The Weekly banner-watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1886-1889, January 01, 1889, Image 1

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ONE PRICE SHUtibiunr. EVERY pur gujbjnteeq Cor Clayton St. & College, Arc ATHENS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY. JANUARY 1, 1889. NEW YOKE EVENTS. !4itors Howling Against an Unjust State Law. running for wo GRADYS THE SENATORSHIP. rave Charge Ag*«t Dirk Man.Ueld-Tb. K«w Drop-n.N««*el-ln-the-Slot OP- era Class—Col. Ecrenlou* Fool Shepard's Br«»k <ew Yokk, Dec.—[SpeciaL]—I see _t most of ti e editors in the state are ttii g their affairs into shape to that if j giiouid be suddenly called onto goto they would be ready to comply with (He order. This is because the new law providing for the execution of murderers by, electricity, which go.* inio effect ►Jnhuary 1st, prohibits the publication of any detailed account of tho carrying out of the death jAsnaity. A large majority of the editors in the state cheerfully an nounce that they will take special pains to violate the law as often as criminals are(oecutod. The <onxtitutions delara- tion iLat no law shall restrain or abridge the liberty of speech or of the press, they tay, is in direct opposition to this effort to'muMUe th -m. Believing that the law is unconstitutional ihey will treat it with ci ntempt. But in ease the courts shall deci le that it is valid. ..ails and jou.naliam may be- oruo closely associ ated in tty* empire state. Still the edit- o s ar-' right and the law is wrong. If it be muds a misdemeanor to give the news, th n is the freedom oi die press tuk< n away by violence. Next will come the raspottsm of Russia. * The other evening f went into an up town restaurant lorBslinner and found r.:y friend, Gen. Geo|te Sheridan, who invited me to su.ro his tatiie. tasked him. in the Ooun-e of conversation, why liis daughter \wa» coming bock to Amer ha. "Because she could not stand Mr. Mansfield's br^telilies,” replied the gen eral. "In speaking of and to her, Mans- field used tho vilest language. She wrote to me to know what she ought to do.and 1 tol l her to come home. I'm too old a man to chastise Mr. Mansfield os he de serves, but I don't think his treatment o: my daughter will be forgotten soon by either her friends or mine.” Mr. Sheriff .n instances some of the language ut-el by Mr. MansSeld in sp ak- ing to his dau/jhter. and if lialt of wbat ho says <» tr c. Mansfield out to bo taken put to the intersection of two stroets and ifiro li-ff until he coulffu t stand up—or tit <iju n either. *% Soar that the ‘-opera glass for a quar ter" iuw hnd several nights' trial at the Casino, tlie management believes that thepiao will endear the house to the public. .Sir. Aian/ou said last nig lit: ••it kioks to ice as if ifc'wiU’prove a great thing. I feel sure that the new chairs nnd the ojier.i glasses will be something that everyoody will try bffore the season ends. Mr. B irtotr has kept an account of the tir.t night's work,” Mr. Barton explained: “You want to understand that ive have put in so far oulv l(*i gbisses. When the plan is com. pi t«d there will be tf30 glasses for the use of the nations. These will be no rheap ones litlier, but ones that can bo lined for the house. On the iirst night 72 glasses were u;e>l and not a single pair stolon. We did find in some of tho Loves ten and five cent pieces, but we also found a quarter in each of these. If there is any mistake of this kind made, the person xnak.ng it can have tlie money refunded by presenting the seat coupon.'’ Mr- Par-ton also added that no funny b isino is could be worked in the Casino machines, as tlier will refuse all base coin ami chop ail coins that do not fit the slot. • • * The recent death of Oliver Ditson, the veteran music publisher, recalls an amusing story that used to be told of him. On one occasion he was asked to say gi&ea at iho taMe of a friend. He struggled through the body of the sup plied! ion very credi ably, out could not, tor tbs life of him, remember how to close it. Finally, is desperation, he con cluded with: "Reipecifully yours, O. Ditson." Another version'has it that the pi nt * used was, "Yours truly, ' Oliver uitson:” but a gentlenan that was there declares that It is a specimen of inaccu racy of second-hand tVlattem. f # A tall, handsomely made gentle man, dark brown moustat he and a fundi v face, who is sopping at the Hoff man house, is Van W Polk, n grand- eon of thtla-s J*.rddmt