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VOLUME V.
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WASHINGTON NEWS.
WHAT THE UNITED STATES OF
FICIALS ARE DOING.
Secretary Fairchild has decided to pay
$lO,OOO for Rugheimer's lot in Charles
ton to facilitate the construction of the
new postoffice.
Representative Perry Belmont of New
York, has been tendered and has accep
ted an appointment as United States min
ister to Spain,- to succeed J. L. M. Curry.
Flora Schmidt, the young woman who
was taken to Bellevue hospital, New
York, with symptoms of yellow fever
died at that institution.
The light house board in its annual re
port to the Secretary of the Treasury has
recommended the establishment of sev
eral new light stations in Charleston har
bor and along the South Carolina coast.
President Cleveland has appointed to
be postmaster: James Rodeffer, Wood
stock, Va.; Byron Lemly, Jackson, Miss.
At the following postoffices -which were
recently raised to the presidential class,
the President has reappointed the in
cumbents: Bessemer, Ala.; Oxford, Ala.;
Union, S. C.
Lord Sackville’s surplus effects were
disposed of by auction on Monday, and
the sale drew to such portions of the
British legation as were thrown open, a
crowd the like of which was never in
the building b' fore. Everything sold at
high prices, people frequently bidding
for articles they could not get near
enough to inspect. *
T. S. Riley, chair man of the Demo
cratic state committee of West Virginia,
has sent the following dispatch to the
Washington Post: “Wheeling, W. Va.
—Official returns from this state
are sufficiently ascertained to warrant the
announcement of the election of Judge
A. B. Fleming, Democrat candidate for
governor, by a small but sure majority.
The rest of the state ticket elected bv
larger majorities. The Legislature will
stand on joint ballot, 40 Democrats, 44
Republicans and one labor union inde
pendent.”
Surgeon Porter at Jacksonville, Fla.,
telegraphed to Surgeon-General Hamil
ton on Monday as follows: “The agent
of the Clyde steamer at Mayport assures
me that if steamers are permitted to
bring passengers for non-infected points
in Florida, he will guarantee not to al
low them to land at Mayport, but will
have them transferred to other steamers.
Freight for Jacksonville need not be
stopped at all, as it is not my desire to
hamper commerce any more than con
sistent with public safety. Under the
above agreement. I think steamers could
continue to run. Tickets to Jackson
ville could be sold to acclimated refugees
holding permits from me.” Dr. J. F.
Hartigan telegraphs that he has inspected
Dade City and Brooksville, Fla., and
that both places are healthy.
President Cleveland’s future plans are
still undetermined. It is believed that he
will spend one or two years traveling in
Europe, which be has never visited. He
will leave the White House at least $75,-
000 richer than when he entered it.
This, added to his other investments,
will give him a comfortable fortune of
upward of $200,000. Mrs. Cleveland,
through the division of the Folsom es
tate in Omaha, is an heiress in her own
right and is probably worth uot less than
half a million of dollars. Col. Lamont,
as has already been stated, will locate in
New’ York in the employ of a life insur
ance company, at a salary of SIO,OOO a
year. Secretaries Whitney and Fairchild,
will both return to New York and en
gage in the practice of law. Attorney
General Garland is also considering a
proposition to make his future home in
New York. Messrs. Endicott, Dickin
son and Vilas, all of whom are lawyers,
will return to their respective homes and
resume the practice of their profession.
Secretary Bayard has not decided
whether he will remain in Washington
or return to Wilmington and practice
law, but it is believed that he will adopt
the latter course. Judge Hawkins, the
assistant secretary of the interior, will
retire to his farm near Cape Girardeau,
Mo., and spend the remainder of his
days in the quiet and seclusion of pas
toral life.
DISCOURAGING.
