The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 12, 1892, Image 1
GOD AJ(D
CAMDEN, S. C.,
/ ? L
? 11 * ?mmmmm
Hre SCHOOL. | OUR ALLIANCE COLUMN.
TAL LESSON
K7ST 14, 1892.
FOR
fcertain marc named Ananias.
his *i>,eold a p.cxss?s??ioa
i reading of two nob'?, faith
" " til ?bo were reaiy to Ji?
ft to puffer for Him if onlv
porifieH. but w* hare 0^ *
i th* story of tb*?e to- a wait*,
th(u!n^;? V J*-us Christ were
heart, I nt while oatfwardly
fere wr*v ing them^si^es also,
di their possessions and baa
all to God; tbeir i?f hop**
jade < arlbiv possessions seem
r?r a? thev inizht do good with
lay up t!?asizr? in heayen
21. Luke xv#f., 22; I Tim.
bac< pai't of the price, bis
; privy to it. and tatroght a
v laid it at tjie apostles' leet.
command to this |
vu^., and bo thou sincere |
mars jin'v ? Thoo sbafo be
the* l/rd thj^i*oc T (Deut.
irginr: And it n also written,
tha*" doeta the work of the
jy"' xlvui.. t* . Ow*
-kept hac< nothing when He
* for u H** coop -rtaiy emptied
humbled Himself even unto
W -v8>- .
>r said. Ananiaj*. why bath sa-- ]
( bea r t to l?e to t he Holy Ghost,
t pare of the price of the land?"
??h even in the inward part*
I He bas said, 4 "He that worketh
dwell within My hou?, be
,3hal? not. tarry in My?f$?
IContr^st "fined with. toe W*JV
with sa?o. ' or "ftUei with .
^nvyn (chapter iv.., 31; vi.,
?y way tor a believer
Spirit and then all else will be
ThU command (Eph . v., 1*>
to all, and to jfceglect it is to be
bedien/v .
remained was it not thine
tr it was 5.olrt was it not in
reT? Why bast thon conceived
(thine heart? Thou hast not lied
unto God.'1 God doesnot need
for "The earth is the Lord 9
ps t hereof' (P? . xxi v. , 1), b<?
lv pleased to accept that whica
and sincerely g?*e m?to Him
Hw glory . All that we ^ve
to a?, and what we five tum
(I Chron. xxix, 14,16)
ter'a question. "Why h act tfajro
Ananiwxas refpousible
satan to intrude these thoughts -
There are two fccoee alwaya
' ua? satan ?nd the "ciyjqpirtt
die other tfcie Spirit of Truth,
fcan fill us except we welcome
sarfias hearing these words feii
re up the ghost;. and grsefc '**?
\ them that heard these things.
[of God were thus laid Oft ail liars
trs in the church to-day there
i|y come a great fear on many
iheu ?e consider we are not
it that these 3bodie? even have
t by His blood Tor His service (I
~%T>. and then remember how we
tnrts and feet and eyes and ears
our own pleasure, and that all
lying unto God, why is it that
ifrasa? .
the voung men arose wound
1 carried nim out and ouned
thev disposed of his body, the
kich he had lived and lied; but
jias, the person who had oc
ifcody' We know that there is
.as being barely saved, saved as
>. iv., I Cor. iti. 15). But
"i of the portion appointed to
/. xx'? cajpot have
ground for expect*? to see
i or cappbira in the kingoom
3 wing ^
Three hours a J
the fact. How long
ieyei together in these mortal j
? not know, but his ha* ended j
a rout to, though she is all un
jr. Perhaps she had ccma
wonkier tag why he delayed to j
l> is a sad story, and i? j
icfc as to be sincere with God. j
answered unto her, Tell me !
)M th^Sand for so much' And i
for so much." How one |
?eter might have be*o led to ear ]
tell the truth, bt&p?riuK>s it |
?n i? vain, the ; heart is so |
ricked and deceitful above all I
riu, that e^en m thi? en
both men and women have
? swear be Pore God and man to
truth and nothing but the
deliberately lie. Yet God
J suffering ha? graciously allowed
i ofttJf'p^rcbance they might re
i Peter said unto her, How is it
tagrecd together to tempt the
Lofd-' C?npare this Terw
i and 4 and see the unity of tfat
particularly a clear proof thai
God, for lying to the Holj
lyrrig unto God.
i "teet of them which bar*
husband are at the door, anc
thee out.' This ? startling anc
(announcement of her husband's
?the first lime mad* knnwa to
i the *ame breath she is told th ,t
ttinstastty die, and she does,
i pronounced and execution takes
irrte moment, ft is the hand
Compare chapters xii., 2ft and
16, -17.
fell she down straightway at
[yielded up the -ghost; an-t the
i in and fotmd her dead, and *
forth buried' her bv her hnv
i the morning they are ini health,
" in a lie to God, that tfcey m*y
men to be very religious, but
they are found out (Num.
Tand are dead an-i b?ur:ed. Two
i grf.ve, but their sou;*?
?"-?t fear cam? nnon all the
pen a? many as hsard these
! manifestation of Gud's hatred
_ .have been necessary *r -,h ^ the
?of the formation of His church on
><k> well to remember toat al
seems to &eep silence now in
t to the corruptions an i a bom ma
professing eittr<S* He is the
?loving but sin hating Goi. and
judgment wlfl bagia ac the
(I Pet. iv.t Rev. iii?
Indians of New Tort. '
irs by the recent State census
fork that there are about 4000
living on seven reservations in
stiil mainly in their tribal re
al! under the jurisdiction of
The ?ienersl Government has
^jn2 to them for a hna
. Very few of them are other
Vidian? of unmixed blood.
vijq sis reservation 13 the moat
containing 12S0. In the puh
; system of the State are thirty
choo<*, having HOtf encaiied
Among these mdiana, includ
Lk^art of the Caju^a tribe living
^da, are all that remain of the
and historic- "Six Nations'' g?
Dlutionary times. ? Pica/uaa
A Musical \Tatc!r.
