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' * ' " ' " "* " -^2 " ' " . .: ;..^m VOL. XLVL WINNSBOKO, S. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1889. NO, 18. V; . " ? - -3r_'j?, American machinery is in demand in Mexico, particularly com mills and all kinds of agricultural machinery. It is a remarkable fact that nearly ninety per cent, of the professional gardeners in this country are of foreign birth. The majority are from Germany, but England is a good second. One of the greatest drains from the forests of this country would be checked ing the Engineering and Building Record, is ^tt-1 ^ r*r,a kt- m tlffol t?> ovauv" ivugvu wj vv ? v originated in this country at the time of the Philadelphia Centennial, in 1876. The circular tower then proposed was to have been 1000 feet high, 150 fcst in diameter at the base, and thirty feet at the top. It -was designed by Clark, Reeves & Co., of Phoenixville, Penn., and was expected to cost Si.000,000. . There are between five hundred and six hundred Chinamen in Sunday-schools and missions in New York city. They are there chiefly to learn to talk English, for there are onlv fiftv-three of the num. ber who are out-and -out Christians; tbat is, members of the churches. A religious worker among the Mongolians says the church people have got to realize that the Chinaman is a pretty hard subject to B christianize. MB , In an address before the Boys' and Girls' National Home Association, which was recently in session for three days at the National Capital, Mr. Alexander Hogeiand, President of the association, made the startling statement that there were 60,000 boy tramps in the United States. He advocated the establishment of a reg"-^-i&sicrion system by which boy tramps might -be found and sent to farmers who were willing to employ them. Kansas City has been considerably stirred up of late by a number of smal fires of undoubted incendiary origin After ar?jnvestigatiorj;he police have dis covered thattSey"were due to a band o , , -schoolboys ranging in years from elevej to fifteen, who stjled th?mselves '-Cap tain Kidd's Pets." The organization wa perfected nndor the rigid code prescribef t>y the yellow bocked novel. Its mem bers swore hideous and blood curdling oaths never to reveal the secrets of thei band. Everything -was done according to written orders, signed in blood or rec ink, as the case might be. Five of th< young desporadoes were arrested, one o whom proved recreant to his oath anc gave the whole thing away. The San Francisco Chronicle considers ihat "the boldness of Chinese pirates in Tonquin does not speak well for the French administration. When these wretches make raids on villages and at:ack even Europeans in junks, it is high { Ome the home Government should do something to suppress the pest. It is a singular ccmmentary on the spread of ^ood weapons that all the pirates in the Orient are armed with the best breechtoading rifles and know how to use them, rime was when these fellows were dangerous only when at close quarters, because their antique weapons were more >ften fatal to themselves than to their snemies. Now all this is changed and in :he Chinese seas as well as among the South Sea islands, nothing satisfies the lative but the most improved rifle." ^ An American hotel, run on purely American lines, with colored cooks and waiters, Boston beans, green corn, terrapin soup, canvas-back ducks and all the other modern improvements, will be opened next year in London. Waterloo House is to be the site of the new enterprise, and already the deposit money for securing the option of the lease from the Crown has been secured, and many powerful American and English capitalists have promised their support to the venture. The hotel is destined to eventually pass into "he hands of a com_pany, but it will net be offered to the public^ttntil the structure is complete and all the other arrangementsattecded fc>. The site is Crown land, and cannot be purchased in fee simple; but the pro- ( jectors have already been conditionally i promised an eighty years' lease. New York is beginning to have a tastr j a wasi oan r. raucisco ana rornana ana 5ther Pacific coast cities have passed through within the last twenty years, in the upbuilding of a Chinese quarter, where these people of a strange civilization, using a language unintelligible to the eye and ear of our race, herd together and defy Caucasian rule and in- ! 3uence. Having once planted themselves i in a olace in this wav it is almost im- ! i possible, declares the Washington Star, j ? root them out. The}- remodel a neigh- ; sorhood in their own fashion. White ! people will not live among them, so that j property values and rentals thereabout are 1 wholly at the mercy of the Chinese themselves; and. when means have been ! iiseovered of foroiui? thom to move. ! * -he whites will not inhabit the same , iwellinar? i |THROUGH DIXIE.! SUMMARY OF SOUTHEB5 NEWS. Happenings of Special Importance Frcm j Virginia to the Lone Star State. NORTH CAROLINA. Justice A. S. Merriinon has been ap- j nninteJ bv Governor Fovvk'. Chief Jus- ' tice of the Supreme Court of North Car j oliua to fill the vacancy caused by the j death of Ghief Justice Smith. Justice! Merrimon served one term in the United : SupenuRuT^Rmcer The estate is estimated at *lo,000. The Albemarle Presbytery, the newdivision formed by the North Carolina synod, met at Goldsboro. It appears that the students oi Wake Forest Baptist college are an unusually lively lot, but the experience of some of them crops out the wrong way, and it becomes necessaiv fur the college to get on without them. During the last few weeks fifteen have left the institution by request, expulsion, or otherwise. "Win. T. Dortch, one of the leading meu of the State, died at Golds- i boro Friday of beat disease Ue served as speaker of the House and President of the Senate,and was also a prominent mem ber of the Confederate Senate. The