The Carnesville tribune. (Carnesville, GA.) 189?-19??, March 01, 1893, Image 1

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he Carnesville 'Tribun VOL. XVIII. a Snow-storm. JfT.TKfS Mmthar-lifht and feathsr-soft and feather- flying swift. The enow cam* down the lifelong night and piled In heap and drift. The barns were roofed with silrsr sheen, the fences glimmered white, Tor fsr end near the barefoot el res had journeyed in the night. The baby at the window clapped dimpled hands in glee; This was indeed a bonny world which he had come to see. The sturdy boys ware loath to wait, their eyes on fire to go And fight and measure arms against the legions of the snow. And feather-light and feather-soft the firing fieeeee piled Above the fields where food was sown for many a hungry child; For while men sleep the great God keeps a watch for things to grow, And His world’s bread is always safe beneath His brooding snow. The snow fell on the upland, on the lonaty graveyard space, And the snow fell on the lowland, near many a dwelling-place, And everywhere 'twas pure and fair, and dropped its shinning fleece As if the angel of the Lord had hushed its heart to peacs. —Elizabeth Chisholm, in Harper’s Bazar. A TW0-00LLAR BILL. BY HELEN FORREST GRAVES. ins, looking doubt- sister. . “Five dollars was all the eggs and poultry fetched, and I’ve got to have three for the new waist to my red paramatta gound. Mis’ Hawley’il make it for a peck o’ dried peaches and a stone crock o’ June butter.” “Yes,” exultantly crackled Josy, tbe smallest and sauciest of all, "you’ll buy it, an’ Hauner Hawley’il make it, and between you both you’ll make a try for Matthew Billings and the old Billings’ homestead! But 1 guess you’ll find"it no s eo!” “Josephine, hold your tongue,” said Mils Hawkins, severely, “and wash them dishes! Somebody’s cracked tbe blue vegetable platter! Mind you’re careful ' now!” „S 9 S IS *££?"& ominous vehemence. - *“ 1 ™ w- «'“»»"■> she. “Sb-sb-sb!" »M S.liu., uni,. r jz sr^rsr^' £&.??!**£".res money at interest, and there's mown one girl in New Cardamom would jumu at the chance of him! I say, Selina, can me an’ Hetty come an’ live with you when you move into the Billings farm- house? » Selina gave her audacious young sister a glance which might have blighted a j : lked ^ & ‘ xx Hetty n still r\\ stood t. i gazmg at f the *3 cram- pled bill. flirted Josey the dishwater from her wet, red fingers'and pirouetted across the room to peep over Hetty’s shoulder. “Mean thing!” said she. “Is that all she’s allowed-you for your dress? And out of your own earnings, too!” “There’s some real cheap cashmeres at Popbam’s,” r ,said Hetty, meekly, “at fifty cents a..yard. I had Eight o’ yards will 0 j i very well. sort laid out for a Heneryetta, but 1 guess the cashmere’ll have to do.” 1 “It’sa shame!” cried Josey—“yes, a ; shame! Selina takes the best of every¬ j thing and the most of everything, and | you always gp. to the wall. Sbe talks as if you were a hundred years old, and, after all, you’re only tnree jearsolder’n sbe is. I’ll tell you what, Hetty,” with a sudden hug of the slim calico-clad form, “if you’ll wait till I’m sixteen—and that’s only a year—I’ll marry old Mat Billings myself, and make the nicest kind of a home for you. I’m tired of seeing you put upon like this—yes, I am!” Hetty strove not to smile. 1 “Josey,” said she, ‘little girls oughtn’t to talk about gettiug’ married. ’Tain’fc proper.” back her work with Josey went to a pout. “Old girls hadn’t ought to, neither,” laid she. under her breath. “Poor Hetty! it must be awful to bean old maid! Ob, Hetty, I sayl can’t I go to New Cardamom with you? Iwantaslate pencil and a yard of pink ribbon and four bone buttons.” “No,cbjld,” dejectedly uttered Hetty, as she went out to tbe mud-splashed old buggy. “Selma is going with me to- “Selina, Selina-always Selina!” mat- tered Josey returning in a discontented fashion to her work, and banging he door so loud hat the gray cat on tbe hearth started from her d earn . The three Hawkins, sistersi lived alone on the old farm Hetty tept home Selina taught district school, and Josey swept the kitchen, drove tbe turkeys 2S Stt S how. St« w older, the ft™ stoaicr *.d more rorty, tl and the two irtrttino- spinsters gaunter a ° j ®^ e however* ge still hoisted the signal of youth in the shape of velvet bows upon her hat; but Hetty had long since relapsed into sober black. . “ I don’t suppose the good Lord meant “—-- t to - give " quite up,” _ som etimes r CARNESVILLE. FRANKLIN CO. CA.. WEDNESDAY. MARCH I, 1833. there was a goodly r array of plait*" shawls, flapping in the wind, piles of all- wool goods, and