The Statesboro eagle. (Statesboro, GA.) 1884-1891, December 18, 1890, Image 1

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VOL. 7. THE EAGLE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year, In advance,.., $l.Ct Bix months, in advance, .60 Advertising rates made known an a; ] lication. Obituary notices 5 cents per lin Wo are not rcsponsibL for opinions ixprcssed by correspondents. Entered at the Statesboro, Oa., puMOii.c* ok ■ econ -class mail matter. THE EAGLE Is published at Statesboro, Bullock coun¬ ty, Georgia,on every Thursday,at one dol¬ lar a year. St tesboro is the county site, and is situated in a fine farming section. „ Bullock „ , has , a population of about 10. „ - 000, three-fourths of whom are whit: people. It is admitted that it is the best farming county in Southeast Georgia. It is solidly Democratic, being known as the “Banner County.” The farmers atw industrious and enterprising, aud eaclh year adds to the wealth and population Statesboro is connected by with the C. R. R., at Dover, and a pj?r manent boom has struck nur town, ana a new era dawns upon our people. The Eagle is the official organ of the the county, and has a large and iacreas ing circulation. Its aim is tc aid all things that tend to the advancement of the people and the upbuilding of the county. As an advertising medium, The Eagle cannot be excelled. The merchants of Savannah, Augu-ta and elsewhere, get trade from the county and the city merchants, as well as the county merchants, will find it to tiled advantage to advertise their business ii the columns of The Eagle. We keep on hand, for sale at low prices, Justice Court Summons, Execu¬ tions, Blank Deeds, Mortgages, &c. Job work of all kinds neatly, beau i fully and promptly done, at prices that will compare with city pri'-ns, such a Letter Bill Heads, &c. :~T Judge Suferiob Court—J ames K Hine*. fLuiaftOTt General—O scar H. Rog ers. Stenographer— 8. W. Sturgis. Clerk —J. E. C. Tillman. Sheriff— S. J. Williams. Court convenes the 4th Mondays ii April and October. Ordinary —A. R. Lanier. Court 1st Monday in each month. Tax Collector— Francis Akins. Tax Keceiver —W. B. Akins. Treasurer —Geo. R. Beasley. Coroner— D. C. Proctor. County isurveyor— R. H. Cone, JUSTICE COURTS. 44th (Sink Hole) —John Rushing, J. I’., Green (Club P. O.' Court, 1st Saiu:doy». 45th House)—Guo. Trapreli, J. Metter P. O.; John G. Jones, N. Metter P. O. Court, 2d Saturdays. 40th (Lockhart)—R. F. Stringer, J. Rocky Fo;d K O.; H.-M. Lanier, N. Endicott P. O. Court, 1st Satur¬ 47th (Bri ir Ta'ch)—U. M. Davis, J. Ivanhoe P. O.; C. A. Sorrier, N. P., P. O. Court, 4th Saturdays. 48th (Hsgins)--J. G. Chitty, J. P., Mill Kay P. O.; W. II. McLean, N. P., Ray P. O. Court. 2d Saturdays. 1209th (Statesboro)—E. C. Moseley, P., Statesboro P. O. M. G. Brannen, P., Statesboro P. O. Court second 1320 (Caston)—Madison Lanier, J. P. Bliss P. O.; J. II. Soarboro, N. P., Biise P. O. Court 1st Fridays. 1340 (Bay)—John Donaldson, J. P., Harville P. O.; Samuel Harville, N. I*., Ga., P. O. Court 8d Sntnrdav. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. B. J. Williams, J. A. Brannen. Swainsboro, Ga, Statesboro, G* WILLIAMS & BRANNEN, Attorneys at Law, STATESBORO, GA. Will practice in all the Courts of th< Middle Circuit. Established 1868. I 'O (Successors to L Dasher <fc Co.) Broughton St, Savannah, Oa*. Dry Goods, Ladies' and Children's Cloaks, BOYS’ CLOTHING, ETC. ISF*3L\ 3. n. Miller and Mr. A. C. HE STATESBORO EAGLE fe HI M THE CLOTHING LEADERS! We are Ready for the FALL and WINTER demands of our large clientage —with the LARGEST, MOST VARIED and STYLISH STOCK under any SINGLE ROOF in GEORGIA, and are pre-eminently the ONLY COMPLETE MALE OUTFITTING HOUSE in the State. PERFECT FITS for MEN. : BOYS and CHILDREN, FOR FAT, THIN, SHORT TIT I MUM SUITS, UfmillNP WLUUIRU OUI10, ^IIITC DRESS SUITS, &C , SAVANNAH, GEORGIA. Mill Supplies, RUBBER HD LEATHER BELTING, “Sea Lion” Leather, Raw Lace Leather, fR r J S—r~ --- #n*-r «/S V. B W S k 5 and Hemp Packing, TUXT AND EMPIRE PACKINQ. BELT GREASE, GLOBE AND CHECK VALYES, IRON PIPE AND PIPE FITTINGS. WHITE FOR, PRICES. PALMER HARDWARE COMPANY. SAVANNAH, GEORGIA REAL ESTATE. ----■©> Any person who has LAND TO SELL And wants to find a purchaser ought to -A DYEETIkSE! I will act as Agent for the sale of Lands placed in my hands, and will ad¬ vertise the same, and