Haralson banner. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1884-1891, November 08, 1889, Image 7
~ GENERAL NEWS. “CONDENSATION OF CURIO US, ‘ AND EXCITING EVENTS. . INEWS FROM EVERYWHERE—ACOIDENTS, STRIKES, FIRES, AND HAPPENINGS OF INTEREST, The cotton crop in Faysom distriet, Egypt, this year, will not be more than ‘half that of 1888, The grand total of receipts, up to Thursd .y night, of New York’s guaran tee fund of $5,000,006, amounted to $1,797,654. , The reports of destitution in North Dakota are said to be greatly exaggera ~ ted. Thereis nothing in the situation “to justify the reports that a famine ex ists in Dakota. Cholera is still raging in the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates. During the last three months Sl,ere have been 7,000 deaths from the disease. " Advices from Brisbone, state that the natives of Southwest New Guinea, have massacred Rev. Mr. Savage, who was «Bent out by the London Missionery so ciety. Mrs. Annie Price, for years past known as the ‘‘only original fat woman,” has just died at her home in New Ycrk, of fatty degeneration of' the heart and obesity. Mrs. Price weighed 550 pounds. The big Washburne and Pillsbyry mills, among the largest in the worid, ‘has passed into the hands of a syndicate. The option of the Pil'sbury system of mills and elevators, it is said, calls for $5,200,000. The emigration commissioners at New York, on Fridy, notified all steamship companies that a head tax of fifty cents each will be collected from them for every alien that they will bring here. This will include chiidren. A company of manufacturers and bankers, of Lynn, Mass., has purchased L 2,000 acres of land near Chattanooga, for ~ $750,000. Two shoe factories, a tan nery, two furnaces, tool worksand other plante, will at once be erected. The Paris Figaro says that the mar riage which had been arranged between Prince Murrat and Miss Gwendoline Caldwell, has been abandoned. Prince Murrat, the paper says, left Paris Tues day, and Miss Caldwell will embsrk for New York Saturday. Members of the cotton exchange, of New York city, met and passed a resolu tion calling on the board of managers to SMbmit a law, to be voted on by the ex change, which would repeal ths system of aspecting and classing cotton, and re enact the former system with such amenGaments and modifications as expe rience hasshown to be desirable. The gable wall of a building that was being erected alongside of Templeton’s carpet factory at Glasgow, Scotland, was blown down Friday. An immense mass of debris fell on the roof of the weav ing department of the factory, crushing it in, and burying silty girls and women employed in the weaving rooms. 1t is probable that forty of those buried are r dead. : \ Early Thursday morning, the boiler in - the new four-story brick block on South Main street, Akron, 0., occupied by O'Neil & Dyas, dry goods merchants, exploded, The building took fire and was completely gutted. The fire burned through to Howard street, and several other buildings were damaged. The principal losers are O'Neil and Dyas, dry | goods, store and building, $225,000. In surance $123,000. A dispatch from Cape Henry says: “Passed in at nine o’clock Thursday morning, brig Alice, Captain Bowling, from Navassa, for Baltimore, with sixty four of the rioters in the massacre at Navassa, October 14. The brig also has the crew, except the mate, who was lost ~ overboard, of the schooner Tom Wil liams, from Fernandina for New York, . which was wrecked during the late storm. The crew was four days in open . boats without food .” Mrs. Greening, of New Windsor, N. Y., presented herself at an Episcopal <hurch and partook of communion. The. ~ rector being told that she was a Meth odist, but partook of communion at an| Episcopal church, owing to the distance -~ of her home from the Methodist church, informed her that by church lules she ~ «could not have communion there again. ~ This so worked upon her nervous system that it resulted in a paralytic stroke. Bhe i 3 now in a helpless condition. | M. Mackenon organizer of the London expedition to relieve Emin Pasha, has _l:xsived the following dispatch from . Zanzibar: Letters have been received 2y from BStanley, dated Victoria, August 20th. With him were Emin Bey, Cusati A Marco, a greek merchant, Esman Effendi 'v.';Hassau, a Tunisizan apothecary, Stars Nelson, Jephson Parke and Bonny. EBight hundred people accompany him toward Mpwapwa. All were well. Stan {ey reports Waddell in the hands of the ~ Mahadists. One of the largest transactions in land . ever consu'mt'tte(f in the South, has re ~ cently been perfected at Jacksonville, ' Fla., and made public