young ladies of Peace Institute, Raleigh, will on December 1st. issue the first number o' a new monthly inaga j ziue. At 1 o'clock Thursday a fearful storm j struck Newberne, coming from the south j west. The plate and pulp factory oi | S. H. Gray, in which there were sixty ! hands, was leveled io the gi'ouud. One j employe was instantly killed, another! mortally wounded and eight others in- I jured. The factory was valued at 000. The damage to the house is estimated at $$,000; to the machinery not yet known. The wind blew a perfect j hurricane, unrooting Louses, blowing j down chimneys, trees and fences. The j damage to the town while not deiinitely j known is very considerable. .SOUTH CAROLINA. Judge Norton has rendered his dccis- ! ion in the recently heard case of Miller j Bros., of Columbia, vs. the South Caro- i lina Railway Company for damages I for cotton alleged to have been shipped | from Columbia to a point north and lost j or changcd in transit. A jury trial was j waived and buth sides submitted the i case to the Judge, who rendered his de- j cision in favor of the defendant, but ! gives no reason. Oti Wednesday the annex to the Cot I ton Seed Oil Mill and Fertilizer Com-1 paoy, at Hock Hill, S. C., containing] about live hundred tons of cotton seed to j be usid in the mill, collapsed, and a larger part of the building fell in. Loss ! about ?500. It is ascertained that over $115,000 ! have been subscribed "by Charleston j merchants to the buildiDg of a new line ; of railroad from that point to Augusta, j Tkn A/<f ir? V*/>i r\ rf minTn/ifiroil Kt? I JL lit AO i-'UUj; vvi \.v*. *.'j \s. x . j Huntington. The road, is to be built ; nearly parallel with the present route of \ the South Carolina railroad, and will! run direct to Augusta. The mysterious steamer with the ocean j cable which was expected to laud, at j Charleston Monday failed to materialize. A fleet of tug boats and pilots were out at sea during the day looking for the visitor, but nothing showed up. No definite news .-can be obtained about the matter. The impression prevails, how- j ever, that the Commercial Cable compa- ! ny will start their cable at Charleston and lay it to llayti. The public is very much excited over the rews, "but is, as yet, entirely in the dark. * There were received at Charleston a i box of bolls raised in bumter county, all j containing cottou seed without a fibre J of lint. The new plant, which was j bred in Spartanburg county, will, it is asserted, produce from oOO to 400 bush- j els of cotton seed without lint to the acre. The bolls sent are tilled with seed which are . perfectly clean, and which show no signs of lint. Every boll contains as many seeds as it can hold. The bolls are the size of the average cotton boll, and every individual seed is as clean as a Boston bean. The importance of this matter may be understood when it is remembered that there are thousands of cotton oil mills throughout the South, and the propaI srators of this new cotton plaut assert ! that at the present prica of cotton secrl | an acre of the new plant will yield from i 300 to 400 per cent, more thau an acre ! of cotton. GEORGIA. Senator duBignon has entered the i general counsclship of the Plant s\-stcn> j and the Savannah division of the SouthI em Express company, Judge Walter j Cbisholm is head of the firm. Robert I Erwin, Senator duBignon and Walter : /II l.. i T? ii... ^i.I. i ? t* v>nisuuiui, .jr., arc me uiuli members ux ; this legal lirm. The Union Street Railroad of Atlauta, j with its rights, franchises and privileg- ' es, has been sold to II. K. IInutcr, of j I New York; consideration, $900,000. , , ; . , i bavannah h?.s not yet given up a 1 hope of getting a navy yard, liutchi- j. son'sisland, or a great slice ox it, oppo* | | site the city, will be offered the govern- j j ment free. At a meeting of the business men <;f | ! Brunswick held at the board of trade j 7..-l k i k. .. i [ I Willis ) UUJ^t -V. o. ViUWlll, Wilb iiUJllI- | j aated fur mayor. A little six-year-old son of Marshal ! Wiggins, of Buena Vista, tilled a hole in j the'ground with powder and touched it i off. lie was so badly burned about the j face and Head that he died. An election took place 31<?nday .j Rome and South Home on the question of annexation. Koine voted overwhelmingly for annexation and Sou'h Home voted, by a majority, the same way. This will add fully fifteen hundred to Rome's population. The new territory will be j known as the Jifth ward. i>y unanimous request oi comnmtee of bondholders, the sale of the Home and Decatur railroad has l>ecn postponed until December ISth. IS?'.). Sale will take place at that time by Receiver K. T. Dorsev in real estate exchange of New York. In the past r.in?% mouths Atlantians have built for themselves GS* h<ur,es at an average cost of $0,000. V Charles H. Wells, editor and proprie- I lor of JJin'f, a trade journal of Atlanta, died at Saranac Lake, N. Y., Wednesday. He was 2'J years of age. TENNESSEE. Governor Tav lor has received petitions from :i,000 prominent citizens in Esst Tennessee ami letters from a majority of the Supreme Court judges,requesting him t<> pardon, or commute the sentence of death pusr-ed on the five Barnard brothers. who killed Henley .Sutton, in Han cock county, last January. After a careful examination of the record, the governor lias docided to commute the sentence of all, and pardon some of Rial meeting of the East 9 Bfe and Georgia railBplle, the following Bercclected: .Tohu H. In^Hj^H^nrl Thomas, Charles M. McS -i^-^-Iohn G. Moore, I homas IN. Logan, Luv\\ttw->r%^MuIM?rfivi, W. S. C'hisholm, John Greenough, Wm. L. Bull. George Coppell, John H. Hall, Evan P. Howell, George S. iScott and George J. Gould. No other business was transacted. At the session of the National Prison Association at Nashville, C. H. Reeve, ! of Plymouth, lad., lead a napcr advo eating laws prohibiting marriage among the criminal classes. The committee of