Newspaper Page Text
Q
The Fayetteville News.
VOL. 2.
FAYETTEVILLE, GA„ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1889
NO. 18.
D. M’LUCAS & SON,
INMAN - GEORGIA.
—DEALER. IN—
BOOTS, SHOES, TIN'-WARE, HARD-WARE, NOTIONS, antS
% * FANCY -GOODS.
^ ^ LARD, CLOTHING, MEAT, CALICOS, RICE, LINDSEYS,
Y LARD, JEANS, and CLOYES, COFFEE, All Qualities.
GRITS SUGAR cf Dry Goods. FLOUR, SPICE
and DRESS GOOiOS. MlEAL, GINGER.
TOBAccO mi CIGARS
We sell as cheap as the cheapest. We compete wifcfc any man
or any town; deal fair, make shoit profits, And handle the best goods.
We thank our costomers for their past liberal patronage, and solicit
a continuance: of the same, sPrices-on all goods G VARAN7 BED.
QUICK SALES1 SHORT PROFITS! FAIR WEIGHTS.
0, Mdiicas A Son.
'4;
35 Mitchell St., cor. Dorset!*..,
ATLANTA,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
MOVEMENTS OF THE PRESIDENT
AND JUS ADVISERS.
S. S. SEjLIG 5
WHOLESALE DEALER IN
Wines, Whiskies, Brandies,
Tobacco and Cigars.
•Carries in stock a full line of Imparted Mid Domestic Goods. Leading brands wf
Bye, Corn and Bourbon Whiskies.
•first-class Corn AVhisLv from $1.50 ie 43-00 per gallon. Eve from $1.50
to $2 00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.5t», $4.00 to $0.00 per gallon.
AY! kinds of Gin for $2.00 per gallon up.
If you want samples send for quart in cartoon boxes. No charge for jugs.
ORDEI18 BY MAIL WILL RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
Wc ask the people of Fayette, Clayton and Caiupboll counties to try our goods
lor family or medicinal use, as we don’t keep any
“ BAR-ROOM LIQUOR. 0
are recommended br doctors, preachers and the best oitiaeua of Ad.lsnta.
S. S. S E LI C,
GEORGIA.
Subscribe for This Papes i
Brimful of choice reading matter for everybody.
.. ^fow 10 TSi0 TI>1:0.
Examine this paper and send us your subscription.
'IT WILL PAY YOU!
ADVERTISE NOW.
FINE JOB WORK
DONE .A.T
THIS OFFICE!
APPOINTMENTS, DECISIONS, AND OTHER MATrERS j
OI INTEREST 1TIOM THE NATIONAL OAITTAL.
Corporal Tanner and Colonel W. W. j
.Dudley, both ex-commissioners of pen- |
si on, have formed a copartnership here !
In the pension and claim business.
A commission of engineers has been
appointed by the secretary.of war tore- :
port on the site of the pioposed bridge j
across the Mississippi nyer at New Or- j
leans.
The attorney-general at Washington is
informed that the irial of the cases of
•alleged frauds in Florida, at the last
presidential election,has already resulted
in three convictions.
Major Isaac Arnold has been ordered
from command of Fort Monroe arsenal,
Va., to command of Columbia arsenal,
Tenn.; Major .T. R. McGinnis, from duty
at Rock Island arsenal to command Fort
Monroe arsenal.
Subpoenas Lave been issued for Mr.
Armour, Secretary Williams and other
persons connected with the Union stock
yards at Chicago to appear at Washing
ton before the United State's senate's
committee investigating thedressed beef
monopoly.
.T. Edgar Engle, assistant chief of the
record division, George A. Bond, clerk,
Samuel B. Ilcasev, assistant chief of the
western division, and Wm. P. Davis,
assistant chief of the middle division,nil
of the pension office, have been asked to
resign. They were among those who
had their pensions re-rated.
The president, on Thursday,appointed
John II. Devaux, of Georgia, to be col
lector of customs for the district of
Brunswick, Ga.; William G. Eleposs,
postmaster at Wythevilie,Va., vice Alex.
