Bulloch times. (Statesboro, Ga.) 1893-1917, February 09, 1893, Image 4

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Tfye Bullsob ’Piiaes. Prn imied Thlrsays. „0BSCRIPTION RATES; One Year $ 1.00 Six Months .pO Three Months 2o Advertising Rates on Applica lion. J R. MILLER, Editor and Pith. StatksaoUo, Ga., Feb. 9, 1893. Two Horrible Crime*. n Dispatches from Paris, Texas, givesan account of burly the lynching of Henry Smith horrible a negro in the most manner ever leeorded ized In the The history of a civil¬ country. The particulars which !!mith are as follows; Myrtle negro Vance brutal 4 V ontragpd old girl. And a jittle year after committing tho fiendish legs in act, taken one of her little each hand hnd literally day tore her In twain. That a mass meeting boose was and palled at the court search pat^ Her 08 mangled ou ^ body t-hn child. was found iu'fnirBuit and the whole fiend town Joined had of the %ho murdered be He A wa*i naught veaterday at low, on the Arkan¬ sas and ftoHV X/onsUn^i of railroad, Ha tWCbtv denied miles here. the criine, put blood stains were on his clothing and later he confessed. This morning he was brought to Texarkana^ wliete 3,000 people had gathpred gager to get at nith. The be Paris searching tnbleSled. party i$ews begged that be not travel »d fast. Everywhere bore along the line, as the train the wretch to Paris, morbid CftJwds gathered gaSte Upon him. At people-. the depot Deputy at Paris sheriffs were 10, 000 put bp a. show bf pistols, bttt wdre brushed aside And a tush made for the tar. IStpith'i A rope heck liras thrown tiroilnd at d he Was dragged fi'bm the tftf: He tVas takau tbp$!$h tty ft rode hoitt, and borhe 1 ijitt City Streets that ped ble id,ah toight ria»e on the monsteh Open prarie, doO yards from the Tetas ahd Pacifid d^pbt, 4A4C»ffdid TTTTTi aWalthd him; It Wail six 40 and ten high, well for tbih^’tes; Thetb) teUv tbhy tort b fed hi in adiabdliCril ekpeUthd ounhing that 8av hae^°bly hot are irbnS Wbtb thrhst to shbw. from Tied evei-y t-hriekfi fildb added fold his td body. His Vigor bid pbrse CiitofSi First; bdi ifdbS bhlbded his feet; ami, tiiS intih by inhu, l’hd they fcrept Up in fahh: than Was UBConsciotiS; wbehj at last ker bsihe oil was bulla pdtlthd piaKbd t ^er bitil ribd cottdn seed beneath bith; A torch set the p^th oh nre and all was consumed; tiarldslty Seekers hake carried hwiy ftll Ihst wris left, eVbh to the iishes. tBd Smith, Sbtdb say, commit. Vanort, the tlrime td Lefrhfagb arrested biuieelf bn who hid him ¥ uce when driink and bluhbbd him. bis Vanbe is prostrated with, grief and wife is dangerdhsly ill from the fehook haiiBed By the SrorHble fate bf her little ubdt'e daughter;—Telegraph. story is hor Th*> the most ? - ilile file fidhgra wires have ever told Id it. start country. No hrinie iii the committed, long list of brutal outrages rifdtrleu by negroes and children iu the 'Touth lias been more terrible in 'ts details than that for whi^h lit Ii#ry the titdbi Pfiiith IM suffetsd the ituHrtls At tho hands crime of brittkl lio ttiore depraved; ferocious dr cr’lnlinai lias a^ijldared; , Nevertheless, the civilized wdfld will hajdlT set 1 Smith Hr lii-i yfliiie -»nHie kIihiIow of the e Sniith ent which followed close affi^r; If wa 8 the most, fiendish of ruVishers; the inoH which buhied hint was the most, ferdfciods Bf liMiJs; Tlici . wofitt will se»> in tlie victini #rith j}ig dangdf'ous, ipthe less flanies hoi;t edniething bid than less the im'U.wl.iq.'thrilst red-hot irons into his It is flfjsh iutnpst kiid lieyotid ft'jp’lded id his agony. belief that in a ilii^fttiou countr ind which bdasts of its cly oi progress,sucll aspires to lead /he van a savage mob is pos 8 ible : 4 .We Hdpo that P’Ver liispatches Will show that the first tin* reports facts. grossly exaggerated It ifi ho answcy.to sav that no nuuisutiiellt crime, bouiu be too severe for the of whicli Sidith was guilty. That ill triif <jf tlirl pun ishm qt should lie as cruel as the crime is great: if hb - Nor is the aiiswer complete if said that ftdy