live of the Teabodv Educational fuud visited the Nashville I normal col lego. When Chancellor Payne I yrose to read the Scripture lesson there were sealed on the platform, besides the | members of tl.e faculty, Senator Gibson, Bishop Whipple, Mr. Green and Gover* j nor Porter, members of the Pcabody ! board. Dr. Curry, general agent of the board; State Superintendent Smith, I Judge Reese. Mr. John M. Bass and Mr. j Ed. 1 licks, of the University board. Chancellor Payne said he greatly regretted that illness prevented ex-Presid(nt , Hayes from being present. In a few pleasant words he introduced Bishop Whipple, of Minnesosa. who made an eloquent talk. lie was followed by exGovernor James 1). Porter, Dr. Green, of Boston, and Dr. J. L. M. Curry, ugent of the Pcabody educational fund. The committee visited all the class ctvwl Ti'?,vrt itm/.li infnrocf^il Tn IWiuOj aii' i >UJV/ uiuva iuvvi jl ^ the afternoon they visited other schools iu the city. At night a banquet was given iu honor, of the committee from t lie Pea body bjard of trustees at the Duneau hotel. VIRGINIA, The police census recently takenj gives Norfolk a population of 31,300-. The secretary of the Treasury has au thorized the proper authorities at Norfolk, to proceed against any persons who are concerned in the alleged attempt of English shippers to bring contract lai ...... r t -> a . -vr oorers lroiu auroau _>unoiK. The body of the man found in Hunting Creek on ilonday eveniug near Alexandria. has been identified as that of Thomas Cant well, of Williamsburg, N. Y. On the second day of the Petersburg premium tobacco fair, sales of the exhibited tobacco were begun. All bright leaf was sold, some bringing as high as ?153 per 100 pounds. William Cameron bought nearly every lot. A good quality <?f dark tobacco was also sold at good pi ices. All sections of the Slate and North Carolina were represented. During the year ended October 1st four hundred ahd twenty shbq> were killed iii Augusta county_ Va., by worthless dogs. Claims amounting to $1,347 were put in for the sheep, and the county supervisors allowed $1,134, which the t tx navjis will have to foot. It is doubt ful if all the (logs in Augusta coitntv ah; I wo: th the amount they have inflicted oh the tax payers this year. Dipthciia is reported in epidemic form in the neighborhood of Blue Ridge Springs, Bedford county, and a good deal of excitement prevails. So f;?r $00,000 of the $100,000 desired Uas been subscribed to th? stock of the Roanoke Engine and Machine Company. During the week ended November 10th 42,572 tons of coal were .'hipped by the Pocahontas Coal Company. The news from Roanoke: "Winter has set iu in earnest with us at last, having made her debut with cold winds, cloudy skies and skurrying snow flakes. A meeliug of the stockholders of the Richmond, Frcdricksburg and Potomac R iilroau company was held at Richmond. Tlw? ,if l1i*? l?r>onl r%f /IJ r\rc 1 showed the operations of the roild for nine months ended June :30, that being cad of the present fiscal year. income was $o02;4:}-l; expenses of transportation ?:;07,0G8; interest on bonds for niDe niontlis & 1.171. Dividends on general stock for nine months *20.271; net profit $i:37,S2:j. FLORIDA. William D. Hill and Elisha F. Hartof New York, with Morris F. Knudson and Robert AV. Patterson, of Brooklyn, John T. Wilson, of Montreal, Micaj i T. Singlotun, ot' Tailcdc^a, Ala., and George W. Scott, of Atlanta, Ga., are Trustees of the Peace River Phosphate Company, incorporated with $1,000,000 capital. It is to operate in Arcadia, and other plact'S, in the mining of phosphates and other minerals and -metals and manufacturing The Hon. W. D. CMpley bas resigned the chairmanship of the State Democratic executive committee. He gives as h:*s reason for Jits'aciion that he is unwill~N4?t<> have the appearance of jeopardiz ingfa-^Trfercst-, of the party, or to retain a position, any advantage from the retention "f winch he docs not want. The resignation was brought about by Mr. Chiphy's having been drawn into a discussion with United States Senator Call, which he snvs. was undesired by him, -.1 f ~ uiuui;:i uuuvi me ?;iicuuistanccs. The /olio wing was received at Jacksonville from Washington Friday night: "The fittorney-general is informed that the ttial of cases of illegal frauds in Florida at the l ist Presidential election ha? already resulted in three convictions." No conviction has so far been securcd in the United States court in F'.oriu t. Only one clcetion case has c-inie to tri il. and in that the accused pleaded guilty to two indictments. Sentence has not yet been passed. The grand jury has brought in a large number <>f indictments, upon which nearly thirty arrests have so far been made, I the accused furnishing bail in every instance. The case now on trial, that of T. W. Ewan, of Dade county, is based on charges of violation of United Stites election laws in lssti, when ex C? >n?ress-1 111:1:1 D-iU^h'-rty secured a re election in i the second district. A N > OTHEE STATES. H. B..Holmes, of Lauderdale county, Miss., made thirty-five bales of cotton this year on twenty five acre3 of pine land on which he had put twelve tons of fertilizer, costing $320. The total cost of makiDg the crop, including fertilizers, was $608, leaving a net profit of $820.48. The cost of picking was $215, but allowing $100 for the cotton seed, there is still left a net profit of cost of $705.48. Fifteen bales would have been a very good yield without any fertilizer. The Birmiasham races were declared off yesterday on account of bad weather. I W. N. Reeves and others have organi7.ed the Chattahoochee Fertilizer Co., to establish the fertilizer factory at Eufala, Ala. Capital stock is .$100,000. Mr. Reeves is president. SUING FOR A POKER DEBT. A Big Game in Whioh Prominent Missouri Men Took Part. St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 2."