Newspaper Page Text
BRIEF TELEGRAMS.
A CONDENSATION OF OI It MOST
IMPORTANT DISPATCHES.
Short hii<! CrlHp Mors**l« of General
Interest to Our Header*.
Ad vices received at Berlin from
Walfluh Bay, southwest Africa, say
that the rebellious Dmuaraland chief,
Witbooj, ...... . has . surrendered , , and , express
ed Iiih willingness to submit to a Ger¬
man protectorate over his territory.
O. A. Lorruzola, attorney fur Vic
tor L. Ochoa, one of the leaders of the
Mexican revolution of last winter, vho
was arrest' d a few days ago at I t.
Stock ton, 1 exits, went before the fed
eral court and demanded that Ochoa
be produced in court.
At Milwaukee, Monday, Judge .Ten
kins dismisM i! the petition of Ives et
ah, to have T. J. Oakes dismissed as
the Northern Pacific receiver, and
confirms Hpecial Master Cary’s report,
exonerating Oakes from making any
money out of the road illegally.
A dispatch from Ogdensburg, N. Y. t
shvh: Petitions for the nomination of
General N. M. Curtis, for represents
tive in congress, are being circulated
in nil of the accessible towns of the
county, and are being signed by re¬
publicans and democrats indiscrimi¬
nately.
The steamer Moyune, recently pur¬
chased in England by the Japanese
government, has arrived at Yokohama,
having made the passage from Curdiff
iu thirty-three days, steaming the dis¬
tance without stopping. Although
Chinese warships were on the lookout
for her, she had no difficulty in elud¬
ing them.
The famous hut. trimmings case, in
which imported of millinery seek to
secure a return of money collected for
duties on certain styles of ribbons mi¬
ller the McKinley tariff law, came up
before Judge Dallas in the United
.States circuit court at Philadelphia
Monday nnd wai continued until Jan.
Nth, next.
A squad of police visited the Tech¬
nological institute at >St. Petersburg,
Russia, and, proceeding to the dormi¬
tory, arrested thirty of the students,
who had retired. The students are
chargi d with being engaged in a nihil¬
ist conspiracy against the government.
The visit of the police was a complete
surprise to the authorities of the insti¬
tution, as well as to the students.
A strike of the weavers at the Hath¬
away and Acushnet mills at New Bed¬
ford, Mass., is threatened. When a
settlement of the recent strike, which
involved nil the mills in the city, was
reached, one of the conditions was that
the mills were to conform to the de¬
mands of the weavers’ particulars law.
All of them have done so to the satis¬
faction of the weavers except these
corporations,
Alexander, the eighteen-year-ohl
kingsof Servia, arrived at Potsdam,
Gerntany, Wednesday evening from
Buda-Kesth on a visit to Emperor Wil
linni. 4 irent preunrat had been
mnue lor "ms recepThin, and it was
generally understood that tliio mtiSufc
that the visit had political significance,
The railway station was beautifully
decorated and a guard of honor w as
drawn up on the platform.
A tire occurred in the yards of the
l hayer Lumber company, at Mus¬
kegon, Mich., Wednesday moru
ing, which caused the loss of a few
thousand dollars. During its progress
a pile of lumber forty feet high top
tied over and caught Assistant Fire
I liief John Ellens. His back, arms,
legs, skull and chest were broken, and
his body was frightlv burned. He died
in ten niinuos after being taken out of
the wreck.
The federal grand jury at Chicago
Wednesday alteruoou reported a true
bill against ex-Governor John L. Bev¬
eridge. president; F. 1). Arnold, vice
president and Samuel 51. Biddison,
secretary of the State Mutual Life In¬
charges surance Company. The indictment
the defendants with using the
mails to further a business of a lottery.
It is alleged that the concern is in its
essence a lottery. The officers were
arrested some time ago, and gave hail
before Commissioner Havne.
A special from Harrisburg, Pa. says;
Iron and steel mills in this locality are
enjoying un era of unprecedented pros¬
perity. At the Pennsylvania Steel
Works the production of rails and
Bessemer steel the past week was the
heaviest of years. Tho three furnaces
in blast averaged nearly three hundred
tons daily. For three days the Besse
mer mill averaged 120 blooms every
twenty-four hours. The rail mill made
4,000 tons of rails during the week,the
largest production in its history.