Means are justifiable which will protect women and cliilHfen p gainst sucli briite§ as Bnitth for it,^nay well be .jH doubted punjlhinebf whether , savage the ferocity remedy hrutalifF is liest for in criaie * .r i ut it is perfeC lv ceftuin that such an event as that at Paris de¬ and coargeiii to some tho peoplo among whom it occurs. No matter hovr great the provoca¬ tion, men cannot bind a criminal to tho stake and subject him to all the tortures which down they can invent the ’ without civilization stepping which from Christian plan of nations have to been raised. most A Thamt’s Thinks’. A tramp had been doing don’t some thinking. “Thinking seem to agree with yer,” said one who saw him. “Naw lit don’t—vit's like this, d’ye see. I’m a Bill, tramp. Now, what my I old schoolmate, is jn»t am not!” “How’s that?” “Well, Bill is the president and of a bank | he’s got as pretty hand a home In as that yer’d like to there’s see; there’s flow¬ music home} there’s er's there, and a pretty wife and some children bloomin’, tlmfo's happy- carriage curly headed \ a him and servants, He's and people call elected 'Mister.’ twice been mayor, and everything is coming his me—ditl'nrcnt Way all tile time, and ?” then look at ain’t it 1 “How'd lid strike it rich like tllst?" “I can’t think of gdfltf any other name fpt it. How bltt sense. We Were bo^s together and while I was fddltn, Hill, aroutto, Havin, a good time. lib sOtte sCemed to look ahertdt .He cti Ou. n’t drink; I did. He didn't Citbi for style, and it Coat tne to pdt it On that same money that hd atlVedi He was fond of reading and I’d rather pliiy cards and haVu fUn with tho Vest of the boy's. WhArt I w r as loafin’ on tho street cofiidfs tmd in bear saloons, Bill was putting in his time at school, t blow in my mon ey on curdf*. Bill saVdd his, an’ II remember now how I Used ter guy Bill an’ call him good,y=goody, and tell him How he was loosin' of His life away witlidhf having any fun—nut say i I Was a color in my nose; I was getting t to culti¬ play a good game of cards ; was vating a tine stock of bad habits— among ’em wad love fdr budgbf tef ntake it short, pard, l was giv¬ ing iilysclf a Hue education sUcCChdtHl for thik here ‘"Mf-vo hllfdnes, aint I at it • “Wnii look Ht mil) ... tidw , wlio’S having tho. good dogd time no0 jl He ndOsH t AtvV’H Set oil 1 HI j he ain’t pulled hi tiVcfyoiicO iii ft while fdl* being a trailip j his HdnH.OSti’t tout’s have tolildVO doii’t oii wllOn add Rore; and HO jfej lUtllgry have ideal, ter sniV ail.d it big jtiie of wood to get a and mur’ti sleOp all under hasn’t haystacks; the ho got ivWfttl id thirst I’ve got, and doesn’t liVti liiUI, as I do, because n? can’t get liquor. He’s Sot got man hood; wot haw I He's got character; siitOu wot mine? mother’s Not one I broke my dear old liljitR, which laid her in her tfrave, Ain’t, that a record?” !i YV!iy shouldn’t I do some think . OBb WHAT HE WAS WAITING FOR. “Young man,” said the the stern pa¬ rent, with the accent on young, “db yott intend to stay here all night iooking holding my daughter’ll hand and her in the face like a sick calf?” “No, sir.” “Well, I had thought when you did us the kindness to retire I wopld put mt arm round her $ ftist, and if she did ris^ not object too forci¬ bly I might a kiss.” IMrectary ^ Statesboro circuit M. E. church Soutli. Sf .HkhroHo.—P i.lfll reaching 2nd am Sabbath’s at 11a. m. and 7 :ld p: m. Sabbath school ever-E Sabbath, 3 :tk) p. m. CommliuibH 2nd SiibbiH’-ll Ocl. in Feint April, June, Aug., diid PreilBii^ng HeC. , 1st Sab¬ mdtitli, bath ana Sat $. usdny ni. Sabbath before in school each 11 every Sabbatli iii Feb., May, Aug., NUV. , Nkw Hope'^P reaching 3rd Sab¬ bath and Sutiirday l>efore in school oacli nioiith.il a, m. 3 Sabbath every 3frt Sabbath fedbbath p. n, Fob., Conuilu- May, uion in Aug. and Nov. McGreoob, W. L>. Pastor. —.