The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, September 04, 1893, Image 3
THE WEEKLY 1 zl tun Aril: MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 4,
1893.
ARLES
CRISP
took the floor
Ae First Time During the Present
Session the Speaker
Stepped Down.
Jl REED WAS QUELCHED.
fiforfiii Mon Showed the Us
.Maine That the Rales oftlio
finy-lir»t Congress Wore
Vila In the Extreme.
ington, D. C., August 29.—There
, CT eir. failing oft in the
M r.f both members end audi
os morning and the house re*
•a its routine appearance. Thi:rt
iri-eral corrections made uj i,u*
^ this morning consequent upon
lerous roll call* of yestetday.
itching* called up the report upon
tales, reporting the rules for
present house. Aftisr the reading
(Pe proposed rules a discussion of
time to be devoted to debate wa»
ipitated. Thia outcome of the con-
was that Mr. Catching* con-
_t that there should be a general
»y,and briefly explained this changes
■ e in the rules. When speaking In
j, of the rule tstlya® O quorum of
committee of the whole 100 mem-
Ms was interrupted by Mr. Kilgore
the inquiry whether a quorum of.
committee of title whole should not
taken as a quorum of the house,
reply Mr Catchlnga said that the
|on of this rule by the fifty-first
gess was good and beneficial (Ap
se).
Reed twitted fhe Democrats uopn
partial approval of the rules of
tfty-Snrt congress, but in a humor-
rein contended that they had not
■ far enough. He then In a more
:;a manner, argued in favor of the
a of the majority, which rights had
aSrmy maintained in the fifty-first
. Now the 'house was in tl»a
of dodging measures instead of
ct Them. He criticized the provls-
i <t tiro ruler, which, toe claimed,
rai the committee ton rules wi th the
■jety which should be vested in the
H Why not adopt, a system of
Is which would give the majority
ml and take away from the fllibus-
:a opportunity to stop Otoe conoid-
ate of a measure? It was bettor to
»» > «noa.ker exercise power in the
£ght of public oplnioh than to ex-
cse it In the seclusion of the com
ic*.* room.
ulip Took tho Poor.
1st. tor the first time this asssion.
Mauler"took the floor, having called
K:< hard son of Tennessee to the
it. sad replied to Uw criticisms of
(tad.man from Maine. He said
v were provisions In 'this code which
re taken substantially from the rules
'he afty-flrst oongniu. - Neither hlsn-
• nor any member of the committee
rote would refrain from reporting
» limply because thl.y were a part
the rules of the fltty-ftmt congress,
ry much of those rules was to be
nmendid: very much of those rules
been by thla country absolutely
idmawd. The gentleman from
n*. When he stood before the coun-
and ipokn of the rules tn the fifty*
d congress, fated to speak of the
rtics adopted before this rules were
»pi*d which were so odious to the
mtry. (Applause.) The first action
the fifty-first congress which was
to the country was not sn so
* under a rule, but It was the or
rvy, high-handed action on the part
the spaker without, rhto authority
•ny one. (Applause.) When the
acre were made agatoart the fifty
»t congress lei no one fore* that
first charge eras that.' without au
*ity of (he house, without the au
onjy of the committee on rules, the
««■ had exercised a power that had
yer been granted to hhn. (Applause.)
has assumed upon himself power
count a quorum. The question bad
O' to the supreme court of the
"d States and the gentleman from
as bad never been justified. He
d b*n*1 the gentleman from Maine
"wal times say that the supremo
n aed Justified Ms course. The eu-
tme roujt had not touched the quea-
o Tho suprune court had said that
• home had a right to make Its rules
■ *s own government and make its
"a Provision# for the sacrrtalnment
Presents# of a quorum, but It had
to* said chat tho speaker Should make
'.rules. (Applause.) The gentleman
referred to the power lodged in the
mltte* o„ ruv». Let Mrs (CfUp)
J L'5f tmt'.eman’e attention to tho
<*»* existed between tho
'.Icy of the gentleman, from Maine and
*' DO IPV ttf »to*» nrlWmll nosMmllMAa An
ftLli? , eot « r dus protest. His fett-as
of *** country felt—that the
in2’ 5° n8TOSK an usurpation
JiSS! -SS 11 to ** repudiated, and witih
JEL pe ?P ,J \ W 1 repudiated it here and
now. (Applause).
of th* prevent committee on
Tho fforulomin from Maine be-
1 that the power should N* lodired
** *i*w.krr Abkoluteljr to decide
w»* n dilatory motion under th*
t , prrrpnoed by the committee on
J,r *- Ir wan left to thrj houtte to de-
whether the motion was dilatory
not
Tin* ftyftti’m adopted oy the flfty**ee-
, rou-ivH, and n**w rendoptrd by
,l " F'Minluw on rules wav to main-
:un. i o‘ indHfdi’al judgtnmt of
r** char, tut the judpment of the mn
houvt*. Toe speaker waj fifuSSSim bill, that
* ;r ^ nt, *d the niithorlty to control
yisatton. The cdirinltte* .-n rules
Jif 1 ?* nnnlmi smb authority. The
i ii'S.ty revi-d in Hie nisjority of th*
2J“. 1'ud-r the ruin rr";.. ed, iliia-
_ y mctirna .vnuld h .1. f >-
'•s*' nan d'l. i-,\. r -ii i*.., h rit:«r r.