}.?A poker gamfe, in which several of Missouri's prominent statesmen took part, has been called the attention of the Circuit Court Cooper county. One evening last June Col Joe Rickey, a prominent Missourian, well known in Washington; Col. John G. Prathcr, a member of the National Demcratic Committee, and Col. John E. Elliott, a bank President and wealthy contractor 01 cooper county, sa^ aown to a poker game in a room in the Planter's House. It was a big game, and it did not terminate for twenty-four hours4 Col. Elliott was lucky on the start, and won heavily. Later he struck a hoodoo dropped all his windings, all his ready cash, and borrowed $1,100 from Col. Prathet and diopped that too. A month later C'Ol. Prather assigned the debt to Col. Rickey for value received . Col. Rickey made a demand upon Col. Elliott for payment, but Col. Elliott smiled a sickly smile, and said he didn't owe anything, and never promised to pay the debt. ^Jgiagftanon Col. Rickey sues hira^i?>tlrewrcuit^ttfv>^r?Cooper (ziiiatff'ancl the matter has not yet been passed upon. Increasing Industrial Activity. The past -week, like several that have preceded it, has been one of much activity in the organisation of very extensive enterprises. Florence, Ala., has led with very heavy investments by Philadelphia and New ^Dgland capitalists, including a f500,000 cotton mill, which will be the largest in thb State; a furnace to cost $150,000: a $300,000 loan and banking company and over $1,000, )00 in cash, it is reported, has been invested in the stock and land of the Florence Cotton and Iron Co. and the Florence Railroad & Improvement Co. In Florida a contract has been made for constructing a 300-mile canal to furnish a water way nearly the entire length of the State. At Bessemer, Ala.; two new furnaces to cost probably $4C0,000 arc to be built. At Briertield, in the same State, iron works that have been idle for several years are to be reorganised with $300,000 of bonds and $700,000 of preferred stock, and operations resumed. A steel plate mill is to be built in West Virginia, and extensive fertilizer works at Norfolk, Va. liailtoad construction is being pushed very vigorously in many parts of the South, and some important lines have been let to contract during the week. In all directions there is great activity in industrial and railroad enterprises, and the South was never before so busy as it is td-day. A Freight light in Florida. The Orange Belt Railway, which runs southwesterly across the Florida Peninsula, with its terminus at St. Petersburg, on the Gulf coast, is the object of much envious attention on the part of several railroad corporations. Last Friday H. B. Plant, with a party of the officials of that system, went over the line of toad with a view to purchasing, it is said, and Thursday President Duval and a party of Florida Central and Peninsula system also went over the Orange belt on a tour of inspection. It is said that the Clyde Steamship Line is "standing in" with the Florida Central and Pensacola aod that they "will. outbid the Plant people. Should this combination secure control of the Orange Belt it would perceptibly weaken the hold of the ?lant system on South Florida and give the Clyde people a portion of the South Florida trade, and also that of the Gulf. A "deal" of some kind is likely to be consummated in a very few days. A Woman in a Congregational Pulpit, At a Congregational Church Council, held at Brookton, Tompkins county, N. Y., last] Sunday, Mrs. Annie F. Eastman was ordained to the ministry and installed pastor of the Brookton Congregational Church. Mrs. Eastman is believed to be the first woman Ordained to the Congregational ministry in this country. Every member of the council voted in favor of admitting her to ordination. Mrs. Eastman is the wife of the Rev. R. E. Eastman. While her husband was pastor of the Brookton church and duriDg his long continued sickness she first read his sermons from the pulpit and next took to preaching sermons of her own composition. The congregation finally askr.d her to take her husband's place. Among the clergymen of the denomination who took part in the ordination services were the Rev. Thomas K. Beechcr, of Elmira, the Rev. Edward Taylor, of Binghamton, the Rev. R. P. Davis, of Owasco, the Rev. J. J. Hough, o^Berkshire, and the Rev. P. S. Fitch, of Buffalo. He Wanted HaBh. Ex-President Cleveland has become a raconteur. While in "Washington recently he told a story uf a state dinner at which a certain well known Democratic politician was present. The politician was gorgeously attired and made a sensation by his appearance. During the repast chicken salad was passed to him of which he helped himself liberally. Before the waiter had made the circuit of the tab^e the politician had devoured the contents of his plate. He was pleased. "Here, -waiter," he cried out "briug me some more of that hash." Mr. Cleveland's rendition of this anecdote is said to be very effective. Universal Suffrage in Brazil. liio Jaxiero, Brazil.?The provisional government has issued a decree establishin'' universal suffrage throughout the Republic. . | OUR NEW NAVY YARD. THE NATAL COMMISSIONS EEPORT Recommends Port Royal as a Port of Gal! and Repairs, but New Orleans Selected as the Navy Yard Proper. I ^ j The commission appointed by Secretary j Whitney last January, pursuant to an j act of Congress, "to report as tu the i most desirable location on or near the j coast of the Gulf of Mexico and the ! South Atlantic coast for navy yards and dry docks," ha3 made its rcpoit to Sec- j retarVTracy, at Washington. This com- j mission visited and examined the follow- i ing sites, the advantages and disadvr.n-j tages of which are set forth in detail: j pr?rt Koyai, S. C.; Sivannah, Ga.; Brims- ! wick, Ga.; Sapelo Sound, fl*.; Key j West, Fla.: Tampa Bay and Pcnsacola j Bay, Fla.; Mobile Bay and Mount Ycr- i noc, Ala.; Biloxi, Miss, and New Or-] leans, La. The conclusion of the com-; mittee is as follows: "After carefully