Henry County weekly and Henry County times. (McDonough, GA.) 1891-189?, January 16, 1891, Image 1

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THE HEN RY COUNTY W& VOL. XV. PROFEBSIOXA L CARDS. P«7 « r. <’ IMPHKMo D E N TI ST. Aii¥ oho d«u*-(*»f work done ciß a • NtnimoiUfrd either by rslliiig on me In p*-< j «<,!! nr itjtlrt sslng me through the mail- I terms cash, unless special arrangement ms otherwise inaiK. To W lIUTAN J W.T. OICKItN. KKV,V> A IHHiI'V A'l TOKNK'tS AT l-AW. MeDotot i n ■■ * Will nraetic. in the counties composing j ihe Flint .ludtoial Circuit, the supreme Court r i Georgia and Hie Unit*-’ stales District Court. »prt|i-ly ( j tit. ii. r« attounkv at LAW, McDonoiujh . Ga. Wilt practice in *ic Flu it Circuit, the Supreme l ourt .i'Orgia, and the United States Distne: Court. marl 6-1)' ft ... Bi;ua>, attorn ky at law. McDonough, U*. Will practice in all the Courts ol Geurgin Special attention given to commercial and other collections. Will attend all the Courts > it Hampton regularly. Ofti. e upstairs over The Wkkki.it office. j | . B AM,, ATTORNK\ a']' law, MoDosoioh, Ca. W ill practice in the counties composing I tic Flint Judicial Circuit, and the Supreme and i District Courts of Georgia. Prompt attention givan to collections. octs- 79 w A. V " ATTORNEY AT LAW, McDonovuh, Ga. Will practice in all the counties compos ing the Flint Circuit, the Supreme Court o, Georgia and the United States District Court. janl-ly fj A. PIiKPLKK, * ’ ATTORNEY AT LAW, HAMI'TO.V, Ga, Will practice in nil tin; counties composing the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court ot Georgia and the District Court of the United States. Special and prompt atten tion given to Collections, Oct 8, 1888 Jno. D. Stewart. | R.T. Da.mei. NTGIVAKT A IIAAIIII., ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Griffin, Ga. | |lt. It. .1. AKAOIJ). llamcton. Ga. I hereby tender my professional service to the people of Hampton and surrounding country. Will attend all cal’s night and day. JO HA TV 11. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Gate City Natioal Bank Building, Atlanta. Ga. PracLii- ■ in the State and Federal Courts. GRIFFIN FOUNDRY AND MaciiineWorks. \\Te announce to the PuhTc that we are It prepared to manufacture Engine Boil ers ; will take orders for all kinds of Boil ers. We are prepared to do all kinds of repairing on Engines, Boilers and Machin ery, generally. We keep in ftoek Brass fittings of all kinds; also Inspirators, In jectors, Safety Valves, Steam Guages, Pipe and Pipe Fittings and Iron and Brass Castings of every Description. OMKOU.A A WALCOTT. ISO l'»K TEXAS! Here is the opportunity of a lifetime. A splendid farm and pasture about one mil, and a half from Henderson, Texas, most under fence, 't he land lies well. Here you use no guano and make more cotton per acre than they do in the south with guanos 't he lauds are mostly under fence and well timbered where not in cultivation. s4.[>H per acre. Terms easy. Apply to, Oct. 24. J. HakVev TTuxeu Henderson, Tex. PATENTS Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, *.nd all Pat ent business conducted for Moderate Fees. Our Office is Opposite U S. Patent Office and we can secure patent ui less time than those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not free of charge. Our fee Dot due till patent is secured. A Pamphlet, ‘How to Obtain Patents,” with names of actual clients in your State, county, or town, sent free. Address, c.a.snow&co. OPP. Patent Office. Washington. D. C. FOR m ONLY! LOST or FAILING 2CANHOOD; mi and IC£R7OUS DEBILITY; Srt 9 >oafcneiw of Body and Hinc, Effects ErTorsor Excesee* in Old or Young. Kobii&t. Noutc SaNHOOU fnlly Rwtowd. Hew to tulirtt led birr»*.he-, WXA K, lS ro v KIA>P£D ORL 4SB APA RTb O* BOD Y. Absolute* n»fal!li--g tioax TREATMENT— Benefit* la • <Uj. Beu fruit) 60 Met>» and (’’•reign foantrle*. Writ* Iheia, Dr»criptl»« Beck, f ipl»’i»tl »* and proofs Belled (triM) fn*o. Aiirtu ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. V. TEN DOLLARS Will bepoid for He* heel itrscription ot tbecelebrated Na.i Cartoon entitled "The New South'' reached by Tin- frnnnHr. I lrelnia A Ueor*l« Hallway. Description shat! include all resources shown In the cartoon Contest closes Dec (Ist. IBKU Decision by three distinguished Southerners Addle. 9 ii. \V. WIiEN'N. Ksoxvilla. Tknx Offß S' S S 3 and Whiskey Habits U 5 ■ E Hal cured at home with -3 # 8 5?? Bout pain. Bookofpar -3 S!e?S3S«miars**Dt FBfaE. II.M.»OOLLEY.M U Al!»et- «-<*. < Iffiee Whitehall S» jfTTTTC! T> a Pim tnt.T he found oe 'ls at Oea 11115 Jr AT LA I’. Bowell A Co's Newspaper A< ieertlstlur Bureau MU Spruce bl. l where advertising Spptracts mmr let made tor it IN NKW X ur K- THE VERY LATEST NEWS ITEMS. Interesting and I'ill,y I’oints Gathered From Every Section of the Country, The Alabama farmers are preparing to get to work for another crop. Nineteen of the leading glass table ware manufacturers of Ohio, Pennsyl vania and West Virginia have formed » combine. The Brumfield-McCoy trouble, in West Virginia has been renewed, and in a fight at Hart’s creek