The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, November 30, 1898, Image 1

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V [ i It' tolTlhi. winnsboro, s. c., Wednesday. November 30, 1898. no. n. 1; ? ?? ??? ? W-X-Vv-V-. ^ T HTTWf\ HOTEL BURNED. I fm Miraculous Escape of Guests From an Awful Death. > A. J. WHITE PROVES HERO. Saved the Lives of Three Women fc- -r Before He Gave Up His Own. ? His Death Was Most Dramatie. p ' Wednesday morning the Baldwin hotel at San Francisco caught fire and was entirely destroyed. There were 300 people, guests and employes, in the hotel ^when the fire broke out and two of those pe< 1fi art . hought to have lost their lives. A. J. White and a inan namod Meyer are ths victims. The fire is said to have start* d in the kitch- j en, located in the basanient on the Ellis -street side. The fire worked its iray up through the flue to the sixth J. "floor and before the fire alarm was seat in the fire had gained gieat headway. For years the Baldwin has been re- j garded by the fire department as the most dangerous fire trap in San Francisco. Built of wood, six stories high, with narrow and tortuous hallways, it is a wonder that half of the people in the hotel escaped. They were slow to waken. Many were dazed and stupefied by the smoke when the police, the firemen and hotel employes, hnrrying $ through the hallways, kicked open doors and notified the people of their great danger. When they managed to reach the windows and fire escapes there were no ladders. Many attempted to jump from the windows to the streets, but were warned not to do so by the crowds below. The firemen got u p their ladders and commenced taking people to the ground, rescuing many in this mannsr. In the interior of the hotel an expL^sion in the theatre caused that portion of the building to cave in. This explosion also extinguished the electric lights throughon* the building. Those in the street below could see through the rifts in the smoke along the attic cornices, forms of men and women crouching and climbing to the woodwork, which was already beginning to smoulder. Streams from thirty engines were being poured upon the blazing building from every point of vantage, but without any apparent effect Explosion followed explosion. The death of Whit'- was most dramatic. Three women appeared on the cornice of the fifth floor on the Market street side of the hotel. The firemen could not reach them. White came out of a window carrying a small rope, gk With this he lowered the women into P the anna of the firemen, who were wait^ ing at the windows of the next floor. ?r~~ 'fhen he started down the rope hand Uol^ rtrrtrr t.VlA 7* A TIP H' UVCi UOliU. tt c ?j uvnu wmv *wj[fv ^l^parted and the man who had just saved ^B^ee lives was dashed to the pavement fjBPJ feet below. " . ' "Lucky Baldwin" had a narrow escape from perishing in his fire trap. "Amid all the din he slept peacefully until his room was broken into and he was dragged from his bed. H. I. Kowalsky, a well known attorney, was also dragged unconscious from bed. He will recover. The Baldwin hotel has been known and dreaded for years by firemen and insurance people as the worst kind of a fire trap. It has been stated often that there were no fire walls in it exeept those enclosing the theatre and that no insurance companies, would write a risk on the building except for ? *.11 o V?/*omrr T\t*AT**7TlTr? a BUiitli aiuuUUl uiu a J The building of the hotel began in 1873 and was finished in 1877, its total eost including ground and furniture being $3,000,000. In the building was the Baldwin theatre. The street floor of the immense building were occupied by the hotel office, bar room and a number of stores. In the basement was an elaborately fitted cafe. E. J. Baldwin stated today that he carried $100,000 insurance, but he could not remember in what company. The Baldwin theatre was completely demolished by the falling of the fifth floor. The entire effects of the "Se cret Service" company, which was filling an engagement at that theatre, were destroyed. A great deal of jewelry and money belonging to members of the company were lost. In addition the contracts were burned. The Columbia theatre and places of business opposite the Baldwin were damaged by water to the extent of $15,000. E. J. Baldwin is prostrated and unable to tell much about his affairs. He says he will not be able to estimate his 1 ">ss for several days. H. "W. Luke, manager of the hotel, barely managed to g*t out with his wife and child. He says where were 302 guests in the hotel. Bold Postoffice Bobbery. One of the boldest robberies committed ir. Columbus, Ohio, in years was perpetrated Tuesday when the postoffice was robbed of eleven packages containing $100 each, or $1,100 in all. The money was. in a pigeon hole at a > stamp window presided over bp Miss Mary Berry. She left the window for a few seconds anu during that brief time the mon?y was taken. Four women were seen acting in. a suspicious manner in the corridor of the postoffice just before the robbery and the police believe one of them to be the thief. No arrests have been made as yet. Bemoval is Asked. Mayor "Watkins of Chattanooga. Tenn., states that he has written the secretary of war, asking him in the interest of good order and for the honor of the service and in behalf of the good name of Chattanooga, to remove the regiment stationed there, to some other point from Chickamauga Park. The mayor stated that he had done this to throw the responsibility for any breach of law or order that might occur, growing out of a possible race collision there, on the department. She Was Mistaken. An exchange remarks that the female who addressed a recent meeting in New York was mistaken in her claims. She said she represented womanhood, when in fact she only represented viragohood and the lowest order of that. WISE COUNCIL. i j Good Advice Given to the Negroes by a Negro. Last Thursday uighi wnile T. Thomas Fortune and a few other Negro orators were howling at a Negro mass meeting in Cooper Union, New York, and Mrs. Grannis was screeching on the same platform, a Negro was speaking j words of wisdom at a meeting over in I Brooklyn. Theit was not one uttered ?