The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-????, August 23, 1889, Image 1
The Fayetteville News. • VOL. 2. FAYETTEVILLE, GA., FRIDAY, Aljj §8$T 23, 1889. NO. 4. GENERAL NEWS. CONDENSATION OF CURIO US, AND EXCITING EVENTS. NEWS 1'IIOM EVEETWHEEE—ACCIDENTS, STKIKE3, FIRES, AND HAPPENINGS OF INTEREST. Eighteen persons were injured by a wreck on. the Burlington '& Missouri Railroad near Lincoln, Neb., Sunday morning. William Kelly, a porter at Minneapo lis, Minn.., dropped a trunk, and a re volver in it was in -some manner dis charged. The bullet passed through the trunk, entering Kelly’s head, killing him instantly. The Brazilian steamer Alliauce, with the three commissioners who were sent as delegates to represent Brazil at the international congress of American nations, arrived at New York Saturday. .John Lees & Son, cotton spinners, who operate the Dover Mills at 1,717 Bodine street, Philadelphia, fa., made an assignment Tuesdey. The firm’s lia bilities amount to about $36,000, and assets j 25,000. There was no baseball game at Cincin nati on last Sunday, as has beer. usual heretofore, as the authorities threatened on Saturday that if one -was played they would break it up by arresting the presi dent and ail the players. An investigation of the accounts of W. 93. Denny, assistant postmaster at Boone- vile, Ind., who is charged with embez zlement in liis office, shows that the shortage amounts to $0,000, and may roach more. Denny has not yet been ap prehended. ^Chicago parties have bought out the Toledo, Ohio, street railroad system, and are negotiating for the purchase of the street car lines in Findlay, with a view of consolidating them under one man agement, aud to ran them all by electric motor. .Dirt was broken Saturday, with impos ing demonstrations, at Huntsville, Ala., for the line of the Cincinnati, Alabama •and Atlantic Railroad, which is to run from Ginciunat due south to Huntsville, and then deflect either to Birmingham or Savannah, Ga. Tuesday evening a bomb, ten centime- tore in diameter, was thrown from the rear of the .chamber of deputies into the Piazza Colena, in Spain, during the progress of a concert. The bomb ex ploded, wounding seriously six gen darmes and a child. Twenty Arabs, of both sexes, who came'on the steamer La Normandie, are detained at Castle Garden, in New York, until the Turkish consul can be. con sulted. It is said there arc 70,000 Arabs waiting to come to this country provided the twenty are passed through. United States Attorney Carey, at San Francisco, received a telegram Friday from the department of justice, at Wash ington, instructing him to assume, on behalf of the United States Government, the defence of Deputy United States Marshal David Nagle, who shot Judge Terry'On Wednesday. A cablegram from Paris, received at Pittsburg, Pa., announces the death there of Win. Shaw, vice-president of the Penn sylvania Railroad Company, and one of the most prominent,railroad men in the country. lie was reported to be worth at least $30,000,000. He was 01 years of age. A dispatch from Little Rock, Arlc., says: Great excitement exists among the cotton farmers of five or more count ies in this state over the appearance, in the last few days, of,cotton worms. They have appeared in the cotton lands of Pulaski, Jefferson, Clark and two otlieu counties, as far as heard from. It is reported from St. Louis that the fast mail train which arrived in that city Saturday night over the Vandalia Road, was robbed at Terre Ilaute, Indiana, while the mail clerks and train hands were at supper. It is said that one pouch, containing registered letters, was taken. The pouch was supposed to contain about $10,000. A lieutenant with a small detail of soldiers from Sully, Dak., has just com pleted a trip along the edge of the Sioux reservation and reports everything quiet, with not a “boomer” in sight. The good effect of the assured opening of 11,000,- 000 acres to settlement can already be felt, and a wonderful increase in alt classes of business is plainly noticeable. The company which is arranging to pipe natural gas to Columbus, lud„ from the Greenfield field, has just closed a contract with the Sholbyvillc Natural Gas company to pipe the cheap fuel to that city from the same field. The work of diggiug the trench and laying the pipe on the main line will begin as soon as the pipe can bo secured and distrib- uied. It is reported