Banks County observer. (Homer, Ga.) 1888-1889, January 16, 1889, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

J:>o. Bap.ton, - - - Editor. A Violent fetiu qu*. twcK h*h teii N w V-aiL Dij in I'lavtn, Saxony, and j s *i, in'*. Tij V* (■ i• o * *>ji wi t , ob In eon. c * nation*! o>gi.iaa-h.n, if Ojsiy iao,*> B*iUe> jt.Jn* in w :b ’hem. llahote io lumi ir nt<! rndor ed bun in in I'-jr n the fou It-ru ‘i**leg'Kr s j oniiion iu Hdirn-ou' cab at. Tha or in *uu*> f. stain* a 1 19 sc©itoo* piijl ill 'h Anni!|m parr.r. Ti e man that wrote it appear ed to fee enffc'ii? for b.^r. A. II potimaK o.g II ;iu le* lo "ti e dm.OO.atic prin-ftand it* rougtvcrap e ex.'‘ I) i a ! i> val ns tl.e pr** may be, ll harrfly *p**>re!i tbi*. T wo Jtsimii *ifj'er din. a* Atone mason*. have hnn r rested at Ivan-Cvor,.d t Rnudi. l’Una of Ituisian toitretifu were foetid in their pease'-dm. B<imo oi i t u-puuiicti> are fining •!l they can to keep Harrison from giving B:i lie n pl4t_ m hie cabinet, but Jimmie ii likely to come in after the row i* r. An ci)t>tuu> iatH.hlioe occuricd at fhfl nio'itk <>l tt railw-v tuurifl be Iwreri .•'t 11 api a?l aud Caunpß, Frame nn<l ii.e iiiic blocked in ocii(*qi;ei;ce Nj mm wth *• jur<‘f! I>v th* accident. A daring ...: U r li Ui Votllfl'y oc Q’red in the money order department *>f the I ditnapoiift, In i , pen efrier, A r J.ditSOii in übiet in tlifl motov *r-.t:r i.'op-r in -1 t. Tno il ievei bccur d about $2 5(0 Mr Coin i,, (Jm.'l .Josi ico of Mon tana, has tot varied his to l*res. (.’I vt-let, *, li idiot; i|.e iluliesot lb* o pjoe t< sy i.uidt nsotuc. Judge McCoanoii vc- > ppaiuted from Too* ,&**>- abe u ’ mvo >, :> l’ >. Din H i:l; i, aii age t\ vuobiwin . liv ins; near r xrrolt, Me., m t fin* to build ingjs lt* ,*2 mi pied, killed his colt aid Mfetiiid Lllftx'it slightly for times, to k l’t i< grpen and went nto 1 he Wood * i fi and i| ikl , '1 he ste.mu ba.-ioi oi 100 rail Riv er iit.i, was t uitied at her dock in N-Wjni, 11. 1. A'looet all her joo-- oßip., ‘eft ■ ;>• sieattter, and the few w'"o tit o„ loud got tiflf safely, tonr.c losing to< r v'o’hing. Tha steamer XT** a total los2, aud tre company es t ui *■.- it* lows nr $5 m* o jj. Imioerisitiy <u ei Ue 4 h of March the presiil. lit end Ms. Cleveland will v.sii iJitflalo for a Idw weeks, and 'ion tetniii t> o‘fi rgetovrn Heights, h re they oil! ibkn a house fir a jn imauent residence. Off view is for mb, at and kav rt ready been placed in ibe hinds and a real estate agent, jvbo >n looki for a r■nrofi*r. L is now iiioi.g'u Mm in', cal post xnvit'r t A 'antit will try to till a’l tin p< 8' < fii es iu hi j r sdict 0:1 wi h r pub rc tin. There aio sums who me Mill holding #pfoirt'rneuto undr his p t'ti:- of over uioo years. Yet they t ain to le tieir.ociats, Aferawblo tlungs may change with (ha Atlanta in :io.! jr. By th<* espe a.ng ot a boat in the O iio : ivv", 'ix porsors were drowned. A i iv t nfoitutr <t< a were nog roe-. They had been to a dance ewd vvcie j. unirg home. At ti e same lime t■< o Rtfuiuprs, the Telegraph and the Ho Lon, wsre rasing up the river, aid the heavy waris produced thereby iaj sized tbe too heavily laden boat, ami the tix occnpautß wero drowned. ■ 1 fce third nrirder inyuery witbii a ir omh, esnte to light in Rrmlngham, Ala., on New Yen's Day. Near Spake nrnes, four miles from the city, ffine hry* banting in the wood* found the de*i body cl a well dteseed yooeg men roiun<a]eii in a pi)o ot brash. The man bad cvidi-nily boen dead rev;ra‘. day#, as derjoinpoeitioo had et ip. .Several pistol wound* wore found on Iha body, and a pistol wit h every chamber empty was lying a short die tauco away. The peasants in ilie vicinity of Din fanegho, in the coenty of D tuegd bare armed thsm elvea, fortified their h-nnscs, destroyod the bridges and blocked the loeda, in leadiness to re sist the evictions which will be at