tempting ribbons and laces in tbe window. Miss Selina got out and went in. “You’d better hold the horse till I comeback, Hetty,”said she, “ and then you can take your turn!” Hetty sat still and looked around. To her the village street was equal to the Champs Elysees in Paris or Broadway in New York at its full tide of gaiety. She held the knock-kneed old horse tight lest he should shy at the fluttering shawls; she winked to keep the occa¬ sional snowflakes out of her eyes, and shivered slightly in the wind. Just then a little boy came down Ike street carrying a gay china jardiniere with a stiff artiflciat chrysanthemum growing out of it. “ Why Billy Powis, is that you?” said Miss Hetty. “I didn’t scarcely know you at first.” The child laughed. Hawkins," said “Yes, it’s me, Miss he. “I’ve got a place in Richardees “Well, I’m glad o' that,” said Hetty. “It’s a great help to your mother, 1 cal¬ culate.” , Billy laughed again, and nodded; but at that same moment he caught the toe of his ragged shoe in a projecting brick of the primitive pavement, stumbled and fell, scattering the china ornament in a score of glittering splinters. He broke into a howl of dismay. “I’ll lose my place if I don’t pay for ’t,” wailed he, “an’ I ain’t got a cent saved up! Oh, dear—oh, dearl what shall I do. I’ll lose my place 1 I cracked a cheeny bowl this mornin’ an’ they won't have no patience with me!” Hetty leaned eagerly forward, the wind fluttering her scanty cape, the tip of her nose empurpled with the cold. “How much is it, Billy?" asked she. “Two-o-o dollars!” Billy lamented himself. “Oh, dear—oh, dearl I'll lose | my place!” half Tears streamed down his frozen cheeks as he stood shivering on tbe pavement; he tremtled all over. Hetty Hawkins looked this way and that; she cast an apprehensive glance at the store door, lest, perchance, Selina’s cherry velvet bow should appear, then she put her haud guiltily into her pocket, and drew out the crumpled two-dollar bill. “Here, Billy,” she whispered, “take this. And, mind you, don’t tell no¬ body.” “Ma’am!” The convulsive sobs ceased, Billy stood staring at Hetty Hawkins as if she had been an angel from heaven, and folding the bill in one hand with a des- added 3 HT Hetty. usrr*" “But it would ■„ 1 be such „ sasasatuss. ]*»“*••“?», “Si^SlULl*™’ f omnant “ H r oredparamatanjtherefo. ; ”-f“«“”■*>•'* ® 0n,y oney bve -* ust d ° ! for arS ‘ 1 r i n ’ ?K^ ^ r 8 a ' u 0 £ .^, ul “ou ‘ v ' evefsawTn ,. . p g yo«; fife. ” “I—I can’t!” she muttered. tt i» I can’.t I” faltered the poor WO- mau. r 1 in an agony ° J of confusion and «m- barr-issment. . “Where’s jour money?” sternly de¬ manded Selina. “I—don’t—know,” almost inaudibly. “You hain’t—lost it? Yes, I swan to gracious you have!” almost screamed Se¬ lina. Hetty drooped her brow, and said notiii ief mg; but tbe torrent of Selina's un- bridle wrath broke all the same on her devoted head. “There goe3 the bargain!" bewailed Selina; “and all through your mis’able carelessness, I should think you’d be ashamed of yourself. Drive on, Hetty. Don’t you see you’re in the way of every¬ body here?” Once again Hetty clicked her tongue to the old hoise, and shook the reins, but so awkward was tbe nervous action that her off wheel became locked in those of another wagon, and, as a necessary illustration of the survival of the fittest, Miss Hetty’s equipage settled slowly down to one side, andi came to a stand¬ still. “My,”she gasped, “the wheel’s come off!’ “Yes,” said a deep voice, “the wheel’s comp off, Miss Hetty. An’ I guess ’twaa’t a very safe axle at best. It wobbled pretty bad wheu ye drove up, I noticed. I guess you an’ Mils STiny M better g't in o my wagonqa letme drive ?e home. °id Romp, ne can be tied be- J»nA, ‘T® he * blacksmith s shop, Miss Sehna was all sanies much obl.ged to you, Mr. Bill- . ,a §®’ ^ ^ d J t / e 8 7 ’ 80ffie u _, tbin’?” not bacl tn h cr ghoppiatf . paramatta and olive cashmere might “ wheel’of opportunity was and had brought up on it , top TO und. uj ® o U ess you better set behind. Miss 8eli “ J „ a aa > take Hetty up on the eeat with me,” said Matthew, re- ely ( ' “She’s some slimmer ’n you m„. tom* • me.m *. ...id schrcelj Aurtmrd b» P>ai. directions. “Do talk, Hetty, she whispered, as Matthew' went back to look to the un* lucky whesi. “Don’t set there like a stun’ marry image! me. I ««. If M*t t want Bi^fig* he te|om to ashamed of my folks. And theu, as Billing* returned, she cried, gushingly: ^ j “Oh, it’s nice to have a man around 1 when anything happens! Mean’ Hetty ■ wouldn't’a knowed’ hardly what to do, we, Hetty?” her Hfkt Hetty rat silent. In secret had arisen an awful certainty that Matthew