CHINA WANTS PEACE,
Hut the Victorious Japs Refuse all
Overtures.
The Central News (London) claims
to have the highest authority for the
statement that overtures looking to a
of peace between China
Japan were made a few days ago
but that Japan rejected the proposals,
considering them inadequate.
According to the Central Ifctcs,
however, there is every reason to be¬
lieve that the proposals were eminently
satisfactory to China, and that her
representatives signified a willingness
of their governments to acquiesce iu
them.
THE JAPANESE PARLIAMENT MEETS.
The Japanese parliament, which was
convoked for a seven days’ session, to
consider war measures, met at Hiro¬
shima Monday. Count Kusnmoto was
elected president and M. Shimada vice
president.
THE PALACE DIVIDED.
The imperial palace at Pekin is said
to be divided by two factious, con¬
tending, the one for peace, the other
for war. The war party consists of
the Emperor, the Imperial Tutor Ung
Tunglio, and Olohopu, director of the
board of war. On the side of peace
are the Empress Dowager, Prince
Kung and Li Hung Chang.
The Czar Dying.
T . gUBQ I lllCtK l at 8t. Petersburg
a 6 erudition of the ccar has per
< ep .., i , changed for ike
y worse. His
symptoms of general debility and
"ta Utah of the heart are more pro
UonnceJ -
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH, GA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1894. -EIGHT PAGES.
TRADE TOPICS.
It. G. Dun A Co.’* Report of Buniness
for the Past Week.
I*. O. Dnn A- Co.’s weekly review of
trade says: Business is still waiting
for the development of retail trade.
There is a little better demand in some
industries, but not so good in others.
Wholesale dealers in nearly all braaehes
are halting because retail business does
not yet show distinctly what it is to 1*?.
Lower prices for the groat farm staples
ami lower wages in some establishments
hinder purchases for consumption, while
political interest and uncertainty also
, jaTe Bomc Warding influence. Moan¬
while large imports and small exports
of merchandise with inadequate employ¬
ment for money here are raising the
rates of foreign exchange, so that pos
uibjhties of gold exports sometimes
nffect the stock market. The halting
attitude for the money is disturbing to
those who have looked for continued
gain, though rightly considered it is
the natural consequence of conditions
which were to be expected at thissenson.
“Reports from the different cities
show, as they did a week ago, that
while extreme low prices for cotton
and wheat are checking retail pur¬
chases iu the west and south, there is
nevertheless a gradual gain. Monetary
movements indicate that the expected
expansion of interior trade has not
been wholly realized, and the demand
for currency from this city has mate¬
rially slackened, The demand for
commercial loans is weaker, and 3 per
cent is quoted for prime four months’
paper. Foreign imports for two weeks
have been $6,900,000, of 56 per cent
larger than last year, while in exports
of domestic products a decrease of 11
per cent appears for two weeks in Oc¬
tober. Yet custom receipts for the
two weeks are only $280,000 larger
than Iasi year, and internal revenue
$1,280,000 smaller.
“The iron industry records a larger
production in September than in any
other month this year, but as prices
are gradually weakening because of in¬
sufficient demand for finished products,
some works are preparing to close or
shorten time.
The demand for cotton goods has
materially slackened, and prices have
been irregular, although resumption
of work at Fall River and New Bed¬
ford with only five per cent lower wa¬
ges indicates confidence in the future.
The woolen mills still have numerous
belated orders for fall goods, but the
demand for spring does not increase,
though in nearly all the lower-priced
products domestic makers appear able
to command most of the business that
exists.
“Failures for the week ending Octo¬
ber 4th show liabilities of $1,714,276,
of which $805,885 arc of manufactur¬
ing anil $892,391 are of trading con¬
cerns. The final report for Septem¬
ber shows liabilities of ouly $7,307,-
124, of which $3,254,373 are of manu¬
facturing and $3,710, 092 of trading
concerns. The failures of this week
have been 231 in the Uuited States,
against 293 last year, and forty-three
in Canada, against forty-two last year.
