Newspaper Page Text
IIIF CONYERS WEEKLY
volume X.
(UllIilESN PROGRESS.
fevs vnOVFMENTS IN VARIOUS
OF THE SOUTH.
Other Bn* 1 "®** Inter
jtorltfff „„d Railroad* Etc.
_Nrw
*1 factory is being erected by
rt ies at Chattanooga, Tenn.
op» been made for
Sn«urc a
factory at Florence,
LoOO h|o stock company factory will at be Gal- or
erect a canning
Tenn. gCJSSKE:
t Sod, of Tampa, Fla., con
jl) ( recting a steam laundry at An¬
il*' Co., ' capital . ,
VoOO, Mies Compress organized at
has been
dria, La.
jptions are being received to
fUe §0 erection Americus, of Ga. a hotel to cost
at
It Lieu*,’ Co, will erect a Taylor compress
Leral Ga. They will probably
L other compresses.
Fort has organized a company to
la cotton factory at Americus, Ga.
Lital stock will be $ 100 , 000 .
tmayor of Anniston, Ala., will re
jiids for the erection of the city
It is to be two stories, 120x120.
F. Gould, of Lake Helen, Fla., is to
a 9-story building on Decatur
Atlanta, Ga., to cost about $150,
j Montgomery Iron Works, of
pinery, have contracted to furnish
seiy for a 15-ton ice factory at Eu
, Ala.
national bank with a capital of
990 has been organized in Anniston,
md a dime savings bank, with a
il of $30,000, has been formed.
ngements have been made for run
I regular line of steamers between
wick, Ga., and European ports, to
ence on or before the 1st of August.
rks are to be erected in Birming
Ala., to manufacture sad irons,
apacity will be 10 tons daily. The
Birmingham Land Co., are inter
It Atlanta, Ga., Cotton Compress &
pome Co. have changed their name
[Atlanta Ini have increased Compress & their Warehousing capital to
n«o.
It Catawba Falls Manufacturing &
■otement Co., capital stock $200,000,
■ten incorporated at Catawba, S. C.
iikject Jrciuse of the company eventually is
the Catawba falls and build a
l« factory.
PYestera syndicate purchased recently
Igh Ithorsand a local real estate broker, thirty
acres of timber in Escam
loiraty, [plicate Ala. It is the intention of
to commence at once the
pw of a large saw and planing mill.
[SHEFFIELD. ALABAMA.
|*l Meeting Company. of the I.and and Coal
pleading neeting fact of the developed Sheffield before Land and the
r [company
i was worth Wednesday three was that the
and a half to four
ie absence Superintendent A. H. Moses,
of the president, A. St
ar , took the chair.
& W. Cole reported that the
i*aj which he represented, and
was under contract to build three
lce8 ' Lad perfected such arrange-
3 1" 1 they w mid be erected in
i, Mlt . the
time contracted. The three
pees “V; would 100 turn out would 450 tons be loaded of pig
r cars
r 9 immense output is exclusive
a of , the other two furnaces which
™w that nearing Sheffield completion. He pre
™ would become to the
6 what St. Louis is to the west. His
of was received with strong evi
e old appreciation. directors
Ir » the old officials were, re-elected, and
“ places. were put back in
An important action was
Passage of of an order instructing the
d -lectors to expend at once one
. , th
ousand dollars in the erection
timndredresidences, rapidly increasing to accommo
, -is strong feeling in the population,
1 demand for market and
stock
1EPR0SY IN LOUISVILLE.
•«»« JIa. Contracts the Loathsome
and Keep, DIs
^ | t a 8ecret .
,oS ne r Louisville. Me - ° f le P ro8 The y has victim Goon
ihn * Lo is
cts. n S*i w lives with his pa¬
j, * rov i disposition,
int went * n S and
la. whero r,v £ he ^ wa ears * a taken S°> reaching sick 0 Hono
»h a !j . ®,P™ ed When
fprr.gy 3 he returned home.