weighing all the advanta j ges and disadvantages of Algiers as n site fur I a naval 6tation the commissi >n is of tbe opin- | ion that while th<? spot is not an ideal one, i no other place o.i the Gulf compares wi-.h it j intne advantages offered, and that the ad-j vantages are so great and outweigh the i disadvantages to such an extent that the c om- ' mjssion has no hesitation in recommending ! the location of the navy yard and dry duc ks ! at tbe present Government reservation at I Algiers, La." The site selcctcd is situ itcd opposite i [ the lowcf end of New Orleans, and em- i braces the Government reservation of 3S4 feet front ou the river, by 2,SS0 feet 1 deep. Additional grout di would have to j be purehased, but this, the commission J says, can be purchased at a reasonable j prifce. The dry dock there, it is estimut- i ed, will cost $840,000, and require throe years for its construction. As to Port Koyal, the commission recommends the establishment of a dry dock, a depot of naval supplies and a; rj/yijng station on Paris Island, at the site of the present naval station. An estimate accompanying *he report, fixes the cost of a dry dock, simi'tu- to those now building for the Government, at j $673,000, to be completed in three years. L WASHINGTON NOTES, ' Mrs. Cleveland's portrait is to be placed in the Corcoran art gallery in Washington; Green B. Raiini, jr., son of the coin- ; missioner of jicnsidns, hes been appoint- j ed assistant chief clerk of the pension ! bureau, vice Reeds, resigned. The com j missioner has created a new division to j be known as the appointment division, I of which his son will have charge. The department of State is informed that the Haytien Government will appoint Annibal I'rici minister to \V;t?hmgton to succeed the present minister, Stephen Preston. The postmaster general has directed that the free delivery system be established at Asheville, N. 0., on January 1st next. the Presideut appointed Dennis Eagan, of Florida, collector of the internal revenue district, Florida. The Secretary of War has awarded the contract foi- furnishing oiie pneumatic carriage at the ordinance proving ground , at Sandy Hook on or befoi'e the 3lst of October, 1890; to the PneUmatic Gun, Carriage and Pdwdei Company, of Washington. The contract price is $18,000. President appointed Thomas Clay McDowell, of Kentucky, collector of internal revenue for the Seventh District of Kentucky, vice Wm. Cassius Goodloe, deceased. Mr. McDowell was a son-inlaw of the late Col. Goodloe. Oan't Sue 'Em So Young. "Take yoifr boy home and keep him in at night until he is old enough to take care of himself," said Judge Me- i Adam, in dismissing the suit of Anuic Ilerschfeldt against Hugo Schwartz yesterday afternoon in the city court. The remark was addressed to Mrs. Sjhwartz of (54 Cannon street, and concerned a youth of 18, who wore a red shirt and a stoUt leather belt. He had been in Ludlow street jail awaiting the outcome of the actioii for breach of promise brought by Miss Herschfeldt, who is 2:j years old. Schwartz asked to be set free as a minor, and said he earned only .*a.ou a week, and had only one coat. lie said he didn't want to marry Annie, hadn't visited her, and bad only a passing acquaintance with her. He denied emphatically that he had promised to marry her or had borrowed $45 from her. This was in direct contradiction of the J young woman's testimony. She said she wanted to matry him and Would n<Jt let him go. judge MfcAdam decided that he could go, and gave the young Womnn j some of that advice about marrying peo- | pie. who cannot support a wife for which I the bench of the city court is becoming j celebrated.? N. T. Sun. Collision Near Alexandria, Va, A fr/M-n Al^vonHrin \rfl QflVC* Two freight trains on the Virginina Midland Railroad collided Friday morning at Russian Brauch, opposite Bull Ran Battlefield, killing Engineer Easters, of Madison Run, and fireman Murphy, of Springfield, and fatally wounding firoman Evans, of Alexandria. Several train-men narrowly escaped by jumping. One train was runniDg in two sections j and the accident was caused by the | other mistaking orders. The cars were | badly wrecked. Alexandria, Va.?The bodies of the | men killed in the railroad accident near j llusby Branch, were brought here Friday I afternoon. The dead are fireman Jas. { Murphy, of Springfield, Va., and brake- j man E. L. Estee, of Orange, Va. En-| gineers Ivcmple and Fitzgerald were j badly cut about the head. Urakcmaii L. A. Payne, of Charlottsville, Freman Evaus of Alexandria, and cattlc shipper Hagginbottom -were sligbly injured Two Murderers Sentenced. William Carpenter and Whitfield Mur rell were convictcd at Edgefield, S. C., Thursday of the murder of Preston Younce in June last. The jury deliberated three hours and returned a verdict of guilty with a recommendation to mercy. A motion made in arrest of. judgement I ?? kw inrl/vii o-r*^ nripAn [ Wis return UJ 5#l?i auuuit J/Iiomi- i ! era were sentenced to be hanged on t.he . I third of next January. These an? the j first white murderers convicted in E IltcI field county for forty years. DOM PEDEO'S LATE DOMINION. A Brazilian Kepublic firmly Established. ?A New Kepublic Larger Than the United States, Scnor Da Fouscca successfully accomplished the Brazilian revolution, and henceforth Ihc New World will be free of monarchies. The manifesto of the lieriiiiiiic.