and for actively
participating districts in the rebellion of northern
of Hayti. The United States
steamship Prince Boston lias arrived at Port-au
the where her commander is assisting
United States minister in mvestigat
lnS ! he Caae -
T The p Pennsylvania . p Railroad , . p Company
h„ male ,™ g emeats for its supply of
steel rails for the next year It has
agreed to take 4o,000 tons f iom the
Cambria Iron Company, at Johnstown,
Pa., the Pennsylvania Steel Compaq,
near Harrisburg, and the Carnegie works,
at Pittsburg, eacn company supplying
iT^o d m.r n n a d t lv'at
“ t0 be be per ton tm i upon uno n delivery f ]e bv fl at
stated periods during the next year.
During the evictions on the Ireland, Drapers- of
town estate p/iai Dublin,
^herfcT. 0 Neil, member of Parliament,
a bedridden woman, aged 02 years was
removed from her home and had to bo
earned to an adjoining heuse A
amJ 11 her' f o ur^children, oneYbaby three
months old, were also ejected. A fierce
rrnlo was Mrvwinrr tenants^ at the time and the
evicted furniture was blown
nto the mud • Fifty ' y policemeu P were
A f weeks of imnris.
DoSVol , i • • j. Edward Me
ol
Ihe criminal court a free man, under
£10,000 bail. His ride down Clark street
partook of the nature of an exile’s return,
Long imprisonment iu jail has not lea
lened, apparently, the number of hia
Wends. One of the attorneys of the so
called “boodlers” said: “McGarigle,
ivho ran away, can now come back to
Chicago, shake bands with Sheriff Mat
son, spend ten days in jail and walk out a
r re e man.
HAd a qood t|ME .
The Georgia & Weekly f Press Assoc ia.
d under e leadersh Advance, p of B . F. Perry, ad!
of Canton held an
journed Ln. meeting at the Augusta Exposi
The party mustered about 25
strong, and several young ladies were
included in the delegation. The ofV- party
was trea ted royally by the people
gusta, especially by Hon. Patrick Walsh,
of the Augusta Chronicle , and Editoi
Gibson, of thei Evening News, and eulo
gistic resolutions were officially for
warded to these gentlemen. A banquet
was tendered, and was a grand affair,
The A ssociation donated $20 to the Mar
tin fund for the benefit of the family of
noble hero of the Times-Union oi
Jacksonville, Fla., and officially sat down
hard on the miserable press accommoda
tlons 01 “ 6 P b "
ommenaing inat , a Ultar>1 T “
1)6 8e ec ^ 0 a e
. ,
ThTSeral oninion’ra ^expressed thli
the ExDOsition P was a success and far in
“ea d 0 f the one held in Atlanta a
r a ^,erfect m. The railrW facilities were
gi simp mT ,' v y perfect between between the the city citv and and the the
& roun •
A S MALL WAR.
-
when the recent election in the
Chicka8aw Nation wa9 he i dj Gove rnoi
Guy was elected on the face of the re
turns, but William Byrd, his opponent,
-who was in control at the capital, threw
out enough votes to secure a small ma
jority, and the Speaker of the House
swore in Byrd. Byrd called the legisla
ture together and put the capitol build
ing under guard. Guy, with fifty foi
lowers, marched into called Tishomingo legisla- and
took possession. He his
ture and was sworn in. Then he went
to Washington, laid the facts before the
interior department and was recognized
as governor and told to call on the
United States troops for assistance if ne
cessary. Each has a force of about 200
men - and the excitement Is intense,
Guy’s life has been attempted several
times, but he still travels alone, refusing
to incur the expense of a body guard,
He is waiting now for the time given
PynPg men expire, when, he declares,
be w ip kill or capture all who resist or
d i e himself.
thf BIBLE. •
_
The case in which suit was brought by
Catholic tax-payers, in Jaynesville, Wis.,
tQ vent the reil ding of King James’
verg j on 0 f the Bible in the public schools
wa8 dec i de d on Monday. Judge Bennett
held tbat sucb reading was not secta
rian instruction, the children of peti
t ioners not being obliged to listen
jf t hey did not desire and the Bible
having been decided upon by the au
thorities, as one of the text books for
Wisconsin schools. There was, nothing,
however, to prevent children from read
ing a version of the Bible accepted preferred. by
the Catholic church, if they
a b, °j!i? w,no -
ss
wei t %rr ‘. ’ (pro’) sir.