few days ago, six men were killed. At the village of McComb, in Ohio, on the 7th, six business blocks were de stroyed by fire, causing a loss of $35,000; insurance SIO,OOO. Ike Mack was arrested in Spartanburg, S. C., for stealing another negro's watch. He returned the watch, paid the costs and was discharged. The hyena at Grant park, in Atlanta, died last Saturday. It had been in cap tivity 31* years. He was brought to America from Africa. The house has passed the bill author izing the issuance of certificates to tele graph operators who were with the Fed eral army during tho war. Mr. Will Wright, of Spartanburg, S. C., lost a tine mule the other day. The animal was poisoned, and fell dead in front of the Central Methodist church. A case of smallpox has been discovered at Hardeeville, S. C. It is supposed to have come from Savannah. Precaution ary measures have already been adopted. Air. W. H. Clayton, superintendent nf the central division of the Southern Ex press company iu Atlanta, Ga., died at iiis home iu that city last Suuday night. The remains of Sergeant Cicero Eng lish, of the Atlanta police, was taken to Collins’s Spring, on the Chattahoochee river, for interment. He died last Thurs day. William A. Wallace’s assignees, at Clearfield Pa., have failed to furnish the bond required ($1,000,000), and a set tlement with creditors has been aban doned. Joseph S. Reed, a prominent citizen, and a brother of the sheriff and Mayor Reed, of Lake Charles, La., suicided. Heavy losses at the gaining table prompt ed the deed. Mr. Samuel Tison, a prominent and well known citizen of Lee county, Ga., dropped dead in Fort Gaines the other day from heart disease. He was about 30 years old. A bill has been introduced in the North Carolina legislature to charter the Greenville, Carolina and Northern rail road. from Greenville, Teun., to Hot Springs, N. C. Physicians report that there are sev eral hundred cases of grip in Augusta, Ga. They say, however, that the disease appears in a very mild form, and there have been no fatalities so far. William C. Jillson, owner and business manager of tho Hope River Warp com pany at Willimaiitic, Conn., has closed the mill. An assignment is predicted in a few days with heavy liabilities. Gen. A. W. Greely, of Arctic fame, was iu Augusta, Ga., last Thursday. Ho has made a tour of several southern cities. He has returned to Washington, D. C., where his signal service bead quarters are. Janies Dayton, manager of Arlington Heights Electric railway, at Fort Worth, Tex., was shot by James Brotherton, en gineer at the jiower house. It is said that Brotherton acted in self-defense. Dayton will die. There is great enthusiasm all over Texas in favor of better roads. Several southern states are doing more to im prove their highways than is the state (Georgia) which claims to be the most progressive of them all. There is to-day more cotton in But ler county Ala., than ever before at this time of the year. Nearly all the farmers have from one to twenty-five bales stored awav awaiting better prices. The warehouses are all full. Marshal D. F. Berry, of Marion, S. C., while on a spree in Charleston, S. C., fell or jumped from a third story win dow in the Forest house, on King street, and was killed. He was 53 years old and leaves a wife and several children. Capt. James Dougherty, one of the best known Louisville and New Orleans pilots, died at the residence of his ne phew, Mr. Tucker, near Parkland, Ky., on the 7th inst. He had been for years a pilot in the Louisville and New Orleans trade. The indictments charging Joseph Pulitzer, JohnC. Chambers and James F. Graham, editors of The New York World, with criminal libel in publishing articles defamatory to the character of the late Alex. T. Stewart, were dismissed at New York. Steps have been taken looking to the impeachment of Frank McGrath, presi dent of the Kansas Farmers’ Alliance, who is accused of being a party to the alleged scheme to elect E. J. Turner, Republican congressman from the Sixth district, to the United States senate. W. J. Frazer, a prominent merchant, was shot and fatally wouned by Samuel Ratliffe, postmaster at Garville, Wayne county, last night. Frazer accused tiie postmaster of tampering with ids mail, and a quarrel ensued. Both men drew revolvers and began firing at each other, but Frazer was the only one hit. Rat liffe is in jail. Sunday night, about 10 o’clock, a tramp went to the Vicksburg house, at Vicksburg, Miss., and asked fora bucket of water. It was found that a box car on the elevator switch tracx was on fire, but it was quickly extinguished. Tiie inference is that the tramp had been in side and set fire to the straw while smoking. Coroner Hanley, of New York, lias notified all institutions and hospitals in that city wherein Dr. Koch’s lymph is being used, that in case any of the pa tients should die, the coroner’s office should lie notified at once. The coroner said that all such would be treated as coroner’s cases, and inquests would be I held. At tlte Mississippi state convention, Samuel Dickie, national chairman of tiie Prohibition party, was