Newspaper Page Text
miGmL
of
1,600 pounds of eoke,
and 140
» of coal tar. By destructive
16 m tiie coal tar pounds will yield 69.6
i of pitch, 17 of creo-
14 pounds of heavy oils, 9.5
, yellow, 6.8 pounds
4. 75 pounds of naph
'185 founds of solvent pounds naphtha, of
wuads of phenol, 1.2
a#, 0.77 of a pound of toludine,
: of a pound of anthracite and 0.9
pound of toluene. From the lat
is obtained the new substance
which is 580
times as sweet as the beet oane sugar,
toe part of it giving a very speet taste
to a thousand parts of water.
-
Arfarm Bag a H«»dred Armm,
■e Bit ■ a HMe .mess hM m many queer flier symptom*. end all
whatever these mar be. one
amendous nerve* soon acquire stead
_
M a»a relieved by It.
tongue is* menace to any d»oent
Or, UWAur-RooT owe*
■ and Bladder trouble*,
ad Consultation free. V.
f Binghamton. N,
Wmf- Japanese
ifBftkfitlPWi* is very rare among
4i iwnso.
-
■ Map pgj.a. Best ef All
Itie tora&se the system in n gentle and truly
beneficial manner, when the Springtime comes,
mm tone and perfect remedy, Syrup of Figs,
metis will answer for all the family and
only 80 cents, the large slss It Try It
is pleas ed. Manufactured by theCalifor
% Syrup Ca only.
■ins A w&bian‘slips 1s a gross Insult ln
-
«V Rales to Sastere Cities*
mjs, March 8, llto.-Beglnninx this
s Seaboard Air Line takes pleasure In
dag to their pvtrons throughput the
ily tite loweet rates ever offered to
T’TP I k*. (tallowing are rates to $*,80i princl- Pe
'• ...in, to Richmond,
w. ilaielphia, ,» . v-wnuth, |U.t0j New York,
T, P*»»*n*-r J. Amdcmom, Agent.
con tempi al'* this a trip North low
to<e of extreme tables,
informalioo. time
B. A. Nkvi.akd, Ge
Agt. P»»«- Dept.. Atlanta,
Is known to the
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Cnrief. Ot&rMwfU*, Mo**}.
' wbohesrmtdedtaOlerwioe,
Xrs.T.
Iowa, for the pa* twenty-two yeess, tells
Her narrative Is as
follows:
‘Tor tea years prior to ISM, I was a eon
sufferer from acute stomach tronWe. X
had all the manifold symptoms of acute dye
pspalo, aad at tteei other troubles were pres
eat la oosapHcitloa—I did not kaow what it
to sajoy a m eal No nmtter how oarefal
X might be as to the quality, quantity aad
my food, distress always fol¬
lowed eettag. X was dee p oade et aa* Mas.
Almost to the point et hmanhy at ttmss, aad
would have beea glad to die. Often aad
often 1 oonld not sleep. Sympathetic heart
trouble set la aad time pad again 1 was ob¬
liged to eaU a doctor la the Bight to relieve
sodden attacks of suffocation which would
oome oa without a moment’s sraraiag.
“By troubles iaereasedastim* wore on sad
I spent large sums ln doctor bills, belag oom
palled to have medical attendants almost con¬
stantly. During 1898 aad 1899, it was Im¬
possible for ms to retain food, aad water
brushes plagued me. X was reduced to a
skeleton. A consultation of physician* waa
unable to determine Jart what did ail me.
The doctor* gave us as their opinion teat the
probable trouble was ulceration of the ooats
of the stomach aad held out no hope of re*
eovesy. One doctor said, ‘All I can do to
relieve your suffering is friend by the of nse mine, of opium. Mrs. ’
“About this Smith, time of a GUddan, Iowa, told
Symantha about the of Mrs. Thurston, of Oxford mo
esse been
Xunotion, Iowa. the This lady said I had. she had She had
afflicted much same ns
consulted local physicians without relief, Giving and
had oil gone to Davenport for treatment
up ttsaTto hope of take recovery, faliteM’ snd was pink persuaded Pin*
by a Dr.
