Athens weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1889-1891, October 22, 1889, Image 4

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THE ATHENS BANNER, Published Daily, Sunday and Weekly by - T. L. GANTT. Editor and Proprietor, Jackson street, Athens, Ha. Thh Athkxb Daily Banner ss deliTered by carriers free of charge in the city, or mailed postage free to any address at the followinc rates: $£.00 per year, $2.50 for six months, S-l-io tor three months, 10 cents forette week. The Weekly or Sunday Banner $1X0 per year, 80 cents C months. Transient advertisements will be inserted at tee rate of $1.00 per square for the lirst insertion, and 80 oents for each subsequent insertion, ex cept contract advertisements, on which special rates can be obtained. Local notices will l>e charged at the rate of 10 cents per line each insertion, except when con tracted for extended periods, when special rates will be made. Remittances may be made by express, postal note, money order or registered letter. All communications, money orders, checks, «tc n should bo addressed, or made ^ayaWe^t^, President L. F. Livingston, of tlie . traeting considerable attention all over Georgia State Frrmer’s Alliance, has j the country, and there are evidences issued a timely address to the Alliance- j that the contest is close enough to allow Mien all over the State urging them to j the Democrats a close fighting chance rnrn outen masse at the Piedmont Ex- ! of electiug a majority of the State olfi- posi;ion on Alliance day. j cers including the Governor, and of It is well that every member of the greatly increasing their strenth in the Alliance in Georgia should be advised J legislative branch of the government Over One Hundred Cases on Point J’eieo Island, Lake Erie. Of New York, Speaks at tlie Pied mont Exposition. THE JUTE BAGGING TRUST. While our cotton growers are using most sternu jus efforts to defeatjthe jute trust—and may eventually succeed in forcing this combination to somewhat lessen its demands—it will be at a heavy pecuniary loss to the oppressed class, and they will never be entirely safe from future ■exactions. Therejare thou sands of large planters all over the cot ton belt who will refuse to join hands with the Alliance in this most holy war, and will continue to be supporters and patrons of the jute trust. Hence the Southern cotton planters must leoktofa stronger^ power than^then -divided efforts to effectually overthrow their enemy and reader him powerless for further evil. This power alone rests in the Congressmen and Senators from the cotton States, and we believe that had these representatives of our op pressed and wronged section done their duty as they should, that the producers ■of the fleecy staple would have long since triumphed, and that too, without the pecuniary sacrifice they are now re quired to make. This is what should have been done, and it is not yet too late: Let every Southern representative in either the House or Sen ate of -our National Leg islature hold a caucus and pledged themselves-to work together as one man and that their w whole mission be to secure the passage of a law to place jute bagging on the free list, and permit the cotton grower to puichase in whatever market he can buy the cheapest. Let these Southern representatives call on the Grangers and other fanner’s organ izations in the West for assistance, and ask that they instruct their eongress- m«n to aid their struggling brothers in the South—the men who buy^their bacon and corn.^flnd are not only bound to them by the, kind redof an liom-st tiller of the soil, but whose interests are -one and inseparable with their own. Let “Death to the Jute Trust!” be the slogan of Southern congressmen until the victory is won. Let this great end overshadow everything else, for it is the most important issue that lias ever confrooted our people—oppressing alike the poor and the rich. Blockade all legislation until the to be present on that occasion. It will be tlie greatest day for Alliancemen since their organization was consum mated. The management of the Exposition and every citizen of Atlanta have set to work with hearty zest and in dead earn est to make Alliance day the greatest day of the entire Exposition. That they w ill succeed in so doing is already foretold by the success they have at tained in securing the most prominent Alliancemen in the country. They have gone to considerable expense and trouble to have Hon. Evans Jones, pres- 'methods of his administration. ideut of the Farmers and Laborers’ Union of America, from Texas, who will address the Alliance at the Expo sition on Alliance day. Hon. L. S. Polk, Secretary of the State Alliance of North Carolina, will also make a ringing speech before the farmers, and the situation of tlie Alii Governor Foraker, is of course, mak ing a most rigorous canvass and is using the full power of the State Ad ministration to secure his return, but be is considerably handicapped by the fact that he aspiring to a