present, and out lined iiis plan for the co-operation of the national and state organizations in plac ing an organizer in the field in that state. Mr. Dickie spoke for a straightout third party movement all along the line. Very few delegates were present. Tom Jones, a worthy colored man, living near the Northeastern depot in Athens, lias domesticated a large colony ' of tiie old field gray rabbit# tliat he raises in large numbers for sale. Tom baa about twenty-five breeders, and says that rabbits are raised as early as chickens. They run at large in the yard and oe xime as tame as house cats. AND HENRY COUNTY TIMES. McDONOUGH, GA., FRIDAY. JANUARY, 16, 1801. INSPECTING GULF FORTS. Gil*. Howard mid suff I-ook About Fort JoftpMoii. Duv Tobtcoas, Fla., Jan. 13. Gen. O. O. Howard and staff arrived on the revel'ne steamer McDutl, Capt. Thomas A. Smith, to inspect the fortifications at this place. Accompanied by Capt. Smith, bis staff and the sergeant in charge of Fort Jef ferson, as the post here is called, he crit ically impected the grounds, buildings and armament. It is the largest fort in tha United States, except Fortress Monroe, and is rapidly going to decay. It was erected by Jefferson Davis while secretary of war, at a cost of $5,000,000. It covers forty-five acres, and the buildings at present are occupied by officers of the Marine hospital service. Gen. Howard was agreeably impressed with the location of the fort, and will recommend that it be garrisoned and equipped with modern guns. It origi nally mounted upward of 500 guns, and many of them are still mounted. It was at this place Dr. Mudd was con fined in his cell for three years on life sentence. He was liberated in 1868, dur ing the yellow fever scourge. All the surgeons of the station had succumbed, and no one could be obtained to fill their places. Dr. Mudd volunteered. His work was like magic, and he lost few of those down with fever. For his service he was given bis freedom. Gen. Howard, upon returning to Key West, inspected Fort Taylor, command ing the entrance to Key West harbor, and he will recommend that it be garri soned and equipjicd in the same manner as that at Tortugas, thus adding two sta tions ready for immediate action in case of trouble with the republics to the south. * 10,000 OUT OF WORK. Matioiihi" Valley Furnaces Shut Down lie* cause of Freight Kates. Youngstown, 0., Jan. 13.—The fol lowing furnaces in the Mahoning valley are now shut down by the operators, be cause of the refusal of the railroad ami coke men to reduce rates : Brier Hill Iron and Coal company, three stacks, 125,000 tons annual capac ity; Andrews Brothers, Hazleton, two stacks, 80,000 tons; Hunrod furnaces, two stacks, 65,000 tons; Strutbers fur nace, 40,000 tons; Hannah furnace, 50,- 000 tons; Girard furnace, 75,000 tons; Hubbard furnaces, 75,000 tons; Mary furnace, Lowellville, 55,000 tons; Claire furnace, Sharpsville, 50,000 tons; Doug lass furnace, Sharpsville, 60,000 tons, Mabel furnace, Sharpsville, 50,000 tons; Shaiqisville furnace, 40,000 tons; Spear man furnace, Sharpsville, 60,000 tons; Stewart furnace, Sharon, 30,000 tons; Sharon furnace, 25,000 tons; Wheeler furnaces, Middlesex, 100,000 tons. By closing down these furnaces, the annual out putof which is 1.000,000 tons, more than 10,000 men are thrown out of employment, and the outlook for an early resumption is not bright. SUGAR FROM MILK. FarmcrM May Get Kich if the New Pro cess Materializes. West Chester, Pa., Jan. 18.—It has been ascertained that a peculiar quality of sngar, extracted from the whey of milk, can be used for medicinal pur poses, and made to realize a price which would double the present market value of the milk produced. The Fairinount Creamery association of upper Uwchlan township, Chester county, has conducted a series of experi ments with alleged wonderful results, and has sent a committee to visit chem ists in New York and Philadelphia with a view to extending the scope of the in vestigations. The keenest interest is manifested hereabouts in the outcome of the move ment, which, if successful, will no doubt give a tremendous boom to the milk in dustry of the country. FISHERY COURTESIES. Canada Giants IVrmi.Mlon to an American Vessel to lluy Supplies. Ottawa, Jan. 13.—Minister of Cus toms Bowell received an application on behalf of an American fishing schooner in distress for permission to run into Gusboro, N. S., for supplies anti repairs. The request was immediately granted. Mr. Bowell said that lie believed every possible concession should be made to United States vessels where the vosted rights of tiie dominion were not in fringed upon. “Wo want to live on friendly terms with our neighbors,” he said, “and not in a constant state of irritation and re taliation.” Mr. Bowell is strongly in favor of the continuance of the modus vivendi, which he believes would be a fair settlement of the fishery question. RHODE ISLAND AND CONNECTICUT CollMUine<l Four Million Pound, of Oleo margarine East Year. Norwich, Conn.. Jan. 13.