^c>v watch *bosft th* >i?e <w
yx ex '.btted tu?r. Peter^T. rg
rfoT ms a religion* chacr, \n*b
>.npan) meats. Within a
5n of Christ with the Komaa
On pfSssrag ? tt spring rhvj
tfrom the tomb, the sent r ?
tfce an?el< appear an 1 ? .e
enter the sepulchre, an : rae
which is sung in the G.<*ek
it ev actuailv ; er*
j^. watch w-is made by an in
?ir> peasant during the reign
&e of Russia. ? PfcTiadelpkia
fsrj Iatar?ating N obe,? Articles, aa& ;
Clipping* from all Botrr&tf/
The essence of ilavery fe unrequited i
toil, and it is of no consequence whether
the force which robs h m of. the fruits
of his toil b$_ applied directly or indi
rectly. the man -who labors in the prodoc
r;on of wealth of which others are the
principal beneficiaries, i , A slave Ex
change.
* ? * * * ?
Segtijg, Enterprise (Tex.) booms an in
come tax a? f. llo~s : A tax upon large
ncojaes is needed to relieve the neces
saries of I fe, $o the ta?es that - now exis
not only enchMce cost of living, but give
opportunity for tnonopo'y and oppre sion
It w the fairest of all taxes and the one
best tendins to relieve pressure where
pressure is least easily tome. Revenue
\ 5hould*$)e drawn from wealth, not wa=.t
^ v * * * * ?
Representative Baker (People's party i,
! of Kansas, ba^ introduced a bill into the
House proposing a reduction in the sal
aries of government officials receiving
more than $1 000 per year. By -the bill
the president's salary is fixed at $25,000:
the Vice-President ?-at $5,000 ; the cabinet
officeriat $6,000; chief justice of the Su
preme ?ourt $7,000 ;the associate justices,
$6,500; Speak er^of the House, $5,000,
and United States 8enat/>rs and Repres
entatives, $3,000. ^ '
v^WASHix^toif, D. C.? There is
just 23 farmer statesmen In this
* Congress. Of these, Ifolman- is running
I a farm three or four-hundred acres in
! Indiana; M?rrell has a little Vermont
ugarden"?of 65 acres; Casey of North Da
kota has control of 300,000 acres in his
State, and owns pretty much all of il
himself ; Vance owns several^ thousand?
of acrj9 of timber hod in 1he old North
State ; and George of Mississippi is a heavv
cotton planter.* Most of the Kansas men
are agriculturally inclined. Jerry Simp
son owns 1,000 acres, and works it, too,
when at home; Baker, Davis, and Otis
^re all in sympathy and close touch with
the farmer ; and Fe^ston is an avowed
hayseed.
polk rsrumrAM tund.
The ladies Is >sembled at Omsba dusii.g
the national People's party convention,
organized a ladies' auxiliary for the pur
oose of assisting the Polk Memorial As
*ociation.
Mrs. Ben Terrell, of Seguin, Texas, i>
president, and has appointed one virc
president in each S'ate, as follows :
Alabama? Mrs. Gaither.
?Louisiana ? Mrs. Clajton.
Florida? Mrs. A. P. Baskins.
North Carolina? Mrs. W. W. Worth.
~ (Jeorgia? Miss Lizzre Peake .
"Missouri? Mrs Dr. Nedff.
Tennessee? Mrs. J. H. McDowall.
Iowa? Mrs. Goodrich.
Nebraska ? Mrs Gen. Van Wyek.
Minnesota ? Mrs. Dr. Fish.
Mississippi? Mrs. Eva M Valash.
California? Mrs. Nye.
Cogae^ticut ? Mrs. Crumsby.
.Jfrflistrict Columbia? Mr?. Crandall.
, Kansas? Mrs. Fannie Vickery.
Sou tii Dakota? Mrs. Loucks.
North Dakots and Washington? Mrs.
Mufr.
? > n - v
?ome time ago a writer in the Noftl
American Review made the statement
that the United States is the largest ten
?nt farmer nation in the world. Here is
a list of the tenant farmers in some of
thevStates as given by the writer:
N^jr York 39,87';
[ Pennsylvania 45,825
\ Maryland 13,5a:
f Virginia 34,89*
[ North Carolina 62,728
' Georgia 62,175
West Yirginis * 12,00C
Ohio 48,282
Indiana 40,050
Illinois *9,244
| Michigan 25-411
; io*a ^
: Missouri 58,862
] Nebraska 11,491
Kentucky 44,02';
Kansas 22,951
Tennessee 57,296
Mississippi 41,558
Arkansas ? 26,136
* -Texas - 55,465
Total 808,072
Here are 21 of^our leading States with
more teoant farmers than England, Ire
; '.and, Scotland and Wales.
Thero is something <nve inspiringlj
prophetic in the beau'iful words of Col.
L. L. Polk, July 4, 1890: "I am stand
| iog now just behind the curtain, and in
'nil glow of the coming sunset. Behind
me Me^He^iadows on the track, befort
meTfc(e* theaark valley and the river,
j- WbeA 1 mingle with the dark waters ]
want to cast one lingering look upon a
~ouatry whose government is of the peo
ple,' for the people;' and by the people."
* * * * $ *
Senator Marnier -"on has introduced ?
bill in Congress taycreate a national high
way commission, to consist of two Sena
torsk, five Uepresentativrs, the Secrefariet
of war, agricultui^aud interior, tie ppst?
master-generai, the attorney -general* tad
as Msociite. member from each'State and
1 Territory- Meetings we to be beid it
WashingtoB during the session of Con-]
gress, in Chicago during' tbe Worlds
Fair, and at such othwr places and timet
a* the majority may select. Tbe eom
: mission is to investigate the need* of the
I country in regard to the highway? ?nd
[ r ' to Congress.
STATE ALL I ARC* 3f*ETHI68.
? !. ;. " j .
As fast as State secretaries report the
rim* and place of the next regular annual
in" ring of the State Allfance, it will be
?d'ie<i to this list : *?