Ie *wlian,- I8 0 ^ a '* men i a * , ter t Li® but return. He
l 0 *ledo<> forlwo . yeai ha8 was, £f kept his
^ lf n / eatin S
^ eare - T a he discovery
™r tW Last, and he is now
UH in th city ° ° f th e Lest physi
e
DURING THE WEEK.
f rh! Ure * firing throughout
eooma isst week
w as re -
ioi, pi Ck n k. * L’o.’s mercantile
Bm { f °, r ,] Unitcd
^erk M t !l’ : e 199 »g*inrt States, 175
aad 203 t >
failures orkeitl^ r “ e weck previous.
r (t 0 2 8e ? UCII
P Wffie rY tlle ® e 0( * un <** iu
stgtes' lu eastern anil
,
mnBi ‘ ks
CONYERS. GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1887.
THE FATAL CYCLONE.
DEATH-DEALING STORMS IN MIS¬
SOURI AND ARKANSAS.
Houses Demolished anil Their Inmates
Killed—Whole Families Slain by
Falling Timbers.
Dispatches from Nevada, Mo., confirm
the reports that a fatal cyclone swept
over the northern part of Vernon county
Friday night. The cyclone seemed to
come down Marmadon river from the
Kansas line, dealing death and destruc¬
tion wherever it struck. So far as can
be learned, the first place that it touched
was at Metz township, passing through
Metz, Osage and Blue Mound townships.
Fences, houses, barns aDd everything in
the line of the storm, which was about
half a mile wide, were picked up, rent
into splinters and cast down hundreds of
yards away. Trees were torn up by the
roots. Over thirty houses were destroy¬
ed and about eighteen persons killed.
Only a partial list of the dead has as yet
been obtained.
There were five members of the Miller
family, four of whom were killed. The
baby, aged two years, was found unhurt
Saturday morning.
Parts of the Miller house and furniture
are found strewn over the fields for a
mile from where the house formerly
stood. Reliable new T s has been received
from Osage township and it is thought
that the death roll will be swelled to over
twenty-five.
The cyclone swept through a part of
Vernon county, Mo., doing great damage
to property and killing a number of peo¬
ple. Thirty houses are known to have
been destroyed, and fifteen persons are
said to have been killed.
There were four persons killed out¬
right and several so dangerously wound
ed that they will probably die. Many of
the hailstones weighed from three to five
ounces and some of them measured nine
inches in circumference. The path of
the wind was from three hundred to
four hundred yards wide and the track
left desolation.
A great many reports have been re¬
ceived of minor damages and the escapes
of those whose homes were ruined are al¬
most miraculous. The heavy rain was
attended by an interesting phenomena in
the northern portion of the city of Neva¬
da, Mo. Balls of fire seemed to be fall¬
ing at an angle of forty-five degrees.
They struck the ground and bursting in¬
to myriads of fiery flakes rebounded to¬
ward the east and died away. The ex¬
hibition continued for several minutes.
General damage was done to outbuild¬
ings, fencing, blooming orchards, outside
the immediate track of the cyclone,
while inside, nearly everything is a total
wreck.
A special from Clarksville, Ark., says
a terrible cyclone swept over that county
from west to east, from two to three
miles wide, at seven o’clock Saturday
morning, passing north of Clarksville
and doing fearful badly damage, killing five
persons and wounding twenty parties
others. The houses of all these
were blown down and scattered far and
near.
A tornado, originating in the Indian
territory and moving due east, passed Little
through the country north of
Rock, Ark., and along the line of the
Little Rock and Fort Smith railroad. It
was between a quarter and a half mile
wide, and near Ozark, Franklin county,
began doing great damage to trees,
houses and fences. Farther east, near
the coal hill and Clarksville and Johnson
county the damage was very serious and
many persons were injured. Clarksville John
Four miles from
Reed’s child, G. D. Croerley’s killed. daughter,
and a child of Mr. Pettit were A
man named Phillips near Ozark was se¬
verely injured by falling timber. Loss
to the farmers in buildings, fences, stock
and growing crops is heavy but it cannot
be estimated.
The Gazette’s Ozark special says that
currents met in the valley and passed up
the canyon east of town, about the head
of which the funnel appearance of the
cyclone was first seen. A track 300 yards
wide was laid almost bare. Timber and
all sorts of improvements were blown in
every direction.
In Ohio the storm was also severe, and
much damage was done to property, but
no lives are reported lost.
Kentucky also suffered to a considera¬
ble extent.
At Blossom Prairie, Texas, nearly ev¬
ery business house in the place the was
moved from its foundations by cy¬
clone. but nobody was killed.
AN ARCTIC EXPLORER DEAD.
