The Rockdale banner. (Conyers, Ga.) 1888-1900, April 09, 1896, Image 3
]£ resumed. a>' d SMITH hold . crisp >E\VNAN. obth aT Crowd Welcomed psias tic lauded Them. jjd APP coflMy con tributed a large « w-rtSSSiSSSt: the third 4.W ZlLn ** m x-Speaker ct> A.S«i niB ^lntT which was engen Kanv r S i to be believe large that as was the Lated as ^ i ® ut such was not ; B S a diking evidence r this nterest the people feel in t gnomic question P ° s f was bly fur. * b ® this occasion. debate had Liao . 0 f the Atlanta the to do with drawing bf farmers who gathered around blic square and all sought m Lto Iking the two place speakers. in Bussell took s .. a large and commodious ^ith long rows of benches and cane bottomed chairs en warehouse com J The i fill up at 10:30 and by 11 0 filled. At few afortably a mm pfore 11, Governor Atkinson „„ w ith Mr. Crisp and Air. following, entered the cheered, ware Xhe vast audience an their popular fellow towns ; y, Atkinson, got up to act as if ceremonies, homelike he was given a md hearty and recep na few pleasant words he in i the first speaker, Air. Crisp, given rousing round of li-speaker Inal commenced in his usual, talking con tone, II, Mr. Crisp spoke of the Lit [of ga7e him to meet his fellow Coweta county. [Smith and myself,” he said, Bemocrats, believing in the [principles [t differ and anxious question— for sue we on one money. It is sometimes called [er lossibly question. with We present our but earnestness, is no reason why we should . The first essential of a joint is that both speakers should eir tempers. ‘Whom the gods they first make mad.’ I pm t to lose mine. I appear before L candidate for the high office led States senator. This, prob pll be my last opportunity of you. inderstand that this county is P Q June 6th. I have been urg ft the selection take place then ^ the people should have an Pity of expressing their choice, id of mine tells me that there >t about my having been for dl the time.” [e Crisp then told of how he jeted iterly speaker. opposed He by said the that he east on t of his financial views. He w two Alassachusetts Demo ad voted against his election. te prevented, he said, the tab a free coinage bill. In the igress he said he appointed a committee and one member “ Ms views. He was not re- 3le for that. Alen changed IC 'Ws, but they didn’t inform i I trisp l;^ s little personal explanation then launched into the pestion, asking that he be par >'he attempted no oratory on | rl. ; hi 8 8 throat. now famous The ex-speaker definition h f suver ism, told and of the demoneti the surreptitious which it had been aecom f 1 g ® the * as deliverance frequently of Air. Crisp’s | * 1 «• conclusion applauded of his address he L a long round of cheers, f Hoke Atkinson Smith Speaks. r°he Smith then presented f who was applauded. gives “ e pleasure,” he said, tr . oc i enteti by t an your own honor DVorrUw 8° Vernor - I trust W- at fabs from m y lips bZ, §aiQst tbe P art y to which ?; anb to wbic h you,” ■ovf-V w- lnso2 “led in ffccSX » us vic Jut1 " e Crisp bas 1 *! he lmpressiou - tbat 1 * e use o{ b «>th gold -r. j m . n favor of kA j^ 11 that sys ti. give us the largest use 'hat unlimited silver 3; topfoveit ' 8 bi f * am etailism not willing a * d I *at by awa y fro “ my Ldey, I want you i* aVL Prec ? nceived have notions. ^ DO inter ' “id Jw y t D ers of Massachu tea "'iVta meTe W JQld fact not ofaeta Rive bi- t '> that ! tv, hep position was to (1 ‘kistorv Elver' tv? * r * tD0 ln of °nntry 8° ld and 50 v c in the * i cL be *n able to "“^the h0 tbat dld not commercial ratio. “I defy the gentleman here as I have before to point to the instance of any one country.” He then took up the question of the fall of prices and said that the fall be¬ gan before ’73, in 1864, and that cot¬ ton fell in larger figures before that time. There was a marked rise in prices from 1809 to 1824. In 1845 prices were as low as they are today, and silver was then selling at 1.31. “The gentleman told you that it was a worldwide question. If this is so, how can we raise the price of silver by coining it in this country alone?” He explained how a cotton raiser under a silver standard would have his cotton valued in gold, but he would most likely be paid in silver. He said that there was more silver in the limits of the United States than ever before. Eight times as much as in 1873. He then sought to show from figures how both gold and silver had increased, as also the per capita circulation. “I told him in Atlanta, in Augusta, and I’ll tell him here that I favor the plan proposed by Secretary Carlisle in 1894, for which every member of the present Georgia deligation- voted.” (Applause). Closing his speech, Secretory Smith said: “Judge Crisp is a very funny man, as you will soon discover. He has 20 minutes to answer my arguments, but he will exercise his undoubted talent by amusing at my expense. Now he must not think I am going to get mad. I promise him that I shall laugh as much as you will, I shall enjoy it as much as he will. My shoulders are broad and I can stand it, and I cry with all my heart, ‘Lay on AIcDuff. 