Friday. Allunsold ""as.h Florida of the Plant system of __railroads and steamships, of the Florida o Southern railroad, of the Jacksonville, | Tamp: %Keg West system, including hhe Florida Southern railway, and the lorida Commercial company, have been psolidated under the name of the As- B i E.ilway Lond Department of g Over six million acres of land | “% ' this syndico! s@,«'@‘ o i x:‘:f :hs yf, ”: ';J‘n . S§TOCKS TUMBLE. THE COTTON SEED OIL COMBINE HAVING CONSIDERABLE TROUBLE, Calamity seemed to reach its climax Thursday, for the bulls in the trast stocks, on the stock exchange at New York. The grief wns concentrated in cotton oil crowd. Everybody was pre dicting aw immediate advance of many pointsin cotton oil certificates, bused on the rosy programme of converting the trust into a corporation, and reducing the capital from $42,000,000 to $30,000,000. doubt of the success. But ulas for the frailty of promises and prospects in Wall street, the popular expectation failed sadly of realization. Immediately on the opening of the market there was on over whelming pre:sure to sell. The first sale was 414, and from that point a decline instantly set in, which had no check until the price was hammered down to 36}. This tumble of five full points meant a shrinkage of over $2,000,000 in the mar ket value of the total capital of the trust. The scene on the stock exchange Dbaffles description. The real reasnn for the most of the de cline was probably because of the serious disappointment which some prominent insiders felt at the annual report. The showing of earnings for the last year is by no means flattering. For the first six months the net profits were entirely sat isfactory, but'the last six months were bad. The total met earnings for the year amount to a little over $1,600,000 which is at least $1,000,000 less than officially predicted. Several of the mills belonging to the trust have been shut down on account of proving un profitable, and it is said that several more will probably have to be closed for the same reason. The corporation into which the trust is to be resolved will be known as the Cotton Oil Company of New Jersey. A REPORTED BATTLE IN KENTUCKY IN WHICH SIX MEN ARE KILLED. A special to the Louisville Courier- Journal from Pineville, Ky., says: News reached here that Judge Lewis came up with Howard and his gang Thursday on Martin’s Fork and killed six of the How ard gang without losing a man., Three of the men killed were named Hall, one named Whitlock, the other two names not learned. Friends of the judge say that he is determined, and will never quit his chase until Howard and his gang are all killed or driven from the country. Both parties are being reinforced daily, and more bloodshed is expected. It 1s thought that Howard has gone to Vir ginia, but is expected to return. The best citizens of Harlan county, Ky., are joining Judge Lewis, and with such a determined leader there is no doubt but that the law and order party will come out victorious, and break up the gang that has been a terror to all eastern Ken tucky for the last twenty-five years. SUEING A NEWSPAPER. MRS. MACKAY, OF CALIFORNIA, SUES AN ENGLISH PAPER FOR LIBEL. The action for libel brought by Mrs. John W. Mackay against the Manchester, England, Evaminer, came up for hearing in the court of queens bench, Thursday. The libel complained of alleged that the plaintiff was a poor widow with two children, and that she was employed as a washerwoman by Nevada miners when Macksy was first attracted toward her and fell in love with her and married her. The plainiiff contexds that the words of the article suggested that she was not a lady of birth or education, and that she was not accustomed to associating with persons of good positions. A GREAT NEWSPAPER, THE PIONEER PRESS, OF ST. PAUL, MINN., OELEBRATES ITS 40TH ANNIVERSARY. The Pioneer Press, of St. Paul, Minn., aelebrates its fortieth anniversary by is suing Thursday; morning an edition of thirty pages, from its new thirteen story building. The edition 1s chiefly devoted to a historical review of the extraordi nary development of the northwest for the past forty years. The building, 110 feet square, represents an outlay of $780,000, and is pronounced the finest daily newpaper building in the world. In Thursday’s issue will be printed about 400 personal congratulations from editors throughout the United States and Canada. MUST BE PAID. The Indiana legislature last winter passed a law raising the maximum li cepse which the city of Indianapolis may impose for the sale of liquor from SIOO to $250. The supreme court Wednesday affirmed the constitutionality of the law. In another case it declared that a license is not a contraet, Indianapolis raised the license to §250. Liquor sellers who had taken out license at SIOO previous to the increase, contend that they should not be compelled to pay the increase of sls¢ until the expiration of the SIOO licensé, The court says their position is wrong. and they must pay the additional $159. BANK STATEMENT, Following is a statement of the asso ciated banks at New York for the week ending Baturday, November 2d : l‘metnmn l.bc'c-.ln.»o’.co‘ i s,sm ;.w&-f{-m-‘o tetseecanenen 7%2% 2 .