In view of the great falling off in the
membership and the debt which is hang
ing over the Order, the delegates to the
Kuights of Labor Convention are now
feeling rather blue and wondering w hat
the outcome will be. At the end of June
1887, the order was $5,972 ahead. Of
its condition one year later the balance
was $1.64, with bills to the amount of
19,227 due and unpaid; October'2l, 1888,
there was a cash balance of $46, with
$2,887 due and unpaid bills.
The aggr gate shipments ot hog products
from Chief. o for the past twelve months
were 955,010.000 lbs., against 1,069.0j0,000
lbs. for the corresponding time in 1880-7.
THE WORLD OVER.
INTERESTING ITEMS BOILED
DOWN IN READABLE STtXE
THE FIELD OF LABOR —BEETBING CAUL
DRON OF EUROPEAN INTRIGUE—FIREB,
SUICIDES, ETC. —NOTED DEAD.
Rear Admiral Baldwin died in New
York.
Warren F. Copp, ex tax collector -of
Saugus, Mass., is a defaulter to the ex
tent of $23,000.
Brotherton’s cotton mill, at Preston,
England, has been destroyed by fire.
Loss $200,000
Dispatches from points in Northern Il
linois, Indiana, and Eastern lowa, re
ports the first heavy fall of snow of the
season. «
The yellow fever has broken out at
Santa Cruz de la Palma, Spain. The
contagion was carried to the port by a
steamer from Cuba.
The sentence of one month’s imprison
ment, imposed on J. D. Shehan, member
of Parliament for East Verry, Ireland, for
refusing to give bail for good behavior,
has been confirmed on appeal.
United States Marshal E. S. Mund, of
lowa, is at Fort Dodge, lowa, with war
rants for the ejectment of twelve hun
dred families on Des Moine’s land.
Trouble is feared on the attempt to exe
cute the writs.
Fred 3. Simpson, night clerk of the
Northern Park Exchange Co., atLacona,
W. T\, who absconded with $12,000 of
the company’s money a few days ago,
was caught at Manloops, B. C., and all
the money recovered.
At Greene, Chenango county, N. Y., on
Monday, George ,F. Matthew's, while
temporary insane, committed suicide by
cutting his throat with a razor. He was
a native of Savannah, Ga., and forty
eight years old.
Hughes county, Dakota, has a genuine
case of leprosy. The subject is a child
of Mrs. Bansum, born while she was a
missionary in China. The neighbors re
fuse to have communication with mem
bers of the afflicted family.
Three young girls, Mamie Taun, Allie
Sedman and Emma Nickens, while pass
ing over the canal bridge at Circleville,
Ohio, were caught by a train of cars on
the Cincinnati and Muskingum Valley
Railroad and killed.
The stage, near San Luis Obispo, Cal.,
was stopped by a lone highw’ayman, and
he went through four passengers. H*
took all the registered mail matter. He
is thought to be the same man that rob
bed two stages last week.
The Beaver Falls Rolling Mills, at Bea
ver Falls, Pa., was burned on Monday
night. Loss $15,000. Six men were se
riously burned, two of whom will proba
bly die. The fire wa9 caused by experi
menting with Lima oil for generating gas.
The police have expelled from Berlin
two French journalists, M. Latapan and
M. Ooriot, editors of Berlin correspond
ence with French newspapers. The offi
cial reason given for their expulsion is
that they made themselves obnoxious.
The British steamer Black Watch
foundered in latitude 06 north, longitude
19 east. The fate of her crew is un
known. She was an iron screw steamer
of 936 lons, plying between Naples and
Odessa, and was probably returning
from Odessa -when foundered.
A shock of earthquake that was sharp
enough to cause many people in hotels
and private houses to run out into the
streets, was felt at San Francisco, Cal.,
on Sunday afternoon. The direction
was northwest to southeast; duration ten
seconds. The shock w r as felt throughout
Central California.
Two lighters, Mary Hand and Charles
Whitney, loaded with 800 bales of cot
ton, intended for the Hamburg line of
steameis, took fire in New York harbor
and were towed out into the East river.