-iti (icivcrnment of Brazil is as follows* Fello-.v citizens: The people, (lie army, acd the navy, and the provinces hfcve now decreed tlie fall of the Imperial dinasty and the suppre-sion of the moaarcbial system. This patriotic revolution has teen followed by the formation of a Provisional Government, whose iirst mission is to guarantee order. hl>fi*tjr and the rights of the citizen. Tno formation ot this Government, until a delinit? Gover>:meut has been named, has been made with fil l regard to the most competent material. The Government is simply composed of a temporary agent, who will jrovei n and maintain peace, liberty, fraternity ani{ or.5i;r. Tue attributes and extraordinary facu'tics invented are for the defence and integrity of this country and the. preservation i ot public order. The Provisional Gcrveru J. merit promises to use a'l means in its pewer to guarantee security of life and property to all the inhabitants of Brazil, native and foreign, and respect for individual political opinion.;, excepting exigent modifications newssary for 1 be good of the country. The army and navy, the ordinary functions <>!' the department of justice, tbe civil ami military administrations continue uuaer 'heir existing organizations, and respect to -aose holding position will be maintained. The Stiii-ite and State Council are abolished, and the chamber of Depities is dissolved. Tlie Piovifioaal Government, recjgniz?s and acknowledges all national compromises under the late Government and agreements a i:!i foreign Powers. The public debt, interna! an<l external, will bo rer-p? ted, also all existing contracts and obligations legally made. Dkodoro Foxseca, Chief if Provisional Govornment. How DOM 1'EDItO ACCEPTED THE LSEVKT ABLE A>'D A HEAVY PURSE. The Emperor Dom Pedro made the following repl}' to the communication of the new Government informing him of his disposition: "In view rf the address handed nte, I resolved to sub-Lit to the comminH of circumstan'es. to leave with all my family for Europe, leaving this brlovei country, to which I have tried to give firm testimony of my aireetionats luve and my devotion during nearly half a century as Chief of State. I will always have kindly remembrances of Brazil and hopes for her prosp?rity. J)o>i Pedro d1 Alcantara. ' To the Provisional-Government." IJiu Dc Janeiro, Cabregjjim.?The adhesion to the new order prti>^;gw,otinues. Cmdido Oliveira, the late prime minister, is still a prisoner. The Kiog of Portugal offered the Emperor Dom Pedro the use of his palace at Lisbon, aud the late monarch sailed for Portugal. Washington, D. C. ? Dr. Valent, the Brazilian Minister, has not yet been officially requested to ask the United States Government to recognize the United States of Brazil. He believes such a reuuest will not be made immediately, but that the new government will wait a reasonable length of time, in order to satisfy the world of its stability, before seeking formal recognition. The Minister regards tiie views 01 me dominant republifins, set forth in their manifesto, as most reasonable in all respects, and they have assumed all of the obhga- : tions and debts of the empire, and have guaranteed the fullest measure of pro- i tection. and personal liberty to the citi- i r.ciis of other nations residing in Brazil, ;is well as security df their \*aried interests, he cannot see any excuse for dissat- . isfactio'n abroad; According to the couEtituticta, a Con- . vention must be assembled in Brazil at , the earliest possible moment. , Xot including Alaska, Brazil is larger in extent than the United States. It , possesses within its limits an area of 3,2S7 <if>4 sminrt; miles, with a nboulation ! uf i3,ySo,y?3. STILL ANOTHER "UNITED STATES. ; The Project for Consolidating the States of the Australian Continent, CnicAe;o, 111?Albert lioltoil, of Asbury, Australia, is ia the city. To a reporter lie said: The project of consolidating the Aiis traliau conmcnt into one poweriui staic is slowly but surely gainiog ground. Within two years a definite pian for founding t^e new nation will be forwarded to the colouial ofiice for indorsement of the down. Before long, and without the slightest commdtion in England or Australia the mdther colintry will see this great group of her colonies piss into the new nation of the tjuited States of Australia. Like your Country Australia will be practically free from invasion. Her people have alre ady shown a desire to be supreme in the Pacific, which cannot be grantifled unless her government posseses the means of ruling the dependencies not admitted to political equality. New Guinea alone is a kingdom in area and rightfully belongs to Australia. As an independent republic Australia will be a mighty maritime power. She is to settle and govern the only valuable possession which Europe has left for the npvt rnniinenncr nower. South Carolina State Alliance. Columiha. S. C.?A large cumber of farmers have been in session here organizing the State Alliance exchange. Twenty-eight counties were represented. The following directors were elected: State at large. J. (J (Juit, of Chesterfield, J. A. Sligh, of Newberry: First District, O. R. Riley, Orangeburg: Second, Dr. W. II. 1 itnraerman, Edgefield; Third, John M. Glenn, Anderson; Fourth, Jno. R. Harrison, Greenville: Fifth. Joel Housrh. Kershaw; Sixth, J. W. Ferguson, Darlington; Seventh, Mr. Cain, of Sumter. AX OFFICIAL REPORT. Thirty-two trustees of stockholders in the Alliancc business agency met here Monday morning to organize the State bus incss cxchance fur the Farmers' Alliance of South Carolina. Alliances in thirtytwo counties have taken 077 shares at fifty dollars each in the exchange, and twenty live per cent, of the stock has been paid in. The trustees held a meeting and elected _ the following officers: President, J. C. Coit; Vice-President, J. A. Sligh; Secretary, W. 0. Cain: Treasurer. J. W. t.-* T. Tlnna!^ 1 t'lUUJUli . WU?1UIW J*. *-r w? sou. The exchange was temporarily loctted :it Green\ille. ?an Salvador's National Palaca Burned. San Salvador, via Galveston.?The national palace here was completely destroyed l?y lire Friday. Government archives were totally consumed. Perfect <?rdt-r prevailed during the tire and n<> lives were lost. i " NORTH AND WEST, j NEWSY ITEMS BY TELEGEAFH, i i Being A Ooni.nsation of tfceT Principal! Happsnings in Different States Robert C. Davidson was inaugurated Mayor of Baltimore at noon Wednesday, Ferdinand C. Latrobe retiring. The failure of the Patterson Iron Works Company at Toronto, Canada, caused considerable surprise. Liabilities, $300,000. Watson C. S<juiers was elected Senator from the State of Washington on Tupfid&v nifrht on the second ballot. ?J o ?