\“\ "" : 'u& soien u eas . nr-_::&‘. Xo g % B SRR R S T NSRRI L S SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS, It is reported that a system is being perfected whereby common illum nating gas can be made by electricity. A course in sanitary engineering has been added to the other courses in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. According to the last census of St. Petersburg, the population of that city was 720,318, tomposed of 424 212 males and 296,106 females. In winter this total is increased by one quarter. A new material called ‘steel pig,” much stronger than cold blast iron, and less expensive than steel, is now being made at Sheffield, England. It is adapted for a variety of uses for which the ordinary iron was unsatisfactory. Professor G. Sormani has shown that the flesh of anima!s which have died of tetanus may be eaten with impunity, the bacillus passing through the system without causing special disturbance. An animal may swallow unharmed 10,- 000 times more than would kill if placed beneath the skin. The germ itself is unaffected by the digestive juices. Eight hundred thousand houses in London have 4,000,000 chimneys pour ing forth the black smoke of partially consumed bituminous coal. Add the smoke of vessels upon the Thames and the countless locomotives on the rail. ways and a volume of smudge is raised that darkens all the bills of mortality and hangs over the valley of the Thames like a monstrous pestilence. A practical test has been made of a new ventilator, which, it is claimed, will ventilate cars without lettiny in dust or cinders. Fans under the car are operated by the motion of the latter, and drive air through a box containing water, which filters and 'cools it, into a central tube along the roof, and thence through smaller, bell-mouthed tubes into the car. Whenever the car moves, a constant current of air is secured, even when the doors, windows and all other apertures are closed. The manufacture of the new six-inch gun, of which 100 have be:n orlered for British land and sea service, has been stopped until a cartridge case of solid drawn meta! can be devised which will stand the shock of discharge of twelve pounds of smokeless powder, and which can be used over and over again. This the authorities have not yet been able to do, and the machinery engaged in the manufacture of these guns is all standing idle, as well as the guns already manufactured. Dr. T. H. Bean, in charge of the party investigating the Alaska salmon fisheries, ' reports to Colonel Marshall McDonald, United States Fish Commis sioner, that they have visited Karluk Lake, found the spawning beds of the red salmon and explored all the Karluk River, except eight miles of rapids. Oa the nests of the fish were found small miller's thumbs, a species of uranidea resembling the one which proves so de structive to eggs and young fish in Eastern streams. The number of spawn ing salmon was disappointing, whilo the enemics of the fish are numerous. | Gafiing Lobsters. } The usual metod of taking lobsters is by means of the pot. The pot is a trap baited with fish, and which is sunk toa certain depth. These traps are marked with bouys, left for a tide, | and then the lobsterer goes out in his boat, hauls up his trap, and sccures his lobsters. At times, however, off the coast of Maine the:2 are estuaries, - which are of great ‘ length. running between the ledges of rock. Pools are many and of considerable depth. When lobsters are plentiful, at certain seasons, %hey run in from the sea, and scek these estuaries for food, small fish being abundant. As the tide recedes, the lobsters re main in some of the rocky basins, and can be ' gaffed. The gaff has a stout hickory stock, and the gaff itself is generally three- pronged, and made out of the best steel. - A good gaff is rarely bought ready-made, but is turned out by the village Dblacksmith. Its temper must be excellent, as it must neither be too soft nor brittle. To use the gaff requires no small amount of skill, for in the water the movements of the lobster are rapid. He car back or turn in the fraction