University of South Carolina Libraries
VOL. XLYI. WINNSBOEO, S. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1889. NO. 12. . A little girl sent out to egg* returned without succcssk comniair,*t\g 'J>*? lots of hens were sauvling &K,hi1 ^oi^g nothing. Arthur McClelliuu a brother of fa n * " - .VJ ?M i CQOQS vrencrau ??? .. Drifton, Penn. He is About fifty did, of medium heigh: and was a X^or n the late war. =? Switzerland wants a naval tiag. As ;, . the country has no seaboard such an ! ensign would at first sight seem rather useless, but it is needed to protect Swiss property abroad. The Federal Council JP are now considering the subject. Speaking of Loudon, Cardinal Man. oing says that one-third of the population could be accommodated in tbt churches if all were crowded, and arguet jthat at least two-thirds of the population never go where they hear the name oi <*od reverently sooken. SBBBHHBK! : London has completed its list of International temples by a Mohammedan mosque?the first ever built in Great Britain. Still the total number of the London Turks is not believed to be over " na^iAn nf SOU, wMie every oiutr gicac Europe is represented by tens of thous ands. With all lier misrule grievazjces, remarks the Voice, the nations of Islam r are, indeed, lessr disposed to show discontent by emigration that* .any other race on earth. ? " -V % ' Our Consul at Victoria, furnishes the cheerful information that the Chinese in British Columbia are diminishing in r un.ber. Of course, says the San -Francisco \ChronicU, this means that they are leavinc the province to inflict themselves on as,-and yet there are people who profess to regard the presence of the Mongolian fig undesirable who strenuously oppose every proposition to introduce a system j of identification which will prevent moonlight immigration. > The "Viceroy of Chih-li Province, Li jr Hung Chang, is a leading statesman in I China. His official residence is hi /K/m+oin Vnt i ATi or cinpp as the veteraa /IKUUMil. A?VV ?Vj w- .... . . missionary, the Rev. Dr. Edkius, waj jassing through this city, he was favored m ^ with an interview with the Viceroy, in m jwhich^ there was much conversation rejBD^Vng Christian missions. Iu reply to "inquiries of the Viceroy, Dr. Edkius BP stated that there -were _540,000 Roman * Catholic converts and 35,000 Protestants in China. , . "Very young ladies wear fichus whici ?~ " ''a iv+tm tr-irJo sstli fihhftns. I UiaUQ VI V/AVAW .??iv?.v f ; / < TChey are joined diagonally at the mid^lf of the back and cross in front, where a 5ew plaits fit them to the figure, and are inatted at the waist line at the back. ? .Among; the novelties in dress fabric? for -the season are ladies' cloths with twoven stripes along the selvage. Black tis th,e usual color for these borders, twa jdrriTvvs ati? fnnr and one two inchdf i W 7? wide, upon blue, green or rust-colored (?. cloths, being especially stylish. WL The Sydney papers contain an account H of .the annexation by the British of the B kjaion and Phoenix groups of islands in the South Pacific. The act was perH^rmed with all possible ceremony, the HnH|HHBritiBh flag being hoisted en eight differbjeknds by the commander of her Matt ship Egeria. The fact that the Kcan flap- was found flvincr on several v-7 * s-r H^iesed islands made no difference shers, but in the opinion of the fto Chronicle, *'rt may slightly B^sant relations hitherto sub ^en the two countries if any [^Preempt at occupation is made. The an/^ PVtmvkw OTA olmAcf nr? auvi. A UVCUXA ^IVU^O aiUlVOb JU line with the other islands north of the equator annexed by Great Britain last year. The Union group is fertile aud populous. The Phoenix islands are of ?oral formation. They contain extensive guano deposits, which are worked by L Solomon island natives for Englishmen." The dairymen of Lynchburg, Va., have ?Tganiztt^hemselves into an association. Accord Lag to the report of the meeting at which this organization was perf v? fee ted, as given by the local press, the main object is to regulate the price of r'll milk. , 1 I "We would like to ask the dairymen, |f| -why not carry your organization further 4">S<w__and-took to more economic results than jp "i the mere regulation of prices? -Why not : form a co-operative association, inspect j milk, deliver it in your own carts j R over carefully planned routes, so that! Bfe balf a dozen milkmen shall not go , ihroujrh-each street? Then as to the j Pmilk left over, why Dot have a creamery toworiiitup into butter and cheese? Every milkman will thus save time, money and energy, and reap larger profits than he is now reaping. All surplus i milk will be use<l, but'ermilk, skim- \ milk and cream can be sold, the butter, i | if carefully made, will bring fancy prices, i and each member of the association will ; have a source of income far better than | the one he now has, where he has to get .out of bed long before the sun is above - Via T?/-n-i7nri anr) ciionrl vnnet of lii? timo n| jantilnoon "peddling." B JJy such co-operation the farmers can ; devote more time to the care and culti- i vation of their lands, and thus benefit all round.?Manufacturers Record. j NORTH AND WEST. XSWST TOMS BY TEIEGKAFH, A CVsuicnsatiw of tho Priccioal in PitTwvat States At jo&astQxva, IV, live more dead Ksiiw wetv 'skc!; out of Stony Creek Kixrr, The tricumal convention of the House i\f IV pu ties of the Protest ant Kpiscopal Church was m sessi^u m Now York city last week. Mrs. Maggie Hayard. wife of a Benwood, W.Ya,, mill worker, gave birth to four children, two boys and two girls, a week a?;o. Mother and children are doiog well. A. R. Peck, confidential bookkeeper in the Chicago office of P. Lorillard & Co.. has disanneared. He has over drawn money belonging to the firm to tlie extent of several thousand dollars. Peck took his wiie and two children with him. Ten jurors have been secured in the Cronin murder case. White Caps tifd David Snyder of Carbondale, Perin., to a tree and whipped him insensible. At Cleveland, Ohio, last night, the wholesale gr very establishment of VYm. Edwards & Co., iu Water street, wag seriously damaged by tire. Edwards estimates his loss at $125,000, -which is covered by injurant. A Democratic Mayor has been elgpted in Indianapolis, Ind., the home of President Harrison. Judge Day, at Auburn, N. Y., hiis filed adecission that the electrical execution law is valid and lias reraa- dc-d Kemmler the murderer for execution. Mr, (J, Caldercn, .the Consul-General of Colnmbiaat isew York, has- been- appointed by his Goverpment a delegate LU lUt luVV*U?MVU?t ~ A lire in Pittsburg, Pa., Monday, destroyed Oliver Brothers' mill, on Tenth street. Loss $250,000, fully insured. A terrific st/yrip.