Suicide of Lieutenant Danenhower, of the
Arctic Exploring Party.
Lieutenant John W. Danenhower, of
Arctic fame, was discovered at 10o’clock
Wednesday morning dead in his quarters
at the naval academy, Annapolis, Md.,
with a bullet hole in his right temple.
He was found lying on his rug in front
of the fire place with a tag tied to his
button hole, saying:
11 Send to my brother at Washington.”
Although h,e has had mental trouble
since he returned from the Arctic suicide regions, is
what immediately led to the
thought to have been the recent ground¬ to
ing of the Constellation on its way and for
Norfolk, which he had charge of,
which it is supposed he had fear of being
courtmartialed. Furthermore, he was
very intimate with young Robert W.
Gatewood, who recently committed sui¬
cide on the Carolina, and whom he saw
in death. It is supposed that this death
suggested the mode to him. His wife,
formerly Miss Sloan, of New York, is
away with her parents. Lieutenant
Danenhower leaves two children, tv
was about 35 years old and an intelligent
and polished officer. i
PERSONAL.
Rev. Sam Jones will go to San Fran¬
cisco in June.
Subscriptions to the Henry Ward
Beecher memorial now aggregate about
$ 12 , 000 .
W. W. Corcoran, of Washington, D.
C., pays taxes on $9,000,000. He has
always been a real friend of Southern
people.
Miss Abigail Dodge (“Gail Hamil¬
ton”), sister-in-law of James G. Blaine, is
said t Rich¬
to be the author of the Arthur
mond letters.
Lieut. Jepii son, author of the popular
novel, “The Girl I Left Behind Ale,” is
among the Englishmen in H. M. Stanley’s
exploring expedition.
A ’movement to erect an equestrian
statue of Gen. N. B. Forrest in Memphis
has been started. Gen. Grant once said
that Forrest was the greatest cavalry com¬
mander on either side of the Civil War.
Chaplain General Gleig, of the
British army, dates further back in mili¬
tary experiences than the Emperor Will¬
iam. He is well over 90, but is still able
to preach. He was present at the battle
of New Orleans and wrote an account of
the siege of that city.
Sir Edward Thornton, formerly
British minister at Washington. S. M.
Braithwaite and E. O. P. Bouverie ar¬
rived in New York recently from Eng¬
land. They came to negotiate a settle¬
ment with the Virginia legislature, rela¬
tive to the bonds of that state held in
England.
Col. James F. Farrel, at one time
associated with Col. James R. Randall on
the editorial force of the old Constitu¬
tionalist, of Augusta, Ga., has returned
from the North and made Atlanta his
home. The colonel’s sister, Mrs. San¬
ford R. Gifford, the widow of the dis¬
tinguished artist, died a few days ago at
Spring Lake, N. Y.
David Preston died suddenly of heart
disease recently at Detroit, Mich. Mr.
Preston is best known as a leading Meth¬
odist and prohibitionist. He was a dele¬
gate to several general church, conferences and of the
Methodist Episcopal in 1881
was a delegate to the ecumenical council
at London, Eng. His estate is worth
nearly $ 1 , 000 , 000 .
The funeral of Lieut. John W. Danen
hower took place in Oswego, N. Y. The
escort was composed of the Kingsford
(corn-starch factory) band, forty music¬
ians, and the 29th and 38th companies of
the militia. The casket was draped
and covered with an American flag. The
floral offerings were elegant, several
pieces being sent by the deceased’s bro¬
ther officers.
John Bright, advocating a continu¬
ance of free trade in England, has written
a letter in which he says that the reason
other nations maintain high tariffs organized is that
those who are protected are an mob.
army, while consumers are merely a
United States under a system of protec¬
tion are burdened with a large surplus
revenue, yet refuse to lessen duties, thus
promoting a system of corruption un¬
equalled in any other country.
Rev. William M. Crumley, one of
the oldest and most respected citizens of
Atlanta, Ga., died at the residence of his
son. He was born at Lawrence Court
House, S. G., February 29, 1816, and was
but a boy when he began preaching the
gospel. For fifty-three years he was a
minister of the Methodist Episcopal
church, living been twice pastor of Trin¬
ity churffli in Atlanta, and having held
also important charges in Savannah, Au¬
gusta, Columbus, Macon and other prom¬
inent places.
XIDNAPPING A SENATOR.