of a second, and then in color ho assimilates o the shado of sca-water. Many of tho largest lob- SO e S L i The President's Primeval Neighbors President Harrison has had some in teresting neighbors at Deer Park. They are the mountaineers from the Backbone mountain, who come over to the village twice a year driving a yair of stolid, heavy-eyed oxen attached to a primitive sled, for the aboriginal of the Backbone can make a s'ed of logs, although he canno’ turn a wheel. Other noted ne:ghbors are the mighty hunters of Meadow and Orange mouniains, they who have lived in their log cabins for nearly one hundred years, trapping, hunting and fishing. Sfeen in the vil'age rare y are these mountain Nimrods, for they have no need of money and rarely barter. Once in a while one of them will come to thevillage, a woman often, astride an old mare, carrying home made Eaniers, with a firkn of butter or a bucket of eggs. If the chief magis trate of the United States should wa k three miles to the west of his daughter’s cottage he would find a way of living as primitive as that among the Indians when white men first touched these shores. He would see a plough which is a crude triangle of wood, a sled made of the untrimmed boug! s of trees, and he might have cracked a whip as simple as those used in the biblical days, for the native's ox goad isa tree branch with the pith taken out half way down and the bark twisted into a lash.—[Phila .el phia News, Blondes aud Brunettes. A French scientist has been making a statistical inquiry into the colors of the eyes and hair in I'rance, and from his 180,000 observations he deduces many interesting results, one of the most cur ious being that where the race is formed from a mixture of b'ondes and brunettes the hereditary blonde coloring comes out in the eyes, and the brunette ele ment reappears in the har. To this tendency probably is to be attributed the rarity of a combination of light hair with dark eyes. Several observers have asserted that the American people, who are pre-eminently a mixzed race, are becoming a dark-haired and blue-eyed nation, and if this be true, such a devael opment must be owing to the working of this law. Good Rules. Learn your business thoroughly. Keep at one thing; in no wise change. Al ways be in haste, but never in a hurry. Observe system in all you do and under take. Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well. One to-day is worth two to-morrows. Be self-reliant; do not take too much cdvce, but rather depend upon yourself. Never fail to keep your appointments or to be punct ual to the minute. Never be idle, but keep your mind or hands usefully em ployed, except when sleeping. A CHICAGO woman recently married a Chinese laundryman, and in three days thereafter the unbappy Celestial ap peared at a barber shop and ordered his pigtail cut off, sayine in explanation, “*Too muchee Yank! Too muchec Yauk ["—Chicago Sunday National. WHEN there is nothing left of the win ter snow but ridges behind the stone walls, and a dingy drift here and there in a hollow or in the woods, winter has virtually resigned the icicle, which is his sceptre. It Don't PPay. To experiment with uncertain remedies, when afflicted with any of the ailments for which Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is rec ommended, as it is so positively certain in its curative effects as to warrant its manufactur ers in guaranteeing it to benefit or cure, or money paid for it is returned. It is warranted to cure all blood, skin and scalp diseases, salt rheum, tetter, and all scrofuous sores and swellings, as well as consumption (which is scrofula of the lungs) if taken in time and given a fair trial, Don’t hawk, hawk, blow, sßiLand disgust everybody with your offen-ive breath, but use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy and end it. Powder andliber y are like heat and moist ure; where they are well mixed everyvthing prospers, where they are single they are de structive, A man who has practicdd medicine for 40 years ought to know salt from sugar; l'ead‘ what he says: TorLEDO, 0., Jan. 10, 1887. Messrs, F. J. Cheney & ('o,—Gentlemen:— I have been in the general practice of medi cine for most 40 years, and wou'!d say that in all my practice and experience, have never seen a %repmatiou that I colld preseribe with as much confidence of success as lean Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by you. Have prescribed it a great many times and its el fect is wonderful, and would say in conclusion that I have yet to find a case of Catarrh that it would not cure, if they would take it ac cording to directions, Yours truly, L. L. GorsvcH, M. D. Office, 