Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME 1
AMERICUS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, .1891.
NUMBER 170
Something For
ABOUT RAUM.
BJtAHD NEW SAFETY BICYCLE
TO BE GIVEN AWAY!
IT WONT COST YOU A PENNY!
To stimulate the traffic in our Boys’ and
Children’s CIothiDg department, 1 will give,
with every Boy’s or Child’s suit, between the
ages of 4 and 18 years, sold by us from the
1st ot October past, until
NEXT CHRISTMAS EVE,
when the fortunate one will be determined,
A TICKET, (non-transferable) entitling the
holder to one chance at a
BRAND NEW SAFETY BICYCLE
ro BE GIVEN AWAY ABSOLUTELY FREE OF
ANY CHARGE WHATEVER!
All you have to do is to
BUY YOUR BOY’S SUIT FROM ME
aud get a ticket These tickets will be
numbered, and on Christmas Eve, numbers
corresponding with the tickets given away will
be put in a box: then a committee of disinter
ested citizens will draw out one of the numbers,
and ihe holder of the ticket containing that
number, gets the
Brand Hew Safety Bicycle Free of Charge!
Now a Word about our Famous Clothing Department.
THE NAME OF
George D. Wheatley
has become known far and wide as the
synonym of
FINE CLOTHING AT FAIR PRICES!
Our stock was NEVER SO COMPLETE!
Our styles NEVER SO ELEGANT!
Our prices NEVER SO MODERATE!
And never so great OUR ANXIETY TO PLEASE!
Our assortment of Boys’ and Children’s
Clothing begins with a neat WASH SATINET
SUIT (wool filling) any size from 4 to 18 years,
#1.25 Per &uit,
and includes all the finer materials, such as
CASSIMERES, WORSTEDS, TRICOTS,
SERGE AND CHEVIOT Suits so desirable for
‘BOYS WHO ARE HARD ON CLOTHES.’
Wishing you all “good luck” in the drawing,
boys,
Your friend,
GeopD. Wheatley.
THE REPORT THAT HE HAD RESIGN
ED DENIED BY NOBLE-
Secretary Noble Slate.That General Ileum
Hae not Resigned—The Preaidant Hat
Not Thought ot Appointing an Indiana
WasiiinotuN, Oct. 28.—The minor
that ex Congressman George Steele ot
Indiana, is booked tor the Pension
coinmissionersltip meets with denials nil
nronud. Secretary Noble whs quoted
as having stated that Ramu had re
signed and that Steele wonhl be his
successor, 'ihe secretary said, With
characteristic emphasis, that he had
stated to no one. either privately or for
publication, that General Raum had
resigned, fur in fact he hail not resigned
and he bml not given it as his opinion
to any one that the commissionetship of
pensions would he tendered. to ex-Cou-
gresswim Steele.
It is said here that the president has
not at liny time thought of offering the
commissinnership to nuy one in In
diana, and that lie lias not intimated to
any one that he has lmd the name of
Governor Steele in his mind daring the
talk of General Raura’s retirement. It
is well known that the president has
had two opportunities to appoint Major
8teele to the pension bnreau, and that
he would not ask him to take it at this
late day. It may be stated upon au
thority that General Raum bait not Ren
dered his resignation to Secretary Noble
oy Preeidput Harrison or anybody else.
General Raum will probably resign as
soon as the fight agsinst him (fuses, and
not before, and the piesident, it it un
derstood, is with him in maintaining
this attitnde.
A GRAND AFFAIR.
the Toon# Men*# Democratic I-esgus
Banquet In Atlanta.
Atlanta, Oct- 22.—There has-never
been a banquet in Atlanta to equal that
given by the Yonng Men's Democratic
league to Governor Hill and his party.
It was a grand, enthusiastic Democratic
banquet.. There were but about eighty
arunnd the board, but eighty more earn
est or enthusiastic Democrats do not
live.
The irnrly filed into the breakfast
room of the Kimball at ,half-past 8
o’clock. There thev seated themselves
about an U-shaped table handsome!
decorated witit flowers aud many col
ored candles. President Slaton of,the
Young ’.leu s Democratic League,-pN-
1. 1L SLATON,
sided. On his right was Governor Hiil,
on his left Senator Dan Voorbsea. Be
sides theas and Governor Hill's party,
there were present around the banquet
board were about eighty young Demo
crats* and their friends. The banquet
was elegantly served.
