The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, June 23, 1893, Image 1
WHMMTY/r jprfjl MYftW mYlIM 2
^ JkAALA rnft MlliiM 4 A?. AVAft A AA1AAAJKP
VOL. VXXJ.?NEW SERIES. UNION C. IL. SOUTH CAROLINA,
, The bnilding of tLo proposed free
library in Philadelphia will cost nearly
a million dollars. AH citizen** will bo '
entitled to the use of it without charge,
and they will be allowod to toko books (
to their homes. t
The Washington Ncwb soys "In one ^
'".thing the South is most fortunate. It ^
I has not mortgaged its futuro or its ^
) present. What is owned is owned out- (
<* right. Whereas in Kansas, for in'
stance, the mortgago debt per capita v
is $170, in Tennessee it is only #23,
and, if one turns to totals, the figures ;
aro even more striking. In Kansas, on |
a valuation of $348,000,000, thcro is un ji
agtrregato debt of $248,000,000; in :i
Tennessee on an assessed valuation or
$ijwz,uuu,uuu, tno aggregate mortgage \
debt is only about $40,000,000."
i. l.-i
There was an incident of tho naval i,
review in Now York Harbor, relates c<
the Atlanta Journal, which in attracting
considerable attention. In all the i?<
display and pageantry there was but N
ono tribute to tho memory of George tl
Washington and that came from au tl
English vessel. If a person ignorant ''
of bho history of our eountry hud wit- l"
nessed tho splendid review lie would
not liavo discovered that any such per- 1
sou as Gcorgo Washington ever lived, ''
but for tho fact that Sir John Hop- 1
kinp, the British Vice-Admiral, (lushed ''
on the deck of his ship a fiery figure of 1
"The Father of His Country." This
\kas a generous and graceful act. I
^^Tho lato Doctor Acrncw. of Pliiln
'"dolphia, said that catarrhal affections
wore almost unknown among the J
Quakeresses whom he attended, ami ho
ascribed it to tlio fact that tin Quaker (,
bonnet protects tho back of tlio head
and tho nape of tho neck from cold atr.
Ho might havo gono further and added ((
that the Quaker women have come
nearer than any othors of their sex to Cl
discovering tho perpetual bloom of ^
youth. One moots in and about Phila- l,
delphia scores of Quakeresses who re- J
tain in old ago fresh, unwriukled faces,
clear eyes, and erect figures. Tho N
peace and health of their spirits seem h
to conform face and figure. is
> of jkrnng physicii^^^^^liichcoinesto Si
? maturity about tlivnmo of year, has ai
aroused tho curious statistician to do u
Homo figuring on their prospects. Ho p
says, notes tho New Orleans Picayune, r<
that there are educated in this country
about twico as many clergymen as
lawyers, and about twieo us many
physicians as clergymen, which makes
about four physicians to cvel^k^wyer.
The United States has more physicians s'
tl
to tlio population than any other country.
In 1880 thero was a physician to '
every (500 inhabitants, whereas in ,
England there was one physician to
overy 1000, in Franco one to every ,
2600 and in Germany one to 2800. In
certain parts of the United States the p
doctora^ero even more plentiful than
the ratio for the whole country indi- t.
catcd. Ten years aero., according to a
ropuct of Iho Illinois Hoard ot nuiu?, - ,,
there was one doctor to 048 persons, t
and in smaller places in the State one I 1
to 260. In 1887-8 the entire number .>
y of medical students in this country was I a
^^18,513 (including dental, pharmaccuti- 1
t Spjl and veterinary), and the total is
* ndlt supposed to be about 20,000. On
t,h(Aasis of this rapid increase, it is '
h*IG to say thnt the circlo of the nv< r- 1
'?Rgo physician's patients is closing in on '
him every year, and if he is improving 1
their health steadily, the outlook for '
liim is anything but cheerful.