Billings's wagon had been close by all the time, that he had witnessed the little episode of tbe china jardiniere and the two dollar bill. “If he should speak of it before Se¬ lina," she thought, in a sort of agony, “what would Selina say?" Uncommunicative though she was, her sister supplied all deficiencies on that score, keeping up a constant current of talk and giggling until they reached tbe door of the old Hawkins house. “Won’t Selina. you come iD, Mr. Billings?” simpered will,” “Why, yes, I dunno but what I said Matthew. Josey flew to light the fire in the best room. “Don’t make no stranger o’ me,” said Mr. Billings. “I was calc’fatin’ to make this ere call afore, but somehow to-day.” things have sort o’ hurried me up Josey gesticulated to Hetty behind Selina's back. She danced a mute fau- dango close to the wall. “I’m a-thinkin’ o’ changin’ my condi¬ tions,” said Matthew, slowly and dis¬ tinctly. “Dear me!” murmured Selina, turning her head modestly away. “And gettin’ married,’’ added the farmer. “So natural,” whispered Selina. «I—I guess I’d better go an’ put the teakettle on,” faltered Hetty, in some confusion. “So!” echoed Billings. “You go! What for? Why, you’re the very one I want to marry!” “Mo?” But in a second Matthew Billings had his sturdy arm around her waist. “And,” said he, “if I hadn’t seen that kind deed o’ your’n to tba,t poor little boy in,the street this afternoon, I wouldn’t, maybe, have plucked up cour¬ a ge to speak.” “Eh!” gasped Selina. “I always fancied you was a kind cree- tur,” added Billings, “and now I'm wife, sar- tinof it. And if you’ll be my Hetty, I’ll do my level best to make you happy.” don’t “Are you sure you mean Se¬ lina?” twitered Hetty, unable to believe her good fortue. Matthew smiled. “Yes, pretty sure,” said he. And again Josey danced the wild, gleeful fandango in the shadow of the big screen. Billings home, Matthew went saying to himself that his promised bride was an angel. Liitle Billy Powis returned to his mother, and told her that Miss Hetty Hawkins certainly was an angel. Josey was delighted beyond measure, and the dissatisfied member of the community was Miss Selina. f‘Th.e idee,” said #ho, “of that old preferring Hetty to me!”—-Saturday Night. A Bridegroom 209 Tim-s. “Marriage!” exclaimed the big fellow to the group of sailors, novelists, liars and men about town who were swopping yarns the other evening, “marriage! Why, I’ll bet I’ve beeu married ten times as many times as any gentleman here. - ’ Now it happened that there was a man present who had actually buried four wives. ’ He was with an undertaker who had heard that his fifth wife was sickly and had called in on him to look the matter up. This mau took the bet. To win it the fat one must have been a bridegroom fifty times, which was au impossibility. “Well, what’s score?” the fat your one inquired. replied the other proudly. ••Five,” “Bab, mao, you’ve lost.” “Do you mean to say that you have been married fifty times?” “Have you any regular arrangements with—any—ahem—any entomber?” ex¬ claimed the undertaker. “I mean to say,” said the fat man proudly, “that I’ve been married two hundred and nine times. I’m a freak in a dime museum—in fact, I am a profes- sional fat man. Here is my card,” and he handed it around; Mr. avd Mrs. B. Lubber & Co, Professional Far, People. ; Combined weight 1561 pounds and B.—Marriage steadily increasing. fake by special ;N. ar¬ rangement. “We go around to different cities un¬ der assumed uamssand pretend we don’t know each other,” said Mr. Lubber. “Then we fall tn love and the manager gives it out that the fat mau is lovesick and that the fat lady is coy. Crowds come to the museum to sue me and my wife making eyes and lookiug poetic. After awhile our engagement is an¬ nounced. This draws auother mob. When the novelty has worn off and no more people can be induced to come and see us on the strength of our engage¬ ment a graod wedding is held in the museum, and after the excitement of it has gone down we go to another city and repeat the fake. “It doesn't do to get married iu the same town too often. We did it in a Texas place twice and an envious mu- suem manager with whom we broke a contract gave tbe thing away and we got mobbed. The Mayor, who was a perfect old fool* had performed the cer- einony, believing that he was participat¬ ing in an affair of romance. When he discovered that he bad been duped and that tho whole town was laughing at him be got mad and issued we*ants for our arrest.’’