"! V « mport fn n the committee on
'• • • I - - -1 i:i ID f • ••m
eJ'iiplf
Hewl In
in reply, ^d that fit was unu-
^ tor tiWa preeldinar officer of thia
body to leave his exalted position and
to partake in the discussion on the floor.
waar even a question whether he
ought to do it at all. But of thia ac
tion he maxle no question. TWe Kentle-
[nan from Gwrgla (Crljp) alone was
to judge of his action. If (Che gentis-
nwa did not believe tlhiat the O’th'.r
membewi of thia committee on rules
were not adequate for the discussion.
Ft was for hhn to decldo when his pow
erful aid tftould be thrown into the bal
ance He (Reted) regretted Chat the
speaker had taken the floor, not only
on g-moral principals, but because he
had introduced Irtto the debate a oer-
tatn amount of parti®mship, thereby
fvho\v:u?r that although the rest of the
hou »e had survived ' the measures of
thia fifty-first congn es ait present the
speaker 'had not. To what had been
said about him personally he would
not reply, for he would not allow this
debate (to degenerate into a personal
question. (Republican applause).
The debate was continued by Messrs.
Sprinker. Boattncr and Hooker of Mlv-
^si«5:ppi, who contended that the trtem-
bershlp of the commit tea-'on rules
should be increased. Mr. Pickier, 'Re-
svnKHwto a# South D2V.9 1 ' 10 who screed
wjlh Sir. Hooker on this point, Messrs.
CiimmSngs. Hepburn of Iowa and Bry.
aa spoke, then tWe subject was dropped.
Sir. Bprfnger iinitroduced a bill to pro
vide for »he coinage of the seignorage
of silver In the treasury. Referral to
tha commJtbeo on coinage.
The house, at 5:15. adjourned.
Tim hvnnle Sn«»*l«n.
Senator Vnrhees. chairman of the
finance committee, reported back the
house hill repealing part of the Sher
man act within amendment In the na
ture of n substitute. He asked that
the bill be placed on the calendar and
r»*7tlcc that he ;bcj!^ ««v th« ven-
nte to take It up and consider It Imme
diately after the morning bu6ln03» from
this time on until final be taken. The
substitute, he said, was actually the
bill heretofore reported from the finance
committee. He understood that notice
of an Intention to address the senate
had been given by the senators from
Georgia (Gordon) nnd Sherman nnd h«
suggested that their remarks might be
made on the bill which he had Just rc-
yortel. He explained further that the
Mil as reported from the finance com
mittee was Identical with that passed
by the house, so far as concerned the
repeal of the purchasing clauses of the
Sherman act; and that from that point
on there was a certain matter which
In his Judgement Improved It and made
It more acceptable.
Senator Teller objected to the con-
sldcratlon of the repeal bill today and
It was placed an the calendar.
A resolution offered yesterday by
Senator Stewart was then laid before
the senate. It directs the secretary of
fhe treasury to Inform the senate
whether there Is danger of a deficiency
in the revenues of the government dur
ing the current year, and If so. what
the probable amount of such deficiency
and whether legislation is necessary to
supply suen deficiency. The resolu
tion gave rise rise to a long dtscsuslon.
Senators Sherman. Voortices, Mills.
McPherson and Harris opposed the res
olution as calling for problem'tlcal
statements aa calculated to. create
needless alarm, or aa reflecting on the
secretary-Of the treasury.
A motion' to refer the resolution to
the flnanace committee was made by
Senator Voorhees. That motion was
opposed by Senators Hill end Stewart.
Finally the resolution was referred to
the finance committee. Tens 40, naya
I*. The senators voting nay were: Al
len of California. Dubois, Hansbrough.
1IIH. Irby. Jones. Lindsay, Pcffer. Pow
er. Stewart. Teller. White of CaUfornta
and Walcott.
Gordon on tho Repeal.
Senator Gordon addressed the senate
In favor of the unconditional repeal
of the purchasing clause of the Sher
man act. This wss. he said, one crumb
of comfort In the present caUraltlea
of the country, and emphasised the
damage done by congressional mis
takes. In the long list of financial
woes there was heard one oheertng
note. That note was the voice of the
people calling upon Democrats to re-
deertv their pledges. That was the pop
ular demand for the repeal of the Sher
man act and for the inauguration of a
sound and stable and liberal policy of
finances.