It is said that tlio Austrian authori- '
fjpq nro vOI*V miioli nnnoarnn/l ol?Aut 1
the constant heavy immigration from '
their territories, and are doing all they
can to check it by publishing harrow- '
ing accounts of tho miseries undergone 1
by their emigrants in foreign countries. 1
They have lately published a state- '
ment to tho effect that Austrian emi- v
grants ii^Brazil liavo appealed to their
consul at liio do Janeiro to request
tho Brazilian Government to give
I
them work or assistance. As the resuit
of this intervention, up to the
first harvest, they wero provided with
fifteen days' work per month, at ,
nominal daily wages of two florins <
eighty-four kreutzers, or about $1.1H. ^
This, however, explains tho New
Orleans Picayune, was not paid in
ready money, but in paper, which
?hoj topers would only accopt at such <
a hojSy discount that tho unfortunate i
lcbcp^rs were barely able to ?o?Hr?tho
necessaries 01 1110. 1110 present
Brazilian Government, moreover, 1
havo not kept the promiso made by
their predecessors to assign land to '
settlers and advance money for its
cultivation. Consequently, the immigrants
have been reduced to desti- '
tution through tlio increaso in the
prico of provisions, tho bad harvest,
the cessation of work on tho roads j
and the stoppage of cultivation.
THE NEWS IN WUJ^ J
Che Latest Happenings Condensed I
and rnu'Au Here.
Gcocgc W. Jackson has been admitted
o the liar. II) is the first colored man
o seek admission to practice in New
ft i s y.
There is one place whore a woman gets
> man's p?y for doing a man's work. It
s the township of Marslifield, Me., and
ny woman who wishes to work out her
oad tax can do so, and have her day's
voik count for as much as a man's.
The mysterious ways of Providence are
llustrutvd once more iu the fact that a
igutniiig b >lt which rcccutly killed two
lersons iu (Georgia left untouched a book
gent who was silting between them.
144 uloniwulUiru ni'u BUA at work Oil
'an lerbilt's palace near Ashevillo, N. C.
Winston, N. (J , is sending out circulis
asking farmers not to bring their toacc
) to that market as they are not in s
mdili ui to buy.
lieu. John II. Gordon, of Georgia, is
oiiig to New York at the invitation of
anthem business m m and veterans of
ic Union Army io deliver an adkrcss on <
ic closuig days of the war and to give
is p rsonal estimate of the two grcn|
mi.mi* i, .c aim l iI'illll.
The county silo of Piinco William ol
ounty, Yn , has bccu uiovcd fr m
Ir nlsville. to Manassas, and the corner T
.me of the new court house to be built o
icic was laid Wednesday with Masonic tl
ire monies. > h
T. It. It d> i {.son,the new postmaster at li
hai lot to, N. U., has cutcrcd upon his v
utiles. g
-Align-ta, Clu., is to Lc congratulated b
i .securing llie (.files Desk Co., which ai
i preparing to move from its present tl
ication at Clrecnvillc, tj 'J. ai
An Italian committed suicide at Santa
Ion, Cal. receutly because he had no u
location. lie left a statement to the u
llce.t that a man without one had ur
usiness to live. d
I'he highest honor for oratory at flic a
Diiinicucumcnt of Trinity Colletyp in
[orlli Carolina, was catriod oil' by a fulllooded
Choctaw Indian of the uame of tl
oscph May tubby. a:
The trustees of a military academy iu o
[aeon, Mo., have brought an action for a
eavy damages against live ministers for o
suing a boycot 011 the academy because t<
ant ing was tundit cadets, w
vindled out of $1,000 by a very smooth ^
nd cunning trick. They were culled g
4?\ etirn ml tvilnOCCDU wll-lt. flli'V Q'ltt.
|flMI O.^.. ..............v, ...... ....J ||
oscd was a marriage cerlilicate, but in S
jality was an order on the bauk where u
jcv had an account.
