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THE JESUP SENTINEL.
Established 1866.
Mil.. Ml- XX V 111.
FAST THE
j th.«* s ! iasSiingtoa
u v e
Elite ; l AND
'#Xr' r Chattanooga
-jg*- Jjjf’ y***^**^ ‘J j^ -**** ♦
IN EFFECT OCT 30, 1882
EAST BOUND.
r tt- g* •■■■■' ' 'I
■ -
Anri d f-ntrcl TiiiiM . , . h:t '
M
t
, ’* ' i *
CONNECTIONS.
I.**.-. - V. H.S,'...inn in 'o a. • M
Arrive New Vkrlf nor
T .rave Mrmplm 12.S5 r. M
A rfivr C'ha 1 . 1 . t noo t!*
I.we t ..;u a
Ai * i "hau^i 1.3 f M
I4fre New ti-M) f. M
f ■?»•<. <* A M
Arrive Ch^ttarKM^a Hr- A. M
t.r r Aainia ” 'h.-»A.'M
Arrive Clrvelnnd I g i>. M
L.ravr M'tbiic ';0t i ,xf
r.rave IM3A.55
Arrive Ckvchxhd 1:25 P, M
TRAIN CONSISTS OF
Pullm b« a :oaih«*aud BiigRag r Car «n®
Dim). All
N'wv
N^yhv M?inp ng Ca * ....., S5PESTIBULED VcsnbuJe«—
ngum. A n
ntiiiMK Car Service I’lmirnasild.
NO EXTRA FARES.
B, W. WRKN N, Geaeral Pass, Agt. Kjoxviik, '.'ran-
Agmrltural 1 , 80113 £3;
AT DAHLONEGA.
A branch of the State University
Spring Term 12632233 Fin? Mafiabddy Fiwz: i7; Febn- "
rumg. 15213! ?‘crm éggz‘m
Mmzdg'zy in. N;7$aa;:;2m~;~.
Best ashami in ma scum, far students with‘i
h‘mim} maxim. The miiitary imiuing 3a
éhomugb, hemg um’irrn U. 3. Army 03162:,
déiaiiafi by the Emma}? x}? War. ; _
30TH 51531135 IIAVE EQUAL ADYAEF
'I‘Aiififi. _
fitmiesms am preparE-z} and iicensed to teach
in the pubfic schmfia. by act of the legislature,
Lectures, (m Agricuimm and the Science.
by difitingfiisimd educamm and midlam,
‘ E0: mun ibis c-Hmat-a is Emsamggad, ,
feet. ‘ ‘
; Mfimde 2237 , - Mania: ‘
3mm $10 permrmth'am} anards.
' "
j‘u 1mm? rates. , __ ;
‘
Each @123th and :eprascmmtive d! £115 stats
, 13 entitlaé :md tequczswd t0 appoint 0m: pugu _
gmm‘11131 disn—gm m- cmnfiy‘, without piyiug
matrieulstion feta, dxjriag his term._ 7
,
,
' For mtah‘g or- informatinn, 3mm” ’8er
guy 0: Treasurer, 1399.111 6! ngstaen. , '
Savannah, Florida and Western Kail way,
WATOltOS* SHORT MKB—TXM» CARD.
Rchedulc of through trains to Florida and Southern Georgia.
In effect July 2 , 1893 .
Doing South—Tloid ilown. Q-cing Nortn—Read up.
p-—;-fg’ j~ ' T
5 IB ; 23~ :
* Wp »2Sa! « io., i.v Savannah . Ar Lv 12 09pf 28a« 6 fi 33p! 2»pl 6 3 20.1 20a
0 2(m 10U.H ? OOrt Al¬ ...Jesup,. ■ 1.0 15p!
.2 £0 -1 ii WfC 9 15a ..... Wftyc vroufe • ■ ...... 8 I5.'i 5 100a
7 20a ......UlWal..... ,! .Brim mswlck ...... 1 20*ij...... | 7 S45p OOp
.... 12 2 10 p. : .... fa.ksimvifls ... Aitiaiiy ■ ■. -------Ywiai 2 dopl | ! 6 2Up
23a t l»j. 00n ..... 6Sa| ■
snap r>5f.pt..... . . Stuiforrt.. ...... 1 15a! 7
io lep loaogi..... .. .Tampa- - - ------- 800u Slip......! ......!
10»1> 11 00p'...... Port Tampa ...... 7
• 15a • Live Oak.. |:®Jl s
11 14a 1128:1 UII’. . (ialtieav illo ..... S00a
«2Sa: 25a.: i.Valdos 1'hmn iosta.. asviUe ..... ......2 3'28p Hip Hoi &23r
# « 2sa] 3 1 02p 25p .MonticrUo .....1145a
STa! .....
h 2 tip ..... Cbattahoechea Baiabrfftsre- •• .....112 67p s i3p
11 3 30a »pi tSui! .... ..Coltim ..Maci :m.. 3 35tiji6 55a j jo gwi> iSp
3 bus J
« 15a ....Atlanta .,.. 7 745a 00a L*^
8 40j> . Mont ntgomery T.™
3 Ofm Mobile-. < i.’.Ui 1- i20ai
7 35a iS.es\ Or[er<na
Nr* 19 leaves Savannah daily, rxoapt Sunflay, S :53 p. in., arrive* 8:37 Jeaup 7-20 p. ni. No. 2 u 8
leaves all Amp betwi daily except KavAnnah Sunday, ami 4:25 .b-s a, m., arrive# Bavan&ah a. in, These train* stop at
s‘auen a r n up
imraa cab AK shiviok ar» cojrar.cwc.xs.