—Notwith standing the Connecticut diarymen and farmers wage implacable war against the oleomargarine and imitation butter maker the year around, the oleomargine man does a thrifty business in the state. In the revenue district of Rhode Island and Connecticut 4,455,257 pounds of oleomargarine was consumed last year. Riiode Island is rather lenient toward the imitation butter men, while Connec ticut farmers will try to induce the pres ent legislature to enact still more rigidly proscriptive statutes against oleomar garine. SKULL AND BRAIN CUT OUT. The Doctors Thought Ho Would Die, but lie in Improving Pittsburg, Pa., Jan. 13.—The case of Henry Blankenship, who was struck on the bead in a drunken row on Saturday, k r.roui-iug great interest in the medical profession. Ills assailant cut a slice from B i k n .hip's skull three byjfour inches in size, and some of the brain matter escaped. The pliysi ian at first said the case was hojieleas. He has since recovered consciousness and is improving steadily. 1l»c Steamer Al»euborn Sunk. Delaware City, Jan. 13.—Tho Alsenborn, plying between Baltimore and New York, was cut down and sunk by field ice in Delaware bay just after leaving the canal. No life was lost. The Alsenborn was a freight boat, and lo loiiged to the General Transportation coinpoiiy, Fred Shriver, president * frURN AS THEY GO. I'he lanital* Reoouiu Desperate and the Torch li Applied. Pine Übmk, Jan. 13.—The returning hostiles wore only four miles from the agency Sunday night. Superintendent Dougherty says they are burning everything in their way ou their march to the agency. Flames from burning cabins and hay stacks have been seen, and volley# of musketry are often heard. Col. Corbin thinks there has been a skirmish between Capt. Wells’s troops and the #a ages. A panic has seized the half-breeds and squawmei here, and they are hurrying their fami.es to the railroad station. A renegi de came from the hostile camp Sunday, and says the medicine men are making medicine which will re duce the effect of a rifle bullet to a blue spot uo th skin, and that the savages have sworn not to surrender their guns. The coming of the hostiles, and the uneasiness among the friendlies is caus ing apprehension. Gen. Brooks's command is close be hiud tho hostile#, and Gen. Carr is press ing him closer every hour. How Red Cloud £»cap«mL Before Lieut, Casey was killed, Red Cloud says lie did everything in his power to save the young officer. Young Jack Red Cloud says he fired five shots at the murderers after the assassination. Later Red Cloud was told of a plot to kill him. His son Jack smuggled him out of the camp, and then his daughter took him by the hand and led him on foot tlm ugh the snow over eighteen miles of wretched country to the agency. Rod Cloud is very blind. Without his daughters help, ho would certainly have lost his v ay and perished in the blizzard. Twice huriug the fight Brules tired at him. Ift-d Cloud ami iiis daughter lay down in the snow until the firing ceased. When young Jack Rod Cloud came into ihe agei cy, he brought with him one of Lieut. Casey’s revolvers. The other lad been stolen. Lieut. Casey's watch anil a portion of his uniform w T ere also taken by the murderers. The Ikx.lv has bee. sent to Rhode Island for burial. Elko. Nev., Jan. 1 . —Samuel MoMil len, of tear valley, at the head of Hum boldt volley, telegraphed to Sheritf Polk Sunday. asking for arms and ammuni tion. McMilleu says 200 Indians are holding a ghost dance in Star valley,and the sitvyition is thieatening. COTTON REPORT. to Tills Statement, Previous Have Iteen Broken. Mephuis, Jan. 13.—Messrs. Hill, Fon taine & Co., in their regular monthly cotton report, say: “The yield was cut siiort within the dis(riag ./ the unprecedented si>ell of wet weather, which prevailed during the latter half of August and all of Septein l>er. Notwithstanding this, receipts at Memphis will break all previous records and approximate 725,000 bales. “The picking season has closed in every state, and our estimate of the total yield of tho country is herewith given. The figures are tho result of numerous letters of inquiry sent out Dec. 20, to all sections of the south, including tho At lantic states, Louisiana and Texas, and we estimate the yield will be 7,7?3,00G bales. “There has been a general increase re ported from every state as compared with last year’s crop, of 7,313,000 bales. Tennessee, North Carolina and Texas show the largest gains, and these states alone have an increase of two-thirds of the total of 460,t>00 bales which we esti mate the present yield to lie in excess of the past season. “But, it should be borne in mind that last year the cotton crop in many sec tions of Tennessee, North Carolina and in north Alabama was almost a total failure; hence, due allowance should lx* made for the large increased yield which correspondents report. “There is also a mistaken idea regard ing cotton that is being held back. The pressing demand of merchants, and Hie necessities of planters, owing to the stringency of the money market during the past three months, have induced free shipments of the staple, and, while stocks at interior points are somewhat larger than last year, it is a question