Newspaper Page Text
AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
%
LUME 1
AMERICUS. GEORGIA. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1891.
NUMBER 148
PALL 1801.
WINTER 18(1)1.1
Annual Announcement.
THE ARRIVAL OP
GBO. D. WHEATLEY'S
Mammoth New Fall and Winter Stock of
DRY GOODS,
FOREIGN NEWS.
NOTIONS.
doing, Furnishing Goods, Carpets, Shoes,
HATS, ETC.
The time has come for a ‘‘matter of fact” talk upon a matter of
fact subject. You buyers of fall and winter goods are about to sup
ply your needs with suitable selections for the coming season’s re
quirements. The idea uppermost in the minds of all, no doubt is to
procure something good and serviceable at the Very Lowest Price and
with all of you it comes down to a quest ion of The Right Pl ace to Go.
You have no difficulty in deciding that you want to Buy
Goo s Ch ap—no indeed ! But what firm will do the best tor its
customers in that direction ? That’s the question, isn’t it ?
WELL WOW. WE will::
Why not say it when we have th -. goods and mike the prices
that will prove the statement every time ?
We realize the fact that -‘times are h >rd and money scarce,” but
we have expended the greatest efTon, in the purchase < f our stock, t >
procure Everything at the
VERY LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE.
Our spacious store is filled to overflowing with the most complete and
elegant line of Fall and Wintek Styles ever shown in this locality,
and from one end to the other, from top to bottom, it all the same—
just the Best Money Buys, just the Newest of New Styles Every
thing bought at figures that make it not possible, but EASY to sell
at the Lowest of Low Prices.
We coll especial attention this season to onr
Black and Colored Silks, Dress Goods and Trimmings.
We have really outdone ourselves in the effort to procure the ve
Novelties of the season. Our stock fairly teems With beautiful and sty!"
positively not to be found elsewhere,
DISTRESS AMONG THE RUSSIAN
PEASANTS IS INCREASING.
Stories Are Told of Parents 1 Eating Their
Children—The Hallway Strikes In Siberia
Assuming a Serious Aspect — Vigorous
Measures Advocated.
L< N.x»N, Sept. 25.—The Tdegraph’i
St. I’e ernburg correspondent has this
to Buy: "The distress among the peas
ants is increasing. Potatoes nro failing
in many districts, ami now an insect
known us tile 'souka/ more destructive
to corn than the Hessim fly, has ap*
peared
The whole population of some villa
ges in Asti.,kali are dyiug of sUrvutior
The doctors prescribe corn ins tea i of
medicine.
There are stories afloat of parents eat-
ing their c ildren in Nijni-Novgorod.
Tim am hod ties in inauy places are
levying a tax on laborers wherever they
obtain work.
The latest dispatches from Siberia re
port that the railway strikes are assum
ing a serious aspect. The governor ad
vocates vigorous measures in dealing
with the strikers. n
CHOPPED INTO PIECES.
newest idea*, the very latest
lections, many of which are
irly
You will find our assortment of
BLACK DRESS GOODS AND MOURNING EFFECTS
not only contains the handsomest and most elegant Materials to be found, but a greater abundauce of
Practical^Bekctions—goods f^the 'sale of the celebrated
p, I?. Brand of Kid Gloves,
, • wo flbow i n every desirable style and color. We guarantee these gloves, from 75c per pair upward,
Sd wUl g& r*^ »»ur ' none y- or another P air of H |oVM ,or overy pa,r * found after tnal to h®
imperfect. -
Carpets! Carpets! and Rug's!!
We have fitted up an excellent and spacious carpet department, where we are now exhibiting a mag
nificent line of _ __
cotton onain. Tapestry.
Extra Super. Velvet,
Q.piy ingrain, Body Brussels.