Never were, more eloquent speeches
delivered in Atlanta. Governor Hill
never delivered a stronger speech. He
had a subject which inspired him, and
no man ever spoke to the subject of
“Democracy’’ with more strength and
eloquence than did he. His speech was
interrupted a score of times by long-
continued mid enthusiastic applause,
nnd when he concluded every man arose
from his chair and cheered with vigor.
Senator Voorhees of Indiana, the
“Tall Sycamore of the Wabash,” the
eloquent, the gratid orator of the west,
made a magnificent siieech in response
to the Democracy of the west. He is
an orator of orators. He made aspeech
which will never be forgotten by those
who heard it. A man of magnetism,
eloquence and force of expression, he
captured his audience, aud when he
couclnded and sat down his bearers
Were so enthnsiastic in their approval
of his words that lie was twice com-
oelleil to rise and Iww his anoreciation.
FROM THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT
A Young Women Throw* Kenelf Down
138 feet to tlio Ground.
Baltimore, Oct. 22.-1116 mangled
remains of a young woman were found
at the base of the Washington monu
ment on Monnt Vernon place. She had
thrown herself from the top of the shaft
which towered 198 feet above her dead
body. It ia presumed that the woman
went to the top of the monnment with
the deliberate intention of committing
anidde. A gentleman who waa on the
monnment while she was there, noticed
her agitatation, and asked her if she
felt ill. She made some vagus reply
and was soon left alone. She then made
the awful leap to the stone flagging
below. The woman bad evidently med
itated suicide. She made a visit totlie
top of the monument last Saturday
when it is believed her courage failed
her. The remains, which indicated re
finement and genteel poverty, were for
A long time unidentiiied, bat finally
they were recognized as those of Miss
Alice Hecbt of 210 West Fayette street.
LOUISIANA ORANGE CROP.
It Is !iumcn*e and One of tli* Largest
Fever liaised.
New Orleans, Get. 22.—The orange
crop of Louisiana, which is rapidly ap
proaching ripening, to immense; in fact,
one of the largest ever raised. Some
of the trees are so laden with oranges
that the branches have to be supported
with props to prevent their breaking,
The crop will be picked by the end of
October nnd is now about passed any
danger of damage. Nearly all the
orange groves in the state are in Plaque-
mine parish below New Orleans on the
Mississippi, that being the only portion
of Louisiana where the culture can be
carried on successfully. This region
includes two narrow stripe of land lying
between the Gulf and the Mississippi,
and the water which surrounds the
orange farms tempers the cold and pre
vents damage from freezing. The onl-
ture is a hundred years old, and some
of the trees are of nearly that age.
There has beeu very little extension of
the orange culture here recently, those
who experimented in it having
heavily from, severe frosts.
The orange farms are most product
ive and are valued at $1,900 or more
per acre, yielding $180 to$250 in oran.
There is little or no cultivation,
crop is sold on the trees, to be gathered
by the purchaser, and frequently the
sale to made "in the bud.’’ when the
tree has only blossomed aud before the
oranges have formed, all risk being
taken by. the purchaser and the pay-
menta being made before a single or-
Ange has been picked. The Louisiana
orange, which to usually a cross between
the sweet and the sour orange, hat suf
fered in comparison with the California
and Florida product, largely because it
was roughly handled in the picking, bnt
the trouble has now been thoroughly
remedied, and it is growing in favor
again.
BACKER’S ASSIGNEE’S STATEMENT.
Tile Hruker Owea Hare Ybee It le
I'robable He Cm Pay.
New York, Oct. 22.—The schedules
of Abraham Backer, note broker, in lito
assignment to Ben F. Einstein, were
filed in the coart of common pleas. Hto
total debts and liabilities, including
secured and unsecured debts, are $1,
038,MO; bis unsecured debts amount to
$849,821. Thera are contingent liabili
ties of $1,012,180. The nominal assets
amonnt to $1,841,707, bnt the assignee
lins only $414,789 to apply to the pay
ment of the unsecured creditors.
Among the principal seenred creditors
are: The National Park bank, fora
claim of $100,003; the Central National,
for a claim of $330,000; the Merchanti'
National bank for $175,900; Henry
Rothschild Sc Co., $86,028; Isaddr New
man, 443,048; M. Bchenieder & Co., of
Sherman, Tex., $142,063, The latter
claim Is only partially seenred. The
other claims are seenred by southern
stocks anil builds. Charles Schenleder
dtCo. have a claim of $181,110, which is
unseen red.
