The Middle Georgia argus. (Indian Springs, Ga.) 18??-1893, September 07, 1893, Image 1
VOL XXI.
JACKSON.
JACKSON is the county Rite of
Putts county, Georgia, situated on the
Past iennessee, Virginia and Georgia
Railway, between Atlanta and Macon,
en a high ridgo or water shed dividing
the Ocmulgee and Towauga rivers.
r l}ie climate is very equable, and one
of the most healthful in the world,
the atmosphere always being pure
and bracing. All manner of out
door work can be performed any
month in the year without inconveni
ence from summer heat or winter
cold. Iho town of JACKSON now has
a population of near two thousand
with a steady increase. It lias a male
and female High Scheol with a fine
corpse of professors offering unexcelled
educational facilities, several churches
of various denominations, all well
supported; splenid hotel accommo
dations, large carrigage manufac
tory, first-class shoe shops, etc., with
over thirty business houses, it is now
one of the best cotton markets in the
Htatc, ns the cotton brokers here keep
close up to the Atlanta quotations. It is
situated in the home of tlie peach, the
grape, the pear, and all kinds of fruit
gr. >w here in abundance, in fact every
thing necessary to sustain the life of
manor beast can be grown here in
large quantities, property of all kinds
cheap, and the inhabitants of the town
and county are cultivated, courteous
and hospitable, and eagerly welcome
all emigrants who come among them
to get a home. There are numerous
water powers in the county
lying idle, only waiting the
capitalist to tako hold and
build them up. Manufactories of any
kind of wood work to utilize the vast
quantitiesof valuable timber lying near
by th ese water powers would pay hand
some dividends.
Any information in regard to town
or county will be furnished by ad
dressing Thf. Middle Georgia Argus,
or l>. J. Tliax-ton, real estate agent,
Jack roll. Ga.
M. V. MCpiBBRN. A. W. LANE.
M’KIBBEN & LANE,
Attorneys at Law,
.1 \OK SON, GEORGIA.
LUCIKN L RAY, CLAUDE C. RAY,
Atheus, Ga. Jacks n, Ga.
RBY & BUY,
ATTORNEYS
Negotiate loans on real estate lower
than any Loan Broker in Georg.j.
Supuior advantages in collecting
el lin.s in the South.
Practice in all Courts, both Federal
uni State. Also Supreme Court of U.
S. A. by speci and contract.
l)r. 0. 11. Cantrell,
DBBTPIST,
Jackson, - - - Georgia.
’ Office on corner Third and Holly
sinc s.
DR 1 K. TIIAUPE,
DBMTIST,
FLO VILLA, - - GEORGIA.
Crown and bridge work aDd all the
latest met In ds or dentistry. Teeth ex
tracted without pain. Prices moderate.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
WRIGHT & RECK,
Attorneys at Law.
(OFFICE IN COURT 1101 SE.)
JiSLCISSOJSr, • -
M. M. MILLS,
Counsellor & Attorney at Law.
Will practice in all the courts. Mo ci
loaned < n r al estate at lovv rate of inter
<st. Long tme granted with small piy
<nenta. Money obtained at once without
ielay.
(office in couf.t u'susa.)
Wilkinson House.
Fii t Cutss in Every Particular.
Th oily brick hotel between Atlanta
aid Xi co*s.
(’ .nvement to a!l bus>nes.
Mrs A. E. Wilkinson, Prop
Slop AT I’ilE
Morrison House.
EVERYI'UIMi -VSIK AJSD FJIiST
CLASS.
Conveniently Located,
Free Hack to no*
C. I>. Greham, Prnpriet r.
UPPMAW BROS.. Prcpre*crs,
Prugslits, Llppman'o Block. SAVANNAH, 6A
§p®iii (feflwp®
CUE LATEST DISPATCHES.
Tie Happcuirgs o! a Day CironicM in
Erie! ata Concise Paraaxapis
And Containing tie (list of the Jiews
From All Parts of the World.
Sunday’s dispatches state that no
new cases of cholera have developed in
Jersey City.