Polk. He is a resident 4f hashvili^but spends most of bis time in traveling «j ain on my way homo from Europe,' h» said. "Some . Ha’ied a . _ Indian 1 uotrte. But that did cleverest of Remington's pictures wa published Inst fall, and represented the Yale football team on the field. Rem ington used to be a member of the team when lie waa a student in the Yale art school, and tha drawing ia wonderfully true to life. A recent picture of his rep resented a peccary hunt in northern Mexico, and Remington lutnself is in the foreground, but no one would recognize him in frontier clothes and with a wide sombrero on his head. • a * . . Thfcato't polite Chinaman in the city is said to be Mr. Charles. He was a tea merchant in .the west, then associate ed itor of the now defunct Chinese-Ameri can. When the -Pearl of Pekin” was put on at tho Bijou he was employed to select accessories and give advice about making the play suii cnntly Chinese. Mr. CharLs is thoroughly Americanized, is a pleasant and interesting talker and says that, the dream of his life is to go bock to the flowery kingdom to visit hi* parents and live a life of ease on the huml le but sufficient fortune he h&s ac quired here. A society octrees would spend in a month what would be a com petence for a lifetime in China. * • • Russell Harrison, son of the president elect, is no stranger to this town. He ia an influential owner in a « e.v.ern silver mine, and is particularly well known at the assay office in Wall street. Now that his father is to have the eyes of the upon him for four years, Midas young Ilnrri-on has been the envoy extr.lordi- na y to big political lights in Ne v York, it is pc-rha; s well to say that when you meet a young n an wi:h cherubic propor- tion-:. with dark hair an 1 eyes, :.nd an esc edingly fair lace, and a moustache that most girls adore, imagine that is young Harrison. If he iai e< his liat and show?, a particularly laid head, and he is not much over 80, bet on it. WANTED $100,000,000. The Sum Required to Complete the Panama Canal Scheme. EITHER What Col. Itlves Says—Tte French Popu lace Would be So Indignant if the Work Wan Thrown Up— The PubUe Tamper. Richmond, Ya., Dec. 29.—CoL A. L. Rives, general manager of the Panama railway, who is spending a short vaca tion with his family, including Mrs. Amelia Rives Chandler, was interviewed yesterday as to why it was he did not soil last Saturday for Paris, as he had intended. He said he had received a cablegram directing him not to come. “Co you, as an engineer, think the canal scheme a failure V” “I feel confident that the canal will Le completed and opened as early as 3^82. I have heard to-day that the canal shares have advanced twelve points in Paris, and I have also received an order to provide additional rolling stock for raiiroad. The Panama rai Iroad is ow ned by the canal company, though it lias an American directory and aa American management, aui« is operated by Ameri cans. in- reuse in tolling stock is an evi dence ti nt the wor.c on the eanil is to be vigorously pnaheJ, and I feel it will bo completed by French energy and French funds.” •‘What is the condition of the work at present "As to the work, I consider ihal near- , . . ... ly two thirds of it is done—in fact in dy, envelope cutter, to run against the j JRrd3 about <me -h»lf of it and Republicans of the sixth senatorial dis- tr'e. have selected Thomas Francis Gra- I £XHAT NEW ENGLAND SLAVER. He Telle Why .He chahed Up One of the Human Chattels In Whom He Deals. Springfield, Maas., Dec. 29.—Charles T. Parson, the notorious emigrant labor contractor, of Northampton, was before the superior oourt yesterday, charged with cruelly treating Vincent Zabrienoj- tis, whom he bad brought from New York to hire out os a farm laborer, be ing Parson’s chief business to supply this kind of help. Parsons's victim was the first witness and talked through an in terpreter. He told of his drive with Parsons from Northampton to Holyoke on a cold winter's day, stockingless and thinly clad, with a heavy ox chain pad locked twice around liis bare ankle by Parsons, and fastened to the wagon seat that Tie might not escape. Holyoke city officials testified to finding the boy half frozen and crying in Parsons's wagon, with the thermometer 14 degrees below freezing point. Parsons was forced to unchain his victim, and the boy was cared for by the police. Indigant citi zens threatened to lynch Parsons, and it was feared the attempt would be made. Parsons