TrAtn# Nos. 86 »u»I 14 narnr PuUmsn car* bctwiien sew York, Savannah and Port Tstnp#. „ No,
aaoerrim Pullman ilecptng car* Waycrons to Nashville. Koaisvillo and Chicago. Train 78 car
rin Ptiilman *lwpi«g cars b-ttvsen New York m l Jackionrille. No. 6 carries Pullman
**ik tetwo ttavannaband Chicago, ami on Wednesday ami Saturdays No. 5 carries Pull
S-TwarisXu H ,WMinM s f' TiD1?8 ' tn(I m ThwsilaTs ami Sundays ths alcsper wtnrus from
‘'Yr.hTN.-.‘^6«mtieot» H-) s
at Jeaup for Maoou, Atlanta aud tea west. Trail) .3 connects Through at Way.
oroa* rulimvi for MontRomerv, New Orleans, Chioago, Na«Hviilo, Train Otucinnatf, with St. Ltmm Alabama and Midland Chicago*
aleepor Wayaroe# n» 23 conttecta railway few
T-cket«»oM to all point* and aleepiiur car bertha secured at passenger stations, and ticket
office, 23 Bull street. K. a. Arnwnd, City Ticket Agent.
ft, (}. Yfeitttnk, Biiperintendeiit W. M. Davidson. General Pas».-nzer Agent
BRUSWICK ANO WESTERN PASSENGER SCHEDULE.
TIME TABLE NO. 68 IN EFFECT SUNDAY, JUNE. 4, 1803.
Subject to (Iliango Without Notice.
(Read 'MwnW aIIdT ' (ltfiAD UIP YAHP.) ~
______
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...... i 15 t'fi 017 00.-j 7 2 iiRTNAWP K ,..«*tt mi’-i « I'O T i\m\ ....
....... a ft 20 .- Jiunatea... .*!=*■’ 10 57] r 6 471 6 3dja--4;«U.....
........ * 9 0 ft t 7 rssL pi,4 »» Wayncsville .. is 10.43,f fi 0 05^3 50;......
f 6 n !Wf t ti .kul -- AtW f,ita nwm b’lf.&t fi ■
\* « 4 'V t i 7 }{: SOS's 8 IU »l ... »ton SJ.0.2T! f o it* r> ;m s t!
Is 7 00 «0i ! 3 If i 8131 * « 3 ... Nahunla ■ stein i M<>, f* l.’ .s
8 7 - 4* t s Hoboken.. « !' !.s i is: i > -
s 8 S 6 : 8 «f 5 W r r Seitiatfervilfe i-1 38! 4 20-S i as
* » 8Si -ts S> 00js- 5> in! WAYUBOSS t ft 30 !s 3 4ili 12 30
to late ft 3»!f i >j a 25 Ifrl l s' »8 1.55 ■s U 31$ ofioi-f ft !C 1 4ft - UP
ell 15! # 0 ■ • VVnieKl><-.ro • 4 53; 1 1... ,11 15
U .12 15; 8 10if 0 m % Id ... Millwood . ... % 40'f 4 3<y t2 27 A KS2S
h !3Ift; « 27! £ tOW b Ki 3-4- - -. M. IKm.tiii :* s,s ( 4 24: i 2 ot,;* a m
5 1 3 S' IS S 3 |« l 01 Vjs 1052 -. • ■ 1'earson. t S JkH 4 0 b, u -i (' OM
^ 1 2 Snj 15! 7 T 05! 27:f leSBisllW KNI3MI 15 1 ... ....88 Kirklnml Mile 1 b ift S 8t» 10 <s Gi 11 1! l»!< ." x 823 8 43
j 1 .......Gray'# ! f 348!
S 2 30: 31 f 10 S 1*1118 Willacoochee ... V 7 57 f 3 4 : 5 i W " 05
» 2*Q : 7 55 f 1(140 * 1123 ... a 7 6S £ 8 40! 10 40y , w
1* ItiW 3 30 S 33:vU01-:* 1144 ...■ Ainpaha .... s 7 safe sji>l m os, ? 05
» *SNf U13 . 120 : 5 ; - - .. ■ Brook Km:,:!!., . . s 7 22; £3 07 ‘.'48! £0 27
»- M. s 4 40' lli U 21 * ia 12 - • • - field ... i-s 7 15 ! 2 8 tV » !•»:,*« 07
sti as *12»)iP j L % 4 vs i* lf> 6.3&1 c. st.
5E0 ft m 9 so n * Tiftou ■ V »7 m ; ass}-* s.oo 5 4-5
P, M.! IHlfi- Cttl A. M l
* 6 41 .... t«22:f 12087,13 52 ...... Tv Tv o 88ft 5 OS
* 7C5......: 10 iri 5315 s too .... Suiiiiier .. i 6 28 f 2 05 ! 8 18 4 as
* ?«t .....! U 03 f l.:2;.i f 1 u , , ■ FwaWii . f e l»;f I 87 S @5 4 03
9 11 I2.!fl2::«»k 1 2S!f } *......Isabella U 6 nt t tei 7 56. tel 40
* Sty..... 11 JSflWh 4 1 3 . 1 .... WHHokU .! 1.3 U esair i e| 7 «! B
* 9 25 al........ ..... J4so 11 RilfHWU ! 1 »iei 451 ...... Oavis... ft’Mlf 1-38 7 29 (ml ; 1 •
H) U.J 2 ;s 110 . ...... Aibotiv ; & SO! j to; 7 to
*. r m.h. » A M-l'N. M-!V U, iy. u,
T» 8 te* No. 7 , 11 , 6 , », IS, 6 , CaUji evet-’et Hasftajr. Train* No. 8 . 1 . 8 , 4 Cftit i oi> • n
fttgnal. W«c» iiiyli-.n Wu with
MontpraRwy, c'n Itirminfslmni iftait* at ; ri- s it.rou^h JbtUn .a faek4(|r-.vj<ie. sTcepliw tw #r S4: l.ouir,
iMUMiMt |K,lr,H. UncUninR Na*hvill«, ebair Choxtanansa, S'ew York. T; Bip ut 1 }a*
ijm. W. Haiskw. Saci-rtctenilant. car* between VVaycrims amt Mondrr.nii-rv Thpoi .iiridge-*