—New York Herald, a Hiir * Storv ‘ } Tree plate just finished working up a ui tree which grew on his place. He received $12 *io for tnr %>. the ■ hark. larlr built Duiit a a frame irame noum home 14*20, etgu.een feet- high, with shed kitchen eight feet high, eight feet wide and twent'y feet long; built a woodshed 1-14x20 feet; made 320 rails; made 334 j i lallroad eight ties, feet and long got and twelve four cords feet high ot wood : all from that one tree and still has a part -.of the tree left. '—St. Louis Republic, THROUGHOUT THE SOOTH Notes ot Her Progress and Prosperity Briefly Epitomized And Important Happenings front Day to Day Tersely Told. A Nashville special, of Tuesday, says: Diligent inquiry fails to substantiate the reported killing of the two Mormon el¬ ders, an account of which was sent out some days since from Pulaski. An earthquake shock was felt at Sac¬ ramento and several places in Solsno county, Dixon California,Wednesday rushed pell-mell night. At the people from their houses. No serious damage was done. The tenth annual session of the Florida ebautauqua Wednesday. opened at huge Dc Funiak amphitheater Springs The was Ailed with an enthusiastic crowd. More people were in attendance than at any former opening session of the as¬ sembly. A Columbia 3. C., dispatch of Wed¬ nesday says: The Union established Store Company, al¬ of New York, which five liance stores in this state, has not found the business protiitablo and the agencies have been sold out to the managers. Tbe reason given is that the company wanted to do a cash business, which they could not get. The Tuscaloosa, Ala., Coal, Iron and Land Company has been sold to Colonel J. W. Woolfolk, of New York. The belt railway will be extended. The Tuscaloosa Northern railroad will be built to the Warrior coal fields, opening up the finest coal lands in Alabama. Tuscaloosa is on tho eve of a new era. Work will begin on the read as soon as possible. Tbe historical committee of the grand carnp of the confederate veterans held a meeting at Richmond, Va., Wednesday and discussed the subject of preparing be a primary used in the history public of schools. the late The war matter to was fully discussed but no official action was resolution taken. of con'^^HBD'w Th?_Jjj?^fittee respect passed to the a memory The Psrap^Ajfl of Ger“^^^^^B£ard. [\%Ga., which were sold i:H iJHS IfcUnortgage to if. n. ';e C'hat- tahoocliee Ic^H K'?r.,700, has just >( burger, Cotton i^H ■r lx' field two mills^H of ■R The deal is cMH The fai^H Psisscn- Isville, ger Ky., Tribr^H was^K^jg ■ fire Itimnl ty Tuesday ■ iwmr- cd at uho^H tr(M| I'ginat- aucc, tlu^H ll cd in c^| lerheat- floor, and was ing the j^HK| Bployes, fourth one ori the ' floor, had lok and ladder NaslnflH compel ppapatch A of Wednesday say^| J^xian lilt carried off the honors at university Wednesday night, speakers^ __ was each a contest from between four two the Dialectic and Fhilosopbie Vanderbilt societies for the honor of collegiate representing oratorical at the interstate con¬ test next May, and the judges decided on 8. R. Bland, of the Philosophic So of ciety, whose subject was the “Curse Effeminacy.” troller A Washington Hepburn said special Thursday says: morning Comp¬ that there was something Gate peculiar City National about the closing up of the bank, Atlanta, Ga. According capital to tbe last report the bank’s unimpaired was $250,000, its surplus $50,000, and its undivided profits $20,000, while tbe al¬ leged embezzlement of the assistant, cashier is stated at $70,000. In view of this statement it is thought strange that the bauk should have to close its doors. Tbe lower house of tbe North Caro¬ lina legislature, on Wednesday, passed tbe state banking bill creating a com¬ plete system of banks of issue under the management of the state banking depart¬ ment, whose head will be the comptroller the of bunks, to be appointed legislature is by not in gov¬ ernor when the ses¬ sion, at a salary of $8,000. All banks are subject to his supervision. The banks are at all times to keep on hand in law¬ ful money of the United States an amount equal to 10 per cent of their lawful deposits, tbis to be known as the money reserve. ORDER TO VETERANS Issued by Gen. Gordon llespeefiiig Hie Death of Gen. Beauregard. Cen. Cordon lias issued the following order in regard to the death of General Beauregard : “Homtq'isrtcrs United Confederate Vet erans, New Orleans, La., February 21.—Goner al Or- dor No. 83.