S. Ilellor, removed; Thomas Clay Me
Dowell, ef Kentucky, collector of inter
nal revenue .1 or the seventh district of
Kentucky,vice William Cassius Goodloe,
’ deoeaseS.
t Seerotary Proctor is eudeevoring to
make such arraagemonts as will enable
him to leave Washington during the
Christmas holidays in company with
<4e-n. Cook and Capt.iPrn.tt, Superintend
ent of the Carlisle Indian school, for the
purpose of making ft personal visit of
inspection to Mt. Vernon barracks, Aln-
; iiEma, where-(-Jeronimo and his baud of
Apache Indians are now imprisoned,
Thu secretary -lias -boon informed by the
surgeon of the barracks that the tribe is
uiusually sickly thic year, and that there
is especial difficulty found in prevent-
nsrg the spread of the tendency
to -consumption that is charac
teristic of the tribe. -He received
a letter -Saturday from Cnpt. Pratt who
. argued strongly against the removal
of the Indians to a higher latitude or
altitude. The--secretary hopes to tiud a
solution.of the problem by a personal
scrutiny of the<conditionof the barracks.
Dr- Walente, Brazilian Minister, on
| Saturday,,-received a. cablegram from Rio
1 de ri&neiro, stating that United States
j Aiaister .Adams had.established relations
with the government now in the control
of affair-s in that.country. This informa
tion lae communicator! to ithc state de
partment and it is reported that he
urged upon the secretary the expediency
of this government instructing Minister
Adame to-complete the act of formal rec
ognition. While it is doubtless felt by
the state .department that the Republic
of the U nited States of Brazil has been
-established upon a permanent basis, it is
-probable that the act of tormaliiy recog
nizing it through our -minister will be
postponed until tliore is an official head
■or. chief eieautive chosen in pursuance
of,some regular method. A meeting of
the congress in Brazil has been called for
neat month, -when the -new -republic will
probably be launched with a complete
organization. When this is accomplished
tlie-guestiou -ct forms! recognition by
this government will probably not be
delay til.
The annual report of First Assistant
Postmaster General Clarkson shows that
2,770 fourth-class postoflices were estab
lished during the last fiscal year, against
8,864 during the previous year. 1,147
post o Hiefe wero discontinued during the
-same time, making the total number of
offices in operation on July 1, 1869, 38,-
999, of which number 2,063 were presi
dential offices. The whole number of
j sppointmentc of postmasters for the year
| is-20,030, of which 8,854 were on res-
| ignations and commissions expired, 7.-
853 ou removals. 553 on tlie deaths of
postmasters. 2,770 on the establishment
of postoffices. The number of money
order offices in operation uc the close of
the fiscal year was 8,583, increase of 472
for the year. The number of money order
stations in operation July, 1881), was 144,
an increase of 14 over the previous year.
The number of postal note offices in |
operation at the end of tlie year was5S7. |
The reports shows that June SO, 1889, |
SOUTHERN' NEWS.
ITEMS OF INTEREST FROM FA*,
RIO US POINTS' IN TEE SOUTH.
;s UOINO ON rr|
IMPORTANCE IN THE SOCTB I.N STATES.
there wero 401 free delivery postoffiees
in operation, an increase of 41. In <
about live other offices tlie free j
delivery service has been established, j
'Flic annual report of Second Assistant j
Postmaster-General Whitfield shows the i
number of star mail routes in operation j A cosmstaai ACCOryT 0 ,
June 30, I860, was lo,0<7, upon which
the total cost of the service was $3,177,-
105. Colonel Whitfield recommends the
appointment of a commissioner to in
vestigate and report, with a view to
make the carrying of the mail under the
star route system equitable alike to the
government and the contractor, and re
lieve it, as far as posible, from the evils
and iniquities with winch it is burdened.
At the end of the year (here were 128
steamboat routes in operation at an an
nual rate of expenditure of $446,032,
THE NEW PLANT
A fire at Baldwinr-i
Wednesday night cnnsec ;
000. The flame-, origin ate'
lioiel, and the- on'ire bet'
two large warehouo.-s
destroyed.