W. t’. !l. O* i.ss, Traft*. Mannv-r.
it. OavinfoS!, a. S’ A.. i.,«<>. W. CaATiwi, U, F. A
“WE APPLAUD THE RIGHT AND CONDEIVSN THE WRONG,”
R E P
CURES ALL SKIN
AND
BLOOD DI5EA5E5,
ar,'. .-r fihfi- iTitbe fre'it tt&ttftjfjK-tkdi lof »fo* <-Ors* of ft’*
ID ID TZ>
lOMU3SKUSUS«iB «s» ,sr.yjfbH\«o SwfirUm* mar
Sptm, Glsnduiar S«.cHlng* t Rheun.atl* Mai sri*,
Chrotds Ulcork ihki, have resisted ail treatrr«t»t # Cat-arrlt,
ERPJIollli! I
**
Mer*
Wrtal P T&ttft, Rcsbi Head, «;<•., etc.
F. B. I 1 , is «; vowreyfu? tetili-, and nn lant RppetUar,
■ m
■
T
H RHEUMATI!
a
1 Ijid'.'I*
wli, *, tv, ary {- ,;»Q6<1 an*i trb'.„y blot-d !» m
*n Itnuor* ccudttlon, due Id" tneni-truRi lrreKiil*kritIev»
RRRiduu !
iMiv bf- S wendirfai t«W ' jki4 T&W'
cl*ftb6kij( t»rcp«rti3« of P. P. P., Prickly A»b, PqIw Iloo*
llOd PctAM.U________
» m
•’' / ->
| ^ fjp* i » k 1 1 !
LIFTMAN BEOS., Proprietors,
Oruggiits, Uppmaa'sBlock, SAVANNAH, <M, j
JESUPi GA„ THURSDAY. MARCH 8 , 181)4
PUZZLES FROM A
|
'
HISTORY OF THE DIAMOND
SHROUDED IXt MYSTERY
Does Nature, Scatter tier firms
Jlruiulenst from some World
Jit Sitaee?--south Vf'rtea's Mines.
A Si# pretty widely known, the
diamond mine? of, South
Africa, situated chiefly in Gri
large depr< ipiflland West, consist of :
ssions, filled with earth,
varying in color from yellow to gray j
ami bln. . which is dem*, ib. ! s- - tough, j
dry jnnd of yolciwud origin, sometimes
har leucd into rock. This mud, m
.
‘■blue,' hs it- us technicallycalled, is;
enclosed known in ‘■pipi. a basin 1 ' which, of rock is geologically }
a.s supposed to j
be a prater hi an extinct vob-.-uio, into j
which the mud has bee i injected from !
below. The four prm uprl pipes .>r
mines lie w ithin a radius of a few miles, |
and ;u,‘eknown as KimiH rley, Do Be* rs, j
Dntoitspan aud Billt ton :ein. The gen-j
<rnl features of all are ulil . ; ie each, >
the upper part from of the soil is yellow, j
changing, at. fifty tonne hundred ;
b < t from the surface, to a blue ground |
of greater , density. 1’lic diamonds j
were first discovered iu the yellow
f m-ih ; and when the miners had j
cleared that out, they imagined that
they had come to the, end of the dia
mend ; Isn't it was so oaf on n d that t hey
x'-ero even more abmidant in the .blue
ground, aud that tunc the .
siuce mines :
have been earned down t-ofiOO and 800
feet without any diminution in the
yield» on the contrary, the deeper the
excav ati ons are earns 1 the Wider ap
pears the output.
-
The ’•blue,” when ekenvated, is car¬
ried up mid spread Cm the gri.nmd, j
where it lies for months, to be disin¬
tegrated by air and water, and is then
washed and picked over carefully by
hand to find the- diamonds, .Scattered
through t-fie blue* earth me not ouh
diamonds, aim, bur Dm a a great great variety varset v of of errs
tai Agates, iron pyritc# and other
aabataueas,- among which Mr. A A
Anderson, the traveler, believes lie
found many weH-worke„i flint impie
meats from different depths; and Mr.