whether the percentage of the crop yet to come in sight is very much greater than at this same period last year.” DON’T WANT WAR. Tho Quebec Telegraph's Opinion of Cuns diau. on the War (^uention. Quebec, Jan. 13, —The full depth of loyality of the annexation party in Canada may lie gauged by the following editorial remarks of The Quebec Tele graph: Great Bi itain may as well understand that if there is war with the United States it w ill have to do the fighting all alone—at least so far as Canada is con cerned. If we 'understand the views of the people of this country aright they will not fight against their neighbors. They do not believe in taking Yankee gore for the ake of any number of seal skins. Once war was declared, tho Reform party of Canada, would, we Be lieve, declare for annexation to a man; that is, if the Americans Conducted their business prudently, and all this would lx* done without the slightest feel ing of unfriendliness to Great Britain, CHARGED WITH MURDER. E. J. Hendrix and a Woman Arrests.! am! i’ut In Jail. Goshen, Ind., Jan. 13.—Mrs. Frank 8. Calkins anti Dr. Frank J. Hendrix are in jail here charged with murdering Edmund Calkins last April by pushing him overboard from a boat. Calkins was a( one time editor of The Labor Signal, the organ of the Knights of Labor, and bad been married to the woman only three days. She confessed that she and Hendrix planned a boat ride purposely to get rid of her husband: that Hendrix gave her husband drugged liquor before they started, and pushed him overboard. Hendrix was to get half her husband’s property. The Farmers’ Alliance of Indiana will ask the legislature to pa-ss hills prevent ing the adulteration of foods and medi cines; to compel corjiorations to pay 'taxes for special privileges; to confine convict labor to tiie State’s needs, and to repeal the law empowering the hold ing of subsidy elections. COME TO GRIEF. Cr**a, a Dulling Yount; Kent nek lan, Ar rested iu Texas. Memphis, Jan. 13. — Sheriff McLendon received a telegram from United States Marshal Frick, at San Antonio, Texas, announcing tho arrest at that place of John 8. t 'mss, who is wanted litre for forgery and miscellaneous swindling. Cross caiue to Memphis a! suit two ! years ago from Lexington, Ky., where he lias a wealthy family connection. He was about 30 years of ago, handsome and stvlisli, and took with everybody from the start. He had several thousand dollars, and this lie invested in a real es tate agency with V. A. Cordes, under the firm name of Cross & Conies. Cross was tho outside man of the concern, and being a glib talker and a steam engine for energy, lie stain worked up plenty of business ami established a gotsl credit. Nor was be less successful with tho fairer than with the sterner sex. and lie became popular in society. His choice fell upon Miss Hullie Fnires. a handsome young lady of good family, who pos sessed a pretty property in her own right, anil they wore married. All went well with them seemingly until early Inst spring, when it began to be whispered that Cross was a “high roller,” and was becoming involved. lie would lack liis judgment with large stakes at almost any game, hut liis spe cialty was the races. They failed to coine his way during the last Memphis spring meeting, and he tried to get oven later on in tiie season by trying to name the winners in a local }xiol room. Here, too, luck was against lim. In one week lie dropjied $4,001) in this way, besides smaller amounts at games of chanceH. Btill his losses were not generally known, and ids credit was not seriously impaired. On May 6, Cross left town, ostensibly to get money enough to square himself from his family in Keutuck. lie did not return or write, and suspicion lieing aroused, his affairs were investigated. It wits then discovered that ho had swindled customers of the firm out of several thousand dollars by failing to turn in rents and the proceeds of prop erty sold. He owed the banks SIO,OOO, itntl was in debt to numbers of people for borrowed money. In addition to these obligations, it appeared that Cross had ! forged tiie indorsement of \V. A. Fairos, | liis wife's uncle, on Hinall notes which he had discounted in tiie city, and hud ap propriated a considerable sum of money j given him by F;tires to invest for him in ; real estate. Nothing was known of! Cross’ whereabouts until two months! ago. when lie was heard of at Sun An tonio. Marshal Frick was put on tho lookout for him, and the result was liis arrest as stated. Cross' shortage hero is placed at $30,- 000, Sheriff McLendon will go to San Antonio and bring liitn Lick hero for trial. DEMPSF.Y-FITZSIMMONS. 11,.11. Men in Fine Condition, ami Nome 111# llets Made. New Orleans. Jan. 12.