third term, which is decidedly distasteful to al irge section of his own party, and, besides, his course in administering the affairs of the State has made him bitter ene mies within the ranks of the republi cans, who are disposed to throw him over altogether and vote for Campbell, his opponent, as a protest against the Thus Senator Sherman in the course of the canvass lias gone considerably out of his way to impress upon the people of the State that in his opinion it is a very even thing for the public good whether aCmpbellot Foraker shall be Governor, provided the Republican party retains control of the Legislature The Island at Prassnt a Vast Isolated Pest House, ance today and its future prospects will and consequently of the State’s repi e be discussed in an able and fitting man ner by these eloquent and prominent orators. Another great feature of Alliance day at the Piedmont is a double wedding, the contracting parties being clothed in j garments of cotton bagging. Governor the sentation in the higher branch of National Congress. Senator Sherman made an elaborate reference to Foraker in his opening speech, but the most conspicuous thing in it was the absence of any assertion or intimation that the Goernor was Gordon, assisted by several eminent hJnest. divines, will officiate. The exercises aud program of the day will be made both instructive and amusing, aud it behooves every Alli ance man m the state to respond to President Livingston’s address by fall ing in line next Thursday, and in one vast muster rally arouud their promi nent leaders ou the Piedmont Fair Grounds and study their interests to gether. THE RAPE OF MONTANA. The attempt of the republicans to steal the State of Montana from the demo crats will be one of the most brazen and outrageous thefts ever perpetrated, if it is successful. Montana is and al ways has been a democratic State, and with one exception, when the people were divided on a local issue, they nev er failed to send a democratic delegate to congress. The State iB still demo cratic, and the election of a delegate shows it. But Since tlieir loss of the Third Louisiana district, it was imper ative that this party carry Montana. A AN OCCASION FOR THANKSGIV ING. As the American ansi Canaslinn Authori ties Have Closest All Avenues of Kscape from the 1*1 c?—Fears That the Disease May Ke Brought to Ohio Towns on the I-ak« by Vessels. Sandusky, O., Oct 19.—The wildest excitement exists on Point Pelee Island, over 100 cases of smallpox hav ing developed there since Sunday. The island has about 1,000 population. Q'.mrsuitl ted oil h!I Sides. All avenues of escape from the place have been closed by American and Cana dian authorities. Every oae of the en - tire group of Lake Erie islands, includ ing Put-in-Bay, North Bass. Middle Bass, Kelly’s and others have quaran tined against Pelee, and the Canadian authorities have quarantined the main land against the island, which has thus become a vast isolated pest house. Ohio Town* Alarmed. Mayor Hunt, of this oily, has tele graphed the state board of health, ex plaining the situation, and asking what lie should do. The vessels ply between the island and the various lake ports on this shore, and it is feared some of them may bring the disease over to this side. It is expected the state board will order all ports along this shore of Lake Erie closed against Pelee. CORPORAL TANNER TALKS of Hi counted, in’, arid now the election re- tiirfis are being manipuhit:d so as to give them also control of the legisla ture. The result will be to give two more republican senators to the already republican Senate. Itfis only logical that the man who organised the theft of an election pre- 1 cinct in Silver Bow county, Montana,to Gov. Gordon surely was inspired with the prophecy of a soothsayer when he appointed Thursday, Oct. 17th for aday of Thank-givi g in Georgia. The defeat of the Olive bill by the legislature on Wednesday affords ad ditional cause for rejoicing, and now that the state and legislature are (lone with this odious measure for ever am! a day, let everybody rejoice, and be glad. The defeat of this bill in the Georgia Legislature has been greeted with glad ness by every f6an who held tlie future p osperity of the state at heart, and the few friends who supported it no doubt are glad the bill has been killed in time for them to partake of a hearty Thanks giving dinner with a clear conscience ofhaving no longer the indignation of their fe.llow citizens hovering over them. The Atlanta Journal was correct in saying the bill failed to pass for the want of more friends. We knevy this all the tjiue, foc-iYerkuew the Georgia republican congreesouvil ..