The Weekly chronicle. (Fort Gaines, Ga.) 1891-????, February 13, 1891, Image 1
* Volume 1. HAPPENINGS HERE AND THERE Related to Oar Readers In the Short est Manner Possible. Within the past year, twenty-five barns bare been borne*! ^n farms in Lin coln county, Tenn., and in almost ev ery instance the fires have been traceable to incendiarism* The farmers, in order to protect themselves, banded together, and mob law would have probably been the result, had not the county court taken the matter in hand, ordered blood hounds, and offered a reward of ssot for the capture and conviction of the guilty parties. An Ei Paso lady, in an effort to smug gle over a music box, applied the instru ment to herself after the manner of*a bustle. The officer had propounded to her the last question and was about to leave when the car stopped suddenly and set the music box a-going. And the so-called bustle played Annie Laurie ! Alfred Call ran the tines of a pitchfork through the h^ad of Thomas King, near Spokane Falls, Wy. King had drawn a revolver on Call. Charles Miller, fifteen years old. has been sentenced to be hanged at Chey enne, Wyo., March 30. He murdered two boys named Fishburg and Emerson. Mr. C. A. Hoy and wife, of Holliday, Kan., were run down by a Kansas Southern train Wednesday morning. Mra. Hoy was instantly killed, and her husband was seriously injured. They had been married only a month. Mr. Hoy was the railroad telegraph operator. Mrs. Long and her fourteen-year-old daughter Maggie, almost pounded the life out of Prof. Pierson Myers, princi pal of a public school at Bellaire, W. Va. The Professor had whipped Maggie for chewing tolu in school. Rev. James Sette, a missionary among the Indian tribes around Lake Wiuni peg and Manitoba, writes that the camps of Indians hunting on the east side of Lake Winnipeg, not very far from Blood Vein river, near Doghead, were visited by a band of wolves, about one hundred in numlier. They attacked the camp and killed many Indians and devoured them. One Indian cudgeled and killed twenty wolves; another Indian climbed up a tree with his gun and shot down twenty. One got upon a stage, which was not very high, and the wolves go him down and devoured him. There is a great panic among the Indians in that quarter. The Indians say that there are no deer, consequently the wolves are mad witli hunger. Milton Tootle, Jr. a schoolboy, and heir to a million dollars, eloped with and married Belle Gordon, the sixteeU year-old daughter of a poor farmer liv ing near St. Joseph, Mo. Eight miners were burned to death in the Capin mine, at Iron Mountain, Mich., Thursday evening. Fire was dis covered in the shaft leading to the sixth level about 6 o’clock, and it spread rap idly. The men, who were just prepar ing to ascend to the surface, were cut off, and rescue was impossible. They were cremated alive. Attemps were made to smother the fire by covering the tops of the shafts. Encouraged by the decision rendered some time ago by Judge Johnson, de claring that the colored citizens had the same rights as white persons, the Afro- American League, composed of colored citizens of Milwaukee, have addressed circulars to a number of saloon-keepers, restaurant-keepers and others, who have been reported to the League as discrim inating against colored citizens by re fusing them admission or charging them double prices. The circular is a warn ing to discontinue these practices under threats of prosecution. A tramp in France called at a country house and related his tale of woe, about as the American tramp relates it here, but threatened suicide in case the woman refused him food. She refused, and he cut his throat and died on the veranda, and made her no end of bother. The dead and mangled body of a man was found on a railroad crossing in the heart of Birmingliam, Ala., Wednesday night last. He was identified as a har ness maker named King, who got on sprees. A druggist in St. Petersburg has in vented a method of tipping cigars with a preparation so that they are lighted like a match by rubbing against any hard surface. Now if we can only get the Indians to smoking cigarettes with the con stancy characterizing the efforts of some of our youth in that direction, it will not be long until we shall see them all under the ground or in in stitutions for the feeble-minded. It should be an easy thing to do, too Indians are not very nice in their tastes. THE WEEKLY CHRONICLE. He Turned Into a Mule. I distinctly remember the first hanging I ever saw in a Nevada min ing camp, and as I put in ten years out there, end as hangings came to be of weekly occurrence, I rather pride myself on this feat of memory. A lazy, quarrelsome