A RICH HAUL.
I ucrTTorui-bound express between
Richmond, Va., and Washington, leav¬
ing Richmond at 7 o’clock Friday
night, was held up by a gang of rob¬
bers at Aquia creek. As the train
rolled into the station two masked
men leaped upon the engine, covered
the engineer and fireman with revol¬
vers and forced them to leave tho loco¬
motive. In the meantime a number
of confederates in the daring deed
were engaged iu uucoiqdiug the ex¬
press car and driving therefrom the
passengers. This done the engine
pulled up the road about a mile, bear¬
ing only the express ear. Tho safe
was rifled.
It is believed that the robbers se¬
cured in the neighborhood of $180
000, as au unusually large amount of
money went out of Richmond Friday
evening, to say nothing of the through
currency. When the men secured
their awag they started the locomotive
off at a rapid rate of speed, alighting
themselves. On towards Washington
rumbled the engine with no one at the
throttle until it reached Guantieo,
which place is only thirty miles this
side of the national capital.
As soon ns the other train officials
realized what had happened, the news
of the living locomotive was telegraph¬
ed ahead and a number of cars were
rolled upon the track at Guantieo to
stop the engine and probably prevent
loss of life ns well as property. The
engine crashed into the cars demolish¬
ing them and playing havoc with itself.
The messengers, according to reports
received, were not hurt. They were
B. F. Crutchfield and H. Murray, both
of Richmond. The safe in the express
oar was not blown open. One of the
messengers was carried up the road
and commanded to open the casket of
treasure w hich he did iu compliance to
the dictates of half a dozen pistols.
There were seven robbers iu the gang.
The express messenger said that the
safe contained $150,000. The robbers
secured this nnd all of the express
packages containing money. It is
thought this amount will foot up to
about $180,000.
TO COIN A BRITISH DOLLAR.
The Government Sanctions it and it
Will Be Put out in 1895.
At a meeting of the directors of the
Chartered Bank of India, Australia
and China, held at London, the chair¬
man announced that the government
had given their sanction to the coinage
of a British dollar for circulation iu
Straits settlement and Hong Long.
The fall in the price of silver, he said,
had affected the eastern trade and les
sened the export of the Mexican dollar
to such an extent as to threaten the
eastern colonies with a total absence of
currency,
Ready to Move Forward.
The New York Herald's special ca¬
ble dispatch from Shanghai, Wednes
day morning, says: “Fifteen thousand
Japanese troops, under Field Marshal
Oyama, are encamped across Regent’s
Sward promontory, to the north of
Port Arthur and within sight of the
naval stronghold. Thev are waiting
for a favorable moment to move for
ward, while outside the port the Japan
cruisers are r^adv to intercept all
retreat seaward.
FROM WASHINGTON.
NEWSY ITEMS PICKED l-P AT
THE NATIONAL CAPITOL.
Sayings and Doings of the Official
Heads of the Government.
Secretary Carlisle has asked Attor
ney General Oluev for an opinion on
the constitutional question involved in
carrying out the dispensary law in
South Carolina, in ease* where the
disputes occur between the l uited
States and the state officers of South
Carolina, on the occasion of liquor
being held in United States bonded
warehouse, being seized for violation
of state police ordinances.
'* lthout 19sniU 8 R Direct . order , r Sec- .
rotary Smith has allowed it to be un
ck.rstoo.1 that all employe, of the tote
rim department may go lo.mo to vote
at the coming elections. There are a
number of employes m the interior de
partment who intend to avail them
selves of this privilege. The snpenn
issnedVJ V 1 ° h r e 1,1 i r “ ,I H T“°l owing l8 a n Vi<,e, pos r? u
, .
a/a-ithont , Eerrouriktrimcntto
aw the
service
Secretary Carlisle has referred to
attorney general the opinion of
Solicitor , Reeves that Jloyd county,
■ a., can ir,hue bonds to be used as cur
irncy. While Air. ( ail isle has ex
pressed no decided opinion, it is be
ieyed among of Mr. treasury Reeves officials will be reversed that the
opinion
Hie attorney genera, treasury
ofncia.s who are near to Air. C arlisle
say the decision is absurd, and whether
or uot 11 18 reversed by the attorney
general the treasury department will
!g it anv issue of one, two live and
ten dollar bonds by a county to be
usei as currency. i he opinion of Air.
