The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, January 13, 1899, Image 2
Style is Nc
Ruled
You can pay the higher
clothes, yet it does not
get the style you ought
highest priced kind are
iug, most ungraceful cl
wearer look as if he h?
to make them fit. T1
clothes. Our strong po
moderate price.
af
i "*5
Suits and Overcoats
$25.00 You can sec
minute you try them <
from, too?another g
Smith Clo
A SKCO.N 1> IMitM I.AM V 1 |u> t
1h4u?(1 By A it" i int 1< io, ( iiiuIiimI In Mo ?? |
Vein-nii'iit lYrm* i
Advices from .Manila stale that a ,
second proclamation by Aguinuldo,
bearing the same date as the one ]
which immediately billowed the proe- .
lamatiou of Major General Otis, based (
upon President MeKinlev's instrue- ]
tious, first appeared on the streets f
Monday, but it is alleged to have
Ilpftll IVCKI I???1
It* term* are much more vehement
than those used in the lirst proclamation.
Aguinaldo threatens to drive tlie
Americans from the islands, culls the
Deity to witness that their hlood will
he 011 their own heads if it is shed,
and details at greater length the
promises he claims were made by the
Americans a* to the j art of the instil- j
gents in the campaign.
It is believed that this second proela- !
luation is the original draft which was j '
not adopted by the Filipino congress
at Malolos.
The natives,it is reported,have been
ordered not to work for the Americans,
and the employes in the commissary
department have gone on strike. Muny
natives are leaving the city.
Maj >r General Otis, however, has
the whole situation thoroughly in
hand.
The situation is rapidly approaching
a climax, and it is just possible that a
peaceful solution will result. Meanwhile
all sorts of alarmist rumors aro
m circulation. The United States authorities
are taking every precaution;
the troops in quarters are under arms,
and the Californians have disembarked
from the transports.
SOUTH KUN PKOIiRKSS.
1 lir New Industrie* Keiioiteil m the South
llnriin- the I'niit Week.
The new industries reported for the
pust week, include among the more
important items a ?:?(),OHO brick works
and a $20,000 coal company in Virginia;
a *50,000 cottonseed oil mill in j
Texas: a *100.000 chemical and ferti
li/.er works in North Carolina; flouring
mills in Arkansas anil North Carolina;
* foundry hihI machine shop in southwestern
Virginia; furniture factories
in Alahaina ami North Carolina; gas
works in West Tennessee; a glass factory
in Virginia; a hardware company
in Arkansas; lead mines in East Ten- '
nessec anil a mining company in Virginia;
a 310,000 paint factory in the
hitter state; shingle mills in Alabama,
Arkansas, Florida and Texas; a company
to manufacture surgical instruments
in Kentucky; a telephone exchange
in Kentucky, and a tobacco '
factory in Texas.?Tradesman (Chattanooga,
Tenn).
SPANIARD I'lqi KS I,l'1)1,0W.
_ _ _ _ _ _ I
(' vil iJovernur or llnvnim I miiuinen lie
l? Si 111 In l'(>w?r
Seuor Fernandez <le Castro, the
civil governor of Havana, acts as j
though he had his former power.
He ordered the Hygeia hospital to he j
closed. Oeueral Ludlow, the mili- ]
>t
by Prices.
.* ? e
?v iviuu vi puv;es lur yuur
; always follow that you
i to get. Oftentimes the
the stiffest, most unyieldiothes
made?making the
ul to stand a certain way
hat can't be said of our
int is lots of style at a
between ?6.50 and
3 the style in them
:n. Plenty to choose
ood point.
thing Co.
ary governor of the district of Hnt
una, who hail not been consulted in
he mutter, was displeased when he
neard of the action taken, and directed
that the hospital be reopened.
De Castro ordered the newspapers
ust week not to print certain business
ulvertisements which were distasteful
to him. They did not do so. General
Ludlow will probubly remove the civil
rover nor.
U.MAN!* HK0!*t?!!T HACK.
t'onyer*, tin. Merchant, Charged With
Swindling, Kftiirim From <'alif?irnln.
S. LuFayette Alniand, of Conyers,
fin., who is accused of having swindled
merchants and farmers in all
parts of Georgia arrived at Atlanta
Monday from Tulare, Cal., in charge
of Detective I' -witt who was. sent after
him some days ago.
Hewitt and Alniand were met at the
train by several members of the local
detective force. There were several
friends of Aim ami's at the depot also.
His old father was present to fjreet
him. Almaml refused to discuss his
case, and asked that he he left alone.