A large part of the business portion
of the town of Magnolia, Ark., was de
stroyed by tire Friday morning. The
loss is §40,000, insurance $22,000.
At 6 o’clock Sunday evening the
Louisviile and Nashville railroad em
ployes of all classes except telegraph
operators, in Evansville, Ind., struck.
Pierre Lorillard lias decided to sell
his entire stable of horses in training
and to temporarily retire from the
turf. r J he first sale eomes off at
Sheepshead Bay, September Bth.
A dispatch from Woodsville, N. H.,
says: There was a severe frost on Urn
highlands in this region Saturday
night. Vegetation was damaged con
siderably, but a heavy fog saved the
river crops.
Six skeletons have been found on
President’s island, six miles from
Memphis, Tenn., supposed to be those
of the crew and passengers of the ill
fated steamer Gold Dust, which was
burned a few years ago.
The Panola cotton mills, located
thirteen miles south of Atlanta, at the
village of Panola, have been destroy
ed by fire and over sixty people
thrown out of employment. The loss
is estimated at over §50,000, partially
covered by insurance.
A Savannah, Ga., special of Satur
day says: It is now certain that the
official report of the loss of the steam
er City of Savannah will severely cen
sure the captain of two tugs and
a schooner sighted at the time the
ship lay aground off Hunting island.
A St. Louis dispatch of Sunday says:
Charles A. Gunn, under arrest as a
suspected train robber, has been pos
itively identified by the crew of the
Mobile and Ohio train he held up in
June last and his case has been turned
over to the officials of the Southern Ex
press company, who w ill prosecute.
Dispatches from Port Royal state
that no more dead bodies were found
Saturday about Port Royal, Beaufort
and the outlying islands; at least, none
were reported. The rain,which began
falling Friday night, continued
throughout the day Saturday and boat
men were not brave enough to row
from one island to another.
Dispatches from Arkansas City
bring news of a fight between the
Dalton gang and the United States
marshal’s posse, in which two of the
marshal’s men w’ere killed and Deputy
Houston fatally wounded. N. A.
Walker, N. D. Murray, G. W. Ransom
and a boy armed Briggs were wounded
and a young man named Simmons in
stantly killed.
Outlaws held up the ’Frisco passen
ger train at the little town of
Mound Yalley, Kas., at 4 o’clock Sun
day morning, shot and killed Express
Messenger Chapman and robbed the
passengers. They secured nothing
from the express car, but not a pas
senger escaped. Even the women
were relieved of jewels and money.
A cable dispatch from London states
that the house of commons will not
adjourn before September 27th. The
leaders of the unionists are busy plot
ting trouble for Mr. Gladstone. Bal
four, Chamberlain and Sir Henry
James decided in a conference Satur
day to defer as long as possible the
adjournment, and thus defeat the gov
ernment’s plan for an autumn session.
A Denver, Col., dispatch says: Dr.
Thatcher Graves, the convicted poison
er of Mrs. Josephine Barnaby, com
mitted suicide in his cell in the county
jail Saturday night, presumably by
taking poison. On his person was
found a note which ran as follows:
“To the Coroner of Denver. Dear
Sir : Please don’t hold any autopsy on
my remains. The cause of death may
be rendered as follows: ‘Died from
persecution; worn out, exhausted.’”
A dispatch from Rome, Ga., says:
Chester Scott, the noted train robber
and desperado and convicted of mur
dering Sheriff - McGinnis-, of Gordon
county, along with five other prison
ers in the Floyd eounty jail, escaped
Saturday night shortly after 7 o’clock.
The escape was most daring. Jailer
Copeland was knocked down, his wife
and mother were run over and with
crowded streets within a few feet all
made good their escape.
Wlrat will prove, perhaps, the most
disastrous street ear accident ever re
corded took place in Cincinnati Sun
day evening at 7 o’clock. An electric
car dashed down a hill at frightful
speed, left the track, broke a telegraph
pole and shot into a saloon, wrecking
both it and the structure it struck.
Asa result of the collision two people
are dead, six injured beyond recovery
and nearly forty more are hurt, many
dangerously.