091, Q d 440 (labor)’ 520 Fisk
20.74^, -- : ’ ^raiitv 3 865 solid
997 ■- . oveVall 79571
“to ^ was:’ 64 958 The
for President^ 1884 Bhiine,
474, . uievei Cleveland u,-,-- 392 795
LOST MONEY.
-
pke cen tral exposition commission
grg of Cincinnati, O., read tbeir
^ ort iu a general way. They fixed
assessment to be paid by the
eVLArSiD t ee6 0 f the exposition funds at
thtotv-tive per cent. The guarantee fund
£,$300,000. was $1,000,000, and the ussessmeut wi!J
O QAT] v/U r A r'lTI7T? HXjALxI AT OxJAxjl. QTT? A VG X 0*
__
A CONDENSATION OF HAPPEN^
INGS STRUNG TOGETHER.
-
movements of alliance men-rail
Road casualties—the ootton cro*
„ Tnnr>a ,„ rinp .„ T „ rilop T , KTTTRN8
ALABAMA.
The vote cast for presidential elector*
r vaa counted on Tuesday J. by Cleveland the governed rel
^ gecret J of sta
Ciived 117>8 0 votes; Harrison 57,107,
and Fiske (prohibitionist) 588.
The safe in the county treasurer's of
fl ^ a t Carrollton, ’ Pickens county, J| was
The noi8e q[ th<J ex osion
iroused 8everal people living near by and
be burglars fled without securing any
bood le.
Th iphfs t of the Kan8ag
Ci J & Bbmingham two®Mormon Railroad,
ticketed elders
fd fifty converts to Ogden and 8Mt
J ake Clt y- Uta,l > from Birmingham.
1 , he converts are mostly from Cullman
county, a few coming from south of
Montgomery. About five hundred con
verts from East Tennessee will be ship
ped fr0m Chattan00 S a to Utah -
Florida.
The town of M.odenny report, nin,
cases of fever under treatment and one
death—W. P. Horne, white, a valuable
citizen.
Superintendent B. M. Turner, of the
railway mail service, on Monday received
the following telegrams from Green Cove
Springs, a town of about 2,500 inhabit
ants, thirty miles south of Jacksonville:
“Green Cove Springs-Fast mail train
14, refuses to take the mail, claiming we
have yellow fever. Advise me at once.
J. Canova, Postmaster.” “Green
Cove Spnngs-Dr. Williams of the
United States marine hospital service,
we hav « fwOT - ? ur ® ail > 8
refused , • .f lease ^nonze fumiga
Juher W. S. Banks.’’ 7”f. Superintendent J, i
Tmnef wired the_ superintendent of the
ralwaymad serviceat Washington, foi
aa *<>rity to establish a fumigating sta
(j 0 y e Springs i 8 •
cUoroia.
The Legislature elected U. S. Senator
\ H , Colquitt for another term. Only
one candidate appeared to contest, Col.
8. A. Darnell, of Jasper, who received
one vote.
Hon . James Hunt , a member of the
Q eorg ; a Legislature, was killed in At
i anta> Thursday night, by Sully Moore, a
mail agent on the Western* Atlantic
Railroad. The two men were old
friends.
Plans for the new union depot to be
built by the Richmond Terminal com
pany in Atlanta, are now being prepared, the
The finest union passenger station in
country, £ the one at Indiunapolis, ^ is to be
d uc ed in the Atlanta st tio
w B. „ a Baum & it Bro iir- , of >r Toombsboro, nnm hsWn
S * 00 000°?/; 000 to J125 OOG^^A'savannah 000^ A Savannah firm rm
f of Br03 cotton d factors los ' ? « ver ^ J lever^nebrh 5P
“
business in - W.lik:mson n anid several neigU
boring coun les. J P Trwin
stores, one eac in ,
ton and uiin.