Before the flames could be extinguished,
about $5,000 damage was done.
It is stated in Mexican journals that
no more railway subsidies will be granted
by that government, as the railways al
ready provided for are sufficient fur all
needs. A number of concessions al
ready granted are likely to lapse bocause
of the inability of the parties interested
to comply with their terms.
Treasurer James J. Daily, of the
Childs-Drexel fund of the International
Typographical Union reports that up to
Nov. 1 the amount on hand was $20,000,
which more than doubles the amount of
the original gift of SIO,OOO by Childs &
Drexel in 1886, and which was the
nucleus of the fund named in their honor.
The entire fund is drawing a good rate
of interest.
Ten thousand people assembled at Rear
Cross, County Tipperary on Monday and
attempted to hold a meeting. The gath
ering had been proclaimed by the British
government, and before the proceedings
were far advanced, a strong force of po
lice arrived on the ground, and charged
upon and dispersed the crow’d. During
the affray many persons were injured.
Some fatally.
The biggest check that even Wall
street has seen for a long time, was drawn
Thursday to the order of -the Central
Trust company of New York, and signed
by President John H. Inman, of the
Richmond Terminal company. The
check was for $3,950,000, which, with
$250,000 previously paid, makes the eff
tire $4,200,000 that the Terminal com
pany bargained a few w'eeks ago to pay
for the Georgia company.
The prize court of Port-au-Prince,
Hayti, after trial, has condemned the
American steamer Haytien Republic to
confiscation for violating the blockade of
the Port of St Marc and for actively
DEVOTED TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE RESOURCES OF DADE COUNTY.
TRENTON. GA.. FRIDAY- NOVEMBER 23, 1888.
j participating in tbe rebellion of northern 1
i districts of Hayti. The U*ited State*
Steamship Boston has arrived at Port-ftu-
Prince, where her commander is assisting
the United States minister in investigat
i iner the case.
S «-»
The Pennsylvania Railroad Company
has made arrangements for its supply of
Steel rails for the next year. It has
agreed to take 45,000 tons from the
Cambria Iron Company, at Johnstown,
Pa., the Pennsylvania Steel Company,
' near Harrisburg, and the Carnegie works,
at Pittsburg, each company supplying
jne-third of the amount, and the price
; is to be S2B per ton upon delivery at
itated periods during the next ytar.
During the evictions on the Drapers
cown estate, near Dublin, Ireland, of
| Robert T. O’Neil, member of Parliament,
a bedridden woman, aged 92 years, was
!, removed from her home and had to be
; carried to an adjoining house. A
! woman who was in a state of delirium
! and her four children, one a baby three
months old, were also ejected. A fierce
gale was blowing at the time, and the
| evicted tenants’ furniture was blown
into the mud. Fifty policemen were
1 present.
After seventy-three weeks of impris
oiguent in the county jail, Edward Mc-
Donald, of Chicago, 111., walked out of
the criminal court a free man, under
SIO,OOO bail. His ride down Clark street
partook of the nature of an exile’s return.
Long imprisonment in jail has not les
sened, apparently, the number of his
friends. One of the attorneys of the so
called “boodlers” said: “McGarigle,
who ran away, can now come back to
Chicago, shake hands with Sheriff Mat
son, spend ten days in jail and walk out a
free man.
A SMALL WAR.
When the recent election in the
Chickasaw Nation was held, Governoi
Guy was elected on the face of the re
turns, but William Byrd, his opponent,
who was in control at the capital, threw
out enough votes to secure a small ma
jority, and the Speaker of the House
swore in Byrd. Byrd called the legisla
ture together and put the capitol build
ing under guard. Guy, with fifty fol
lowers, marched into Tishomingo and
took possession. He called his legisla
ture and was sworn in. Then he went
to Washington, laid the facts before the
interior department and was recognized
as governor and told to call on the
United States troops for assistance if ne
cessary. Each has a force of about 200
men, and the excitement is intense.