will charge a Ifea onable Per Cent, for selling the same. no sale is ijiado no expenses arc incurred. Respectfully, J. A t BRANNEN, Statesbon, Ga. Has doubled the number’of its sufcxcri hers during the past year, and hopes be Vre the end of the present year to SEND IT TO EVERY HOME IB THIS COUNTY! The advertising patronage in the past has been very good, and wo know that Advertising* Pays! If you want to reach the people, the way is to ADVERTISE. fcXCMOK IIIIMIIIHII. L. . W. ... PERDUE, A. ... M., PriUClpSL r. • • , Spring Term Opens January 13. All the Branches taught and Sttidtnt* prepared for College. Government positive, but kind. The instiuctirn in tho Collegiate De¬ partment largely by lectures and demon stiation. Students required to take notes at recitations. TUITION: $2, $3 and $4 | er month, according grade. Pupils charged fiom time of to end of term. The Music Departmfn standard Wi l Ik; kept up t* tlj> Ljyjtvt Address, L. W. Brin., ExotVinr, Ga. oa, Vi. F, Br/.wyon, !!wnl Trustees. jrtci. STATESBORO, GA., THU ECEMBEE 18,1890 H L n i Shipments a Specialty Measnre’ineiit and Rules for Self . 8E NT FREE to any address. PRIVILEGE OF EXAMINING before Paying. W© Aim to Please. HATS. KNOX. STETSON and our F LhXORS. OVERCOATS. For Men, Boys and Children, all Grades and Prices. T liUWcSl . ff ,, tPrW ATIlCeS* , BEST GOODS, Send for onrlatest Illustrated Ostalognex. C. A. SORRIER Areola, Greorgffa, -AGENT FOR Fi?e d Lifs Insurance, FOR THE COUNTIES OF Bulloch and Tatnall PROMINENT PEOPLE, Count von Moltke is an enthusiastic mu¬ sician. novels. Jules Verne is the author of twenty-four Justice Miller left a personal estate valued at $1113. Buffalo Bill made $500,000 out of his Wild West show. The Crown Princess of Denmark is six feet three inches tail. - There are ninety-seven counties iu Con gressman Lanhatn’s Texas district. The ex-Emperor of Brazil is translating “The Arabian Nights” into Portuguese. The Prince of Wales has already drawn over $16,000,000trorn England’s treasury. John W. Young, son of Brigham Young, is President of tha Utah Central Railroad. Mrs. Dorothy Tennant Stanley is two inches taller than her husband, the great ex¬ plorer. Dr. Koch, the discoverer of the cure for consumption, is said to ba dying of that dis¬ ease himself. The rule of the Sultan of Turkey is said to be most humane. Only one execution has taken place in the Empire for several years. Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, of Eng¬ land, is nearly seventy years old, and re¬ joices of in the receipt of a comfortable salary $40,000 a year from the crown. The wealth of Senator Leland Stanford, of California, is placed at about $80,000,000, Mr. Stanford is a New Yorker by birth and went West in his youth in quest of a fortune. moved the deformity, but has very consid¬ erably and improved the General’s appearance eyesight. Vice-President Morton’s eldest daugh¬ ter, Miss E lith Morton, is now about seven¬ teen years old. 8be is a pretty girl who has been well educated and possesses many graces of manner. Captain James Bend, who savo<l th* livas of U3S parsons wracked off Loan Beach 1850, the still ship lives State of the Georgia iu Deeembor, nt avu of ninety, near Bunch Haven, X. J. B. I*. iSilit.LABKK, tho well known “Mrs. Partington.” Mass., died the other day at I helsea, ai the age ot seventy-six. Ha pub¬ lished nine books, and forty years ago was the most popular humorist in the country. ADVERTISE US, WITH PAY IT WILL THE ALUANC KTiOi ■ WHAT WAS DiJNB. AT THEIR SESSION If OCALA. IMPORTANT MEA8UR IS TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF AT ORDER. The proceedings gil; The important dev lopmSSi of day was the formub IC, u of a call fo r meeting in Cincinnat u**n the 28d ruary, to organize th<f I,at sonal union ty. It is evident thaftbe will Farmers’ ance, third as a body, T^QUthern not endorse party idea. de®ation and the Missouri have axes would firmly set damagjn aga® Jto « the move order in be so south, and as they .