A Bold Plan lo Gobble General Sherman’*
Brother.
It has just leaked out,’ that a party much of
kidnappers or outlaws, comprising ban¬
of the dangerous elements of Cuban
ditti, had arranged to capture Senator
John Sherman on his recent visit to Cuba.
The project only failed by a notice in
time. The plot was well arranged, and
the banditti were in sufficent force to
capture Sherman’s party, but they left
the plantation intended as the scene of
the outrage just five minutes before the
outlaws appeared. It is thought the
owner of the plantation While in Havana, was a party Senator to
the scheme.
Sherman took occasion to congratulate prevail¬
the captain general on the peace
ing throughout the islands. When the
visit senator, the however, plantation expressed in the a desire interior, to
sugar
the military guard was barely sent as escaped an escort,
and the entire party an
unpleasant surprise.
DROPPED THE BOODLE
Into the Hands of a Catholic Priest.
A repentant thief dropped his boodle
in a Philadelphia, Pa., confessional re¬
cently. A mysterious stranger entered
St. John’s Roman Catholic church, going
into Father D. L. Broughal’s confession¬
al, and told a tale which the priest, nat¬
urally, will not divulge. But when the
repentant sinner left the church thirteen
pieces of rich silverware, which, as the
stranger told the priest, had been miss¬
ing for five years, were found in a corner
of the confessional. Among the articles
are a teapot marked “I. B. B.,” two
large spoons marked “B.,” a butter-knife
marked “Carrie,” and a number of other
articles similarly engraved.
FIRE IN MIDDLETOWN, KY.
The business portion of north Middle
town, Ky., was almost totally burned od
last Sunday. Loss $35,000.
WASHINGTON GOSSIP.
ITEMS OF INTEREST FROM OUR
NATIONAL CAPITAL.
\Vliat la Being Done by the Heads of Oat
Government—'The Week’s KerlefS
presidential appointments.
The president has appointed Sigourney
Butler, of Boston, to be second comp¬
troller of the treasury, in place of Judge
Maynard, promoted to the assistant sec¬
retaryship of the treasury. Mr. Butler is
but twenty-nine years of age. He is a
native of Quincy, Mass., and a son of the
Hon. Peter Butler, who was a prominent
applicant for the position of collector of
the port of Boston when Salstanstall was
appointed. He is a graduate of Harvard
college, of and is associated in the practice
law with Richard Olney, an eminent
attorney of Boston. He is a democrat.
OUR REVENUE RECEIPTS.
The total amount of trade dollars re¬
deemed for nine months to date is $5,243,
000 , which amount will be increased
$400,000 by recent importations at San
Francisco from China.
The total collections of internal rev¬
enue during the first nine months of the
fiscal year ending June 30, 1887, less were than
$83,981,204, being $573,788 corresponding
collections during the Collections
period of the last fiscal year.
from spirits were $46,668,141, a decrease
of $3,927,737; from tobacco $21,443,631,
an increase of $1,306,276; from fermented
•liquors $15,182,758, being an increase of
$1,519,603; from oleomargarine $481,-
240; from miscellaneous objects $201,-
807, being an increase of $41,203. Re¬
ceipts for March, 1887, were $341,819
greater than those for March, 1886, the
increase being mainly in receipts from
tobacco and fermented liquors. There
was a small decrease in receipts from
spirits. Commissioner Miller estimates
that the receipts for the present fiscal
year will aggregate $118,000,000 fiscal as
against $116,902,869 for the last
year.
Gen. C. C. Augur, U. S. A , retired,
will command the encampment of the
national drill. He is a resident of Wash¬
ington. i
The treasury vaults contain 2,000 tons
of silver and 48 tons of gold. This is
the limit of their capacity, and the treas¬
ury officials are puzzled to know what
to do with the constantly accumulating
store of precious metals. An appropria¬
tion for a new steel vault failed to pass
the last Congress.
ALEXANDER MITCHELL DEAD.
A Railroad Magnate Dio* ot Heart DUoaae
In New York.