tropied. Troop* and poliie on duty in the region march with difficulty, sod the appearance cf the district a <hat )f a c*untry where war is going or.. A commiseary wagon was lost onNiW Soar’d D ay while crossing the temporary bridge. Rhode Island people are raising numey for * monument to Thoa. W. Dorr, hero of the Dorr war, and leal er io t e muyecuert to Hibttitire a constitution lor the King Hilaries • barter. Dorr was ejected govern n of ifhode Island ia 1841 by the op ( ,< n O'UH to the old charier and, although defeated aad imprisoued by Gov King a rut his parry, hie ideas finally prevailed. The extension of suffrage tiy the Bourn Ant has started the idee o' a monument to the l-ad.-r ot consti tii'ional lib-r'v. SLAIN Isi lUE FaLL OF THE SILK MILL During The Cyclone at Heading. The 1 iist of Fatalities Now Reaches Over 100. Reading, Pa., Jan 10.— There ijmourning this morning and sor row in many households in Read ing to-day A pall ofdealh hangs over the city. Fathers and moth ers and sisters, relatives and friends, are grief stricken over the work of last night. Over one hundred spirits are hnshel forever in death as the result of the wreck and ruin wrought in this cify by the storm of last night. The cy clone left the entire city in dark ness, which was only relieved by electric lights and huge bonfires which shed their lurid glareontho scene of death. All night. long bravo and will ing hands assisted in the work of the dead, The disaster is fully as bad as reported in these dispatches last night, The list of fatal cases will fully reach one hundred and may be more. Hospitals and un dertakers establishments are filled with victims. Physicians are all busy aiul many private houses have bean opaned lor the accom modation of the injured. When j the first gray streaks of early mor ning appeared it portended a beau tii’ul and happy day but not for the grief stricken residents of Il\ad-. ing The smiling sun appeared jand everything was directly in J contrast wit h the fury of last- night. Then everything war. dark, dismal and foreboding and finally wound up in the sacrifice of one hundred lives. , I To-day all is again bright and glorious in the Heavens, as 1 hough moc ring the work of last n ght. The ruined silk mill presents a scene of desolation. The Polish church disaster several months age was one of the most horrible acci dents that had startled the commu nity, but the Joss of life by that fa tal cave-in of tiie floor when the dedication ceremonies were being conducted on a quiet Sunday af ternoon sinks into comparative in significance when placed in a par allel with the awful visitation of last evening Wards of sympathy and heartfelt tokens of condolence will doubtless not be wanting, but (hy will bo meaningless expres sions if unaccompanied with on;e substantial oiler of assistance to some of the families who have been so suddenly and heavily stricken. For the purpose of eff ering tln’3 needed aid, Mayor Ken ney at 2 o'clock this morning is sued an apeal for help. The statement of eye-witness. The only eye-witness to (ho disast er, 60 far ns is known, was Mrs. Genimil, residing at 1150 Mulber ry street. At about twenty minules of 6 o’clock, she said to a reporter, *ri heard an awful crash, and thinking it was anew house wh'ch is being put up alongside of us, ran to the front door. A great cloud of dust hung over the silk mill and 1 could hear the crashing of the timbers ami the roar ol the falling walls. The next moment 1 saw the whole mill a great heap of ruins from the midst of which came sucii awful moaning and groaning and terrible cries as I never want to hear again. Not a soul did I see coma out of the nidi and it seemel many min utes to me before anybody came to thespot. I stood therein the door like one struck dumb, until my husband came running from his work ” Teams of every description-cm