Bud Thrash the well-known locomo
tive engineer, who ran the engine which
hauled President Cleveland strain (when
he visited Atlanta a year ago) and a man
named Sullivan had a dispute on Mon-
1 day, brash which across ended his neck, m Sullivan inflicting gashing an ugly
wound. The people are getting very
tired of the frequent murders and allrays
in which deadly weapons are used.
j. F Hill, a prosperous farmer of
.
Madison, left home, telling his wife that
he was going away never to return, and
that she might take the farm, stock,
corn and eight bales of cotton, valued at
about ten thousand dollars. He sold be
fore leaving about fifty bales of cotton,
and some suggest that he carried with
him not less than five thousand dollars
in cash. Before leaving he paid all of
accounts. He is fifty years of age,
has been mariied more than twenty
years and left a wife and four children,
all daughters, three of whom are mar
ried.
KENTUCKY.
Court of Appeals at Louisville rendered
: a decision in the caseofD .vid Roberts,
cbarge d with murder. Their decision
gend8 Roberts to prison for twenty-two
j years. Roberts is sixty-four years old.
j i n iq 84 Roberts cut the throat and of bid James the
Kendall, of Morgan county,
hody in the brush and escaped to Mis
gouri.
jhrtlaND. Cumberland
Two inches of snow fell at
; “J M ^ n ^ d A f heavy } storm is reported ^
nta n8
; j r»*»r--2s
WSrs&M,t 6th, which three men were
member m
kilied, have been indicted by the gran
) U! 7 oi Montgomery county for man
slaughter, and arrested on that charge.
mwsourl
The state supreme talker, court passed on the
8Ma of Dave and affirmed the
judgment of the lower court. Walker
was sentenced to be hanged December 28.
It did not take this news long to reach
the stronghold of the regulators in Ozark,
aad vengeance will be wreak, d on the
state’s wftnesses, who formerly Prior affiliated to the
with the Bald Knobbers.
killing at the Eden’s homestead no less
, than twenty murders and lynchinga were
credited to the regulators.
LOUISIANA,
The steamer Maud M. Fish sank on
Monday night at Mould’s landing, twenty
miles below New Orleans. She had a
cargo of rice and sundries. In making a
I Hiding she careened and the engine down room
soon filled and the boat went in
thirty feet of jater. Mate J^ aFox J aa
! P '. y nTllfZa toescape^nS F
, !„*. +
north Carolina.
An attachment against the property of
the Bank of Durham, has been gran ted
in favor of Arthur C Elhott, of New
York, m a suit for $5,084.
Two colored men were before the
United States commissioner at Raleigh,
upon charges of having intimidated one
of their race at Oxford on election day
because he bad voted the Democratic
ticket - 1 hey threatened to take hi
of ° f tow “ ,ff whl P h,m - The com ‘
missioner held the men whose names are
Nelso Bass and Major Herndon, in bail
for appearance at court.
south Carolina.
The fishing smack Puritan capsized
off Charleston, and several of her crew
were drowned.
Th e British steamer Sandringham,
loadcd wlth cotton at charleston
for Reval, was found to he on fire in the
forward hold, and was nearly destroyed
on Sunday niglrt.
Great preparations were made for the
gala week wnicb. begins in Charleston,
S. C. Amusements include fireworks,
naval sham battles, prize drills, balloon
ascensions, trades display, torchlight
procession, fantastic parade, prize shoot
ing, lawn tennis tournament, racing daily
and an illumination of forts and Charles
ton harbor.
There is danger of a serious riot in
Beaufort between the negroes. Ex
Congressman Robert Smalls ran for sher
iff and was defeated. He then became
disgusted, and it is said assisted m hav
a split ticket put up against the Re
publican , ticket lor county officers and
re P{; e8e “ tatl I e8 - Serious trouble is ap
preheuded at any moment, and acting
under the order of Governor Richardson
Adjutant-General Bonham has ordered a
battalion of infantry to arms, and they
1Dg ^
Tennessee.
j_ P . Wishendorff, book-keeper for B.