m " VI
Cotton Mills North and South. h
The New York Financial Chronicle fi
ikes twelve Fall lliver cotton mills and M
tiows that their averago dividends for
se past soven mus have ranged from j
to 10 per cent. h
Our Southern cotton mills, as the Ral 11
imoro .Manufacturers' llecnrd showed a t
liort time ago, piy dividends ranging c
iom 10 to 23 per cent. v
The advantages in cotton manufactur-v.f
ng arc all on our side. Wo have tho j
aw material on tlu sp it, and wo have
xccplionully cheap lab >r. In 18'Jl the
vcrago yearly wages paid t > each cotton ^
pciaiive m rutroouru was jy\I!U, as comlaicd
with au over ige of $025 in New
'highui 1, ami ar. average of $222 in the s
y
diddle States. This great difference is
.11 in our favor, and makes it all the* ,
larvier for the Nin th 11 compete with us.
N >\v, why sii ?u d l.ngland and the
s'ui tlt, situttod at a great dUtaucc from
lie cot to i fields, manufacture most of
lie raw 111 iterial ami market it? We
in establish mills in sight of our fields
hat \vi 1 be more profit >ble than their
i stant competitors. The Southern
hales h ive good distributing facilities,
iml (lie completion of the Nicaragua
an il wdl mike it cany to roach the
n i'' et- of both coasts of S nitli Ainer
en, and also China and Japtu.
This, then is the situation. The South
ins prac'ically a monopoly in cotton; her E
nil's pay the biggest profits; her labor
sthe (h< ap' st, a:;(l she lias the Inst
haiices of reaching tlie consumers of the
.wild. Tluse advantages in the course n
if time must inevitably make this section ^
lie centre of the lit mufaeture and distri
uition of cott in goods. Hut our homo
apital and enterprise should not wait for v
his* improvement t > he developed by ,
mtsi lens. We should go into it ourselves,
mil thus hasten tho approach of the ilay
,vhoii wc can li\ tlie price of our raw material,
instoail of allowing it to be con .
[rolled l?v a ring in Liverpool.
- ? i
Baptised After Death.
ClIATTANOOOA, Tk.NN.- A ijUCtT 9tblV ,
ronies from Englo Cleft, a small settle- N
inent ou Lockout M.o?j)>?||ni Severn'' [
weeks ago J. W. M.isser was very ill with .
fever. Ho wanted l.? be baptised, aud,
its this could not be do'c during his ill ,
BOSS, he refj'-ie't' d that i s soon as he dim
his b.idv be imim-isod. Ho said ho had
neglected it during his lifetime, and ,
wanted his dead body baptised. A few
days ago ho died, nod on the day of his
funeral, at lllxon's (Cove, the Kcv. \V.
,T. DtC'ii jin i ivn o-.-ed tho -orpsc in tho t
presence of a largo crowd of people. The t
Imdy was then put back iaha the coflin I
and laid in the graveyard.
HIGH TOWEn-HUINB OF I
Reproduced at the World
Do We Want Themf
tf. Y. Sun.]
Hero is an interesting letter from one
f a half dozen of valuable immigrants:
"I saw, some time ago, an nrliclo iu
"be Bun, which said that young men
ught to go South, and seemed to praise [
ic Southern States. Now, we nro ^ne. I
ale and hearty young men, sonie-JSagsh,
some Irish; wo are all strong and
igoroii", and none over 27. We arc all
raduatcs?oue of Oxford, three of Camridge,
one of Triuity College, Dublin,
ad one of the London University. I am
jo sixth man. Our united income
mounts to $72 per week.
"We have completely de-fine gontlclan-izcd
ourselves, and consider uo wo k
ndignilicd or beneath us.
"We have talked matters over a good
cal, and we have almost, decided to seek
ucwcr country than New York, and to
e about "milking our piles" at once.