Guy’s life has been attempted several
times, but he still travels alone, reiusing
to incur the expense of a body guard.
He is waiting now for the time given
Byrd’s men to expire, when, he declares,
he will kill or capture all who resist oi
die himself.
BANDIT KILLED.
The notorious Kep Queen, from Texas,
was killed near Clarumore, in the Che
rokee Nation, ori Sunday, by the district
sheriff, Ed Senders, and posse. A week
or more ago it became known that Queen
and some of his outlaw followers were iD
the vicinity, and they were finally lo
cated in a cabin about a mile from the
Dog Creek court house. That night the
sheriff made up a party, and, going to
the place, they secreted themselves
about the premises. Three men then
came out and mounted, and as they were
riding away, were called upon to halt.
The answer was a pistol shot, which was
returned by a vollev from the officers.
Queen went down, mortally wounded,
and one of his companions was unhorsed.
Rewards are standing in Texas for
Queen’s capture, dead or alive. The
Cisco and other bank robberies are laid
at Queen’s door.
■ "■ #
YELLOW FEVER.
Jacksonville, Fla., had 12 new’ cases is
fever on Sunday. The city proper of
comparatively free from yellow fever.
The suburbs develop most of the new
cases. The fever has appeared in viru
lent form in South Jacksonville, across
the St. John’s river. The natural loca
tion is most favorable to the spi’ead of
the disease, the land being generally low,
and, to a great extent, marshy and wet,
and a number of yards being partially
covered with tide water. At a meeting
of the relief authoiities a resolution was
adopted to allow the Howard Association,
of Fernandina, to draw on them for $3,-
000. No further aid could be extended
to that city. Surgeon Martin reports
five new cases at Gainesville, Fla. Mon
ey is badly needed. Surgeon Martin is
greatly overworked as the fever in
creases, but stands up manfully.
ROUGH TIME.
The Cunarder Etruria, which arrived
in New r York on Sunday from Europe,
experienced one of the worst passages
in her history. A tidal wave swept over
the big steamer and George Warnold, a
sailor, was killed. Her lecord includes
five more or les3 severely injured. The
passengers were terribly shaken up. The
sailors saw a mountain of water approach
ing. Terrified they scrambled for safety,
but with irresistible force, the green wa
ters curled over and fell upon the the
big steamer. Like logs the five sailors
were jammed in a heap against the deck
house.
“GOD SAVE IRELAND!”
Invincibles Mullet and McCaffrey left
Dublin, Ireland, under strong escort, for
London, where they will give evidence
before the Parnell commission. When
ihe train reached Down Patrick station
McCaffrey shouted: “God save Ireland!
We want the people to know that we are
coerced and go unwillingly.”
j SOUTHERN STRAYS.
A CONDENSATION OF HAPPEN
INGS STRUNG TOGETHER.
!
MOVEMENTS OF ALLIANCE MEN —RAIL-
ROAD CASUALTIES —THE COTTON CROF
—FLOODS—ACCIDENTS—CROF RETURNS.
ALABAMA.
The safe in the county treasurer’s of
fice, at Carrollton, Pickens county, was
blown open. The noise of the explosion
aroused several people living near by and
the burglars fled without securing any
boodle.
FLORIDA.
The town of Macclenny reports nino
cases of fever under treatment and ond
death—W. P. Horne, white, a valuable
citizen.
Superintendent B. M. Turner, of* the
railway mail service, on Monday received
the following telegrams from Green Cove
Springs, a town of about 2,500 inhabit- 1
ants, thirty miles south of Jacksonville:
“Green Cove Springs—Fast mail trail}
14, refuses to take the mail, claiming wd
have yellow fever. Advise me at once. :
P. J. Canova, Postmaster.” “Green
Cove Springs—Dr. Williams, of the
United States marine hospital service,
says we have yellow fever. Our mail has
been refused. Please authorize fumiga
tion, so our mail can go forward. P. C.