^ TTn . aw txrKi/?l^ tttqq I CL\j biiu UUIVU wvwviug nuAViA n?w calculated to help La condition of the Negro, to alleviuc ' n any degree his real or fancied ills At' the Brooklyn meeting the only t ue and helpful policy for the Negi ./as laid down in j strong language by the wisest Negro j leader m the country. On that occasion Brooker T. Washington s "It must be apparer this time that the effort to put tnc rank and file of the colored people irv a position to exercise the right of!':i chise has not been a success in thr.< portions of our own country where tt* Negro is found in large numbers. Kit her the Negro was not prepared for auy such wholesale exercise of the ballot as our recent amendment to the constitution j contemplated, or the American people were not prepared to assist and encourage him to use the ballot. In either case the result has been the same. In mj mind there is no doubt but that we made the mistake at the beginniug i of our freedom of putting the emphasis ! on the wrong end. Politics and the holding of oifice were emphasized almost to the exclusion of almost every other interest, and we accepted responsibilities, which oar experience and education had not fitted us to perform with success and credit. To mind the past and present teach but one lesson? to the Negro's friends and to the Negro himself?that there is but one way out, j that there is but one hope of salvation, and that is for the Negro in every par: of America to resolve from henceforth that he will throw aside every nonessential and cling only to essentials? that this pillar of fire by night and this pillar of cloud by da> shall be property, skill, eccnomy, education and Christian character." No man who will look the facts squarely in the face, no man who is capable of forming a fair conclusion as to tbe results of Negro suffrage can deny the truth of what Brooker Washington had the sense to see and the courage to proclaim. The worst enemies the Negro has had since his emancipation have been the politicians and placeseekers of his own party who have filled his head with false notions and his heart with false'feelings- The best the Negro can possibly do is to realize his own position, his present weakness and incapacity for positions which he is urged by false leaders to claim. Brooker Washington points out to him the only path which will enable him to gain a better condition for himself and his children?Atlanta Journal. A PECULIAR ACCIDENT. ? " ? ' m ! tt m All -Exploding1 .isoner a ears up iwu HousesOne of the most peculiar accidents which has ever occurred in Georgia happened in Warsaw last week. An engine and boiler of six horse-power, and weighing 4,000 pounds, which was used to run a gin, blew out the crownsheet of the boiler and kilted two Negro men and came near killing an entire family. | The residence of Mr. S. A. Maxwell, a well known and respscted gentleman ( of Warsaw, stand just across the road | from the gin house, and last week, , while all of hi? family were sitting in ! their house, the crownsheet of the boiler blew out, and after killing two ! Negro men who were standing near the ginhonse, went clear across the road and entirely through a portion of the residence of Mr. Maxwell and landed thirty i feet away from the residence in the back yard. The bursting of the boiler made a terrific noise, and tore the porch of the residence off on a line with the parlor, knocked both front and back walls out from the parlor, and left the end wall and the partition wall intact. The ceiling and roof were only slightly damaged, and the engine was torn loose from the boiler while passing through the house and finally stopped in the rear of the house, while the boiler went twenty-five feet further and came to a stop at the far end of the back yard. Mrs. Maxwell had just left the parlor, where sh?. had been to replace a book, and she i nd her children were sitting in the r jom next to the parlor, wheu the accident occurred, and their escape from serious injury or death was almost miraculous. A Negro man was chopping wood at the corner of the engine house was blown thirty yards through a barbed wire fence into the road and instantly L'll-J XT KJiieU. -OLUUMier J^egru iu?u vjclo ju.au entering the doorway of the engine house and was blown fifty yards in an opposit direction, breaking his neck. The family of Mr. Maxwell were very badly frightened by the accident, and had a narrow escape. Mr. Maxwell had only a few minute3 before he left the house and crossed the road to the store, which escaped uninjured. The pranks played by bursting boilers are nearly always peculiar, but the actions of this boiler in Warsaw were more freakish than any of its predecessors. Gagged the Watchman. At Elsberry, Mo., 68 miles north of St. Louis, Mo., robbers made a desperbte attempt to rob the Lincoln county aank. It is not known how much, if any, they obtained. As the result of rough treatment received from the robbers, J. W. "Waters, nightwatchman of the town, who is 60 years eld, may die. He was found at an early hour Thursday bound and gagged lying in the open air, where he had been left by the robbers. He was badly frozen. A New Plan. The Rev. Br. L. G-. Broughton, pastor of the Third Baptist church of Atlanta, hit upon a simple and good idea for increasing the contributions, by making an innovation in the method of the collection. Instead of the six staid and sober deacons who have passed around, the collection plates, he put six young women on that duty, and the collection was suddenly and largely increased. It is an idea that is likely to be acted upon in some other churces SOME PLAIN TALK. Caustic Comments on the New York Meeting. A SLANDERER REBUKED. A She Monster Makes an Unseemly Exhibition of Herself by Lieing on the Women of the South. No better justification of the white revolution at Wilmington, N. C.? could be furnished from a hostile quarter than was afforded by the spirit which characterized the colored mass meeting held in New York recently to protest against so-called "Southern outrages." The attitude of&he Negro as illustrated j at a meeting supposed to be representative of the best colored elements.