t^paZenTbutuntil 1 the attorney nothing
general renders a decision
definite wddl he done
Vincent Bounced,
S. S. Vincent, United States mar¬
shal for the district of West Virginia,
at the request of the attorney-general,
has resigned and D. Garden has been
appointed to the vacancy. Mr. Vin
cent was appointed in 1893. In Sep
tember last Vincent and several depu
ties were present at a political meet
ing at Wayne, the W. Va. At the conclu
sion of address, which did not
please him, Vincent arose to reply,
whereupon many of the audience left
the hall. This seemed to have an¬
gered Vincent and an altercation arose,
which culminated in an affray, during
which one man was killed and three
others wounded. The marshall and
his deputies were arrested and are mi
der bond to await the action of the
grand jury. Complaints have been
made to the attorney general that
twice before Vincent or his deputies
had been guilty of creating disturban¬
ces at political meetings at Bluefield
and Huntington.
Expenditures penditures amf^Rt am eceipts.
5 Up
or the fiscal
year year have exceeded the receipts $9,-
500,000. For the corresponding pe¬
riod of 1893 the expenditures exceeded
the receipts $22,500,000. The annual
report of the commissioner of customs
to the secretary of the treasury con¬
tains the statement that the “under¬
mentioned districts and ports reported
no transactions” during the fiscal
year ended June 30, 1894. In
the appended list are the follow¬
ing: Annapolis, Md. ; Apalachicola,
Fla. • Atlanta, Ga. ; Beaufort, S. C.;
Brunswick, Ga.; Chattanooga, Tenn.;
Cherrystone, Va.; eastern Maryland;
Fernandina, Fla.; St. Augustine, Fla.,
St. Mark’s, Fla. ; St. Mary’s Ga.;
Georgetown, S, C. ; Stonington, Conn.;
Natchez, Miss.; Newport News 5 Va. ;
Pamlico, N. C. ; Pearl River, Miss.:
Pensacola, Fla.; Petersburg, Va.;
Richmond, Va.; Rappahannock, Va.,
and Teche, La. All the ports named
have a collector, and many of them
deputy collectors and clerks. The
collectors either receive a stated salary
or fee compensation.
THESE GOT GOLD.
Bold Bandits Hold Up a Train In
California.
The Coastbound overland train, dut
at Sacramento, Cal., Friday night,was
held up by two masked men about six
miles below’ the city. The robbers,
armed with revolvers, compelled the
engineer and fireman to accompanj
them to the express car, where Mes¬
senger Page was told that if he die
not open the doors the engineer and
fireman would be shot. Page, how¬
ever, at first attempted resistance
nnd fired twice, but, fearing
that the trainmen would be killed,
he let the bandits in the car, wheri
they secured four bags of gold, con
taiuing about $1,500. The robberr
then uncoupled the engine and aftei
running it toward the city a short dis¬
tance, reversed it and jumped oH
making their escape. The engine rs*L
into the uncoupled train but as tin
steam had run low, no damage was
done.
A Bank Goes Fuder.
The Buffalo County, Neb., National
bank closed its doors Friday. The
closing was caused by a $19,000 judg¬
ment against the Sands clothing house,
in which the bank was interested, and
a couple of directors demanding their
deposits. The Sands clothing house
was closed at the same time, but no
other business houses have been aftect
ed so far as known. The assets and
liabilities are not .vet known.
-p . 7 he b ° rt Discussed. of the Id
ruav mornings session
nr national Typographical l n.on ».
Louisville was principally devoted U
a discussion of the short day question.
The original motion was that after
September 1st, nine hours would con¬
stitute a day’s work. It was finalh
decided that the motion be referred t<
referendum.
A Paper Mill Combination.