The valuable barn <A 1.
Orchard Hill farm, ky ,
by lire Suuday morning,
stallions were burned to
mond, Prairie Wilkes.
(., N.
iss of $250.-
1 .o the beneoO
' block, with*
(joining. wer¥
WHICH PRODUCES COTTON SEED WITHOUT
THE LINT.
The new liutlcss cotton plant men
tioned in these columns some time ago,
is attracting considerable attention.
There seems to be no doubt about the
existence of such a plant, as proof of it
is exhibited in Charleston. Ttiere were
received there Tuesday a box of bolls
raised in Sumter county all contnining
cotton seed without a fibre of lint.
This new plant which was
tried in Spartanburg county,
will, it is claimed*, produce from 3u0 to
Webster,
us. destroyed
Four note*
nth—Evarn-v
Larkiu and
i Weaglc-ment. The loss ,t $75,009. i
Arrangements were ir-ade at lticb-^
mond, Va., Thursday t restore sarv..»
from Richmond to Lync'Lb rg and thd
southwest, over the Richmond ami :>an*
ville and Norfolk and Western/via Bun-,
kcrville. The schedule goes into etle-^
at once.
The Randolph county. West Virgin:*
capitalists purchased one hundred tlio-vis^.
and acres of land, which is occupied byf
squatters, who have armed themselves td
resist eviction. One surveyor tea al-t
ready been killed, and serious trouble
anticipated, as the settlers will fight.
A dispatch says that on Thursday a£
many seed as it can hold, the bolls being
the size of the average cotton boll,and ev- j
ery individual seed is as clean as a Boston |
bean. The importance of this matter may ;
be understood when it is remembered ]
that there are thousands of cotton oil j
mills throughout the south, and when it j
is added that the propagators of thisnewr
wounded; and eight others injured.
Another meeting was held at the Mtiv
chants' exchange ac Nashville, Tenn., -
Saturday night in the interest of th«f
fund to save Jefferson Diyis’ home-
A committee was appointed to go 8.4
lively to work at or.ee. A number if
tnoro than an acre of cotton.
cotton plant claim that at the present ; subscriptions have already been made.;
price of cotton seed, an acre of the new | A number of gentlemen arrived
plant wilL yield from 300 to 100 per cent, 1 Denver, t.ol., on fcaturday from Re*-.*
i county, Ivan., to locate government tan<1-4
1 in South Santa Fe for a colony of '*0(j
l Mcnnouites, who propose settling on U<f
j line of the -.Atchison, ’ opeka and Soirfal
; Fee road. It is the firft_ colony of th^
• kind to locate iu the territory. jf
j William Carpenter and Whitfield M 6
rell were convicted at Edgefield. B.*C i
- Presi ut.
ORANGE INTERESTS.
ORANGE GROWERS’ UNION AND FLORIDA
FRUIT EXCHANGE CONSOLIDATED.
The board of directors of the Florida
Orange Growers’ union have been iu ses
sion for two days at Ocala, and the re-
Thursday, of the murder
A.
*
suit is the consolidation of the Orange i N ounce in -Time Inst. The min _ "U v.
Growers’ union and the Florida Fruit ex- j most brutal and unprovoked. 1 JC
change. The outcome of the consolida- oners were sentenced tube hnege- _
tioa will be to place nearly all i the third of next January, i- l - J - ■
of the orange crop in the hands j the first white murderers cont.c-.cci
of the exchange which lias already lian- j Edgefield county for forty years. J!
died 6,000 boxes of oranges this season, i Governor Taylor, of Ten tu-see, tv-*
an incicase of 500 per cent, oyer the pro- ! Friday, acted upon the rase or the to ■£ •
j Barnards, sentenced to hang for unit^ A *
iu Hancock county. The goviru r 'V-.H"*
i doneil absolutely .John, Jr., ant
Barnard, commuted to five years
1 vious year. The total orange crop of
j Florida this year is estimated at from
I l^OO.OOO to 2,100,000 boxes. The ex
change, through its agencies in various
j sections of the state, probably control at
I least l,500,0e0 boxes of this crop. This
1 consolidation marks a new era iu market
ing Florida oranges and it is expected
j that it will save growers at least $100,-
| 000 this year.
ft
GREAT PRAIRIE FIRE,
DESTRUCTION OF CHOPS, FENCES
TREES—HEAVY LOSSES.