mw result was almost nuwtaoL from
“I before was lea to try mouths th«l I felt her . better experience, than
and for many I almost
I had a dosen years. am now
free from trouble, and If splendid through remedy some error sets
of diet I feel .badly, I this regained strength
ms right again. have my
and am cnee more ln my usual flesh. I sleep
well and sen eat without dlstrem. I hare no
doubt that I owe my reoovsry to Dr. Wli
Hams' Pink Pill*, i only wish that I had
beard oi then yean ago, thereby aad saving much
myaelf tm yean of suffering
“r^'^WUUam*’ Pink PiH* oonUin life end til riehneee the ele¬
ments neoestory Mood and to give new shattered
to the restore nerve*.
Company, lehenectadv, for $8.80. N. T., for 60c. per
box, or si x boxes
_
Loyal to HU State.
Kentuckians are always proud of
their state in whatever departin' ent of
human labor they may hold place . Not
long ago a widow went to see a marble
cutter to get a tombstone fot her late
husband. She selected a plain one in¬
from his stock and gave him an
scription to put on it.
“Can’t do that,” he said, politely,
when he had read it.
“Why not?" she caked in surprise.
*1’m paying for it.”
“Tea’m, bat I can’t put that on. I
stretch my conscience a good many
time* in what I put on a tombstone,
hut I ain’t going to tell a plain lie
when I know it.”
The widow was greatly shocked, and
insisted on bis explaining what he
meant
“Well, ma’am,” he said, “you’ve
got here, *Gkme to a better land,’ snd
that ain’t so, ma’am. There sin’t any
better land than Kentucky. ^ —Detroit
Free Free*.
The Qreatest fledical Discovery
of the Affl.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
la oi
CSSS feat
, Feb . 14,1896.
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dr. BROADUS DEAD.
THE GEE AT BAPTIST DIVINE
PASSES FROM BARTEL,
Famous the World Over as aa Orator
and Scholar.
Rev. John Albert Broadua, D. D.,
LL. D., president of the Southern
Baptist Theological Louisville, seminary, Ky., early died Sat¬ at
his home in
urday The morning. death of Dr. Broadua
removes
one of the most noted divines of his
day. He was well known both in this
country and Europe as a scholar nod
orator and has several time lectured
before Tale and Johns Hopkins uni¬
versities, and was considered one of
the beet Greek scholars in the world.
There is no man in the United States
whose death could have caused more
widespread Dr. sorrow. of Welsh
Broadua is ancestry,
and was born in Culpepper 1824. county, He
Virginia, January University 27, of Vir¬
graduated from the
ginia with honors. As a scholar,
thinker and author, he was known the
country over. His best known work
was “Preparation and Delivery of
Sermon*,” This work is used as a
text book in theologio&l seminaries of
all denominations in Europe and
America. In 1859, with the late Rev.
James H. Boyce, Dr. Broadua founded
the Baptist theological seminary at
Greenville, 8. C.J which, in 1871, waa of
removed to Louisville, the Baptists
that-oity having guaranteed $300,000
for that purpose. During the war,
Dr. Broadua was a missionary chap¬
lain ln Lee’s army.
HONORING CONFEDERATE DEAD
A Monument In Chicago to he Dedi¬
cated in May.
General J. 0. Underwood, ex-lien
ten&nt governor of Kentucky, and one
of the most prominent southern men,
is the author and executor of the
movement to build over the 6,000 dead
confederate soldiers who sleep in
Oakwood park, Chicago, a handsome
monument commemorating their brave
deeds and heroio fortitude.
He has succeeded in this magnifi¬
cent work, the monument has been
completed—the only confederate mon¬
ument north of the Mason and Dixon
tine—has been recognized by the
United States government and will be
nnvelled with imposing ceremonies on
May 80th. dedication of this monument,
, Tho will
the ceremonies attending whioh be
participated in by prominent generals
of both armies, will be a great event
in American history. It will make a
great step toward cementing the divi¬
sion between the sections and will an¬
nihilate mnoh of the bitterness that
remains. It will be an occasion that
will attraot the people all over the
country, and no one oan fail to appre¬
ciate its
The monument is a handsome affair.