The Raleigh, N.C., Paper Company,
whose mills are at the falls of Neuse,
has purchased the plant of the Sonth
Fork psp&r mills, at Lincolnton, and
it will be at once brought here, making
the Raleigh mills among the largest in
the south
STAMP STEALERS
Make a Big Haul From tlie Bureau
of Engraving.
A Washington special says: The
stamp robbery at the bnreau of en¬
graving and printing, discovered a few
days ago, turns out to be much larger
than at first supposed. Instead of one
package containing 50,000 2-cert
stumps, it is now believed that over
200,000, and possibly 250,000 stamps,
?! various denominations are missing,
1 ostmasters in all parts of the country,
U 1S ^ a ' e received fewer
6taI pps thanithey ordered, i and failed to
n ' Diy the department of the deficien
' ^ their qu.uttrh rt ports a-
? ^niT 1 ,4 l e T w ^ s ° 1 !SC < * r
, , f Jl , SuI7’l , ^ ™,
knowu tbat ihursday n s shipments • of */
fctftm P 3 were served to 1,800 postmast.
ers, i some idea of the enormity of the
t f ascertaill i U£r what offices have
received short pac ‘ ; age s, > is had. The
6tealiD „ bM bc n J on for Aim
aaJS> aml 8eem8 to have been the re
gu j^ 0 f a pj 0 ^
William B. Smith, formerly of Plain
fie l«l, X. J., and George W. Longstreet,
who were emoloved in the stamu engr^hig de
partment of the'bureau of
ftlu \ printing, are ufixler arrest and the
^‘ “ eftC e, i “> tiTes who . are W!lS Iooki ’-intil "* ,or recently Williom eri- A -
ployed in a billiard room in a hotel in
the city, and a man, ■whose name is
believed to be Simmerslitz. Both men
left Washington Thursday for the pur
pose of selling stamps.
Friday Smith made a proposition to
the police authorities to turn state's
evidence and make a full confession 1
they would sign a paper guaranteiug
him full protection. He said he would
imj^licate govornment employes much
higher than himself. He was told
that such protection could not be
g rau t e d. Smith then told the author
ities that j ie knew where Beach was,
but would go to jail before he would
tell his whereabouts. The authorities
gmi^’s offer ^as as he\as tld toltl sTma 80 ma "> °l
conflicting stones em ce his arrest.
FIRED UPON THE MOB.
Three Men Killed in an Attempt to
Save a Rapist’s Life.
Iu the criminal court at Washington
Courthouse, Ohio, Wednesday, Jasper
Dolby, the negro v ho assaulted Mrs.
Mary C. Bird, of Parrott’s station, a
week ago, confessed the crime and was
sentenced to the penitentiory for twen
ty years. There was every prospect
of a bloody fight as a great mob wus
in town bent on lynching Dolby, and
the sheriff had Gyo companies of state
militia present to help him protect the
prisoner.
A special grand jury was called.
Dolby was indicted and his trial and
sentence followed promptly, The
county officers hoped by this means to
quiet the mob and avert a fight.
As darkness came on, however, a
crowd of 1,500 people surrounded the
jail and had battered Mown the doors
when they were fired upon by the
guard in the fight wfe^ch followed
ZLAkili'i 3 Ten —funded.
Fled at Knoxville, r I| w.f me So-th
ern Raili y Co.
The first consolidated mortgage deed
of the Southern Railway Company was
filed at Knoxville, Tuesday. It includes
all the road-bed, buildings and equip¬
ments of the road, in Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Alabama, Georgia, and the District of
Columbia.
The mortgage is for $120,000,000, in
favor of the Central Trust Company,
of New York. Gold bonds to run one
hundred years, at 5 per cent, are to be
issued. The mortgage xvill be regis¬
tered in 17G counties through which
the road runs. It contains over 50,000
words, and Deputy Registrar J. * L.
Faulkner wall require two weeks to
copy it. No mortgage for as large an
amount was ever before filed in Ten¬
nessee.
THE DECISION REVERSED,
Anil O’Brien Can Be Tried for Em
bezzlement.
A Chattanooga dispatch says: Last
spring the county circuit court
quashed the indictment against M. J.