miner name Rattebone struck a man with a pick one day and killed him, and after a fair trial was found guilty and con demned to hang. On the night pre ceding the execution he sent for me. I had once given him a pipe, and had also written two or three letters for him, and he reasoned that I was his friend. When I entered his presence he held out his hand and said: “Say, now, you don’t believe I’m afraid to hang?” “Oh. no.” “Haia’t no idea I’ll weaken?” “None, whatever.” “ ’Cause I propose to hang with a grin on my face—if I’ve got to hang. There is just one reason why I don’t want to, however, and I want you to do me a favor.” “Well?” “Go to the boys and state the case. There’s an old fellow down the creek named Champlin. A month ago I got into a fuss with him, and he said I’d be hung in three months. This thing will tickle him almost to death, lie’ll say, *1 told you sol’ and he’ll go on about the wicked being cut short in their career, and all that, and I want to disappoint him.’’ "But you are going to hang in the morning.” “Yes, 1 know, but 1 don’t want to, you see. Just go and talk to the boy’s and tell ’em about old Champ and get me off.” I didn’t do anything, of course, says the Denver Republican, and next morning, when he was led out he plead his own cause, but without avail. Just before he was swung off he saw tltb old man in the crowd, and he called him up and said: ‘‘Champ, you piebald, knock-kneed old cuss, you’ll go around bragging that you predicted this, and you’ll swear your hat on your ear and step high. Durn your old hide, but it’s on your account I hate to go. I’ve got to, however, but I’ll get even with vou. Hang me if I don’t turn into a mule and kick you to death afore the year is out.” Five months later a speculator came into our camp on a mule. The animal stood tied to a tree, and when Champ lounged up to pick up a fry ing pan the brute shot out and hit him in the temple and keeled him over stone dead. The Three-Legged Hen. Bradenburg, Ky., Feb. B.—Benja min Mosely, colored, of this place, has quite a curiosity in the shape of a Plymouth Rock hen having three well-developed legs This chicken was hatched two years ago, and is now as large and healthy as any in Mosely’s yard. The third leg is about one four inches long, and has all the toes complete. In walking about she folds it up under the body, but when she stops it drops down, but is never used. Mr. and Mrs. Mosely, like all colored people, are somewhat superstitious, and have never touched her since she was hatched. Mosely has been offered a good sum for her, but has refused all offe rs. One of the most amusing cases of absent mindedness on record is that told on a certain famous professor of one of the northern colleges. He was one day in a book store, deeply absorbed in finding a work to prove some question in dispute. The store was filled with customers, and as the professor started to leave he stopped to shake hands with a few friends. Last of all he extended his hand to a sweet faced lady near the counter, saying: “Good morning, madam. Your face looks very fa miliar, but I am unable to recall your name. ’ Absorbed in thought, he passed out without awaiting the lady’s reply. She was his wife.— Drake’s Magazine. fort Gaines, Georgia. Friday, February 13, 1891. MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA. What We Find to Talk About on Our Texas has 3,129 people in the peniten tiary; Missouri has 1,720, and Georgia comes third with 1,537. In Savannah recently, while Mrs. Kay ton and family were at supper, a thief entered the house and carried off $3,003 worth of diamonds, A negro was sub sequently arrested and charged with the theft, but there was no direct evidence against him. It is thought that the soil and condi tions necssary to the growth of a perfect tobacco exist around Dalton, and a proposition has been made to get up a stock company, employ an expert to bacco grower and make the experiment. A lightning rod man who is visiting country districts in this state gives this terrible warning to people who refuse to patronize him: “An old man down the country refused to have me rod his dwelling. His wife and grown daughter stood on his front porch and cried for a lightning rod. As I mounted my wagon I said to him: ‘Old man, in less than thirty days you will regret this.’ And, gentlemen, it is the truth that in just twenty-nine days from that time the lightning fell on that old man’s house, demolished the house, killed his wife and daughter and completely paralyzed him. ” Editor Webb, of the Monticello Star says: “We are feeling powerful good this week. We have had our life in sured, been vaccinated and collected some old debts.” There is a philosopher connected with ‘.he Macon County Citizen. Here is a slice of his wisdom. A writer in an ex change advises people to “take things just as you find them.” That won’t do in every case. There is a man in jail here now for taking things just as he found them. It is likely that he will go into the coal mining business too. Mrs. J. G. Winter of Atlanta, on Sat urday night last, gave birth to three girl babies It is said that, provision having been made but for one, Mr. Winter was sent to the house of a relative to obtain clothing for No. 2. On his return he found that he had brought just half enough, there being a third visitor to tally unprovided for. Two of the chil dren lived. The parent is doing as well as cofild be expected. A special from Cordele to the Tele graph says that B. F. Morris, city mar shal, while attempting to arrest a bois terous negro, was shot by the negro with a Winchester rifle. The negro es caped. A party of determined men with a pack of bloodhounds are scouring the country for the fugitive. The marshal, tl ough painfully wounded, will recover. Near Camilla. Ga., there is a Justice of the Peace who uses the oath to wit ness as follows; “The evidence you shall give in this case shall be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, and pay all cost, so help you God.” The State of Georgia receives $25,000 annual hire for its convicts. Last year, with only 5-10 convicts, Indiana had paid into her treasury $69,076.68 net profit, Sunday morning between 9 and 10 o'clock two white boys, named Aaron Black and Tommy Somers, found a pil lar caae m an open field adjacent to one of the roads leading from the Boulevard to the brewery in Brunswick. Upon opening the case, which was quite heavy, they found a lot of moss and the remains of a negro infant, that had apparently been born a few days previous. They reported the matter to Mrs. P. Dittman, living near by. No clue, however, could be obtained as to its parentage or other wise, and the remains were buried in the field. The letters ‘ ‘P. B. ” were marked in black on the pillowcase. Sandersville Progress: A contest is now before the courts of this county in volving an estate worih about $15,000. An old lady made a will leaving her property to one set of children. After ward she decided to leave it to another set, and instead of making a second will she had deeds written giving a share to each. Instead of destroying the will she tore it partly across the signature of the witnesses, thinking no doubt that she was tearing off her signature, or was de stroying the validity of the will. She died about six months' ago and in the bottom of her trunk the will and deeds were found One set of children claimed the property according to the will, the other according to the deeds. The case was before the last superior court of this county, and the jury decided in favor of the will. Those in whose favor the deeds were made out are fighting the case. A number of Lawyers have been engaged, and the end is not yet. Weekly Travels. Different Kinds. didn’t think of it. The medicine men among the In dians told them that no bullets could pass through their ghost shirts, but it never occurred to a buck to hang his shirt on a hickory limb and blace away at it and note the result. It was, therefore, “heap disappoint ment” when the shirts didn’t prove bullet-proof. STILL UNSETTLED. Mr. Brown, of Virginia, spoke of Mr. Hough, of Tennessee, as if the name was pronounced “Hoe,” which he claimed was very proper for him to do, but Mr. Hough resented it, and one received two bullets and the other three cuts, and the case is still un settled. Mr. Brown insists that when a man wants to he known as Mr. Huff he need’t go all around the alphabat to accomplish it. WHAT MARY SAYS. Mary Kyle Dallas says that if wo man could see man eating at a table by himself, without any restraint on his hoggish characteristics, she would shrink away from him as from a beast. LIKE AS NOT. A bottle full of whisky was taken out of the earth at a depth of 37 ieet in Connecticut the other day, and the inhabitants are wondering if those Mayflower Pilgrims didn’t take their nip before breakfast along with the rest of the world. ALWAYS THUS. In the early history of Pennsyl vania when a big Indian chief offered to sell a tract of laud big enough to make two counties for twenty gallons of whisky “ye white man went oute and removed ten gallons of ye whiskee and substituted that muche water.” Ye white man hasn’t changed much since that date. SHOULD HAVE WAITED. Henry Williams gave a hack driver $2 to take him to the depot in Savannah in advance of the ’bus, and he got there just in time to be