ported M. E. Barber, as early as 1871, re
the discovery - of many worn
unci perfect flint implements at Coles
! ' f -‘rg Kopje, in diamondiferous soil,
^ roi: j conaidt-rablo depths, which, if
confirmed, would add another to the
many pnzzlos connected with 1 he
diamond mines, especially if the yol
CBmc theory is to be maintained. Mr*
Anderson, however, looks upon the
blue.'ground as .occupying the bed of
TTS 1 ^ 0 * t Uml f ih 1 th f aiH ;
iG T W °i K
‘ U anbst-ances had r Bern
,1o '?‘ by nu “, nciC f 1Vrr V n T V rT“
“® tca , b , v ,he J v *?> ^st&xit twelve
-
m,»., or move, the bed of which at
various points, and the locky banks
ou both sides, are rich in diamonds,
the rock of the river bed being of -the
same nature as that which encloses the
mines Geologists generally incline
to the volcanic theorv, but believe
that the diamonds are of an earlier
date than the upheaval of the mud
containing them from an enormous
depth. '
1 he groal. majoriiv of S-mth African
diamonds are amorphous, cloudy, vel
lowish-lookiug, soapy-feeling masses,
varying in size from a pin’s head to a
small pebble; but somo arc perfect
octahedrons, white aud very brilliant.,
Those arc, of coarse, the 'most vain
nble ; and, singular b* relate, although
these varieties'occur in all the mines,
yet the general chaructoristica of the
gems, whether dull or brilliant, white
s l ’ r ye^few, arc sufficiently distinctive
j to enable an cxi>ert. to say at a glan
lr «>m which mine a diamond ha--conic,
the same holding good of Vatvl River
fteins, and of those froni Jugersfonf-ciu,
in the Orange Free State.
Here, then, is-another puc.y.le. How
1S ’■* ihat gems so apparently similar,
liaviug presumably » oorumon origin
and embedded m the Minus matrix
have aeqnired varying characteristics?
| »*,,«« NntneK it ° ' ' ' «f at i unimg i,;. i,„ ,
‘ , li r snci ct« . even irom . tiic prying eyes
of scientists, for although the diamond
mins of South Africa have Ikh-u
j ) t tlJown wenty nna year.*, work<J<l scarcely for anything than has
j been added to our knowledge of the
1> ' a * )< '’ ou1n ei 'dcd it
Adamant, and we still regard it as the
hardest of all, things; yet it is easily
smashed by a wcH-directed blow, can
be cut in flakes by the dishonest jewel
ler, and is often found so cracked and
flawed as. to crumble to pieces uu
touched; nevertheless the splinters
will.pierce the hardest rock, and even
wiieu reduced to the finest powder.
will cut and polish -all other gems.
Until the discovery of the South
African.mines, all diamonds came from
J Uilia and Brazil; but it was, of course,
fhe .fiidinn. mines .which .supplied the
Did World; and, Hriuge as it may
Ku>..-m, to our belief in tin
ol. nind ‘m ci»Itmu<-u, tin jewi let * *»f
ancient India, and possibly of .Home
also, had discovered the art of eu
graving and even of piercing the dm
irtorul, au art which our modern jew
ciers find most difficult.
Thousands, perhaps millions" of
years the diamond -has been, iu exist¬
ence, yet its origin isofill a mystery.
‘.’ure carbon, the chemists call it. but
in what -alembic it i« distilled they
imow not. Embedded iu mud, it jv
niaiued nndctiled; yet sometimes it
will be iom.id tinted by-some.chemical
process so as to become pink, blue.
yellow, and even black, but it always
remams n diamond, not lobe con
founded with the commoner
whicli oitcu bear it company. In the
\ mil IUvt r digging*, it would seem-to
have n constant companion m a: mi
otittly etivukcd pebble, known ns the
'bandikiom,” whiuii, when » ili ; :.i-r
fin.Is, t.j inow.s that oimucnls iu
IU'!U lu these diggings fit gems nr
not found in *‘bhie” ■ ground, us at
Kimbcrit-i, bat sonictiin • at -i dept).
ot from twenty tn aweary feet iu
T J,lcr U i
boulders, although often in shallow
beds of fine red sand or under a liar*,] 1
crust of lime. The puzzle here, ujraiti,
is to. kuov. how all these gems eaitio
tliere,*--Ch«nil>e,rs , s .Ton-trial.
SELECT SiniNfiS.
The word Arizona means eiytnolo
cully, “big nose,’*
A duke daring the middle ages was
an independent; sovereign.
Hie n.i’ua Btolumv ws adopted os a
title by the biter kings of Egypt. •
Tll( oMest N ( „ v fintrlaud < '..urch. m I
,„ it , (f nst , lls !t Ee IijriottS edifice, is at i
H.nglmm, Mass,
their The list of English author and 800
work- give the titles “Botrtdde,” of over
poems and essays on
Italiau soldiers arc given cigars
< ' > G’ 'F<y. but have p.t pay ft.r their
uudcrclot-hiug, washing and all toilet
articles
New York hes the biggest gas tank
iii the.world. H towers high. >)’•*<)
the bnikliugs in West Sixty-tiUh streetj
ft ud holds 4,'KM,tMW feet.
“ ‘A School master’ withes to -ex
change his little daughter, aged
eleven, for a boy of similar Kentish was
mi. odd advertisement in the
Mercury, England, recently*
'When tbo ostrie' is to be 'divested
of its plumage a. 1 ng hood is placed
ou its hmvd, and it iv then r-outiued in
a ra jj,_.,| inclosure about three feet
Mjiuir The birds rarely show fight,
A. B. Myeis, of Hitnover, Penn ,
lost- both his hands in au ne ulent
years tlmt He w:e. recently married,
and signed his marriage certificate
with a pen held iu his teeth Hi,
penman-hip i- due.
The register of a country hotel in
Viitiue ofte day recently contained
,} - Mongolians, Kusaians, Prua*
K! ; tU6i > Italians Turks, Greeks, Can
k r< uch and Ger mans, each
writteu in the owner’s language,
A take of boiling mad, two miles m
eetomuferencvi. '.exists in the island of
Java, near H.jlo, Masses of soft, hot
mud contiimally bubbles arise explode and fall, bad* and
huge mud like
loons,' with reports like .guns, at the
rate of three a minute.
