Waycross weekly herald. (Waycross, Ga.) 1893-190?, November 18, 1893, Image 5

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THK WAV CROSS HEkALu, SaTUk&AY, NOVEMBER i8, 1893. STANTON’S BOOK. The Goorirli S’o: t [un. i a Second Edition «>r - M’ntfs of a Day.” Atlanta. Nov. 17.—The second edi tion of Frank Station's look of poems has just made its appearance and is j meeting with lil»eral sales at the book 1£IS3 P0RTER.S HEROIC SACRIFICE. stores. The author’s pithy and charac- teristic preface is as follows: . _ , “The first edition has l>eon exhausted A School Building Ritrnad and Nineteen an<1 ^ now ont of pr i ut> l, llt tha demand of the Twenty Children Sared by j for it is so continuous and persistent that Their Teacher, Who Per- : a second edition has bean prepared. The . „ _ .... ! , demand has been a source of surprise to tu. the author. The songs and vereJs wore i meant only for ‘a day.’ That they may NCNda', N. Y.. Nov. 17.—The village ' continue to ting their way to the heart SChoolhftino fli nonnorwillt* two ntilw ! 9^ p-0.'* north uro. Cave Her Life to Save Her Pu pils from Burning. fell ai thard \ gave himself up bail. Got hard w Williams to act i: Carlisle lias 1 rotary Gr olhouse at Coopersville. two miles ! for ^ north of here, was an old framo struct- ! uro. In it were 19 scholars, in charge of the village teacher, Miss May Porter. Besides the scholars tliera was littlo Wil lard Johnson, son of Conrad Johnson. He was too young to go to school and bis father had left him in Miss Porter’;: care for tlio day. Qntrido the door was an aslipile and near that a woodshed. Just after the noon recess Miss Porter noticed smoke at the door, and told one of the boys to see what caused it. The woodshed had caught fire from the ashpile, and when Ihu boy opened the door a mass of flames struck him in the face. Tho scholars took one look at the door and then ran shrilling to Miss Porter’s desk. She ran to the door, but saw es- capebyit was impossible. The only w.iy to save the children was to drop thorn out of the window. Two or the largest boys leaped out of tho window, and to them Miss Porter began handing out tho children. As she lifted them up one by one the flames came nearer, and the room grew black with smoke, which almost stifled her. She could easily have abandoned her pupils and saved her own life, but she stayed. At last all were saved but littlo Wil lard Johnson. IIo did not know what to do, and ran hither and thither chased by the tongues o' fire. Miss* Porter startod to catch him, but he ran directly into the most fiery part of the room, 1 breathed tho flamos and dropped. Miss Porter ran to him, but the fire, ; which was already going through the I window from which she had passed 19 i children, caught her clothing, and she j fell by the side of the child. Melvin Chambers climbed upon the window sill to help his teach?r. but was driven back. Ho climbed up again and 8aw Miss Porter rise, "with the child in her arms, and tako a step forward. A great whirl of fire swept around her, and l she foil. Then she made one more ! effort, and as the flames drove the boy back ho saw her fall again with the Johnson boy in her arms. Tho 19 children stood there and saw ; tho Bchooliiouso reduced to ashas. The j district is sparsely settled, and it wane time before aid arrived When it | and the road Fought Till Death Stopped Each. Greenville, N. C., Nor. 1.— Abner '.Slaughter and Dore Smith hilled each ot’o” in a dispute over land. Smith or dered Slaughter fc*> s .op cutting on the disputed land. Slaughter refused and Smith shot him. They then-clinched and emptied their pistols into each other, Smith's brother giving Slaughter several blows 0 n the head with a piece of iron, tfaith tell dead. Slaughter snapped an empty pistol five times THE FROST And “Eruns-.vick by the Sea Now Ail Right. EOW TOST WAIT A FEW HOSE DAYS ►ther Smit ad then 1.