—^--- , Notice. Tlfe firm of T. S. Mercer i Rro., has been dissolvinl, T. S. Mercer withdrawing.. The business will continue under the firm name o" B. B. Mercer *v Co., to whom all .accounts due T. S. Mercer & Bro, Statesboro, are payable. Ga. Feb. i893. It .floiie. The Dyeisburg, (Tenn.) Times has the following to say on the death of Gen , liutlcr: ’ ,, A n act of cpi^Jblood ul dsprav. jty, which stands alone jin the an¬ nals of civilizhtioo, is .brou'.'h? to iuind Hy the death of B^n Fotler. the foh! boast from wi. .sc remora even the vultures that reek amid a putrid feast of shame and scaodal would turn witb|toathing and dis¬ gust. It ia a orime that stand out on a back-ground of Satanic black ness in nil of its bideoqs deformi¬ ties—an act of soulless would vidi^ny that in comparison make the (bloodstained bauds |of Nero white and the treasonable names of Jndas Iscariot, <Benedict Ar nold and Andrew Johnson less odious. It wag bis infamous Or¬ der while in command of the Fed¬ eral forces at New Orleans, giving his brutal underlings a license to ravish and treat as a common pros¬ titute any }ady of that city who might by word for or Yankee gesture officers express contempt In lavgunge of or soldiers the ab esteemed contemporary “this or¬ der stands alone in the history of civilised warfare with nothing to approach it in blackness.” Its soulless atrocity filled the nations with horror. It brought the flag under which the perpetrator of t-Uch a crime, was not, under sen¬ tence of court martial, shot like a dog, the loathing and contempS^of the civilized world. Yet this aci of foul depravity was bailed with applause by the Federal authori¬ ties and a Northern press and Nor¬ thern public gloated in over keeping it in fiendish glee. It was with and their the disgraceful Natural outgrowth mode of war¬ oi fare the wild phrenzy of a fanatical and ruffinnly horde that would applaud any orime that would humiliate a Southern man or woman. It if* not strange that the fiends in hu¬ man form who disgraced the sol¬ diers name by makiDg war marked on women and children and our beautiful Southland with de¬ vastation and the most cold blood¬ ed atrocities could gloat iu savage glee over an order to deliver a pure and noble womanhood as a prey to the lawless lusts of ruffian brutes It is not strange that they should worship the hideous deformities and glory iu the shame of the foul beast whose sonl is branded by one of the moat atrocious ’briqitfs at which devils langh and acgele weepi The fact that be died, forgotten by the accessaries of his crimes n an eitiunation fbr Ih&m and a jufH 1 retribution for him, thE Best Blood Balm, August A. Kludges, .Baitfmore, 810 Md„ St, Charles street, writes : “From , my youth I suf¬ fered frem a poisonous taint in my blood. My. face au:. bolf was continually affected with eruptions and sores, 1 am now 43 years of age, and had been treated both in Germany and Amerioa, but no remedy over¬ came the trouble until 1 used Botanic smotii Blood Balm. Myjekiti I clear, and healthy, and is consider the poisen blood. permanent!} endorse driven from my I it as the best blood remedy. O ill, AN do, Fla., June 2, l8$2. Messrs. Lippman Bros.., Propr’s P. P. P., Saviunah, Ua. Gentleman:- I feel it my du¬ ty to inform you of the cure your wonderfui medicine, P. P. P., wrought in my base. I have suf¬ fered for malatia two years with dyspep¬ sia and in the worst form, and was a daily sufferer from sick heada'che. My bowels did not act But twice a week; and sometiihes only once a week. 1 could not retain half Idle and my 8toffitich was alwaH uhcom Idrtably hedvy: iilelicines, I tried pills, ail kinds of biit only found temporary relief in them. 1 felt despondent and was hoping to soon find relief in death. Seeing your P. P. P. advertise¬ ment I decided to try it and re¬ quested Dr. Peak to get me a bot tle, ahd after taking that bottle I felt one hundred per cent bettor; I have taken twB bottles and i wil Soon get another, and I peverythiHs can now hat Und in canlf pqaoe sleep p.ndjenjoy like to^>. My an headaches hare ceased and |tfiy bowels are regular. I would .ad vise P. all sufferers like myself to £ive P. P., a trial, and they will write yon as I have