—Tbe general commanding, with the rteepeat sorrow, announces iCfjH to the members of our “social, literary and irt historic li al and be- UPVO i cnt” brotherhood the death of one of our grandest men tberft and one of tho Beauregard, greute-t American soldiers. Genci ml fl. T. tho last of t lie full full general general- of the confederacy, save one, has elosed elosed bis his distTiziiisbed career, hiseallantspirit having, pas<e -d into the the realm of ahadows at 10 o’clock p. m. yestrr lay. In our civil war, lomance and chivalry clustered around hia name. At his command the firs’ shot was fired which 8-t ablaze the torch of war. Ho commanded iu tho first victory which abed glnrv upon southern arms, and participated in the closing rccncs of the straggle at Jos-ph K. Johnston’s sur¬ render at Gret-naboro, N. C. His daunt¬ less courage, his matchless ability and iropermliable deeds during ’he war rendered his name not only fan ous and of dazzling brilli¬ ancy upon this continent, but. it reached ont over tbe wide ids world. His fame wonderful difctwaed achleye- In meut and instrioua were , a ,j «^rv n-ea sought bv nations whose banner floated the pate or- scent as well as those emblazoned with the fierv croar. Hi. digmfleq ,, ^Jnest r , rtjnent in r , ri va‘e Me. fortitude and endeavor to build up the fortunes of hia people and of the south, ennobl'd him as a pa**, «... ail possible honors be pMd to his memory by the United Confederate Veicraf-S. By order of J* B. Gobdok. “General Commanding. “OroiUiK Mo iumav. of Staff. ‘•Adjutant Genera! and Chief LAID TO REST. The Mortal Remains of Hen. Beaure¬ gard Consigned to the Tomb. The funeral of General Beauregard at New Orleans, Thursday, was one of tbe largest and most imposing ever witnessed in the city. All of the exchanges were closed as a mark of respect to the de¬ ceased general, while business in the courts and other public offices was vir¬ the tually suspended. Early in the morning city family of the general arrived at tpe hall aDd assigned a room adjoining the council chamber, wbero the remains of lay people instate.* poured All through day a constant tho city strain hill to get a last glimpse of the form oftvit- of the well-known soldier. A detail erans assisted the rogular police force’a keeping order. in Among those who arrived to take part tbe ceremonies were Governor Fortfer and party from BaU>n Rouge, members of Raphael Sctumcs’ Camp of Confeder¬ ate Veterans from Mobile, and Coloiel J. B. Hereford and General Caball, pf the The trans-Mississippi moved department. hall cortege from the city a little after i! o'clock for Metaire ceme¬ tery. The flag with which General in Beauregard Baltimore Was the presented by Mrs. Carey at opening of tho war, and which he donated to the Washing¬ ton Artillery a few years ago, was placed on the coffin by that command. The ceremonies were elaborate in character aud the obsequies partook of tho natnre of a military and civic de¬ monstration. The military formed on LaFayettesquare Continental ss follows: Guards, Washing¬ Fifth ton Artillery, Fourth Battalion, Battalion, Third Bat¬ talion, Louisiana Field Artillery, Army of Northern Virginia in double column. On the right of the the hearse was the army of Tennessee; on left and abreast was tho Army of Northern Virginia. Following the Army of Northern Vir¬ ginia came tbe Washington of Artillery No. camp, and to Jhe No. rear 10 of the them Army camp of Teu- 9 camp command consisted nesse. The entire of veterans and militia, and was un&r command of Brigadier General Euclid Horeland, himself a veteran of the Army of in Northen Virginia. Colonel The A. veterans Maginnis. were charge of A. General !) Gedtgo The active Moorman, pallbearers adjutant were General of Gordon; General Wright Schaumberg, adjutant general of Lieutenant General Smith; General John Glynn, jr., coir mamling the Louisiana division of ti United Confederate Veterans; Co? AY. R. Lyman, commander of camp 1; Colonel J. B. Vinel, commander camp No. 2; Colonel W. L. Vincent, commander of camp No. 9; Colonel B. F. Eshfclman, commander of camp No. 15; Colonel Joseph Deinonrcll,command¬ er of camp No. 10. The. active pall¬ bearers wore long arm badges of Eng¬ lish crape trimmed with black silk rib¬ bon. The honorary pallbearers number¬ ed nearly a hundred, including promi¬ nent confederate soldiers and statesmen. TUMBLE IN STOCKS ( Of tli« Reading Railroad Causes a Panic In Wall Street. A New York special says: Wall street was treated again Monday to a continua¬ tion of enormous liquidation in Reading, and transactions in that stock were even greater than on the preceding two days of the break, very closely r pptoximating a million shares in that one stock alone. Further concession the in its prices business were on a parity with amount of done, 8 5 8 per cent marking the extreme decline, and at the close it was only 2 per cent better, showing a net loss of 6 5 8 per cent for the day. A IlBAVY DKCLINK. It early became whispered aDd that decline a