I'll AXSI'OltT WAS OV KUC ROW It I'D.
vioiinh Trni)|i? Keiirli llomr In a Wretell rtl
.?i < 1 Deplorable Condition
The Spanish transport Notre Dame
ile Saint, which sailed from Havana
on December 19tli, for Barcelona arrived
at the Spanish port Monday with
1,100 repatriated soldiers on board.
The vessel was overcrowded ami many
of the troops were found to be ill ou
the steamer's arrival.
NKW OliOltt.l V I'OST.M ASTK1JS
Who Hart- Iti'O'l vf il Appointment* ?i
Hand* of 1'imlmnnft-r (ioiiemt Sinilli.
The following fourth-class postiiiuv
ters for Georgia were appointed Tuesday:
Chester, Podge county. Mrs.
A blue Byrd; 1*111 is, Columbia county,
\V. A. Phillips; Jamestown, Chattahoochee
county, K. \V. Smith; Mecca,
Campbell county, l.illie llrock; Neese,
Madison county, \V. J. (ilenn; Noble,
Walker county, Thomas J. (iiliner;
Popular Springs, Haralson county,
H1!a Hills; SilverHhoal, Banks county,
Paul F. M. Purr.
Do you want an up-to-date., liv?
n?i/i //>A/ ku // ?< o?<
rwtv *j? v?^/ur ?"?/???> i riU(> U/ V V%> HOIWl#
posted on affairs at home and abroad f
You will ansu-cr the question affirmatively
by sending its your name and
subscription for this paper for a year
or at least sir months.
GETS A LIFE SENTENCE.
->pi>tilni'<l Who Snrrrmlrrrd I'tince to tlcn
Mil.-* I* Hatllv TrcBlcil
A dispatch from Madrid aay?: Col.
fulieii San Martin, who was in command
of the Spanish garrison at I'oncc,
Porto Kico, when the I'nitcd States
troops, under General Miles landed in
the island, ami who ahaiuloned th?
place without resistance, has heei
sentenced to iinprisonment f<>r life.
He will he incarcerated at Ciieta,tlu
Spanish penal colony in Morocco, op
posite Gibraltar.
PtftCE TRtftlY HIIDE PUBLIG
DOCUMENT IS NOW BEFORE SENATE
FOR RATIFICATION.
' A SUMMARY OF ITS CONTENTS.
It* Moit Important l'rovl-lonn Pr?Tlou*ly
Puhllalicd?Other Article*
ltrlefljr Outlined.
The American-Spanish peace treaty
lias been made public. The document
consists of seventeen articles.
The first, second and third articles
relate to the relinquishment of ('aba,
the cession of Porto Rico and the
PllilimiMlOO oa ??? * ?
A wo U0I01VIV1C*^ITCU UUl UJ
the press.
"Article four provides that the i
United States will, for the term of ten
years from the date of the exchange of
the ratifications of the present treaty,
admit Spanish ships and merchandise
to the ports of the Philippine islands
on the same tetrns as ships and. merchandise
of the United States. I
Article five designates that "the
United States will, upon the signature i
of the present treaty, send hack to
Spain, at its own cost, the Spanish
soldiers taken as prisoners of war on
the capture of Manila l?y the American
forces. The arms of the soldiers in
question shall be restored to them.
"Spain will, upon the exchange of
the ratifications of the present treaty,
proceed to evacuate the Philippines, (
as well as the island of Guam."
According tb article six, Spain will, 1
upon the signature of the, present 1
treaty, release all prisoners of uar aud
all persons detained or imprisoned for 1
political offenses in connection with 1
the insurrections in Cuba and the '
Philippines and the war with the 1
United States. 1
"Reciprocally, the United States 1
win. ?ii ?j
...IK . ciiTn.ir ? > [iciauun llllillt! prison- I
ers of war by the American forces and :
will undertake to obtain the release of 1
all Spanish prisoners in the hands of '
the insurgents in Cuba and the Philip- '
pines.
I "The government of the United
! States will, at its own cost, return to
! Spain, and the government of Spain '
i will, at its own cost, return to the j
j United States, Cuba, Porto Rico and '
| the Philippines, according to the situ- | '
j at ion of their respective homes, pris- 1
| oners released or caused to be released
| by them, respectively, under this artii
? '?. " !
I Article seven provides that "the
i United States and Spain mutr.nlly re- *
I limpiish all claims for indemnity, n#i
tional and individual, of every kind, i *
! of either government or of its citizens ; 1
or subjects, against ihe other govern- ; '
; ment that may have arisen since bo- j 1
ginning of the late insurrection in j ^
j Cuba and prior to the exchange of :
' ratifications of the present treaty, in- j ^
i eluding all claims for indemnity for j
the cost of the war.