that|P. P. P. beats any medicine on the mfirliet. I URTIsi. Yours truly, Artist Paihfer, CoLLVEK, Orlando, Fla. Washington Letter. Erotn our r'-^ul-r eorrospond'int. Washington, fi, C.. February 3. —Hon. Don M. Dickinson* pile is regarded as President-elect Ul.ive land’s personal representative, is in Washington in the interest of the Andrew# hi* 1 for the rejs'al which of is the Hhetnian silver law, tei bt? riiiay Li if eh iip ill the lioUsh Oil Tin tind Friday next. Mr. DicKinson is outspoken in favor of rthiiexstion of Hawaii, alid iii this he Iii is in Hue with seven tenths congress, without regard to politics. The Hawaiian com¬ missioiiers arrived to<lnr and to¬ morrow they will present their pe¬ tition for annexation. that There would are have so mauy to complications if he met an act of congress annexing Hawaii iB to be passed, and in the course of the delay, which would necessa¬ rily ensue, might, some foreign govern¬ other ment by revolution or means, secure control of the coun¬ try, that it is probnblp that the outcome will be the adoption of some quicker method of asserting American control and warning for¬ eign governments to keep their hands off. There is no politics in this it said , simply to his Americanism, credit, Mr. Harrison and, be has consulted as freely with the prominent democrats in congress as with members of his owrf par ty twithstanding No . the threats ca bled from Loudon as to what Eng land intended to do, it can be sta ted without exaggeration that the intentions of England or any othe- nation is catting no figure whatever in this matter. Hawaii ia going to pass under the control of the United States. That much in certain, butYt is not yet decided just how it is to be done. Another certainty in the situation is that Hawaiian sugar producers will not be paid the bounty of 2 cents it pound McKinley now paid iaw, Americans under the which some al¬ lege to ha vs been the cause of tniJ revolution and application for an nexatlon. U'hstever lhe cause, there many good reasons for our not neglecting the the_ oppyrtunity to get control of Islands. Judiciary The majority Committee, report of the House which in¬ vestigated the Homestead labor troubled, has attfacted written wide atten¬ tion. It was by RepreSe.n tive Boatner, of Louisiana, who therein says that he the finds that.lie finds nothing in constitution which authorizes congress to regu¬ late to interfere with, or prohibit .the employnreht, of Finkerton or ‘other detectitfi's iiy persons or cor¬ porations, iii exopt engaged so iti far as they jan\}’ be inter-state comhie-Ffie, “The tFohle at H c lilo sti'ad beyond c.oiitinued federal the report, - ,Was jufisdictioii , coptfol or or con gressioiial interference , To |x*r mit cy tne federal au¬ thorities, witnout male** deniilnfi of. the States.or.to the laws which would control in ..relations States of employer or employe undePtake fnejust the. authority you Id be to of authority the Stale* and to in,terpose federal ijpon a subject of which the States iiav^. and ought to havo, supreme control.. tile ’ The investigation of whiskeV trust authorized fiv congress will be conducted ,fiy a sub-committci compose#! Ipdyvna; <)t Representatives Mis- By¬ num, of Bucii&fjito, Stockdale of sisippi; Powers; of Voriiiont. of New Jersey, and There \pU a general sUrprise when the Senate voted down a mo¬ tion made by Senator Sherman to make the I Nicaragua Canal hill the “unfinis bed husinesa”[of the Sen ate, whic ill would have given it the right of,.way every day after 2 o’¬ clock. There is hardly ona chance in ten that.this bill can get through the preseiil tiuil Hofioe, but it has eeen supposed the Senate intended to pass it anyway, perhaps after all it will go tO join tire numerous other matters that.are stated to be left over for the Fifty-third Con grd^s'td Representative wrestle with New Y’dfk, ift ‘chairman Fellows, of of tho comhiit tee that Panama will investigate tho spend¬ the ing United Canal money in States. Col. Fellows is a shrewd lawyer, and as skillful cross-examiner