I Pacsetigers who arrived at Fort Worth.
: Tex., on the south-bound Fort Worth
I and Deliver train, Wednesday night, re-
: ported that a terrible prairie ami forest
j tire was raging for over ten miles along
j the road, and back from the road for
■ more than a mile. The lire caugtit from
j a locomotive, and a high wind from the
j west blowing the flames, they soon licked
I up hay, -corn, oats, fences, barns and
I farmhouses. Railroad men, fanners and
j stockmen worked diligently, hut were
unable to arrest the spread of the flames.
Great trees are on lire, and the situation
is critical. Tlie fire begins south o(
Rhone, iu Wise county, and ends near
Herman, ten miles distant. Tho loss will
reach thousands Of dollars.
A MORMON GROWL-
4
3n:.,A
THEIK MANNERS AND CUSTOMS EXPOSED I
11Y THE COURTS.
A dispatch from Salt Lake City, Utah, I
says: The investigation in regard to the I
endowment house oaths and teachings ol
the Mormon church was resumed in the j
district court Saturday. James E. Tal-
mage, principal of the Mormon college
in Salt Lake, testified that pupils of his
schools were taught that the revelation
iu regard to plural marriage was from
God; that the constitution, when prop
erly administered, did not interfere with
any revelat ions of God. Witucsssaid ho
believed polygamy was right and the law
against it unconstitutional, notwith-
peniteutiarv the seuten:es of Clin:
Anderson Barnard, and to ten years
of old man John Barnard.
A special to the Nashville A V
from Hopkinsville, Ky., says: ItHCiMf
lion is received to the effect that JoscqWf
A. Smith, the man who killed W. Fj
Williams, town marshal of Trcnfon, \
village on the Louisville and NashviJ'*#'
railroad, several miles s - ith of tins cT*yA•
two weeks ago, was taken from jp’.j a?
Elktou. the county seat of Todd, Sifndayj
night, by a mob, and hanged to a tree ir»
the courthouse yard. ** . ^
A meeting- of stockholders of
Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potonxi
Railroad company was held at „f!: .h \
mond, Ya., on Wednesday. The rep. rAl
thowt-d the operations of the road f -t' 4
nine months ended June 30, I860.. !iw ■
come was $502,434; expen&cs of irius£-
portatiou $307,068; interest on bonds
nine mouths $31,271. Dividends •
general stock for nine months $26,25
net profit $137,823. l
Governor Taylor has received petitions
from 3,000 prominent citizens iu Easti
Tennessee and letters from a majority oi:
the supreme judges, requesting Him tuJ.
pardon or commute the sentence^of dealt#
passed on the five Barnard brothers wiJ
killed Henley Sutton, iu Hancock coair-1
ty last January. After a careful exombf
nation of tho record, the goveucor l .isi
decided to commute the sentence* of 1.11.;
and lie may pardon some of the five.
NEW OFFICERS
OF THE EAST TENNESSEE, VIROfNJU
GEORGIA RAILROAD.
13
i
At the annual meeting of the E;.s
Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia railroa^
held at KuoxvHle,Teun., on Wednesday4
the following directors were elected!
John If. Inman, Samuel Thomas, Charjo*
M. McGhee, Calvin S. Brice, John
standing the decision of the supreme I ihomas N. Logan, Edward J*
court of the Uniicd States. All pupils ^nford, _ \S . S. Chtsholni, John GretnJ
were taught to obey the revelation of L Bull, George Coppell^
celestial marriage. Witness thought
about ouo iu thirty of his friends was a
polygamist. He bolieved the president
of the church was divinely called and
would obey him.
John II. Hall, Evan P. Howell, George
8. Scott and George J. Gould. - *
You should -ubserib' lor this
by all means,
. F. 1