from Berlin, Germany, that the recent interviews between Prince Bismarck and the Emperor Joseph and Count Ivalnoky, resulted.in a modifica tion of the Austro-German treaty where by a casus foeder is established wheuever vital interests of either nation are threatened. Ilittsorto only open attack has constituted cause for joint action. The British bark Oneway, Captain Anderson, which sailed from Philadel phia June 5, for Bilboa, with a crew of fifteen men and 124,000 gallons of crude petroleum, valued at $8,856, is be lieved ,lo have been lost, as nothing has been heard of her since she passed out Delewaro capes. The cuptain’s wife and two children accompanied him. The Minister of Finance at St. Peters burg, Russia, intends to tax Protestant churches in the Baltic provinces. These churches have hitherto been exempt from taxation. This is one of a series of re forms, by which the government intends to thoroughly Russianize old Baltic Ger man institutions and diminish the influ ence of the German Protestant clergy. A dispatch from Butler, Pa., says: The south bound train leaving there Friday afternoon, on the West Pennsyl- vania’railroad, was wrecked at Sni vel's station. The latest report is that three passengers were killed and twenty-five injured. It is said that while running rapidly over a small bridge the rails spread and the cars went down an em bankment. A storm which prevailed in St. Pauh Minn., Tuesday night, was one of Die worst ever experienced there. Two inches of water fell between the Lours of 2 and 5 o'clock. At Eau Clare, Wis,, lightning struck a large agricultural building on the grounds of the north western fair association destroying the building, together with several thousand bushels of grain and a lot of machinery. The loss is $6,000. BREAKS THE RECORD. WASHINGTON, D. C. MO YEMENTS OF TIIE PRESIDENT AND HIS ADVISERS. A GHASTLY 8PE CTACLE. CHILDREN IN TUE STREETS OF PHILA DELPHIA USING HUMAN BONES FOR TOYS. SOUTHERN NEWS. Ail OLD MAN FASTS SIXTY-SEVEN DAYS AND DIES. Robert Marvel, of Indianapolis, Ind., after fasting sixty-seven days, died Tuesday morning. His case is extraor dinary, and has attracted the attention not only of the curious public, but of the medical fraternity far and near. He was 85 years old. On June 13th, Mr. Mar vel ate his last square meal. For thirty- six days he took absolutely nothing into hisstomach. On the thirty-eighth day he bit off a piece of pie, but. did noteat it. On the thirty-ninth day he drank a small quantity of milk, and at regular periods he has continued so. All told, he lias drunk not to exceed one gallon of milk in the sixtv-seven days that have elapsed since he began to fast. The faster was reduced to a “living shadow.” Sores, came upon him by reason of his long, confinement, and evidently Marvel had.not only suffered long, but severely, though everything possible was done to relieve him. liis fast is the longest on record. INDIGNANT AMERICANS .CLAIM THAT THEY WERE CRUELLY TREATED BY GERMANS. E. C. .Hill, widely known among flor ists, aud president of the national floral association, has just returned to Rich mond, Ind., his home, from a trip to Europe, and reports that while en route from Belfort to Basle, in company with Robert George, of Painesville, the train was stopped at the neutral line between France and Alsace-Lorraine, and be and his companion were arrested as spies. They aud their bag gage was searched, their passports dis regarded and they were not permitted to cross the line. Mr. Hill says the Ger man officers were obstinate aud brutal in their treatment. They were denied the privilege of continuing their journey although there was nothing whatever to support the suspicion against them, and they were compelled to hire a French peasant to take them back to Belfort. Their treatment will be reported to the state department. “OLD BLACK JOE” DEAD. APPOINTMENTS, DECISIONS, AND OTHER MATTERS OF INTEREST FROM THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. The Secretary of War has authorized the expenditure of $500 for improve ments to the Marietta, Ga., cemetery. Wnt. Rule, of Tennessee, has been ap pointed pension agent at Knoxville, Tcnn., vice D. A. Carpenter, resigned. Secretary Windom left Washington Tuesday for a three weeks’ vacation, and Secretary Rusk left (:i Wednesday. Not a member of the cabinet is now in the city. The treasurer of the United States has issued