testified that lie caused the boy to come from Castle Garden and hired him out. This was on November 4th, and ten days later the boy reappear ed at Northampton and was turned over to Parsons, who claimed he was about sending the boy to New Y’ork w hen ar rested at Holyoke. He chained him : o he would not escape. His admitted (hat rhe boy was thinly clad, but said he had given him a horse blanket in which to keep warm. Tho case had excited great interest all over Western Massachusetts and will be given to the jury to-morrow. A PLOT TO BLOW CP. CONFLICTING NEWS. Steamer Finally Arrives Port an Prince. time ago the nawampers publish paragraph that 1 kadroirri an Uu lady, which was uatrte. But that not prevont my friendi from poking fun 2tor e jtm." ent * to toSC *o!L mi v?, ht G® interesting to hfiriTauudlfl W 10 WO* the w&en^ntiiki1 certain school, pictures which 2*“® SS^“&.2l\£2sv *»»»“ spiritual works of \ WbUls. We Jj® °«»?ion up in tl* fiwAjAajminde tS*J? 0 * 1 * boaud tor toother. H. ntral. He dhctSLT^ 0 ^ H* raUonmfa>»* and , Wlthgrcat eUb * ute lines that wife 1 ® min- aeoplc scrutiny. Bat h? d eveo micrt ^ Taminanv Hall candidate, Thomas Fran, is Grady, ex-senaior.to fill the va- caiu caused l>y J'divai'd F. Reilly's elec tion a i county clerk. As vnler tho law, ballots may not contain aught su\e the name o" tiio , Candi da 4 * and the office, voters and polit ciaui, are in a quandarv to know how on earth aaij body is to tell which of the T homas Frauds Graiivs is eieoioJ. In the event of a controversy, the legislature would have to decide. Thomas Francis Grady, «-n. el >pe*cutter, is not quite sure that h s f.itn is ore not joking with him. Tamil anyites think there is more trick lima jo.o. • • • Col. Fll-ott F. She; ard. the editor of the Mail and Express, has at last appar ently succeeded in his early and often- expressed design to put au end to the running of ibe Fifth avenue stages on Sunday. At a mieting of tho directors of the stage company held on Saturday he managed to get J. H. Watson, ox- pn-siden of his bank, and H. C. Alex- suder, his private secretary, elected di rectors in place of Frederic* Baker and CharlesO. l*«>n>ontco. vdi-i. liplving b; come disgruntled, had resigned. Till- gives him control of the board. He al-. ready had four thick-and-thm supporters' among the thirteen directors, and it is understood that Eugene M. Earle, who holds the casting vote, will support Col. Bhor-hard's Sabbatarian schemes in con sideration of the colonel’s promite to buy mare stages ard more hor.es and build a s • able to keep them in. It is also under stood that E. I iy GoUdard, tire preside!’ of the comp my. will be neutral in to ing contest, so Co!. She;ard may i a.- a majority even without Mr.' i axle's vote. That Col. Shepard already rules the roost is s’ onn by his getting his pri vate secre ary appointed treasurer at Saturday's ineetirg. • • * One of vour contemporaries comically rele stoihe marriage in Georgia of a Mr. Ryun and Miss Rock—the marriage noth e of the pair having been printed as Ryan-bock. 'This is fa-.rlv matched by a wedding the other day in New York citv, where Mr. Wood espoused a Miss Pyle of Brooklyn. The advertisement: ead : ••Wood-Pyle.” Care-Gall. DIAS DEBAR’S FUTURE. Lather Marsh Will Lecture White Prince** Ann O’Della Acts as Demoastrntor. New York, Dec. 29.—Ann O’Delia Dis3 Debar looked a veritable princess last night when a reporter called on her. She said she was stopping' for a time at a hotel not far from St. Patrick's cathe- dral- She has selected a fiat, she says, which she wiil occupy f«s soon as it is fit ted up. Gene is not to live with her,'die declared emphatically, although he may join her on her lecturing tour. She says that she is a Catholic. ••I was bora a Catholic, and I* will live and die one. I submit myself entirely to the church, and if Archbishop Corri gan, who is mv sponsor, wished it, I would never hold another seance. It is under the auspices and authority of toe church, though, that I shall lecture. The archbishop and I hpve liad considerable conespondence, and it was at his order that I called upon him when I left my Castle Blackwell and obtained ab$oli tion. Yes,” the wied, “these l^turtoon spiritualism will begin soon. Mr. Marsh will be the leoturer and I the depaonstra tor. Wo are still in perfect accord. Our relation of medium aud been broken, and we will still be in ~ar- ^ Lawyer Marsh is now at Newport she aavs. and Gen. Dim Debar is out