215 Summit St. We will give SIOO for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. ¥ Sold by Druggists,7sec. Did You Read The large advertisement of Tar Yourn's Com- PANION which we published last week? This remarka.blzi))a.per has the phenomenal circu lation of 430,000 copies weekly. No other ;ournal is more welcomed by old and young n the families throughout the land. The pub lishers make a special offer once a year, and to all whosubscribe now will send the paper free to Januwary 1, 1890, and for a full year from that g(:ée. The suabscription price 1s $1.75. Ad- S 8 TuE YouTn's CoMPANION, Boston., Mass. In all things throughout the world the men who look for the erooked will see the crooked, and the men who .ook for the straight will see the straight. We recommend **Tansill’s Punch” Cigar. LTS Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Ph{sicians. Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the taste, Chfldron take it without objection. By druggists, CONSUMPELON “Lucy Hinton.” Hark ! the sound of manv voices, Jubi'ant in gladdest song, And tull many a heart rejoices As the chorus floats along: “Hail the Queen of all Tobaccos!" How the happy voices blend, “Finest and purest among her fellows-— Man's staunch and true friend.” Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers. Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant crops. Best fruit, g‘rnin, grm and stock coun try in the world. Kull information free, Ad dress Oreg. Im'igra'tn Board, Portland, Ore. Originates In scrofulous taint in the blood. Hence the proper method by which to cure catarrh is to purify the blood. Its many disagreeable symptoms and the danger of developing into bronchitis or that terribly fatal disease, consumption, are entirely re moved by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which cures catarrh by purifying the blood; it also tones up the system and greatly improves the general health. Try the | “‘pecullas medicine.” “I'have used Hood's Sarsaparilla for catarrh with very satisfactory results. I received more perma nentbenefit from it tian from any other remedy I ever trled."-—M. E. REap, of A. Read & Son, Wauseon, Ohlo. y Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C.'l, HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar s Creanon Bax cu® A& pe Cupg ok CATARRY LDin Hn W v & W HAY- presdles FEVER B 3 o 2 50 S Cts. 20 e COLDHEAD ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren St., \(\\\:)rk. (fi_";:m L slvrnvu.i' o &;“\:; ‘R4 e 5 AL ‘,__,‘;;_,.:.f,~\§~- ¥ A © o 2 T ATI Nl 17 & "\_;"4 ”/,; .%" ’ gy WS 2 SHITH’S BILE BEANS Acton theliver and bile; clear the complexions cure biliousness, sick headache, cosi_l\'oncns, malaria and all liver and stomach disorders. We are now making small size Bile Beans, especially adapted for children and women— very small and easy to take. Price of either size 25¢ per bottle. A panelsize PHOTO-GRAVURE of the above picture, *Kissing at 7-17-70," mailed on receipt of ¢ stamp. Address the makersof the great Anii-Bile Remedy—*'Bile Beans. J. F. SMITH & CO., St. Louis, Mo. N THE WONDERFUL \o\;, 2s( ÜBIRG\CHAIR\ S 5p2 7225 (U M coMBINNGS ARTICLED 71! L . | \\/#44:4 OF FURNITURE . ¥ .‘ B e e Wit G (INVALTD X SRI \@m SVPR\ES ) \‘f%mijg:% i RSP _w».‘ AND Een NN Xé,!%, WHEEL |2= a‘,“.;:!.';_ QN 7\ St CHAIRST {4 " () w. 1 £ 3he lowest s = Automaiic Brake uh:{'“;ulszrh)ry };)v“‘xc:'a, < ,_{;-75 ‘;::‘1:. FREE and hip goods to be (fi [ WhERL ciaTEs g:iddfo: on dfshvarya \' “7“‘l‘ TO HIRE. am! or Lata- S & ]o;uo,‘ Nurgc goods desired, \._/ SBIBEIIAVIL::!‘ _ LUBURG MFG. 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From first dose :{lmpmms lsappear; in ten days at least two-thirds symptoms removed. Send for free book testimo nials of miraculous cures. Ten days' treatment free by mail. If you order trial, send 10c. in stamps to pay postage. DR, H. H. GREEN & SONs, Atlanta, Ga. and WHISKEY HAB ITS cured at home with out pain. Bookof par ticulars sent FREE, B. M. WOOLLEY, M. D,, ETLANTA, Ga. Ofice 65 Whitehall SE OME STUDY. Book-keeping, Business Form;. H Penmanship, Arithfiwfiu, Short-hand, ete., thoroughly taug{n by MAIL. Circulars free. Bryant's College, 457 Main §t., Buflalo, N. Y. ‘“ “oun made b{ our Akoulb.- THE DR. PERKINS MEDICAL CO.. Richmond, Va. MDIIIAA VABIT. Only Certain and OPIUM easy CURE in the World. Dw. ‘Jo L. STEPHENS, Lebanon, P.\I.M’H BUS, COLLEG L, Philadeiphia, Pa, Scholarship and positions, 8510, Write (or civcular, I prescribe an fully en. dorse Big €x as the only QOures in specific forthe certain cure LN R eause Btrioture. . Amsterdam, N. Y. 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