Backer’s assets include the claims
against the Macon Construction com
pany of Georgia, one an open acoount
of $388,819, and on notes $283,000. As
security for these claims Backer re
ceived $300,000 of the Georgia Southern
and Florida railroad first mortgage
bonds and $4J5,000 in Macau aud Birm
ingham railroad first mortgage bonds.
Ot the Georgia Southern and Florida
bond*, $232,000 was delivered to the
assignee, as waa $410,000 of the bomb
of the Macon and Birmingham railroad,
the others having been ra-hjrpotbeoate;l
' Backer. The actual value of the
2,000 in bonds to $150,800, and that
of the $410,000 in bonds .to $102,900,
making the setaal value of tho claims
against the Macon Cons traction com
pany bnt $293,800. The construction
company to iusolveut and iu the hands
of a receiver.
World's Fair Kmptojre# Htrlke.
Chicago, Oct. 28.—One hundred and
twenty men employed in the electricity
bnildmg at the World’s Fair gronmls
quit because their foreman, William
Irving, had been given the alternative
to accept a position at forty cents an
honrorqnit. Irving has been a great
favorite with the men ever since the
work was began. The strikers were
subsequently paid off and left the
grounds. The men claim that Irving
was reduced from the foremanship be
cause he strictly enforced all of the state
laws regarding wages and honrs of
labor. He was the only foreman on the
grounds, it to said, who insisted upon
the weekly pay day.
victim* of Persecution.
Sr. Petersburg, Oct. 22. —Serious
anti-Semetic Hots are reported at Scher-
nigsff, in which thirty Jews were
killed, while 900 suffered'either in per
son or in property. The popular belief
that the Jews are responsible for tbe
prevalence of the famine, has bnt slight
substratum of tbe fact. The Jews
are usually large buyers of grain, but
this year they refrained, owing to the
persecution of which they hare been
victims. Famine has extended to Sibe
ria. Advices from the interior of tbe
empire are continually of worse im
port. The people are commencing to
Hot in Samara, Sarateff and Voronets.
INDIANS RESTIVE.
THE 8ECRETARV OF THE INTERIOR
RE8U8E8 TO PAY FOR SERVICES.
The Allotting of th# Chvyenus end Ara
pahoe Lands -The Citizens of Oklahoma
Mast Walt for Congress to Pay Them for
the Work*
Minister from Guatemala.
Washington, Oct. 32.—The Hon.
Antonio Batres, who succeeds Dr. Fer
nando Ctn* as minister from Guate
mala, has arrived in the city and estab
lished the legation permanently at tbe
Arlington hotel Mr. Batres to one of
the most eminent scholars and states
men in Central America, and for the
lost twenty years has held almost con
tinuously posts of the highest honor
trust under his government. Once be
fore he wss minister to Washington,
daring the administration of Mr.
Hayes, and his many friends bars
given him a moat cordial welcome.
Wichita. Khii., Oct. 22.—Word has
icon received here that the secretary of
die interior lmi decided that he Iihb no
right to accept the offers of the citi
zens of Oklahoma who tendered their
services to complete tho allotting of
the Cheyenne and Arapahoe lanrtson
sn understanding that they should be
reimbursed out of an appropriation to
be passed by the next congress. This
decision will aroase a vast amount ot
ill feeling on the part of both Indians
And those waiting for homes in the
new country. The Indians even now
believe they are being maltreated, and
claim that the government has failed
to live np to the treaty made with
them, both us to the payments prom
ised and as to the division ot the
lands. A Dispatch from Darlington
says the Indiana are very restive, and
that a large number ot ohlefa have been
delegated to go to Washington and de
mand what the Indians conceive to be
their rights.
HIS HIDE WA8 8PLIT.
A Tontli Who Seem* to Think Ho Do-
' *err*d oil Ho Got.
St. Josrph, Mo., Oct. 82,—Lonis Gal
vin, a boy of 19 years, was arrested on
■.he complaint ot hto father who wanta
to send him to the reform aohool be-
janse the boy is not nndor control. The
officer who made the arrest found the
boy in a dark cellar, bound hand nnd
foot. Hto mother sent clean clothes to
tbe prison for him, and on stripping
him the turn-key was horrified to flm
that the little fellow’s back and shoal-
ders were covered with gashes and ugly
braises. The hoy made no complaint,
bnt said he deserved all he had received
tnd more too.