- prevailed on Luke Huron Tuesday". Several vessels have gone down. At Mount Vernon, Iud., George T. Rice, an aeronaut, with Wallace'? circus, made an ascension. As he descended over the river, lie became entangled in the rope, wax dragged through the TI-O+OT- owrl /-IrrtTi'npn ft wi? his hl)T1 dreth ascension. Ex Govenor Perry, of Florida, is dying at Baden, Texas. Returas from Connecticut towns that cast more than two-tliirds of the State yote last year show that the vote on the prohibitory amendment is about three to one agaiiLStjt. E. 0..Leech has been, appointed director of the Mint at Colombia, S. C.. TVw T XX TTimKoil rocifrn^fl V1VC JL/i* U - JL JU.IUI vu.iij J At Syracuse, N. Y., Lester B. Fauli-: ner, a.bank embezzler, has been granted a stay of-proceedings until the next term of Court, and has been bailed in the sum of $20,000. The citizens of - Taylorsviile, Neb., tarred and feathered oict Jason Mitchell and then rode him on a rail. Iuste.-id of resenting this treatment, Jason seemed to enjoy it This puzzled the boys very much, until the old man sued twentyfive of them -for .one hundred dollars damages each, and got it. They now be<rin to see that Jason reaiiy had the O - - - most fun. In the United States Circuit Court At Richmond,, Va., the grand jury found true bills of indictment agaiust A. S. Hooper, of Richmond, and John P. Aberneth, of Petersburg, for robbisgthe mails. A colored ?&an in Philadelphia was killed on Saturday by the explosion of a; soda - water fountain, - which he was ^fiartrincr * OTwo ladies in a buggy weie killed at Sandwich 111., on Saturday while trving to cross a railroad. Pierre, the newly-elected capital of South Dakota, is the cectre of a real CSU&l/C UUUUl. Snow fell at Lockpoft, N. y., Monday morning to the depth of six inclies, greatly damaging shade .aud fruit trees. The storm continued three hours. Shot HiaSleeping Son. In Frankfort' township, Minnesota, James-Dean, a .farmer, shot his con, aged 8 years. Dean had been missing poultry, and a short time before daybreak heard a CGffidOtiop in the hen house. Springing from bed he seized his shotgun, and. running to tne aoor, saw in uie uutkucss something moving about the lieu house. He immediately tired, and was horrified when he discovered that he had slain his son. The boy was a somnambulist. A Tight With Indians. A hot skirmish occurred hear Mount Vernon, Skagit county, iu the new state of Washington on Sunday night, that rpanltftd in the death of one Indian and the serious wounding of another. The tight was on the farm of Henry Kimble, who, with George Lester, was oue of the parties to the affray. About 5 p. m., an ludian met a young son of Kimble, who was taking to market a half dozen pheasants. The Indian attacked the boy, and took the pheasants away from him. The cries of the boy were heard by the father, who came to the rescue, and gave the Indian a sound thrash ing. The Indian then left, but returned ;about midnight with a party of Indians.;' They immediately opened lire on Kimble's house.. Kimble, with his friend Lester, so well defended his place that one Indian was killed and another wounded.-The other Indians are now under arrest. A Training School for Nurses. The training school "Tomurses, an institution of the Johns Hopkies-Hospital, was formerly opened at Baltimore Wednesday. It btgin with eighteen students, who have complied with the necessary requirements, which consist of a pliosician's certificate of good health and a clergyman's certific.-.te testifying to theirgood character. They have also : passed an easy examination in element- ! arv arithmetic and dictation. The} i will Kft TITOav O lin! /l! ! nxii w itvjUiivu iv ? vn? <% vi pale blue gingham, with apron -and linen rollars and cuffs: The students, who will be comfortably lodged iu :: finely equipped building and boarded, will receive iu addition a moa:L during the first year and $12 during the -second year. The course extends ovet tw<> years. RAILROAD CONSTRUCTION IN DIXIE. Opening Up New Sections of the South Por Industrial Advancement. 4 T>T T'flWAtr r^rv/lTW A mr A XTT\ ^tTT V riAI\Lr^K'il^ VUlV^ilAJ.1^ Uiii/ vur cago. ?This railroad is now well under way. W. M. Kenefick, a wealthy Kansas City contractor, has closed a contract with McDonald, Shea & Co. for fifty miles and will ship 30 car loads of stock to Johnson City, Tenn., to begin work j at once. Eighty miles of grading have ] been sublet and contractors are still ar- 1 riving to take the remainder of the work. McDonald, Shea & Co. have the contract 1 for 340 miles. 1 Columbus, Greenville .on> New- ! kax.?rThis company's extension is being j ' pushed. It is a part of the Savannah ana j1 Western system, and $300,000 of the bonds of the Savannah and "Western j were reserved to change the narrowguage road from Columbus to Greenville , to standard guage, and to extend the road from Greenville to Newnon. A surveying corps has been put on to locate the road from Greenville to Newnan, and it may connect with the road at Sharpsbur*;, The work of widening the track between Columbus and Greenville is un- ! rler way, and it is expected that by next ' spring the road will be in operation. Nasiiville Northern.?This railroad ! company has been chartered in Tennessee to build a road from Nashville, northerlv to the Kentucky State line to connect there with the proposed extension of the 1 Ohio Valley road, south from Princeton ' via Hopkins'ville, Ky., to Clarksville, Tenn., and Nashville, thus forming' a 1 through ijne from Evansville, Ind.