^ de! monstrated to be that of bitter hostility toward Southern white people and of savage desire to humiliate and crush them. It was the same spirit as that displayed when tne Negroes were 111 the ascendency at Wilmington, and which lead them to heap insults and contumely upon the white victims of their misgovernment. It was the spirit which rendered the situation at Wilmington intolerable and made revolution a necessity. While it may be conceded that their attitude is mainly attrbutabie to the political adventurers and fanatics who have inflamed their minds and played upon their passions, it is clear that it is an attitude which not only justified, but demanded heroic measures such'as were adopted at Wilmington, and which will render it necessary to maintain a firm hand upon them until they have .reached a far higher condition of civilization than ,they have yet attained. The false teaching of the past thirty years has done infinitely more moral harm to the V/\/*WA AII fka ffAriArflhftno nf alotr? UJLiCfcEi an uii^i vr* oavi | ery through which he passed. Slavery found him a savage, and in multitude of cases made him a Christian and in many instances gave him the refinement and good form which were developed even in dependents by the high social standards of the old South. Tiie political education which he has received from New England sources since emancipation has confused his brain, perverted his heart and corrupted his manners, and instead of really progressing, there is danger, under the baneful influence of the morbid and unprinci yiUU ^UiU?UV^< WW TT MXVU UMkl l/vwu v?. posed, that he may revert to the original type from which slavery rescued him, except that this renaisance of barbarism in him will be accompanied with the vices of civilization and the power for mischief which civilization confcrs upon those who are in it, but not of it. If the Negro is to avoid this danger and develop into a higher citizenship, he must free himself from the evil influences and teachings under which he has been degenerating since the war. As long as he suffers himself to be abused by bad counsel and kept in a false attitude toward the Southern white people, just so long will he continue to retrograde in character and respectability. He has seen the effect of thirty years of fanatical political education. Let him turn away from the - i 1 .e 1 j * I scnooi oi nate, ueiiance auu uistiusi iu which he has been trained and try thirty years of good will toward and cooperation with the white people of the South. If he does, he will rise to a higher stature and a higher degree of prosperity than ever before. His home and biding place is in the South, and he should recognize the fact that his interests are bound up in the prosperity and progress of that section and are dependent upon the relation in which he stands to the dominant classes there. While the Negro is to berega-ied 'more with pity than with anger, because the victim of a pernicious sys cm of political philosophy and pretended philanthropy, it is impossible to find in the English language words sufficiently strong to properly describe the white hypocrites and political criminals who have mislead him in the past and are still endeavoring to fire his heart against the South. Such wanton, malicious and unspeakably abominable aspersions against Southern women as were uttered at the New York meeting by one Mrs. Elizabeth B. Grannis could spring only from a heart as black with hate as the foul and shameful slanders which she uttered. The New York Sun describes her remarks as unprintable. An extract from her address was as follows: "I am only here tonight to represent womanhood," said Mrs. Grannis. "We all know that the white women and white girls of the South are full of colored blood. I stand here for colored women and colored girls the same as I ao lor wnite women. At this a wild uproar ensued. The colored men and women jumped up in the aisles to cheer. Many laughed and gave vent to hysterical exclamations. Others mounted their seats and waved their hats. The pure and true. women of the South can afford to treat this libeler with the contempt with which they would regard the ravings of a foulminded maniac, but her utterances illustrate the spirit of sectional hate toward the South which still prevails in some quarters of the North and which apostles of humanity like Mrs. Grannis are continually endeavoring to fan into a general flame. They stop at no slander, no lie, no villificaaon, no matter how gross and detestable, if it gives them the opportunity to spit out their malignant venom against the South. They are the pretty and vulgar political descendants of that wholesale libeler, Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, who had more imagination and just as little re- ? gard for truth as her imitators of the present day. The wrong and injury which "Uncle Tom's Cabin" inflicted upon the country incalculable. That wrong and injury still live, and, like John Brown's spirit, seem to be marching on for still further evil. As is pointed out in the recently issued United States history