5 n Secretary Smith received much ap¬ plause when he concluded. In answering him, Speaker Crisp said: “Brother Smith says I am a humor¬ ist. I’ve been in congress 14 years, and no man will be able to show you that I have been humorous there. I have a keen sense of the ridiculous, however, and I think it does.no harm to make a little fun of my brother, his argument and his position.” Air. Crisp continued along this line and closed amidst much applause. BRUNSWICK’S BIG LOSS. Half a Million Dollars Gone Up In Smolce. Brunswick, Ga., suffered a disas¬ trous conflagration Thursday. The fire started at half past 11 o’clock a. m., and besides the $500,000 and more of property destroyed one human life was sacrificed, one man was mashed and badly crippled, while four men were prostrated and are suffering in¬ tensely from injuries, some most likely fatal, others not so severe. The property destroyed includes the wharf property, cotton sheds, freight warehouses, tracks, lighters, tools aud part of the freight in the warehouses, all belonging to the Plant system and comprising their local terminal freight. Tbe company lost, too, from three to six freight cars and between 10,000 and 2U,uOO crossties. The property of N. O. Emanuel and James E. Broadhead, on the Plant system dock, went too; twenty-five thousand barrels of rosin, one thou¬ sand barrels spirits of turpentine; all the wharves, engines, wholesale gro¬ cery building, grocery stock aud ware¬ house buildings of the Downing com¬ pany : Segue’s fish house and various smali fish and oyster houses on the water edge of Bay street. fire On the far side of Bay street the swept Briesenick’s three-story brick building, including the machinery and supply stock of Breisenick ; office fur¬ niture of Broker Alaxey and Lumber Dealer Padrosa; retail dry goods store of Cohen’swholesale grocery and liq¬ uor stock of J. J. Lott; wholesale and retail liquor stock ot' R. Y. Douglas. The wholesale warehouses of the Hoyt Hardware Company; three-story Ocean Hotel, extending up Alonk street; the retail store of the Hoyt Hardware Company; two beer depots full of goods across Monk street; tbe Haas Liquor Company, wholesale and retail, and the ice depot. On Bay, from Monk up, the fire swept Herzog’s brick building, retail dry goods store, Hirseh’s wholesale and retail liquor store, several smaller stocks and two empty storerooms, all in a block of brick buildings from one to three stories high. It is impossible, so far to gain any¬ thing like an accurate estimate of the losses, but estimates are given, and it is generally conceded that they are placed low. Broad The Plant system, $75,000 ; head, $5,000; Emanuel, $6,000 ; Down¬ ing, $225,000; Briesenick and occu¬ pants, $60,000; Lott, $15,000; Douglass, $10,000; Newnan, $20,000; Hoyt, $15,000; Ocean hotel, $10,000; Haas, $4,000; Herzog and buildings and stocks and blocks, $15,000. These losses are merely calculated . and . from hurried interviews may prove greater. Increase in Miners’ Wages. Representatives of the coal opera tors of Alassilon, O., district met at Canton, Ohio, Friday and decided to advance the price of mining from 55 cents to 61 cents per ton. The rate will be paid miners for the output o* March. The final rate will not be agreed upon until the scale of the Pittsburg district is settled. # NATIONAL CAPITAL GOSSIP OP WASHINGTON IN BRIEF PARAGRAPHS. Doings of the Chiefs and Heads of the Various Departments. The senate Monday confirmed the nomination of William A. Little, of Georgia, to be assistant attorney gen¬ eral. The president has signed tbe act re¬ pealing the statute prohibititing the appointment to the army and navy of persous who held Confederate com¬ missions. The election contest from tbe First congressional district of Alabama, made by W. C. Robinson, tbe inde¬ pendent populist candidate against George P. Harrison (dem.), was de¬ cided by the election committee No. 1 in favor of Harrison. The senate committee on territories authorized a favorable report