—Word comes from both tiie Dempsey and Fitzsim mons camps that both men are in good condition and confident of the result of the coming fight L'foro tho Olympic club, Wednesday night. Gus Tuthill, who will be one of Demp sey’s seconds, McAuliffe being the otiier, has returned from Dempsey’s training quarters, and says Detnpsey is ill fine health, and will weigh about 156 pounds in tiie ring. He is now down to 147 pounds. Ho brought buck with him Mose Gunst, the Australian bookmaker, and between them they are enthusiastic over Dempsey’s prospects, and have SIO,OOO to bet. The party will leave Galveston ac companied by half a dozen other fight ers, who will ail apjiear at the reception to Dempsey to be given by the Audubon Association. Tuthill says McAuliffe will sign arti cles for a fight with Jimmy Carroll be fore the Olympic club for a SIO,OOO purse, to take place about Mardi Gras. Later. —Everythtng is ready for the great glove tight between Jack Dempsey of New York, and Bob Fitzsimmons of New Zealand, for tiie middle-weight championship of the world, for the largest purse ever offered for a fight of this kind —$11,000 going to the winner and SI,OOO to the defeated man. Tiie city has its SSOO license and tiie mill will surely occur. BOWERS KILLED PERRY. liowcTM Ho* ltaen A Treated and la in Fal lon County Jail. Atlanta, Jan. 12.—William Bowers, a negro, killed Henry Perry, another negro, at Clark’s Cave, on the Central railroad, one mile lteyond East Point It seems that Bowers came to Atlanta and after getting drunk went back to Clark’s Cave where lie found Perry had i secured his position and was at work. It is said that Bowers told Perry lie had killed one man and would kill another, and drew his (istol and shot ] Perry in tiie back of the head, the hall | passing entirely through and coming out above bis forehead. Bowers lias been I arrested and is now in Fulton county ja' l * ADJUDGED INSANE. ! Arthur S. Coljar, Jr„ No Well Known, U tn the Asylum. Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 11. —Arthur ! s. Ooiyar, Jr., whose escapades during the past few years have attracted wide at tention, has lieen adjudged insane and ordered sent to tiie asylum for the in sane. Colyar was charged with selling a horse for which lie had swapped a horse belonging to another man. In Mexico recently, lie passed as J. G. Carlisle, Jr., and obtained $l(>,00(t on a worthless check which he induced Gen. Frisbie, a prominent American from California, to endorse. r>iK«atl»flrd »t Her Marriage. Fleminosburg, Ky., Jan. 11.—Mrs. Rae McLean, daughter of State Senator J. P. Huff, made an unsuccessful at ! tempt to take her life by an overdose of morphine Thursday night. Mrs. Mc- Lean lias been married but three weeks, and when she recovered from the effects of the poison she gave as tiie reason of tier rash act dissatisfaction of her mar riage. Killed Accidentally. Heptizibah, Ga., Jan. 12. —Dozier Na pier was accidentally shot in the left eye Sunday afternoon, near Ridge, by Ciiur ; lie Averett, with a Smith & Wesson 38- ' calibre pistol. Death ensued in a few minutes. For Sale. Judes Washington hand - , Gordon jobber, stands, ’s, news and display nd other things neces a good country news •'"d Job office. I fit: sot , bargain by flitter fold Wrathcr —i». J Out of tVorh. ' liONDON,J,ui.l2.—The rigiyiS, still continues, and the Bi*- ? the working classts, cans weeks of frost luid snow, lit to’Tot, . terrible proportions. Iu London alone, | it is believed, there are nearly 200,000 | men without work, and every city in the i kingdom reports u proportionate num ber. Most of the local authorities have lamentably failed in their duty toward the suffering poor, and private charity, j although given every where in geueiuua measure, has proved sadly inadequate, owing to the tremendous magnitude of the evil. The Socialist agitators never had more promising material for their purposes, and they ore seeking to utilize it to tiie fullest, extent. The government has received informa tion which proves that the agitators have for weeks past been busily engaged among the poor people, inciting them to violence. Starving men are told of the abundance, wealth and the aliouudiug luxury in the West End, and are urged to seize forcibly that which they will never obtain by quiescent suffering. The agitators have not so far met with much success, partly on account of tho inherent ordiliness of tho liritish workmen and partly liecause there is not one among these sinister mentors who has had the courage to risk a broken skull by head ing the westward march. Hut the [Hovers that he are undeniably alarmed, and are quietly- taking elabo rate precautions for tho preservation of the public peace. They have never quite recovered from the panic into which they were thrown a few years ago when the mob marched from Trafalgar square along tho West End thoroughfares smashing and looting for a full hour al most without hindrance. Such an op portunity is not likely to lie given again to tho revolutionists. At the present moment soldiers and policemen could be massed in great force at any threatened j toil it within live minutes of (irst alarm, and the knowledge of this fact explains the cowardice of tho agitators. There have been scores of meetings of the unemployed, and careful organiza tion is proved by the presence of at least one Socialist orator. Flags and revolu tionary emblems were plenty, and each meeting gathered round u banner lieur ing this inscription: ■'We demand the right to labor, und don’t intend to starve.” The distress in some provincial towns is said to lie greater than in London, and ' not infrequently aggravated by peculiar local circumstances. At Newoastle-on-Tyne, for instance, there are said to be “four miles of under ground dwellings with dripping wet i walls, places into which the light never comes except when tiltered through a dark medium,” in which live working men ami their families. If British workingmen made of their troubles a political question, they would doubtless obtain prompt and generous help, judged by what is occurring in Ireland. MURDER WILL OUT. A Crime Committed Four Wars Ago Jus! to me to Light. Springfield, 0., Jan. 10.