of Susan Pendleton Lee, "31rs. Stowe had never been South nor seen slavery and slave-owners as they really were, but she was a violent abolitionist, and she wrote for anti-slavery newspapers a story founded upon isolated cases of cruelty and crime picked up from other papers. In vain the South denied the slanders given broadcast to the world. "Uncle Tom" was republished in England; it was translated into the European languages, and its caricatures of Southern life were multiplied a thousand-fold by abolition energy and fanaticism. When Mrs. Stowe was pressed to give her authority for the account she gave of the Kentucky and Louisiana planters, she published 'A Key,' which showed among the millions of slave-holders and their Negroes how few were the instances of wickedness such as she gave to the world as the habitual daily life of the broad South." Haters of the South who have learned l- J? VT-- - ] tneir morais lruui iuj.?. oluyyc <*uu uwuu JBrewn, who deliberately slander the Southern people and seek to array the Negroes against them, are enemies of the colored race and dangerous to the peace and prosperity of the whole country. They are directly responsible for race outrages, murders and collisions in the South, and the blood shed under these circumstances will cry to heaven against them. It is time that the better classes in the North put the stamp of their emphatic disapproval upon these emissaries of evil and wickedness. They cannot atford even to appear to endorse creatures who, like very drabs, fall to cursing a whole section and spew oat upon it tiie slime of their own degraded natures.?Baltimore Sun. A Heavy Bale. Catton ani Easks in tha Sims Pack age. One of Adam's black sons, Will Clarrlv namfi. and a farmer hvr.ccuDation. I induced by the exceedingly low price of cotton, and hard times generally, concluded. as he was helping to gin a bale of his own cotton at Frank Davenports gin in Greenville county, one morning before daylight, last week, that he would add a few hundred pounds to the weight of his bale by dropping a rock in the press occasionally, and so he proceeded to execute his plan, with the result that when his little bale of cutton was suspended upon the company's scales at Pelzer, Cotton-buyer Blake was astonished to see that the beam was tipped at the 829 figure, and suspecting that there was surely something heavier than cotton in the enclosure, Mr. Blpke ordered the bale unhooked and Mr. A. P. Long, chief of police, ordered Will Clardy to keep quiet and watch the investigation which only lasted a few minutes, when 350 pounds of rocks, five in number, were separated'" from the cotton, the largest one weighing 125 pounds. Mr. Long, after pausing a few minute, came to the conclusion that any man who could enhance the value of flint rocks from nothing to 4 5-8 cents per pound would do to take along, and he accordingly invested his man wich bracelets and escorted him to Anderson jail. Will did not confess his crime bnt only aaid "its de strangest thing I ever seed how dem rocks got into dat bale of cotton." ?Columbia State. Girls Commit Murder. Miss Nora Bitner, a highly respected young lady of Allegheny, Pa.3 was beat ea so badly JLhursdayatternoon by ttaree girls (none of whom are over 15 years of age) that she will probably die. Her assailants, Mamie Wright, Sophia Mickle and Victoria Bennett, are in jail. The cause of the assault is rather mysterious. It seems that Miss JBittter, with a young lady companion was walking along liast Ohio street, and in pass ing a group of young girls at play she made some jocular remark concerning the party, whereupon one of the youngsters grabbed her by the hair and pullhar fA fho <TrAiin^ WKIIA nfAofmita vu wv u uuu< r t mig ];j Miss Bitner was kicked oil the head and beaten into insensibility. Her companion was unable to protect her, and a rescue was only effected when two men came upon the scene. The physicians attending Miss Bitner says her skull is fractured, and a blood clot has formed on the brain. Tried to mob tue Engineer. Members of the Seventeenth United States volunteers, colored, attempted to mob Virgil Waters, an engineer on the Southern Railway Thursday. At Silver Creek^ G-a., Waters' train accidentally killed a member of the regiment who was standing od the track, the troops being en route to Macon, G-a. When the man was struck Waters stopped his train and hastened out of the cab to render assistance. Several members of the regiment cursed the engineer for alleged carelessness and one made a threatening gesture, and with angry soldiers in pursuit the enffinpp.r ran fcn his and VmrrioHlv O ' "V ?W Vk*M WA444VW*,, pulied out. A gun was fired as the train moved away, but no one was injured. Danger in Soda. Common soda is all right in its place and indispensable in the kitchen for cooking and washing purposes, but it was never intended for a medicine, and people who use it as such will some day regret it. We refer to the common use of soda to relieve heartburn or sour stomach, a habit which thousands of people practice almost daily, and one which is fraught with danger; moreover, the soda only give3 temporary relief and in the end the stomach trouble gets worse and worse. The soda acts as a meehanical irritant to the walls of the stomach and bowels and cases are on record where it accumulated in the intestines, causing death by inflamation or peritonitis. Don't Want Them. El Parvenir, a Santiago de Cuba paper, prints a two-column article with reference to the intention of a colored preacher of Topeka, Kas., to bring 40 families of Negroes and establish a town in the highlands above Santiago which shall be known as Topeka. The paper demands that the people boycott the Yankee Negroes, asserting that they are freauently guilty of horrible _ J i j-T- _ Cl-._i.