-Ibis teert Legislature composed, as it is, of con- wrongs of your people i change the political complexion of tlie are lighted. Use your strength to pre vent the passage of any bill—clog the wheelis of government, and thus force congress to grant a recognition of your just demands and a redress of your people’s wrongs. Our Southern compress men have united and by “gerrymandering”' and other means recognized in extreme casds managed to defeat tlie passage of objectionable laws by the majority ; and surely there never- was a more worthy or appropriate opportunity for an exercise of these peculiar practical tactio3 than iii this instance. If the compress men from our cotton growing States' will only do their duty in this matter they can and will secure the enactment of a law that will effectually and per manently destroy the jute bagging legislature, should be an old convict and jail-bird ami that he narrowly escaped lynching for his villainy. The Homestake Tunnel precinct of Silver Bow polled 172 votes, of which 163 were democratic. There is no alle gation of fraudulent voting or fraudu lent count, and the whole theft is based upon the-merest technicality that lias been settled by the Montana courts as immaterial and" inSuffleieut J&’A itiate the return. • • . - + l * A . • * AJ The Board of Canvassers was solidly republican; the chairman of tlie board, W, W. Ja^k, had Wavy wagers on tlie county eliciting the republican ticket, '.and lie lias skipped for Europe. When it i$ considered that the pretexts for this theft were prepared by a convict ; that the chairman of the Board of Can vassers had heavy wagers on tlie result; scientious law-makers, could not b< friendly to a measure which hovered over the state like an appalling death- cloud to its future prosperity. But, it is all settled for good, and let us rejoice in the defeat of the Olive bill, which menus tlie continued prosperity, which is now being experienced bv the Empire State of the South, RegardiuR Bussey’* Overruling Order Raising Pension.. Washington, Oct 19.—Corporal Tan ner was asked Wednesday what he had to say regarding Assistant Secretary Bussey’s overruling of the commission er’s order raising $2 per month pen sions. He began his reply by referring to Cicn. Bussey us having been for twenty years editor of a Democratic paper, and as having never served in the army or navy. He continued “Gen l-ussey conveys the impression that the effect of my order was to arbi trarily raise all pensions below £4 (be tween ai>,Out) and fin.OOO) to $1 per month. On tlie contrary, the order re ferred to cases allowed after March 27, the day I took oriice. I could issue no certificates for less than $4. N o one di‘ p i*ed my right to take that c mrse Then, of course, I could, act iu cases where applications were on tile for an increase from pensions less than 134, if accompanied by pi oper medical certifi cates. * There is plenty of law for it, Bussey to the contrary notwithstand ing. lie says there is no precedent, say every commissioner who p.eceded me left precedents.” they are now so manfully; struggling for, and tliat iVcostuig them such ,a large share of,their liaril-earned monel’. The jute baggingtfust is fefltirely dif ferent from any other combination ever formed in our country to extort from the masses. Tlie sugar, oil and other trusts are not confined in their} opera tions to one locality but bear with equal force on every person and section. The jute trust effects and oppresses only one class and one section—is directly aimed at the great staple of the South, and a crop, too, in which there has been but little prefit to the producer. We be lieve the grain farmers of the West wfll unite with the cotton raisers of the South in this most holy and righteous struggle". Let the Alliance and every cotton planter demand of a candidate for con gress that he will devote his entire time and talent to working for hieir relief before supporting him. L This is the surest, the speediest and the only way to defeat the jute trust. Place cotton bagging on the free list. relief that no allegation of fraudulent voting or fraudulent count was presented, and .that the Canvassers have no legal powr ers beyond computing aud certifying tlie vote, the utterly lawless and revo lutionary nature of the political theft may be fully appreciated. • A man has just as much right to ex pect a merchant to let him have liis goods without paying for them, or a laborer to do work for nothing ami hoard himself, as for a newspaper to be sent : to hi in free We found over one hundred such par ties on our daily books, and as the Tamp* *h a Hnrbnr. Nnw ltOKRr 'Dct. 19.—The Tribune’ Birmingham, Ala., special says that the Richmond Terminal, Georgia Central, East Tennessee. Louisville und Nash ville, Southern Pacific and other south and southwestern railroads, aud the plant s;. stem of railroads and. steam ships have united iu a movement to niaiio Tampa, Fla., the shipping point for all freight handled on those lines, large part of which uo.v goes via New York and Boston. Extensive improve ments of the Tampa harbor and ne.v steamship lines to mobile and Now Or leans ate u part of the cc ieme. Greeting to the Empire State of the South. ADsoiutely p Ut Killer! ia a Jlo l.ng M II. Sokantov, Pa., Oci. 1!).