A Japanese audience, when they
wish to express disapproval of a bad
play, do not hiss or hoot or make nny
hideous and inconvenient- noise; they
merely rise to their feet and turn
their backs to the stage, upon which
the eurtaid immediately descends, and
the aW. olav is forthwith tabooed. -
imported from Madagascar, is
1 Sl « possession of W. C. Hobinson,
(jl Xe -w Castle. Penn. The animal has
110 uii *>»' tun* Me * rabbit. The
eftt is a great rabbit hunter, and can
fwllow yfr. Bunny into almost any ^
barrow-. Mr. Robinson claims that it
caught.nineteen rabbit* one day re¬
cently.
Ancient critics said Homer was a
pmgiariBt . . Nauerats ekai-ged that
I tlo:uer S - 0!C al{ lm work trom ft P re *
P oeiu i A elmn mentions one
! who preceded Homer and
! wrote a pioem on the siege nt Troy,
'
and Sukhm says Homer got his best
passages from a poo in by Oomumis ou
, thject.
| ! The samc California s, Indian's bow is made
I from the white sap of wood of the
i cedar, the outside of the tree being
i the outer side of the bow. The stick
.
is scraped and polished with pieces of
i obsidian, Then it is rousted iu ashes
! and bent into shape. Their arrows
arc made of button willow, twigs of
: the buckeye and canes,
M'td Bcatlu r Bliilosupliy.
; As-1 was passing through .F street
t ou a recent showery morning, I saw
’ an mnbrell i-mender sitting m front
j of the door of au office bnildi ug.yvork
ing' away on u heap of broken iim
: brojia.g which evidently ho had ed.1*
leetod from, the tenants iusidi I'ha
i rc.iu was falling steadily, aud the naau
must- have been wet to the skin be
lore he returned their property to his
1 customers. I could not forbear ask*
: ing him why ho thus invited a bath.
“\Yhv shouldn't I?” lie asked in re
| suonsc
f ‘•'Because it is ft bad advertisement
for your trade, said I. “A tailor
should be always well dressed, a shoe*
: maker always well Shod; by tie- same
j logic, a man who deals iii umbrellas
: i ought to be dry when other persons
aro getting soaked with rain,
; ".You’re dead wrong," he answered,
: promptly. “There's no suggestion of
p.,dti\c suffering iu old clothes or
! well-worn -shoes—many peopl like
. them better than new ones. But- when
f. offer to mend a man’- uirihreHa f
i make a great deal more of an itnnres
sion on him by coming into hi-s pros
; once with a wet back. He on* to
himself at once; ‘Is it really so wet
I can’t, stand that sort of
thing. It wonl-I giv-j me Wy iloalhl*
.And out .comes'fins umbtcdlss at once
to be put in repair. Hd, you sec, f
trade m nj mis* rabln appearance. It
i'- just as much of a tool-.fur me a- my
nippers or my wrench.”— Kate Vidas
j TPashiugtoh
Largest Library in the World.
j The largest library in the world
' is the National Library of Paris, con
i iaiuitig more than 2,i.iOff,OtK) -printed
volumes and about 200,000 manu
’ scripts Fhn Rriiiah Mnaenm has
a
eoHoetiou of about 1,.UK),000 vobuucs
> and exceeds the St. Petevaburg J taper*
• jal Library *»nl.y by 12.0>).) volumes,
Royal Library at Mu men eon
; tains, about O'lil, 1 Hi ’> punted works, aud
i it is exceptionally' rich in pamphlets,
while the Berlin Hoval Library has
' 81K4,00<> volumes, that of Copenhagen
: 510,000, that .,1 Dr. lefi tui-.i t:*f sha
L hi vcr..i: v I .ifiic.ry at Goitin-yen each,
liita oMjm He- Imperial Library at
Vienna has thspypO, while the-Univer
- ft bib',i iu the same met'ropo-lia
ka* 3?0,-.0ff.i,- -New'York Imlcpcadvut.
THE NEWS IN GENERAL
c ®“ Ir ™ ,°w,» a »«
Blejrajtae , ASnces
And Presented in Pointed and Uemia*
He Paragraphs.
Tim Dixon steam engine works fit
New 'Burgh, X. Y., have .made an as¬
signment,.
Pin men, imprisoned in the Boston
Kim mine at Ashland, Pa., by a failed i
foal, have been rescued.
The committee on eountitutioimi
amendment'- of the town house of rep
resents lives reported favorably a tewo
lution submitting prohibition ton pop
alar vote.
A special from Nebraska. City, \« >
slides that J. T \Yhib ha-b,. n found i
guilty iiffg of criminally libelling I Bier
Morton, The libel consisted, of
gently, hanging S- cretary ' Mort-ou iii effigy re-
1’he Sew York //*/ted Montevideo
ruble says that the sanitary state of the
city of Hio is’appalling. Yellow revet
is rampant, Bor several days bmiais
reached ninety a duv, and it is impos- j
slide to the number of u>
caget , (
r , ,, , ,„r:,"vu , . ,
*y 4 : ' * 1 ’ ",
j Alt f , tii.'"}m-d' Ull
of n'■ had^heei- mllS 1 ramf t- -
e vau t
and dollar
Governor Patterson, of l'oimsylvn- ,
noth m" I'mmeti TEde fo’nrevcH ,E if't Jll
wdufBecTelarvIIm-it witn o from tvecretary uaintj, Viijutant d, com,, i,cn i v
ound Greenloud. Attorney Genera
Iminfkn iiaras}>oit • . c'u\\ ( yiotnl 1 V ' ^ n ^ 'v ^ \\ sl^tn r *1 t.