A Jacksonville special says: There
is no yellow fever in Florida. The
state has a clean bill of health. A dis
patch received from State Health Offi
cer Porter at the state health office
Sunday states that the sickness of
Newmann, at Port Tampa, announced
on the 29th as yellow fever, is not
yellow fever, as a subsequent diagnosis
shows. He has since declared all re
strictions oft - and the people may
Port Tampa and come as they please.
A New York dispatch of Saturday
gives the statement for the Georgia
railroad for the year ending June
30tb, which shows: Net earnings,
$484,771, an increase of 109,444;
charges, §626,727, a increase of
JACKSON, GA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER T. 1893.
$2,011, and deficit, §141,956, a de
crease of §107,433. Coupons from
the Georgia Pacific Railroad com
pany’s 5 per cent, equipment mort
gage bonds due August 1, 1893, will be
paid by the receivers on presentation
at the Central Trust company of New
York.
A Washington special of Sunday
says: The United States treasury is
depleted. But little over the gold re
serve remains. Funds must, there
fore, be raised at once. President
Cleveland and Secretary Carlisle had
a conference Saturday and agreed that
of all the plans proposed the best was
to coin the seigniorage of silver now
in the treasury. That amounts to
§52,000,000. Mr. Carlisle talked with
the leaders of both houses of congress
about the matter end found them
all in favor of the plan.
Several deputy sheriffs of Birming
ham, Ala., with a number of blood
hounds, arrived in Clarke county Sat
urday night, where they went on a
telegraphic call from the sheriff of
that county. They say they have
found the trail of the ’Meacham gang
of outlaw's. The sheriff of that coun
ty anticipates serious trouble in cap
turing them, and has called for depu
ties from a number of counties. It
was given out a few days ago that the
gang had made their escape aud left
the state, but the report was untrue.
NEWS FROM PORTROYAL.
Many More Dead Bodies Being Found
and Unceremoniously Buried.
A special from Port Royal, S. C.,
states that the islands around Port
Royal aud Beaufort presented a sad
der scene Friday than w r as that of
Thursday. The waters have begun
receding rapidly, and as they disap
pear, leaving the land in view', pictures
of desolation and destruction multi
ply. Dead bodies are being found on
all portions of every one of the islands
and in most instances decomposition
has gone so far that anything like a
certain recognition is almost impos
sible.
The discovery of the bodies is sad
enough but the burial which they are
given enhances the sadness of the
story. No one has time now to join a
funeral cortege unless the funeral be
that of a member of his own family.
Those who have not lost by death a
relative are kept busy repairing the
damage to their property or saving what
they can from the wreckage. The dead,
when found, are left on the ground
where discovered until grave diggers
can be secured. Then a shallow
hole is made in the earth by scooping
out the mud. No digging is now'
necessary, as the earth is almost a
puddle for from two to ten feet. The
hole once made the body is dumped
in without coffin or clergy and the
mud trampled back again. Sometimes
the discoveries are so frequent and the
burials so multiplied that more than
one body is placed in tkesame hole.
SIGNS OF BETTER TIMES.
Mauy Big Business Concerns Resume
Operations.
The Oliver Iron and Steel Company
at Pittsburg, Pa., started up with
non-union men Friday. The compa
ny has enough orders on hand to run
the whole plant for an indefinite peri
od, and there is very little stock on
hand. The plant emjjloys about 4,000
men and has been idle since June 30.
Business and banks of Kansas
City are unanimous in their opinion
that the low points in the present
financial depression has been reached
in that city, and that the upward
ward movement has begun. Bank
presidents estimate that the banks
have gained §2,000,000 in deposits
since the run in July.
The suspended Bank of New Eng
land, at Manchester, N. H., having
assets sufficient to pay depositors and
■tockholders in full and have a sur
plus, will resume in a few days.
The St. Louis Stamping Company
has resumed business, Mr. W. F.
Neidringhaus, the proprietor, agree
ing to sign the Amalgated scale. This
will effect 10,000 persons.
A general mass meeting of the
striking coal miners held at Leaven
worth, Kas., decided to declare the
strike at an end and return to w’ork at
the old scale.