— In 1880 El der J. M. Clark, colored, pastor of the Baptist church in Dayton, and Carrie Moss, now his wife, murdered Clark’s first wife, at Yellow Springs, Ohio. She was given soaked parlor matches and arsenic, and these failing, arsenic j and quicksilver in a pie, from winch the woman died. Tho body was so swollen that it was with difficulty placed in a coffin; hut as the husband was a minis ter no suspicion was aroused. Tho woman Moss was then living in criminal intimacy with one Taylor, white, and her daughter, Elbe, assisted in the murder. Effio became too inti mate with one Dr. Steinberger, who got her money, some $2,5(H), away from her liy worrying her. Monday she commit ted suicide after telling the story of the murder. She said she was afraid to tell before, for fear she "would be hung be tween two negroes, but has been in hull ever since.” Steinberger sworoout warrants against | Clark and his present wife, arid they were arrested. There is great excite ment at Yellow Springs. BOY—TREE—EGG. Georgia, K«m«liow, Kgg-aeily Heat* tli« World on Freakii. LaOrange, (ia., Jan. 10.—During the 1 month of December, Mr. Boyd, of this! county, employed a boy to cut down one of the giant oaks in the grove at his place, known as the Cline place, for tire-1 wood. In the center of the tree, about four feet from the ground, was found a fresh hen’s egg, embedded in the solid wood, there Iming no hollow or hole of any kind that the eyos of the astonished beholders could discern, for any one to place the egg—only space enough to hold it, as a bullet mould holds the bullet when dosed. The tree was a little dotted around the egg. Now who can solve the wonderful freak ? STRUCK BY LIGHTNING. llie Old Historic Oak on Ouel Island Splintered by tho Bolt. Hartwkll, Gra., Jan. 10.—The triple oak. as it is generally known, located on Duel island, in the Savannah river, was struck by lightning and shattered to pieces. The tree is one with a history. At the May freshet in 1840, five men were saved from drowning by climbing to the top of this tree, where they re mained live day’s before they were rescued. Benjamin F. Perry and Bynum fought a duel under its shade in the days of nullification in 1832, in which Bynum was mortally wounded. RAGING BLIZZARD. Terrilh: Suow.torm and High Wind —Traf- fic Abandoned, Kansas City, Jan. 11.—The severest snowstorm of the season raged all day Friday in Kansas and in northwestern Missouri. The storm has extended all over Kansas. A high wind has drifted the snow, so that the trains are delayed. The regular freight service on many of the roads has been entirely abandoned. Miltondam?, Kan., Jan. 11.—A heavy snowstorm, accompanied by a strong wind, is raging throughout this section of northern Kansas. Freight trains have been abandoned. There have been no trains on the central branch of the Union Pacific for eight days. T< EOJU3JA,SEKKY COCyTV.-tVhor.-9 us, Jn*. A. 0. tVynn, executor of the os • ate of J. A. Ellis, repre- nth to the eont# in his petition duly filed, that he fully ad ministered the estate of isid J, A. fUTis. This is therefore to cite ait persons con cerned, heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they esu, why said executor should not he discharged from this executorship and receive letters of dismission, on t! e first Monday in February 1891. Oct. 27, IWM). Wn.lV. NELSON,, 3*n. Ordinary. Cl TATE OF GEORGIA, HENRY COUN tJ TV.—Whereas, Jag. A. 0. Wynn, ad ministrator of tho estate of Jag. L. Hrock, represents to the court in his petition duly tiled, that he has fully administered James l>. Brock g estnte. This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, heirs and creditors, to show enuse, if any they ean why said administrator should not lie discharged from his administration and receive Setters- of dig mission on the Hist Monday in February JSpi. Ws. N. NELSON. Ordinary, H. C. >- EOF GEORGIA, IIENRY COUN qu.