instructions, subject to the con venience of the treasury, to the assistant treasurer of 1he United States at New York, to supply notes and silver certifi cates of small denominations to banks ordering them in sums not less than $1,000. The department of state on Monday received a cablegram from the United States vice-consul at Porto Rico, an nouncing the death of Consul Edward Conroy, one of the oldest members of the consular service, having been appointed in April, I860. He was fully eighty years of age. The Secretary of State is informed that his imperial majesty, the emperor of China, has approved for the use of Chi nese legations and consulates au oblong yellow flag bcarirg a dragon in dark blue and a sun in red ; and for the use of Chinese merchants a triangular flag of the same desigu. The Inter state commerce commission has received complaint by the Holly Springs, Miss., Compress Manufacturing company, against the Kansas City, Mem phis & Birmingham Railroad company, charging, among other things, unreason able and excessive freight rates on com pressed cotton between Holly Springs, and Memphis, Tenn. The President, Saturday, made the fol lowing appointments: Robert A. Mosely to be collc-eior OX Internal Ti-vcnuc for the district of Alabama, Postmasters: Sam uel P. Burns at Talladega, Ala., vice Richard R. Hunley, removed; James G Hughes at Marietta, Ga., vice James B. Blackwell, removed; George G. Alexan der it Camden, S. C., vice Daniel C. Kirby removed. The Treasury department has granted the application of a New Orleans firm to have an assignment of percussion caps, intended for transmission to interior points, taken from the list of explosives, so that they may be forwarded under bond in the ordinary manner. This ac tion has been taken upon a report from the collector at New York, that actual tests show that these caps, used for sporting purposes only, are not explosive articles, and arc not, therefore, properly included in the list of explosives. Civil Service Commissioners Lyman and Thompson had an interview’ with the President on Saturday in regard to cer tain contemplated changes in the civil service rules. Commissioner Lyman pre sented to the President a rough draft of the contemplated amendments, aud, to gether with Mr. Thompson, discussed with the President the probable effect of the proposed changes, and the reasons that, induce the commission to recom mend them. The President is understood to favor the changes. It is believed that one of the rules, us amended, will place all chiefs of divisions within the classi fied service, and thus provide that when changes occur in these positions, that they shall be filled by a certificate from the commission. BUSINESS OUTLOOK. REFOPT OF R. G. DUN A: CO. STILL EN COURAGING. Property owners and residents in the vicinity of Twelfth and Carpenter streets, Philadelphia, are indignant at the careless manner in which human bones are being handled by laborers in the new three foot sewer down Carpenter street, which is the site of the old pot ter’s field, where the victims of the yel low fever of 1832 and the cholera of 1845 were buried. The laborers broke ground on Thursday, and late on that afternoon the first coffiu was struck. It was carelessly throwu on top of the dirt pile, and in the fall the partially rotten boards fell apart, and the skeleton rolled upon the oirt. When the excava tion was enlarged and extended, the la borers found that they were cutting a sluice through ground literally packed with corpses. Coffins that lay parallel with the trench were torn out aud thrown upon the embankment, and others that lay crossw ise were torn out by a stalwart laborer, who, with an ax, quickly cut through the coffin and inclosed body un til the width of the trench was secured. The parts were then picked up on a shovel and throwu upon the embank, ment, to be thrown into barrels. Bones were scattered on all sides. The scenes at the trench were horrible in the ex treme, and the odor was nauseating. About fifty bodies, or portions of bodies, had been taken out. Children living near the scene were running over the embankment handling the remains of the epidemic victims and many of them were carrying away the smaller bones. Rib and breast bones were scattered all over the sidewalks, and some of the children were “building houses” by pil ing up the bones. At one point thirteen coffins lying in a heap had been cut