The Dejnocnstc party made for the
people four distinct, emphatic and une
quivocal ■promises. They wer»: To re
form the tariff; to repeal the Sherman
law; to place gold sod silver on an
equal foot Ag, and to remove the tag
on atarte bank*. Coupled sritb thee*
premia** t-hd* had been the one condi
tion ah art the people should turn out
(*!»> Republican* and turn the govern
ment over to tbb Democrats, and now
wv«i on anxious, even agonizing sus
pense. (ho people looked to the Demo-
cfat# to ms what they w*re going to
do. There was no escape for the party.
It had cither to redeem or repudiate its
pledges. The pledge as to tariff /atom
would doubtless be fulfilled in due timer
n»t eo as to hamper or cripple th* in
dustries of the country; pot an as to
phsc: obstructions in the pathway efch'-r
of infant or aged Industries: hut. by a
better disposition, a wiser adjustment,
possibly by free raw material, to help
manufacturer* to lift the burdms of
labor! <0. proceed fhe common paopie
and thus benefit all fee •**■!?*!*./?
(ton grant party <« wtdril be belonged.
He stnorely trusted that ns much
might be truthfully ss4d for thc pledge
of flume kit reform, end believed that
as much might be said. , . h ,
SELSK.”ffi!"£;» l *•£>«££
s7»?a.WhiSrjss!?OT
GEORGIA'S CROPS
ARE VERY SHORT
Weekly Report of the Weather Bureau
Not Encouraging to Geor
gia Farmers.
HAVOC OF SUNDAY'S STORM.
HAVOC OF
SUNDAY'S
HURRICANE
(Continued from pa*6 1.)
i Irieli Potato Vines Are Reported
’runs Off By the Terrific Storm
of Sunday Night—Ilow Cot
ton Has Suflereds
Atlanta. Aug. 29.-(Speclal.)—'The
weekly crop report- of the weather bu
reau Issued today shows a derided
shortage in tto? cotton crop all over the
state. Rust has done more or less dam-
dgc lr. tVS» ocuuuu anu imr Luivlcaso
of Sunday night also did great dam
age.
A r-porter from the vldnty of Au
gusta is quoted as follows:
"The damage to cotton was enormous.
A killing fro*t could hardly have
worked more serious damage than Sun
day night's hurricane. Cotton was not
very good in eastern Georgia anyway
this year, and thia violpnt destructive
storm has ruined the prospects of many
a farmer for anything like a fair crop.
The picking of cotton is rapidly ad
vancing now and farmers will soon
know Just how short their crop is." •
Peas, sugarcane and potatoes con
tinue -to do moderately well. As thn
picking advances It becomes more and
more evident that cotton will be very
short this year, some think even Shorter
than last year. A small crop to the
large amount of rust on cotton Is at
tributed this year’s failure to secure a
good crop.
The past jveek in southern Georgia
has been very favorable for gathering
ootton. which is opening rapidly on
some plantation*. The crop will be cut
off one-third. Rust has caused the forms
and young fruit to drop off. Only at a
few places has the crop buen reported
to be In good condition.
Great havoc was wrought to planta
tions in the southeastern part of, the
state m Georgia’s coast counties by
the mioent hurricane. All crops were
injured and targe quantities of timber
were felled. Even os small things aa
Irish potato vines had their tops com-
piuoriy wrung on by the violent gusts
of wind. Pea vines and al) other small
crops, besides the larger crops, did not
escape the fury of the storm.
BRUNSWICK FEELS BLUER.
Brunswick, Auc. 2!).—(Special.)—
There are no mote suspicious cases.
Six days have passed and if any genus
are in Brunswick no one can find them.
So thoroughly satisfying were reports
from all the physicians today that It
was decided unnecessary to Issue 3.
bulletin. The health board's s.lence
Is significant and 00 more yellow fever
uk* will be reported.
Judge Alfred V Crovatt, a prominent
citizen, has returned and says uc looks
for a speedy resumption of Bruns
wick's growth. Dr. C. Fagct of New
Orleans, an expert, arrived today and
will take charge of the hospital at
Camp Hutton Is needed. He has been
tn consultation with the surgeons in
charge here and will remain until the
quarantine to raised.
Burgeon Hutton today said be would
push Camp Hutton to completion so
that It will be in readiness in toe event
that any new case* rcqu.rc its use. hut
as they have had six days indemnity
from any further outbreak of the dis
ease, things look favorable to a speedy
relaxation la quarantine regulations.
Dr. Uultcras has made a canvass ■
IVayncsviUe and surroundings, which
develops the fact that there to no sick
ness thereabouts of a suspicious nat
ure among the Brunswick refugees and
others.
