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|[ jyilH THE BOOTS ON
r «mbkabi.k Family Record
p ' Os Deaths.
North Baltimore, O. Nov. 20.-
J, A rcber of this place was
k last evening by a BalUmore
• Ohio train and killed instant-
Arcner is the last of seven
otbe r.wbo, with two brother.-
have met violent deaths.
’ rha ’ first fatality occurred 15
inr< »go, wh-’ii a brother, John
.jierwaa >“ lled at F ‘ ,Btora by a
4 0. train-
'j s mes Archer was lhe next to be
Hed. He was caught under a
]j ng tree near this place in 1887
dcrushed to death.
Tffo years later Burt Arcber
8 ground to pieces at Deshler
/Cincinnati, Hamilton and
yton train.
frank Archer resisted arrest in
jo and was shot and killed by
irshwKratz of North Baltimore.
Lak- Archer was run over by a
40, train two miles west of
in h Baltimore.
Dai, Archer was killed two years
o l,y an excursion train near
iledo.
e>( e Baker, a brother-in-law,
rnerly Marshal of the town was
led by Harry D .vis. a notorious
,ok, who later broke jail.
diuiter McMurray, at.other
)ther-in-lay, a saloonkeeper at
irdstown, was shot and killed in
parrel with a railroad man.
I'he women members of the
nilyeofar have » -caped violent
ith?, but the body of a daughter
o died of typhoid fever was
tin from her grave by ghouls,
.topieotsand deposited in a
■rel in Bloomdale. O.
Joseph Archer is the only sou ol
! remarkable family who has
(died with hie boots on. The
her, John Ar her still lives iu
rib Baltimore,
lipuiijTabulae cure torpid liver.
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: OF NEW YORK •
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5 RICHARD A. MCCURDY K F SHEDDEN g
j PRESIDENT. ’ NEG. AGT. §
• E. F. COLZEY ;
Jj SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE ARMSTRONG HOTEL POME GA- j)
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S OLDEST., STRONGEST AND BEsT. g
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(• If You Contemplate Taking In" ©)
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WITH A NEGRO
TH IS A LAB AM A GIR L E LOP ED.
A tragedy recalled.
SENT TO THE PENN
—
Eob Two Years, Beard, a Bboth
ek or Bl d Beard.
Birmingham, Ala. Nov. 20.
At Carrolton today, Miss Leona
Barnes, an 18 year old white girl
of prepossessing appearance, was
convicted on the charge of misceg
enation after a trialjof two days,
and was gived a two years term in
the penitentiary.
Last March Miss Barnes eloped
vitb Andy Beard, a negro laborer
on her father’s farm. The affair ,
created a big sensation and a mob ,
persned the couple for a w°ek,
finally overhauling them while ,
they were making for Mississippi.
Beard wf s tied to a tree and i
shot to death in sight of th 3 girl,
who pleaded with the lynchers to i
spare his life. When the posse de- t
parted the girl was lying at the i
dead negro \ feet, cry>ng as if her <
heart would break, and professit g 1
her love for Beard.
She was subsequently tiken
home by her father and severely
flogged. A., the recent sitting of
the Grand Jury she was indicted
for miscegenation. On trial she
made no denial, but professed her
love for the negro, who seemed to
have lu.ld a strange charm over ,
her.
Her father employed able law- I .
yers to defend her the plea of in
sanity was urged, but conviction
resulted An effort will be made ’
to have her sentence commuted to 4
a fine, so she can be paid out. The t
girl’s father is a r ell-to-do farmer. (
The negro, Beard, was a brother j
of Bud Beard, who criminally as
saulted a little white girl two
weeks ago and was given the death t
sentence, after escaping lynching r
only by the use of troops to guard j
the courthouse where he was tried, j
Buy a R< me made cigar and be t
happy. q
POWDER KEG
FOUND IN THE COAL FOR THE
AMPHITRITE.
THE MONITOR WAS SAVED
I
By The Timely Discovery Os
The Explosive.
Norfolk, Va , Nov. 20.—The
big, double-turret monitor Am
phitrite, after undergoing repairs
at the Norfolk Navy-yard and
coal yard at Lamberst Point, sail
ed Tuesday for Southern waters,
had a narrow escape from destruc
tion on the heigh seas .
While coal was being transfer
red from the barge to monitor on
Wednesday the coaltrimmers dis
covered a keg containing 25 pounds
of blasting powder in the coal.