has few equals. Furthermore, he is deeply inter tjated in tho subject, ho is uivest A11 of which increases the chances for the exposure of somebody, if there ia any truth in the charges that have been from time to time made, both in this country and in France, of the bribery of Amer¬ icans of prominence. Ex-Secret sry Thompson Vv ill be one or the wit¬ nesses here lieaLl. He was pres¬ ident of the AHterican end of the ooinpanF. which haR only . , The Senate, pessed two of lfikfc .the appropriation that bills, seems at to realize it isin a hole., ,B<5gliining today; it will meet at 11 o’clock. If tire gold in, the Treasury is reduced-as.^efi. Se'crqtarv,.Carlisle this month wil! find last, than lhe $100,000,000, known less as the gold reserve fund, when he takes charge. , .There, than is now lefts gold in the Treasury at any time for many. Years, and of course what is there Will have to ire paid out whenever Treasury notes ar** presented for redemption. EDUCATE --»t HTBitm PROFIT :*• 1 . ■ cou.EG£-.inu«*i6* ttoms y&ak-Grtxl* wsmiss OntoM ThMUfSHmt ■£££g£3Sges (b om.dvcwi »o W» Actual Bvm* Pi Ste4»»U enter nor time. Mend !*r . cirrelere. Largs! in ui i Dealers South. the mamotii and reliable S US Gqfii'iqgo A\'qgor\ Goiqpqqyi Handle Handle Eveyrtlung r.ujr g on WHEELS and Harness ton. One style of FA AM DESIGNS, ERB Carnage. * Forty other ■ "wTkeep everything the latest and largegt Ya* riety of new. R.4RAXTEF, On our “Auburn Steel Axle Wag-i / . \ ovis” we will replaco every broken Jsterl Axle no matter what the load V ‘might weigh which or what it broke the ciretihitetaiH ' ces under CHARGE. FREE OF _____ ineftuiog _ lUagott Compflim. miSvmol) nub 'orter’s Bisiness AlTD ^ ' of Shorthand Si. Tlie Most thorough Ktiil practical School in the doiiiitly. FiidOfsoJ ^ r mote prdniinont hltSinesa utbil, arid its graduates afd fiiioti: to bri fottno jj ilding lucri tive positidiift id-sDnioniais, in ne’;tf!y every wtite i^tatG 111 t-He? For full particulars dtc,, Porter & Anderson MnWAls A5it) Fiibi^MiSfdRs. KIlfBS QP J©B ditS .■ * j IDOlTlS AS i Office. 189,3 jhtni (ift la. --OF- 1«SSJ . p\e\v YcuFj, chard A. -McljlrtlT TI^ep. Cash Assetts 5 w gid ledsinger Special A gad. (j ’■mm. l e s e • & I E s . $pf 5 $£| 3 s? r *‘*rys *>-*■ 1 im -*" —»r***rs. A sr t*^)ufipes> iwssts.tt)'* Tra* con.dtB as&rkxa&SGSu i; <jH* 6tries IS Opp Jj^rcplTOodkl, 4r»». ioto,„vut^ ble not, descrip- free on. We advise, H nr of' tft£Z8& of the in foreign lenti cured. 3st same in co , 1 ■j>t free. AddresA VI ■ C-r^ PATrwr ornce, Washing o. C. * V. %-V^'* *■ ■» *' *r*& OUCM r » *-igf l « ■ - ■■4a» M fcte.» • . • ;»? jaam Spring ftit^es mntrt liiSt!£ Waifeifig itmi ?hick Cultiva¬ tor .hi double! the cost iii btie tWop. Spill's SI.W8I buckeye PBRS ftidjiUj liHd CUiiiViittjr—4 Wbihterful ; 6feas SUC wplwHBHt: ,bU>or saving gjtfiilg ISiWfSi‘CiiHiVatdr BUOKeYE lUifi . with HarrrSW: the besjfc implement tne"i tyf fitfrfl market;, film fitjfctbrt \Vrite fdr e*er .pufc^oii 'Hr'dhlarH altd learn it H fit prices ewit a ltd our jilfiiltor* fiiff ogrictimiral say ftbdiit elttb it. iii . Thv old little, bohglit , South TiioUsaHHfi iijlFdiltill, uS Hi list’ them AtKililkaa in Texas; Hft¥cl add IBfttt Mississippi. Rmd.v Wd bile car for ileliv •V: ' ■x ft CAVANAUGH, Arhisti, Ga ESS1 CURES ALL SKIN AND BLDDD DI 5 EA 5 E 5 . and rbfaicUaf pr«erib* eerier* Ifcwito F. r. P. ft* & apieiKild oami vn anon. edi graa % satltfartio* Ur tbs earn «/ f»rra* and ittm tt Pri marr, ftaaandary ax* Tertiary 13$ .1 a !: IS Sy 8or««, f hll!^Sri*m5B-hr. SlcdulM Ba »ta«, Rf»um»llun. acrofifou, Cfcr.ato Olan thM 5»«IUofi, km rwtiUd »ll *M OjtarA, RPilSKSi 8iioIJttMM^SS7cSrt«!rT5r!51J"5«SaS!6ir*S^» w.aiPr^o*, Trito^iifcad, "* ^ —?» P. it m.f>onfii&: Mmia, andac »u., •*. taccLmi, ». spW^ I » AUillokJ ill builflu* Uu ____ A-dl«*r')K,Vy* -ap npieiy. , , *e« uf ixiwuA »»d whoa* bl»->4 to ta P.RRB ■ttsjsr* p«cul*rly sssun^xsTTSsssCTBainmiioSS ft V. P. PrkU/ Alt, Boat P., Pcka /ERR. Cures dyspepsia — » LIPPXAN BP.Q9, Piipristara, ****** UlTni^rnovic. fAVAliflAH, Gi.