( to 1 Nashville, i Macon and Birmingham. ?This railroad co in pa oy lias placed a second corps 1 of engineers in the field on the locating survey. The 6rst party has finished .over 4A milnc frnm Aft Thp TYr#"15mi nary survey has been completed. The company claims to have already secured enough funds to construct the road in the most substantial manner. It propos- j es to use 75-pound rails, and will have 5 degree curves and a maximum grading , of 50 feet. No road has'heretofore built ' through the mountains between Macon, fi!:i . and Birmingham, Ala., with less thaii t>?i-fi'8i grade?. Mr. W. Henry Wells, of Macon, is chief engineer, The Atlanta and Danville Railroad was formerly opened between Danville and Milton, N. C., by an excursion of business men from Danville to this P/}int. Eob. Roger Q. Mills HaarjJ From. The Hon. Roger Q. Mills, of Texas is in Washington city for^ the first time since the adjournment of Congress. In conversation Mr. Mills said, that though in the minority, the Democrats were fully conscious - of their power, and would use it. '*We do not propose," : &44 Jj.Q, "that the Republican majority shail pas* a single measure without our, consent. For instance, you may depend up- j on it that the rules of the House will not be changed by the Kepubiican Majority ib any essential feature. We do not propose to permit them to be changed a3 desired by Mr. Reed and others, in any particular feature. Isor will we permit ( any of the proposed legislation looking , to control by Congress of the elections ' for we see very plainly what the purpose of that is. The same can be said of the contest cases that will come up before i Congress. We do not propose to let . the Republican majority be further in- ; creased adlibitum, by throwing out Dem- ' ocratic members, as seems to be the j purpose. In other words, we propose to exercise control of the House just as . much jis though we were still in the majority, because we know our minority .is strong enough to make us the virtual : rulers." Southern IVmers' Alliance. Greenville, Ala.,?Up to date thirteen colored Farmers' Alliances have been organized in this, Butler County, alone, and before the close of the year similar ? - ir? /itr/irr urj*cUllZ.uulvu3 Will uc xi/iixicvi ajli township. The membership is not large, but it is* rapidly increasing, and bids fair to be strong. The white and color ed Alliances are. united in their wai against trusts, and in the promotion of the doctrine that farmers should establish co operative stores and manufacturers, and publish their own newspaper?, conduct their own schools, and have a hand in everything else that concerns them as citizens or effects them personally or collectively. A manufacturing and commercial company, uuder the auspices of the Farmers' Alliance, has" * - ??i.l- - ?( been organized nere, wua a capuai ui $123,000.?Chicago Liter Ocean. Heceiver for the South Garolina ^Railroad, An order was filed in the United Circuit Court appointing ex-Gov. Daniel K. Chamberlain, of New York, temporary receiver of the South Carolina Railway. The order was granted by Judge Bond oil the complaint ox jt? reaencic vy . couna of Montclair, N. J., a holder of the second mortgage bonds. The road has been in default for over a year on all its mortgage debts, and the receiver is appointed in order to apply the income of the road to the interest due on the mortgage debt. The appointment of a temporary receiver is made at once, in order to preserve the property of the company intact until an order can be made for a permanent receiver and the question of the jurisdiction of the State or the Federal courts can De aeierunaeu. Married on His Death-bed, Miss Janet Grace Dalziel, a Boston gnl, was the bride in a deathbed marriage that was performed at the Sturtevaut House New York City on Monday afternoon. The groom was Dr. Seth Eastman, a ship surgeon recently attached to the steamship Finance, and very well known in Concord, N. H. He > < - ' r 1 leilllis OTip SCVeittl WCC&.9 auu ivuiv rooms at the hotel, where two physicians attended him. They found him suffering from galloping consumption, and told him last week that there was no hopes for his recovery. His father and other relatives hurried on from Concord, and Miss Dalziel came in response to a telegram. There had been a romantic courtship between her and the surgeon, who was ten years her senior. She is a fine looking girl, with luxuriant auburn hair, and is 22 * " > ? /vf nrra QVia Tt'QC Jit tached to the young physician, and at : her desire a clergyman was called in and i the lovers were married. Tuesday afternoon the bridegroom died of heart failure. The bride was be| side his bed and held his hand. \ THROUGH DIXIE.. 