"Is it too much to ask you to give us
lirr.ugh your paper a few words of advice
s to where wo can get full information
f tin kind of mc i wanted, the positions
ud modes of living open, &c , South,
r coul 1 you (if you thing it it would invest
the public; tell us briefly what we
to know, in your colunis?"
ic ATtr in ram RS way is uui puna iirnv 01
ur six friends, Georgia is the "Empire
tate of the South;" in other words, it is
lore like New York State than any othoi
louthern State; and to Georgia we should
dvise our friends to betake themselves,
bit they will need capital; and we doubt
f the principal which produces $72 a
reck will go far. Still it may, anil cerainly
if they all hang together, they will
;ct along better thau by hanging separtely.
The fact that negroes do most of the
lanual labor of the South will restrict
he field for our friends to some extent,
ait probably to their advantage. College
nen, with p'uck, and as levev-hcadcd as
liese young llritons and IrMimcn seem
o be ought to nnke their own way South
>r North. We wish them success; and
vhile they are gaining it, let them not
org t tlicir duty to this country?let
hem become citizeus as soon as they
cgally uiny.
m
ESQUIMAUX FAMILY.
Vt the World's Columbian Exposition.
>A N A M A CON VICTS LI BER ATE D.
?ho Court of Cessation Froos M. Eiffel
aud Charles D. Lcssops.
Pauis Cablegram.?Considerable cxiteincnt
has been caused by a decision
d the Court of Cessation on the appeal
if Charles I)e Lesseps and other defend*
.nts convicted of fraud in connection
vith the Panama Cnual Company. The
:?urt handed down its decision Thursday
plashing the sentence on the ground
hat the statute of limitation covered the
deuces charged and that the indictment
>11 M'liii'li flin. iiri?mif>r< xai-rn liiml imo
rrcgulur In consequence of this decison
M. KifTcl was at once liberated from
>rison, and M. Charles Do Lfsseps, who
s in the St. Louis hospital, suffering
vith an uccute attack of dyspepsia, was
nforined that he was at liberty, but was
oo ill to leave the hospital. There were
ivc defendants convicted on the trial,
vh ch ended February 9th lust. These
vcrc Ferdinand Dc LcoOcps, his son
;harlcs, Mariu9 Fontane, Ileri Cottu
aid Gustove Eiffel:
Lightning Killa Four Brothers.
Auhian, Mo.?The s:x Wright bro
hers were standing under a tree near
heir home here, when lightning killed
four of them outright and injured the
)thcr two so they may die.
IKV. I, L'MfBu *
Jt vH^H
ttw'^Qr*'^ W^m
^h4jff t A
A AI\I\D,UMH UW, If T A. HI
Kerch, the wifo of a well-to do Senear
Pleasant Ilill, Preston coun^j^H^U-ii'
Icrert tww nf li<?r children and thefllKr
Wed on tb? term for 18 yeaW^S^^tegjwV
:ight children, the oldest of whoif^^HL *
For some time Mis.*'KerClT K
melancholy, and frequently said tl
ess afraid she would die and '111
children. She seemed to be^Bj^Bd sl
ncaltli, however, except that J
dines complained of a trouble "
\fter dinner Mrs. Kerch went u
alio was at work in the leunffl^Bhd" P
to her: ^jBw . "
"I have given Johnny eaV^^Ely^- }'
poisou, and we will all jumprJBH?c d
Mollie remembered that a jjfl^fcol f
itryehninc was in the house
;o the placo where it had been '
was gone, and when she
ivliere mother was she rnw li!fl|H^^G|
:he ten-months old baby
Ik-fore she could be prevented
thWK k
t boy 8 or 9 years old, b'UtMoTaiWlBW^S^P
;he boy. I
A desperate struggle then begat be- I
;wecn mother and daughter, but tfan iofuriated
womnu broke looso and jumped
.nto the well, which hnd 8 feet of water
in it. Freddie, to whom poison had been
jiven, was found lying dead on the floor
>f the house, and Johnuy died a few
niuutes later. Mr. Kerch was not at
aornc at the time.