—Jon Wi of Henry G vith of tho 10 Russian couvi ed at San Francisco, order had been made them. A treasury >rli was possible that some bo released, others van the custody of the Ru* The report oi Commits Ho said »• laud- secret. It i: contains no knov A to rial said that it >f the men would id be returned to ■ian government, oner S trad ley, «.i case i3 still kepi And tUo Refugee* Who Dave DeeU Long Kept Out Will Do Welcomed Duck by Those Who Have Faith fully Stayed There. Brunswick, Ga., Nov. 17.—The citi zens of Brunswick are all jubilant at ths appearance of frost at lost. The handful of citizens who arc hemmed in here are shaking hands and hugging one another as though a love feast were in progress. Enemies have made friends, and all are rejoicing at the deliverance of tho people from, the plague. There is also ice in the suburbs of Brunswick, and ice in tho detention camps. Surgeon Murray lias permitted refu gees to come to the camp, and it will only be a few days until ail can come to their homes with perfect surety. Tlie joyous exclamation that can bo heard upon the streets is “Thank Go. 1 .! That cu. e. Pov^Hun, Q.UIT3IAN, GA. Osaier In Orassn’as and • • • • Cosnlry Prcduse or EVERY DESCRIPTION. Baron. Lanl, Cort-.^Oats. Chickens Camry Moduat* Milkmen ’All goods guaranteed. Goods will be ship ped promptly and carefully. Write forpriccs. 5. L. PRICE. 8WHMI, C5. General Produce Merchant, f’a<-vn. b:<r<l. Son, flats,Syrup, Ghtakens, F.?g$, IS AS CAPS AMD HARMLESS AS •> «&. SP2.ss.is: £S8©©e3. SP'OTXl'tl©©. It i3 applied light to the parts. It cures all diseases of women. Any lady can usa it herself. Sold by ALL DRUGGISTS. Mailed to any address on receipt of 01. Dr. J. A. McGill oi Co., 3 and 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, HL Soldby E. H. CRAWLEY. OOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOCKX.' OO > Do You Disease ;ommonly ccir.es on with slight symptoms, which when neglected increase in extent and gradually grow dangerous. Be RIPANS TASU If yea SUFFER FROM HEADACHE, DYS- „ — nd!‘ he will not; everything i Dr. Fagot Dr. Pool, «>f Valdo been hea\ formed i has been • iwf anyone b fectly sr.f* left for ! i JJ i n | TOGO hi ! I CO and GROCER! ils Flour; reis Sugar, commendation, but i that it MAKING GEORGIA LAWS. _ (.’iiaklestox, Noy. 17.—The Richmond and Danville railroad hr.s taken ;i hand in the war on the dispensary, an 1 ex- Judge Cotlieran has filed a petition ask- Lewis W. Pc ast the state constable, nville, roqnir- w hv he should noi be punished for contempt. Perrin is charged with unlawlully seizing a package of liquor at Greenville on Nov. 7, the said liquor at the tinte being in possession of a receiver appointed by the United States court. The hearing of the case was fixed for Nov. 20. , Macon, Nov. 17.—The mortgage held j by the Mercantile Trust and Deposit ; company, of Baltimore, on the property i of tho Georgia Southern and Florida i Railroad company will be foreclosed i and the road sold under the hammer un- -lid there waa nothing loft bnttjiosroonl- I less. the supreme court interferesj. That . . | is the result of tho great tnal that lias coring rums. been in progress in the superior court In a few hours the l.oJios of Miss Por- j here this week. The proceedings in ter and Willard Johnson were found ini volved some fine points of law in the a yard of where the window was. Both I ca f ■ so “l?? on wMeh "° n,lm S J . . . , ... . . 1 has ever been made. wero burned beyond recognition, but the ; . - ' larger held in its twiste l mil blackened ! Thrir T#ctici Chanced, arras the smaller holy. 'j El Paso. Tex., Nov. 17.—The Mexi- . can revolutionists, instead of attacking A Child Burned t« Broth. ; (j u jd a d Jaurez, as has l>een lately ex- Atlasta. Nov. 17.—Little Helen, the | pec ted, have evaded the Federal troops vtar-old child ox J. H. Poyas, of this fj-otn Chihuahua and Casa Grandes and inportnnt Bill Affecting the Terms of Convicts—Other Laws. ti.anta, Nov. 17.