How it came there, whether by
accidentor design, is not known,
it was probably accidentally left
in a co il car at the mines,
If the powder had gone into the
warship’s bunkers and been shov
eled into her furnaces at sea it
would have cost the lives of many
of her crew and might possibly
have sent the vessel to the bottom.
NINTEEN MEN.
This Texas Desperado Claims To
Have Killed.
Corpus Christi, Nov. 20. - A
man known in Yoakum as G. W.
Hughes was arrested here Tuesday
night on a warrant forwarded by
1 oakum officials accusing Hughes
of stealing. Soon after Hughes was
placed in jail he informed the offi
cers that his right name was
Starr, and that he was related to
the notorous Belle Starr, the
female desperado. He claims to
have killed 19 men.
A new steamboat has been built
at Rome for service on the Oosta
naula and Coosawattee rivers. It
is named the “Connasauga” and
it is said that it will make regular
trips from Rome to Carters during
the winter and spring.—Ct.lhcun
Times. I
NICKS RECORD
LAWYER HOWE PREPARING
TO SPRING A SENSATION
2ND TRIAL TOMORROW
Farmep.s Prefured For The
Next Jury.
New York, Nov. 20. —Lawyer
Howe is profiting by the suspen
sion of Martin Thorn’s trial, anti
when the case is openet
and Mrs. Nack goes on the stand
he will confront her|with a list of
murders in which she is alleged
to have been implicated.
Since lhe confession tas to her
part in the killing of the bath
rubber in the woodside cottags
men have been at work ferret
ing out every detail of her life
with renewed energy. Many new
facts have been disclosed and
new witnesses sou; d who will
testify that she crushed out others
human lives as calmly and with
less trouble than the affair of
Woodside cottage.
That Mrs. Nack was the direct
cause of the death of a young wo
man who had been the sweetheart
of a wealthy New Yorker is now
stated by Mr. Howe, who asserts
that he intendeds to make the
full story known as the new
trial.
Sheriff Doht, of Long Island
City, sent out a dozen of his
deputi s today to serve 150 sub
poenas on the extar pane) of jur
ors drawn to appear in court on
tomorrow morning for the
second trial of Martin Thorn In
♦ his extra panel are the names
of farmers and tradesmen in the
seven different towns of Queens
county, The second jury is likely
to be made up principally of
farmers who live in the back
woods of Long Island and who
do not read the newspapers to
any extent.
Just received a nios new lot of
felt bats, at lower prices than can
be hid elsewhere. Call and
see the latest shape* out.
Mrs. A. O. Gahradd .
CUBINS WIN
THE WEYLER DEMONSTRA
TION WILL BE A FLASCO.
SCHEME OF REFORMS
Whlch Will Be Considered By
The Spanish Cabinet,
Key West, Fia., Nov. 20 —De-
tails of the assault made by the
Cubans on the town ot San Juan
de Las yeras, Santa Clara Province
prove that it was a Cuban victory
in spite ,of the official Spanish
report sent to New York by direct
cable.
The patriots were commended
by the Ceparo and Alvarez, and
they entered lhe town after
dynamiting the Spanish and put
ting the garrison to Hight. The
Spanish Captain, Marcelino Gar
cia, was killed.
Other important engagements
are reported at Mantua, Pinar
del Rio and Quivican, Havana.
At Sierra Maestra, in Santiago de
Cuba, a valuable S] anish convoy
has been captured by the patriots.
Weyler Hurrah a Fizzle
Santander, Spain, Nov. 20 —The
friends and admirers here of ex-
Captain General Weyler, antici
pating the possibility of the
steamer Montserrat, on which
Weyler is traveling from Cuba,
coming to this port instead of
Corunna, are propcsing to give
him a big reception. The subscrip
tions to the faud for the expenses
of.the denominstration are hang
ing fire in a most discouraging
way. Thus for the sum collected
ammounts to only about “$87,80.
OFFENSIVE TACTICS.
Will Soon Be The Methods Os
The Patriots.
New York, Nov. 20—The Her
ald’s correspondent with the Cu
ban army writes : “Unless Gen
eral Blanco speedily makes more
headway than he has done yet,
autonomy will be a dead letter in
the Cuban issue.
“An assembly of patriots chiefs
was held last week in La Madrema
and there were present General
Mayia Rodriguez. General Pedro
Diaz, Colonel Raoul Arrange and
Colonels Luis Perez and Gayo.
All agreed upon the uselessness of
the new regime. General Rodri
guez anys : “It is necessary that
we shall prove to Spain, to the
island, to the United States
and to the world that the pacifi
cation is lie. We are in better con
dition at the present than ever be
fore and very soon we will assume
the offensive, attact’ng the col
umns, the garrisoned towns and
the Spanish camps.”