-~'herras, Abner Payne, adminis lio corn' l l! been ,1 Williamson, deceased Bur iron has Unln petition duly years, and the quesiuistered Ite from that specialty to somo : s thcre tliougb formally discussed, ha..and acted upon by any convention übS yenr. Bor iron is not a circumstance in the volume of iron and steel made in other shapes, and the basis is not regarded ad an average one. Kkdp iron is made in large quantities, and by some is regarded as a fair basis. Sheet iron is another specialty upon which many would like to see the scale based. The committee has been engaged for the last two or three weeks gathering information on tho actual selling price of the various kinds of iron and steel, and comparison of these figures will lie made, ami it will be ascertained if the present calculation permits of any manipulation iu favor of the firms. Prices in all branches of the market have been shoved down to almost cost, and it is thought by the most conserva tive members of the association that no advantage will bo gained by making tho change. The latest market rejKirt shows bar iron to lie selling at from $27.50 to S2B, which is uliout as healthy a condition as that product Ims been in for some time, while tho market for manufactured iron is in an uneasy state; tho price of steel billets is the lowest on record at present, and the stoel rail business is in an unsat isiactory condition. There lias been no improvement in the pig iron market, while the manufactured iron and stoel market is simply dull. Some of tho meu recognized these facts, and, upon their authority, it is stated, there wdl lie no effort made to secure an increase in wages this year. MEMBERS DISSATISFIED. Mult l!roii“lif Affitinut tho (Winpral Cr.iihl Council America. Louisville, J«n. 12.—A suit has been filed by Attorneys E. S. Watts and L. N. Dornbitz that threatens thelifeof the Gen eral Grand Council of America, Longue of Friendship. The suit is brought at tho instance of the following members: John C. Hood, J. M. Shaw, Lh A. Hugh, Stephen VVebrle, George E. Scott, E. J. Hutton, Myra Burns, Catharine Munion, Julia Hugh and Sophia Wchrlu. Iu the petition the plaintiffs allege that the grand almoner, Robert U. Tubb, ha< collected about $2,500, which he holds. The object of tho corjioration w as stated, among other things, to benefit the fam ilies of members who, through death or disability, were uhuDfo to provide tor them as usual. 'The plaintiffs claim that the league has uo legal existence, and is, therefore, incapacitated from carrying out this object. They further state that assessments have lieen levied on them from time to time and are held by Grand Almoner Tabb add President General J. FI. Hen derson. They ask that the corporation and its officers be enjoined from collect ing any more assessments, or paying oat any benefits. They further ask that a distribution of the funds now on hand lie mode among all the members, the distribution to lie made through Ilia court in such way as may lie deemed least expensive. A DRUNKARD’S FATE. llreakt! a Lamp Over Hl* Wife, and He !m Fatally Hurueri. Greenville, S. C., Jan. 12.—Frank Poole, a victim of domestic tragedy, died at his home in this city at 3 o’clock. Poole and his wife were horribly burned by a lamp which he, in a fit of drunken frenzy broke over his wife’s head last week. lie ha<l lieen out until about 1 o’clock nt night, and when he returned found his wife in lied. When ho asked for his supper she told him where to find it, and complained of being sick. This enraged him, and he took her by the hair and Iml led her out of bed, then grasped the amp and broke it over her head. The oil streamed over them both, burning them horribly. Mrs. Poole was not burned quite as badly as Poole, though she still lingers in great agony, and it is feared she can not recover. Mucli sympathy is felt for Mrs. Poole and her three little children. Should Mrs. Poole recover, it is feared tiiat she will be so maimed that she wiH be a helpless invalid for life. It was a horrible affair, and citizens are indignant at his conduct. THE SUPREME COURT Decides Tlmt the Legislature II:ul the Iliglit to Fix {Boundaries. Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 12. —Theques- tion as to whether a large section of tha adjoining suburbs added to the city at the extra session of the legislature last spring was legally a part of the city Ims just lieen decided in the supreme court in the suit of John H. William vs. the city to test the constitutionality of the act. The annexation was made simply to secure some 7,'>00 population, and a most irregular boundary line was run in order to leave out the many manufactories. In one case a street was left outside the cor poration, while both sides were taken in, the line running three-quarters of a mile to and around a large manufactory. The court decided all the legal points against Williams and held that it could not in quire into the motives of the legislature. LOWER LIQUOR LICENSE Wanted by Dealers in the State of Penn sylvania. Harrisburo, Jan. 13.—The represent atives of the liquor interests in the state have prepared a bill, which will be intro duced in the legislature at an early day, providing for the reduction of the license fee to S3OO. Representative Stewart, of Allegheny, in sjieaking of this move, said: “If the liquor men are wise they will keep the bill where nobody can see it. The sentiment of the legislature is over whelmingly against any decrease in the state fee, and if the liquor men decide to force the issue they will get a higher is sue than SSOO so quickly that it will cause their heads to swim.”