re¬ of ceivership must follow, established, a but nearly 7 per dispatches oent. was Philadelphia reassuring from started the covering of shorts, and a rally of over 2 per cent, was brought about. The official announcement of the fact followed, however, and a drop of 4 per cent—to immediate the lowest price of tbe excite¬ day - was the result. The ment attending the enormous transaction was great indeed, but was not so pro¬ nounced as the immense figures would seem to indicate. Wall street is, as it were, a spectator of the contest, and seemingly has nothing to lose and which days ever party becomes the victor, three of extreme depression followed of Heading period and of"de- its allied stocks, by a pression among tbe Industrials, has fail¬ ed to cause a single failure on the street. RECEIVERS APPOINTED. A Philadelphia special says: The af- fairs of the Philadelphia brought and Reading into Railway Company Monday afternoon. were All day court late there were rumors on the street that re¬ ceivers were to be appointed. constant¬ Officers of the United States court were ly besieged by newspaper men and par¬ ties interested in Reading matters, who were eager to obtain the lost news. About 2:30 oclock Monday afternoon Attorney John G. Johnson and Lawyer Thomas Hart, Jr., made their appear¬ ance and were closeted a long time with Judge Dallas in chambers. At 4 o’clock the announcement was made that Judge Dallas bad made appointed trie appointment. Archibald The receivers are A. McLeod, president Edward of Paxson, the company! of tb| Chief Justice M. supreme court, and Elisha Wilber, e; president of the Lehigh Valley Rail Company. Judge Paxson at once seUI thi In bis resignation as chief justice of supreme court of Pennsylvania to Gov* ernor Pattison. The security of each re¬ ceiver was fixed at $500,000 for which they are to enter their own bond. A Text* UycloBe. A cyclone struck Jacksonville, Texas, shortly after midnight Wednesday night. Tbe residence of Jimea A. Campbell wrecked, was torn from its foundation and Campbell acd his family were sleeping bouses at the time but not injured. Several in the vicinity were slightly wrecked, acd the chimneys of tbe outbuildings and feucee demolished. Norlli Dakota’* New Senator. A special of Moudiy iron) Bismarck, North Dakota, sa s: W. N. Roach, democrat, of Graud Forks, has bees elected United States senator on the sixty-flrst ba! THE CABINET COMPLETE. The President-Elect Makes Olcial An- nonneement ot Ike Fact Herbert for the Navy and Olney Attorney General. A special dispatch from Lakewood, N. J., says: Mr. Cleveland announced Wed¬ nesday evening that he had completed hit cabinet by the selection of Richard and Olney, of Boston, for attorney general Hilary A. Herbert, of Alabama, for secretary of the navy. The complete cabinet is as follows: Walter Q. Gresham, of Illinois, aecre- taiy of state. John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky, secre¬ tary of the treasury. Daniel 8. Lamont, of New York, sec¬ retary of war. Hilary of A. Herbert, of Alabama, secre¬ tary the navy. Hoke Smith, of Georgia, secretary of tbe interior. J. Sterling Morton, of Nebraska, sec¬ retary of agriculture. Wilson 8. Bissol, of New York, post¬ master Richard general. W. Massachusetts, Olney, of attorney general. Tbe election of Hilary A. Herbert for the navy has been expected for several days, but Mr. Olney’s name bad not been mentioned in connection with tbe cabi¬ net and hia selection is a surprise to everybody, particularly to the friends of George A. Jcnks. Hilary A. Herbert has been in congress for many years and has acted as chairman of the naval com¬ mittee of the house. He ia thoroughly familiar with the work that has been done toward placing footing the United States navy on a proper and hia knowl¬ edge of tbe present condltiou of vessels under conetruction and which have beeu planned head makes him a most desirable man for tbe of the department. His se¬ lection is practically a promotion. Richard Olnoy is one of the leadiug practitioners of the Massachusetts bar. He has not held any political position or been prominent in political matters, but is known ss one of tbe leading lawyers and substantial citizens of Boston. His selection gives New England a represen¬ tative in the cabinet and that of Mr. Herbert gives the south three positions. APPEALING for her throne. Princess Knlulani Issues an Address to Americans. A Londou cablegram of Sunday saya: Princess address Kaiulani si mis tbe following to the American people; ‘■To the American People—Four y art ago, at tlie request of Mr. Thurston. Ilicn Hawuiin’s cabinet minister, I was sent away to England