O’Brien, ex-supreme court chancellor
of the Catholic Knights of America,
for the embezzlement of $75,000 from
that order. The decision of the court
was based on the Tennessee statute
which denies legal redress to corpora¬
tions not having an abstract of charter
granted in the state. Tuesday the
Tennessee supreme court, sitting
at Knoxville, reversed this decision
and made O’Brien liable to criminal
prosecution pending the examination
of authorities cited by Mr. O’Brien’s
counsel.
AN INSANE MOTHER’S DEED.
She Sets Fire to the House ami Holds
Her Children in the Flames.
Mrs. Jennie Harrigan and her three
children perished by fire in a barn
upon their farm in the outskirts of
Elizabeth, N. J., Monday. The resi¬
dence was also burned. The husband
and father was absent at the time of
the calamity. The general belief is
that Mrs. Harrigan became suddenly
insane and set the house on fire, and
that she then took her children and
went into the barn, and, locking the
door, set it on fire. As the flames be¬
gan to close around them, the mother
gathered the children about her and
held them there until they were over
come. The eldest of the children was
six years of age and the youngest four¬
teen months.
A Solid Company This.
It is stated that the report of the
American Cotton Oil Company, 31,’1894, for the
4ecal Tear ,. oJlng 6 August ’stockholders' to
be eu b mitted aI the an
nual meeting at New York on Novem¬
ber 1, 1894, will show that the com¬
pany, during the year, paid off about
$250,000 of its bonds, all of its inter¬
est charges, 6 per cent, dividend od
its preferred stock, and earned in ad
dition a small surplus on its common
stock,
Split at Fall River.
The weavers, at a meeting in Fall
River, Saturday, voted 875 to 75 not
to return to work. The parders voted
to go to work 290 to 94.
THE LATEST BY WIRE
GIVING THE NEWS UP TO THE
HOUR OF GOING TO PRESS.
Brief Mention of Daily Happenings
Throughout the World.
A new electric light plant with eight
large dynamos is beingereeted in Mer
idian, Miss. The old one was burned
down several months since, leaving the
city in almost total darkness,
The general life insurance agents of
North and South Carolina met at
Raleigh Wednesday to form an associa
tion - Tllcro has heen ftn association
of geucra i agen t 3 ftn d solicitors, but it
was thought best to have a separate
organization.
The postoffiee at New Albany, Ky.,
robbed Thursday. While Port
">“**' Schindler was at dinner a thief
slipped into liis private office and took
$ 4 » 000 worth of stamps and $500 in
cash from the safe. The robbery was
not discovered until Air. Schiudl.er’s
r eturn. There is no clue to the thief.
Contrary to expectations of rnami
the {£?“"* public “f in mm-L general, ,u . ,b ® the B«rpri» striking of
weavers at Fall lliver continue to
manifest a decided opposition to re
turning work under the terms offered
Pome weeks ago. Though there are
hardly 30,000 out of 5(5,000 looms in
operation the idleness seems to run in
streaks.
Thursday morning a strike was de
dared iu the cigar factory of Gonza
lez & Moera, at Ybor City, Fla., and
all hands went out. The*factories say
the strike is due to an anarchistic ele
ment which prevails in certain factor
ies, but the men claim to have a griev
mice in the rate of compensation and
say that they will demand New York
and Chicago prices.
the i ^ Co-operative P ° stmastcr Loan * eneral and bas Investment declared
Company, of Mississippi, with head¬
quarters in Jackson a lottery, and the
same lias been refused the use of the
United States mails, and newspapers
carrying the advertisement of such
lotterj- have been notified that publi¬
cations containing such advertisements
are not mailable matter.
A Baltimore dispatch says: Dr.
John D. Kremieu, recently adjudged
guilty of murder in the second degree
for poisoning John Forres, alias Her¬
man Hanburch, formerly of Philadel
aphia, has been sentenced to ten years’
imprisonment in the state penitentiary.
Kremien, who was Forres’ physician,
was arrested when he presented the
forged will to the orphans’ court, pur¬
porting to give him Forres’ estate val
ued at $6,500.