on the nomination of Hon. B. F. Franklin to succeed Governor Hughes, expectations as governor of Arizona. Contrary to no opposition to confirmation mani¬ fested itself in committee. The conferees on the agricultural appropriation bill for the coming fiscal year reached an agreement Tuesday. As passed by the house the bill carried $3,215,392. The senate increased this by $118,260. The senate conferees agreed to recede from amendments carrying $78,120, leaving the bill as agreed to, appropriating $3,302,792, or about $1,000 less than the amount for the current fiscal year. The items of $13,720 for the division of seed, and $65,000 for the publication of the report on dairy farming are the most important of those stricken from the bill in conference. Sent to the President. The senate concurrent resolutions on the Cuban question were delivered to the president’s private secretary, Air. Thurber, Tuesday morning by Air. Platt, one of the executive clerks of the senate. Later in the day they were sent to the state department as the law requires that such resolutions shall be printed in the book of laws annually published by the department. Secretary Olney called early at the white house and remained in close consultation with the president unde¬ terred by the notice that had been sent to the other members to the effect that there would be no cabinet meeting. There is reason to believe that the meeting would have been postponed regardless of tbe appearance of the measles among the children at the white house to afford the president an opportunity for private deliberation with the chief member of his cabinet, for there was a story current, and it is believed well founded, to the effect that the two were engaged in the preparation of a special message to congress. Measles at the White House. The meeting of the cabinet Tuesday was postponed without date owing to the sudden appearance of the measles in the presidential household, little Es¬ ther Cleveland being stricken with it. Private Secretary Thurber’s chil¬ dren have all had the disease in regu¬ lar course, and to prevent the possi¬ bility of its transmission to tbe white house, Air. Thurber has absented himself from his own domicile for the past week, and has made hia residence at the white house. However, this sacrifice was of no avail, for Tuesday morning the eruption suddenly ap¬ peared on little Esther Cleveland, marking her as the latest victim. To prevent the spread of the disease among the families of the cabinet offi¬ cers word was sent by telegraph to tbe various departments that there would be no meeting of tbe cabinet, and steps were taken that the disease might not spread. Orders were sent to Woodley, the president’s suburban residence, to put the place in shape for the immediate reception of the Cleveland family, and Airs. Cleveland, accompanied by all the children, left the whitehouse to make their home at Woodley until the disease has run its course. What Will the President Do? The same resolutions calling for the recognition of the belligerency of the Cubans have now passed both houses of congress. The senate and house have, therefore, done all they can to bring about this long-deferred recog¬ nition. The resolutions finally adopted are those framed by the senate com¬ mittee on foreign relations, and which passed tbe senate by a vote of 64 to 6. They passed the house by 245 to 27. These overwhelming majorities indi¬ cate the state of feeling throughout the country. The question now arises as to what will President Cleveland do? Opinions' £ differ, but the prevailing beU { ig that he will take action as suggested in the resolutions. The first of Ihe resolutions recognizes the exis tence of a state otjoubiic war in Cuba and declares the United States should maintain neutrality between the war ring parties. The second calls on the president to offer the friendly offices of the government to Spain for the recognition of the independence of Cuba. No one acquainted with Spain supposes for a moment that that country would tolerate such interfer ence in her affairs. Yet it is thought the president will make the proffer. Pensiou Rulings. The policy of the interier depart¬ ment, in cases involving reinbursement to the government for fraud or mistake of pension claimants is laid down in several ruliugs of Assistant Secretary of the Interior Reynolds just promul¬ gated. the In these it is held that govern¬ ment cannot withhold the pension granted under the act of June 27th, 1890, to reimburse itself for money er¬ roneously paid as pension