__ crimes ana tnat me soutueru cunes, anxious to be rid of their colored population, will endeavor to send them to Cuba. A Horse Midget. The premium midget of the New York horse show is a perfect horse, 29 inches tall, 7 1-4 hands high, weighing 127 pounds. He is four years old and eats a pint of oats three times a day, and when thirsty drinks a glass of water. URGED FORCE. ' DemonstrativelMeeting in Washington Wednesday Night. MUCH BAD ADVICE GIVEN. I Only One Voice Was Raised for Peace. McKinley, BrookerT. Washington and Other Leaders Denounced. Upward of 5,000 Negroes assembled Wednesday night at the Fifth Baptist church, on Vermont avenue, near R street, Washington, D. C-, to protest against the wrongs ifc is charged have been inflicted upon their race, particularly with reference to the recent race riots in the Carolina?. Incidentally they took occasion to denounce the Democratic party, President McKinley and Brookcr T. Washington and other colored men and the Washington Post as enemies of the Negro. It was probably the greatest outpouring of Negroes ever seen in Washington. Orenerallv SDeakincr. the addresses were of the most fiery and passionate order, while two diametrically opposed sets of resolutions were adopted, the one favoring force, and termed the political resolution, the other counseling prayer and preaching. Incendiary as were some of the utterances, the meeting was nevertheless harmless, and afforded the speakers an opportunity to give vent to their feelings. A committee was then appointed to draft resolutions for the meeting. It consisted of Rev. W. H. Brooks, Rev. W. J. Howard, E. M. Hewlett, W. Calvin Chase, Rev. R. T. Hart and Col. Perry H. Carson. While the committee was out Attorney John Moss secured recognition from the chair, but he did not long retain it, and had not the Hillsdale barrister left the church at the time that he did, a riot might have ensacd. Moss wanted to know the purpose of the meeting. In reply, the presiding preacher started in to tell the story of a man going to Heaven, but he had conducted his hero no further than the pearly gates before the audience burst into thundering applause and laughter, mingled with cries denouncing Moss, commanding him to sit down and to get out. Moss protested, and vainly endeavored to state his position, but the 6rowd declined to listen to him. At the conclusion of his speech the committee on resolutions reported. Rev. W. H. Brooks read those which were announced as the moral resolutions. They reviewed the situation tiiroughout the South with respect to the condition of the Negro, declared that lynchings .had become common, unarmed men were slaughtered, babes torn from mothers breasts and private property destroyed. The resolutions then urged th.e Negroes to act, and to protest before the American people against arson, murder and anarchy, and also appeal for sufferage. The Negroes were urged to support the best statesmanship of the South, and a call was sent forth to the ministers throughout the land and to preach and to teach right and justice to all men, and Christians everywhere were called on to support the Negro in demanding his rights guaranteed him by the law. The political resolutions next read declared that the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments are practically dead letters, and that a former presiHpnt. fipnfc t.rnnna infcn Tllinms to nroteet property, so should the present executive have sent a force into the Carolinas to protect the Negro and his rights. It was then declare! in the resolutions that color was not the cause of the race war and outrages against the Negroes; it was because they were Republicans. Democracy had caused ail the trouble to regain its power. The passage of a Federal electien law was strongly urged, and a committee of fifteen advised to be appointed to communicate the resolutions to the president. The resolutions advised that force be used to secure the negroes' voting rights. Both of these sets of resolutions were unanimously adopted. Tremendous cheers greeted Col. Per ry Carson when lie came forward to speak, and his every utterance was greeted with cheers and laughter. He said the Negroes wanted a Douglass to lead them, and then dropped into original poetry which brought down the house. "Organization is what is needed," said Col. Carson; "you niggers don't get nothing till you organize. Resolutions and mass meetings don't count for anything; organize." Look at your organization here tonight; I am known all over the country as Col. Perry Carson. The Irishmen stand together, the Dutchmen stand together and so must you niggers, if you expect to get your rights and stop calling on the White House. Father Abraham ain't there no more. Prepare to protect ? 1 TTTi~\ m n Juu-locxvcaj tuu v 11 iuc ui jum nvuivu and your property. Get your powder and shot and pistol. The Negroes in North Caroliua had five years to do that, and they didn't do it until three days before the election. That's why they failed. Perry Carson is ready; he has got his shot and pistol; he is ready to defend himself. Help yourself; stop crying for the white man to help you. Get your shot and your powder." Rev. "W. H. Brooks followed in a speech which, considering the occasion and the surroundings, was simply marvelous and wonderful. It was most eloquent and, in fact, the redeeming feature of the meeting. It was a most stirring but sincere and earnest appeal frtr deliberation aad the working' Out of the destiny of the Negro by peaceful methods. He appealed to the pulpit and to Christians everywhere for justice and moderation. Several brief speeches were made, all of them of an inflammatory nature, and it was late when the mass meeting adjourned, after having passed a resolution denouncing George W. Stewart for his attack upon the colored school teachers. He was declared