—About 9 o'clock Wednesday evening Solon enee, Pa., accompanied Davis, of Pro by two ladies, entered the blooming la ii of i ho Scranton Iron and Steel campiiuy io observe the process of marie lifa.it. re. At the ,doorway were three, car-, loaded with re l hot ingots. To e en o the heat of these' in passing Davis .tejiped. naek.va d, and was expense was more thaij \ye could carry, j caught by an immense ilywheel, rovoiv- erased the tast name. No discrimina tion was shewn. — All couhnunicntions in the interest of candidates will lie charged for at the rate of ten cents per line. In view of the fact that the contest will be decided within tip* Democratic ranks, the Ban ner will be “hands off.” Those who desire to put forward the especial claims of their friend or candidate must expect to pay for the same. This rule applies to every one. John L. Sullivan lias .spent all the money he made by his fight with Kil- rain last July' and is now quoted as “dead brok.” Buff this fact will hardly prevent tb$ slugger from f enjoying life in his usifal way. 1 He enjoys tlie ‘ sen- ' Gov. Hill and party spent, several hours in Rome on their return from Atlanta, and were greeted right roy ally by the good Romans, and Editor Graves in a most beautiful speech bade them welcome to the Mountain City. Mr. Donald Harper, representing the young Democracy; also gave them a cordial welcome in a fitting speech. Gov. Hiil. left after responding with patriotic enthusiasm to tlieir speeches. A new industry has developed in Ath ens—hunting up leg-breaking holes in the streets and bridges, so as to man ufacture <ity. suit against the The cotton week ending Friday, 18th inst. shows the largest receipts on rec ord—309,000 bales. The previous high est figures were reached of 11th No vember 1887, when the figures 300,000 were reached.| It is believed if the Al- liancemen had not held tlieir cotton back they would have simply been plienominal, as the crop promises to be by far the largest ever made. The Athenians now want Gov. Gor don to declare a Thanksgiving, Day to help out the Northeast Georgia Stock and Poultry Show, 8Ation of breaking something even if it is himself. The Rome, Tribune pertinantly asks what lias become of John L. Sullivan’s candidacy for Congress. It was a boom which seems to have been knock ed out in one rouud. JjJcElree^jriVINEO^^ARbUi female dimm A darkey can’t expect to rank in first- class society in. Athens unless he is the proud proprietor of one of these fero cious beasts a blind tiger. iug t.'.9 times a minute,, ami winrle l out O- sight. When the engine was f topped Davis’ dea l and horribly mangled body was found in the wkyci pit. IVaiiun-iu l>atu Gives Way. Oshkosh, Wis., Oct.. 19.—Berlin Pam, on Fox river, just above Eureka, went oiit Monday night. This is almost unprecedented from the fact that the water in the river has been remarkably low during the past few weeks aud late ly the river has been at the lowest -mark ever known. It is thought that tlie'snri and wind opened crevices through which the water got start©; l and carried the structure away. The loss of the dam will seriously impede navigation on the upper Fox. It will probably be rebuilt at once. Evidence* of Great Progress Raving Been Made in the SuntH During the Last Quarter of a Century—The Cl :ud Which Hung for So Many Fear* Over It 1* Gone—'ysiopiii of HU Speech. Atlanta, Ga., Oot. 18.—The following is a synopsis of the address of Governor Hill, of New York, delivered Wednesday at the Piedmont exposition: iu behalf nf the great state of which I am proud to lie the repre-entative, and for which this kind expression of esteem and hospitality is intended, I wish to thank you most cor dially. The empire state of the north sends warm greeting to the empire state of the south. She is proud of your progress, as she is of her own. The north has not forgotten the message whichjyour eloquent Grady brought to the sons of New Eugland two years ago. He touched, as no orator in the generation since the wslr ha? touched, ft chord of sympathy ar.d charity, whose sound vibrated from Maine to California, and the echoes of whose silvery tones hav3 not yet died away. He told us merely what we know, but what we never before fully appreciated. Glatl to free Such Progre**. I am glad that you have given me this op portunity to see the south under Us uew con dition—to see for myself what you have accomplished in this struggle of twenty-five years. Everywhere w e turn we are con fronted with the evidences of the achievements our sciemifi? men a id skilled arti sans. No perso can safely predict what improve men'B may be made governor hill, in the next quarter of a century. Whatever contributes to swell the sum of human happiness and tends to a higher and bettor civilization deserves the encouragement of a grateful people. Amer ica owes much to her artisans, inventors and menvf genius. TheThactment of just and liberal laws for the protection of thei> rights and the pro motion of their interests, is the least tribute which she can pay to the great