inbt. Louis looking after his landed intei ests. A Sorry Tragedian- Baltimore, Md., Dec. 29. The treat ment of James Owen O'Connor atKer- turn's; in this city is, by the tragedian s fay down on the c0 «fession, the most truculent and brutal he has ever met with- Last night V7h«?kinht before he had ^po.ed Mrdlv dime lines in Richard UL, when SSKggSsrtfEiss SfmYlom -h. filerS ^ ence roared him into silence. « ere i-e another Forrest, he had no chance heard. W^etchwon I+n a fit ave no- I h l^'°Th..7S to the v - ith hrfM Haskell** Toagh K«pfirlg»cfi. Conn., Dec. 29,-George Has- JKS5& cartridge expJode-in liis nocket while going to the Lantern ! h L““k,iE Nluaieeu Burnosl an tl«a Kata Adams. * Memphis, Dec. 29.—[SpeciaL]—Cap tains Darragh and Huls, U. S. inspec tors of steam vessels, report that there a bm , H Q , . i j„„. n f, mil ju . were on board the steamer Kate Adams, tile i. ' * - , J^ about foui teen miles of canal are already conip-eced, with a oepth of twenty-eight and a half or twenty-nine feet, large enough to run ihe CJmbria or Etruria through. The entire lrngtliof the c.inal is forty-five miles. Work at tho great cut at the summit it going forward with tha utmost prouipitude. lhj canal lias now cost the F rench people almost $800,- OoO.OOO. Au addition of $100,000,000 will finish the work. I have every reason to believe tho money will be forthcoming.’' It is said that unless tome scheme is adopted to partially recou-j the share holders, there will be such a revolution as France has not seen for a century, and it is difficult to see how such a meas ure can be passed and existing laws nul lified in tho face of the determined oppo sition which will be evoked by the mere suggestion. There have olwa.-.s le n many avowed enemies to the canal in Franco, ami >o far as they dared to do so, the/ have exulted in its downfall. The money so literally thrown away came, of course, largely from the savings of the peasantry, who have be.^un, in no measured t-.rms to demand vengeance upon the robbers. One political. Jesuit will te the prubaule weakening of tlie attachment of the inhabitants of Alsace- Lorraine to France, when they thor oughly comprehend that their money has been absorbed without there being a prospect of any return. A large propor- ' >n of them poured their savings intc o big ditch, incited thereto by a feel ing that they were doing a fine and pa triotic thing in supporting a French -pro ect. The Germans will doubtless he .-lireveil enough to impress upon the minds of their new subjects that such a g gair.ic swindle could never haye currcd under their rule, and it is even suggested that their claims to some re muneration by the French government wdl be added to Germany's list of griev ances against the republic. THAT FAMOUS LUMPKIN BELL. A Chicago Dime Museum Manager After It—Its History. Chicago. Dec. 29.—[SpeciaL]—A man ager of a dime museum in this city has made a liberal offer for the purchase ot lease of an old and unused bell at Lump kin, Ga. If his proposition is accepted he will bring it here immediately and exhibit it; but should the owners of the bell refuse to part with it he has enter prise enough to palm off on his patrons a substitute for it as genuine. The Geor gia bell has an interesting history. It has engraved upon it the year 1600—the year it was cast. For a number of years it tolled the hour for congregations in a convent in the Netherlands. It was af terward carried to Lisbon, and from there ;o Madrid, and was in the tower of a monastery in that city when Napo leon invaded the territory, taking every thing as h i pushed his forcesover plains and ud mountain rides, an l all bells were being taken and recast into cannon. The owners of this bell took it .down from its tower and shipped it to New Yoik, where it remained for many years, until purchased by a Lumpkin man for his church. It has been used so many years that it has lost its tone, GLADSTONE'S BIRTHDAY. Congratulations from Various Porto of Eng land—TLe Irish Hembera. London, Dec. 29. -—[SpeciaL}— Mr. Gladsone is seventy-li ne years old to day, having been born at Liverpool De cember 20, 1009. In various parts of the country demonstrations were held in Jionor of the birthday of the “Grand Old Man.” . The Irish members of parliament telegraphed their congratulations to Gladstone, who is at present traveling on the continent. Ghastly Attempt to KU1 a Man by His Counterfeiting Confederates. Middletown, N. Y., Dec. 28.