Tennessee. Nashville, August 16.
i Texas, Austin, Augtist 18.
Indiana. Indianapolis. November 17.
K^oturky. Owensboro; November 8.
I - 'Columbia. S. C., July 17.
Virginia, Richmond. August 17.
L^nisi*?!*. Monroe. August 2. -
California Sarrament? October 3. .
Georgia. Gainesville, August 17.
,&& twiJfSSg'At 34.
M.^naoe. La.. Auewt 10.
North Carolina. Greensboro* August 9.
West Virginia. TTIariw?buTg, August in. '
WiHiamsport, Pa.. October .25
At the ?y ' it iire?2n* c? .
tury there were in the Uaitel Scutes 57!
millionaires. Now there nre more that
7000. How many will there be *>ftv
years hence? .
'*? ? - .1
DONALDSON IS PRSHDINT.
Chosen By the 8. C. State Alliance cm
2nd Ballot.
Colttxbxa, S. C.? The State Alliance
met ;in annual session here. The follow
ing gentlemen were placed in nomination
for President. Mr. Sligh's candidacy
being a complete surprise: Senator W.
D. Evans, of Malb:>ro; Hon. M. L Don
aldson, of Greenville; W. J. Bowden, of
the Cotton Plant ; Col. D K. Norris, of
Abbeville, and J. A Sligb, of Newberry.
Mr. Donaldson w*s nominated by a
handsome majority on the second ballot.
The new president of the Alliance wts
born irr~ Gr?fenville county forty-eight
years ago. He fought in , the war in
Hugh Aiken's frixth Cavalry, Butler's
brigade, as a lieutenant in Capt Joe Sul
livan's company, and made a gallant &ol
dii r . After the war he settled in Green
viire^where he went to farming and has
made\great success of it. He appeared
in the political arena in the f<ll of 1884,
whm he was fent to the Legislature. He
served two terms and then succeeded
Governor Mauldin in the Senate, which
position be still holds. In December,
1889, wbea the State Alliance Exchange
was established, he was placed in charge,
and he ran the exchange successfully un
til he resigned last year, when the Ex
change was moved to this city. The.
general opinion among the Alliaocemen
seems to be that they have got the best
man for president. *
The following are the other officers
elected :
Vice President? W. D. Evans, Ben
nettsville.
Secreta?y? J. W. Reid, Reidsville.
Treasurer -F. F. Taylor, Mt. Coghlao.
Cbapla n ? Rev. James Douglass,
Blackstock.
Steward? E. B. Taylor, Aiken.
Doorkeeper - J. W. Kennedy, Sandy
Grove.
Assistant Doorkeeper? A. R. Walker,
Fair Bluff.
Sergeaot at-arms? J. E. Jarnegan. Co
lumbia.
Lecturer and OTganizer? John R. Jef
fries, Star farm.
Executive committee? T. P. Mitchell,
^ Wood ward;' S. T. D. Lancaster, Glenn
"Springs; and E. R. Walters, Orange
burg.
Judiciary committee ? W. N. Elder,
Guthriesville; D. K. Norris, Abbeville;
and J. L. Keltt, Newberry.
As far as can be asc<?iained the lectur
ers in all the districts were all re-elected.
Dull Tims Figures.
Richard H. Edmonds, of Baltimore,
gives i* the August number of the Forum
some account of the present resource* and
recent progress of the South. The rec
ord is one which every Southerner will
read with pride and . every other Ameri
can should rejoice in. We can take only
a few of the molt striking passages in
that record. The South produced 535,
M2-.000 bushels of orn in 1891, a gain
of about 75 per cent, over the production
in 1881- The gain in. cotton, production
wa? about the same, from 5,456,000 bales
io 1881 to nearly 9,000,000 bales last
year. The gain in railioads is even more
remarktble. Ten years ago the South
had 38,000 miles of railroad; now it has
about 45,C>00, a gtfin of nearly 90 per
cent , and the increase in the number of
passengers and the amount of freight car
ried ha* been enormous. Between 28.
000,000 and 24,000,000 tone of co%L^ex^T
mined in the South in 1801 . onTv aborifc
6,000,000 in 1881. The value of exports
from Southern ports has increased from
$257,535,401 to $349,801,999, a gain of
3 f> per cent., which ip nearly five times
the gain made at the other ports of the
United States. The Southern output of
iron is nearly 325 per cent greater than
in 1881. The gain in manu'acturing and
banking and al* branches of business hte
been great. The assessed value of
property is nearly two billions greate*
than iu 1881.
richmond"terminal
f
The Pennsylvania Railroad En ew>av
oring to Secure .Control.
N*w Yoak, N. Y.? The Richmond
Terminal advisory commit'ee of seven
met and authorized Chairman Strong to
appoint cpmmittees of three to represent
the6aud5jer ceDt. bondholders, re
spectively. These will confer with the
advisory committee as to the action to be
taken regarding the default which will
be made on the interest of the bonds.
It is reported that the Pennsylvania
Railroad is endeavoring to get control of
| the Richmond Terminal system by offer"
) of a tralfi^*lliauce.
Growing Cotton in Connecticut.
Putnam, Cosn.? David Johnson, a
spruce old colored man of Poinfret street,
who was on a big Southern plantation
"befo1 de wah,M is teaching his neigh
bors that cotton may be grown in Con
necticut as successfully as "way dovrn
South in Dixie. w David is gar.'ener for
Benjamin Grosveooj and has a little farm
of his own at Pomfret Street, lie had
been trying vainly for several years to
make people believe his colofc^theory,
and th s year has verified it by growTng
cotton on his farm. His crop is a small
one, but it looks splendid. Johnson,
who tencled thousands of *cres of; cotton
is the Sooth, says that his Pomfret Street
I plants art quite as luxuriant and jpromis
| ing as any that are raised in Dixie. He
| adds that, while the Northern season is a
1 short one, the sail here is richei and the
plant** thrive better than in the South.
He also grew? nne sweet potatoes
Very Plain Talk to Queen Victoria.