money un¬ der the general law when such pension was not procured through fraud or mistake but was allowed as the result of au erroneous judgment on the evi¬ dence. This decision reverses the recent ac¬ tion of the commissioner of pensions in the case of Christian Alay, an Ohio volunteer. In the case of James A. Trosper, who served in the Twenty fourth Kentucky infantry, the follow¬ ing ruling is made: “In a pension claim under the gen¬ eral law lor disease of the left lung, concealment by the claimant of the fact that he had been shot through that lung prior to his enlistment, which wound caused the lung disease, amounts to actual fraud on his part. It therefore warrants the withholding of the pension granted him under the famous ‘Jane 27’ act in order to reim¬ burse the government for moneys paid him ns pension under the general law on account of the lung disease.” RYDER IN JAIL. Feeling Against Him Intense — Miss Owens’ Body Buried. A special from Talbotton, Ga., says: Dr. W. L. Ryder, the slayer of Aliss SallieEmma Owens, has been removed to the Talbot county jail. His condi¬ tion is yet serious, but the physicians think that all danger is passed. The wounds from his knife would have been fatal, but the blade was dull, and be rapidly lost strength from the overdose of morphine that he took as he left his office for Person’s pond, where he was captured. against the Feeling is intense assas sin. There has been frequent talk of violence, but tbe helpless physical con¬ dition of the prisoner, aud the plead¬ ings of men with cool aud deliberate beads have prevailed against any dem¬ onstration of the kind. Tbe people know that justice will be meted and are disposed to let the law take its course. Ryder’s best friends are as bitter in their denunciation of the slayer and his crime as are the close personal friends of the murdered young lady. Aliss Owen had no ene¬ mies, indeed, and her beautiful char¬ acter and rare accomplishments made every person her friend. The body af Aliss Owen was taken to the country home, ten miles distant, Alonday afternoon, and the largest fuueral pageant ever formed in Tal¬ bot county followed the corpse to its resting place. Tbe scene was one im¬ pressing solemnity, and old and young trembled over tbe dead in the most in tense sorrow. SHERIFF SHOT DOWN. Notorious Taylor Delk Fires the Fata) Bullet. Taylor Delk, one of that famous gang of outlaws that made the Delk name notorious about Atlanta and throughout tbe state of Georgia a year ago, sent a bullet through the body of Sheriff Gwynn, of Pike county Thursday night. The bullet caused the sheriff’s death. Delk had been indicted by the Pike connty jury for robbery and assault with intent to murder and the sheriff armed with a warrant went after him. Delk was in his home near Concord, surrounded by friends and associates equally as desperate as he. He, it ap¬ pears, anticipated the coming of the officers, and closing his doors, made them fast. When the sheriff, accom¬ panied by a posse, reached the Delk home everything appeared quiet. Sheriff Gwynn‘went upon the porch to knock at the door. But as he ap¬ proached the door he was fired upon from a window. A ball passed through his left breast, entering near the nip¬ ple, and he dropped upon the porch. In all about fifty shots were fired from the house. Delk then made good his escape. bloodhounds and At latest accounts posses were chasing the murderer through the thickets, forests and swamps of Pike, but with little proba¬ bility of catching him. THE WRECK EXPLAINED. Criswell Tells of the Object of the f*6ol£6I > 3 A special from Alacon, Ga., states that the mystery of c the railroad wreck , at Stone Creek, on the Southern road, some weeks ago, in which hree lives were lost and several people injured, has been solved, and three white men, Warren E. Criswell, J. Richard Shaw and Tom Shaw are in Bibb county jail to await the action of the grand jury charging them with the horrible crime. One of the men, Warren E. Criswell, has confessed it all and his confession, told at the hearing before Justices Bull ELECTION LAW FOR PRIMARIES, Provisions of the Statute Under Which They Will Be Held. An Act to protect primary election and conventions of political parties in this state, and to punish frauds committed thereat. Section 1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of the state of Geor¬ gia, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That ou and after the passage of this act that every political primary election held by any political party, organization