—Early Sunday morning aloud explosion awoke the inhabitants of Roscoe hamlet, in Sul livan county. Mrs. Mary J. Ileineman. wife of Frank Heineman, rushed into the street in her night gown and said the explosion occurred in her house. Her face was burned and blackened by powder. An investigation showed that a can of powder had exploded in the sit ting room, adjoining tho sleeping apart ment, blowing out the windows, wreck ing toe furniture, and loosening the par titions. The can contained twenty-five pounds, and was placed in the house with the evident intention of destroying the inmates. I^uis S. Schuster lived with the Heinemans, Mrs. Heineman be ing his adopted daughter. Twenty-five vears ago Schuster w as convicted of pass ing counterfeit money, and was sentenc ed to seven years’ imprisonment. When he had served five years he was pardon ed by President Grant and returned home. It is thought vhat he was hired not to divulge the names of hia confed erates. and that they now hope to get rid of him lest ho tell the secret. Neither Schuster nor Heineman was injured. A Ciu-d Flaying Y. M. C. A. Boston, Dec. 29.—The Charlestown Young Men’s Christian Association has been on its last legs for some time, and last night a meeting was held to decide its fate. There was a good deal of plain talk, and finally an Episcopal clergyman proposed introducing card playing as an attraction. This suggestion was emphat ically squelched. Then a Baptist minis ter asserted that the only way to keep the association alive was to drop the evangelical test, which is applied to all candidates for admission, and accept as members any young men of good and regnlarstanding in the community. This raided a howl from the strictly orthodox members present, and it was as.-erted that the Christian associations all over the country would boycott tnis branch if any such comb'mtion was formed. It was finally voted to stick to the evangel ical doctrine at any cost, and if need be die with colors living. CAPTAIN SIBBERLEE SAYS WAS QUIET. A Passenger, However, Tells a Much D:.» furent Tale—Bloodiilicd and Inerad- larism Rampant—Rioting at DiC'ereut Points. New York, Dc-c. 29.—[Special.]—The steamer Prinz Mauritz arrived from Port-au-Prince ^o-day, bringing the first mail for several weeks. Chief Officer Sibberlee said: “Every thing was quiet in Port-au-Prince while we were there. The people seem to be satisfied with tho election of Legitime as president of the republic. When we entered Port-au-Prince, we saw the Hay- tien Republic covered with American flags. A iiumbir of men from the United States w; r ship Galena were on board. On the da/ we left, ihe 22d, President Legitime was gi .en a reception on board the Galena. Mr. Sibberlee said lie learn ed there was no bi mbardmtnt of Cape Hayiien. hut ail northern points were blockaded.” The s.ory told by Comte Delta H. Ze- r.tguinal and other passengers i n the Prin ! llnnrito represents tho present sit uation in 1-iayti in an entirely dtoereut light. While th- steamer was at Jacmel constant rioting was in progress, no bus iness was transacted and disorder and lawlessness reigned supreme. On De- cemaer 2tnh, the day of sailing, two bands, composed of adherents of the op posing leaders, Legitime and Hyppolyte, met in the street, and firing at once began and was warmly kept up. The men were uniformed, but with no recognized leaders. A frame home was set on fire, and the flames spread unchecked throughout the town. The fire was still in progress when the steam er sailed, and the destiuction of the town was imminent. At Port-au.-P.ince, where the s‘- next touched, the situation was mot as bad. Toe mob was supreme : d no authority recognized, all business . at a stand-still. EXCLUSIVE CUEEDUOOB. A Roqaert to tho Spirit*. Boston. Dec. 29. —Gen. Butler is coun sel for Edward Sumner, of New York, and others, who »re trying to break the will of their maiden aunt, Sally, who was a near relative of the late Chaylos Saved HI* Jailer’* Life. New Brunswick, N. J., Dec. 29.— Gustav Vasko, the convicted murderer awaiting sentence in New Brunswick jail, saved the life of Jailor Gulick. A prisoner named Daniel McCaffrey,’who had been incarcerated for disorderly'con duct, became refractory, and when or dered to his cell by the jailer, he seized a stone cuspadore and hurled it at the head of the former. Vasko, who had been accorded the liberty of the corridor, seeing the jailer’s peril, interposed his body, receiving toe heavy missile in the face. Vgsko's nose was broken, and he fell stunned to toe floor. In the mean tone the jailer’s attendants oame to his rescue and McCaffrey was locked in his cell. Vasko’s injuries were immediately- attended to. He was badly scarred. The heroic behavior of the convicted murderer, who has been expecting a sen tence of twenty years, will, it is thought^ mitigate his sentence. He Eloped With hu Wif*. Chambersburo, Pa., Dec. 26.