Loveman & Co., the largest retail dry
goods house In the South, has disap
pC ared from Chattanooga. He leav.-s a
-wife and child. It seems that his spe :■
ulations have been in small amounts
covering a period of two or three years,
-
BANDIT KILLED.
-
The notorious Kep Queen, from Texas,
was killed near Claramore, in the Che
rokee Nation, on Sunday, by the district
sheriff, Ed Sanders, and posse A week
or more ago it became known that Queen
and some of his outlaw followers were in
the vicinity, and they were finally lo
cated in a cabin about a mile from the
Dog Creek court house. That night the
sheriff made up a party, and, going to
abouAhe ^ place, they secreted themselves
premises. * Three men then
came out an d moun ted, and as they were
away, were called upon to halt.
The answer was a pistol shot, which was
ret urned by a volley from the officers.
Queen went down, mortally wounded,
and one of his companions was unhorsed.
Rewards are standing iu Texas for
Q tieen > g capture, dead or alive. The
(jj 8C0 and other bank robberies are laid
a t Queen’s door.
-
YELLOW FEVER.
-——
Jacksonville, Fla., had 12 new cases is .
f ever on Sunday. The city proper of
comparatively free from yellow fever.
The suburbs develop most of the new
cases. The fever has appeared in vim
lent form in South Jacksonville, across
the St. John’s river. The natural loca
tion is most favorable to the spread of
the disease, the land being generally low,
and, to a great extent, marshy and wet,
and a number of yauls being partially
covered with tide water. At a meeting
of the relief authorities a resolution was
adopted to allow the Howard Association,
of Fernaudina, to draw on them for $3,
000. No further aid could be extended
to that city. Surgeon Martin reports
five new cases at Gainesville, Fla. Mon
ey is badly needed. Surgeon Martin is
greatly overworked as the fever in
creases, but stands up manfully.
-
STARVING.
-
The depopulation of Western Kansas
continues with wonderful rapidity. and In
N e ss city, DightoD, Scott City,
many other places, not 100 people will
winter in any of the towns. Two years
ago most of the towns had from 500 to
2.000 inhabitants each, but the streets
aud almo-t the entire villages are de
serted, and the few inhabitants left are
i a s e
i r;io bl ss
gtoim8 have 8Wep t the plains, killing
much gtock . The people are discour
aged and heartbroken. They raised no
° tbis and have been compelled
c op8 year , from the fear of
to leave thc-ir homes
starvation.
j --7- A DUEL.
duel between Andneux ,. . n .
A an > J .
resulting from the charge made by t.ie
latter in La LanUrne that the INimes tna.
was the outcome of the collusion betweet
Nuina Giby and Andneux, was foug.
on used Tuesday and Andneux near Paris, received ^words a s we <
•
wound m the chest
NO. 39.
WASHINGTON NEWS.
WHAT THE UNITED STATES OF*
FICIALS ARE DOING.
Yorkf Representative Perry Belmont of New
has been tendered and has accep
Jed an appointment as United Statesmin
ister to Spain, ^midt, to succeed J. L. M. Curry.
F!(>n( , he Jomg womail .ho
was taken to Bellevue hospital, New
York, with symptoms of yellow fevei
died at that institution.
F filled t g iptments ia the arm y
will be by President Cleveland at
an earlv day Quite a number of names
have bee n suggested, and it is reported the
Do! . Dan Lament has been offered
position of Judge AdvcC ate General.
p resi(lent Cleveland ha8 appointed Wood- to
be postmaster: James Rodeffer, Miss,
stock, Va.; following Byron Lemiy, Jackson,
At the ^ postoffices pre8idcn which ,i al class, were
recentl raised the
the President has reappointed the in
cumbents: Bessemer, Ala.; Oxford, Ala. j
Union, 8. C.