No Sign Os Submission.
Madrid, Nov 20 —The Heraldo,
in an article on the Cuban situa
tion, admits that despite the con
cessions which have been made to
the Cuban Autonomist and not- 1
withstanding the appointment of 1
autonomist nnd perfects, there is ’
not a single sign of submisssion '
on the part of the Cubans.
- ——— (
TO BE DEPORTED
47 Austrian Stavb Cutter In
Alabama Will Be Returned.
Washington, Nov. 20.—Com- ,
missioner General Powderly, of
the Immigration Bureau, received
a telegram from Inspector Baldwin
in Mississippi, stating that he had ,
secured the arrest of ninteen others
of the party of Austrian stave
cutters, making forty-seven in a'l.
Inspector Baldwin was instructed
to bring the forty-seven imme
diately to Baltimore for depor
tation to Austria riid tc leave a
deputy to find the two still mis
sing-
MEDALS OF HON YR.
Washington, Nov. 17 —Medals
of honor have been presented to
Captain Samuel B. Horne, Hart
ford, Conn., for gallantry at Fort
Harrison, Va., September 29, 1864
Mr. Michael McCarthy, Walla
Walla. Washington, for gallantry
at White Bird Canon, Idaho.
June 17, 1877. and to Mr. T. B.
Glover. 159 High street, Boston,
for gallantry at Mizpah Creek,
Montana April 10, 1879. and at
Pumpkin Creek Montana Feb. 10
1880.
ATLANTA BUDGET
OUR SPECIAL CORRESPON
DENT AT THE CAPITOL
WRITES GRAPHICALLY
Or Thrilling Scenes Transpiring
In the Legist atutk.
Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 20.—(Spe.
cial Correspondence.) It is not of
ten that it comes into the life of a
man to witness such a scene as
was enact d upon the floor of the
house of Representatives of
the General Assembly of the State
of Georgia, ae that which thrilled
the spectators on last Wednesday.
When the two branches of the
Legislature met in joint session
and listened to the speeches of
Col. N. J. Hammond and Dr. W
Hv Felton iu behalf of the trustees
of the State University.
The fight which is being made
to take the landscript fu rd from
the University, and with it estab
lish a separate Agricu'tural Col
lege in connection with the Expe
rimental Farm has already been
told in these columns and it was
to meet this fight that the spokes
men of the Trustees appeared be
fore the General Assembly.
Even in making the ii vitation
to the trustees to appear before
them there was some little fric
tion between the two branches of
the Legislature. The House passed
a resolution inviting the Trustees
to appear before them in commit
tee cf the whole. Tnis necessarily
excluded the senate, but the Sen
ate passed a resolution providing
for a joint session at which the
Trustees might be heard’
The hour fixed being elevt n
o’clock a. m. An effort was made
to charnge the hour to 7 :30 p. m,
then the attendance upon the
session would, undoubtedly, have
been much smaller, But this ef
fort failed.
The question when was, wheth
er or not the House having passed
a resolution providing for the
hearing of the Trustees in the
Committee of the whole wou[d
concui in the action of the Senate
in providing for a joint session.
The Senate’s resolution was
brougt up in the House and after
some discussion and an unsuc
cessful! effort to again fix the
hour at 7 :30 o’clock, the Senate’s
resolution was passed.
Lorg before the hour fixed the
galleries of the House began to
fill with people anxious to hear
the speech to be made in the in
terest of the University. It is a
fact of passing interest that amon
the spectators assembled were
five ex-Governors. These were:
Gordon, McDaniel, Bullock,
Northern and Boynton, who is a
member of the House making the
five, though he was not, of course
simply a spectator.
Promptly upon the arrival of
the hour of eleven o’clock the
members of the Senate formed in
the Senate formed n line with
the President and Secretary of
that body at the head, and march
ed across the hall ways to the
door of the House.
The door-keeper of the House
announced their arrival and was
directed by the Speaker to admit
them. As they filed into the House
and down the main aisle to where
seats had been provided for them
in front of the Speakers stand,
the Members of the House, as is
their custom, arose and remained
standing, and greeted the appear
ance of their brother law-makers
with a generous applause .
As soon as the members of the
Semite had been seated, ths door
keeper announced to Pres. Berner,
who had become the presiding
officer of the joint session, and his
Excellency, Gov. W. Y. Atkinson
ami the Members of the Board of
Trustees of the State University
werejat the doqr.