Chain Mattings, CruMEf 6 Our° render ^his feature of our business mu-
You Want a Carpet . Tins customers aline: You simply call, examine our great assortment, and select
tuallj ptatt? "uV^^Xyour carpet, and put it down on your floor. AT OUR EX-
AndnOT,M.yonr« ld y^^j c 0 “ , “‘ e - > "bOTbocttM»we y clato;to e Kiws“oh Bargaiiwin quality and
are really as represented. ’» ” „ . , t j. at vou moy come. When you are once in onr store, we
price. Wepnly-eay what wesay « °X fa Xr barflins with us do exist, and that we give the,
GEORGE D. WHEATLEY,
Wholesale .ad Rot»l Dry Oa«l.. N.lioaa, ClatLinq, Fu»1.»P OoooM Canada, Sho«, Hat,. *
Cor. Lamar St. and Cotton Ave., AMERICUS, GA.
— a TWI. the Veteran Dry Goods Salesman, who torso nUnr yeus hu ierved joa J
'„ o .PH.reliableMr.Henry s. Davis,*lje '® wwe jeom-foroil oar customer* sod bis friend*.
P-8.-Th»u^v.rn-dywHh.c 0 r Dadley Ttm KUlenend SamWarlickcom)
uJot Hr. Joo. P, Cato, unr efficient and pop
uVffiT.r* *• * drent 01 bl * w '
4 Murderer’s Victim Is Killed and Fed
to Hogs am! Harvest Hands.
Sax Francisco, Sept. 25.—San Luis,
Oltispo county, baa in times past been
the the;.ter of many blotaly anti myste
rious crimes, in which phases of devil
try were devions, but the climax has
been reached in a recent murder neur
Cholame, on the eastern line of the
county, in which an inoffensive man
was killed, lus bones chopped into pieces
with sharp instruments, part of the to
mains fed to hogs and part stripped of
its skin, salted and fed to harvest hands
employed by the murderer.
’i tie story is so utterly horrible that,
except for a well eonnecte I chain of
circumstances which lias been care, ally
put logetner, would be utterly beyond
credibility. Tnose prooft are so muti
lated that a warrant has been served by
Soerilf O’Neal, charging John Gularte
with the wilful murder of one Marlin
Heims, the murder t ccurring presuma
bly on June 8, the date \v,.e,i Heiuu
was last seen. Heiius wits out i.oyed by
Gularte, anil was killed for liis savings
of $300. Many lragments of the body
we e found in the rear of Gularte*
house. The harves.ors who recently
worked for Gularte were fed on suit
pork They are firm in their present
conviction that they helped to dispose
of Heims by euting him.
Aaalataiiee for Hie Fltmtletl Country.
Madrid, Kept. 25.—It is stated here
that a force of tioops will be sent to
Consuegra and employed in shoring up
the buildings at Consuegra and at Al-
meria, which are still in danger of fall
ing owing to the undermining they suf
fered during the receut floods. It is
estimated that there are a hundred
houses in Cousnegraand Almeria which
are in danger uf collapsing. The Roth
schild banking house • f Paris bas sub
scribed the sum of $2,000 to the fnud
being raised for the relief of the flood
sufferers.
Ho Devoured riftjr readies
Portland, Ind.,Sept. 25.—James Me
Coy, who engaged in superintending
the construction of streets in South
Portland, displayed gaatronomicnl abil
ities that would make an alligator torn
green with envy. Coining down Main
street he espied a basket of lnsciona
peaches in front of Smith's grocery, and
seating himself he devoured fltty of
them without stopping, and then did
not seem to be nucomtortakle.
lluraed While Fighting Fo eat Fire*.
Pixckley. Minn., Sept. 25.—All day
long the citixens were battling with
fires that threatened to destroy the
town. A party of six men started from
one of the Brennan Lmnber company’s
camps to go to another about two miles
away. Dan Bullivau aud bis brother of
Morn, and Sam Johnson of Ean Claire,
were of Ibis party. Afler going a short
way they got in front pf the fire, and
Dan Sullivan, mluing^bis brother, went
bock with Johnson/ to look for him.