1.05DOS, [Cablegram.] - Land and Wa
ter says that when the Duke of Devon
shire visited the Queen last week, Her 1
j Ma jesty said that she relied upon his ad- !
i vice to. assist her iB avoiding the necessi- j
! ty for sendipg for Mr. Gladstone to form
| a new government. Tfce Duke, it is re- I
| ported, said, in reply to Her Majesty.
J that there was but one alternative for her !
j to her to adopt? she must either ca'l [
upon Mr. Gladstone to form a mini?t.y
or mttjMbdicate the throne.
j ' Democratic Candidate.
Tauks n?ei ite; W. Va.,? The State
Democjfttic cod rent ion was in sessio.n ira^
tiT an early hour in the morning 1 rllotmg
for a gubernatorial < andidate. Shortly alter
midnight there was a stampede for Col
W. A.Mc?orkle,of Charleston, and on the
second ballot ihe counties began to change
their votes foe him. Iu the midst of much
cbe-ring and enthusisam a motion was
made to make the nomination unanimous,
And it was done. Mo >rkte was sent for
? and^fcxsepked the nomjnatwn In a brief
speech, after which^tbc convention ad
journed ontil 9 a. m.
GENEBAL NEWS BRIEFS. ]
Short Items of Interest Prom Here,
There and Everywhere,
h "* lr \ I
Telegraphic Dispatches and Culling* .
Embracing a Comprehensive
News Summary. -
Senator Colquitt of Georgia is seriouily
ill at Washington.
There are now five colored lunatics in
the city jail at Danville. Va.
? Fire destroyed Miller's planing mill
at Alma, Robeson county N. C. Loss $10,
000.
* The Homest^aS (Pa.)Mllls, of Carnegie
Phipps & Co., are again rnnning, manned
with non-union men.
C harles C. Poske, a wo*l known Balti
more traveling man died of sun tfrokerf
"Richmond. Va., Tuesday.
TheJThird party conventior. of, tht
tenth district of Georgia has re nomicat
ed Tom Watson for Congress.
The Normal College building at Gra
ham, Alamance county N.*C., waa,J>utn
ed with all its contents last Friday night,
It is probable that ex-Senator Mahone
of Va., Mrill be appointed permanent re?
i ceiver of the Richmond Terminal at a sal?
[vary of $5,000 per, year.
The U. S. Senate has reported favor
ably on the purchase for $70,000 of th(
Temple Farm at Ybrktown, Va., where
Lord Cornwallis surrendered.
Tuesday was the, hottest day Philadel
fh? has had, save one, in fifty* yean.
he tera perature, 1C0 8, was f he nigbest
of the country. Nine ? deaths resulted
from the heat and there were many pro*
tratiens. - ? v
Letters of incorporation ?re being got
fen up for "the Ocean View Hotel Com*
a with the object of building a first
<. h>s hotel od the surf side oP Bogue
Bank's, opposite Morehead City, N. Ci
The building is to cost $150,000.
A desperate fight occurred at Flat Rock,
near Somerset, Ky. , Wednesday after
noon, ^between Deputy Sheriff Sellers and
John Coffey, in which both were killed.
Sellers attempted to arrest Coffey on a
charge of adultery, when the trouble be
gan. . * r :r
A Wilmington, Del., lawyer haarecivr
ed a draft for #800 from Berne-^wi tier
land, which was the amount of the in-i
demnltv paid by thq Canton of Berne for
the false imprisonment for tiee days of
tive-Amerieans who had been arrested as
pickpockets
The campaign was opened in the Valley,
of Virginia at Lnray , Monday. * Colonel
Alexander, of Winchester, spoke, *n<
nouncing himself a candidate for Congress
in opposition to Colonel O'Ferrall. The
People's party also organized, and will
have a candidate for CongTess in that
district.
Two Roanoke College students from
Mexicof Emilio Robert Garza and Ang 1
Vetez, are spending the summer in Sal.m
Va. Another young man from, Tampico.
Mexico, is expected to arrive boob to en-j
ter college in the fall. It is also probable
that a number of students from Corca
will be among the foreigners at
College next
Theagjftai ifiade b^merchants of the
-South to torn Hie stream of immigration
down liere is having its effect in Eng
land and Scotland, a large number : of
immigrants arriving at New York on the
steamer. Gallia. The Gallia started Wed
nesday for ?outh Carolina and other
Southern States.
Both tie pumps at the Staunton, Va. ,
city water-works are in such a bad^state
of repair that they will not work. The
reservoir is empty and with the thermom
eter at IM5 the town is without water.
The springs in the suburbs are the eoie4
supply. It will be several days probablv
before the famine will end and the pumps
get to work again.
Governor Buchanan, of Tennessee, has
been defeated in the Democratic prima
ries in that State in the canvass for the
gubernatorial noroiuati ?n by Judge Pe
ter Turnev. but declares that he will not
enter the field as an Alliance or inde
pendent candidate, and will do all in his
power to hold Tennessee in line for both
the national and S ate tickets.
The board of trustees c[ the Union
Theological Seminary, at llampdcu-Sid- \
ney, Virginia, at a meeting Wednesday
elected Rev. Dr. Peyton H*f\Roge, of
Wilmington, North Corolina-^ to the va
? cant chair of the English Bii?!e and pas
.toral theology in the seminary. It has
| not been learned whether-or not he
will accept.
The Di smal Rwaurp Canal, wbic'i cost
$1,500,000. and which whs sold recently
at public auction for fl 0,1 00, was author
ized to be constructed by the General
Assembly of Virginia December 1, 1787.
The canal is 23 miles long, and conuects I
the wateisiof Elizabeth river in Virginia
with the Pasquotank river j in North
Carolina. It is belived that the canal
is destined to play an important part in
supplying the city of Norfolk ith drink- J
able water
Backbone of the Strike Broken. k
???
Homestead Pa.? Homestead's striking
steel- workers are considerably agitated.