3TOMAET OF SOUTHEBH NEWS. ] J Eappenings of Spatial Importance Prom ; Virginia to the Lone Star State, NOETH CAROLINA. ! A singular case of drowning occurred ] in Albemarle Sound just outside of Edenton. Two men on the steamer of 1 the Norfolk and Southern Railroad were ' wrestling on the stern of the boat when they lost their balance and fell over-"" board. Before the steamer could be stopped or assistance rendered both were . drowned. One was a fireman and the Dther was an engineer. The Sam Jones meetings have begun' , at Durham. An employee of John Robinson's cir- } cus was accidentally killed at Charlotte ] while the show exhibited there. ( Postmaster Archibald Brady,- of Char- ! lotte, was marneci w canescay to .miss -i Sallie Craig of Gastonia. Governor Fowle delivered the address 1 it the Warrenton annual Fair on Thursday. Active steps are being taken at Ral- ( eigh to form a stock company to build 1 i mammoth new hotel. D. F. TVemyss, the newly appointed ' postmaster for Fayetteville, is said to be 5 Lhe youngest Presidential postmaster in \ the United States. Another large tract of land lying on the Swannanoa river has been purchased , by Charles McNamee, of New York, rep- j resenting the Vanderbilts. , Wednesday night at the |st Presby- 1 teriaii church in Haleigh,: Senator J. H. < Pou, of Johnston, and Miss Annie Wal- 1 ker, of that city, were united. in~ mar- / * [iage. . j! SOUTH OAEOLINA, , I u . < At Davis & Lamar's kaolin mine near Aiken, a mass of clay caved in, falling on Thomas "Wooley, superintendent, 1 breaking his neck and killing him in- < stantly. ^Vboley was 24 years old, and I son of a prominent citizen of Ajken. - 1 A special committee was appointed by ' the Charleston chamber of commercc ^ to take steps looking to the .control of 1 the South perolina railway interests Qf 1 Charleston. " ~ The vestry of St. Mary's Catholic \ church at the port city, have discharged \ Sexton John T. Kanapaux because he made himself conspicuous in uphplding Dr. McDow, the slayer of the late Capt. 1 Dawson. Kanapaux is an especial ad-' } niirer of McDow, and the congregation ' having heard of hig aciiocs, clemauded \ his discharge. 1 Up to date this season the Columbia \ compress company lias compressed 4,88/ ' bales of cotton, against 4,138 for the corresponding period last year. All but about three hundred bales were bought ' there. Every bale so far compressed 1 there for Columbia buyers has been ship- 1 ped direct to European biokers. or spin- : ners. . Col. F. W. McMaster has contributed ' to the Agricultural Museufn at Columbia* a stalk and leaf of tanyah (Caladium'es-' culenturh) so tall and big that" a man ' six feet high can stand under the canopy and be sheltered froiri the rain!' r; The resignation of CoL J..Q. Marshall. ! as colonel of the Palmetto regiment has ' L ? Hftn T? T kilrrf ueeu ttuu wu. Jifcivuvuig has been instructed to issue orders for an election" to fill* tho vacancyv There are nine companies in the regiment? two in Columbia, two in Orangeburg,, two in York county, and one _ each in Winnsboro, Chester and Aiken. ' T. E. Dickson has received his com-"' mission as postmaster at Seneca.' , In the Columbia criminal court W. D. , Kelley, on trial for the murder of George j UcilCLUaU. TT CfcO '' ??v TMiTBSSEE. . f John A.Hart, Republican, was elected j mayor of Chattatiooga and ten out of < sixteen councilmen elected are Republicans. It was the first election in the State under the new or Australian plan, -and passed off very quietly." ? Congressman Whitthorne, of the Sev ontlx district, is dangerously ill. a? his home in Columbia. But little iope of his recovery is entertained. He has been in bad health for a long time. Rev, Oscar Haywood,, a native'of Montgomery county, N. C-, has accepted o m!1 tr> t.W nstxtnrftf-p nf the "Rjmtist i. church at Bristol, Tenn. * The transfer of the*- property the Roane Iron company in Chattanooga*to the Southern Iron company, -was formal- % ly made and the company's- steel plant' 'j employiBg 500 men, is to be put in Oper- ' ation \vij.h9ufr delay*'-The mill is td%Ea|se'J steel in various-forms ffom Southern iron * ores by-the basic-proees?4~ - ? -- The first city- el^tioa'fcfcld an Nash 3>. vine underlinepew^wwcvu j?wb?wbcu off Thu^ay^w^hotit* any disoraer:.at the polls^ Oalj two^rgste w?i e^iaade, the partial af&sted himng f^^lates cut so that--when placed, jover the tickets only tSesames of ibiar^an^rdates 'coiald be seen. These jfetz rfuroished voters unable to read.andf By^them carried into the polling plac^fo.-naark. their tickets by. A very light'vote was-polled, not reaching 5, 0(W6)r" the 7,200 "registered ?<. 'Ait;-isafevhi etraiirlit I VULCIB wW1 v*'ft*JkW Democratic tic^fiigb Vwas Selected, McCarver Leading the |j5t.for Mayor: ymq itf> The north-bound; freighkirain onP^he Richmond-and X>an voile ftailro&ditiroie in two- Thursday "morning alter leaving Bauville, and the reap- section collided wich' the cars-in front; ftsiilting in a bad smashup. Brsflceaiau Farley, of Mapches-ter, was Irilled, and brakeman Owens'* laead was badly injured ? Geoa^MaCa&ip*,.an ow an^jpdf^fcr conduct^ "on' tTfe~Shenan<fo?h Valley Railroad, fell .between two cars-of This train at Roanoke and "wa3instantly, killed.. ' 7 V ... At a meeting of the Mchmond dham-ber of Commerce a resolution-offered by*^ Judge George L. Christian was traani- : mously adopted, to.', the effect' that, ; wliereas, "the route'of" the IntehJationar'" Congress as .now.laid down ignores tha?' city and nearly the whole Southern-; country, a special invitation be extended to the delegates to visit Richmond The Richmond, Marl & Fertilizer Co. hns been organized tc' mine marl, manu facture marl and fertilizers; etc." -- Capital stock is not to lbe less-tifAn $200;00t)~or. more-than $500,000. Charles H. -Simpson is President, and James R. Branch, secretary and treasurer. i i 1 *sz The Merrick Wrecking company, of Norfolk, is at work saving the cotton cargo of the Amy Dera, which was abandoned by her officers and crew. A disastrous fire occurred at Rocky Mount. It began in the Franklin warehouse, and nearly all the business portion <~t the town was destroyed The r>V.iaf Vviiil/^inrfe ? WU-IVA wuiiuJJU^O k/uia\,u *> CIC JJlUi- CJJUU1sry's hardware store, J. C. Morris's millinery store, Mulcare block, Hollo well's jewelry store, and -the premises of Hail ind Binford, J. H. Austin, and Gills <fc Johnson. The loss is $60,000. GE0EQIA Hattie Segors, a young girl of 17, ivhile attempting to cross the railroad track on the Western & Atlantic road iear Smyrna Wednesdav mornincr was struck 'jj the engine of a passing train ind instantly killed. Chairman Sledge, of Atlanta, of the national cotton-committee, with other leading Alliance