A sensation was caused at Omaha,
Neb., by the publication of au affida¬
vit by J. E. Coleman, proof reader of
the last state senate committee on en¬
rolled bills. He swore that during
the session Thomos J. Majors, the
[ resident of the senate, and lieutenant
■rover nor, approached him several
f ilDAfl nolnrtix to steal several billa^
|£! order to prevent^tsDeconffnf^HTW*
The Odd Fellows’ Home and Nation¬
al Sanitarium at Gainesville, Fla., was
formally opened by the board of trus¬
tees Wednesday for the reception of
sick Odd Fellows and Daughters of
Jebekah of the entire world. The
homo was built at a cost of $18,000
tud is fitted up with all conveniences
for the comfort of its inmates. Appli¬
cations have been received from all
over the United States and Canada for
he entrance of sick and afflicted mem¬
bers of the order.
Depositions taken at Cincinnati in
the case of Dr. Amick vs. Reeves, de¬
velop some remarkable facts. It was
shown that the Amick Chemical coin
pany,of Cincinnati, lias supplied forty
thousand doctors with Dr. Amick’s
chemical treatment for consumption,
is much us $1,000 worth of sample
medicine being distributed daily.
Each patient receives a trial outfit and
tn inhaler. The company offered as
evidence its files, containing thousands
of reports from physicians of cures
covering every stage and phase of the
iisease.
HAD FORTY PASSES.
Debs’ First Lieutenant, Mr. Howard,
Traveled Like a Lord.
A Chicago dispatch says: George
W. Howard, vice president of the
American Railway Union, and widely
known as the first lieutenant of Delis
in the great strike last July, recently
lost a pocketbook containing forty
annual passes, and he advertised for
them. The passes were over all the
leading railroads, and among them was
a Pullman pass. The passes were
subsequently found and safely re¬
turned.
Tho news of Howard’s loss was a
great shock to laboring men. They
recalled that Mr. Howard often scored
labor leaders who were so faithless to
their trusts as to receive subsidies from
railway managers in the shape of free
tickets. He was especially severe on
Labor Commissioner Carroll D.
Wright for having a Pullman pass.
A BANDIT BAGGED.
He Was Heavily Armed and Had
Much Boodle.
A Richmond, Va., dispatch says:
Governor O’Ferall has received a tele¬
gram stating that a man supposed to
be one of the daring bandits who held
up and robbed an express car of
$50,000, on a train just south of the
Potomac river, last Friday, was cap¬
tured at Cumljerland, Md., Wednes¬
day. A pistol, cartridges, and $1,050
were found upon his person, and the
authorities are certain that be is one
of the robbers.
LUMBERMEN ORGANIZE.
Saw-Mill Owners Hold a Convention
at Brunswick and Elect Officers.
The lumbermen of Geoegia and
Florida met in convention at Bruns¬
wick, Ga., Monday. Hon. J. W. Ben¬
nett delivered the address of welcome
on behalf of the city. The object of
the meeting was to organize for the
purpose of restoring the price of lum¬
ber to living rates. No industry is
more demoralized than the lumber
business, owing to the unprecedented¬
ly low price that has prevailed for the
pasf two years
I P. P g
_
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Makes
Marvelous Cures
In Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. IV P. purifies the blood, bn ’ '* up
etren K Th n to Skomdmwl' ex's
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers
i^n^wn’T^Mholll'O
positive, in all cases. sjieedy and permaueut cures
I-arties whose systems are pi oisoned
nnd whose blood ia In an impure corn; u i.
tion. due to menstrua! irreguluritie e3
are peculiarly and benefited by tl lO wo , n -
derful tonic blood cleansing prop¬ xn.
erties of P. P. P. — Prickly Asb, Poke
Root and Po tassium.
Springfield, Mo., hlglie Aug. Pith. 1693.
—I can speak in t lie st terms of
your medicine from tny nwn personal
knowledge. I was and affected rhou: with heart •nr
disease, 35 pleurisy treated by the niatism i best fo lor
years, was very
physicians ana spent hundreds of dol
airs, tried every known remedy with¬
out finding relief. I have only taken
one bottlo of yonr P. P. P., and can
cheerfully say it has done mo more
good 1 t recommend han anything I havo medloiue ever taken. all
can yov r to
aufforers of the above diseases.