through, aud half the remains were still sticking in the ground. At another point six coffins were cut through, and along the sides of the trench the dis gusting spectacle of partially destroyed coffins aud bodies was discovered. ITEMS OF INTEREST FROM VAs. RIO US POINTS IN THE SO UTH. A CONDENSED ACCOUNT OF WHAT IS GOING ON Of IMPORTANCE IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. “OLD BLACK JOE” DEAD. THE ORIGINAL OF THE FAMOUS OLD SONG PASSES AW AY. The original “Old Black Joe” died ai Mount Holly, N. J., Sunday, in the little cabin where he has lived for years, just on the outskirts of the town TTh proper name was Joseph Queen, and he was undoubtedly the oldest man in the state, being 112 years old. He was born in Virginia in 1777, and the fact is recorded in faded characters in an old family Bible. “Old Joe” was a runaway slave, and came to New Jersey in 1827, where he was takeu care of by some of the resi dents qf Mount Holly, one of whom is still living and remembers that he was well along in years when he went there. For years past the townspeople have minister.d to his wants and kept him in comparative comfort. He was very pa- triarchial in appearance, and his form was bent nearly double with the weight of years. A monument will be erected to bis memory by the citizens. IMPROVEMENTS IN GEORGIA THE ORIGINAL OF THE FAMOUS OLD SONG PASSES AWAY. The original “Old Black Joe” died at Mount Holly, N. J., Sunday, inihe little cabin where he has lived for years, just on the outskirts of the town. His proper name was Joseph Queen, and ho was undoubtedly the oldest man in the state, being 112 years old. He was boru iu Virginia in 1777, and the fact is recorded in faded characters in au old family Bible. “Old Joe” was a ruuaway slave, and came to New Jersey in 1827, where lie was taken care of by some of the resi dents of Mount Holly, oue of whom is still living and remembers that bo was well along in years when lie went there. For years past the townspeople have minister, d to liis wants and kept him in comparative comfort, lie was very pa- trinrchiul in appearance, and his form was bent nearly double with the weight of years. A monument will be elected to bis memory hr the citizens. K. G. Dun & Co., in their review ol tjacie for the week ending August 17, report the number of failures in the United States a; 181, and in Canada at 32; a total of £13, against a total of 201 a week ago, and 219 in the correspond ing week last year. In regard to the general outlook, the report says: “Inall directions business prospects continue encouraging, and changes during the last week have beer on the right side. Ex ports increase and the speculative rise in breadstuffs has been checked. Interior cities report a: increase iu the volume of trade, aud the money markets continue nmply supplied, though rates arc gradu ally hardening. The great industries appear to he ia fully as good condition ns last week. Further crop uews sus tain government advices and estimates as to cotton, con and oats, and strengthens the prevailing impression that the Au gust report, in to wheat, was less favor able than the actual situation. Grant was tlo youngest President at his first inauguration. A I’HENOMINAL INCREASE IN THE VALUE OF PROPERTY. j The tax returns for 1SS3 showed that property had increased throughout Gcor- I gia $18,000,000. Every year siuce that i time the returns have shown au increase, i but never lias the amount for the year ! 1883 been equaled. This year, how- i ever, the high water mark will be passed i find a new record established. The lu- ! crease of 1883, which, for many years, i was quo’ed as something phenomenal, , included the improvements iu railroad ■ property, which was a very large factor. The $19,000,000 worth of improvements this year come solely from the tax di- ; gests, leaving ihe railroads out. Should they be included, the statement would prove that Georgia is $25,000,000 richer than slue was last year. HONORING EDISON. Edison is expected at Milan, Italy, i:i I September, where elaborate preparations are being made for his reception. No where in Europe are Mr. Edison's genius and his service to the cause of science better recognized than in Italy, and on his visit to Milan, King Humbert will confer on him the dignity of a grand of ficer of the Italian crown. I Prof. Perry, the aeronaut, whose ter- ■ rible fall from a balloon at Mount Holly, j