officers, has recommen3ed a meeting of Cotton Exchanges in St.' Louis Contemporaneods with the National Farmers'-meet;.Dg in December. The receipts of cjtton at the port of Sarannah in one chy were nearly fifteen thousand bales, the largest for any one in fliA a I UCLJ AUL VXl/J O J J.A1C JJUJOJLJCUC * of getting a million bales this year is rery bright. The second Piedmont Exhibition -was opened at Atlanta by a military procession followed by addresses by Governor Gordon, Speaker Clay, Mayor "Glenn, H. W. Grady and Senator Whetfield. Saturday night Mrs. I. GittlesoD, the i wife of a prominent Augusta business j nan, suddenly awoke from her sleep and iroused" her husband, and to him she related a strange dream about the sudden Jeath of her father. While at breakfast ie.next morning Mrs. Giddleson received a telegram from Knoxville, Tenn., j vnuounclng the sud.den death of her fa- [ their, Mr.' Dave Epstein, which occurred j Sunday morning in that city. Xrpu? 1?< Auc JLLUUI mciuiiuma ui -a.tiauwv nave begun using flour bairels made of cotton ludk, a new material impervious to water and which resists fire for a longtime. It weighs to the barrel aboqt fifteen'pounds less than the wood, aud can be manufactured ten per cent, cheaper. The cotton duck barrels can be rolled up into imall space and returned to the mills for creguencuse. me Darrein can inus oe returned its solid goods and thus save space. The merchants 1 on ounce it a success. Governor Gordon commuted the sentence of Isaac L. Sellers to the time he l?as served. Sellers was convicted Oct. 3th, 1885, in Appling county, of attempted rape and was sentenced to teu years in the . penitentiary. The woman who jufiered from the attempt has recently signed an affidavit that Sellars was not the man and that she had been hired by Ben Williams, the real ciiminal, to accuse Sellers. The "Dro&eeutine- attornev and many of the citizens of Appling county signed the petition. FLORIDA. The steamer David Clark burned to the.water's edge at Fernandina, Monday morning. Some of the crew had narrow escapes. At a recent meeting at Live 0 ak, Rev. Henry D. Howren paid an eloquent and touching tribute to his father, the late D T> YT TT^i rnu? 4-U * tvev. xi. ja. nuwrcu. j. ne speaker is tuc Dharlest'on newspaper man who was concerted several months ago. OTEEB STATES. ' There was frost over Middle and North ilabaiua and at Fort Gibson and Jackjon MTss.j Sunday night, the earliest for many years. Fire in Birmingham destroyed several small stores belonging to a Mr. Thomas, of Union Springs. Loss about $13,000; insurance $8,000. The corner stone of the new music hall at l?ew'Orleans was laid with g^eat ceremony, it will have aseating capacity of 6,000 in the auditorium and 1,800 on the stage.-: At JaCkson, Miss., the east wing of the State .prison was burned Wednesday. Loss $30,000.''The convicts were kept under perfect control. The Southern Yellow Pine Lumber Association met .at.Birmingham, Ala., and decided to^advance the price of lumber one'dollar oer thousand feef. The first' train load of cotton that ever left Denison, Tex., filled through to Liverpool, left Thursday by way of Boston. Itrconsisted of twcnty-twp cars. Between * Leadville and Palestine,. Miss., Willie Lott, IS.years old, a mail rider, was held up by - two. masked men armed-with Winchester rifles and - a pistol They possessed themselves of the mail-pouch'and blindfolded the boy, leading him into the woods, where the sack.was cut open and the contents: secured by the'robbers. There were but two registered -packages in . the bags, contents , "unknown. -:The robbers then fiesrplipd tVie hrvc V?nf. Via KoH Tf/V"mir?n(?'r but -a quarter piece. H? was released atid the empty bag was given him. - * Parson Duckworth &? a Horse-Trader. The Rev.-F. Duckworth, pastor of the Methodist church at Union Grove, Wis.,' has been sued by Dr. Clarke, of Chicago. He sold the Doctor a horse f<3r $225, and alleged that the horse wag' sound - and only 8. years' old. On the' strength of this Dr. Clarke bought_ the. horsed and sent sifter it. Tyiien.the animal. arrived at ..Chicago ft was lanae/and'sHowed'symtomfc of being a; "plug,-" 4 veterinary, sinrgeon discovered that the "horse was 14 years old, his teeth had been filed, and he was very lame,'find'gave as his opiuion that the'atritoafhad'been dosed. Mr. Duckworth,* however,- asserts that the horse-had -beeo'driven - too fast "and had been-ieljput'ih'the; coidr Ewpheta'Pfc^'... The Veiled' FrfcphetV parade at St', fcoufc, Mo., was a marked success- arid ^wa8 witnessed by immense throngs of people. The floats j^prcsepted twentyt\vo,iavpnte conu&jQperas.. A - ball was ^meri-injjie .music hall of . the . Esoosi*. .tioirJ^uildiD^, and the scene waa one of spteadOr and magnificence. . Eev.Dr.' Tahtt^e Will k> Abroad The" Rev. f)r.. Taimage announced to his conereirati^n that< he intpnri.-d to start for: PaliStine on October*38th, ;and:-tb begonetwo' months. His object is Co. obtain fresh..material.W use id.a. life 6f"Clinst'whicb he is writing. His> pulpit will be supplied bj ministers from other cities. MANY LIVES LOST. The Boilers of a Passonger Steamer Explode "With Fatal Kesalts. j ne steamer uorcraa, 01 tne unacmia i consolidated line, which left New Orleans "Wednesday evening fortheOnachila river, exploded her boilers at False river, nearly opposite Port Hudson abo?t noon Thursday, causing the loss of the steamer and about forty lives. The Anchor Line steamer, City of St. Louis, : happened near by and her crew saved ; many liyes. The following is a list of the passen? 