—An important bill which now only lacks the approval of the governor to become a law, has just passed the senate. It is the house bill ordering that all convicts in the peniten tiary who were sentenced under the law providing for different terms of punish ment than the law now in force, lie dis charged. if they have served as long as the law now in exister altv. 249 eas es Cau-goods. 88 boxes Soda, 168 boxes S&KES MD GfiHOV. 100 Gross Matches. j nought to sell, not t-.» keep. Coltei carol ally handled. W. B. COOPER St CO., ! 94 1-2 l?ny Street - - - Savanna!:. *». O. Box 310.) PERSIA cr INDIGESTION, taRs m?m§ TABULES take RJPANS TABULES RIPAMS TABULES Hipans 7a!)u!es Revulaia the System ana' Preserve Mo Health. | EASY-TO lA8t, QUICK TO ACT. t SAVE MANY A DOCTOR’S B!LL. • ♦ Sold by Drutrsists or seat by mall on receipt of | Box (6 viaL), 75 cents. F&mily pack ft go <4 boxv l THE REAMS'CM .> 1f« SPRUCE STREET, RIPANS TABUL (700CCJWDt>CHDC«OOOOC^;CC'OOC>OCCO-OOC030COCOCvC;OljOC UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS. the pen A ! the ho bilks a M. BRIOE, SON & GO., <U 7 1T3TAN. GEORGIA, General - Grocery - Merchants, COUNTRY PRODUCE. Conn Oats, lUtcou, Lard, Peas, Finders, THURBER’3 FAILURE. •4-ytar city, was so horribly burned by her clothing catching fire from the grate during the temporary absence of her mother, that sue vUo 1. after several hours of terrible suffering, Mrs. Poyas, the mother, heard tho screams of her child and ran to her aid. She was also badly burned on the hands and arms, trying to extinguish the flames. j THE~LAST MEETING. The Knights of Labor .Meet In Thlladel- 1 |ihl* for tlia Last Time. Philadelphia, Nov. 17.—The Knights of Labor of America have met here iu convention, this being the seventeenth time they have come together as a na tional body to legislate for tho order. The meeting did not get ready for busi ness until afternoon, the morning being consumed in organization. When the convention adjourns after this meeting it will be without day. This fact has become generally known, and has led to the charge that Master Workman Powderly and others are pre paring to disintegrate the order, so that they might come into possession of its property, valued at more than $100,000. Mr. Powderly in an interview indig nantly denies the charge. The convention will nut 6et a time for meeting again, because of an agreement made with the American Federation of Labor and other organizations. The idea is to agree upon a common day iu the future when all labor organizations from Chihuahua and Casa Grandes and have taken Ascension and Carroltos. The’ Americans, who were ordered or dered out of Ascension by the revolu tionists, are seeking safety at Darning, N. M. The Mormon colonists, located near Lake Palomas, just across the bor der, have been ordered to abandon their home. After a MiiMl«»ippl Postmaster. Jackson, Miss., Nov. 17.—The Fed eral grand jury continues to probe, and 15 indictments have been returned. Twelve are for selling whisky without license, two for illicit distilling and one for embezzlement, the latter being against Major W. H. Gibbs, tho ex-Re publican postmaster at this place. The amount alleged to have been embezzled is $3,920.82. George Brown, a postal clerk, on trial for tampering with the mails, was found guilty. A Criminal Prosecution Abandoned. Buffalo, N. Y., Nov. 17.—Captain Clifford Cassidy, of the Twenty-second regiment, N. G., indicted for killing young Broderick during the strike of August, 1392. will not be tried. The district attorney says the Broderick fam ily are satisfied to rest the matter with the trial of their suit for civil damages brought before the state board of claims. “Besides.” says that officer, “the case against Cassidy is so weak that convic tion is hopeless." Should XL- Ah'.v t<» IVy A11 Claim* and a Fiimll Dividend. New York, Nov. 17.