[ institute an whelming majority oi the and the representative- fir here, by no such tion could be hoped the delegates idea. who .are putting the third Realizing that an attempt to secure endorsement of the c|nvention woulij death ly concluded to their project! make they have to l‘? an ual crusade, capturi an here in the and there them in the $outh, the West. and most of 7 this who added await them, to the 750(000 will colored have voters, strong thei a over 1,000,000 to start on. seheme is one of, intense \ political portance. Thursday nLht Alliance had tve open from meeting, the colored addijpsed AT a nee by aud of Knights of Labor. Tuere was a full tendance of Ailiance« cn > who seemed enjoy the meeting inanely. A negro from So Carolina made speech in which he ijoiccd in the tion of Tillman overthrow of aristocracy. j > D. Muller, of Another negro, I isiana, said the co red people the Australian ballot vhich the Alliance was going t giv o them Harry Tracy, of Tc white man a veteran alliaucemai said the formers They were going the to solve friend 1 to of negro the problem. they had were tied from negro been politicians. sepa by chicanery ailiancemen, of hu SeMs Pointing “We to negro ’naVe'*^ not leave here until fStiwbd federation with this (fganizatlon, will bear fruit in the rears to eome,” Mr, Barber, said^ of Virjpuia, an aged anceman, to t\■ negro “Go back atm‘tell ye !r people that have have forgotten forgotten demoi|acy, repu’d trtnism, and that that Fanners’ Alliance s riser . . , i, M There is C ' n8 to have the r i Tr’V 1 '“ J P 0 "” 1 “ tion Alliance, during recitiig the afternoon, a resolu was offered the fact that the Farmers’Alliance aimed at the better ment of the condition of the farmers in dustrially, morally Criticism and socially, and regretting and condemning white the action of the alliance in opposition passing the resolution Wednesday elections in to the federal bill, because such action has no reference whatever to the aims and pur poses lated of the organization, and was ealeu to check the growth and influence of the alliance. The resolution will prob- 1 ablv ^ass The publication‘of alliance press committee requests the the following: “U. 8. Missouri,'made Hall, president of the State Alliance of of a strong speech in favor the resolution condemning the Lodge bill. After the resolution was ** - without a single person expressing himself moved personally reconsider opposed the to it. Mr. Hall to resolution, which motion being seconded, he then moved to table the motion to reconsider, and this resolution was carried never to be recon¬ sidered, and the order w as thus inaltera bly Friday committed ngainst day the in bill.’’ was a busy the Alliance convention. The investigation committee reported; the 8t. Louis platform was re¬ affirmed, and the officers were elected. All of importance that remains is the disposition third of the financial There question, and the party question, may be considerable discussion on the financial question, for and it involves the land both loan idea, the sub¬ treasury disposition plan of third but the the party ques¬ tion seems to be in sight, and it’s a com¬ promise. , Colonel L. F. Llmgstos, organization of Giorgia, from the committee on made the report which is to furbish the basis for an ultimate union between the Na¬ tional Farmers’ Alliance and Industrial Uniou and the Fanners’ Mutual Benefit Association, which is an organization with a large membership in explained the western states. The report was at length by Chairman Livingston. The report wai adopted without dissent. This ai tion undoubtedly means the ab¬ solute consolidation of these two orgini zations in the near future. Colonel Liv¬ ingston' for also adoption offered a resolution the provid l;iu the • of 8t. Louis alliance platform of 1889, inasmuch as there hts been a question raised as to the unanimous endorsement of the de¬ mand tler.in contained by alt the state delegations one year offered ago. An amendment was by Mr. Loucks, of North Dakota, railroads providing for the ownership of all and tele¬ graph lines by the national [government. Col. Livingston < pposed tli'i, and offered as a compromise measure, u resolution providing that liberty to control aud op¬ erate all such lines shall vest in the gov¬ ernment, and if, after a fair trial of this system, it is found that it does not afford the relief demanded, or effect reforms in the management of them, government ownership adopted, after shall be complete. discussion. T his was Mr. some Wade, of Tennessee, offered an additional amendment that every Alliance lecturer, Btate and National, and all newspaper organs of the Alliance shall support the 8t. Louis and Ocala platforms suspension (amended the plat