1 gers lost, so far as known, besiaes the crew of 20 lost: Dr. Atwell, a chiropo- ] dist, and four negro musicians traveling with him: Scott, of Smithland, La.; Mrs. ; Davis, of Stockman, Texas; Mr. Koenich; J Mrs. Huff, of Opeiousas, and Mrs. Kauf man's Durse and eldest child. The Corona was on her first trip of the season, and had but recently been repaired at an expense of $12,000. She was valued at $20,000. Three Million Acres More, The Government Northwestern Commission has accomplished itsjmi^sion and to the great tracks of land recently acquired for settlement from tho Cretks , and Seminoles in Oklahoma, from the , Sioux in Dakota, and from the Crows iff Montana must now be added the largfc areas just surrounded by the Chippewas in. Minnesota, who are to concentrate ' upon the White Earth and Red Lake res- 1 ervations in that State. The required t number of signature?, after hard canvas- 1 sing, were obtained Monday on the last * of the reservations visited, the one at 1 Mille Lacs, and the terms of the act of ( Jan. 14, 1889, are accepted. As nearly'as can bs estimated the Mille Lacs reservations contains 61,014 acrts; the Leach Lake 94,440; the Lake Win- i nibagoshiah, 820,000; theGrand Portage, f 51,840 ^the Fond du Lac, 100r121; the < Bois Fort 107,500. This makes a total 1 in these six relinquished reservations of ^ 734,922 acres. Iu addition, the commitsion secured the surrender of such parts J the Red Lake and White Earth reser- 1 vations as were not needed for their al- ' lotinents in severalty, and the land thus < acquired is estimated at ab^ut 2,250,000 { acres. The aggregate, is therefore, close ' upon 3,000,OdQ acres, and some estimates < cany it much higher, the exact amount * depending on an accurate census of the ^ various tribes ind the allotments -which ( they will require. 1 In any case without the excitement at- 1 tending the acquisition of Oklahoma, ! areas aggregating over 1,000,000 acres in access of the latter have been obtained, 1 and these, too, not in the indian Territo- 1 ry, but in the State of Minnesota1. The 1 facts that the tracks aia-ia different lo- 1 calities has certain advantages, while a ] portion is fine farming land and a portion 1 is covered with, valuable and exten- 6 sive pine forests. 1 Lse's Leniency, t Siruon Peter "Walker, a negro youth . of 13 years, who was to have been < hanged at Chasterfield Court-House, Va., 1 on Friday, for the usual crime, was sur- 1 prised the previous morning to receive a 1 visit from Governor Lee. Seated in his i buggy, behind his pair of favorite gray i pomes, me governor arove out 10 me * Court House to see the doomed boy. < He had received ?o many divergent -re- t ports as toWalker'8 age a ad the circum- i stances under which the crime for < which he was sentenced to ' deatk was 3 committed that he determined to have ] a personal interview with him. * ; The boy was astonisned when inform- 1 ed who his distinguished caller was. As ; I a result of this^ interview the Governor * reprieved the prisoner for thirty days. < ar.d it is believed that he will, before the expiration of that time, commute his < sentence to imprisonment for life. The negroes have manifested unusual 1 interest in Walker's esse. A few days < ago a dclegatien. headed bv the Rev. J. < H. Hcimcs, of the First African Church 1 of Richmond, and composed pf niearly ' all-the. colored preachers in Richmond i and Manchester, called on the Goevrnor > in the boy's behalf. - m Eligible to the Presidency, A. young Western American, who can't 9peak a word of the United States lan- ' guage, arrived at Castle Garden, New ! York on the steamship Amalfi from'Ham- i burg. He told Major Sernsey, the able ' linguist of the Garden, .in dulcet-Bohe- < mian that he was Joseph JNobntne, aged nine, and that he "was going to join his Bohemian mother at Sr. Paul,, his birthplace. He said he was sorry he didn't undertand his own language, -*and he begged to Major to e*cues aim, as he - had spent eight years of his liio .with his grandparents in Bohemia, where everybody,-he was pained to remark, ?poke Bohemian.- He was pleased to hear from th Major that he might aspire with ten million other youngsters to the Presidency oi his native land. Death of the John Brown Jurors, John C. jMcClure, aged 85,-died at his -home near Summit Point, W Va., Monday, after a long illness. By the death of Mr. McClure there is but one juror in the celebrated John Brown insurrection case left living, the sarvivor ..being Mr. Righston, of Shepherdstown, W.Va. Of . the eleven jurors now passed away only one came to a sudden or violent end, the exception being^Valter Shirley, who was throtvn from a horse .a few veara aco and killed. The Nsrth Carolina Sjao4. The North Carolina Synod of the Presbyterian chuVph convened in annual session in the First Presbyterian chiirch at Charlotte Rev. Jno. M Wherry was elected Moderator. There were over 100 delegates present. The Board of trustees of the Union Theological S.-minary of Tirginia reported to the Synod that the i ron'.riburions to that mtVcm for th* n??t. i year were $42,265,92, and that their library has increased to 14,000 volumes. -1 A Cotton Exchange Increases the PinesThe New York Cotton Exchange have raised their fines for disorderly conduct I from one dollar to one hundred dollars, j Under the old rule a member could j punch another member's head and get j off sometime* for fifty cents, but now [ such, action c+n oaly he indulged in by f j the wealthiest members of the Ex- j j change. Denmark ^pow produces 50,1)00,1^' ' pounds of. bufiter in a year, there i5eini . among-4 population or 2,000,000- Ml fewer thaa 900,000 cows. J* KNIGHTS IN LINE. THE PLASH OF LAJTOE ATT!) SAttftTl The Grand Parade of the Knights Templar At Washington-?Exhibition Drill Tuesday morning the National Capitol city wore a holiday garb. Along Pennsylvania avenue every building was lavishly decorated with" bunting &nd suspended across the street were flags, banners and the cross of the Templars. ' It was tlie occasion of a grand Nationil Triennial conclave of the Knights Templars of America, tens of thousands . strong, comprising over 200 commanderies from all sections of the country. The days of chivalry, with all their pomp and display, seemed revived, but the