Dr. Huttcn speaks encouragingly of
the prospect*. Dr. Gultcras rays It is
safe to presume that the fever has
been stopped by the system of thor
ough d.-pffuilati'jn nnd endorses Mayor
Lamb's action In issuing s proem nm
tkg> to the people to leave. Dps Hut
ton and Carter endorse Mayor Lnmb'a
proclsm.vt.oa and think his method of
ridding Brunswick of her people has
saved her from an' epidemic.
Dr. Gultcras In an Interview advises
Bninswleklnns not to rush back home
yet, ns the fever germs may exist 111
aoms closed house, nnd those who are
Little actual loss will result from it.
A vertical, cyclone, with all the ter
ror- which the word ha* for the peo
ple of this section, swept up the coast
and across Charleston yesterday. Early
Saturday morning the dreaded signal
was run up and the city held Its breath,
too Ring the storm might pass us by.
Saturday night a heavy northeast gale
started shortly after midnight and blew
for several hours, but as a partial lull
had preceded the dawn -and continued
throughout the early hours of the
morning, ft was t. -oed that after all
the dty would not fall wltlaln the track
of the cyolone. But the weather looked
exceedingly dirty yesterday morning
and the wind rose again to a gale and
came in fitful, angry gusts out of the
northenrt. A heavy canopy of clouds,
which during the frenoon drifted rap
idly across the heavens, began to set
tle down upon the city. It had that
muddy tinge which suggested there
was plenty of wind behind It. Seaward
a -necivy mist thickened until it be
came a avail of clouds. There was no
longer a doubt that the dreaded cy
clone was to descend upon the city In
all its fury.
'i'lie Cvnrt Took the Alitrin.
The craft lying at anchor In the bay
were the first to take the alarm, and
ftom all quarter* of the harbor they
came hurrying tn. All that could do so
found mooring along 'he wharves, and
other less fortunate moved higher Into
tho river and mala >l.t' beat anchorage
they could. The largest vessels, no less
than the smallest croft, nought protec
tion from the angry tempest. Fortu
nately there are comparatively few large
s.uns In nort lust now. else the damage
dor.c might have been multiplied many
t lines By 1 o’clock a special bulletin
from the weather bureau posted .tn front
of the News and Caurer building warn
ed the citizens of the Impending disas
ter. The few peap'e who were out in
the storm congrerated about the board,
nnd having read the dispatch, anxiously
Inqu-rsd for further and fuller parttcu-
lura For the mov |-uit, however, the
people had kept tn tntl- houses through
out the day. The attenoance at the va
rious churches wss small and few people
who were not ainolutely compelled to
do ro beyond their cash doors, but the
•nquirlea for further details of the hurrl-
can* Were anxious .and endless. The
1 ii-i al dispatch and Muipiy stated th-t
• cyclone was « t.’sl In south Flo. .Jo.
aid that It was moving l.orth by ■ orth
«-.*>_ Ths veli.’t/ wa» estlmatoi at
from forty to sixty miles/ There was
nothin for the people but to calmly
await ttoe bursting of tint- storm. It did
not come suddenly, but after warning.
Increasing steadily but perceptibly in
force and fury the wind etrengttoened
sa with an increasing purposo from A
gate to a huricane, until before the
darkness finally fell with howling fury
over the houses and strewed the city
with wreckage and debris of every
kind and description.
It continued to come In those sullen,
anery'tuats. which mean so much to
;ls familiar wtlh the tenors of
such disasters. Tiling went flying in
every quarter until. It was unsafe to
walk the streets. Pedestrians venture
some enough to weather the storm
found thin calves drenched with rain,
their umbrellas turned wremgside out
and themselves 1 .almost swept off their
feet.
Rain 1st lav
Tyt-- 1 » h from the outside. TIM
Other iF-untL-rs which nre reported to
thn shipping between the quarantine
stii:vu ati-.t TJ’bev arc The Norwegian
ship Harold, which is lying on Tybeo
bi-ach; Norwegian lark Linden, at tl-c
qunruutUie station, h.gh anu dry and
:n th- 1 harbor fore mast gone; the Nor
weginu bark Elmira, pron the beach
quarantine. The Norwegian bark Loyal
to i*a thn marsh near the quarantine
station with sit lur masts gone. The
Portugese bark Audaiia is high and dry
amt ik considered :«• bo a total wreck.
Tho bark Mexico, which is lying at the
upper quarantine wharves, is now- in
between the lateral row pilings of the
wharf. How she got there i- a won
der. She was apparcbtly lifted over
the outside p’llngK.
Loaves to shipping.