films), or suffer fr<m order; and further, that qo candidate for any national political office .''hall be sup¬ ported By Alliance member ', unless ho. , ttifhi’rifPS this tihllform, and Ay sub-A I-* uuns may oe su^vememu nt pleasure qj the president. This was also ad pted, and the whole platform as amended was adopted unau mousiy upon a call of the roll by states. Or. 0. W. Macune, chairman of the national executive committee, submitted his annual report of the work accom¬ plished by that body during the past year. It referred at length to the work ui mo committee iu unviu^ *«*> treasury bill drawn and presented to congress. The chairman said that the committee’s mission in this particular was virtually ended, because the Alliance had elected forty congressmen, who would look after pushing fhc hfii through thotkiational legislature. The report recommended the reduction of the sal¬ aries of all national Alliance officers removal from Washington city of national Alliance president’* office, inas¬ much as the retention of it there entails an expense not commensurate with its usefulness. Regarding the third party question says: “I recommended as a compromise that would carry out the end sought to be achieved by the west and north, if it met-the approbation of the south, that a convention be called to meet in February, 1802; that the convention be composed of producers, delegates from all the associations of and that the next annual ses¬ sion of the supreme council elect dele¬ gates to represent this order in that vention. I sustained this by saying it didn’t commit the people, but provided a themselves means whereby they could express on this great question through their subordinate during county and state organizations the coming year. Whcu the great eonvetion meets, grid delegates and instructions will come from there their with peop'e. authority If their people decide in favor of indepund ent the party action, it will prevail. If not, cause will still be benefitted* by the conference, and there wi 1 be n better t&e un¬ derstanding labor organizations of the objects seeking which are to .achieve. This is the bus's of all I er commended, but it has taken a wonderful both hold upon them, and wilt satisfy sides.” “If the convention of 1892 should be called as it doubtless will be, the ques at work on the subject ot amalgamation thedi under the same rubs. Despite white verse and section of the force bill, the Colored Alliancemcn appear to be on the boated terms. — ym* At the *.* INVESTIGATION afternoon session REP the OUT. , appointed to investigate Livingston and the against Polk, Maeunc, made the billowing report: been 1. That we have nimble to ton, a single fact, implii thji irtiting, &h in characte otit'Voi?rf"'piT-sadeht, l! L. 2- A.' to llrnthet Llviogton, Jo pmotot f >p Alliauce, do.o. anything derogatary of his person h'g h stand.ng, prepared but «nd-rse your com- his W»ttc ta not quite to C0 " rse J n ~ nt “‘ 3. That T m the case of Dr. U. W. Ma cune, nothing has been found to lessen our » n lm l >mo “ al ,nte » r £ v and 1 T- y ''m, Tth' r c S rct hls m • t conncctio. with tho the „ Ge . scnato “* e3t ° r « la na co ' f , .. - *.” tl0 * ... U lre ’ not 1 beforo ‘ the •' m \",! Alliance, come with W an assured , majority agaiust independent made action, of but delegates before ? composite My up }***"'*TT \ r T Z *-«“«" Mutua f tlla ' “ c *- Knights Asso cl!l of : ! on8 > I**. Unions, the Grange and , a,I tbe body organizations of producers This wd[represent a total constituency colored Alliance should go in, as they are likely to do. Their 750,009 Unions votes, the 900,000 votes of the Trades and the Knights of Labor, and organiza¬ the 300, U00 votta of the other farmers’ tions, will make producers’ more organizations than a majority of the whole rep¬ and T. Y. Powderly, with A. W. Wright John W. Hayes, were present as a fraternal committee from the Knights of Labor, and addressed the Alliance. Their business at the convention is to confer with the Alliance on the formation of a third party composed of all the indus¬ trial organi nations of the country, and they will ask the farmers to While appoint fra¬ a committee of conference. ternal greetings are being exchanged the be tween the knights and the farmers, white and colored brethren of tho Alli¬ ance have a joint conference committee PROTEST AGAINST THE