Wanted?A Buffalo Farm.
Washington, I). C.?Secretary Mortoi
has received a communication from the
President of the Nebraska City National
Dank, Col. W. L. Wilson, earnestly inviting
his attention to the desirabity of
experimenting in the perpetuation of
that almost extint animal?the buffalo?
in the Aleutian Islands, or Alaska, and
invi>ing him to consider the propriety of
purchasing a herd uow controlled by the
hank as aircnt for the use of this department
for this purpose. The Secretary has
written Col. Wilson, treating his proposition
in a humorous way.
'The fact is," said Mr. Morton, "tho
suggestion was originally made to Col.
Wilson by a mutual friend, Mr. Morrison,
who is a bit of a wag, and who has proposed
this thing as a sad joke. But Col.
Wilson has taken his proposition in all
1 a ll_ i 12 il.i t
(seriousness, auu actually ueuuves uiut a
will carefully consider the propriety of
undertaking, as Secretary of Agriculture,*
to make an experimental buffalo farm ia
Alaska or the Alcutiau Islands. The bank
cauie into possession of these animals
' through the settlement of a decedent's
estate, aud I have no doubt th^t, viewed
solely as assets, they are a stock which it
will I c hard to water. But I fill to see
any reason why Uucle Sam should pay
out the people's money from the United
States Treasury to run a bnffalo farm.
Though I think Secretary Carlisle has a
reindeer ranch in Alaska, for which
Uncle Sam expended $25,000 originally,
and over which lie has constantly a
salaried groom and tr.iiuer."
A Marshal Kills an Outlaw.
A special from Miller, Oa., says tint
Deputy Marsha! E. N. Darnell killed
Henry Johnson, a negro desperado and
mtlaw, last night. Johnson (was looking
;or the deputy with a Winchester, having
ihiealcned to kill him, but Darnell got
.he drop and puffftteen buckshot in the
legro's breast within a space the size of
i silver dollar.
Liupton Dead.
Special from Auburo, Ala., announces
die death of Dr. N. L. Lupton, professor
>f Chemistry in the Agricultural and
iiccnnnicai College o( Alabima, He was
he most einiacnt scientist and teacher in
;hc South ami formerly professor in the
j 3o.ith-rn University of Alabama, also at
Van Inrbilt University, and was at one
ime president of the State University
. >f Alabama.
MNp subordinates aiocou
lb&\g?%ooacw?th Rioh
to- ptyqg
faU **n* of
mft ?ot suftnr, but famttfet of the
BbHBK* Ate drlletTtc desperation.
KStlie put week I>ew Vvrkcnl
jpjthcr cities foe aerBB?thcf
Mdia?
Um^tter le^feacUing. Whole
H^BHp^tf^praeticelly camping out
^ M^ctCaDDed foods |rt
S^PW^pr||ff,W",Wa^ary viands.
Matkceping is gradually becoming an
possibility, and even boarding house!
3 coir pel led to close their doors.
Every hour the misery increases. The
*gnct:em of Chicago, the opening ol
- 1. ... I.. .....I ll... al.li.tjw Mtfltt.
V miiiinet hi;v 10 nu?i ?uu nt..Vw.
tion of the immigration laws uro driv
g hou'ekecpcis to the wall.
"I seut 75 girls to Chicago three night!
;ov" said tli; kcper of a Sixth avenue
rvanls'1?g??iic.y. "Not one would stay
'this city. One woman who wanted i
rvnnt nc u illy .cried wheu aho told tni
iw alio woa placed."
Too mat ia chtrgo of the Grand Cen
Id ngcucy, in Sixth avenue, assured m<
Mpada"1'"! iii?ni> in iwaam wli<
roitcd servants to do gonernl work.