The British birkentin*. Gen stn. is
high and dry on McQueen's Islandjust
abreask of enus Point. She Is apparently
In go-d stupe, with everything stand
ing. The only vessel that rode safely to
her anchors during (he stea m was the
bark. Two of th> fix Panford Rots
dredges. Nos. 5 and 7. are on McQueen’s
I "land, about hilf way h-etw-on St. Au
gustine creek and the Lazaretto creek.
The dredge Tom MachicM in over in the
harsh high and dry. having b- --n blown
feom, Venus Point acnots the long
Island. The bark Omaus wao blown from
la«r dock across (he river to (tae Sav-m-
haJi side, and afterward -was blown
over the river again, and ts now high
and dry on a shoal oppovte Jefferoon's.
The stern-wheel steamboat Abeeville
°* W * Ivwrf Pntrf Rrmvn holm 1 pine tO
tlh-e Oysitc** Can-ninsr and Cultivation
Company of Brunswick is on the wharf.
The Abbeville is «. complete wreck. Th's
oyster boat Fred Brown cbjt be rotten
off. She has two fool's fn her bottom.
The steamer Bonin an from New York
to Oardegna*. Cuba, Cap*. Hanecn.came
in Tybe#* harbor today vn»ry badly d*m-
®4TCd. The revenue cutt.*r BoytweR ar
rived Monday afternoon brlnxlnj? Ca.pt.
Raaers and family from St. Catherine
Iwtand. There U much damage on the
1 Aland. The thr<v>imKted echoonre Be
atrice McTjean of St. John**. N. B.. re
cently ordered to Sape'.o by the quaran
tine aiuithoratieo of Savannah, had put
m for a hartxm and was drawn hlsfo and
dry up in tne wooas on The wm bmI»
of St. OTthertoe’* Island, and the
•choonem Mary and Maid of tfote Mist
near the Florida p**mgv.
No loos of life was reported. Nothin*
has been heard from (tv- steamship
City of Savannah, now many hour*
overdue.
Tybee Inland is about wrecked. Had
•the island been waehed away the de
motion and destruction could not hav?
been much worse <foan it wa*. Houses
there wdf blown down, burned, washed
away and otherwise demolished. The*
railroad track was blown from <foi!
rround end ports of it stood up a!on*
the line like a. fence. Rails wen?
twisted and spikes were pulled from the
crossfires. Tfoil railroad track was com
pletely wreckAl, part of it beta* blown
frightened end terrorized that many
rc killed , L nd drown'd on Paris Island,
•nows him been received from 8t. Hel-
four miles from Beaufort. It Is bo-
1 fully __
Port Royal and Seabrook, all negroVs.*
Every house In Benufort and Port Royal
'va.% damaged to some extent; also a
number of barges and craft were wrecked
and blown ashore. The Cooshaw Mining
Company loses $50,000. Tho total losses
are estimated In the neighborhood of a
half million dollars.
TI»F Report From Wilmington.
Wilmington. N. C., Aug. 29. A severs
storm of wind and rain prevailed hero
yesterday and today, but caused no
damage beyond blowing down a few
trees nnd tences and overturning two
unfinished frame buildings. The tide
wa* the highest known in years. At
Southport the wind velocity was sev-
cmy-three miles. The Norwegian hark
Bonita was blown ashore in the river.
r*n other damage was done
Th- fchoon.-r B. 1. Hazard. Rafforfi.
Georgetown (or Elizabsthport N. J..
willa cargo of railroad put in at
Southport this morning in distress, leak-
ing and with spanker and mainsail lost.
She reports having been struck by the
hurricane Saturday night twenty-five
mUes southeast of Frying Pan light,
three masted schooner Three sj*.
with cargo of lumber, from Sa
1 r .
an'inVaf nd.nt bin. " The Sherman act
sets not the friend but tho toe of , b '
metallism. As a true frilled of bimetal
lism firmly convinced of Its vitalising
influence in the languishing Industries
of Ibe whole country, he appealed for
the repeal of the Sherman liw.
He doctored Uist he should support
. prompt concurrence lr. the houre
with the uncomprondslng sttltude
the house against bimetallism; and for
Immediate repeal of the Sherman tow.
The InstTUClkana by the senate on the
>■ substitute reported from the commit-
® tee on finance Involve Indefinite post-
me strength
flfioe to enact bimetallism In
•lltte
F,**?*'' ro 'i*4 Mil fix lh** order of
"i •" without me cons, i
III’the r.f!y -.-cor:d eongrei
•” '-’tii npicsiilon to the opera
, ' <’f rule* ibat had ptevailsd tn tht
L „ 1 /'’bgr.'-K*. In.tesd "f follow-
’*“< lust nod, aviien tiiiburiei ii.-
*1 not have been slaved, instead i f
f'-bing fhe rulei
I*"- .’be ffty-src.in-t congress had
bk'-ti the mij,Re c
""■roe qf pi.,.