~ Diphtheria is epidemic in the twelfth ward of Chicago. At a meeting of the National Grange at Sacramento, Cal., the Australian system of voting was approved. Two young leopards were born in the Zoological Gardens at Philadelphia a few days ago. ?jvathbone. of Washington, D. C., feunder!5ftlirt?^^thc Kuighte of Pythias, was nrostratedaHS* ngfel m I Limar O., with an immense carbuncle.^" He lived only until his family, who were telegraphed for, arrived. The West is still a great place for youngsters. The new Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of North Dakota is only ol years old. lie is Guy C. II. Corliss. Rep >rts received from New York and Pennsylvania show that it rained continuously for three days and that the i ivers and streams are now dangerously high. The ^Susquehanna overflowed its banks onH awa tr man\7 -"-J ?-j ~ D ? The extensive new vitrious china works of Knowle?. T?ylor & Knowles at East Liverpool, 0., were entirely destroyed by lire Monday evening. The total loss is about a quarter million dollars. Insurance |30,000/ The Secretary of the Interior has appointed the following named persons to be Commissioners to negotiate with the Sisseton and Wabpeton Indians in Dakota for the sale of their surplus land: Eliphalet "Whittlesey, Secretary of the Boar J of Indian Commissioners: C. A. Maxwell; chief of the Land Division in the Bureau-^vidian Affairs, and D. W. Diggs, of^Blsnk; JDakota. The Rev. Harry NicHoIsr^f^s^ily,_ acting pistor of the Methodist church in Housatonic, Mass., has fallen into disgrace and tied to Michigan. Presiding Elder Travis and the stewards of the church held a confercnce with [Nichols, who pleaded guilty to charts of gross irrimrrrjlifv s>nf} rrjsicrnP.fL Thft rtliar terly conference then cAjreHcd him l'rom the church. A serious freight wreck occurred in the Wichita canon, Indian Territory, on the Denver, Fort Worth and Texas Railway Tuesday. A flange of ouc of j the engine's driving -wheels broke and the engine and live cars were tlfrown ' from the track. Engineer Wilmarth and : Brakeman Wier were icstact[y killed, j . Fireman Elam was dangerously injured. ! J Mrs. Anna Hancock, 53 years old, an \. inmate of the Biunswick Home at Am- j ityville, ]Sew York, eluded the vigilance ! of her keepers Monday afternoon and committed suicide, by hanging herself ; with a rope fastened to the top cf a ^^ " imvinin rf rtff O /'lrjir I ?iJUUU ?Y J auu tlivu J vu. ciI wuuii. tier Deck was broken. Oeofge fox, an Englishmen residing ( ;it Georgetown, Ontario, Canain, was ' arrested tor endeavoring to sell his 10- , day old baby. Mrs. Fox died, and the \ father not wanting to take care of it, ? attempted to lind a purchaser. lie said 1 that if he were in the old country he 1 tuuld $10 foi* the baby, therefoie he : uught to get f Id iu thl3 country where babies arc ndt so plentiful. He was starting for New York when he was ar- ! rested. Thursday morning a north-bound freight train on the Philadelphia and Reading road ran into a landslide at : VYlndeld, Pa. The engine and twenty cars Were thrown from the track into Susquehanna Kiver. Several of the train men are injured. The engine apd cars are buried in the river. Heavy raiDs caused the accident. Walter Haynes of Brimlfeld, Mass., celebrated his 100th birthday Wcdnes day. He is excellent health. As a carpenter Mr. Hajnes helped to build the first block erected in Syracuse, N. Y., and alone excavated a quarter section of twenty-six rods of Erie Canal. He never used liquor or tobacco, an attributes his longevity to "boiled victuals", and -'Johnny cake." FOREIGN NEWS, The new Regents of the Republic of San Marino, Domenico Battori and Marino Nicolino, have entered upon the discharge of their difficult duties. In their opening address they declared it a fundamental principal of their programme to " ? Via Cfof A6 A f i 11VC ID. pcncct pwee >vitu l/UV kji a.vc; VA : Europe and the rest of the world. Berlin has 38,000 dogs. The French fcaxes produced 3,000,000 | francs less last August and 4,000,000 i francs less last September than the corresponding months of last year. The debt of the city of Paris amounts to 7U0 francs for every man, woman and child within the city limits. In Frankfork the debt is equivalent to 317 francs per head, in Milan to 228,,in Berlin to loi, ! in Hague to 137, in Brussels, the most heavily indebted cf all European cities, to 1.605. Dnrincr the last two vears the Italian j army has been increased by 30.000 men. | 200 lield guns, and 0,000 oalvary. Never j was the army so numerous or powerfully i organized as at present, under the at- j tempt to keep up with Germany's mill- j tary step. Governor John B. Gordon, of Georgia, j who is to lecture in Central Music Ilall, j Chicago, on the evening of November 30, \ in the interest of the Ex-Cocfedcrate ' monument fund, will be tendered a rc j ception on his arrival there. In order to i perfect arrangements for the reception a meeting was held at the Grand Pacific > Hotel last Friday evening, at which arrangements were made which insure a brilliant affair. There wa> a large attendance of prominent citizens and ExConfederate and Union soldiers. Mayor ' Crciger, Senator Farwcll, the Hon. ! Carter Harrison and a dozen Union Gen- j eials are among the reception committee. 