That was the last /seen of them alive.
Their remains were found by theircainp-
mates. The bodies were badly burned.
Forest Fires In Wisconsin.
Ashland. Sept. 25.—Reports from
along the line of the Omaha road are
that forest fires are rapidly advancing
and eating np everything before them.
The homesteaders, surrounded by a
wilderness of woods, are being burned
out, and people arriving in town tell of
narrow escapes from being burned to
death. High winds have been effective
in spreading the fires. To add to the
discomfiture of tbe excessive heat. .Ash
land is tilled witbsmoke and navigation
U impeded, owing to the heavy smoke.
I'rare llelgna Mipmne.
Atlanta, Sept 25.—News ha* been
received here that Rev. Dr. Tapper and
his wife will leave Leavetiworth. Has.,
for Atlanta on Monday. Friends of the
rector m this city are glad that the wife
of the ]Hipnlar minister has become
again reconciled to biin, nud will give
the good man and wife a happy welcome.
Dmslb’a Horrors In a ll roO ,1 Vessel.
London, Sept. 23.—The crew of the
vessel Jenny Lind, wrecked during the
tornado at Martinique, have strived At
Plymouth. 1 liry tell an awful story of
the horrors of the scene. They say that
about 300 persons were trilled anil 1,000
inj rr»l.
CONDENSED NEWS DISPATCHES.
Domestic an 1 Foreign and of General
Interest.
The London .Standard's correspondent
at St. Petersburp avers that tile Russian
government lias accepted TUI as tbe
price of the new loan of 20,000,000.
Iu Hale county, Ala.. Walter Collins
waa examining nia pistol while Rufus
Stevender was in front of Inin. The
pistol accidentally went off, killing Ste-
veuder almost instantly.
Tbe Americafi Waltham WHtch com
pany has announced a reduction of 15
to 2U | er cent, iu the wages of U00 of its
employes, nr all those employed on its
eighteeu-size movements.
A dispatch from Ottawu, Canada,
states on what is alleged to he reliable
authority, that the government has ar
rived at a decision regarding the reor
ganization of the cabinet.
The funeral of the late William L.
Scott took place from hia late residence
iu Erie, Pa. Among the most noted of
many distinguished persons present waa
ex-President Cleveland, Hon. Daniel L.
Lament and Governor Pattison.
At Nashville, Tenn.. James Douglass,
while in an intoxicated condition, took
a small dose of morphine with suicidal
intent. His life was saved, after sev
eral hours’ hard work. Douglass is a
fast young fellow, about 21 years old,
and a son of Byrd Douglass, a wealthy
warehouseman.
The executive committee of the Grant
Monutueut association hud a meeting in
New Vork. Work will be at once be
gun on the monument. The present
temporary tomb will be removed inside
the north end of the main building, for
which the foundation is already laid.
The amount of money on baud is $15.1,-
213.8U.
The Washington Starsay* it is learned
i the best authority, that every hi ig
points now to the election of JndgeBit
lerof Indiana, to succeed Judge ric. u-
field on thelieuchof the court of cmnns,
and it is said that tile president will
probably permit the secretaryship of
war to remaiu vacant until congress
meets.
At a negro church in Sheffield, Ala.,
a negro named Wilson became enrag 'd
at another negro for paving attention
to liis wife, allot and killed the iiiiiu
aud then cut his wife's throat from
ear lo ear. The negroes tried to hush
np the affair, but tbe particulars leaked
out i,n— the officers are now after the
murderer.
At Charleston, S. C., Judge Simonton
filed in tiie United States circuit court
bis decision of the motion made by At
torney General Pop.- for the dismissal
of tl e injunction restraining tbe Caro
lina farmers and all other phosphate
companies from entering or mining in
the Okjsuw territory. The decision de
nies the motion and says the petitioners
must give eight days’notice before again
making the application.