The Cocheco Manufacturing Compa
ny,at Dover, N. H., will start up Sep
tember 6, after a three weeks’ shut
down.
THE WOMEN RESCUED.
They Were Passengers on the Wrecked
Steamer Savannah,
At 2 o’clock Friday the tug Paulsen
arrived at Savannah with all of the
missing lady passengers of the City
of Savannah safe aboard. A great re
ception was extended them. When
the tug was sighted the news ran like
wild-fire over the city. A great crowd
quickly assembled on the wharf below'
the city exchange. As the Paulsen
came up she was saluted by tugs and
other steam crafts in the river. Marine
glasses showed that the decks of the
puffing little boat were crowded.
A number of them were taken off
Harbor island and the others from
Hunting island. At the former place
they were the guests at Senator Don
Cameron’s winter home, and at the
latter they were cared for at the homes
of the lighthouse keepers.
The women looked dilapidated when
they came off the tug. None had a
change of clothes when they left the
wreck and some had only their
' night dresses. These were provided
| for by the islanders, but not with
fashionable garments. All the ladies
were browned by the sun and the sea
; spray. They tell the experiences of
thieir trip through the breakers in the
| small boats. The sailors worked nobly
and skilfully. Their passengers were
soaked through and through but that
was no novel experience after the day
and night in the rigging,
AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL.
Affairs of Government anfl Mine ot
tie Honse and Senate Discussed,
Notes of Interest Concerning the Peo
ple and Their General Welfare.
There are eleven contested election
cases now before the house of repre
sentatives.
There will be no delay about the
work of tariff revision. Chairman
Wilson Wednesday morning called to
gether the committee on ways and
means. It was decided that the com
mittees have daily sessions until Sep
tember 20th, when the tariff bill will
be presented to the house. "Wilson,
McMillin and Turner will be leaders
in framing the democratic bill.
Senator Gray, of Delaware, one of
the closest senators to the president,
says that Mr. Cleveland is anxious
that the work of reforming the tariff
be proceeded with immediately after
the consideration of the silver repeal,
and is also anxious that congress re
main in session until December. W.
D. Bynum is also authority for the
statement that congress will remain in
session.
The treasury department has ordered
all the gold bullion in the department
coined immediately. This bullion is
in the form of bars, and as it cannot
be used in that shape it has been de
cided to coin it. There is about
§90,000,000 in bullion, and as the
coinage capacity of the Philadelphia
mint is only §6,000,000 a month, it
will take more than a year to coin the
bullion on hand at present.
The bill introduced in the house
Tuesday afternoon by Mr. Spring
er to coin the seigniorage silver
bullion in the treasury, will be
favorably reported from the commit
tee on coinage. The bill undoubtedly
will pass the house and get the presi
dent’s signature. It will mean an ad
dition of at least fifty million dollars
to the circulating medium, and, to
gether w'ith Yoorhees’ national bank
bill, will increase the currency of the
country nearly one hundred million
dollars.
Senator Butler, of South Carolina,
returned from the south to Washing
ton Friday morning. He found a tel
egram from Port Royal informing him
of the condition of affairs there and
urging him to join with the other
members from his st „' 3 and see wffiat
could be done to relieve the people
who are in distress. The senator will
call on the secretary of war and en
deavor to secure some action by that
department in the nature of an order
providing a supply of tents and ra
tions for those who are homeless and
without food. The senator does not
see any hopes of securing relief
through legislative action, for con
gress has always in the past declined
to appropriate money for this sort of
relief, holding that that was the duty
of the state. Mr. Butler will do every
thing in his power, though, to bring
relief of som sort to those who are suf
fering.
A Washington special of Wednesday
says : The story about Mr. Cleveland
having part of his jaw bone removed
on account of a cancerous growth in
the mouth proves to be correct. Dr.
Hasbrouck, one of the physicians
who aided in performing the operation
on the first of July, while Mr. Cleve
land was on the yacht of his friend,
Mr. Benedict, confirms the story. He
says more than an inch of his jaw bone
was removed. Mr. Cleveland stood
the operation well and his physicians
state that it will probably not affect
his general health. All the diseased
tissue was removed and the incision
healed thoroughly at once. There is
a fear, however, that in the near future
it will prove more serious than the
physicians will admit. The subject
was freely discussed at the capital
Wednesday, and much anxiety was ex
pressed about the condition of the
president’s health.