The pedestal is of Georgia marble and
the statne. is of fine bronze. It is
forty feet high from the base to the
top of the statue. Surrounding the
monument will be four cannons, ap¬
propriated by the United States gov¬
ernment by special sot of congress,
approved Janaary 25, 1895. The bill
making this appropriation was pushed
through the senate by the efforts of
Senator John B. Gordon. The sena¬
tors reoognized his good purpose in
the matter and lent him their wilting
assistance. The bill passed the boose dis¬
during the last session without a
senting voioe. government oonsti
This act of the
tutes the first recognition ever shown
the confederacy by the government,
and for that reason is very significant.
Tbs' dedication speech will be made
by General Wade Hampton, The
southern generals who will be present
are: General Fitahugh Lee, General
John B. Gordon, General W. W. Ca¬
bell, Harry Hath, E. a Walthall, L.
L. Lomax, Marcus J. Wright, M. V.
Butler, Clement A. Evans, F. C. Arm¬
strong, Eppa Hun ton, William H.
Payne and others. Frau tits federal
aide are expected General Schofield,
General Flagler, General Lewis* aad
General Palmer. The Grand Army
and hundreds of confederates will be
present The Grand Army
said
tore.
a? zzxiz. '*’
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’ TOB DiaTMSAEf LAW VOID.
Judge Simonton Decides That the Act
Does Wot Always Hold.
. States
Judge Sim onto n, in the United
circa it court at Charleston, 8. O.,
Tuesday, rendered a decision in a ha¬
beas corpus ease, which was brought
to test the constitutionality of the die,
Lt
lina, bis son and a sailor were arrest
ed some time ago on the charge of vio
lating the dispensary law. Thisschoon
er in seized at the landing and her
cargo of whisky from Savannah was
seized and confiscated, and so was the
vessel. and
The defendant* gave bail, were
tsrjzr-EXsstzs: SonthCaroh
aet of the le^i«Ut«e of
ns, upon which this arrest was based,
in conflict with the constitution
laws of the United States? I
Incidentally, the court eaye that the |
dispensary law has become fixed in the
legislation of the state. It is for the
interest of all her citizens that it be
■ettled and the constitntionality of all
its parts be ascertained, and that
speedily. But the court finds this ar
rest in violation of the constitution
and the inter-state commerce act and
orders that the prisoners be discharged
from custody. The court says: "The
clanse of the dispensary act, so far as
it has been made to apply to these pe
titions, is absolutely void.” This de- j
cision will probbbly carry the dispen
sary law up to the United States su
preme court.
NOT EVEN ON OATH.
Prof. Smith Says He Would Not Be
llevo Secretary Morton’s Assistant.
It has jnst beoome known that the :
educational committee of the Tennes- ,
see legislature, in session at Chatta- 1
nooga, was treated to a tremendous
sensation during a star chamber sea
sion in which the state university at
Knoxville was under investigation.
The state superintendent of education,
Frank Smith, appeared befoie them
and declared that he wonld not believe
President Dabney, who of is agriculture, also assist
ant to the secretary
on oa *“* '
The professor testified , that local ,
trustees called a meeting of the board
without giving previou
trustees president at a J” leave ge > o a f n ^ abs e “ A p
dent Smith further charged that be
waa present at a later meeting of the
trustees with enough proxies to defeat
the board’s former action, but that
the right to vote these proxies was de
tiled him in conflict with the inetitu
tion’s rules 1
The committee will report favorably
ota the conduct of the state university,
especially on the recent introduction
of co-education. The fact that Pr^ei
dent Dabney once disapproved of
Smith’s appointment to a chair in the
•ohool gives his chargee a aelflsh col
oring. Nevertheless they have pro
duced a decided sensation. Superin
tended Smith insists that Dabney be
made to r< sign as president of the uni
versity.
TOM WATSON AGAIN.
The Populists of the 10th District
Name Hfm for Congress.
The populist convention for the
lentil district of Georgia met at Thom¬
son, Go., Saturday and was oalled to
order by James Barrett, of Richmond
county, who was made cha i rmen.
A committee consisting of G. H.
Ellington, of MoDnffle, O. E. Mc¬
Gregor, of Warren, W. E. Dees, of
Richmond, and Allen Edwards, color¬
ed, of Taliaferro, was appointed by
the chairman to draft resolutions ex¬
pressing the sentiment of the conven¬
tion.