Alexander Mitchsll, president of the
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul rail¬
road, died last Tuesday afternoon at the
Hoffman house, where he has been stop¬
ping for the last two weeks. Since De¬
cember he had been stopping with his
wife at Alexandria villa, near Jackson¬
ville, Fla. When he came to this city
two weeks ago, he was enjoying unusual¬
ly good health. For some time he had
been somewhat troubled from Wednesday impeded
action of his heart. Last
evening he went out and afterwards had
a chill. He caught a severe cold, which
developed into bronchial pneumonia, and
no doubt directly affected the heart’s ac¬
tion and caused death. The remains
have been embalmed and will be taken to
Milwaukee.
THE POPE S DECISION.
A DUpatch from Romo Oncernln* the
Knights ot I^abor.
. The Catholic News, of New York, re¬
ceived the following cable dispatch from
Rome concerning the pope and the
Knights of Labor:
“The pope has decided the questions that
of the Knights of Labor ik favor of
organization. This decision will stand
so long as the present met nod pursued doc¬ in
furthering their aims prevails, The
uments of Cardinal Gibbons have been
indorsed. The pope further decided tnat
in Canada, where a mandament has been
issued against ihe knights, members of
the order will receive absolution on the
promise of obedience to future decisions
of the holy see. If the knights identify
themselves with theories now being dis¬
seminated by certain agitators, this deci¬
sion in their favor will be revoked.”
FATAL CYCLONE IN VIRGINIA.
Houses Blown Down and Soveral Elves
Lost.
Monday night a cyclone visited Suffolk
Va., section with fatal and destructive
effects. Its track was about one hundied
yards wide. The house of John VVright,
six miles north of Suffolk, on the Norfolk
and Western railroad, was completely
demolished. Wright and his wife and a
young sister and James Luke were in the
house at the time. Mrs. Wright and
Mr. Luke were killed, the young girl
fatally injured and Mr. Wright seriously
hurt. Much other damage was done to
property along the path of the cyclone.
HOME NEWS.
The Masonic board of trustees in Au¬
gusta, Ga., have selected a place for the
erection of a handsome fours-tore build¬
ing on their burnt lot at a cost of $40,
000. The building committee was au
thorized to have plans and specifications the trustees’
drawn in accordance with
idea and proceed at once with the erection
of the building. A larce public hall,
offices and moms for local societies will
be built in connection with the Masonic
ball.
TROUBLE IN TONGA,
AN UPRISING IN THE ISLANDS
PROMPTLY QUELLED.
thirty-six PontCrt.Ml Wesleyan Natives
Condemned to Death.
A steamer which has just arrived at San
Francisco brings the latest particulars re¬
garding the attempted assassination of Prem¬
ier Baker, of the Tonga Islands, by converted
Wesleyan natives. The correspondent of the
Sydney (New South Wales) Herald at Suva,
Fiji Islands, writes that Mr. Baker believed
that an organized attempt to hill him and to
overturn the Government was to be made by
the Wesleyans. He sent for soldiers, and
a large number of indiscriminate arrests were
made. Mr. Baker put the prisoners through death,
a form of trial, condemned them to
and the sentences Were executed the same
night. Before the sentences were carried out
the acting British Vice-Consul, W. E. Giles,
used the utmost exertions to prevent the exe¬
cutions. newly
Things were growing quieter when the
appointed Vice-Consul, it. B. Leefe, arrived
at Tonga, and after an inquiry decided that
he had no power to interfere. The storm
::gain burst, forth with redoubled fury.
The Wesleyan Mission Collegi W e was in
vaded by an armed mob. esleyans wrecked. were
brutally beaten and their houses
Mr. Leefe was again appealed to, but agr am
refused to interfere. Among the earliest
persons arrested and condemned to death was
an ordained Wesleyan minister, David Finan,
a man of the highest under position arrest, and and six repute.