June* I* Governor Now.
New York. Oct. 22.— Lieutenant
Governor Edward F. Jones to, by tbe
constitution, acting governor ot the
state in the absence of Governor Hill,
in Atlanta, and, according to The Eve
ning World, declared his intention of
exercising gubernatorial functions. Sec
retary of State Frank Rice, who to in
the city, said he did not think there is
any probability of Lieutenant Governor
Jones making an appointment in the
place of the late Judge Allen, it being
hto belief that Governor Hill made the
appointment before he left for the south
some days ago. Governor Hill has
proven himself too goods constitutional
lawyer, hto friend* say, to have left the
state with any possibility extotlng for
Lieutenant Governor Jones to make
tronble while acting temporarily in an
executive capacity. The lieutenant
governor says: "I will. exercise the
fnncttruH of the office to such an ex
tent as the public good may reqnire.
I have uothing to say for ptildication
regarding my specific intentions,"
Am Ungrateful lYould-b* Snlelil*. -
Findlay, O., Oct. 83.—Charles Hum-
by, living near this city, attempted
suicide by hanging himselt to tbe door
ot his barn. He had just jumped from
a stool on which he" was standing while
adjusting the noose, wheu Dewitt
Coney, superintendent of wells for tbs
Btandard Oil company, came along and
promptly cut the young fanner down.
Hnmby was not at all grateful for the
humane act. On the enutrary helooked
npon it as a malicious interference with
Ills rested rights. He accordingly
jerked ont hie penknife, whipped open
the blade and started after Mr. Coney.
He chased the philanthropist all around
the place, bnt the panned finally
escaped. Hnmby, who to n prosperous
farmer, to supposed to 1* temporarily
insane.
They Devilled to Hv|mr»te*
CRAWrOHDVlLLE, Iud., Oct. 22.—The
sensation of the hour to the announce
ment that Mr. nnd Mrs. George Hadley,
after it happy married life extended Over
a period iff twenty years, have decided
to separate. Tlu-ir iiu-omputnbility of
tempermeiit prevented their agreeing.
Instead of luatriraouiul iifo growing
lovlier ns the days passed by. ft grew to
be an nnhearabie burden. Neither lius
any charge to make, and neither will
apply for a divorce for two years, when
the charge of abandonment entt be es
tablished. Mrs. Hadley to a beantifnl
and accomplished lady and a society fa
vorite. Mr. Hadley was a leading
wholesale grocer until recently, when
he sold ont to engage in business in
Chicago. He to alike prominent in
bank and social circles. An amicable
division of property has been made.
Mfirrlml ffl» 9l0thrr*ln-Li»«r.
New Albany, Ind., Oct. 28.—A very
strange elopement and marriage took
place In this city, the groom marrying
hto annt and motber-fn-law. Thomas
A. Cook of Fleming county, Ky., 39
years old, and Mre. Virginia Proctor of
the same county, aged 70, were the
happy conple made hnsband and wife
by Elder Wilson. Several years ago
Cook married the dangbter of Mr. nnd
Mrs. Proctor, hto uncle and aunt. They
lived happily together nntil a few
months ago, when the wife died. Cook
and Mrs. l’lix.-tor grieved so over the
death ot the wife and dangbter that,
notwithstanding the disparity of their
years, they were drawn together and
tbaxeenlt was the marriage.
BODE THE BEAR TO DEATH.
A Woodsman Punishes a Chestnut Thief
Regardless of Personal Danger.
Schaxton, Oct 21*—*A<no& Mason, a
Iiackot Creek woodsman,' has a shingle
shanty a mile back In the woods from
hto bouse. Last Monday Mason's boys
gathered a grain bag full of chestnuts on
Peck's Hill, three miles from where
their father was making shingles. Mr,
Mason had. gone home when the boys
got back to the shanty. It was after
nightfall, and the lads were nearly tired
ont, so they placed tbe hag in the shanty
and went home, Intending to take tbe
nuts to the house some time tho next
day.
At daybreak on Tuesday morning Mr.
Mason found the shanty door open. Ho
thought the boys bad carelessly left ltso
the night bofore, and be stepped Inside
tbe moment he. reached it. In tho
furtbor corner of the shanty a bear stood
crunching chestnuts with hto tall toward
the door. He bad ripped tbe bag open,
and be waa so busy filling bit- stomach
with nuts that be didn't hear Mf.*. Ma
son’s footsteps. Tbe chestnuts lay all
over the floor In the corner, and tbe
bear was oraeking them as fast as posst-
ble.