N. C., was reported several days ago, ! died at Charlotte, Tuesday, j On August 30th, the Eighth Georgia ! battalion will hold a reunion at Adairs- j ville, Ga. Prominent speakers will be on hand and great preparations are being I made for the su cess of the reuuion. The boli worms arc attracting a good | deal of attention in the vicinity of i Brownings, Texas, and are making sad havoc with the cotton. The leu worm i also prevails iu different localities. Mrs. John P. Richardson, of Chatta- I nooga, Tenn., arrived at New York a few ; days ago, and. upon opening her bag gage, lound she had been robbed of | $3,000 worth of jewelry, probably on i the railroad. There is no clue to the ; robber. ; The Keating Railroad Company, of | Reading, Pa., closed a contract Saturday with the Stauntou andWest Augusta Rail- j road Company at Staunton, Va., to build j twenty-five miles of railroad from Staun ton to the anthracite coal fields. The work 13 to commence in thirty days. A report from Raleigh, N. C., says that Dr. Eugene Griscom will tender his resignation as superintendent of the North Carolina insane asylum. The res ignation of Dr. Grisrom will end oue of the greatest sensations in the state. Nine-tenths of the people and newspa- | pers have clamored for i; for weeks. There will be a grand reunion of na tive North Carolinians, now residents in other states, at the state capitol, Raleigh, October 14-19th, at the Southern Indus trial Display and Annual State Fair. The lowest possible rales have been fur nished by the railways, and there will be no obstacle iu the way of those who wish I to revisit the old scenes and renew the tender associations of past years. The board of directors of the cotton exchange A New C. leans, has sent to all exchanges and hoards of trade an invita tion to a convention of the cotton inter est, to take place iu that city on Sep tember 11th, to agree on a uniform method in adjustment of difference in tare between cotton and jute bagging. The proposition is that from a certain date all cotton shall be sold bv net weight, allowing 5 per cent, of gross weight for jute and 3 V per cent, for cot ton bagging. __ - In n^wer to certain inquiries made by the collector at Charleston, S. C., rela tive to drawback on the jute bagging im ported as covering of cotton in bales, the Treasury Department holds: First, that the official supervision of lading should be as cartful and thorough ss possible. Second, whenever it is found impracti cable for the exporter to give in prelimi nary entries, the numbers of the various brands of bales ia each lot, it will be sufficient if the numbers are stated in the inspectors' return. Third, sworn state ment of exporter required l.v the regu lations should be made by an active shipper who has knowledge of the fact. Fouith, agents or attorneys should not be allowed to sign the final entry and oath of exportation when the exporter himself is present at the port of ship ment. ASKED TO RESIGN. THE PEOPLE OF A NORTH CAROLINA TOW MAD W ITU THEIR MAYOR. There is a very decided sensation ; the town of Windsor, the county scat i Bertie, N. C. It culminated in a ma meeting of citizens, which unanimous! adopted the following resolutions afti mature deliberation: “We believe thi A. J. Pritchard, mayor of Windsor, hi willfully, maliciously and corruptly pro tituted the office of mayor to his person ends, and thereby brought shame an lisgrace upon the office and reflection upon the go. d citizens of said town an community; therefore, be it Resolvet That the aforesaid A. J. Pritchard, ma\\ ol Windsor, be requested to resign tl ffiee of mayor forthwith.” A cornmi tee presented the resolutions to tl mayi r. who refuses to pay any attentio to them. A HOLOCAUST. HEAVY FINE. THE RESULT OF IMPORTING FOREIGN LA BORERS UNDER CONTRACT. A FIRE IN NEW YORK IN WHICH NIN* LIVES ARE LOST. The United States Court at Austin, Texas Friday morning, James Wilkee and Abner Taylor pleaded guilty to the importation of skilled laborers from Eu rope, to work on the new capitol. and were fined $1,000 and costs, each, of sixty-four eases. Early Monday morning fire broke out in a big five-story tenement at 305 Sev enth avenue, New York. Nine of the sixty-odd occupants of the house lost their lives. The dead are: William Cienr.oa, Nellie McGloghun, Mary Wells, Jane Wells, Thomas Wells, Bertha Jus- tig, William Mokee, Jano Jeffrey, and au unknown woman.