—Dr. William A. Hanimil, of Martinsburg, W, Va., and" Lillian Benton Hammil, of Hagerstown, Md., arrived here on the late train last night, having eloped from Hagerstown. They were formerly man and wife, but divorced in June, 1887. The lady and her child have been living , in Hagerstown with relatives, but last pight the doctor stole them away. The ' clerk of the court was out of town, hut the deputy clerk was aroused from his bed, a license procured, and the couple were married in the hotel parlors at 1:80 o'clock this morning. The lady has rich and influential relatives in Hagerstown, who pursued the eloping couple here this morning, but found it was too late. The doctor claims that their divorce after their first marriage was brought about by relatives who caused trouble between them. A Blue* Bear Ran the Town. Pittsburg, Pa., Deo. 29.—Sergt. W. F, McCurry, of the sixth ward station, was » l f f r to e “ omriiuausm. informed that two Italians and a bear Gen. Butler stated that toe clnuad In t|i*j __ SSZSi— ttlA sifttof. Tlia saw- will providing for vhe interest of Spirit ualism was not in accordance with En glish law. - ~ were blockading the sffeet The geant found the oear dancing a fantastic step and toe two Italians screaming and carrying on in high glee, both consid erably under the influence of liquor, a hard fight the Italians were >d to the station and lodged in a The bear followed the sergeant to station, but objected to being locked up. Tho brute roamed about the office, cracked a pane of glass and pulled the Civilian Riflemen InCignant Over tha At tempt ot the National Guard to Freeze ’Em Out. New York, Dec. 29.—[Special.]—Civil ian rifkmen in this city and in Brooklyn are greatly excited over an attempt which they have discovered on the part of the National Guard to freeze them out at Creedmoor, and to turn over the range made famous by civilian matches to the National Guard as its exclusive property. Creedmoor, which was established in 1813, was acquired by money which the -state furnished An appropriation of $25,000 was .recured from the legislature by the National Rifle association. u]>on conditions which prevented it from dis posing of tho property without the state's con rent, and re juued it to keep the range open for tiie use of the National Guard. The association at iirst made a great finr.nckil success. The Irish match of 1874. the line centennial matches anil the two later ones, brought it fame and ior.uuc. All the above matches were won by Americans, who still hold the inrernii- tionai troph '-. But for the la t six or eight years no civilian matches hare 1 een shot, and as a le-i.U tne a-speia ions treasury has be come depleted. The National Guard has iisud Creedmoor for prac.ice more and more every year, and has come to look upon it almost as Naaional Guard prop erty. Many Guar Ism tin are members of the Ride 'association, and by re a-on of the difficulty of securing civilian eti- tecto's of the association that governing board lias g adualiy pas ed over into the hands of the military men. No.v, out of aLout a dozen numbers of the board, only two. sirictly speaking, are civilians. The boa. d of directors has aln .o t abso lute c- ncrol of toe association's interest-.- About tire only check that can be put upon them lies in the function Of tin association to elect them. Toe present board are Almost unanim ously in favor of the scheme of-the Na tional Guardsmen. A bill to give the National Guard ab olutc control of the proport'' wiil be introduced in the next leguiat ire, and the general opinion ia that it will pass. ANOTHER BLOODY UURDFJB. ' A Cuban Detective Goes Alter a Pi^r of Rascal* and is Murdered by Them. Havana, Dec. 28.