Many persons were take place the day after exe¬ the
cutions were to
departure of the steamer which brought the
above news to Suva, and thirty more the day
following. French and Germans have sent for
The
men-of-war, and urgent representations of the Fiji Islands have
been made to the Governor
to interefere and depose either Mr. Baker or
Mr. Moulton, a Wesleyan missionary. Herald
A special to the Sydney from
Auckland, New Zealand, says: “Further
news mercilessly from Tonga plundered states that and Wesleyans maltreated are
being King’s soldier:;. The Premier does not
by the
anticipate any difficulty about French inter¬
ference in Tonga, and is of the opinion that
German jealousy would be aroused by the
appearance of the French so close to Samoa
The Tonga or Friendly Islands form a
group in the Southern Pacific Ocean. They
were discovered in 1643 and were visited in
1773-77 by Cook, who gave them the name
of Friendly Islands from the apparently hos¬
pitable reception he met with from the in¬
habitants. It has since been learned that it
was fear alone that prevented the natives
from attackiu ig Cook, many of the natives
being wild and ferocious. There are 182 isl¬
ands, about thirty of estimated which are inhabited, 2o jOOO
the population boing at from
to 50,00. They are divided into three groups,
the Tonga being at the south. The cli¬
mate frequent, is healthy, but not nut formidable; humid. Earthquakes hurricanes
are
are both frequent and destructive. The na¬
tives cultivates yamsjbweet potatoes and fruits
and a little corn is grown. Missionaries in¬
troduced the cultivation of oranges. Cocoa
nut oil is the only important article of ex¬
port. The of Bea, Tongataboo Island, is
celebrated port the place on where in 1840 Captain
as
Croker, of the British sloop Favorite, was de
f ated by the pagan party. behalf of In the this Christian engage¬
ment, undertaken in
missionaries and their native partisans,
Croker and many of his officers and men were
slain. When pagans, the natives were
devoted to war. The natives offered human
sacrifices and cut off their little fingers and
toes as propitiatory offerings to their other gods.
Their mythology, like that of the
Polynesians, was a low type Bulota; of polytheism; those of
the spirits of all chiefs go to
the poorer classes remain on earth to feed the
•mis and lizards.
Nearly all the people are ,now Christians.
They were visited first by agents of the Lon¬
don Missionary Society, but in 1827 came
under the care of the Wesleyan Society of
Great Britain. There are three main mis¬
sionary stations and the smaller islands are
intrusted to the supervision of native teachers.
The art of printing has been introduced
and many of the natives can read and write.
A king rules all the islands. Catholic mis¬
sionaries from France have established them¬
selves in the southern group of islands and
converted many of the natives to that faith.
EMPLOYES SHARING PROFITS.
I'roctor <fc Gamble, of Cincinnati, A*r*o to
Divide with Their Employe*.
The firm of Proctor & Gamble, manu¬
facturers, has made an elaboiate proposi¬
tion for allowing their employes to share
in the profits of the firm. The plan is to
appoint superintendent three trustees, two bookeepers
and a in the firm’s em¬
ploy, who shall twice a year ascertain
the amount of profits'during the preced¬
ing six months, allowing as expenses six
per cent interest on the capital employed,
and reasonable salaries to members of the
firm devoting their time to their inter¬
ests, and divide profits between the firm
in proportion to the capital and wages
earned. ,
The employes have accepted the prop¬
osition with thanks, and resolved to al¬
low no outside influence to disturb the
relations between them and their em¬
ployers.
ARMOUR'S SELMA CONTRACT.
The contract under consideration be
tween Armour & Co., of Chicago, and
the Selma Land company has bemi closed,
the same having been signed warehouse, by boti
parties, and their extensive
with refrigerator, will be erected there
at once.
HUEEN OF THE SANDWICH ISLANDS.
Queen Kapiolani, of Sandwich Islands,
has arrived in San Francisco, en route to
attend the jubilee of Queen Victoria.
Sh« will visit Washington to pay her re¬
spects to President Cleveland before
going to England.
stealing government timber.
-
Connor, of Florida, , , has
Timber Agent the general land office that a
reported firm to in that state has caused to be
lumber
cut and removed from government lands
in one locality 2,500,000 feet of timber,
valued at $20,000.
NUMBER 9.
LATEST NEWS.
A great meeting was held in Blackheath
Common, London, England to protest
against the coercion bill. Fully 10,000
persons were present, Several members
of parliament were in attendance, Reso
lutious denouncing coercion were adopted
by an almost unanimous vote.
In the enforcement of the excise law,
in New York City, the police prevented
the sales of liquors in all the leading
hotel bar-rooms and cafes, as well as in
the less important saloons and restaurant*
on Sunday. Among the places where the
law was observed to its full extent were
Delmonico’s, Fifth Avenue hotel and the
Hoffman house, the Astor house and
other prominent hostleries.
Patrick H. Hennessy, a prominent and
former wealthy merchant of Galveston,
Texas acted as sergeant-at-arms of the
state senate which adjourned April 4.