" -ndursed Mi.i _ ■
a targe Derr ecru tie "majority to
t’-'-n’’ had derided
(l th y did not |. levs u -i -in ■ -u
,** **• Ntot here iheir rq ri - n- ,
, ‘houkl b.v • •! il •• r t" t-f. r
" » No tn: . , - uld ih ;:,te to
(A| i laute).
^Ttenevsr.of , r,., ,t i
1* ail come Ip--, powr r
vve Of powi-r he! h -a
5 had be-n >t,-,t- . fit 3m
L?w then he I -■« In 1 b.en
(Atmtoass i it- n ■* ,
ponement; and foe that reason tm 1
not support the substitute.
I lire- All '"‘I ' "I" - " II- A -III nil.
Wi-sliitaP :L Aug - ' \\': 1 l’riv
Secretary TOartwc was ask.-l
n -m'.nq otm rnln* the r,-p »rt th
\|,- l l.-A.'l Uld «.l' -i \-t - - k
followlag au op-*ra* -an perforni-*!
The rain did not set In until 2 o’clock,
but when It did start It came tn tor
rents. Which deluged houses and flooded
the streets.
The terrific force of ttoe storm forced
ttoe water in -through ttoe cracks end
crevtoa of windows and doers in quan
tities sufficient to drench via furniture
Id dwelling houses and in soma in
stances to Hood tho floors to a depth of
an Inch or more.
Grew Worse at Mghf
Thia was the storm fti the daytime,
but it grew wore.- as night drew on.
When night did come It wrapepd ttae
o*ty in CUT feet darkness. Ttoe electric
wires brers all down and It would hava
been Impossible to have k;pt tho gas
jot* burning.
A few feeble rsys from ehmusa win
dows an-1 the faint glow of a full moon
were the only rsye of light which re
lieved the perfect darkness to add to
the terror which the people fo.t about
S o'clock at night, when the alarm bell
began to ring. A broken wire wss the
cause, but no one knew. The "torm
continued with unabated fury. The
tide, which had turned early In the
ofirraooQ.stloodsd the lower portion of
the city.
Tho waves were lashed Into a" fury
of foam and dashed high aver the sea
wall and flooded Whits l’oliat Garden
nnd every street below Ttudd and
Broad streets. The roadways and side
walks of the entire city were under
water al»>. “
Hard to (auras at thn I*>«*.
It Is, of course, out of the question
to hazard even a wild guess as to tho
eatent of the loss Which has been oc
casioned
Several casualties to persons and
much serious damage are reported, but
a omplete Inventory can only be made
aft/r n careful Inspection of the terri
tory extending from Ten Mile House
to ths Battery. Only one life la reported
lost upto this time, a negro woman.
Every wire in the city le down.
Thouaands of trees hare been denuded
of pdr i ii IK" and the Hmbs see blown
comfortably srtua'Od hail bolter remain entirely bare.
niv-iv until fro-t. or if drcinii-- 1 iti-eii A bu —lred houro-s are unroofed and
compel them to return they must :ir- lU^ U ?h'rl^on f L»d' Wori»*h"svTbsen
range to sun their bouses reverei da,a
before occupying. Bruns art loans b ere th . n.-i B iiborhood of Cha-i-ston is
do not think this necessary, and many injured to the extent of »i,o«o,oe«.
express the Jnrentlon of m-aving tlieh’ umstez in the city are impossible,
families before frost. .None of the burin- ss houses arc open
The risk to reduced to a minimum I this no-rning
where hiuaes lvtre bi'en aired and )l^of tne s^tsng* topsmabla on
junneil regularly for setTuml days
fore occupancy- Dr. antton u ^> g(m<I f *r St tahaUHmnu of Nuiilvao’i
from «ht' prr>* nt Innicatloa tlio kov*** n-1 juiaad aa<I tfoe cout. Th«? former place
meat quarantine will 0000 be relaxed I wai Intlmard from at S p. m. Sunday,
and he will si Km b»* able to turn Camp I comnv.n. .» ,n ii now au*r* 'Dd«d.d
Hutton ofor :o rellskm* sock :'.o> for — ' ~
cam;) umAll guards will I.* Favnnnab, Auk -Sunday* »torm
moved from around Branhim'H u mu? injun'd many bulMiuw* m Savannah,
Thur^liy mom - l lie »l v»n U. r.- ftC d ditl grrat damajn» lo the tree*. Only
•re all In ;i merry mood today and
cou- dcr their work alm^t • n U*d.
The relief committee Ik still doing
good v. < rk, and Mayor L*am>> k i . ug
• large force nt work on aanltatlon.