They have satisfied themselves of the
correctness of Suprintendent Potter's
statement, that, a number of f?rm?r
employee returned to work . That
the backbone of the strike *ai bfen brok
en is acknowledged by all save members
of the advisory committee and the mo e
radical unionists.
Mr. Potter said to a United Press re
porter: "Altogether sixty of our former
employes have returned to" work aod^we
have been informed that many more will
make applicant^ for their old places.
Twenty-seven of our old men came in
Twenty- four of them found their place?
still open, but the others I am sottv to
say were disappointed. But while they
cannot step into the positions they gave
up a montn ago, these men will be iriven
work."'
The Agricultural School Funi.
WAsmscteN-, D. C-. ? The President
. has app'or?d the bill to tlirect the Sec
retary of the Treasury to^ay over certain
t-money to the State ( A Soath- Carolina for
the support of the college for the bent fit
of agriculture; also, the act to construct
a bridge across the SaYannah river. &\ .
\ '
A
Troops Leaving for Sonta.
Homestead, f a.? More troops left
? Horn stead for home. The fourth re
giment, four companies of the Tenth
Battery *CV departed thia
the Twelfth, -Eighth and Ninth
in the day. \
HE CHARLES WANTS A DIVORCE
Hit Wife i* tfc* Prettiut Sid in Cbi
naiovrn, Bat Be Stye fin* is
VnfaxthiaX*
N*w Y?m, N. T .?Lee Charles,
otherwise known u Lee Nom, bead jo!
the Sane Chang Tea and Grocery Com
pany, of 28 Mott street, has o&e of the
prettiest girls in Chinatown fcf a wilje
Lawyer Mcl aughlin has infititatedpvo
ceedings for divorce o? of tfce
wealthy merchant against Eta. Charles;
Mrs. Charles' mother was a negresa and
her father a Chin am in. She Wit born
and brought up in the Chinese quaitfft
but has always held herself aloof from
the other women in the neighborhood .
8he speaks excellent En glish, hit a fair
education, and" a slight knowledge of
her lather's language.- .When phemar
ried Lee Charges everybody is the dis
trict said that?8he wafe alucky girl, aad
for a time ah# was very happy. ; But she
quarreled with her huiiband, and
quarrel was never made up. The qi
was over the attention paid- Mrs Char}
by Ung Toy, who aleo lives ai 28 Mjtt
street The relations bHween j the U
became so well knows tHat
fija friend Lee Toy to watch
Sunday night Lee Toy dfscoi
Chaiiea and Ung Toy
summoned the husband.
called Policeman Corcoran
wife and Ung Toy arrested.
When they were arraigned]
Tombs Court the room was crowded wijth
Chinamen, alt of whom!
interested in the proceeding^.'
Charles wanted ?o make a chwge of
tempted assault against ting Toy,
the Justice refused to alloar ltrfnd
a charge of disorderly conduct agsu
both. In the afternoon a
ination was held, at the
which Uj?g Toy was .sent
for six months' aed the woman'
thtrged. . lW;S, \
at the
the statue of coLmaraj
la Italian War Veu,l to Coaeey tke
Staamar Which it to Bring it 1
to ThiyKty,
WAiMKeTO*, |K C. ?The Xtepartro^nt
of State made pubUo a pleasant excl *
of courtesies between President Hai
and King Humbert, of Italy: Ul
date of the 18th iost the Secretin? of 3,
Navy addressed a letter to the S^creWry
of State, advising him that he had learn'
?d unofficially tLa'. the steamer tearing
the statue of Columbus, a trift ofslie
Italiau- Americans of the cittfof nSv
1 ork. was Jikely to be accoaipaiaied'by a
vessel of war of the kingdom of Italv J
aad that the visit would conque with th<l
/V 1U^1 (4ebrati?n to take place in
* ulder tbe ausP?P?? of the
The Secretftfy of the
the cordid eatisfaction
of the Navy Dep rtment at ttfis intelli
gence, and gave assurance that the I&l
lan vessel of war would receive a cordial '
welcome worthy of such au honored visi
Tbe letter of the fi??- !?*>?? rY . *" *
having been i In ( , T
in Italian Minister
city. on the 91 ?t
IM? fIiD"te;' J"0" F?'?. informed
he Secretary of State that the royal
cruiser Bausan had been desisted for
?nd w?uld be at New York J
at the bfcmning of October. In view oC
h^f??i10D' President Harrison sent
?ogB?&t!thenm tc
Bf*M<?$tvBumbfrt ?: 1MB
1 bo olf^r fo tend tn itaiiaH , Rotnc.
la cen-monlre at vv>i5 rnifS?r Participate
'? October aSoSim?
?t this signal tribute totb^inr^ *1';T Ktatiflcaa n
?Wp ofX; fr,end"
Tft fki- a i BttWAWX HawusoH.
Kiag Humbertre
itessa%SgSS
The Industrial South.
Although, the usual midsummer dull
ness is at hand, reitorts from the South
show no cessation in tbe number and di
versity m new industrial enterprises or
pnized. In tbe list of new ea'terp rises
mor m r endi?g Ju,y 29$ he Balfci
utT^i. Ufa?tUrers' necord n,entioDs
(^following as some of the more im
portant items: A $35,000 silver plating
company at Baltimore, Md ; a $125 000
water works and l.ght company at Mon
n? r f 'i?? i000 oil and 'Utilizer com -
ffin MiHedgeville, (U. ; a $45,000
cotton seed retiumg and manufacturing
l'nm?fDy at rCW 0r,e*n*? L?- ? a $10,000
o? .r ZD?cturil,g comPany at Rom*>
Ga. , a $40,000 cotton and woolan mill
company at Marble Kalis, Texas; a $00,
000 ice, water and power com pan v at Yoa
kum, Texas; a$l'0,000 ice manufacturing
wmpany at Brinkley. Ark.; a $25,000
E"b2ln? company at Baltimore, 3Id. ; a
fOU,OQO gram milling company at Whit
acre, Va. ; a $200,000 phosphate com?
panv at Richmond, Va. ; a $300,000 wa
L-and 8ewerage company at
Natchez, Miss. ; a $500,00Tc$nstruction
company at Wheeling. W. Va. ? a #15 -
^manufacturing com pany at Hairiman,
^ 'ce~ ''-ht and water
?g*? cOuipany st Orange.Texns; a $10,
cigarette machine company at Phii
|PP|? Va. ; a $25,000 construction
company at Souil.pnri, X. (\ ; a $300;
000 oil and gas ^ievt^opment company it
Rchmond, Va. a >30,000 bed sim'nkr
nwalijactur^g com^ny Ht DatW,f^5
$30,000 flour mill at Deca-ur, Texas- a
$15,00?deYelop}pptit comprtuy at Ro<'k&
Mount N a^ind a $20,000 man^factuT
mg company ?f-f.'re?lj?iin."Tt<xa?.
fe ? ; ? . j
THE SOUTH BOUND K0AD.