The gin house belonging to J. K. Pate
at out lour miles south of Davisboro,
Ga., was burned, together with nine
teen bales of cotton and 800 bushels of
cotton seed. Abont one half of tbe cot
ton waa owned bv Mr. Pate, tbe balance
belonged to hta neighbors. The loss is
estimated at $1,200, and it Is not be
lieved that anr insurance was carried
on the proiierty. Sparks from the en
gine ennght in the lint room.
ALL WERE DROWNED.
A Boat Is Upset anil a Party of Flsss-
nr* Seekers Are Lost.
Nnwbcro, Sept. 25.—The body of but
one of tbe five persons who were drown
ed in the Hudson river, off Low Point,
by the capsizing of a rowboat hod been
recovered. It waa that of a man. Tbe
search is being continued by George
Wood of Poughkeepsie, and Edward
Ackerman and Thomas May of Low
Point. It is believed that the victims
were Andrew Potosnoke and his wife,
Slavs, who live at Brockway's, two
miles north of this city; their 2-year-old
son, a Hungarian called "Frank,” who
lived in Roseton, anil a Polander, also
from Brockway’s. It was tbe latter’s
body that was recovered. Potusuoke,
his wife and child, spent Sunday at
"Frank’s” home. The child was chris
tened Sunday night. They all started
for Brockway’s in a Whitehall boat.
They hod been drinking Off Low
Point tbe bout was npset and all were
drowned. It appeared from the evi
dence that no ouu ..I tbe purty could
swim.
i
The Chinese Situation.
Shanghai. Sept. 25.—The situation
here is much worse. Disorders are in
creasing at Iciutng, aud this is tbe pre
lude to other disorders. The valley of
the Vang-tse-K^ ig is in rebellion.
Wu-cbang, the-V -rat seat of tbe vice
roy, is ready to revolt, and then thorn
towns open to Strangers—Hankow and
Cbunkiug—are likely to follow. The
latter town is difficult to defend by
warehips, owing to tbe shallowness of
the river. Great excitement prevails.
Strangers are fleeing from Shanghai,
widen is among the threatened towns,
but measures of defense are being token.
Three ships of war are at Wa-chacg
aud the fleets are concentrating at
bhuiig.isi. Minister Lemaire of France,
bas left here for Pekin.
MANY PERISHED.
RAILROAD COLLISION BETWEEN BUR*
GOS AND 8AN 8EBASTIAN.
Additional News of the Terrible Collision
Deceived at London-Several Prominent
Person ages Crushed 'to Heath—'Twenty-
Four Are Dead.
London, Sept. 25.—A dispatch to tho
Standard from San Sebastian says that
it is reported that Seymour Lncos and
Maurice Long, the latter British vice
consnl at Malaga, were killed in the
railroud collision between Burgos and
San Sebastian.
Several entire families perished, in
cluding the judge of Victoria with his
wife and daughter. Borne Englishmen
with the tourists ware also killed. Most
a tiie passengers were asleep at tbe
time of the collision.
Twenty dead and twenty-three in
jured, four of whom have since died,
were extricated from the debris. Many
children wore killed.
When the qneen received tbe news of
the disaster fhe stopped the fetes in -
honor of. her daughter's birthday and
requested the minister of justice tosend
the details.
Ranged Him to a Tree.
Asheville, N. C., 8ept. 25.—Fred
Tyler, white, an engineer on the North
Carolina road, and Hesekiah Rankin,
colored, got into an altercation at the
round house here. Tyler struck Ranldn,
with a lump of coal. Rankin ran off,
>t it pistol, and coming back fired at
rler, striking him in the abdomen,
le crowd of railroad men caught
Rankin, and, taking him across the
river, hanged hi u to a tree. Tyler will
die.
A New Sjmagognn.
Macon, Ga., Sept. 25.—A new Jew
ish synagogue is to be built in Macon to
nke the place of the present*bnilding.
All arrangements have been made, the
site secured and a great part of the
money—$50,000—already in sight Rab
bi e Tnrlier says that work will com
mence at once and that the building
will be handsome and a credit to the
city.