- The failure of the great firm of Thurbcr, Whyland dr Co. will enlist much interest in the south, where they enjoyed a large pat- The assets of-the concern are set by Mr. Tlibrber at nearly $2,000,000, and the liabilities at not more than $800,000. of which $500,009 is iu commercial pa per. Careful handling should pay every debt and .leave something to divide among the stockholders. Every dollar of Mr. Tlinrber’s is in vested in the company, and, as the largest stockholder, he will be the largest loser. He has the sympathy of the whole banking and business world in his misfortunes, and his honesty is un questioned. An effort will be made to continue the business. Plans for reorganization will be prepared and laid before the stock holders, “and,” Mr. Thurber says, “it will be for them to determine what course is the most judicious under the circumstances. To stop the business and wind it up, would involve such great loss that it is not for a moment to be thought of.” CLEVELAND RETURNS. Officer* Want to Hold On. _ Birmixor.vm, Ala., Nov. 17.—D. D. will meet and form a more perfect union ghclbr, of Huntsville, Al... the leading —a sort of labor trust, it lias been call- I p„ r ^,. w ... ■ «d. If successful, about 830,000 men I fag attorney for Messrs, raraoas an t be united under one bead, and they tv ill j Pinninger. tna United buttes disrnc, a.- at once prepare to tako political-action, torney and maralitu whom Mr. t-teve- WitU such numbera, its importance as a : land displaced before their terms hal political factor will bo obvious. ; expired, is preparing papers to revive Mr. Powderly said in his annual re- ! the case on a writ or error, port, that the order was in a flourishing condition. He resented an attack from certain protesting clergymen who had ■dabbed the Knight of Labor as a Catho lic institution. He dosed by paying a high tribute to the pope as a friend of Macon, Not. 17.—The pleas advanced by Judge Clifford Anderson, represent ing the Macon Construction company, qHbodng the granting of the petition of thjMerc “ Corbett and Mitchell Go to Florida. New York, No^. 17.—It has been defi nitely settled that J. J. Corbett and Charles Mitchell will battle for the championship of the world for a $20,000 purse and a stake of $10,000 before the newly organized Duval Athletic club, of Jacksonville, Fla., on the night of Thursday, Jan. 25, 1894. Labor mad Capital to Co-Operate. —** . - Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 17.—There j appears now to be no qnestton bnt that mortgage o* th. Otoruia Southern j the rolling null at Bessemer will start Florida railway, hare boon set !**de . op at a very early Sate. It will bare- Judge Gamble ha* decided that a ; aumed on the co-operative plan, the diet shall be prepared in favor of the ! workingmoa sharing in the profile with Petitioners. 1 the owner*. Tlio President lias Got Bark iron. Hi* Mysterious Trip, Washington. Nov. 1.—Preesident Cleveland arrived in Washington at 8:40 a. m., in President Thompson’s pri vate car, over the Pennsylvania railroad, haxing left Jersey City at midnight. He was met at the station by Private Sec- retary Thurber and drove at once to the White House. Secretary Lamont re turned with him. Immediately after breakfast Mr. Cleve land was Hi his desk again, and at 9:45 his private secretary was sent over to the state department with a large bundle of papers on which the president had taken action. Does r»un effort Want to Settls T Washington, Nov. 17.