“Let his Excellency, the Gov.
of Georgia and the Trustees of the
State University be admitted,”
ordered the President, and at the
tali of hie gavel the members of
the General Assembly arose and
remained standing while the Gov.
followed by the members of tho
Board of Trustees, walked down
the main aisle.
Again the hall rang with ap
, plause, in which the visitors who
(Continued on Last page.)
A WHOLE MAN. .
a A whole man
isano t h e r
name for a
healthy man.
One of the
prime essen
tials of life is
clean I i n e s s.
The first step
iu this direc
tion is a clean
skin. This fact is well known.
Not only should the outside of ths
body be perfectly clean, but the
interior of the body as well. Clean
teeth, clean throat, clean naaal
passages are all requisites of per
fect health. The whole body, as
well as every organ in the body,
is lined with mucous membrane,
which is even more liable than the
skin to become very dirty. The
most frequent cause of unclean
mucous membrane is catarrh.
Catarrh ere tes natural secretions,
even though the cataarh be very
slight, 1 1 this conditicn good
hea’th is impossible.
Dr. Hartman has made a speci
alty of treating chronic catarrh
for nearly 40 years. His great rem
edy (Be ru-na) has become known
throughout the United Stages and
Canada. It is certainly rhe best,
and probably the only effective
internal remedy for chronic ca
tarrh. Its cures are permanent.
The Doctor is also the author of
many books on chronic catarrh.
His laics' book on the subject will
be sent free for a short time by
The Pe-ru-na Drug M’f’g Co.,
Columbus, O.
Ask your druggist for a free Pe
ru-na Almanac for 1898.
MOHAMMEDANS DEPARTED.
No Room for Polygamist in the
United States.
New York, Nov. 20 —The first
polygamists excluded under the
existing immigration laws were
•ix mohamniedans, who had ar
rived on the steamer California,
and who were today arraigned be
foie the special Board of Inquiry
at the barge office here. The im.
migrants declared that they all
believed in the Koran, which
teaches polygamy. They were
then ordered deported.
SAVED HER LIFE
I have had lung trouble, almost
consumption for years. I have
tried many different remedies, but
never obtained relief until I bought
a bottle of Cheney’s Expectorant.
I began to improve at once and
when I had finished the fourth
bottle felt like another being. I
am getting fat and can do 15 hours
work daily. Mrs. Minnie Goldberg,
Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
ires /C’
eer = ~-
be- > (/s►*■
the heat. • ' B
(hires
I Rootbeer Iji
ft cools the blood, sw
w tones the stom-
J ac h , invigorates 111
/(Y the body ’ full y k
/L r satisfies the thirst. S
\ \ z 1 -A delicious .spark- m
V/G I ling, temperance
/f- 'j drink of the high- iff
\! i est medicinal value. Ir
.Male only by VL
The Charles E. Hires Co., Pbfla. FC
j A package makes 6 gaJlooa.
ktoid everywhere.
PERFECT MANHOOD
J The world admire® pej’fect flan! NX
•nuratfc, dignity or m’.Rcuiar development s’ene,
out that wiibtAe and wonderful lore© F nowu aa
SEXUAL VITALITY
vhlchisth** glory of manhood-the pride of
x>th old and young, butthereare thousands of men
ni IT •-■ring the mental tortures of. a weakened
an hood, shattered nerves, and railing
•exual power who can be cared by our
Magical Treatment
jrhich may be taken at home under our directions
>r we will pay R. R. fare and hotel bill® for those
who wish to come here, if we fall io cure. We have
no free prescript .ons, free cure or C.O.D. fake. We
uave 1250.000 capital and guarantee to cure every
case we treat or refund every dollar you pay ua, or
fee may be depoHlted in any bank to be paid u«
when a cure is effected. Write for full particular*
STATE MEDICAL CO.. Omaha, Jleb.
Blood poison
curedin IStoSbdnyg. You can be treated ir
. <>r r4lnir - price undo? same tr ua run
ty. It you pre for to come here we'willeen.
tract top ryraiiroadfareandhotetbills aid
nccbargp.lfwe tail to cure. If you have taken mer
cury, iodide potash, curt etlll have aches and
pains, Mucous Patches iu tnculh, Sore Throat
Fiuiplea, Copper Colored Pools, Ulcers oo
any partof the b< dy, Halror Eyebrows fa Uiue
out, it is thle Second ,ry POISON
we guarnutee to cure. Vfo colisit the most obsti
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* - -...