?*Fhrco or fou- y"'u -g*i wa rnttld hi
roju initnigr mts for |8 a month. Noi
ley laug'i at anything less than $13
lontli," said he. "Servants will no
my in the city in the summer. Thi
ear the working of the immigration law
ud the demand for servants in Chicag
nke it almost impossible to supply ou
atrnns. The nutnbor of persons wh
ive in fl its has increased. The moracr
ou mention to u girl that she is to bo th
nly servant in a family she shakes hi
lend and rcfusus to investigate no
u< tlier.
"Sacedish and German girls demac
norc thau any other nationality becaui
Iiro aharp enough to know that i
|ffonv) a fashionable fad to empli
i Jut as it was the swoli thing
Colored servants bofore the war."
wfratare middle class families
own work uutli m"?? 7"
"Aud when will there he a change?'
"Maybe in the fall, when tho Chica
Pair is over, liut servauts have t
idea? now about wages. They ha
changed very much. They go frc
place to placj looking f >r more pay ai
less work. Servants wh? have plac
come to the agencies nod watch for o
portunities to better themselves."
tF/fp \ffW\
W ?K'J
4 \rBa;t!^TITE
INDIA* ENCAMPMENT.
At the World's Columbian Ex posit i
Rain For the Asking.
A new tain wizard named C. It. Jew
lias l ist ;: in Kansa?. He claims that
ran establish direct electrical coininuui
tion with the clouds by means of cert
gases, and that he can produce clouds
sending the gases into a clear sky. WI
this is done small clouds i>ogin to gatl
in nil directions, and within ?i short tii
the sky is shut out by a solid mass
clouds from which rainfall is certain,
says that he can also send a captive I
loon into a cloud and produce rainf
instantly. When this method is used
charges the baloon with certain gas
which explode when they come in ct
tact with moisture.
Frankfort to Remain the Capital <
Kentucky.
Louisvjm.b, Ky. ? Frankfort will r
nain the capital of Kentucky for fil
fears more at least. The House decid
the question, by the selection of Fran
fort over Louisville l>y ft vote of 46
17. The present dilapidated 8tt
ouildings will l>c torn down and a cost
structure erected at a cost of sever
uillion dollars
The Soldier Priest Dead.
Father Darius M. Hubert, 8. J., t
soldier priest, died in Macon, Oa., Tu<
day. Father Hubert went through t
war on the Confederate side as a priv?
soldier and was beloved by nil veterar
He was ft member of the Veteran's A
location of the Army of Northern V
?inia. He wt.s 70 years old.
vlavlrom rarvous prostration, at her frlri
knoioMt(?it 43* T?IMt street. 8bn- tad
had only ni?rMa\om< from Baltimoro, that
where idie had been for one month vipiu p?ar
Ing for tho benefit of her health. ueoe
Amanda uicksuu Tuuiuci w?? to )mi? jiar.
old, and ?? a daughter of David Oicfc- Tt
eon, who waeopt of tho wcnlthicetfaria- tnun
era of Hwook ooailj, aho died lapsing Mow
bis ratite to hit colored d "lighter, valued /vile
at 4448,700. Then was a big law suit man
nnd contest over tho wilt, bat Amanda pre*
nuatly wr.s victorious wu was fcuus
possession of all that was bequeathed to Tl
lur. She had two sons. Julius aud Charles Piic
Dick'on, l?oth intrrlrd, who according rcrti
to the will by which their mother in nam
hcrl c 1 a fortune, will receive *1 00,000 111 t
1 ncli, ami p irt of the remaining $317,000. M
A ........I* l..l?.l.ln l.iit it i? 1,?1?.'vi-il |Mw>
> her husband will coiuo in for part of l?cr itoo
estate, which h valued at more than half dty
b million. Although rich, Aiuauda was <uu<
i a mo list, generous nod buuvolont wo
f man ami enjoyed her fortune and others
di-ted her plcasuto. 8hu wai kind-heart*
ed and in no way pompous or assuming jh(
f on (.ccount of her wealth.