Its Ltaae to /the Florida Central
""VMBaummated.
Savannah. 6a. ?The lease of th*
South Bound railn^ad to the Florida
Central and Peninsular road was'cnnei'm
mated todny. The rental amounts to about
$40 ?.(M)0 per annum. The link tb unite
: the i^outh Bound, which mns frcm Co
lum.bia. S. C., to Savannah, and'tjie
Florida Central snd Peninsular, whiJhJb
terminates at Jacksonville, will Ije buil?
at once. Tbe lease places the securiii^
of th? Sottth Boun4 at; par. Th? negri
tiations have been *5ri progress for^e
months. - . /
1 ji! v-rriir i
Belief Southern Flood Sufferers.
r ? .( ]
WAsaiK?Tt>5. D. 0 ? The House
committee on Appropriations order t
favorable report on a bill api
$30,000 for tbe t- lief _ <rf i
?ftood ?dNfei9> I'he
is to be e|p?cded i
af the ^ake.la
A MOVING ICE MOUNTAIN.
ikir
nqcxvai quloxse shoot.
WUTOIBT CALHOEHI A.
It Is* MDi Loat*nd 200P?et Deep
Piled by Piudni Agdi la ? Bt?>
lees Qorjc?.
^i?Si
IB?
I
aetive glaf;
cier Sn Southern California of
-such heroib proportion* at to
jbstify comparison . with ths
minor Coutinental glaciers jof the Alps,
And& and Himalayas, can be added to
the local category of itupandoai works
in the eoonomy of nature to befoond is
tropical Ca'ifornit.
- The story of the existence of a moving -
liver of Ice bailed in the deep canyon^
c f the Sea Bernardino range of mouot
s ins is an old one, and amoag earliest
tien in this section it baa been tooled
clown, aa i tradition. Among man? of
tbs older residents ot San Bernardino
Count; the eiisteuce of -a gnat toe
'? gorge upon the upper levrt oNkaitNefc;
Mountain?the monarcb<!the San Ber
nardino range? haa beenTttown and:
Touched for during the pest thirty yeera,
a ad yet not geasftalli
The freqiieailtanpdn of I tbepe atorlea
prompted fche Los Angetai Herald -to
mike antexhatf rti ve invemgntioo at to
their trajtht and witk this aim an expe
dition wee organised, At High land
Station,- they boarded the BearValley
stage and made the first raoaotainpor
tion of the toueaey trough j a Wild and
ruggedly beautiful section of the coun
try to Ptoe M**, whtre ? hilt was mfde 1
at the Bear! Valley Hotel to Wure Sua.
tangs and bum*. A start was made at
6 o'clock t|e ne xt morning,!
?of 8000 feet wa? made to;
the range south of fU?e ]
roid barometer! here shor
tlonof 8030 foot. .
I At an altitad.; of 10, <
covered plateau half . ja:;
craned, attt then the jptn.
a canyon that apparently seemed impas*
sable, but a thmad4ike trail wound in
and out the rugged and forbidding 1
mountain Mib.
As the party jwoceeded up the oanyon j
the masses Of mow ?dong the aide*, and
in the old torviat kyi became more* fre
quent, and at many points it had drifted
into great banks twenty, thirty and My
I <fcet in depth. An the aioentcontinued the
tree* were mostly atutited and dwarfed
In growth, while the snow covered 1
nearly fUrt oB|in| surface and shone ' with
dazzling brightness, j At; 12,000 f$et
the timber line reached. The sttfcnt
Uvea now up a steep incline, and on either
Mide were great ita vines or gulches that
Extended upwards for hundreds of feet
to points near the summit. //>-jr?e climb
was over small* bowlders ithat rolled
downward from under, the feet. Three
ravines, 'oblong in shape, half a mile in
length ancLabout. an eightLef^^^jJ^
width, were
canyon that wound
spirally downward, trending in a south
erly direction.
a climb
TjtTSfflft of
the ana
If atof*
Although these great fissure* in many
respects assemble headstones of glacier*,
?till thej were not of . sufficient dhnen.
sions to indicate a permanent existence,
and the party folio we 3 the tren^of these
-ravines in a southerly direction and
crossing a ridge projecting from the
I mam body of fhe mountain fully 2000
??me t0^e maia S?r*e' ^Wch
extended from the summit downward
for fully twc and a quirtei^milee. Thia
gorge was wedge shaped, much like an
immense V. reversed. it was fully ao
eighth of a mile in width at the summit
and gradually widened to t>>ree-quarter?
of a mile at the bue. The snow at the
crest of. the gorge at the top of the
mountain lay in strata, there being one
deposit in an immense cup-like Assure
hundreds of feet in depth. On one side
of ttSs fissure the strata are sharply de
nned, eaoh*repreaenting the accumulation
of a single year, .the lowestiSand most
; dense approaching the blue color of ice.