work which they have performed in her behalf. It is my good fortune to become acquainted with the r.ew south in a state which, though one of the oldest of the old south, is one of the most progressive of the new—in a region which received tho severest blight of war, but which shows now the greatest degree of revivification—in a city which represents best the recovered energy, the proud spirit, the wealth, the intelligence, the honor, the vigor of this rejuvenated laud. The Southerner’* Loyalty. When I reflect upon the scenes which took place in this vic-q.ty; only, twenty-five years ago, how a stubborn and loyal army, bat tling for a cause which it believed to be just, for homes, for families, for country, for life, was driven southward step by step by force a superior in numbers and re sources, how, day after day, the sound of cannon and musketry reverberated through these va leys, and the flumes of burn.ng homes It up the horizon; how vigorously the Fe ’eml force?, spurred on by the one de sire of preserving the Union of your fathers and theirs, fought their way through shot and sh 11, destroying homes as they went a d devasta b g fields; how, finally, those brave men in gray, driven from every stronghold, fell baCit within the fortific itio.is of ibis f-ir ci y, aud how at last Atlanta fell: us a northerner ol i enough to have ob served the tendency of the ante-Deilnui south, I am amazed i as an American citizen proud of my country'V institutions aud form of government, I am rejoiced. This is indeed the sunny south. The great dark cloud which hung over the south for so many years has gone, thank God, aul the bright sun of heaven looks down upun.a nobler civilization, il!'st)ivln_ pirations. The rapid- development of the south, and-in the conditions of sdcipty which now; prevail here, there are suggestions for serious thought. Not ft Pessimist. I nm not one of those pessimists who, while recognizing and admitting the glori ous prosperity of your industries since the ...4? «... 'sL This phwoer never vane* . ritjr, strength anil wholesome^ n '* rr «« i womiea! than the onlina^T***- besoM In competition with Vt,i s ,mi a! low tests, short weicht alum, t lc , '"“Ititai lien,. Sold only In cans p, Coj, lOS \v al Irtreeb New Y„T *•“ Provedto youlhT^^f; labor. Most of you will renSiL* 1 dictions of your statesmen beforT thaiwithont slaves the south c ZZ' itably produce cotton; y* you have raise! more eX|?£u years than you raised in the t»J." before Sumter was fired on uot^v . ing that only a part of yourpopJS been engaged in this industry, ^77’ the meantime, your rowufseturia,! haue become formidable rival* 0 £ •£, Tlie SolM South, It is sometimes said in the uortioJ south is solid. 8o it is, solid fur ernment, solid for the welfare of iVc solid for integrity in private life, solid in its opposition to a patrmi ministration of publie affairs against congressional extravagant*^ its renunciation of the error* of it*, solid for American ideas, solid ja in* tion to the new nation, solid in iUa tions for a higher civilisation a id all that would make us a prwp«re M powerful republic. Of such solidity I an not afraid, dangers in such unity as sprh« fr*o”l noblest motives and subsorvos the mo«d alted patriotism. A MINE HORROR. Terrible Explosion in an Enjll.h (, Mine—More Than Fitly Bead Bod! Recovered From th* Debus. London, Oct. 18.—An enrred iu the Bent ilee colliery, at Lea ton. Staffordshire, at an earl; ks Wednesday morning. There enty men in the pit at tho tuna sad these only eleven are known to in survived. The pit is completely wrecked, i search for bodies is attended with gn difficulty. A large force of men in gaged in clearing away debris sal t deuvoring to reach the dead or dji miners. Fifty llotlies llvcnrwl. Later—The men engaged in iug for victims of tlie explosion ta found fifty bodies of the deal unrwa SUGAR TRUST STCLKS Forced Down by I« Irpmdeat Bil® •a Cheaper S«K*"- New York, Oct. IS —Sum t>:ria tificates which touched 120 bine24 now quote l at 77. The e nreai things which have couti'iiwtcd to u notable decline, among which we new life, new courage and new as- the decision of the ®°^ r > cs jj capitalization of the trust for an to® about trible the value of tho represented, the uncertainty regaruB the decision of t ity of the triist. and the er. competition at Philadelphia oi JM airo apreckeis ‘refinery. . The* value of tlie properties in the trust. whi^h fioa.s MW , certificates, 1 was only ;;>lo,GoU.w - - - • ■ n. iM 1 ™ cent of time of their incorporation. 0&W Well Known Winnipngnn Dead. Winnipeg, Oct. 19.—Senator Hardisty died Wednesday evening- from injuries received when he was thrown from his carnage two weeks ago.- He was’chief factor of the Hudson Bay company in charge of the district of Edmonton. His father and grandfather were chief factors in the company’s service, in fact, the Hardisty family has been con nected with the company almost’since its organization. The deceased was a brother-in-law of Sir Donald A. Smith. Twelve Tear* for Murder. Qrand Rapids, Mich., Oct 19.