The Administration’s Policy.
During the last few days Secretary
Carlisle has had several conferences
with the leading members of both
houses of congress in which he has
stated that the administration prefers
that congress pass but two financial
measures for the present. These are the
unconditional repeal of the Sherman
law and the Yoorhees bill, allowing na
tional banks to issue currency to the par
value of bonds on deposit. After thiß
is done the administration prefers that
congress will hands off financial mat
ters for the present and allow the
strained situation of the country to
right itself. After that is done and
business is progressing smoothly and
the banks get on a firm basis again
then congress may consider the repeal
of the ten per cent tax on state banks,
and the hundreds of othar financial
propositions which have been suggest
ed and introduced in the shape of
bills in the two houses of congress.
Silver in the Senate.
The senate committee on finance
Tuesday morning decided to report
back to the senate the Wilson repeal
bill with the recommendation that the
Yoorhees bill, already on the senate
calendar, be substituted for it. The
committee also resolved to set aside
the national bank circulation bill,
which is now unfinished business in
the senate in favor of the Voorhees
bill, and press the latter measure as
rapidly as the temper of the
senate will permit. The dif
ference between the house bill
and the Yoorhees bill is found in the
attachment to the latter of a para
graph declaring that it is the policy of
the United States to use both gold
and silver as money metals, and to
preserve the parity. The program of
the committee, as far as jt contemi
plates the setting aside of the national
bank bill, can only be carried out
through the aid of the majority in the
senate, for the national bank bill can
not be withdrawn or set aside save
through a majority vote in favor of
the consideration of the repeal bill.
THE PRESIDENT’S RETURN.
The Sojourn at Gray Gables Benefi
cial to All.
President Cleveland, accompanied
bp Mrs. Cleveland, their daughter,
Ruth, nurse and maid, arrived in
"Washington Friday morning from
Buzzard’s Bay, Mass.
The party were met by Secretary
Thurber with carriages and driven to
the white house in a drenching rain.
Mr. Thurber was afterward asked as
to the general health of the party and
he replied that everybody was feeling
first rate, and that the sojourn at Gray
Gables had been beneficial to all.
Mr. Cleveland, in particular, was in
excellent spirits. His eye was bright
and his complexion clear, and he look
ed vigorous and strong.
GOES RIGHT TO WORK.
Mr. Cleveland’s first day at tin,
white house after his absence at the
sea shore, was spent in the hardest of
work. After breakfast, the president
went to his office, and from half past
nine until haif past eleven, he and
Private Secretary Thurber disposed of
a very large amount of accumulated
public business.
A CABINET MEETING.
At half past eleven the babinet meet
ing began, and lasted until one o’clock.
All the cabinet officers were present,
except Secretary Smith. The silver
question was discussed w'ith reference
to the chances for repeal by the sen
ate, and the president expressed him
self as satisfied that his recommenda
tions would be carried out. Another
most important question considered
w'as the condition of the treasury, but
no definite plan of relief was dicussed
with any view to immediate action.
BUSINESS MORE PROMISING.
Bradstreet’s and Dun Give Encourag
ing Reports.
Bradstreet’s report of trade for past
week says: The clouds over the gen
eral business situation throughout the
country have continued to break away.
This is the second week in which the
actual improvement has been recorded,
as indicated by an increase in volume
and distribution of merchandise re
ported at Cincinnati, Chicago, St.
Louis, Kansas City aud Omaha. More
travelers have been sent out from these
and other points, and manufacturing
industries there as well as at larger
eastern centers have in a number of
instances begun starting up, some
without special orders.