—A report has been circulated that Ambassador Panncefcrce is negotiating with SecreJ tary Gresham for the settlement of the claims o* the British sealers seized pre vious to thewnodus Vivendi of 1891. If Ambassador Paunceforte has received any instructions to make a demand on this government he has jot had any offi cial communication on the subject with the state department. The Behring sea tribunal quashed all claims except those for damages for seizure of vessels previ ous to the modus vivendi. It is proba ble that before long the Canadian claims for indemnity will be presented to this government. Representatives of Pacific coast inter ests are urging (he president and Secre tary Greaham to obtain the concurrence of other nations to the Behring sea agree ment. They represent that sealers are already preparing for next season, and that if the concurrence of other nations is not obtained they will fly the flags of other nations than the United States and Great Britain, and destroy seals without benefit to this government. The presi- \ve the matter at- | Furniture, Carpets, Batting, "Rugs, Matting, .Etc., brought to Wavci Mail or Telegraph Orders for Furniture promptly attended to. -CHEAP COFFINS. Hood’s Cures Letter* of Dismission. GEORGIA—Ware Cdusty: Whereas David A. Jordon, administrator of Ramlal Jordon, represents to the court in his petition duly tiled and entered on record, that he has fully administered Randal Jordon’s estate. This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, kinjlred and creditors, to show cause, if any they can, why said administrator should not be discharged from Ills administration, and receive letters of dismission on the first Monday in Novend>cr 18!K). j — * * - *m I vki’.ex Lott, Ordinary. j Benton & Upson, i Machinery and Mill Supplies, ENGINES, BOILERS, Saw Mills, Shingls Mills, Wood Ward ing Machinery, Sugar, Rice, Cotton and Canning Machinery. ’ -igating Machinery A SPECIALTY. Office and Warehouse, Machinery Wharves. Awocgso S. F. S W. Railway Depot, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. RELIEVES nil Stomach Distress. REMOVE8MKMM.6eD.80f REVIVES Fxttitta ENERGY. RESTORES^ OR. HARTER I J. A. JONES & CO„ Lloyd &Adams DEALERS IN’ Faints, Oils, Doors, Sash and Blinds, Machines. Tf--a Cotta and Sewer Pipes, BUGGIES, WAGONS, Road Carts, Turpentine Wagons, Harness, Sewing Machines and Attachments, WAYCROSS, GA. ^-We keep on hand a full supply of Need for all kinds of Sophie BfcXeldin Wfiea 7 year* oil herein to ba troubled with ec zema oa tha head, causing interns itching and burning, sad aHecthig her eye;. Her mother testifies: ** We faro her six bottle; of Hood’s Sarsaparilla and .he 13 entirely well. I here taken It mysell lor that tired feeling and it does me great good.** 11ns. William MeKia.ron. <0. stocU- holm St. Baltimore, Met Grt Hootl’8. Hood’s Pills cure all liver tin. bBIoust*a, l»tmdiee. Indigestion, .let hemlaolie. 23 erntv ffimwiw, Sot. it.—Jota D. gtasfcB bln been appointo! rarrajoiof agyAjgqStfa asjf c - a F. J. JAMES,. Harness and "Shoe Maker, Two-story Building Albany Ave, WAYCROSS, GEORGIA. All work do»e promptly and Cheap for Csoh. Orders solicit*-* and Mtisfiietioo guar BUILDERS HARDWARE, Floater au l, Hair and Cement. Comer Congress and Whitaker Savannah, : Sole Agents for Adamant 1'hiMor, best preparation in the world for plastering trails and ceilingr* VI rite fcrriitulats. dev ISM y WOOD'S 1*1 tOS PlIODUVE, The Greet Eaglbh Bemedr. Before and After* or tUCelMWO htidubonestctore, tnclocop letter, and wo will send by r-* PMkM.SltSlx.SL Onf* 131 Woodwenl For saio In Way cross and everywhere by all SWEAT & WILSON, * QUITMAN, GEORGIA. & BILLIARD SALOON.^ And Dealers in Flue Whiskies, Witter, Rnras, Gins and Brandies, And the Purest Whiskies manufactured for Medicinal Purposes. We buy our goods direct from the Distilleries and the best markets and will uive our customers the benefit of same. Wc have the largest stock in Sonth Georgia. Orders by mail accompanied by the OAF7I will receive prompt attention. Johnson’s Magnetic Oil cures all pain and it will never return again. Intentnl and external for man aud -beast. .S'**- 4 dy B. .T. Smith. “Orange Blossom.” the contm<»M'«BAe Female Kemedr, is said and rceumnecad- •d bj all druggist.