Tho finest mctalio coffin, lined with A
rose colored plush, was purchased and Wil
L aha wna In Imr [JilU jun,
i Sho wss buried from Trinity colored leci
n Methodist church. jpi
< "IT Wil
8 I?* Wh
: (! gtk, *"
n S W1
" j ::
,d i , *d
30 ' l llll
h ci.irr nwr.r.mshs' mountain. ha
)y Reproduced at tho World's Columbian 1,11
^ Exposition.
THE SOUTHERNS SOCIETY.
to
11 01 ub Features to be Discontinued, t
to Kaw York.?The famous Boutboru
' promfflftBt j
K* wh'ch, l?y the lntrodu< tion of club fen "
?*A? tur. a in the Ust few years, hns been the *
*e Southern Club, is again t? become the "
,m Southern Society, by the elimination of 111
?d these fenttires There hits b en some de (>l
;es halo of lute among the members of thi*
P* organization ss to whether or not it
should be r?in purely us n social socioty,
? w ithout club features, such sh n bur room,
pool and billiard*. The executive cum
initio u> nnimously resolved to report 11
that nil clu!) fe?*oien which hnve crept "
into the society within the last four or w
five rears shall be discontinued. It rc
II
iommrmls that the o ionization return
| to the obj- cts for which it wns srgani^c 1 ^
?viz , Kiting entertainments, holding l<
' receptions the nnuunl and other banquets,
and creating and maintaining u chnrity '
fund.
* ~ T
IvVO BANKS rAiij j
And n Receiver Ha* Buii Appointed ''
for a Third. h
i Omaha. Nkii?The Ameii. nn Nniioi.nl II
] Bank is in the hands of Comptroller J. I
L. McCague, president,snd it is supposed 1
:lint the American National's connection c
nn, with llie McCiigue Havings Bank, caused 1
.ts downfall. There are heavy runs on
ill the savings banks hero.
A BAI.T I.AKIt CITV HANK
Sai.t Lakh Utah ?The Park City
Bank hns suspended. Liah'lities f |:J0,~
>00; nRsets as much. Tiic cla;m is made
:hat the haok will shortly rcsutuo The
issignec says that the depositors arc to
oe paid 80 cents on the dollar.
ler
A HANK ItKCBIVP.ll Al'I'olNTKD.
^ "Washington, d. C.?Tfio Comptroller
>f the Currency has appointed Joseph
JT. Bannett receiver of the OgUthorpe
t,a National Bank, Brunswick, (J i.
all
ho """ j
ee A Posaiblo Explanation.
>n- iColunibin, H. C. State.)
Southirn boys at West Point are bus
tain ng the high records of tlieir prode- .
lessors I' is a notable circumstance
uf that North Carl na and Virginia furnish
three out of the four high'at honor (
e* graduates at tho nca<lemy this year. We 1
ly are inclined to think that the relative |
efl wealth of tho sections accounts in large ]
\r . . ..... . ^
part ior im mgn m"K soumeru b?ys |
*? take in compel ion with those of other i
't? jeetions. They sre generally poor, and j
'y know that their advancement depends*' |
jpon their o*u efl\>rts. This being so, <
imbilion spur* them ?s it does-not spur |
:heir wealthier Nor.hern classmates./
Here is one advantage the poor always ]
he isve over the rich?the incentive to em- (
ps- aloy all their energies in the race of life. \
he ?
itc District Attorney Price Resigned,
is. Washington, I). C.?Charles Price,
,s United States attorney for the western ,
ir- district of North Carolina, has resigned
and bis resignation has been accepted. ,
*
\ A
Mleo! dllUr l? chief of the Macon
graph, the oMNet paper In tM South, . .