— Amiel Gosch has been sentenced to Jackson prison for twelve years for the killing of Dan. Siuclare,* of Bowne township. The supreme court will be asked to give Gosch a new trial The blind tiger still has his lair in the Classic City, and is breeding a large number of cubs. My lore was like Uly t.air. Low droopim in the sultry air, My heart was rent with «rief and cars. I loved her well. - — - — ^ gro^s diii My love’s now like a blooming rose: How bright her face with beauty glows. I dare not tell. The wandering bee would stop to sip, The nectar of her perfect lip. 1 ’ ’Twas Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Presrrip- Tion wrought the spell. MoELREE»8 WINE^F CARnm for Weak Nerves. Knocked Out in Forty-Five Round?. San Francisco, Oot. IS.—Charley Turner, of Stockton, knocked out Will iam Heunessy, of Kansas City, in the fortv-fifth round, in a fight to a finish in the rooms of tlie Goldon Gate^Ath- le/io club, Wednesday night. lt.'semenccd to Death. New York, Oct. 19.—Judge Martin in Part I general. sessions has resen tenced to death tie nry Carlton, the mur derer of Policeman Brannon, and fixed the date oi execution Dec. 5. Soldiers’ Monument Dedicated. Worcester, Mass., Oct 19.—The sol diers’ monument at Winckerdom was dedicated Wednesday, Grand Army S from all the towns iu the vicinity g part in the exercises. war, profess to soe In some of j’our institu tions and conditions cause for grave appre hension for the future., Such apprehensions are due perhaps, to the agitation of selfish politicians, to that ignorance which does not understand the southern nature to the sur viving remnant of old time jealousy an 1 suspicion. Great Problems to Overcome. J would not jjave you understand me os depreciating present dangers, or as belit tling the obstacles which now confront you. Great problems will have to be grappled with, and,the north is watching to see how you solve them. One of these problems is the education of the masses. The worst foe to our democratic form of government is ignorance. It is a startling fact iudeed, which was reveale 1 by the census of 1880, that in some of your states half the popula tion could not read or write. The census of 1890 will make a better showing, I am sure. Inqpstrlal Enterprises. In the field of industrial enterprises you have great opportunities. Your resources are inexhaustible; see that they are not monopolized; discourage such legislation as tends to enrich classes at the expense of tho masses. It is within your power to do much towards securing more equitable relations between employers and employed. • Thus far you have been particularly fortunate in avoiding disastrous labor agitations. But when there shall be collected in your manufacturing cities large bodies of work ingmen, when rivalry for employment shall have become keener, you will have to meet serious questions, and if you would take warning f om the north’s experience you will prepare to meet them now. Your em ployers must realize what ours have been slow to realize: that cne man’s rights are the rights of another. Let the benefits of your prosperity be en joyed, not by the few who would use them for their own selfish ends, but encourage that broad bunuuh charity which looks to the greatest good of the greatest number. You have within your borders vast numbers of an unfortunate and long oppressed i ace; it is your interest, as it is your duty, to lift them out of the estate in which fate has placed them, and help them to assume the responsibilities of citizenship. The Advantage of Free Labor. The experience of the last twenty years A’ started out wiih BO per whole refining business of uw \mt its output has steadily w* crouched upon by outsiders. ‘ ^ increased tlieir capacity unu v „ been doing .the past year "V.jJ cent, of the business, and.«*»£* period of the sugar trade at J ° The independent refinea mainly in Philadelphia, hjj JJ producing capacity of * . .0 Sprockets" additional refill > . ^ deifihia, which wifi he coa ^ e J^ Jan. 1. will make thq; output by the^independeuir .55. 000 barrels, ihe total <io s J^ sugars manufactured by fineries in the baited ^ the trusts, equals • btm *SS«Ml daily. The trust °an no 1°^* to have the same monopo.y ^ ness that it had die first r istence, and this fact ha per^J ence in bringing ah° u t^, pr £ c eof® reduction in the mark V j fe. trust certificates during t months. Strangled His Employ Little Rock, Ark.,Oct-^ letter from Yenita, Indwn nnlef says, “a most remarkable m j. committed in Cooweesce^ee last Saturday. John B |CU8 y to-do Indian, had in his of nineteen,named James s ^ feel out with his employe 1, ^ ed his wages on a h>S ^ ^ agreed. Richards refused^ than the price a ^ rced ’ '' gie^ struck him. After a s g )Iy got Richards down and gled him, cnly relaXin ^ xt inet. his throat when life wa \ C year s ards was about sixty* a peaceful man. got away. MsElree’s Wine and THEDFORD’S BLACK- for «1» by tbe W»» M