The committee offered resolutions
indorsing the Omaha platform, de¬
clared for the feee coinage of silver
and opposition to national banks, and
called oa Governor Atkinson to im¬
mediately order an election. The res¬
olutions were adopted unanimously.
Mr. W. M. Haws, of Warren county,
then nominated Thomas E. Watson to
be the populist eandidate for oongress,
and Mr. Watson waa nominated with
out
ared before
the for an hour,
He called oa to give
him a fair showing and declared that,
if he did not have a majority of the
to
bj tuSm their at
of
teak oa tha
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3
WASHINGTON
ITEMS OF HEWS PICKED UP AT
THE NATIONAL CAPITAL.
gayfogg, an( i Doings of the Offlclal
.
-
The disappearance of eighteen sena- the
tots will make an entire change in
appearance on the senate floor when
body meets again. Instead of the
majority of the desks being on the
democratic side, they ‘ now appear on
the tepn blican aide.
c le v« * la L<ftfter h^enterS his office,
The ident spent P the morning re-
8 co ® res8 men ftnd other cal i erB .
The recent decision , . . of , the , assistant . , ,
attorney general for the postoffice de
partment to the effect that the so
called newspaper laws circulated by
publishers’collection agencies, were no
laws at all will have the effect of clos
ing the business of various newspaper
collection agencies throughout the
cauntry. The department will now
prohibit , their letters from going
through the mails to the newspapers
and to subscribers who have f|iled to
p»y. .
The statement is made upon good
authority that the decision of- the
United States supreme court on ihe
constitntionality of the income tax
will be rendered before Monday, April
15th. Treasury officials, charged with
collection of the tax have been very
anxious to obtain some informal as
snranee on this point, inasmuch as.the
extension of the period within which
returns must be made by taxpayers in
order escape the 50 per cent penal
^ imposed by law, expires on that
day>
A meeting of the press correspon
deQtfl at Washington has beed held at
wbioh the invitation 0 f the Cotton
8ute(J aDd international Exposition
Com pany of Atlanta, to visit the ex
pogition in eit ber May, Jnne or July,
v&g considered. Among the resolu
tions adopted P was one accepting the
invitation go cordia ] ly extended and
.^g that if it be agreeable to the
officers of the Cotton States and Inter
national Exposition company it wUl
^ mogt oonT enient to the correspon
j-oew* *«*•
1#st we * k ln Ma ^.
The Spanish minister at Washing
ton,«enor Muruaga, had received no
reply up to Thursday noon from the
captain general of Cuba regarding the
firing upon the American steamer Al
lianca by a Spanish gunboat on the 8th
instant. Senor Muruaga is satisfied
that the moment the captain of the
gunboat makes hie report to the cap
^n general it will be in turn for
worded to the minister. When this
report is received it will be at once
laid before Secretary Gresham in or
der that he may be made acquainted
with the Spanish side of the case,
whioh will then be carefully. investi
gated.
The postoffioe department bae in
strueted the postmaster at Mobile,
Ala., to make up and dispatch, on the
1st proximo, n»»ite addressed to Cen
tral American postoffioes of Belize,
Bluefields and Bocas del Toro, to be
dispatched by vesaele sailing from Mo
bile to the places named, and to oon
tain only articles addressed for deliv
ery at those plaoea The dispatches
from Mobile will be in addition to
those from New Orleans. La., for the
same places which will continue m at
present. The reason for adding Mo¬
bile is because most of the vessels now
use Mobile os a home port instead of
New Orleans.
Costs Too Mnoh.
After many years of dissatisfsotion
over the prices for coal exacted by
the Panama Railroad company from
the United States - war vessels, the
artment has declined to have
eatings with that concern,
and will secure ooal supplies naval from an¬
other source. Heretofore ves¬
sels st Colon were obliged to get their
ooal from the railroad company at $11
per tan. The navy department pro¬
tested that this rate was exorbitant,
and oontandad that the feet that the
United States government kept vessels
at Colon to protect the company’s
the" price should be redueed. The
company refused to lower the rate and
S e creta ry Herbert has directed tint
hereafter United States naval vessels
coal at Colon
shall goto Cartagena tor the purpose,
is only * day’s run
Colon, and the departmen
$5.50 ton.