choosing or asso¬ ciation for the purpose of or selecting candidates for office or the election of delegates to conventions in this state shall be presided over and conducted in the manner and form prescribed by the rules of the political party, organization or association holding such primary elections, by managers selected in the manner pre¬ scribed by such rules. Such mana¬ gers shall before entering upon the discharge of their duties each take and subscribe to an oath “that he will fairly, impartially and honest¬ ly conduct the same according to the provisions of this act; and in accord¬ ance with the laws of 6aid state gov¬ erning regular elections fbr the offices of said state.” Should one or more, of the managers thus appointed to hold such elections fail to appear on the day of election, the remaining manager or managers shall appoint others in their stead and administer to them the oath herein prescribed. The managers shall take the oath before the notary public or other officer au¬ thorized to administer oaths, but if no such officer can be conveniently had the managers may administer the oath to each other. Such oaths shall, after being made and subscribed to be filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court of the county in which such pri¬ mary election shall be held within five days after an election. Sec. 2. Be it further enacted. That before any ballots are received at such primary elections, and immediately before opening the polls, such man¬ agers shall open each ballot box to be used in such election, and shall exhibit the same publicly to show that there are no ballots in such box. They shall then close and lock or seal up such box except the opening to receive the ballots, and shall not again open the same until the close of the elec¬ tion. They shall keep a list of voters voting at such election, and shall before receiving any ballot administer to the voter an oath, provided such voter’s vote challenged, that hois duly qualified to vote according to the rules of the and according to the election laws said state and that he has not before in such primary election being held. At the close of the elec¬ tion the managers shall proceed licly to count the votes and declare result. They shall certify the of such election, and transmit certificate with the tally sheet or poll list, together with the ballots cast, and all other papers relating to such primary election within the time pre¬ scribed, and to tbe person or persons designated by the rules of the party, organization or association holding such election. Sec. 3. Be it further enacted, That every such primary election shall tie held at the time and place, and under the regulations prescribed by the ruies of tbe party, organization or associa¬ tion holding the same, and the return shall be made and the result declared as prescribed in the foregoing section. And the returns of the managers, with the tally sheets or poll list, together with all other papers connected with such election, shall all be filed in the office of tbe clerk of the superior court for the county in which such election, is held within four days after the final declaration of the result thereof, and shall remain there for public inspec¬ tion. Sec. 4. Be it further enacted, That any manager who shall be guilty of willfully violating any of the duties and obligations devolving upon him as such manager shall be guilty of a mis¬ demeanor, and upon conviction there¬ of shall be punished by a fine not to exceed $100, or imprisonment not to exceed six months, and any manager who shall be guilty of any fraud or corruption in the management of such election shall be guilty of a misde¬ meanor, and upon conviction shall be fined in the sum not to exceed $250, or imprisonment, for a terra not to ex¬ ceed twelve months, or both, in the discretion of the court. Sec. 5. Be it further enacted, That any voter who shall, if challenged, swear falsely iD taking the prescribed oath, or shall personate another per son and take che oath in his name in order to vote such voter shall be guil¬ ty of perjury, and shall be punished upon conviction as for perjury. That Sec. 0. Be it further enacted, • ^ any P ers ®, n at ' election ^ shall vote more than once or J OQe £demeanor, place , s hal! J £ a m and on u thereof be fmed not ieaa than $50 nor more than $200. Sec. 7. Be it further enacted, That all laws and part of laws in conflict with this act be, and the same arc hereby repealed. 21, 18 91. Approved October 1 Utah’s juries now consist of eight men instead of twelve.