to bo educated privately anil fitted for the pooi- tioii.whicbiby inherit. tbe constitution oflfewaiia, I wait to For all tlieao years I bavo patient¬ ly, and in exile, striven to fit myself for uiy re¬ turn, Ibis yiar, to my native coun'ry. I am asking now told that Mr. Thurston is in flax Washing and you to tak-j away my my tbvono. No one tells me officially. “Have I done anything wiouft that this wrong should be done to me and my people? ‘‘I ini coming to Washington to plead for my throne, my nation aud my flag- Will not the great American people t ear me? “Kxiui.aki.” REPLY TO KAHJI.ANl’s ADDRESS. A Washington special says: The Hawaiian envoys, both of tbe deposed queen and provisional government, capitol spent part of the day Monday st the in conference with several senator#. Tburs too, of tho Hawaiian commission, has given otit a statement in reply to from the massage to (he American people Princess Kaiulani, heir apparent to the Hawaiian throne, telegraphed from Cleghorn Lon¬ don. Thurston calls her Miss and says he had nothing to do with send¬ ing her to England to he educated; that she went to England heir about tbe 1887. throne At that and time sbe was not to had no standing under the consti’ution of Hawaii. Ktiakaua was then king, and ex-Quceu Liliuokalani, his sister, was by law heir. By K.ulnkaua’s death she came to tbe throne in February, 1891. She then had power to nominate her success¬ or, subject to the ratifica'ion of the house of nobles, which woe done about March 1, J89). Tbis was the earliest date at which Kaiulsna had any standing under the cons itution as heir to the throne. As a matter of fact, the young ladv’s father is a British subject. Her guardian, T. It. Walker, the British con¬ sul at Honolulu,and his busines* partner, T. H. Davies, is her burincaa agent and has control of her in England. The young lady was sent to England by her father against a strong feeling in Hono¬ lulu that it would be best that sbe be ed¬ ucated in the United States. ASKING AID For the Irish In Their Mrnggle for the Home Rule Mill* A ca 1 le dispatch of Sunday hom Lou¬ don states that an addrtss has been issued by Justin McCarthy. Timothy Healy and other Irish nationalist leaders, to their kinsmen, and to ail friends of Ireland in the United States, Canada and Aus¬ tralia making an appeal for further con¬ tributions. They acknowledge that in Jhe struggle for the last fourteen years, Lie almost dominant factor, next to the lourage Bkironic, and has tenacity been financial of the Irish assistance people ft# W. kindred and friends beyond tho They ask now. that they may be ^Tabled from people, the ssrae bring to powerful conjume- end generous to a tion : >eir labors and principles. through the by iJnSnight generosity of tbeir race ed for the brief they interval e»k now ‘hat for atill eidrequ^ atan between Irelan d and ber breaki ng day. A BULLET IK HIS BBAIN. ,,W, Jack*.., . AtU.I* Lawyer, Suicide*. Mr. Thomas Cobb Jackson, a promi* nent attorney of Atlanta, Ga., committed buicido Thursday. The explanation sug- suf- ,, s >cd liv the family is that he wa9 r. iron, te->,i«i.'iv <>f tniml. A friend Tom Cobb had been rushed from court to court by the press- uro of railroad litigation growing out of the Richmond and Danville’s receiver- ship. This the friend considers as the strain which unsettled his mind. NO. 9. GROWTH OF THE SOOTH. The industrial Development During the Past Week. a nnim of tbe industrial riniation in tha Bonth for the past week show* among the im¬ week, portant the new eitabliulmient industries organised Powhatan during Olay the of the Manufacturing 9100,000; Company, of Richmond. Va, capital ConitMny, M»oon, the Georgia Ga., with Mill 9300,000 and Elevator 0 f capi¬ tal; the Panliandla Hardware Company, of Wichita Falls Texaa, capital 9100,000; an ioe plant costing 9150.000, at Augusta, Ga., by ths Columbus iron Works Company, the Anniston Cordage Company, of Anniston, Ala., capita! 900,000; a 975,000 cotton mill, at Toccoa, Ga-, and one to oost 9150,000, at Murfreesboro, Tenn.; the Columbia Veneer and Box Compa¬ Enterprise ny, at Louisville, Lumber Ky., Company, capital $100,000; of Atlanta, the Ga., and the Ho'.cott Lumber Comps ny, of Shreveport, La., each with 9100,000 cap- Sirty-one new industries were established or incorporated enlargements during manufactories the week, together with im¬ 13 of and 18 portant new buildings. Among the new in¬ dustries not already referred to are a $35,000 canning factory at Austin. Tex., and one at Charleston, W. Vs., a $15,000 coal and coke company st Roanoke, Va.. steam and cotton gins Tex., at LaFarette, elcotric Ala., Dalton, G«., Cuefo, and