run over by a horse, smashed under a bill board and trampled on by a drove of mules. When the ’bus came roll ing up he was rolled off to a hospital. FAITHFUL UNTO DEATH. A Syracus street car horse which got into the habit of kicking was tied in a stall and’a bag arranged for him to practice on. He began at 7in the morning and kicked until 11:25 with out a let up, and then, broken-hearted and disgusted with man’s ways, he feel on his side and yielded up his life. WILLIAM WAS TENDER. A stranger at Fort Scott, Kas., got into a dispute with William Davis about the weather and pulled his nose. Five minutes later William was dead of heart failure. The doc tors said that if his wife had picked up the rolling-pin and threatened him at any time for years back the result would nave been the same. Rough On the Young Couple. The desire of young married peo ple to prevent the traveling public from ascertaining that they are on their bridal tour was sadly thwarted in the case of a young couple who re cently came to this city to spend their honeymoon. They were mar ried in a small town in Connecticut and started on their honeymoon on a special train that also carried a large number of wedding guests to the nearest city. No sooner had the train left the station than huge pla cards were noticed on the windows near which the happy couple sat. They read, “Just married.” The travelers had a good laugh, in which even the bride and groom felt obliged to join. They did not laugh, how ever, when they reached their hotel in the city, as their trunks were brought to their rooms with printed placards, “Just married,” pasted all over them.—New York Times. A West Virginia school teacher warned the girls that anyone who chewed gum was not only to be classed with the cow Creation, but could not hope to enter the Kingdon of Heaven. After he had been licked by several fathers and broth ers he put his theory in his pocket and skipped out. NOT FOUND IN THE ALMANAC. Some Funny Paragraphs Overlooked by the Almanac Writers. Let the g. o. p. wear mourning, While the bloody* shirt it tears, Vitriolic John Jeems Ingalls Hath crawled up the golden stairs. Husband—“l don’t think much of that Bramble girl.” Wife—“ Well, you had better not.” “Then what reason have you for mar rying?” “I’ve no reason at all. I’m in love. An exchange speaks of water in which no fish can live, and yet the citizes of a town near by are compelled to drink it. Well, fish can’t live on whisky, either, but a great many people drink it with out compulsion or water. Rev. Mr. Talmage says that we wilj sing belie. the «econd day we are in Heaven than we did the tirsi.. 12 of us didn’t sing any better the second day than on the first the music-loving angels would want to Move out, Henry Clay was asked by a lady, after the death of Jackson, what his belief was as to the fate of Jackson. "Is he in the good place?” “My opinion is, madam, that if Jackson made up his mind to go to Heaven all hell could not keep him out.” You claim that you were insane when you proposed to her?” “Yes, sir.” Can yon prove it?” ‘ Yes, sir.” “How?” "By producing the plaintiff in court and letting the jury look at her.” Gushley—“Did you ever, like the poet, ‘stand on the bridge at midnight?’ ” Rounder—“No, but I’ve often stood on bobtail flush at about that hour of the evening. St. Peter—" What’s the matter at the portal ?” Spirit—“ One of the Four Hundred has arrived and refused to go in by the regular gate. He wants to know where the stockholders’ entrance is.” Boarding-house Mistress—“l thought you said your appetite was poor when you came here ?” Gredy boarder—“lt was, but starvation has got in its work.” Doctor—“ Well, my little fellow, you have got quite well again. I was quite sure the pills I left for you would cure you. How did you take them in water or in cake? “Oh, I used them in my blow-gun!” He “Wasn’t in It.”—Sanso—“Have you been playing poker for money ?” Rodd (disconsolately)—“No; but the fellows I’ve been playing with have.” Passenger—“ls this ticket good to stop off?” Conductor—“Yes'm. But it won’t be good to git on again.” It is strange how a man will himself admit thathe is a fool, yet if any one else tells him so he will get hopping mad. Appeal of a Very Young Lawyer— “ Gentlemen of the jury, I beseech you, acquit my client for my sake, for this is my first case!” Ethel (to her younger brother who had been whipped)—“Don’t mind, bruz zer, don’t mind.” Brother (between his tears) —That’s just what I was licked for, not minding.” “Daughter,” said Mrs. Bellows, in dignantly, after Jimpson had taken his departure, “how came your hair so dis arranged ?” “I shook my he id so much while he was trying to get me to say ‘yes,’ ” replied the quick-witted girl. Dr. Pilsbury—“Well, Mr. Sceptic, did you follow my prescriptions?” Scep tic—“No; if I had I would have broken my neck.” Dr. P.