nibusses, funeral coaches, fire wa gons, hospital vans, and private ve hides, were pressed into service and were running rapidly to and from the scene of disaster all night long, bearing the bodies of the wounded, dying and dead to their homes or to different hospitals. From the statement of some ol those who escaped from the build ing, it appears to have gone down in an instant. There was a loud crash of breaking: of limber and persons in the mill rushed toward the main doors. A good many of them succeeded in getting out, while four girls saved themselves by jumping fram second story win dows. The first rumbling noise was fol lowed instantly bv the falling ol ihe building, the upper stories go ing first with ifs human load. Had it not been for the tart that but few of Ihe hands were on the third and fourth floors at the lime, scarce ly a life w; uld have been saved Mr George Giimshaw. one of (be proprietors of the mill—who was in the office at the time and barely escaped with his life, having re ceived several severe wounds on the head—slated that there were, to the best of iris knowled;. e, aboui 275 persons, principally girls and toy?,in the establishment at the rime ot the occurrence. Gunnels, Power & Cos., a v - GROVE/*-^—, -a DEALERS IN Plantation Supplies. SoAACVJ Q*\A& (%V*&V*Q X 9 We Keep io stock a fnll’eappljr of good and fresh goods. We can not b* surpassed iu Quality an! Dnraoitity. We buy at lowest loirket figures; we defy competition in prices. We want orly a living profit on <ur sales. We lo not claim to be YanderbiUs, nor do we wi.-h 'o accumulate their fortune*. We are rroeivins daily,, a full snpplv of o-r Cctomers ev r\ day wants, jpy* Country Produce Taken in Exchange at H'gbesi M rket Prices. Xmas Announcement. ATHENS BOOK STORE. BOOKS:—Onr stock of Chtff'inas IGoks has been MicUxl w i'h great Cate slut uilt, v> believe, ttnet the t;ihi e> ot onr many .h int*. Youi g people's bonks *ithont end---iroja ive cenia to Libtarieß fif ed, *l*llr*. Ait B .c;ks Our book table contains many choice art book* up propriate for CliriM mas gifts. We b.-.ve abo added laigely to onr general ~.ock ol Lneraiy Wate, and we brtieve we ctti mil all requiroTiat ts i u ’he aay of bookf Lr presentation. We have aI; r’<* I>ck t< n i Stai dard Auth na in net* r>tatliti<* irot" live >o ioity dollar*. Mtn oi them 've *ll r at about ra i price. Bl BLES —Pocket Bibles, Pew* Bible.* Family B hies, , stamenta tud hymnals, t>e.t* oi | raver books and hynt,n*. A ffne cteu<ion oi the halß us Uxu.rd Ttaebet-s’ B b'ee. Tre i-mallett B it le n* iito world, a z> oi a pock t te*ian>eut. Albums —*>ur photograph aloams t<eon selected itoin vs inns luai.u as one*, both a: home and abroad. In leather and plush goods,in bis line wo baveau x-e liet asset ttnerit, including ull the nve.*t designs in hape, style fetid get up Pi ices on qu.tt'crH troai one to twelve dollar*. Oar bow room abi. v e tbe stcreorby the sstue stairway as tlte Young Men’s Chut inn Association rooms, has been placed under the chatge <tMi s Amu Pat man, wbo during the Christmas season, will he aided by o'her young ladies. Dolls, Building Blocks, alphabet blficks, games, tool chests, tin t.- ys, dinner etc, lirque, ffgutes, vases, bronze g"<(Js, ete , velocipedes, <xp css wagooe. Frames, eu* Ctuistmas car is. 5 cent* to 6 Jollms each. For 25 ;ents we will mail seven 5 cent cards, or three at 10 cents For one dollar we mail 30 at 5 cents, or 14 at 10 eeuts each. Mail order* prompily attended to. Space U iLcitc ! or we in ght mention ot* ei goods. D. W- MCGR.EGOR. Si, CO- Wholesale and Retail Dealers i* ILoka a tut Siatioutty, Athens, (Jcurgia. Stock Larger Than Ever! Stoves! —Stoves Bought by Car-Loads!— ft And Prices That are Bound to • Attract Jones’ Standa’d Tinware. Boo&Dg, Guttering end Job-W-rk. Call or Write for Prices. E. E. Jones, 209 B’oad St. ATHENS.