Th# tcfuil cash
F-' m 1 j wt-vneu. jaii 1 V* n. utiuh uiuwti
several hundred feet from where it wsa
lying Into ttoe woods. To get the train
OA’.r from Tybee on entirely new track
will have to be built almost the entire
distance. Washouts are not clrcum-
stance* -.to the wretched condition In
Which the track* were twisted by the
wind* a* if they were straw*. At leist
half ths bouses on the island have been
blown down or badly damaged. Dam
age to building* In Savannah Is bring
rapidly repaired.
Lilt of PutfillllM.
The ran of fuiuniies W-rtofore given
_i gradually growing arvd It is Im
possible to tell to whit extent it will
go. Several bodies of drowned person*
were picked up and ssarche* are now
bring mads for others who sea mtssing.
Every -hour reams to bring some new
story of a dsrito as a result of the
storm. The drowning of Mr. A. G. Dll-
mor osslstasst cashier of tha Central
Railroad Bank, wa# one of tne most un-
fortunalte fatahti*! of the storm. Mr.
Ulloner owns a farm on Hut'blnson'
Island,, opposite tHe city, and hid k :ll
OA’er to pay off hi* hards sn-1 n: :c*id to
o’he r dottos. Thenr were b
his ties and k to aupro—<i that he
struck against the outehml when he
Jumped from hi* birn as it was about
to blow down. Miller, his dairyman,
has not been found, and It is supposed
be wss also drown'd. The other fatali
ties so file reported »r*u follows:
Tony Holmes, colored, crushed In
house on Hutchinson’. Islam!.
Four unknown negroes drowned
Brampton’s plantation four miles from
tbs city*
Lewis aignett.colored, ran into s
live trolley wire.
A 6-year-old colored boy. drowned on
Hutchinson's Island.
John Williams, Mary Butler and Sa
rah Green, drowned on a rice plantar
lion south of ths city.
Two unknown sailors were drowned
at Tybee Island. Forty to fifty other
persons tre reported missing, nnd It is
supposed, as nritnhg has been heard,
from them, that thrir bodies will be
found later. Twelve' barks and berk-
enttnea which were anchored at the
quarantine Station were blown high
and dry upon the marsh, and some
of them were carried by the storm
across the marshes on an Island two
miles distant from the station. One
of the vesM-ls at Tybee was completely
cap-iz.il and three clubhouses on the
Island were blown entlrol yilown. and
others were flooded, nnd the people
sought fh»lter WA-herever they could.
The wires nre all down and Savannah
In nlmont entirely abut off from tele
graphic communication. The lug Paul
sen arrived tn the dty at 6 o’clock yes
terday afternoon. Who brought up
about sixty passengers from Tybee. Mr.
Rivera, one of them, etated tha tfour
negroes engaged In clearing the rail
road tracks were drowned. A sailoi
and the i sbln boy on the schooner Har
old, which Is on hr ride on north
beach, were drowned. It le reported
that eight of the crew of a tirrnp
sloop which went ashore on the south
end were drowned.
The Hotel Tybee Is considerably der
seed In front The verandas sre goi
and so are the bath bouse*. The Kmgh
of Pythias' club house wss w-fh"! .awa
Two of the cottages of the col ten - Cl
are gone. The north end Is prsi tica.
cleaned out. The water swept with It
mendous force over thi* r>art or t
Iflantl. railroad tracks bom* rarrt
from 200 to 500 feet. The Chatham cl
house Is badly damaged. The pavtllo
on the t* • h are k ? e; ao t» the *wlt<
hack. An empty train !i In the woo.
Trains on all roada are coming In lit.
ularly, and *<>roo have entirely htopp
lo repair washouts. The church iteeplea
•re demolished, and at least W large
tree* are blown down all over the city.
Th' Tybee road Is under water for the
entire distance, and In many places la
entirely waehed away. There Is no com-
k at ton whatever with Tybee except
vannnh for Philadelphia. wa« wrecked
nnd abandoned off Cape Fear on tho
night of August 28. Her commnnrfer,
Cnpt. Isaac Simpson of Mark'd Hook.
Fn.. and Mate Johnson H.-ode of Park
avenue, tinmmore, were washed over
board nnd droAvnod. The names of the
survivors are: William Simpson, stew-
nrd. brother of the r.-apt.iin; William
Nimpson, non of the captain, a panssn-
ger: John Washington, John Scott nnd
another man. name not known Tho
vessel Was left anchored and In a leak
ing condition.
The brlgtmllne Wattrow (German)
from Liverpool for this port with a car
go of salt went to pieces on Caswell
beech. The crew were nil saved, hav-
ing swam ashore. ’ They sre now at
Caswell life-saving station. An un
known three-masted schoaner Is also
reported ashore and leaking nnd show
ing signals or distress on nana Meaen.
two miles southwest of southport.
The life-saving crew have gone to her
assistance.
A Train lo IMelimomt.