H 1 AAiHmr, wmt' r o. fu betid* sf. Mem 0 ‘' l “ ,, T, 1 he Jt party
w til be gone about two weeks.
Ex~Oa»l.nev William k. .Burr, Jr,, of
the St. Louis National bank, who lb
nuder a warrant 'of arrest charging
him' with embezzling--about SKA,000 of
the bank's funds, appeared before
United States District
Crawford and gave security for hi- aj
pefiranoe. Mr. Burr clnim.s that In is
guilty of no criminal intention, and
when his story ja told 1>< will be <U
.glared iuttocunt of nny intent to dc
fraud,
,A.t a meeting of the fusion demo
eratic state central committee of Kan
sas at Topeka a call was issued for a
state convention to meet in Topeka,
July 8, I- place in nomination candi
dates for state offices The commit
tioiis of the parties, and it is possible
that two democratic state conventions
will be the result.
The report telegraphed from George¬
town, Col., that citizens of that place
were signing a petition in favor of the
silver states seceding and joining Mex¬
ico, proves to be a canard. The lead¬
ing the men of Georgetown, silver which i« in
heart of the belt of Colorado,
;-ay they have not heard of any such
movement and declare that nowhere
in the country can people be found
more loyal to the government, and con¬
stitution than those of Georgetown,
Joseph Don Jan was tried in the
United States district court at Balti¬
more on the charge of violating the
postal laws by sending a threatening
Ward to Vice President Stevenson. The
jury returned a verdict of guilty and
Judge Morris sentenced Don dan to the
penitentiary for eighteen months. The
man is evidently not st rong minded,
but. showed from his actions and
his desire to run the country
that he was of that class of cranks
which are liable to become dangerous-:.
The trustees of the Brooklyn tuber
: imeh have not acted on the resist i
tion of Dr. T»linage, and it is mnv
said that be will remain.' The doctor's
farewell aerinoji announced for Hun
may be turned into a jubilee sermon.
Withdi the past few weeks Hie trusteed
have raised $.(50,000 to pay .ou the
church debt, and the collections have
increased so that they fully meet the
running expenses of the tabernacle.
The pastor feels very much encour¬
aged and it is now -predicted Unit Lie
will remain for life.
Now, that the bill consolidating passed New
York and 'Brooklyn has both
houses of the legislature, and has re¬
ceived the governor’s signature, public
opinion solidly endorses it. Brookly n
has more than 1,000,000 in habitant",
and is altogether too loo large sidetracked and. im¬
portant a city to remain
asu mere -suburb of New York, B lum
the provisions of the enabling set arc
carried out and voted upon, tin greater
New York, as the newspapers ealt it,
will have a population of d.UOOJKH',
and an ai* a of about 135 -quart miles.
TARIFF THE ISSUE
Mf.cvl'lngr «i (lift It-inocratic t:o 111 ?res*
vioual Uaflipaigw C imtiiHoc.
The deim*cr»tk* tMUgrotfrional eaiu
paiga «ntiu*ittef m* l in Yv'aahington
and discussed the inn >uuu uf rai-iug
fluids for the printing of document
and the location of headquarti-rs.
There was uo imeittain sound nt the
meeting regal'dingthe t*.*-it ion tie-party
fthai! take relative to the campaiipa.
Tariff i» to be the isMit D«uw
I'rats, said one speaker, “have been
preaching the gimpel of tariff reform
for many years, ami we prtom#i's'" cannot, .afford of
non to n jiudiatc the
.-nr r* pi* m ntatis. -* 11 t <>nsp—, :■
matter what form the ponding tariff
bill * hid! lulu n,c « Vi-* lltivc com
1 i i J » *
qnorlt-rs-.
Ail the property oi .tUi/ is «ss«s*t
at g-l-j,b0y,cCff>,UtK'.
Subscription $ ! „CX? Per Year.
GEN, JDBAL EARL! DEAD.
Ante of Hie mmm totes
Passes oier tto Riv t r,
injuries Kecelveff in a Recent Fait
Hasten ilis Death.
General Bar tv died at 30 ’>>1 o’clock
- .
I'luj . home
J i xugiit in ids in Lynch' ;
ourg, > a. He passed away quietly io .
the presence of his family and pLv.-u
emu and intimate friends. The old j
general, seemed aware of his approach-'' i
ing end early in the day. Before
noon ho called for the looming paper,
as was his imariabh- nminn, and nl
ti'njpti'd to toad. but soon, found that
his sight was tailing. Boon after, he
extended hi- baud t«. S u»tot Daniei,
who had been a constant watcher at
the bedside, and calmly said: 1 f want
to fell you goodbye, .Major,"' He
then bade his i.-phcw. ('aboil Early,
fau-wvil. after which 1 h* drojipt-d info h
slumber. Enter in the day, the
‘h v jhg m lerim nskod Senator D-miei
llo \ toleaie the room, as he wanted to
!l,, k witn him about certain an luge
n,e ®^ ; IU *' Glut time ho suffered
, pidn that he did
su< ’‘ 1 intense not re
with vive. his He hand met death unflinchingly,
resting' quietly • in Sena
u " »«*r..
Private telegrams Lav - beci, ^nt by
HeUa, ' or DuIiiel to nuu v of General
-
Vm1 >' H ^
0m WUI ’ n ° d ° nW ’ attenatiU!
burial.
ftis .thought that (IciHU.-f*!Barly has
left a good estate, though he was a man
°- ™\ AA'Ai l * LlS iy " nd - 'T"
J ex-confederates. H,s life
has , been nn unusually Franklin eventtul one.