CONGER BILL. The Negro Alliance, on Friday, wired their protest against the Conger com¬ pound lard bill to Senator Paddock. At the forenoon meeting of the Na¬ tional Colored Alliance, Friday, . the following amended resolution was unsn imous “Resolved, I y adopto That 1 : delegates attend¬ wc, Farmers’ Alli¬ ing the National Colored ance, do hereby, in meeting assembled at Ocala, urge upon congress to pass the Lodge election bill, and let it apply to all sections of these United States.” The principal change from Thursday’s resolution is the elimination of the para¬ graph criticising nnd denouncing the white national Alliance for its action. Arguments were also made for the subtreasury plan by Messis. Livingston, of Waddell, Terrell, of Texas; Harvey, Georgia, Florida, and Harry Brown, and of Dowell, and against it by Wade Mi of Teunessee and McAllister, of Missis¬ sippi. When the question came to its passage, the result was a vote of 79 to 9 in favor of the bill. A reso’ution en¬ dorsing the Pickier subtreasury bill was subsequently adopted with only three dissenting votes. THE FORCE BILL. A vigorous attempt was made to re¬ verse the action ou the force bill. The votes by states, as far as recorded, were as follow*: Agaiust force Missouri bill. Arkausas *2, Louisiur a 4, 4, Georgia 7 North Carolina 4, South Carolina 4, Tennessee 4, Indiana2, Virginia 4, Wert Virginia 1, California 2, Florida 2, Kentucky 4, and Kansas 1. For the force bill: Alabama 4, Arkansas 2; Illinois “, Missouri 1, Texas 4. Indiana Wi A Virginia i, Flo'rida 1, M»( *liigi»':i r uakota 2, Kansas 8. The convention adopted ing tho Pad a memorial dock and food resolution bill favor¬ pure and con¬ demning the Conger compound lard bill. Indianapolis was chosen os the place of meeting next year, and with the usual votes of thanks the convention adjourned sine die. The tJaturday National was a day of developments, Citizens’ Alliar.oa was or¬ and ganised, the its constitution has been adopted officers elected; tha business agents have organized an association and appointed committees to otk look after cotton, gram, tobacto and ir crops. The colored alliance has finished its labors and adjourned sine die, and its delegates, signed Rice’s with third one exception, have jmity call. The membership of th.* Citizens’ Alli¬ ance is litailed to citizens of incorporated villages, cities and towns, who” are in sympathy with the Farmers’ Alli¬ ance, The purpose is to promote the Louis principles of the and platform affi adopted at this 8t. tu 1889, mod at Ocala year by tho National Farmers’ Alliance and Knights of Labor. The importance of the co-operativo phase brought of alliance out at the was meeting shown of in the the state fact business agents when they organized the co-operative association. It was shown that seventeen state exchanges do a bust, ness of about f 10,000,000, and since they have been at Ocala they closed contracts with the manufacturers’ agents attending the convention which will make a busi ness of $17,000,000 for the com ng year. The association was organized by the election of the following officers: J- B. Diaoa, president, Polk’ St. vice-president, Louis, Mo.; W. Oswald L. New Atlanta; Wilson, secretary, York; J. K. House, treas¬ urer, Kansas City, Kau.; and the follow¬ Jacksonville, ing State business Flu.; agents: O. Wynn,Atlanta, W.K. Cessna, J. Ga.; W. L. Donaldson, Grcflnvillc, 8. C.; W. H. Worth, Raleigh, N. C.; A. R. Venable, Jr., Richmond, G. Va F. Gaither, ; J Rogers, Nashville, Ala.; Tenn. T. A. ; Clayton, New Birmingham, Orleans, La.; T. D. A. Duncan, Dal'ns, Texas; J. S. Moore, San Francis¬ co, Cal.; S. Harvey, manager, Pensa¬ cola, Fla.; A. K. Frair, manager, Bt. Paul, Minn.; W. W. Ilol'and, Louisville, Ky.; R. M. Humphreys, Houston, T.