MR9. M. M. YEAKY.
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
CUT RATE PRICES \ \
ON
SHOES 5
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
CHEAPEST SHOE HOUSE OH BAHTH.
SHOE BROKERS.
E. B. HARRIS, Manager*
Macon, Ga,
0 P. & 1
. mmg 9
MANUFACTURERS OF ANI) DEALERS IN
SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS,
Mantels, Paints, Oil, Lime, Cement,
REEDED, TURNED AND SCROLL WORK,
AND-—
BUILDERS’ HARDWARE,
MACON, GA.
Write us for Prices before you buy. Estimates cheerfully given
Schofield’s Iron Works!
^C«,n.-u.f©.ctra.r©rsi ©.n.A 7'©1c'fo©rs of
l\m Engines, Boilers, SAW ILLS, (Jottm Presses
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
-Soie Owner and Manufacturer* of--
Schofield’s Famous COTTON PRESS I
—-To Piiok by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam
S2AB8 GOODS, PIPE P1TTING8.LUBRI0AT0RS, BELTING, PACKING,SAWS, ETC
-General Agent for
UNCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETTS MAGNOLIA'COTTON Gill
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
MACON. GEORGIA.
m tuff® Sg®
lit ! - ' ESTAIH.ISHBD 1865.
Iff 111 One Price HI
121 iff
lit Clothiers, Ill |iKj
m m
<9 *
®! m
TAILORS, I ® 9)
HATTERS, Si
m im is®
i&i FURNISHERS. HI
©
fit'S A | Bros.
| Ik® tiseman j®
l|| IfS a.® i®
% ) 5 and 17 Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, GA. iJJ&'S
i§i i
m WASHINGTON, 8t«. O. C. N. factory. BALTIMORE, 213 w Gcrman MD St: 1
Cor- Ttw ano E- W
*TA i ?a i t M.Y flANyFACTLkUWo O! CLOTHING IN THE SOUTH ©
5 fci f^p Jr | DEALING DIPECT 'A ITH CONSUMER
;
» $3.ia a m Q2>m -®&^4'S
3
PI MPLES, BLOTCHES
Ann OLD SO RES
CATfiBRH, ftlfllMjlfl,
MDJjH TROUBLES
anil DYSPEPSIA
Are entirely removed toy P.P.P.
—Prickly A*h, Poke Root amt Potas¬
sium, tiio greatest blood purlfler on
earth.
AnEtmr.KV, O.. July 21,1991. Savannah,
Mrs isrs Lippman Bros. , of
Ga.: Of.ak sms—l bought a bottlo
yourP. has P P. at Hot Spring:*, Rood than Ark.,and throa
It done mo more the
months’treatment st Hot Springs.
EenJ Uireo bottlea C. O. D.
“^“JSTSWtoh. County, O.
Aberdeen, Brotvn
Cart* J- i>- Johnston.
To aU trhom it concrrn: 1 here
SrmofSJSKlSSfSSBK ,
auvaunan, ua.
Hhiit Cancer Cured.
totimovy fro,nrhe Mayor 0 /Sev ( in,TtX,
Sfox iN, Tkx., January IT, 1^93.
Mbssrs i.ippman have Brop., tried Savannah, P.
O. i.: - cf;—I your
P. P. for a db'oaso of the akin, usun ny „
known ss sH o>unit nicer,of thirty lollof: years' »ut
standing, the and and great it
purifies hi- ’ removes nil lr
rltatiou fr. ni i: , seat of tho disease
and prevents , K spreading five bottles of the
80 res. I have tn \ or six
ami feel eoulide-.it ‘ another coursa
will from efleet, a inch- cur. ;\has and also stomaob relieved
mo ■hx. \
troubles. Your RUST,
Att \v at I.aw.
BoflK ALT. cn DRUGGISTS Blood Diseases SELtSJ !^1 "• nee.
LIPPKIA^
PROPRIETORS,
I.lpi>nianii Slotlft,$avaatiah|