a defamer of the virtue of Negro women. An Oklahoma girl advertised for a husband and got him. The advertise ment and wedding outfit cost eleven dollars. Within a year he died and left her five thousand dollars life insurance. And yet some people say advertising does not pay. BISHOP TTTRNER ON NEGRO RACE. He Declares His People Have no Future in This Country The seventeenth session of the Macon African Methodist Episcopal conference, sitting at Dublin, G-a., since Wednesday, has adjourned. Bishop H. M. Turner, D. D., of Atlanta, presided, assisted by Vicar Bishop James M. Devane, of Queenstown South Africa. This conference consisted of 250 colored ministers. Before reading out the appointments Bishop Turner made a sensational address. Among other things he said: 'T see no manhood future for the negro iu tins country, and the man who is not able to discover that fact from existing conditions must be void of common sense. Our civil, political and social status is degrading, and as degradation begets degredation, the Negro must go from bad to worse and infinitum. Neither education nor wealth can ever elevate us to the grade of respectability. I say this, because we are surrounded by so many influences that militate against our manhood. '"The best thing the Negro can do is to ask the United States congress for a hundred million dollars to meet the expense of starting a line of steamers between this country and Africa, thus pioneering a domain forour settlement. With this start upon the part of the general -government, which actually owes us forty billions of dollars for 246 years of labor, we could build up a business that would enable us to transport to Africa as many of our race as are fit to go. If the United States has hundreds of millions to throw away in a useless war, and for other foolish things, surely it can appropriate a hundred million dollars en the mnst Iftval inhabitants it has in its domain. "The white people themselves bad infinitely better appropriate a hundred million dollars, if we are the raping monsters which the public press charges us with being, than to be shedding so much blood, when I know and you all know that much of that blood is. innocent blood; and innocent blood will speak to God day and night for retribution till God overthrows the nation, as he did the Roman Empire. And, as I have the ear of the country it is very likely I shall call such a convention within the next three or six months; for, if the Negro does not say or do something in his own defence, he is not only an inferior race, but he is not fit to be ranked as a human being." A WOMiff'S WORK. She Makes a Good Living on a Little Farm. There is in this state a woman who on a little farm manages to support herself and her children and to provide the latter with the means of education. Her only help is a young negro boy. The following extract from a letter written by this woman to a friend in Atlanta a few days ago gives some iaetf8* of the way in which she manages to get along: "Well, let me tell you what I made cn my little farm this year. First, I sold $40 worth of strawberries, made 60 bushels corn, plenty of hay and fodder, 60 gallons syrup, 200 bushels swees potatoes, 3 bales of cotton, which the children and I, with the negro boy, picked. I get 4 gallons of milk a day, and nounds of bnttftr: havf. 4- Vine* to kill and have plenty of chickens and eggs. I have never done as much work and as hard work as I have this year and my health has never been better. "The children are getting so ihey are lots of help to me, and are just as smart in their books as they can be. May plays nicely on the piano, is taking lessons from a good teacher and I pay her in butter, eggs, etc. We are gradually getting out of debt." This brave little woman has not only given a noble example of courage and liidepeaaciiee, but she furnishes also : an illustration of the advantages of diversified farming. Her good sense in raising her own provisions might be imttated by a majority of the farmers of this state greatly to their benefit. ; There are many women in this state , who conduct farms, large and small, and , it is said that nearly all of them are , remarkably thrifty and successful. They believe in raising as far as they , can everything they need, and they are exemplars of the fine practical business sense which women so often develop when there is a demand for it.?Atlan- . ta Journal. A Remarkable Case. i William B. Smallridge, who died a ; few days ago at Glenville, in Gilmer " county, carried a bullet in his heart for i 37 years. He was a member of Co. E, ! 1st West Virginia infantry in the civil i war, and in September, 1861, while < marching through Gilmer county, West ! Virginia, was shot by somebody in am- i i I ii T IT . * .n n J ousn, tne Dunet entering omaiinage s 1 che3t, at the lower point of the scapula, J on the left side, passing thence direct- i ly through the left lung into the left i ventricle of the heart. The force of ; bullet wad so broken that it did not pass : the innor wall, but the regimental sur- s geon prououuced the wound fatal, and < left Smallridge to die. He did not die, < however, but was sent back up the Lit- J tie Kanawha river in a skiff to his home i in Glenville, where he recovered and < has since lived. A few weeks ago, < while on his deathbed, he asked Dr. Gr. i 0. Brown to make an examination of i the wound after his death. This Brown i did, and found the bullet imbedded in the heart. Surgeons pronounced it the most extraordinary case on record. An Indiana Mob. On Sunday night' November 6, Jos- , eph Baird, an offensive negro in Sey- , mour, Ind.. was taken from jail and , horsewhipped. It was with difficulty ' that the mob was restrained then from 1 lynching him. When Baird was re- t leased he accused about 20 colored men t of being in