He was dismissed, charged with forging
sundry vouchers. He was indicted by
the grand jury and convicted in the dis¬
trict court, and was sentenced to two
yx«.rs’ imprisonment. When the verdict
was read, Hennessy threwup his hands and
fainted.
THE APACHES MOVING.
Over Four Hundred Indian* t* be *•»!
to Alabama.
The Apache Indians who were moved
from Arizona to Fort Marion, Fla., last
fall, are to be removed by direction of
the’ secretary of war to Mount about Vernon 450,
barracks, Ala. They number
in addition to Geronimo and seventeen
bucks, who are confined at Fort Pickens,
The wives of the latter will not be re-j
moved from Fort Marion to Mount Ver¬
non, but will be permitted to join their
husbands at Fort Pickens. Captain, Indian
Pratt, superintendent of Carlisle
school, has gone to Fort Marion to select
30 or 40 young Indians, before removal,
to be instructed at this institution.
The removal is made on account of the
crowded condition of the quarters at
Fort Marion. Although the health of
the Indians has been good,it was thought
advisable to send them to a healthier lo¬
cation, where they will have plenty of
room and be free from the gaze of hun¬
dreds of curious people, who flock about
them every time they appear in public.
Mount Vernon is considered as peculiarly situ¬
well adapted to their needs, being
ated in the southwestern part of Alabama
on the Mobile river, not far distant from
Mobile, and consisting of a tract of 2,100
acres. occupied by two
The barracks are com¬
panies of artillery. The Indians will live
in tentB, and it is hoped that they may
become self-supporting. Geronimo and
his renegades are not kept in solitary
confinement at Fort Pickens, but are re¬
quired to work under guard.
THE ENGINEER'S LAST WORDS.
“Boy*, Fla* the Train*!”—A L*r*e Land¬
slide on th« New York Central.
A passenger train on the New York
Central road at midnight, Monday, ran
into a landslide and the engine and seven
cars were thrown from the track. The
engineer was killed and the fireman and
" badly injured. The slide
one passenger feet long, caused by heavy
was 120 wrecked a
rain. The conductor of the
train had his wits about him. The ex¬
press train from the east was due, and
the conductor flagged it just in time to
stop it within seven car lengths of the
slide, which covered both tracks. The
engineer’s last words were: “Boys, lag
the trains!”
Dacamber, 1880, wrote O. L. Hathaway, Fall
River. Mass., "Was *reatly afflicted with rheu¬
matism; tried St. Jacobs Oil; all pain leftme."
October 19, 1886, he writes; “Have not beea
roubled with rheumatism since.”
Thesole surviving representative of the rev
olutionary war is Abigail S. Tilton, of North
Woodbritige, N. H. Mrs. Tilton is now a trifle
more than one hundred years old. Her Umi
band, Beni imin Stevens, participated in the
battle of Benningtor
James McEIlen, IVit Huron. Mn h., writes;
Had sevei e pain- in side. After taking Red
tax Cough Cure the palna ceased entirely.”
Priee twenty-five cents. At druggists.
Bishop William Taylor, whose self-support¬
ing missions on the Congo attract great and
widespread attention, is a sp'endid looking
and is long: and spreading and of pure white.
Woman’* Face.
“What furniture ran giv* snch finish to a
r< »om, as « tender woman’s face';'" asks George
i Uiott. Not any, we are happy to answer, tlie end pro*
y.dot the g o of health tempers t et
expr ession. The ^ pale, aaxioi s, blcodl ss face
of th e consumptive, or the evident suffering* and
o: ti e dyspeptic, indace leeliriRso; sorrow them of
Ki-iaf on our part and compel us to tell
Dr Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery, the
sovereign rem*dy for consumption and other
disea-es of the espiratory system, as well as
dysjopsia and other digestive troubles, bold
everywhere.
twenty Qneen year* Vitoria more, prosit ofHrinjj
long ago. _
A Cl IT *f Beautlfnl Women.
Detroit, Mich., i* noted for its healthy .hand¬
some ladies, which the leading physicians and
druggists there attribute to the general use
and popularity of Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonic
People who tell big yarns ought to be com¬
pelled to take out a special lie-cenee.
Daughters, Wives ana Mathers.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, Utica. tree. N.Y
scurely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 85c per bottle
Plso's Remedy for Catarrh 1* agreeable 60c. to
ug*. It i* not a liquid or a snuff.