Fisher, W. S. Banks.” Superintendent
Turner wired the superintendent of the
railway mail service at Washington, for
authority to establish a fumigating sta
tion. This will be done at the railroad
station, which is half a mile from Green
Cove Springs.
GEORGIA.
Christophine, an Italian fruit vender in j
Atlanta, who was assaulted last Monday
night by three young men, died of his
injuries on Thursday.
Hon. James Hunt, a member of the 1
Georgia Legislature, was killed in At
lanta, Thursday night, by Sully Moore, a
mail agent or the Western & Atlantic
Railroad. The two men were old
friends.
N. B. Baum & Bro., of Toombsboro, !
have failed, with liabilities ranging from j
$100,090 to $125,000. A Savannah firm
of cotton factors lose over $50,000. Baum j
& Bros., did a large general merchandise
business in Wilkinson and several neigh
boring counties. They operated three j
stores, one each in Toombsboro. Irwin- i
ton and Dublin.
Bud Thrash the well-known locomo
t.v e engineer, who ran the engine which
fouied President Cleveland’s train (when
be visited Atlanta a year ago), and a man
named Sullivan had a dispute on Mon
day, which ended in Sullivan slashing
Thrash across his neck, inflicting an ugly
wound. The people are getting very
tired of the frequent murders and affrays
in which deadly we;'*pns are used.
J. F. Hill, a prroperous farmer of
Madison, left home, telling his wife that
he was going away never to return, and
that she might take Ihe farm, stock,
com and eight bales of cotton, valued at
about ten thousand dollars. He sold be
fore leaving about fifty bales of cotton,
and some suggest that he carried with
him not less than five thousand dollars
in cash. Before leaving he paid all of
his accounts. He is fifty years of age,
has been married more than twenty
years and left a wife and four children,
ail daughters, three of whom are mar
ried.
LOUISIANA.
The steamer Maud M. Fish sank on
Monday night at Mould’s landing, twenty
miles below New Orleans. She had a
cargo of rice and sundries. In making a
l inding she careened and the engine room
soon filled, and the boat went down in
thirty feet of water. Mate John Fox was
asleep in a stateroom, and the boat sink
so rapidly that he failed to escape, and
was lost.
NORTH CAROLINA.
An attachment against the property of
the Bank of Durham, has been granted
in favor of Arthur C. Elliott, of New
York, in a suit for $5,984.
There was a business crash in Durham
on Thursday hitherto unequalled in the
business history of North Carolina. Six
firms made assignments almost simul
taneously. The firms assigning are: AY.
T. Blackwell, president and owner of the
bank at Durham, $400,000; E. J. Parish,
$190,000; AY. F. Ellis, $23,000; Muse &
Shaw, $10,000; Robbins & Stone, $8,000;
J. AY. Bh ckweii, SIIO,OOO. The aggre
gate liabilities will approximate $1,000,-
000. Assets are not known yet.
NORTH CAROLINA.
The fishing smack Puritan capsized
off Charleston, and several of Itor crew
were drowned.
The British steamer Sandringham,
loaded with cotton at Charleston
for Reval, was found to be on fire in the
forward hold, and was nearly destroyed
on Sunday night.
Great preparations were made for the
gala week wnicb. begins in Charleston,
S. C. Amusements include fireworks,
naval sham battles, prize drills, balloon
ascensions, trades display, torchlight
procession, fantastic parade, prize shoot
ing, law-n tennis tournament, racing daily
and an illumination of forts and Charles
ton harbor.
There is danger of a serious riot in
Beaufort between tlic negroes. Ex-
Congressman Robert Smalls ran for sher
iff and was defeated. He then became
disgusted, and it is said assisted in hav
ing a split ticket put up against the Re
publican ticket for county officers and
repre entatives. Serious trouble is ap
prehended at any moment, and, acting
under the order of Governor Richardson,
Adjutant-General Bonham has ordered a
battalion of infantry to arms, and they
are now awaiting orders.