aspect of revival -was one of peace ind civilization, not of war and barbarism. Long columns of soldiery, with their gorgeous plumes and uniforms, galloping, mounted equerries, fluttering a,uners, maruai music, xne snrui ana commanding trumpet calls, throngs of tdmiring spectators?only fields of picturesque tents, mounted battlements and mailed warriors of the middle ages were wanting to make the picture complete. ' .... . THEveBOWDED STREETS. "The streets of the city were thronged iarly in the tadrriihg with strangers and. residents, eager to witness the grand pa-. ?eant.' The Templars formed early in ;he morning at their various headquar:ers; apd "with, bands pj ay ing. marched . ;hroiigh th6 crowded -streets to the place >f starting. " '!" THE GBA27B '-PHOCE38ION. . Twelve divisions of procession formed n the streets adjacent to the capitol and rem these side streets, at; the signal of jommand filed into line and began a long , narch up Pennsylvania avenue, whose sroad surface, was level and smooth, laving been newly laid with asphalt a short while ago. The parade moved over the line of marrh three and a half miles ong, beginning at First and B streets ;ast of the capital, Sad street to Pennsylvania avenue, past the treasury building and -white house to Washington cirile.Here the parade moved into K street and thence to ML Vernon square, [n front of the white house a stand was jrected on tho same side from which the president inMarch last reviewed long colimns of soldiery and ^ivic organizations ;hat formed the inaugural procession. The line was headed by Eminent Sir Knight Myron M. Parker, chief marshal, with 45 aids on horseback and accompanied by the Marine Band, and they ^ere-taerecipient of many cheers as the procession passed the Presidential' reviewing stand the flags were dipped and salutes given the Chief Executive of the aatioc and his cabinet. As Grand Comnander Roome passed, he deferentially bowed to the president, who as deferenaally returned the salute. The Commanderv of the District of Columbia was "followed by New England organizations?all fine looking men. The third division was made up ?y New York State Templars. Comnanderies from Virginia, Delaware, Ver- , nont, New Hampshire and Connecticut J - i-i.? i c* iiaue up Mic luurtu uiviaiuu. oicvcusuu ; jommandery, of Staunton, headed by ;he Staunton band, twenty-five strong, in their bright ^c.d uniform, headed the :ommandene8.' Richmond commandery So. % introduced a variation in the ap-' pearance of the parade. In the i lace of swords they carried long lances tipped d\th silver of a dull hue, and their vesta -nts were adorned with silver facings. Another of the Virginia commandcries ^UllVU iauvw r n4viugwiu. The fifth division was composed of j iommanderies from Ohio, Kentucky aDd | Maine. T*fce grand* commandery of Kentucky, headed by a band placing the air 3f ''Mv Old Kentucky Home,'1 was greeted with chcers which broke out afresh as the DeMolay commaadery of Louisville, whose band was playing the same touching strains, passed before the reviewing stand. The last named commandcry is known among the Templars as. the champion drill corps of the United States, and the grace of its evolutions was greally. cheered. The sixth division contained only Pennsvlvania men. distinguished bv the strength of them muster and by splendid costly banners.- Indiana, Michigan and Texas commanderies composed the 7th division, the -Indiana men all doffing their hats as they passed, the President. In the lead came the Athlet- j ic 4*and. of Philadelphia, playing the j "Star Spangled Banner " lUinoig and California Knights came J next, fel!c?cecU>J the. 11th division com- j poned of representatives rOm-Mina^ota, i PTflinflaa ManjluTi^ NVhrisckft nnrl W?i?t Virginia and t-ie grand coinmanderies of j Colorado end North Carolina. All marched well, and- were applauded as they passed the'stand. The Maryland-delegation was particularly large and imposing. Its approach was indicated by the airs "My Maryland" and '-Dixie:" Over fifteen thousand Knights were in_ line, and the procession was made up of picturesque squares and- crosses and octannPQ 111 V\QQO n?r V/UJ^itV4 KUAVV *** jj/wwwiujj. SECOND DAT. The features of the second day of the Knights holidays was an exhibition drill which was given at the grounds - of the Washington base ball club which Avon the admiration of four thousand spectators. In the evening the reception tendered the Sir Knights and their ladies by President Harrison at the White House was a verv brilliant affair. An Exodus to the West. A letter from Topeka, Kansas, to the St Louis Post Dispatch, says: "D. II. Garrett, of this city, a promiaent col oreamaa, nas inaugurate*! a mammota exodus of negroes to Oklahoma. Al- j ready about 2,000 negroes of this city j have gone to the new country and have i taken claims.- They have formed a col ony in "Western Colorado and have excluded all white setters from that section. A town calleo Lincoln was soon established by the>? and is now one of the most thriving settlements in Oklahoma. OneJcmndwd'families from Kansas City jtift join them on the 8th inst. Au immigration society, which h*s been recj&Ttly established with headquarters / this city, hts letters from Tennessee, Georgia, Alabamu, Louisiana and the Curolinas stating that there will be 2041,.000 emigrants from these States to Oklahoma just as soon as they can gather their crops. POEEKtH foibles. 1 The nephew of the Dublin informer, James Carey, appears to be a: social outcast. As no one wrilT oivf> ur/vrlr V?? . 