Mr. Mason Instantly became eo angry
over tbe way the bear was destroying
thd fruits of his sons' hard labor, that
the thought of danger never entered hts
boad. He Immediately determined not
to let the bear leave tbe shanty alive,
and lio made np his mind at once how
he was going to kill him. He had a
drawing knife In his hand that he had
aharpened the night before, and that was
the only weapon within roach. It was
nearly os sharp m a razor, nnd without
waiting another moment the plucky
woodsman closed the door softly, fas
tened It, and ran at the bear.
His steps startled the hungry brute,
and giving vent to a snort of fright the
bear whirled and made for the door.
Just as the hear turned Mr. Mason leaped
on his back, looked hto toes under the
bear’s belly, grippod his knees against
hts ribs, and went to slashing the bear’s
nose with tbe shaving knife. At the
first stroke ho cut off a chunk of tbe
bear’s snout, and the blood spurted
against tbe door In a stream. When
tho bear saw that the door was closed
he began to run around the little
shanty, snorting blood, bellowing, and
trying hard to shake Mr. Mason from
bis back. Mr. Mason had a grip on the
boar's body that tho Infuriated brute
couldn’t looson, and he kept shaving
siloes from the bear's snout and forehead
as they made tbe circuit of tbe slinnty.
He soon cat the boar's oars off, and tbe
blood spurted to Ills eyes and nearly
blinded him for a moment.
Tben tho bear made a lunge for tbe
only window In the shanty, four feet
from tho floor. He knocked the sash
out at one cllji of hie paws, and while he
struggling to olimb tbrougb, Mr.
Mason swung the drawing knife under
bis throat, grabbed tho other end like a
flash, and pulled and sawed with both
bands till the blade cut clear through
tbe bear’s wind pipe and jngnlar veins.
The bear dropped as tbongb a ballet bad
pierced hts hoart, and Mr. Muon was on
bis feet in an Instant at the bear’s tide.
The big ohestnut thief soon gave his
last kick, and before noon Mr. Mason
and his boys dragged him ont, hung
him to a tree, and skinned him. Ho
bad eaten three-quarters ot the. nuts,
and he weighed 313 pounds.
CONDENSED NEWS DISPATCHES, ‘
Dom«*tl* and Foreign and of General
IntareaL
Madrid Ulspntcli ally*: Pseverar-
village* In the province of Granada
have been isolated liy flood*. The snp-
plv of food in these places has. in con-
sequences, become very scarce. Traffic
has been completely stopped by Sala
manca and Oporto, a portion of the
railroad line connecting tbe two cities
having been destroyed by n landslide.
A Paris dispatch says: Tli--archbishop
of Aix will be prosecuted for disregard- -
ing the circnlar of M, Failierios. the
minister of public Worship, enjoining
him not to leave bis diocese without tbe
consent of hto government, an order
consequent upon the recent pilgrim dis
orders at Rome. The archbishop, by
bis disobedience, to liable to a heavy
liue a* well as a term of imprisonment.
At Minneapolis, Ignatius D-mnellv
began snit against the St. Paul Pioneer
Press for *1,000,000 for libel. The snit
involves ex-Congressman W. S. King,
and to bused on a letter written by the
latter to Donnelly and repnbltolied by
the Pioneer Press. Donnelly's attorneys
secured the opening nnd closing of the-
«e.
A Stoney Point, Out., special says:
At u public meeting held here for th*
purpose of advocating political union
between Canada and the United States,
notwithstanding the fact that the rain
had been falling for days ami th*
roads were almost knee ileep, the at
tendance was very large. N|>eeches in
favor of political untou were loudly
applauded, and resolutions endorsing
political nnion were carried itunni-
inouaiy.
A Berlin dispatch says that an ex
haustive article from the pen of Pro
fessor Koch has been published. The
article will treat of the origin, prepara
tion and application of tuberculin*. In
it tbe professor has declared that by
chemical experiments he has succeeded
in purifying hto lymph of all inflamma
tory matter. He also says that the if-
fert of an application of soar lymph dif
fers bnt little from tbe effect* of on sp-
BlJfStjou of crucje ljjmBfc-