Lord Sackville’s surplus effects were
disposed of by auction on Monday, and
tbe aa ^ e drew to such portions of the
British legation as were thrown open, a
crowd the like of which was never id
the building b-fore. Everything sold a
f’f.SS A
K . . } 1 ‘
T. 8 Riley, chair man of the Demo
cratu: state committee of WestVirgi ,
w ’ asningtou 8e P L l ® ost. nwwLn micming, W vv. Va v -
—umctai returns irom iJis
are gumcientiy iiseeriainea io wao
announcement of toe election of Judge
•J k, -£ „“L.ii Kni mninritv''
w " er maforiUea^ 5ie Leli.Sre w?H
fita d on joint ba n ot> 46 Democrats, 44
Rer)ub * ] icac8 an d one labor union inde
d t „
‘
Vanderbilts is looking
^4 Te wofrmrcSng Pres dent’s country Mr.’
S^^VJinTimated av it.
‘tTbuv that it will take
at leas ?150 000 to buy it u, and * there i«
that amoimf TMsTum, howe/er, repre- thd
sents quite 200 per cent, profit President on paid
original investment. The
$21,500 for Oak View when it was hurd
ly more than an enclosure of unimproved rebuilt
suburban land. He practically stables, fenced
the house, erected fine
the place handsomely and graded every spent
foot of the land. He is said to have
nearly $30,000 in this work, and thflf
property must, therefore, represent an
outlay of at least $50,000.
Surgeon Porter at Jacksonville, Fla.,
telegraphed to Surgeon-General Hamil
ton on Monday as follows: “The agent
of the Clyde steamer at Mayport permitted assures
me that if steamers are to
bring passengers for non-infected points
in Florida he will guarantee not to a
low them to land at Mayport, but \ 1
have Freight them lor trans Jacksonville erred to other need steamer^ not be
stopped at all, as it is not my desire to
hamper commerce any more than con-'
sistent with public safety. Under the
above agreement I think steamers could
continue to run. Tickets to Jackson
ville could be sold to acclimated refugee#
bolding permits from me.” Dr. J. F.i
Hartigan telegraphs that he lmfl nspected and
Dade City and Brooksville, Fla.,
that both places are healthy,
In a letter written to Surgeon Porter at
Jacksonville Fla., .Surgeon General
Hamilton says: “My opinion is that the
class of articles that need necessarily be
destroyed is an extremely limited one,
ma ttresses and their contents; disinfected pillows
and com f 0 rts cannot well be
at least without employment of process
^ exnensive as to render it useless from
economic point of view. With these
cXcep tionB, I think all article? in sick
rooln8 can be properly disinfected. Bed
cbam ber walls should be sponged and
wugbed w j t h a solution q f bi-chloride ol
mercury, ' and such artlcles as. sheets, pU- *•
j ow ca ,ses and blankets should be fire*
plunged in disinfecting solution and af
terwards put in boiling water. Wearing
appare l hanging in closets adjacent lo
bed chambers; carpets of bed chambers
andruKg j nbe dchambersshouldbesub
j ect to disinfection by steamiDg. All
bouse8 should be exposed to air currents
M much ag possible. Upholstered furni
ture ghou i d be treated by spraying with
bi-chloride of mercury solution.”
Rresident Cleveland’s future plans are h«
still undetermined. It is believed that
w iu 8pe nd one or two years traveling in
E ur0 pe, which he has never visited. Hd
will j eave t he White House at least $75,
000 richer than when he entered it.
This, added to his other investments,
wd j g i ve him a comfortable fortune of
upward of $200,000. Mrs. Clevcdand,
through the division of the Folsom ts
tate j n Omaha, is an heiress in her own
rj ght and is probably worth not less than
gage in the practice of law. Attorney
Ge n era l Garland is also considering t
propoaition to make his future home ie
Y ork. Messrs. Endicott, Dickm
and Vilas, all of whom are lawyers.
will return to the r respective nomes ana
resume the pn.cic: -f their profession
Secretary Bayard Ins not decided
whether he will n ma n in Washington
, r !e t um 10 Wilm.iigton and practici
!a , v but it is beiiev : i 1 La» lie will adopt
( , i( ;atler co;mc. Judge Hawkins, th*
.
as is aut secretary of the interior will
rei j re to his farm near tap- (. ardeau,
y; 0 and spend the reu.a . er of hit
] the and sec.usion of pas
days in quiet
<oral life.