About half a mile downward from the
summit the three gorges heretofore de
scribed as containing immense deposits
of snow, center io one common channel
and debouch into the main -oge. At"
the point of juncture there were indica
tions that at some long-past period the
smaller channel hid been an active
! glacier. Both sides of the main eonre
i were observed closelv, and investigation
revealed the existence of lateral moraines
formed of eirthy matter which had been
etame-l from the mountain sidtfs.and
fallen upon the surface ? of moving snow
and ice. The pmy turned their faces
again toward the great gorge which fell
j away at their feet, and then began what
proved to be an exceedingly perilous
descent. Tney managed to reach a
point near the base of tie glacier. Here
j the mixhty forces of Nature which had
been working untold year? had pile<U*p
a croaS moraine of immense rock jvtiose
sharp au-i anguhr edges projected from
the mass of snow aad^ice, some of then
fully twenty feet in breadth and equally
high. The base line which u at an ele
vation of 10,000 feet was mainly com
posed of snow, but at, points this had
anitfd or melted away, and the ice was
| exposed. A stick of giant powder was
; placed in a crevice au-i exploded, and
; :?mense fragments .of ice and stone
torn away remtfng ancient ice of a
dark blue color almost verging into black.
lasting fragments of this old ice the*
; were found to be bitter, and permeatei
with a ftoe silt-like .?and. The none
f<Wmd in tne cross moraine of fhe glacier
mc u led porphyry, yr.tiite, pure whits
l quartz, petrified wood aud limestone
furrowed and scratched at if with
| gravers tools an I biocks ot_ m irble as
clear as auy <^er quarried in anfesuntrv.
fucre ??? a ?mitl 0, u,t6r ,rJm |
the l.ase of the p,^. .fu.|,,nJ, fr071 the j
contour of the got^e there miist be a i
S" of ?? f??y 4 TOle >? iM.-th and 1
WO feet in depth, if not more.
An interc?fin?r point js the question of j
the movement of the j^cier, ,ad from j
corollary circum-tance^jt w^ computed !
that to* mass whs iiwiqj downward i
into the valley at the rate oAorty -seven j
-( ao: more, and it is
assumed without doubt that the melting :
of the ice at the ba* i.ae or-tiua great
reshaped nms of ic> a7* mrilv
anow is synchrouoiw wit!i it 5 eq lati^of 4
progression. Sin Franjiico fU^nine^
^ - j -H 1 '
ujtfuetry' coiors is
CROPS IN m SOUTH.
torn** Droughts in Many Portioaa.
Oott and Tobacco Injured. *
WiCKOroToy, D. C.f~The bulletin of
tin Weather Bureau: for the week ending
Tueaday contains the following tele
graphic report* of the crop condi i na of
me various Southern Skates :
Virginia? Weather continued exces
sively not, withmore than average sun
shine; rafafatt scattering and in lighrto
beery showers, btfftofufficient in north
ern naif of toe State; where the drought
la severe; except in localities, general
rains are needea.
North Carolina- Weather unusually
dry and warm*, ground becoming baked;
light showers of Monday beneficial. Cot
ton improving and fruit is doing well;
corn and tobacco injured, turning jcU
low in places ; curing tobacco be^un.
South Carolina? Excessive heat and
sunshine. Lack of rain has bad injur
ious affect on cotton, turning it yellow
and causing ft to shed fruit particularly
on light jolh. Other crops injured to
ejteat by heavy Hubs of Holiday.
Gfc6r<iar-Venr warm, sunshiny weathfc
er, with scattering showed, all crepe,
havebeeri
&.^ttonL ?
from wet weather of: pre v
is in excellent conditio#. < *?
?Rainfall for the 8tat* below
the normal, with hefrvy focal shower* in
some* ^ectk>na; weather favorable for
satfceriag and ckaripff' crops, bat injur
ious to ocjange groves ; temperature above
normal; averse Motile. < TjTl .
AJabmi?Terape^atore ilifcMv above
normal; raiofsll for , 8Ute abour nornuil
and middle portions;' mod
were jefreahing to vegeta
mch rain in imutMrn portion;
' iu northern portion,
I? Conditions .^somewhat
lie than . precefeding week;
and sunshine -oorma^P with
light scattering showers : all crops better
cultivated and outlook more favorable.
Approved by the Presiden t.
ffos, D. fc-Tke President
. jd the act to authorise the con
of a bridge ov?r the Tennessee
Deposit, 41$. ; the act to provide
^ minatioQ aod promotion of
i to the army to the gmde of
_r lieratenant; the act amending pen
sion flaws bo as to remove the ; disability
1 .Who, having participated in the re
u,hirvesin;e enlisted ia the army of,
' States become disabled. (
v
An Himmlf. A
Taslbt, Va.?Ex? Judge Thomas ,?V
B.iva.. deliberately '
poor
"table he left a note say
_ ^ eked in body and m;nd
and jwas tiretf of living. The Judge was
at one time a leading politician, and un
til 1$88 presided over the court at Ac
comac. He was 62 years old.
The Propar Caper.
Cape Chajlles, Va.? After a quarrel
Moriday with his mother, inj"'* which he
cursed her and other members of the
family, Elijah Gladden, a young white
man, living near H&llowel), A ceo mac
county, rushed out of the house and threw
himself in front of a train on the Phila.
and Norfolk lailroad and was crushed to
death. ?
Got. Jones He-elected.
Birmingham-, Ala*?' The state election
passed off very qufetly. A large part
of the negro population vDted, and their
votes were about equally divided be
tween Jones and Kolb. Gov. Jones (Dem)
is ejected by 30,000 to 50,000 majority
over Kolb, (Alliance*.
*
Firtt New Tobacco at Winston.
Winston, N. C.? The first new to
bacco of the season was sold in Winston
Tuesday. It was raised in Davidson
county, and brought $2 50 per hundred.
It is more than a week earlier tha i n*w
tobacco ever sold on this market.
Two Trains Collide.
?j?
St. Louis, Mo ? The limited : east
bound passenger train ou the Big Four,
which left here at 9 p. in. collided with
a freight train at Kdwardsville Junction,
ills., aud the engineers aid tuernaw were
killed.
Renominate^! by Acclamation.