Other «
to one. A hi
m 7 to
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foreign complications the oonditi on of
the treasury has been overlooked and
the aspect Is serious.
It is not believed that in case of
diminution of the gold reserve f l01n
any cause the administration would
dare provoke the wrath oi the kax^i
can people farther by an issuance 0 f
bonds in any way similar to the W
one.
The atmosphere ***»***»«. j
around Washington
has been filled with all sorts of rumors
of foreign complications Secretary
Gresham has oh his war .paint. He i$
indignant with Baron Fava, Italj’g
representative, for the latter’s unpr©.
cedentcd letter to the governor of Col- 1
orado instead of treating with him
cnilciee the admimetration of foreign
on aff “” the merchant mtb . *^>° liner k Alhanca. ^.. the fir l?g Hi*
chief annoyance, however, comes from I
p' aTa > B undiplomatic performance and
Spanish Great minister’s interest impertinent
criticisms. is man
if eB tcd in the matter in official cir
and the war fever inspired by
Gresham’s peremptory demand up
on 8pftin for . an apology ap
pearB jo be spreading. There is an
impression in some circles that the
Spanish government will make its re
ply by merely handing Minister Tay
i or big passport aid fevering all dip¬
lomatio relations with the United
States. This would place the ooun
tries in the position now assumed by
Venezuela toward Great Britain,
France and Denmark. There is a feel
ing here that Gresham will carry war
into the enemy’s camp and hand the
Spanish minister his passports, and
may also insist upon the recall of
Baron Fava by Italy.
portunity The preskLent^in to popularize looking this for adminis- an op
tration, may seize tfie opportunity to
wage an aggressive foreign policy. He
will secretary be ur^ed of to state. do so In anyhow the possible by the
event of its becoming necessary the
United States government is better
’prepared at the present time than ever
before to enforce compliance of its
ultimatum to the Spanish government
» result of the Allianca incident.
THE CUBAN ,MtTDDLE.
The Insurgents Government Claim a Victory Over
Troops,
rSr The steamship Olivette arrived at
and brought newe of a battle between
the insurgents and the government
troops in whioh the latter were com
palled The to leading retreat, spirit the movement
m
residing in Havana received a letter
Orom General Maso, in which letter he
stated that he, with 2,000 troops had
attacked a Spanish regiment, of 1,500
men,, under command of Colonel Santo
Sildes, who were on the way to Man
saniHa to Bayamo. The engagement
lasted two hours, and the government
troops were compelled to retreat into
the townof Bayamo, with a loss of 300
men, killed and wonnded. The in¬
sorgent lose is reported to have been
leesthan 1 seventy killed and wounded,
The troops, said General M»ao in
his letter, will not follow up their ad
vantage, prefering to remain quietly
under arms until after the orops are
harvested in June, when a more gen
eral nprieing is anticipated,
A semi-official report ourrent in Ha¬
vans regarding the firing on the Alli
anca by a Spanish war vessel w to the
effect that a steam launch was seen to
leave the Allianoa’s side before the
warship signaled her to heave to. Ha
vans paper# are silent upon the sub-
THE STRIKERS CONFIDENT.
They Consider Their Fight for Union
Mates Practically Won.
The strike of the miners of the Pitts¬
burg, Pa., district is but one week old
and there are nearly two-thirds of the
miners of the district at work at onion
rates—69 cents per ton. The strikers
consider the fight practically won, tat
they may yet tamp np against personal soaa
adverse circumstances in the
obstinate railroad operators.
The river operators have
the demands of the miners
hM beezka general resumption of work
stall the river mines. All the river
crafts are b e in g loaded, and as long ee
this rush continues there will be work
not only for the mil number of river
miners, tat also for s large number of
extra men from the railroad mines.
On the other hand, the rsflroud op¬
erators refuse to pay more than 55
ton, and the majority of
idle. They claim that
compelled , refuse orders
they are fill to them prices
because they cannot at
quoted by competitor*.
In the rivil district
■Bear?
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M-iithi-M
t-efc