1-. -HM lias been-allowed to take another name. . B The Pekin Gazette asserts that nineteen hundred of its editors have beea beheaded. The journal in question. rm claims to have been in existence for* a thousand years. The late Wilkie Collins was a victim 9 of the opium habit, and, his: friend Edmund Yates says took more pure laudasum than would have jsaiiiced. to kill a I ship's crew or a company- of soldiers. Naval authorities in England are.panic-stricken by the collapse of both the^ ?N 11-ton guns of the war ship Victoria. while they were being proved. They ^9 H cost $$5,000 apiece, exclusive of $150,- vHj 000 for carriages, mountings, and ma- fl chinery necessary to work them, and threw a projectile weight 1,800 pounds. This result has somewhat dampened the ardor of the advocates of big guns. A banauet in honor of the Czar was .given in the White hall of the castle last Friday. After the banquet the Empe- v* ror acd the Czar attended a gala performance at the opera house. On Sun^_ . ' ?9 day their Majesties took luncheon with the officers of the Emperor Alexander's grenadier guards, of which the Cesr is honorary colonel. Cnriosties of Figures. A problem, that at a glance seems ; enough 'to tempt many a school-boy to ? spend a portion of his evenings in aa endeavor to solve it, appeared recently iaa v: Maine journal, and is as followsr Take f.V?A Tinmlv>r 1i> Ttf jiltinlxr it. htr srtwi then multiply that product by itself, ami you have 225. Now multiply 225 by itself, * J and so on until fifteen products have beea multiplied by themselves in tarn. The' -. Jej question aroused-considerable interest among lawyers in Portland, and their ? best mathematician, after struggling with the problem long enough to see how much labor was entailed on the solutiotti made the following discouraging report upon it: "The final product called for contains 36,5S9 figures, the first of whida are 1442. Allowing three figures to aa ^ inch, the answer would be over ,1070 feet long. To perform the operation would require about 500,000,000 figures. -JM If they can be made at the rate of 100' a minute, a person 1 ^ J day for 300 days in lr would bo twenty-eight years about it. If, in multiplying, he should make a row of jj ciphers, as he does in other figures, the.. . ... number of figures would be more than 523.^39,228.. This would'be "the ptcois^aumber of figures used if the product ' "iljl of the left-hand figure in each multiply . || cand, by each figure of the multiplier , \ ?fiirure; but, as. it is. 'a most ire^uenuy, ana yet not nnrnyr; two |M figures, the method employed to "obtain the foregoing result cannot be aecuif^ applied. Assuming that the cipher used on an average oncc in ten tim 475,000,000j000 approximates the acta number. An Indian Doctor. v Dr. Carlos Montezuma, of Chicago," who was recently given a position at the -B Indian boarding house at Fort Stephen- "\ soji, Dakota, has had a very romantic life v. ^ +V?o Ttofitra oKiliitf m " I OUU AO iUUOLl Uuvxiv V* ?-? man of Indian, race who, through -tha greatest difficulties has won his way tor culture and standing. He was bronght -fl to General Morgan, the Indian Commissioner's attention by Captain Pratt, of ? Carlisle, and in response to a letter, asking him if he would take a place in the ? Indian service, he modestly replied fhat " he did not wish to stand in the position of an office seeker.* Br. Montezuma is a . 9 full blooded Apache, and all his near kin were killed in battle when he was not -? more than four years oldi He was sold for twenty-five dollars and carried ta VyJ Chicago by an Italian photographer, used him dressed in Indian costume, ja with other curiosities to attract patrons. TTo Ttroc nmr>1ftT7e(l in fliid w?T until nfttlfo U.U TT ?viuj?v;vv. .? "-J J fifteen years of age, when he attracted <3? attention of Professor SelemH. Peabody^ of the University of Illinois,at Champaign Tlie interest of the young men at the . , university, especial^ thoW connected with the Young Men's Christian Association, was enlisted in behalf of the homei r J J 1 1- 4,n Anf^ntx " less Doy, suiu uiej uuu?wu& w uuuoj the cost of his education. Ho spent two " years in a preparatory school, four years in college and afterward attended a medical school, from -which he graduated a few years ago. He has built up a good practice in Chicago, winch he was in no haste to surrender, but trie proposition of Com* niissioner Morgan that he go among his own people and .assist in derating them appealed so strongly to his sentiments that he" decided, to accept it.?Button Post* Y-||h Collecting Empty Bottles:* > One of the big bottling companies hew keeps a big wagon in constant use for /vf cmnfu Vvn+f1p? f>!pT+*if?? brands of bottled beer is sold by men who compel the return of the bottles; } ."'5 but wine bottles, ale bottles, apolinarw bottles and other receptacles for drink are not taken back. This big wagon is sent around for the collection of these empty bottles, and so much per dozen is allowed for them. If the temperance organizations which have been collecting startling statistics to be posted in tie .^1 street cars as " to a warning to drinkers, / would onlv keen a tab on this wagon ther / would gain a better idea of the amount of / intoxicants used in Chicago. Prom on*'" smaH place yesterday it carted off over seven hundred bottle as the result of less than_ a month's business. These empty bottles are sorted and sold to bottlers when they are not needed bytho firm which buys them. In itself this it quite an industry.?Chicago Herald. mm Largest Structure Erected by San. | The great pyramid "of Ghizch is tfcft largest structure of any kind ever erected by the hand of man. Its original dimea- - j fcions at the base were 764 feet square, and its perpendicular height, in the highest point, 48S feet. It covers over four acres of ground, and has been estimated to have cost not less than $145,200,000. Internal evidence proves that the great pyramid was begun about the year 2170 B. C., about the time of the oj birth of Abraham. It is estimated that ? V ft Art AAA j f 1 .J. , aDout 0,vuu,uuu tons 01 jiewn swucs were j used in its construction, andtiie evidence ! points to the fact that these stones were I brought & distance of about 700 mile# I from quarries _in Arabia. - - iiimi?