TENNESSEE.
J. B. Wishendorff, book-keeper for B.
Loveman & Co., the largest retail drjt
goods house in the South, has disap
peared from Chattanooga. He leaves a
wife and child, It seems that his spec
ulations have been in small amounts
covering a period of two or three years,
MARYLAND.
Two inches of snow fell at Cumberland
on Monday. A heavy storm is reported
on the mountains.
W. S. Stier and James Ewach, who
were respectively conductor and engineer
on the freight train that was the cause of
the collision on the Baltimore & Ohio
road, near Dickerson station, on No
vember oth, in which three men were
killed, have been indicted by the grand
jury of Montgomery county for man
slaughter, and arrested on that charge.
MISSOURI.
The state supreme court passed on the
ease of Dave Walker, ar.d affirmed the
judgment of the lower court. Walker
was sentenced to be hanged December 28.
It did not take this news long to reach
the stronghold of the regulators in Ozark,
and vengeance will be wreaked on the
state's witnesses, who formerly affiliated
with the Bald Knobbers. Prior to the
killing at the Eden’s homestead no less
than twenty murders and lynchings were
credited to the regulators.
KENTUCKY.
Couit of Appeals at Louisville rendered
a decision in the case of David Roberts,
charged with murder. Their decision
sends Roberts to prison for twenty-two
years. Roberts is sixty-four years old.
In 1884 Roberts cut the throat of James
Kendall, of Morgan county, and hid the
body in the brush and escaped to Mis
souri.
VIRGINIA.
Snow fell in Staunton on Monday to
the depth of two inches, ' followed by
sleet and drenching rain.
AVilliam R. Shipe, a young man 23
years of age, committed suicide on Sun
day nt Richmond, by shooting himself
through the head with a pistol at St.
James Hotel. He is said to be a Vir
ginian, a resident of Brooklyn, N. Y.,
and traveling salesman for the shoe house
of Pollock & Co., Baltimore, Md.
HAD A GOOD TIME.
The Georgia AVeekly Press Associa
tion, under the leadership of B. F. Perry,
of the Canton Advance, held an ad
journed meeting at the Augusta Exposi
tion. The party mustered about 25
strong, and several young ladies were
included in the delegation. The party
was treated royally by the people of Au-
especially hv Hon. Patrick AVaish,
of%he Augusta Chronicle, and Editor
Gibson, of the Evening News, and eulo
gistic resolutions were officially for
warded to these gentlemen. A banquet
was tendered, and was a grand affair.
Tj#Association donated S2O to the Mar
tin fund for the benefit of the family of
the noble hero of the Times-Union of
Jacksonville, Fla., and officially sat down
hard on the miserable press accommoda
tions of the Exposition, rec
ommending that a suitable man
be selected to look after the
newspaper fraternity, who visit the show.
The general opinion was expressed that
the Exposition was a success and far in
advance of the one held in Atlanta a
year ago. The railroad facilities were
simply perfect between the city and the
grounds.
SUSPECTED.
♦
John Van Korff, engineer at the Steam
Gauge and Lantern works, at Rochester,
N. Y., was arrested by Chief Detective
Hannan and Assistants McCormick
and Naight on suspicion of setting fire
to the works Friday night, in which
thirty-seven persons lost their lives. Van
Korff is forty-five years old and lias a
wife and six children. Some years ago
he was a brakeman on the Buffalo, New
York & Phi lade phia Railroad, and was
suspected of ha/ing set fire to loaded
freight cars. Later lie was engineer at a
building on B’oadway in that city.
Three times while he was in charge the
building was on fire, and on the third
occasion it was burned dow-n. Before
this Van Korff worked in Moore’s sash
and blind factory as engineer. This
place was burned twice while he was
employed in it. AVhen Gould’s grocery
store at Trowbridge street and AVest av
enue was burned, Van Korff was the first
to discover it.
THE BIBLE.