-xns. The work of the association was divided into sections, each of which is fn charge of a committee. Of the cotton com mittee, T. A. Clayton, of New Orleans is chairman. Ho wtil go to Eu rope and visit the cotton exchange the of Liverpool, Iluvre, Bremen ar.d all cotton ports, where arrangements wi 1 be actiml'tlire committe e will alsaf A^Lcn sejlinjr hot from the gross with weigiits. D. There Cof is a bagging committee M. tin, of Homer, III., as chairman; and a tobacco committee, Louisville. presided over by W. W, Holland, of There was quite a breeze over the agri cultural statistics resolutions, which* in cluded sub-alliance a proposition secretaries to make in a connection roster of all with a committee of five alliance c ingress men to help collect and disseminate sta tistics. At the morning session of the negro Alliance Mr. Powderly aud A. W. Wright, of Toronto, a member of the general executive board, made a frntor nal visit and extended them an invito tion to send .raternai delegatus to the general assembly of Kuuhts of Labor. Powderly made a short speeOii, and followed by Wright, who made a shrewd argument on tho single tax idea. An important item in the business of the Presidcnt afternoon session suggestion was adoption the of Po'k’s that national legislative board be suuersceded by a national legislative council, compos cd of the national president and the pres idents of the State Alliance. This leaves the natioual executive board intact. The National Reform Press Association has been organized president; by the election 8tell, of of Dr. Macune as J. B. Mon tana, vice-president, and W. 8. Morgan, of Missouri, secretary and treasurer. Tho association numbers twenty-five papers, and will have forty. The last thing be fore adjournment was the adoption of the following resolution: Resolved, That we endorse the Na tional Economist, and the manly action of Brother Macune and his associates in said paper, and will do all we can to urge them onward in the good work of edu cation. restored The Alliance men in are the order, happy and over will tho harmony adjourn in high spirits. the flatform adopted. The great interest of Monday’s proceed ings was in the discussion oa the sub treasury bill. After a hot debate the fol lowing list of demands was adopted; “1. We-demand the abolition of na tionnl banks; we demand that the gov eminent shall establish sub-treasuries or depositories in tbe direct several the states, which shall loan money to people at a low rate of interest, not to cxco>d 2 per cent per annum on non-perishable farm products, and also upon real estate, with the proper limitation upon the quantity of land and the amouut of money; we demand that tho amount of circulating medium $80 be speedily increased to not less than per capita. shall “tt. Wc demand that congrefs pass such laws as shall effectually pre . vent dealing in futures on all agricultur¬ al and mechanical productions, preserv¬ ing a stringent system of procedure in trials, such as shall secure the prompt conviction and imposition the of perfect such penal¬ ties as shall cecure most com¬ pliance We with condemn law. the silver bill “3. recent¬ ly passed by congress, and demand in lieu thereof the free and unlimited coin¬ age of silver. “4. *We demand the passage of law* prohibiting the alien ownership of land, and that c mgress take prompt action to devise some plan to obtain all lands now owned by ulieus and foreign syndicates, and that all lands now held by railroads and other corporations, used and needed iu excess by of them, such as is reclaimed actually and held be by the government for actuul settlers ouly. “5. Believing in the doctrine of equal rights to demand all and special privileges leg¬ to none, we that our national islation shall be so framed iu the future as not to build up one industry at the cx i.i iciqther. We further demand NO. 27. the femoral of the eristnrg nervy tax from the necessaries of life that the poor of our land must hare. Wo further demand a just and equitable system of graduated tax on incomes. We believe should that the money of the country be kept as much as possible in the hands of the people, and hence we demand that all national and state revenues shall be limited to the necesssary expenses of tho government, economically and honestly administered. “fl. Wti demand the most rigid, honest and just state and national government control and supervision of the means of public communication and transporta¬ tion ; and if this control and supervision do not remove abuses now existing, wo demand the government ownership of of such means of communication and transportation." TELEGRAPH AMD CABLE. WHAT 18 GOING ON IN THE BUSY WORLD. A SUMMARY OF OUTSIDE AFFAIRS CON¬ DENSED FROM SEWSY DISPATCHES FROM UNCLE SAM’S DOMAIN AN O’ WHAT THE CABLE BRINGS. The liabilities of the Delamater Dank at Meadvilie, Pa., will reach $800,000. The failure of Colbrm, Chaunccy <fc Co., was announced on the No w York