Richmond, Va., Aug. 29.—Passenger
train No. 78 of the Atlantic Coast Line
with Pullman sleepers attached reached
here thia evening at 6:50 o'clock from
Charleston. 8. C.. having bron delayed
twenty-four hours by the destructive
storm which swept over the South At
lantic Sunday and Mondiy. Your cor-
reapondent In an Interview with Mr.
T. B. Beddlnrfleld, Southern Express
messenger, who was In Charleston dur
ing the storm, was given this store:
He say* that the battle of wind ami
rain commenced with the terrific force
at 1 o’clock Sunday afternoon and cm-
tlnuel without cessation until Monday
morning at 7 o'clock. He «nys there
was not a space In the street that dl l
not contain delaris. such as roofs of
houses, signs, awnings, telegraph poles,
ete., which were scattered In all direc
tions. five roofs of hotels avere blown
off nnd the streets were flooded with
water almost to the doors; that he «:iw
fourteen box cars that had been blown
from the railroad truckm nnd turned
over: that all the phosphite works In'
the city were Mewn down or bed!?
damaged. There was a schooner lying
high In the streets, having been driven
from its anchorage. There waa no
communication with Eai-annoh. all tel
egraph Urea having been prostrated.
While he saw no one killed or Injured.
It v.-js currently reporiot that eight
people had been killed in the city. It
was nUo reported that there had beei
great Ran of life on Sullivan's Island,
numbering in the hundreds, but lnav
mueh a« h1! communication was cut oi*
of- course there was no means of verk
fadng th- tep rt. For ninny .-ille* nl-an-
the line of the Atlantic Coast Line rail-
ion-1 leading out of Chnrlreton the tete-
grapb poIoK wer nearly nil blown d «n
nnd the storm aamk om’ of the sovereet
nnd mest destructive evor ixpi-rlenced
In that section.
t-e.r
u
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nPi.dut-1}
riiiUde'.ph
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‘ 'a* major!
'n from Male
4||
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vpfovmi of Om i
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.power, mm Mai
■ te » *.*
Why
arouni!
| Shii”h'i Vitalize
;my i-.riple \v«i
j.r. f. r t” Mifler.
• by n. •
nt. ,*1 to euro
icvcral car !oa«ls
f. -• n -r » lalwr
• -I : u -~t •
i.iy anil To • • n
number is now w
.\n ay h ,*rb
»‘*on a:i l t<
The p; ■
(Sp*"- tl \—John
fr .in T.illhor tn.
■i hiisTsTv by a
l ttr '-t ribs at-
i-l of his :n-
ntut n pcofi
imiKM«ll»l»'
property <
aiued tcrioui ilam-
ar»» known to hnve
d f»\e mtetinf. It 1%
iriat4 the r mount of
•U. The dtad are at
fjl.mti, divwneo on
:t:d; Fred Stewart,
Mr. Ullracr; Ton?
by fa
Hulrhu
ffa/e. yOU
Tjys|)ef3sia
In your family I
flo oneHiinJ ctum
htort dyspttni* than.
lard.
fye Hgv/j^hor^5ni‘n<^
i*5Ff«.t, clean.
And figkltl|ful .
J)YSP£PtlCS
And other In vCr.ds
can. eat food fooKed
Witli foTTotetic
Without unpleiscnt
C-ffect. *
/tu.coofc'fn^ pur fool O
i+ .a'pUH.k^jwESf^
//iQEfy, than jnj other
j/io rTtninjZjne re fore j
u&« CoTTOlINB.
Made only t>y y
N. K. PAIRBANK & CO..
CHICAGO ST. LOUIS.
by water
William Duncan anl C. A. L.
hum. There were on a flshinK
it la believed were at Wolf I»ln
the cyclone came. Fears that U
druwucu entertained a.
party left to eearch for them tl
U In difficult to civ* en eet
lli* damage do*i • by the >rm
lr.* - C*n< hundred thousm'l doll*
. V. t lb. :v ay .1 *r • « > I-
-fourth of the
sa I by
:«iin;any, ‘
ivtttuc.
Cherry nud L'oiiuu | , >t uully. T
u.lcruj your
iU»e reuieUjr
iy »u tiuivir
cam?* Lane
khall be glad >
remedy freo ,
10 Lure coa*
id me their
n<»u'hbor1nK [n’.nts by fir
ihtot fully hrt
Roy.il. Hf.i-
h and red kill'd
BiteBehns
Small
Guaranteed to cuie Bilious attacks,
V: Headache and CoMUpetlee M in
•i. , ^hottlc. Prico 26c. Fur sale by
druK^ists.
K tare “7.17, 70” end *xnple do*e free,
j. f. IKITfl A 00.» Proprieure, MW TO ML
A * l bLOBUM^M D ,
Petri itr«L Sew York*
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.l