The case in which suit was brought bj
Catholic tax-payers, in Jaynesville, AVis.,
to prevent the reading of King James’
version of the Bible in the public schools
was decided on Monday. Judge Bennett
held that such reading was not secta
rian instruction, the children of peti
tioners not being obliged to listen
if they did not desire and the Bible
having been decided upon by the au
thorities, as one of the text books for
AVisconsin schools. There was, nothing,
however, to prevent children from read
ing a version of the Bible accepted by
the Catholic church, if they preferred.
SHUT DOWN.
At a meeting of the river coal opera
tors, held on Monday, it was unanimous
ly decided to shut down all the mines
along the Monongahela River for an in
definite period. This will throw out of em
ployment 7,000 miners besides all the
river men engaged iu.taking coal down
the river and the mine laborers. The op
erators say the shut down will be for two
months at least. They claim they cannot
sell coal to an advantage now, as the
market is overstocked, and coai is selling
for five.cents per bushel, the lowest lor
many years.
NUMBER 38.
MIT? DIRECTORY
llll
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Ordinary J. A. Bennetfc
Superior Court Clerk.... 8. H. Ibn r u
Sheriff W. A. Byrd
Tax Receiver Clayton Tatum
Tax Collector Thos. Tittle,
Treasurer B. P. Major*.
School Superintendent... J. P. Jaooway.
Surveyor W. P. Taylor.
TOWN COMMISSIONERS.
B. P. Majors, B. T. Brock, J. P. Bond^
,T. A. Cureton, J. B. William*.
J. P. Bond, r tir'dnn|
B. T. Brock, Secret*^
B. P. Majors, Treason^
J. T. Woolbright, City Marsha^
COURTS.
Superior Court
J- C. Fain Jadge.
J. AV. Harris, Jr Solicitor General.
Meets third Mondays in March usi
September.
Ordinary’s Court
J. A. Bennett Ordiawsrjr.
Meets first Monday in each month.
Justices’ Court, Trenton District. •
Meets second Saturday in each month.
J. A, Cureton, T. H. B. Cole, Trmtinra
Rising Fawn District meet* third S«V
ureby in each month.
J. M. Cantsell, J. A. Moreland, Joe*
tices.
MASONIC LORE.
Trenton Chapter No. 60, R. A. SL
S. 11. Thurman, H. P.
M. A. B. Tatum, Secretary.
Meets second Saturday in each month
Trenton Lodge No. 179 F. and A. ML
J. A. Bennett, AV. M.
T. J. Lumpkin, Secretary.
Meetings Wednesday night on and be
fore each full moon f and two weeks
thereafter.
Rising Fawn Lodge No. 293 F. af ~
A. M.
S. H. Thurman, W. M.
J. M. Forester, Secretary.
Meetings Saturday night on and bef*_
each full moon, and two weeks thereat,
tc-r, at 2 o’clock p. m.
CHURCH NOTICES.
M. E. Ciicßcn South.—Trenton Cir
cuit Chattanooga District—A. J. Fra
zier, Presiding Elder; Rev. J. 11.
well, Pastor in charge; S. H. Thurman,
Recording Steward.
Trenton services second and fourth
Sundays in each month, at 10.30 o’clock
a. rh. Prayer meetings every Srunduy
night.
Byrd’s Ciiapel.— Services second and
fourth Sundays in each mouth ax 3
o’clock p. m.
Rising Fawk.—Services first arwl thirs
Sundays in each month, at 10.30 < "clock
a. m. Prajer meetings every Wed. vsday
and Sunday nights.
Cays Springs.— Services first
third Sundays in each month at
p, m. Furnace at night.
BOARD OF EDUCATION.
B. F. Pace, President; G. A. R Bible,
R. AY. Acuff, W. O. Cureton, Jobs
Clark.
IDsT OTICS,
Any additions to be made to the alavr
changes or errors, parties interoste.
would confer a great favor by riot&yiaj
us of the same.