He was born in county, Yir
November A, 1830. Hi- \va,s ap
poin^tHt cftdef to West mid -d», gran
"»o.i - |« »- .« .1-™
!V . „ lieutenant- of artillery at Fort
Monroe. Ho served iu the Florida war
1 sdT-'dB. In-this .war his genius as
a soldier was shown, He was eonspic
nous for bis courage and d< tcraumi
lien and more than one -veteran army
officer predicted for the gallant young
lieutenant a brilliant future.
\iter the war, «« there socuu'd b»
fore him « life of inactivity and a« his
heart yearned for his old -Virginia
home, he took a step Hint he had been
carefully weighing, and resigned from
the army in 1H3S, reluming to his ua
tivo state. Here the tojdiet betook
himself with his usual ardor to the
study of Blackstone, with the result
that- he immediately jumped into a
Urge L-metic-'.
He took an active interest iu all pub
’-12. He #us elected commonwealth's
attorney in 1.8A2-'3 *, and again iu
184B-’52. During the Mexican war he
was major of a regiment of 'Virginia
volunteers, serving from January,
184.7, till. August, 1 AIR tie was act
mg governor of Monterey in May and
June, In 47 a ml after the disbanding
of the army returned to the practice
of the law.' The part he played in the
late war is a matter of history and is
'
well known.
KKSiOJ-UTlONH OF BEGllBT
Tim general assembly in session at
Richmond adopted the following res¬
olution “Tb-solve^, the scnafe by the house that of
delegates, heard t with <’ounimag, protumi
this nody lias re¬
gret- bf the death of General Jubal A.
Early. In his death we recognize the
loss of ouo of the ablest and most dis
tingnshed of the beloved leaders of the
confederate forces and of one who,
since 1885, has lived in the intnmry of
that great struggle and has devoted
himself to the truth of its history and
the exposure >f fii-tsehood and pre¬
tenders. " Eulogies Were delivered by
membprs ot both Iiousoh.
GROWTH OF THE SOUTH.
The Industrial Situation During
jiiss, p . , s ‘
Tho wc-cUy )t-vi*.-<v of the u lastrial tutu*- .
tion in ibeisottth shows that the improvement
will h l-iH been aotiotaW since th« ot the
voar a tiwtii»:u and h'eaUilj.onunning.liciaK than in
the la re marked in iroitworkmg blast
aoedworkiiw i«dij*ri«, Several new
furnsc- s have been blniyn in and the iron pr*>
due* .s iu* teasing, deniomtrafing that, sfniib
era furnace men an wtsiain ’ii> ta*< a at
pres<-nt rales. The coil oulpat at largev.dheries
w inorvMing and there, is a ccnisubnable wove
meu iu treeling new cuke ovens. Reports
from one thousand s-urffos *n the south io the
ha# .trebled sines Janaar* first.,
For y at w indiHtdctfi wcr« eHUulmh©<3 ,. m , tha
UJ: in die P Ht w- di, tosoiiicr I ioiuiufcufc
Hi (or.^ that vviil bu t ijiar ioo.
Aiaona the r* w Industrie* *i* the f-ltowing;
1„, .--c.pinjg* !! Brick at*.* ?•*’* • v <-omp*»J.
;vi<h S9 ; *,t!-* :| cspi-Al. »! Ht&anigtnD, M!>«.:*
-d .ivui^tonj T&&si&ZSSi£ SMOgXW .rattiifl.m'll by
t K.V.; ■-* Fort Mill, 8. C
IV. A. Watson and others at
V.. nohow# a»«lother# wi:i e-.-nu Hb f«rlij.'4**r
Va„ by ,1. tv, teinitord- awl sVNcwpm-t, barrel ntili-will Ivy.,
Irt- NYp -i-r Mill, pane, 100
wTm- waanizU *t b»«l«
. a foundry Amcraci.j'.vinras'nmpMiy company
Hoifk An,-., s.sifii elattsr#
will capital, f«a «
‘ VVV'-r^vmrK# are to terr-v.’’«>.» al MorUnsvill*,
Vj., ur«l F: X0>t thtrw:*, Kv
A-!H>u« Ii;c !aivt> new baiidin ; .,'s IU prospect
Virginia: Kuptui cUmt-h a fliin iirliie, A!*.;
Fi-.siy:i-nanoimrcfi tflwk at Bfe*-* nock lb **i i. W.wwc N- v-.; Siit.v
mow luitei by V.v; $«M»OOrftl
$lii.l! 0 <) J*.,l at Harra-mbur*.
tararte ht Mor^u c.«-eb ■.«*«,
$7 flfiO Fw* *•«'«! *1
- :
-Tr-uliwmaiu (Olwl UHookt. 'ftfR- >
.Sew York Will be Great.
A Mx.sifiiit Horn Llauiv, V, I 81H*9
Tin : natu- New York' biii far tin oou
xotiiiatiou : ..... .. ........
of N«.w York and Brooklyn,
ims paetsed. the sonata jutt ■i'* it passed 'i9,
the nfiRi-i!il)'y by » vot 1 ’ of aye*
nays- 2 ,
.
NUMBER II
OUR LATEST DISPATCHES,
Be fflpjetijjsoUOa?CteBcleiii
Brief m CoaCrSe Paranais
And foiitaining the (Fist of the Sew*
From AH Parts of Hie World.