Bay He tVaa Clubbed to Death.
Augusta, Go .- Sept. 25.—Oliver Ellis,
a negro well known in police circles as
an old offender, was found dead iu bed.
Two weeks ago, while drank, on officer
attempted to arrest him and Oliver
clinched witli him. The officer, to free
himself, struck Ellis with a club. The
negroes are excited, and say that Ellis’s
death was canted by the dabbing.
Large JuIinirQU.
New York, Sept. 25.—Charles Mo-
Lean, attorney for Coler, Jr., a broker,
haa obtained judgment in the anpreche
court against.Sigmund T. Slyer & Co.,
real estate dealers at 44 Broadway, for
$148,427 on notes. Henry M. Oxe has
also obtained judgment against the same
firm for $00,825.
The Flamlng-flali!win Affair Settled*
Atlanta, Sept. 25.—The friends of
Mr. Fleming and Dr. Baldwin of tho
house of representatives, have brought
about a settlement between the two
legislators engaged in the recent nn-
pleasantness.
RAILWAY BOYCOTT BILL
To Make a Survey of China.
London, Sept. 25.—The Standard's
correspondent at Sebastopol says; A
[party of live generals, ten colonels and
eight stuff captaina, under Lieutenant
IGeueral Manikin Nevstrouff, have been
sent from bt. Petersburg to survey the
whole Crimea and to prepare topograph
ical idans fur the war department. The
fact la much commented upon in mili
tary circles.
She Nought Too Nlneh lleer.
SPRLNoHixn, 0., Sept. 23.—A sensa
tion was created here, caused by Frank
Sclilegelmilch, a member of the’school
board, frightfully beating his niece,
Mamie Mslir. a little tot, with
cane. He sent her to rash the growler
and she purchased 10 cents’ worth of
beer instead of 5 cents' worth. Sbe waa
frightfully bruised about tbe arms umt
body The police or* investigating the
Introduced la tbs Houre—Railroads and
Basks To lie Regulated.
Atlanta, Ga., September 25.—What
is known aa tbe boyoott bill was Intro
duced this morning by Mr, Bolfenlllet of
Bibb.
This bill seeks to prevent nnjnst dis
crimination on tbrpart of any railroad
operated within or partly within thla
state, sgainst any other railroad com
pany within thla state. It was referred
to the railroad committee, and is ex
pected to come up for final action at an
early date. This is an important meas
ure and baa aroused considerable Inter
est
Tbe bill by Mr. Harris of Catoosa to
provide for the election of the railroad
commissioners by the people and to re
duce tbslr salaries to $2,000 per year,
raised, a* waa expected, considerable
discussion.
Mr. Berner of Monro* made a ringing
speech against the bill; he did not bi-
tieve in bringing the railroad commis
sion into polities, “for," said be, “if
yon place this commission out of the
hands of the governor and give tbe rail
road corporation* an opportunity to take
part in th* election of this commission,
yon would find that every agent, every
ponies would take
employe of these comp
part in the election oi these commls-
Mr. Fleming spoke against the bllL
He soiil it would not bo a question of
honesty on the part of the voters, but a
question of deception.
Mr. Lewis of Hancock spoko In favor’
of tho bill. lie believed it would be
easier to bribe ono or two men than it
would tho voters of Georgia.
Mr. Wheeler of Walker was In favor
of It.
A motion to indetlnlh
bill prevailed, and the l
Tho bill by Mr. Boifculllet of Bibb to
regulate banks was taken up and passed.
This is recognized as ono of the most
importaut.measures that the house has
disposed of.
It provides that no hank shall loan one
person more than 10 per cent of its
rattan capital unless such loan is secured by
’ unquestionable collateral.
It further provide* that all banks shall
publish a quarterly statement of their
respective condition* In one or more of
tbe pnblic gazettes.
dieW postpono the
s blfl waa lost.