—The Machine broth ers, who, while under sentence of death for kidnapping, made their.escape from the Castillo del Principe Fort ft month ago, have just murdered the detective who was after them. Fr&ucisCo Fajardo, an old convict, was employed by the government and furnished with a mili tary pass to discover the whereabouts of the Machine brothers, and, with the aid of troops, to take them dead or alive. Fajardo set out Thursday night to go to Muanajay, a small town near Havank, he being informed that his men could he found there. On the road that leads to Caimaite he was met by tho Maehuiee, accompanied by several other ufimpKa, who stopped him and inquired his namA Drawing their revolvers, tnoy opoped fire on Fajardo, who drove hu horse at full speed into a meadow, where He dis mounted. ran into a bam and hid in a barrel. There he was foqnd by the ban dits, who cut him to pieces, hi* body presenting twenty-six cuts indicted witn the terrible machete. There was also a pistol shoe in the right thin pie. The bandits took from 1 he r victim the com mission h..* had from tli * government. A special from Sagua la Grande an nounces the murder of a roldfer anil sergeant of the civil guard by tho ban dit.i near Jicotea. A telegram has js st beep received from Batabano gi, ing particulars of the murder of Seui>r Carlo Sanchez Gonzales, an old resident of tha town.. Ha was ar bitrarily arrested aud then shot id cold blood by a sergeant of the civil guard. MR. EDISON’S LATEST. Whereby Electricity I* to Be Produced Directly from Coat Akron, O., Deo. 20.—Thomas A, Edi son, the great electrician, spent Christ mas with his father-in-law, Lewis Miller of this city. In an interview he said he was now working on an invention whereby electricity would be produced direct from coaL dispensing entirely with the boilers, engines, dynamos, etc., now re mired. Besides, ho said, he wotda ise nearly tho entire heat- uidts of toe •oal instead of only about 5 pe'r cent., as Is done by the present system of burning; Poor Hdlicaa Girl—Lucky Chinaman. New Haven, Deo. 29.—Wah Wgock Lee, clerk in a Chinese tea store in this city, at noon yesterday received a hand some Christmas present in Hartford in the shape of a handsome American bride, Miss Ida I. Spalding, who has been teaching in one of the Hartford public schools for some time past. The knot was tied at the. parsonage of tfie Rev. A. S. Kavanagh,pastor of the South Park Methodist Episcopal church, in the presence of the bride's aunt and uncle. The happy pair will reside in this oftv. Wah was formerly a laundrymah in Hartford,, and been mo acquainted with Miss Spalding while she was a teacher in the Sunday-school of the South Park church, he being one of her scholars. Miss Spalding came from Maine four years ago. Lee is 27 years old and his bride is a few years his junior. A Suburb of London Shocked by a Disciple of “Jaek, the Ripper.” London, Deo. 29.—[Special.]—Another bloody murder has occurred, this tone at a suburb near Bradford. A boy named John Gill is the victim. His heart was tom out and lay on the ground near his body, and his legs and arms had been hewn off roughly, and afterward tied to his body. Two Stab wound h were found in the chest. A milkman has been arrested on suspicion, as the boy sometimes accompanied him. on his rounds, and the milkman was the first to recognize the boy’s body. ~ Gov. Hill’s Inaugural Parade. Albany, Dec. 29.—Gen. Parker, who {s in charge of the arrangements for the parade on the occasion of the governor's inauguration next Tuesday, rays that the affair will be one of the the most iml posing of the kind witnessed since thd war. Not only will the local members oi the National Guard and the Grand Army of the Republic take part, but a number of such organizations from other parti 1 of the state have expressed a desire to bn represented. Gen. Parker says that all who desire to participate will be given? places in the line, but he asks that he bo immediately notified. The exercises wiH be strictly non-partisan. January.. Hay Corn. tort - ' International Socialist Chicago, Dec. 29.—All the socialistic* - organizations of this city have decided- to send delegations to the international- labor congress which has been sum-! moned by the Social Federation to mee'.j in Paris next spring. The Reds of Pan i! have charge of the affair, and it is sa' lj that the government is already conside: ing the desirability of interdicting tho] gathering. So far, the socialists of-Ita. . — telephone apparatus down. The Italians England, Belgium, Denmark and Switz- -> JUS> finally induced the bear to enter their erland have indicated their intention o.j January 8.?ru I ■ cell, and the trio were locked up. being repre- ented. ' Aa * w >in in 12 AS THE WORLD WAGS. Unvarnished Tale* Compiled front tha His tory of n Rasy