the mob, also Mayor A. W. j Mills, and other officials. When May- ' or Mills met Baird Thursday he accus- * ed the latter of making these charges. ' Baird was also confronted by Dr. Shield ( who said Baird had repeated the charge to him. Then Baird and Mills both drew their revolvers and opened fire, keeping it up through the street till t Baird ran into his house. Fifteen i shots were fired while a crowd was wit- i nessing the chase, and no one was hurt, a Baird was arrested and taken to Brown- t town to prevent lynching. < OTJE TROOPS LAND. They March on Cuban Soil to Their Camp. Gen. Greene and his sta5 left the hotel Inglaterra at 6 o'clock Friday morniug for Marianao in order to superintend the landing of the American troops. All four companies of the Second regiment volunteer engineers which th* pi AT?1 cfcx li r V/U vu vuv x iviiua louuvgu wj uaix past 9 o'clock at the Marianao wharf with colors flying. They formed at the landing place and marched to their camp, two miies away, filing past Gen. Greene and his staff, who, on horseback. reviewed the men as they pasi^d. All the men, with the exception of five who are still suffering from sea sickness and were taken to the camp by train, ' were in line and are all in good spirits and fit for duty. One hundred and fifty Cubans of Gen. Menocal's division were employed in clearing the camp site and by 11 o'clock the tents were being pitched for the first American camp at Habana. Apart from the few cases of sea sickness only two of the 280 men who landed from the Florida are on the sick list. Patrick Toohing is suffering from dysentery and Thomas Leonard from a dislocated knee cap. Both had their present complaints when they left the United States. These men were busy all the afternoon pitching camp and fixing tents. The site selected for the camp is excellent on high ground and well supplied with water. The men have arrived with only heavy underwear, woolen blouses and cloth breeches, which are very trying under the scorching sua of the seacoast. The medical staff considers it urgently necessary that khaki uniforms be sent at once for the comfort of the men. EARTHQUAKE SHOCK. Felt in Portions of North Carolina and Virginia. .Richmond. Va., Nov. 25.?Many points in south and southwest Virginia report having experienced an earthquake shock about 3.30 o'elock this afternoon. The disturbance was felt from Nottoway county to the Tennessee line. There was the usual preceding roaring noise. No damage is reported. AT LYXCHBURG, Lynchburg, Va., Nov. 25.?At 3,05 o'clock this afternooh a shock of earthquake was felt here. It was quite generally felt, but there was no damage. AT DANVILLE. Danville, Va., Nov. 25.?At3.o'clock sharp this afternoon an earthquake shock was felt throughout the city and surrounding country very perceptibly. No damage reported. CHARLOTTE PELT IT. Charlotte, N. C., Nov. 25.?A distinct earthquake shock was felt, throughout this section at 3.10j;his a?- _ terhoon' No'serious damage reported SOUTH WEST VIRGINIA. Roanoke, Va., Nov. 25.?A very perceptible earthquake shock was felt here this afternoon at 3 o'clock, lasting about 30 seconds. No serious damage was done. Reports to the Times from various Darts of southwest Virarinia show the tremor to have been very general throughout that region. ELSEWHEBE. Raleigh, N. C., Nov.?A special to the News and Observer from Franklinsviile, N. C., says: A very distinct earthquake shock was felt here this ' afternoon about five minutes after 3. 1 Vibration was from east to west. A special from Winston, Nv C.. says: A distinct earthquake shock was felt * here at 3.10 this afternoon. It shook ' the largest buildings in town. 1 AT NORFOLK ALSO. Norfolk, Ya.. Nov. 25.?A few min- J utes after 3 o'clock this afternoon two ; light shocks of earthquakes were felt : here. There were not generally noticed 1 however. J i A Lady Suicides. i Friday morning about 5 o'clock Mrs. < 3am Whetstone, of the Hollow Creek section of Aiken county, the wife one of the community's most respected citizens, committed suicide by drowning. ] At an early hour, while it was yet dark, , she called her husband to do some er- ( rand for her. He was still in bed, as \ was all the rest of the household. He remained in bed some 10 or 15 minutes < afterwards, dozing off to sleep. When j he awoke he missed his wife. He arose, | calling her, and receiving no answer he ] gave the alarm and search was immediately made. It still being dark, it was ' with much difficulty that she was traced ] by her footprints to an old pond some 200 yards from the house. There she . seemed to have sprung across an old ( ditch, and going some distance up the stream, jumped in. The searchers had to wait some time for daylight before . the body could be found, the current ( having borne it some distance down the stream. The place wa3 only about two ^ feet deep and it is somewhat remark- < ible Jiow any one could be drowned in ] so shallow a place. This is the second | ittempt in the last few weeks. The \ >ther was made with a razor, the lady jutting an ugly gash in her throat. Her reason then, she said, was her very ill health, and she felt that she was } jnly a burden to her family, and want- ^ id to eet out of the way. She was < ibout 60 years old and leaves a large J :ainily and a number of relatives to ( mourn her sad end. 2 v:n T ( wcgiu mill iiauur x culls. v In the United States circuit court * :n Charleston Saturday Judge Simon ;on appointed C. 0. White temporal^ r receiver of the Charleston cotton mill j lpon application of Walters & Compaay, of Baltimore. The claims of these ;oncerns amount to $30,000. It is al,eged in the complaint that the liabilities of the mill amount to $125,000. ' rhe order issued is made returnable ? December 19th. The mill was reor- * ranized about fourteen months ago, 1 Segro labor being substituted in it for s white labor. It was generally supposed 1 :o be doing a eood business. 