?Uh bU hud on hi. gun d.m..<M '
Allan retract an editorial which op - ^ ,j
Hi in the Telegraph Moadey, which
unoed Duff at a blackguard and a
ie editorial waa in reaponaa to a comLcatlon
publlabad In tha Sunday
a, signed by ilufl, wherein he tooted
a moet unmercifully. T. >V. F. Price
ngiug editor of tha Telegraph, waa
sot, And came In. fan a ahare of the
no three HufYa ceeheu,., ^
c and denounced them in no un
tin term*, calling tbem all naanaer of
es, nil the time keeping their grip
lieir guns. Then the Huffa departed,
r. Allan said he had nothing to say.
lie hna been passed, and it is nnderd
that a duel will surely follow. The
is in n tumult of excitement, as all
:crned nre prominent people.
H EY LYNCHED SHORTER.
> Prediction of Hie Fellow Prieonera
Was Fulfilled.
. tp cUl from Staunton, Va., says:
diam shorter, colored, who haa been
T'?1.
m 1 lie person of Mrs. Clevenger, at
ivh' stcr, Va., was delivered by Sheriff
tts to Sheriff Adam Forney and his
ird.to ho taken to Winchester for trial.
Vhen Shorter left the jail his fellow
oners said to hiin: "Look rut for
nchcstiT. You will never get thcie
ill.
This prediction was verified in a few
lire. When the train reached Keerns
vn, four miles this side of Winchester,
iody of armed, unmasked neon hoard*
the train, took Shorler frvim the
Brill, and, taking him to the woods,
nged him up snd riddled Ins body with
illets. Shorter wss IV years old.
STUNG TO DEATH.
bp Honey Beet Swarm on the Conductor
end KiTled Him.
A Lvnchburff, Va., special nays: Sun
ife to git ready to go to church, noticed
int ono of his bcvhivcs was swarming,
iid went into the yard for the purpose
f catching the swarm and hiving it
be bees were full of tight and its soon
i Hngnn walked near a Inrge number
tncked him ami ho * as stung in many
laces about tlie head, eyes and noa*. Ho
as carried into tin liousj sod a phjalan
Miinmonvd, but before the doctor
one In cxp'red in gtcit agony, llogan
n? linrty three years of age and had
cen in the employ of the Richmond &
t.inville Riilroad for a number of years,
t the time o'h s dea'li lio was conduc>r
on a material traia.
'he Gigantie Enterprise of I?ouiai*a*
Capitalist*.
Jacksonvti.i.r, Fi.a.?A special fr.m
ampi says that tin Louisiana Lottery
Jompiny ii s purchased ihe b.5. frost
ropcrty, and will construct terminal
ncilitics for its line of stcamahip* to
iondurus. Two islands oil t) a(5 couot of
Ionduras have been purchased for beadpiartcrs
of tho lottery, and a submarine
: a I > 1 c will Ito laid between tho islands
tml Pott Tampa.
, u ?.,>
^ ' 'h- 'P*
. ? - r?*?- ?^ t *
/-. m-j: l- * -n-i
I'M I ill"
YCCATAN liniNH.
tcproduccd at the "World's Columbian
Exposition.
LOWEK RATES TO CHICAGO.
do Cuts Yet, but all Roads Will Come
Down.
Baltimoiie, Md.?"It is not true,*
lays a prominent official of the B. A O.
R It., "that our line has cut the rate
from Philadelphia to Chicago. You can
near all sovts of reports about catting
rates but the agreement has not bean
violated. There will be lower rates to
iifl^'VV'orld'a Pair before August. . From
EW flrtt it has been intended to sell lowjr
rate limitsd tickets after a time to be
Israel Ko tVin naacAnoAr OAmmiifpA r\f t Via
vj 'UV |/40?Vi||VI VUIUIHIVWV v? ?U?
rrtfok LfBe Association. On Tuesday
l#iv tou COuiiuitMV wi!! uiOvt tC
the matter, and by the first of July the
tickets will be on sale."
Killed by Emery Wheel.
Richmond, Va.?Charles W. Watkins,
l well-known merchant, was killed Friiay
morning by tho bursting of an emery
wheel at the 8tarkcs Dixie I'low Works,
.%*!