R. G. Dun & Cos. says: The indus
trial situation mends but little. The
signs of improvement observed a week
ago were scarcely sustained, for, while
twelve textile and thirteen steel con
cerns have resumed after stoppage,
fifty-five textile and two steel concerns
have stopped. In addition, thirteen
others have reduced working time,
and several have reduced working
forces. A more satisfactory indica
tion is that the failures are greatly
diminished in importance and some in
number. The number reported dur
ing the past week in the United States
is 356 against 148 for the same week
last year, and in Canada 29 against
28 last year. In the eastern states
the failures number 149; in the west
ern 142 and in the southern 65, show
ing an improvement in each section.
THE STRIKE POSTPONED.
The L. & N. Employes Accept a Reduc
tion Until December Ist.
The final conference between the
cheifs and trainmen on one side and
the leading officials of the Louisville
and Nashville on the other, was held
at Louisville, Saturday lasted and from
half past 2 o’clock until 8:15 at night.
The following is the text of the agree
ment reached.
On December Ist there will be an
other conference as to the restoration
of rates. In the meanwhile the 10 per
cent cut will operate as President
Smith’s order intended it should. At
the deferred meeting of the trainmen
and the officials December Ist, the
business before it will be the considera
tion of the restoration of rates and
this' will depend upon the volume of
the road’s business at that time and
its ability financially to restore wages
to the standard existing before the
cut.
The Louisville and Nashville does
not bind itself to restore rates, regard
less of business alone as the trainmen
at first wanted the management to do.
In other words, the question of resto
ration is left open for adjustment at
the time fixed upon.
A Fatal Wreck.
A southbound freight train loaded
with merchandise, was wrecked and
partly burned about ten miles from
Brenham, Texas, on the Gulf, Colo
rado and Santa Fe, Friday. A prai
rie fire had burned away a piece of
track, and as the train came along at
the rate of thirty miles an hour, it
rushed into a bridge spanning a wide
creek. Jack Swanson, the engineer,
was killed and Fireman Dameron and
Brakeman Ford were fatally injured.
Two unknown tramps were killed and
number of others are reported to be in
the ruins.
Banks Resuming Business.
A Washington special of Friday says:
The following national banks, which
: recently suspended payment, have been
permitted tore-open their doors for
: business. The American National Bank
of Nashville,Tenn. ; the First National
i Bank of Grundy Center, lowa, and the
I First National Bank of Barjusonville,
! Missouri,
QUIET AT COAL CREEK.
Governor Turney to Remove the Garri
son of State Troops Stationed There.
Governor Turney, of Tennessee, aftei
an examination into the situation at
Coal Creek, says he has decided to re
move within a week the garrison of
state troops that has been for eighteen
months stationed there. In their place
will be stationed a civil guard of
twenty men, and at Big Mountain half
as many. He thinks there will not be
any more trouble.
Declared to Be Asiatic Cholera.
A cable dispatch of Friday from
London states that the epidemic in
the Lincolnshire seaport, Grimsby,
has been declared officially to be
Asiatic cholera, after having been call
ed a “choleraic disease’’ for many
days. The last victim of the disease
was a woman, who died last Tuesday.
Several other cases before hers had
! ended fatally. The authorities of
Grimsby believe that the cholera was
brought to the city by immigrants
j from the infected ports, Antwerp and
Rotterdam.
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Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
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Cures" rheumatism
uttjuuug up ihe syim rapimy.
Ladies whose systems ore poisoned and whose blood Is \is
an Impure condition, due to inenstrnal Irregularities, are
UHf|f SURE.S
r.r.r. Malaria
poeaTtarly ' i>"" "iTtcd '"V>y *ha "wonder ml'"' tonic™
cUaming nropertlea of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Root
and Pot \ssfum.
LIPPKAH EEO 2., Proprietors,
vtruKgitta, Lippman’a Block, SAV.fi.li K ftA,
RipansTabules.
Ripans Tabules are com
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best medi
cal authorities and are pre
sented in a form that is be
coming the fashion every
where.
Ripans Tabules act gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual constipa
tion, offensive breath and head
ache. One tabule taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
RipansTabules may be ob
tained of nearest druggist.
Ripans Tabules —^
are easy to take,
quick to act, and
save many a doc-i^^^^ 7
Advertise!
It Will
PAY YOU.
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DENVER
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