1 -- - - 2 Getting Their Eyes Open"Senator Tillman recently said that ;here had been a great change of senti neat .in the North in relation to the 1 ights of inferior races, and it looks r rery much as if he was right," assents ( ihe Portland (Me.) Press, a Republican a >rgan. \ i IUKE JiLUUD dtiJSl) T l_ I unit at a oenaus i rouDie wren wegro soldiers at Anniston. 1 SPRINGFIELDS FREELY USED. Fatalities Result. Apparently Worst of All the Troubles Yet Developed. A Reign of Terror for Awhile. A special from Anniston, Ala., to The Advertiser says: Members of the Third Alabama (Negro) regiment with murder in their hearts caused great excitement here Thursday night. Shortly after dark, Private Gildhart of Co. B, Seoond Arkansas, while going towards his regimental camp from tewn, was shot in the head by a Nesrro soldier. who also stabbed him in the back. G-ildheart was taken to the regiment J hospital. A little later a member of the Fourth Kentucky was shot on Walnut street by a Negro soldier, who lay in a gully, shooting at the white men who passed. Firing was heard in Liberia, the Negro quarter of the city, which is not far irom "Walnut street,- and* squad of provost guards went to inve& tigate. As it turned the corner of Six teenth and Pine streets a large crowd of Negro soldiers, without warning, opened fire upon the guard with Springfields the gun in use in the regiment. The guard returned the fire, but had but few cartridges, and soon had to retreat. Reinforcements and more ammunition were tfent for, but when they arrived the Negroes had disappeared. The number of Negroes in the mob was variously estimated at from 50 to 200. In the engagement, Sergeant Dobson, Third Tennessee, was shot in the arm and Priyate Graham, Third Tennessee, received a painful but not necessarily dangerous wound in the stomach. Two other members of the provost guard are missing and cannot be found. When the news of the trouble became known the white soldiers who were in the city gathered around the provost guards' headquarters and begged for guns and amunition, crying like children because their requests could not be granted. Citizens armed themselves and repaired to the scene of the battle. Mayor High at once ordered all saloons closed. Several Negro soldiers, one with a Springfield which had just been fired, were arrested in various parts of the city and locked up, though it was with difficulty that the inforiated white soldiers and citizens were prevented from wreaking summary vengeance upon them. Armories of the two local military companies were broken into and every gun and cartridge appropriated by unknown parties. Gen. Frank, who is in command of the troops here, came out and wa? on the streets until" a late hour. ? Grea. Colby, commanding the Second brigade, ordered out two companies fPL:.a m O' wvu <jl uuc xrniu xemiesoee aau'oeuond Arkansas and brought -them to the " city for whatever services might be-required. They scoured the city and carried all soldiers not "on duty back to the camp. A member of the Fourth Tfisconsin is said to have been shot but the report cannot be verified. One Negro soldier while under arrest was shot in the arm by a citizen. After the engagement at Sixteenth and Pine very few Negroes, either soldiers or civilians, were to be found on the streets, and it was well. Firing has been heart! at various parts of the city and rumors are afloat of several crowds of Negroes in ambush, but ill investigation was fruitless. A Negro soldier was dangerously beaten by some white soldiers on Tenth street this afternoon and this incident is supposed to have caused the riotous actions on the part of the Ne- > ?roes, who are said to have slipped out of the camp through the guard lines. One Negro soldier has been brought in iead and another fatally wounded. DflftArhvJ Wrm at. Alto* Miss Margaret Moore, who was to be married to Timothy Foley in St Catharine's church, Moscow, Pa., Wednesday, deserted the bridegroom at the altar. The church at Moscow was filled with the relatives and friends of the principals. Rev. B,. H. Walsh began the service. Already the bridegroom had made his solemn vow. "Will ycfu, Margaret Moore, take rimothy Foley to be your lawful husband?" asked the priest. There was a pause. "Is it yet too late?" asked the bridejlect. "Not yet," said Father Walsh. "Then I will not." said Miss Moore, ' * is she turned from the altar and startjd for the door. Several years ago Foley jilted Margaret Moore for her sister. His wife lying, he recently sought out Margaret Moore, who promised to marry him, jut through revenge deserted him at ?u jJULC aicai. Fed on Turfcey. The Seventh army corps had an un< lsual Thanksgiving. The ladies of savannah gave Gen. Lee's 13,000 solliers a turkey Thanksgiving dinner. Five hundred ladies visited the camps luring the afternoon and served the ta)les in each regiment. Turkey, fruit ind cakes were served to every man. Outside of Gamp Onward the provost :ompanies at a dozen different stations Fere given dinner so that not a soldier n the entire corps was without turkey, rhousands of crysaothenums was distributed among the men and half of the torps wore boufconniers. SixlMenlKilled.? A special from/Quincy, HI., says: rhe powder mill at Lamotte, Mo., iituated eight miles south of herej'on he maine line and a half a iri'.e from \cf>Krtrrt KIait r>r> at. 7 nn a. m tillinc ix men and wounding several others, rhe explosion occurred in the packing louse and was so terrific as to be heard md felt a distance of 25 miles. A Democratic Conference, Eastern and western Democrats will lold a conference in New York in the lear future, probably on December 2. Chairman Jones is authority for the tatement that the Chicago platform