lighting plant at Columbus, Os., Hempstead, Tex., and Davie, W. V». Flcrar and grist mills are to be buiit at Biloxi, Miss., Macon, Ga., Mini Point River, Ky., Mnllio, Maury Tex., City, Tenn., Bolton, Pilot Vs., 935.000'ice and factory and Htuarta Draff, a es¬ tablished at Charlottesville, Vs., ehgine works at Knoxville, Tenn., and a foundry at Newport, Ky. Sugar miila are to be bnilt at Bertie, Few Orleans, Thibedaux and New Iberia, and La., tobae- cofactories Tenn., aud at 925,000 Lexington, plumbing Ky., Newport, Louisville, a Ky. oompanv organ¬ ized at Among the wood working Wayneeville, plants of N. the C., week box are a barrel fr.otory at faotorles »t Charleston, 8. C., and LoniaviUe, Ky., furniture factories "at High Point, TL C., and Alexandria, Va., and Raw and planing miila at Stockton, Ala., Dalton, Ga., aud Memphis, Tenn. The enlargement! include fertilizer works at », Ga., a rolling Rookwood, mill at Tenn., Newport, and Ky., an iron furnace »t cotton mills at Columbus, Ga.. Graham and King's Mountain, N. C., and Gaffney City, 8. O. Among tho new buildingk of the week ares bank building at Columbia, 8. C., buaineai homes at Fayetteville, Ark., Orlando, Fla., Ky,, and Tifton, Ga., churches at Covington, Va., mill budd¬ ings Dallas, Mobile, Texas, and Ala., Wytheville, and Louisville, Ky. and at , an opera house at Versailles, Ky.—-Trade (Chattanooga, Tenn.) COTTON GROWERS MEET. Reduction of Cotton Acreage Advised— Anti-Option Bill Discussed. Seventy-five delegates were present when the cotton growers’ convention met in Memphis, Tenn., Wednesday morning. Joint 8. Richardson, a promi¬ nent Louirana planter, was called upon to preside. Atwood Violett, of New Orleans, was in attendance, together with Agricultural Commissioners Good¬ win and Lane, of Tennesse and Alabama, respectively. There were lengthy tions which discussions all over referred various resolu¬ were to a com- mittee and reported late in the session. A resolution linking (he further reduc¬ tion of cotton acreage and diversifica¬ tion of crops was unanimously showing adopted. Statistics were quoted the benefit to tbe south of acreage reduction last season. A resolution but favoring pigeon¬ tbe anti-option holed and bill then came dropped up, aftir was araur- ances that the bill had been killed in congress, 'the convention adjourned sine die. PREPARING FOR WAR. Orangemen Buying Rifles to Resist the Home Rule Parliament. A London cablegram of Wednesday says; It is reported from Bel fast, Ireland, that Orange societies in the north of Ireland are preparing f»r forcible resist¬ ance to the home rule parliament, shou'd one be established. It is being arranged that all Irish opponents of home rule shall simultaneously withdraw their de¬ posits from the postollice savings banks and purchase arms to bo used in ease phys¬ ical force should become necessary to pre¬ vent tho assertion of Irish home rule in Ulster. Inquiries are already being made with the view to contracts for a supply of tho latest improved weapons, and an Orange club at Dungs - .non bsa received an offer from a Birmingham factory of one thousand Martin! r:fi»». Excitement is running very Mg*i among Uiiter loyal isls, and many of them declare that in event of the enactment of the home rule bill, civil war will inevitably ensue. BANK PRESIDENT A FORGER. A Lincoln, Nebraska, National Bank Goes Under. A special from Lincoln, Neb., says that another lot of forged national paper aggre¬ bank gating $200,000 on the has been brought to light in that city. of A batch of notes now in the hands attorneys for collection for eastern banks, amouting to $178,000, signed named by Hurl- an ex-employe of Mosher, burt, and endorsed by Mother as pres- identof the national bank, were floated by Mother and the money squandered foe by him. Mosher admits that be got cash but refuses to say where it wee". The bank was opened Thursday for the purpose of admitting creditors to file their claims and wind up Its business. It is now stated by conservative men who are intimate with the affairs of the bank, that Ha liabilities will exceed $1,000,000 with assets practically nothiog. LIVELY TIMES. BtTa j Honsoa of the Kansas Legislature Outs, „^ a TVmeka T^r i. Kas disnatch reTearn«t of Tuesday between on in h<mMi of the legislature end bIowi h , T6 been exchanged. There ere D0W n threats bvthe populists of aen- ^Tm.y . ( hostilities TZ?thiog and at nWthan any moment / talk, which h g gQ j on _ been indulged in. An aUempt by the deputy sergeant-at-anns knocked down and several men on both gideg „ ere bftdly bm ised by blowa of ' ---- ■ompeUrivcj* 1 be SuitanoMLjjj^B ..anno: Fre b eg ^