I' iro at Shreveport-, La.,which origt
nat* d from : an explosion in a time store
destroyed property to the value of
$125,(MX),
Tim Jackson Brewing Company at
Cincinnati has made an assignment to
John D. Bob<-. The assets are $400,
UtKI, while the liabilities are but. $150,
000 The assignment, it. is said, i*
only temporary.
Ihu city council os West Knoxville
has passed cm the Hurd and final rend¬
ing an ordinance udhomiug the sab
<’f ttuudh to the amount of §75,000 for
the purpose of building certain bridges
to connect, the „vity ‘with KnoxviiU
proper.
A Nashvilli; speeial says ; Governor
Timmy, who visited the. (Jockrill farm,
^announces that be will approve the
selection of the eummissioners. This
is a guarantee that the work on the
ntnv penitentiary will he begun at an
early dab .
n. «■**«*, .... «.*
jonrmd sine du The extra session
called by Governor Waite had contiu
ufed fifty-two days at an expense of
in« pet projects ^outgiving doing life anything many of to
or
aid the unemployed; Only a dozen
bills have been passed.
W,]ibnl U «'« »* <^on
pressman Wilson, who was on his way to
Guadalajara, Mexico, to the bedside of
his father 0,7attack who has been serimisiv fEr‘ Im! ill
with H typhedd
i r^eive<l a telegram informing him
!I his father'* ’ \ athiylitlv
h, »m
j | CT-ited States as muiu ss he m able to
[ Mand the. journey
In the special session 01 the Cuited
State- court at Chattanooga Judge
Key issued n decree for the shm* of the
Chattanooga Union railroad, « belt
line for freight j.urposes which eaeir
vh e that city, if its debts are not
paid in twenty day-, the property is to
be. advertised to be sold in stxG de vs.
The sale will be for cash, and the pro
vct-sls used to. pay its bonded indebted
ness,
A terrific explosion occurred in th<*
, , ,
ompanj, at (iisstown
‘ “j, C0 ' Ui was H(
f ‘l , T 1
n b ,,A '*. • Fortunatily. then was
| aud Mirronndiug . nctarcs wart ■»«
Ml *
■' ISashvilie . special . says; F,x-< »ovixn
or John B Buchanan lias tiled bis
answer to the bill tiled against him by
the state fox the recovery of certain
sums. The governor denies the chat
gen in toto. ’lie bill «sU judgement,
i b>r $xe5,O0O no felt and tor SRolM) com•
mi-ions and expenses paid Fortcrtield
and Wolf when the defendant was act
ing governor and could not be reached
)>v the chancery court.
A dispatch from Ml Pleasant Mich ,
says: Hherifl' Knuc has arrested eigh¬
teen promiiifuit citkef.m i*f Nf-f.tawa
township'on criminal warrants charg
ing them with the idtemptc.'. destruc¬
tion of the expensive. damteHslr across
the Gold Water river tn the Mount
Plcawnnt lumber Company, fot the
purpose'-of flooding logs. Over fifty
residents gathered Thursday with axe*,
dynamite, saws and picks and had
partially destroyed, the dam when the
sheriff with posse arrived ou the scene
in time to stop the destruction,
The Tallow Tree
Our foreign t'on-ol- *pMf u..|i • ni
ts - ml h-n. « u-.-u* id
accounts of Urn thing- dm! conn
under t-heir obscrvuiiou while in line
of duty. These 1 In m .irthde* um i • . valuable i- a
from many poin‘ - ■>» viy w. arc mn-cr
j in otic in each of our
pypUlutioib i b-,.., i <-<y M ,,..,„. M . <i,e documente
.
ill which th<*y appear, ticlng pubbcti- ‘
w ith other teiovf-rmmbd.
,- ' -• ;iri . Hgldorn 'consuli-cd.
'
l this . , WdA tnUUi . i. ,*..., I »'it I uitm-c nit I -
n *
ing and valuable to t-be sCH-ntiHt anu
2eii ,. ra 5 reader is overlooked-- Ft in;
OHS vegn nlion ‘*1 UlnwX *-y*ct .ally
the irc»<'. Thi* tro»• t.nt'
sttUillntrin schifera of thu.4K>teui«t. t)t«
root of which , . , prodll'-ts- , • . • *" -y 1 "
the HUJIOU'- ri< c paper .Hid fill- «:t*
T* > «-«.a Thu grc.o v bvrric.v arc
the m ooltec id TOiilinfiW “•'**) >ft
of tho
kIxu and color, lit preparing
\£%* , iu.. U . 1 m*ii»‘— -t 1 r, 1 are first.
j. p urJ ut flu tH*n mm-iHHirp pounded in -m ^ Hu?
f .,
, ,, ?
This pulp is then pbmed in a barn
Hoo seine and the mealy port ion*
st ., r ,. ara ra,'| froa; the hulU- the tallowy
having the oil expressed
from it in !:-T2<- primitive wooden.
the chaff IHH-C _
nrCSfiCS. while • T ’-•*
* | | nt0 tU el. The oil thu>
*****
i n g purposes, ete The wbolR tret
from roof to leaf * v surcuargvO with
ult.ifi.nol*. ■■ : „ ^ ^ w < , broken dnib'-
.. • •
librations *.1 ' TO- bm ..... , , e
kfiovm to evttdh PUT- oil for fia>> s.8
■
1 sts* wedding Vru« Spoiled . . if
o, #ht Kb* n vistly when
cm McA/hfin .fidled. f« show up
a 1H j marry Arih ,bi* *d*s tinugh *:
yfr. Jacobs had cooked fc»r Hm oeca*
>son eight itirkiy-. five h*<s f.mr
diuk-m fl-wd s»v, vuotuu of san-ii,
.
t rash,