—“ Why, what do you mean?” Sceptic—“l threw the prescriptions out of the window.” She—“ George, you are a bundle of inconsistencies! George—Why, what do you mean! What have I done? She —All last summer at the beech you gave me nothing but gas; now you become economical and want it turned down. There has been a hue and cry all over Georgia for better roads. The newspapers have talked the matter, the grand juries have recommended, and even a state road congress has been called, and yet nothing has been done. The law is inactive and inert, and the legislature has failed to make it effective. There is an ele ment in every community whose sel fishness and lack of public spirit causes it to antagonize every under taking which calls on it to take any part in the performance of any public work, and it is the influence of this spirit which renders our legislators so inert and indifferent. Wild West W'arnlngs, From the way the Arizona Kicker warns the city officials of the town it is published in, there is not much genuine pleasure to he derived from holding an office there. Below you r ill find a few samples. A WISE MAN. The deadlock in the Common Council was broken last night by the absence of Col. Taylor. The colonel couldn’t help being absent. Some of the boys had him in the suburbs, un der a tree, with a rope around his neck. It was either hang or break the combination, and the colonel de cided to help break it. We want to say right here and now that if there is any more “fuss ing” in the council we will move to impeach the whole gang, and if we can’t get ’em impeached we’ll head a body of outraged citizens and clean ’em out to a man. They were elect ed to do public business and the pub lic is in no humor to put up with their personal quarrels. Col. Taylor ex hibited wisdom in coming down off his high horse, and we trust the les son he received will not soon be for gotten. A WORD TO THB MAYOR. The mayor of this town hasn’t the decency of a wolf nor the dignity of a monkey. He has been drunk at least three times a week for the last month and he would as soon pull hair with a half-breed as to argue with a gentleman. We’ve got tired of his capers and we now give him due notice that unless he comes to a right-about-face we’ll give him dead away and rid the community of his presence. An individual about his size is wanted in one of the eastern states for cow stealing, and w’hile we don’t want to be pizen mean, we owe a duty to this community. We have got our eye on the mayor. STAND VP, TOM HARTWELL. Tom Hart well, city marshal,, yon were appointed as guardian of the peace. How have you fulfilled your mission? On numerous occasions within the last three months you have been drunk, and yon can be found in a saloon oftener than on the street. You have set a bad example all around, and the idea that you are a guardian over anything except a whisky jug makes us laugh. The Kicker has given you a fair show, but you would not improve it e Open your ears now, Thomas! If yon don’t resign or brace up the boys will call on you within the next fort night, and when they do so it will be too late for any excuses. You’ll be taken out and made a pendulum of, and the grave will be shallow and the obsequies mighty brief. It you want to cull the wild cactus when the spring time comes again, Thomas, we have pointed out the way. If you don’t, then the boys will cull you. come out, jim! While Jim Kaniff was not elected mayor of this place on a temperance platform, the public expected him to be decent about getting drunk and whooping up and down the streets. It is with sorrow ( that we announce the fact that Jim is a complete fail ure except as an old soak. He has not drawn a sober breath in six months, and his official career has been enough to shame a wolf out of the country. We have kept quiet on this matter, hoping Jim would brace up, but the time has come for a lit tle plain talk. We say to him in the most friendly spirit, that he must come out of that and brace up. The boys are muttering and growling, and if his honor continues his present career something will happen within a fortnight. He’ll be waited upon by a committee, mounted on a mule, and the mule will be headed towards the hills and told to travel. His honor will keep going and never re turn, or if he should bo foolish enough to refuse, the boys will plant him and proceed to sign a call for a special election. There are 200 women preachers in the United States, and many times 200 wo men who preach. Number 2