Day. Two young women by the name of Smith were drowned at Hillsville, Fa., whi.e crossing the rivt-r in a skiff. A woman named Stevens was found dead in her room at Saugerties, N. Y., due to exposure and starvation. Two Hungarians at Nantico, Pa., who have been i.l over a week, have been discovered to be ill with the smallpox. Frank Green, a <1* sperado, accused of four murders, was found drowned in tho Kentucky river, near Brooklyn. In a drunken row Will Rankin crushed Frank Bo\ d s skull, at Rook ford, Tenn., so badly that toe latter will die. At Alma. Ark., Geo. Keys, while care lessly handling a pistol, accidentally shot and killed Doc Chambers, a farmer. Maj. Charles Dickey, Eighth Lliited States infantry, has been reported unfit for active service and placed on the re tired list. •Report of the state board shows thu$ Ohio is living a* read of her income. No wonder the Buckeye state wants to ad- nex Canada. Daniel Hanse, of Springfield, 0„ out of employment, and having an insane wife, left his four children the further eorro tvful memory of a suicide father. At Bncyrus, O., Henry Gerbig, who was in fear of white caps, prooqred a re volver and while practicing with the weapon, shot himself, narrowly escap ing death. Dr. Henry J. Reynolds has begun suit! against the Chicago Times and *f. J. West for $28,000 damages, claimed to have been caused by revelations con cerning infanticide, recently published In that paper. DAILY MARKET REPORTS. [triouux areoarao BTXBXooa * oiurfTx], Atlanta, Go,, Opening and dosing quotations of ootton fu tares in New York to-day: December.. Opening .... 9.40&9.49.. .... 9.45£5 .. 9.3'J© 9 40 February.... Karen Anril •;;;;•• .... 9.51© ... 9.65© ... 9.78© .. 9.60& 9.51 . 9.60© 9.61 . 971© 979 iSr..::.:.:. ... 9.89© . 9.81© 9.(j8 June ....10.00® . 9.91© 9.91 July August September.. October November... . ...10.2S©10.29.. ...10,U©10.11. ... 9.25© 9.29.. .... & ... © ..]0.98©10.9B ..10.05©10.06 . 9.71© 9.73 C.used steady. Seles. 93,800. Spots — raid- •:bags 9 Hi receipts 310,703; exports Ho.373; Hoc* 919,MB. Chicago Market. Wheat. Ill., December 39. Closing 101U 13.8»$... f -rc. V. * ire-ember January ,luj 7.80 {bus. FOR SALE! Room hense and two acre lot, crib and cow vJ house: also fine fruit trees, iu Winterville. Ga , and hi 200 yards of the depot on Railroad t property is iu good repair Price $1,800, one half cosh pie and rents for $125.00. balance in 12 mouths at 8 percent Interest. 3 Room house in East Athens. In good repair and well located, an be bought for $300 .. —, i i-tore house ou extension of li oatl 1 E st Athens Can be bought cheap Cf\ Acre farm In 3 miles of Athens, 40 in a high UU state of cultivation, 20 acres in pasture and original f rest; 2 branches running through the place. This place is well Improved with au S room dwelling, barn, stables, carriage house, poultry house and eotton house; within one half mile of a school and church and in 300 yards of thee. SM. Railroad. Price $1200, one half cash balance in 12 mouths at 8 per cent interest. -« A Acres of land 8 in a high state of cultiua- JLU tion, 2 in woods, some fine fruit trees and a 3 room dwellingonthe place and within Smiles of Athens for $300. iinn Acres of splendid land, within 2 miles of L\J I the post office of Athens, on the road leading out to WatrlnsviUe. It has a 0-room. dwelling, stables and other houses used on a farm. It has also 2 tenant houses. 150 acres of the land in a hif ti state of cultivation the balance in old field nines and original forests. This place has also a fine orchard on It. 3 Room house: and half acre lot on Oconee street for $850, TO RENT. The offloe where Df.8telier occupied on Jack- son street, a splendid stand for a dentist or a physician. . - 5-Boom house on Dougherty street, convenient basinet s, for $16 per month, 4-Room house on Handcock ave., convenient to business, for $10. g Room house on Jackson Street. 7 ROAM BRICK HOUSE and lare-e lot and garden on Campus. S TORE HOURK ou Broad street, better knowa as toe store, which Coleman now occupies, for 1889, Mr. Qantt’s splendid Falrvlew farm, in is min utes walk of the Postoffle of Athens. It has a new 10-room house. 3 wells of good water, fine barn, 100 varieties of grape vines, they bear well; also a fine orchard. There is also a nice pasture, and about 50 acres of land in a high state of cultivation This place can be rented very reasonable by calling on J. T ANDERSON. R.E. A. -YOUR ATTENTION IS CALLED TO Some New St;