Warsaw, Va. 7The Demq^rdtic Con
gressional Convention^fr*?Jhi8,the Firsi
district met at Tappahanno^k and r?>TTmTr*
inated the H<>n. W. A. Jones by ac-clama
tion.
THE TORRID WAVE.
No Let-Up xa th? Oppr?*siv?ly Hot
Weather.
Richmond, Va.- Charits C. Poske, a
drummer for ? Baltimore fancy goods ^
house, died suddenly Wednesday ?fter
noon from ibe effects of the unprece
dented hot weather. T wo other ;;ases
of sunstroke resulted? John Lams, an
acrobat of the Sargent and . Kidder cir
cus, and W. H. Frajser, ? street cat
driver. Both are expected to recover.
Since Uat Saturday ' tue thermometer baa
not been betow M degree*, and has fre
quently registered 10<?
New Yokk. N. V.? The weather I
throughout the New England and
Middle Sta te* today continued oppres
sively K t Mtny prostratioo* were ie
ported. Fartorij* and raill? shut down
account of theh<<t w ather.
A War Route to the Lake*,
Ottawa, Canada.? Increased activity
may be looked for shortly - in conn* ?.tion
with the work of deepening the St. Law
ren:e canal to '* iaqrteen foot draught.
One of the Government engineers states
that the Britiah Govern men t was urging
the Governraen* of Canada to hfurrr the
work of deepening tnecanalf 'taroogh by
the end of 1894. that they be avail
' able for the pasnge of British gunboats
I in the ev?-nt of thdr being required; tor
lake service. ^ . ' '
Tue Goverjmest efomeer'a estimate
that it will require at last fit, 094,030 to
?ecurea uniform d p'h i througtaawt the
eiaaaif of fourth en feet, from the head of
aaxi atioa \o tidewater. *
. - - ' f i * ? -
; Paper ctr ffhith
be a novelty.
That* are c|4\y two
sialdng ?etf^V
tubetoiAo*Si ?
74ccin*tt0n
thatruai
iMiplfo
? ml >|
*w8kk
wt?o?S&
Stroma 01
decidedly
The mora
tblm
kw&Vlj
its tfttal
ibttodk&t ?
leal.
The oil to
worbiet
pumped <o
pip*
?
- <
ty
In order
the t QttQI
Island bare zU*
pondt and th i|
tht tteasipi j
: tt U reletfc !
w&enbewe?
he wOald
breechee |
other leg.
In oneof tfcjf
. >?0'
Sa
!<*?!
tweotj4wo feet
1 A , r
ol Sir
Effl?
toft'
run HBO
t speed at He'
per mlnut*. I
than ha*
wheel
? awL.
Chinese,
WU SCUlf
India
for feounttyji
finest known j
found in thr
KaericystuL;
?.Pacific, it i ju-^,
case do any
ar*
Plans are
?traction of
chain of the
line will ha
will present,
There are to j
and a third
quartern _
Pear-fcrow.
depredations
somewhat
transparent,
ical plant to
tingnished
jumping i
ibUiig'lniri
^?soplng
baTtiia
>01 laat'Uj[4l|C.l
t, wtwo twrnm
the name Ps^U, likeaa!n| tt
The mysterious subject, of
.Influence has, been
Calcutta, India, h ,
clerk made several sfctem
get married to the girl ol
each time he was mysterf .. ,
at the altar and thrown into a
stupor. He Has made no leas that
attempts, failing each Ujne.
Paper manufacture Is one of the ,
ing Industries! of Cores. Besides its 1
jfor writing pfper, it is jetfeployaA Sta
great diversity, o.ways, $uch as
and in the tasking \laateror
snoe soles, coits and boni. It i
>m the bushi of the
rhich is indigenous, growing In tnaftj v <
arts of the island, Sqt thriving be1
t^e moist, warm clima^oPthe 8ouU.
[n walking to the Cenfek Park, Iff
York City, oaie day a Boston
was surprise^ by some or
shrubs and flowers ^e-j*wo
stys he found even sugar maples, Nsti
maples and swamp maples. He
moss pinks, Asiatic magnolias,
th^forsythia, jthe cornelian
other charming things that a
to New Yorkers who stroH
park.
Who would think
devise au apparatus
counting the i LUmber
dance in a bar of ,sunH]
-would, imtfcin I that such ajk
feat could bena^riotl Out, ^
gree of accur .*cy
official reports
recently been
croecopiste.
tory, Scotland;
The Hurdereve
Memphis, Texk.
wee, brought to s cl
after being oufc fire
Vrl
53S
Mitchell ca??
the jtwy,
le
when
inute#. tir turned
v..v. v uf. u'v. ?uiuuin<| t? UIm.TU it
verdict finding Alice Mitchell to h*i?**ne /
and recommending (~a tha i peace uf the
State that she Ibe confined in an ictanf \
asylum Thej j udge\? charge was- anj able' A
document. Hi* dwelt on expert,
timony and mildly excotiated tha :pty>v ?
sic an* who, he id, could prove airy ni
to be insane wjh,en they atarted ini tot
this purpose j When the verdict was an
nounced, Judtw Mitchell, father of Alice,
wept. Alice looked on and smiled, A
low mosn tv a* ;Vard in the ' rear of the
court rooij. tt came from Jo.rTTaNS;
Nifui Mitchell 4*i8 be taken to
| next v ^-k. I]
i ?cr?>nvice, v
cd
lite Johnson, her al
1 probably never
Bolivar
allegad
ww-<
A Parlor Shot Prove* Yatel.
f'H\RLt(.Tof, S. C.? A few days agia
a ne%ro boy uraed Joseph Dantsler was
hho? with a parior rifle by Mr. Nicholas-"?
Peterson, on whose premises ha w?Ji
(?a-Mug. The ball passed under ttia ?**
enth nb. and the boy died in the |
Mr. Peterson was bound over to appear^
at the inquest.; ^
'Tt-r?
The official itatiuics of Franca
shown the* in ISH about ?2.00i
w
died o? starvation In that
the number of those who became*
from misery amounted to 76J00$?
?J:L