stock exchange Tuesday. Postal Card Contractor Daggett, of Birmingham, Conn., was on Monday de¬ clared a bankrupt. Boston, Whitten, Burdett & Young, Tuesday. clothing, made an assignment '] he firm is rated by Bradstrcet at $503, 000 . Washington McLean, formerly pyjori ty-four years. sab* The amount of silver offered for to the treasury department Monday, was 1,120,000 ounces, and the amount pur¬ chased was 085,000 ounces. Tito interstate commerce commission made its report Monday. The report re¬ views at length the work of the commis¬ sion for the year, aud recommends a nutn i, cr 0 f amendments to the law. The wiu of Daniel B . Fayerweatbcr, New ( ^ 0 m i\p; olla i r o feather dealer, of Y ork, was filed Monday. lie gives $2, loom ^ t0 different sol leges, and $95,000 to 09pitalg ' The testator died the 15th . o{ |ut wstK ________________ recent failure in the India trade have had tt subduing effect upon the market, The entire force of Clark’s thread mills in Newark' and Kearny, New Jersey, went on a strike Wednesday morning. Over 3,000 men and girls are out. r J'he strikers who decided to remain until d.s charged were reinstated, Mavor Creigier, of Chicago, on $5,000, Tues dny signed the ordinance giving - 00u to the World’s Columbian exposi tion, and it President will at once Harrison, be placed who in the hands of c an then issue his proclamation to the world. A dispatch of Sunday from Vera C ruz. Mexico, says: The hospital nu thorities will give out very few reports to the press about yellow fever in that However, popular rumor has it that the disease Is epidemic. The bishop nf Vc.u Cm*is dy-imr— The l amount of money pttt a t mtq^ * i„., t circulation . by Monday s treasury opera- 14 about $0,807,800, distributed as £lows: bou d , ’> $5,550,000 By the pur ; by chase the purchase of 4 per of cent 4i Pf r « 0Dt bol ‘ (is - ‘* ndthe P urchttM sl ^ ver bul.ton $i07,800. house The loan committee of Tuesday, the clearing at New York, on issued $187,000 additional, making the total to date $1,412,000. The Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company has circulars stating that on January 1st it will discontinue the practice of having its checks passed through the clearing house, A special of failure Tuesday from Delamater Erie, Pa., says; The of 1 , of Me idville, lias reached Erie through the business relations of the senior Delamater. State Treasurer Boyer h s entered judgment against Noble, and Rowles & Co , owners of extensive coal ore docks, valued at $75,000. The company of tho firm is George B. Delamater, who has other intere.-ts in Erie, Wednesday morning fire broke out in the linseed oil works of Kittie & Co , 8an Franci-co, caused by a vat of oil boiling over. and the The flames could not bo checked entire establishment, with all it# contents, was destroyed. Tho loss will probably reach $200,000. Insur- 11 rice about $100,000. The same cstab lishment was burned out several mouths ago and had recently been rebuilt, The t< tal population of the country, including Indians, etc., will reach 0;i, 000,000. Already the census office his actually returned, in round numbers, 815,000 Indians and whites in Indian ier ritory. which These Bpecial with the population Petrol! esti- of Alaska, Agent mates at 88,000, will bring up the total population numerical of guin the country of 18,000,000 to 63,000,000, for the a decade. Three persons were instantly kille 1 nt tho state university station, of the Great Northern roa 1 in Minneapolis, Wednes¬ day morning. They were in the act of boarding a Great down Northern train when they were run by Todd an Omaha train. The victims were Ed. and wife of Hioux City. Ia., and their daughter, Mrs. Slayton. Mrs. Slayton Whs the wife of the master mectmnic of the Kansas t ity road, and lived in Minneapolis. N L. Avery and under Raphael the Simms, con¬ ducting a business firm name of N, L. A v ery <& Co., at O^ecoD, Ark ; Avery A Simms, at Freui Blytheviile, Ark.; and N. L- Avery, at hmtn’s Bayou, Ark.; made an assignment Wednesday a - ternoon at Osceola, Ark. They were the principal merchants of that tow -. Liabilities $60,000, due principally to Memphis and St. Louis creditors. As¬ sets nominally $00,000. Tho failure is attributed to poor crops aud inability to make collect ions. _ What isVa’Joii nutUrrfUa dejVtfVrttJ .coal MWdeu, in fajiaj q,UWlLVirth-8 Ueu ia