1 The giraffe born in the Zoological Gar- j dens of Cincinnati has died for want "ot proper nourishment. The unique spec:- ! mtu lias been preserved by a taxidermist, j i x TEE NATIONAL JACKSON tJLUB. An Organization for The Perpetuation of x atnotisnL The National Jackson Club, which was organized at Nashville, Tenn., Monday, issued an address to the people which starts oil by sajing "the perpetuation yf a republican free government : rests upon the patriotism of the peopleIn proportion as patriotism degenerates or is alloyed with mercenary desire, does the danger of dissolution increase." The address calls attention to "the evidences oi decay tnat are ucgmnmg to ue maiufc-sr. which. unless speedily arrested may result disastrously," and says that "political parties, ali of them; make* 'spoils' their Urst ci>ject, and it is gradually be? ing instilled into the pubiic mind that the proper reward of the government for . service and the devotion of its sons is sordid iticre rather than the blessings of freedom acd protection it was created to bestow upon them." The address heralds a storm of anarchy and disruption and asks "How may danger be arrested? A man lived who by iron will and executive power hu.-led back the first great dar^eMlnitni^ ism, represents the code of patriotic principles. To draw the nation back to the contemplation of the sublime character of Andrew Jackson is to inculcate the pure and loyal principles upon which his great life was predicted; to have ali the people with unanimous voice reiterate the ?raad sentiment, 'The federal Union?it shall and must be preserved.'n "The situation appeals beseechingly to patriotic sons of Columbia to come to the rescue." "The first annual meeting of the Club is called to assemble in.the city of Nashville on the Sth of January, 1890, under the shadow of Jackson's tomb, on the day be made memorable, .and to this meeting all the people of our great country arc invited, and particularly those who are in sympathy with the movement. TIIE OFFICERS. The following officers were elected Moaday: President, Hon. A. K. McClure, of Pennsylvania; vice-president, Hon. Benton McMillan, of Tennessee. Vice-presidents at large, John J. George Harris, of Tennessee: Hon. Jeff Johnson, of Alabama Hon. A. S. Coleyar, of Tennessee. Two vice-president's from each . Scale as-follows: Alabama--Hon. O. K. ~L?ne^Sl Smith: G.orgia?Hon. R. B Bollock, Hon. Patrick Vi'alsii; Kentucky? Hon. Heniy Watterson, John Mason Bracon: Ohich-BxPmcS.-ia.if i? r h<ick FTnn A. fr. Thnrman: New York?Hon. T. C. Piatt, .Hon. R. P. Flower: Massachusetts?Hen. George F. Hoar, Hon. John Boyle O'Reilly; Louisiana? Hon. Page Baker, Hon. H. C. Mimer; Florida?Hon. H. M. Flagler, Hon. A. V. Clubbe; Pennsylvania, Hon. S. J. Randall, Andrew Carnegie; Illinois, Hon. B. C. Farwell, JTon. John M. Pa'mer; New Haznp- - J shire, Hon. H. W. Blair, Hon. Frank Jones; Connecticut, Hon. J. R. Hawley, Hon. W. W. Eaton: Maine, Hon. 3. G. Borce, Hon. > T. G. BIa<ne; Tennessee. Hon. Wm. Durcan, M Hon. A. TV. Wills; Mississippi, Hon. E. C. Walthall, Hot>. J. L. Anren; Arkansas?, Hon. A. H Gatland. Hon. L. N. Roots: rexas. Hon. R. Q. Mills. Hon. Thomas Ocbil:re; New Jersey, Ex-Senator Sewall, Congressman MscAdoo. EXPLQBER STANLEY. " ? ?*" or. tie arrives au iawcujijje, iusviug iuauc <u Important Discovery. ~ The English foreign office is in receipt )f dispatches stating that Stanley arrived , : it ?.I;vampa. ' In addition to those whose names iave already been reported, Stanley has :vith hi:u Herr Hoffman, Emin's daughter, and Fathers Grault and Schinos, of ihe Algerian mission. Stanley has -madof in unexpected discovery of immenss value to African history, finding an ex tension of the Victoria isyanza to t$a south ana west. v Valuable Phosphates in Florida. An alleged expert elaimsthat an analvsis of the phosphate deposits in South ' Florida show that they excel in quality the celebrated phosphate deposits of South Carolina. Large discoveries of these phosphates have been made near Tampa, in Tampa Bay, and in the Alafia ? river, and preparations are being made for shipping this phosphate rock from Tampa to Atlanta, where it will be manufactured into fertilizers. Large de posits of phosphates have also been discovered in the waters of Peace creek, near Arcadia, on the line of the Florida Southern, and these phosphates are now being mined and shipped to Atlanta. Tic re arc other deposits of phosphates in the different waters of South Florida?______ _ awaiting a development which will not long be delayed, according to reports from that section. Old Transportation Line Ke-Established. ' "* xl_ _ Arrangements are completed ior i?e re-establishment of the route from fiichmosd to Lynchburg, and the Southwest over the Richmond & Danville and Norfolk & Western Railroads, via Burkeville. This was formerly the regular route to Lynchburg, but of late years owing to a disagreement between the two roads concerned. it has been discontinued. The merchants of Richmond, and particucarly the Chamber of Commerce for years past have been working hard for the reestablishment of this line, as it affords a great saving of time to all points in tbe /. Southwest and points tributary thereto. The new schedule went into effect MoadllJ" ' " Tha Southern Lutheran SyaocL In the Lutheran Synod at Wilroington Monday the report on the .Location of the proposed theological seminary wag;'' presented by Dr. Brown. Two propositions were submitted, one for location at Xewbcrry. S. C., by the South Carolina Synod, and another by the Southwestern, Ya., Syrod, favoring Salem. Va. The ; provisional oiler of the South Carolina . Synod was accepted. The Rev. W. E. Hubbert. was elected chairman of the board of education, and Dr. W. S. Bowman chairman of the committee to nomi? nate a board of directors. Trouble in Laurens County. Coumbia, S. C.?Henry Hill, an aged planter near GreggJCourt, Laurens county, was fatally stabbed on Monday while endeavoring to quiet a number of negroes who were fighting among themselves on his farm, after having bccprue intoxicated by whiskey obtained from an illicit still the ueighborhood. Tl<e negroes also set upon and beat two white constables who were sent to qtiell tVi/? f?/vnctal?l *s IliC UISUllu<iLiy*v;. \si v? vuv - is fatally hurt. There is great -excite- ment in'thc vicinity, and more troubi^ : is feared. i ' ' * ' ' -A:i