"The United States will adjudicate J ,
and settle the claims of its citizens
against Spain relinquished in" this ar- '
I tide. | ,
Article eight relates to the property ]
! - - . i - i . ?
i rimim in tut* rtjited Territory. j
I Article nine states that "Spanish (
I subjects, natives of the peninsula, re- i j
sitting in the territory over which ; ,
Spain by the present treaty relin- : j
quishes or ceiles her sovereignty, may j
remain in such territory or may remove ^
| therefrom, retaining in either event all ,
i their rights of property,
j Article tep provides that "the inhab
! itants of the territories over which
I Spain relinquishes or cedes her sov|
ereignty shall be secured in the free i
j exercise of their religion,
j Article eleven provides that "the
! Spandiards residing in the territories '
I over which Spain by this treaty cedes j <
or relinquishes her sovereignty shall | i
be subject in matters civil as well as : 1
criminal to the jurisdiction of ilie 1
courts of the country wherein they re- t
side. i
Article twelfth relates to judicial
proceedings pending at the time of the
exchange of ratifications of the treaty
in the territories ceded.
Article thirteen relates to the rights
of property secured by copyrights and
patents acquired by Spaniards in the
island de Cuba and in Porto llico, the
Philippines and other ceded territories
at the time of the exchange of the ratifications
of the treaty.
Under the provisions of article fourteen
Spain will have the power to establish
consular offices in the ports
and places of territories, the sovereignty
over which lias been either re- !
linqnislied or ceded.
Article fifteen sets forth that "the
government of each country will, for
the term of ten years, accord to the
merchant vessels of the other country
the same treatment in respe? t of all
port charges, including entrance and
clearance dues, light dues and tonnage
duties, as it accords to its own merchant
vessels, not engaged in the coastwise
trade. This article may at any
time he terminated on six months' notice
bv eit,li#.r cruveriinient to t li ? otlw.r
Article sixteen is as follows: "It is
understood that uny obligations assumed
in this treaty by the United
States with respect to Cuba are limited
to the time of its occupancy thereof;
but it will upon the termination of
such occupancy, advise any government
established in the island to
assume the same obligations.
Article seventeen provides that "the
, present treaty shall be ratified by the
( president of the United States by and
, with the advice and consent of the
, senate thereof and by her majesty, the
queen regent of Spain; and the ratiti
* I cations shall be exchanged at Wash- I
. | ington within nix months from the I
date hereof, or earlier, if poHsible."
NORTH CAROLINA LAWMAKERS
Seek Same Important Changci la Pr?a*at
Affair* of State.
A Raleigh dispatch says: Two bills
have been introduced in the house of
the North Carolina legislature requiring
all railroads in the state to operate
separate coaches for white and colored
passengers.
One of the bills is an exact copy of
the law now in force in Tennessee
and which has been declared ooustitu
UUllltl*
The othor is similar to it except
that it provides "that any first-class
coach may bo divided into compartments,
separated by a substantial partition
in lieu of separate coaches."
A bill was also introduced iu the
house to amend the state constitution
so as to provide that "all" the moneys
arising from the taxation of the polls
and property of the white people for
public schools shall be appropriated to
the support of the public schools of
the white race, and all the moneys
arising from taxation of polls and
property of the colored race for public
schools shall be appropriated to
:hn Hiinnort of tlm rmhlio schools of
ri ~ ~ i? ? - tbe
colored race."
Tho school fund is now proportioned
according to population, the negroes
getting as much per capita as
the white people, though they pay
about ten per cent of the taxes. j
CONDEMNATORY RESOLUTION
I ntroiliicra In t!i?> Teiini-nnco I.cglnlattire
Knlntlvr to l*<*nnl?tilii? Conf<Ml?rnt?*a.
A resolution has been introduced in
the Tennessee houso of representatives
relative to' the pensioning of
Confederate soldiers. After referring
to President McKinley's patriotic
speech at Atlanta and Senator Butler's
pension bill, the resolution says:
"We condemn ami repudiate the action
of Senator Butler. That it is the
sense of the people of the south and
especially the people of Tennessee,
that we reserve it as a sacred right to
?are for our living soldiers and per- :
petuate the memory of our dead, and '
we commit to no country, state or per- ;
<on the privilege of rehabilitating the !
memory of 'those dead but seeptored !
sovereigns who will rule our spirits
from their arms.' "
BRYAN AT BANQUET.
IMukwortli Club nt Cliulnimt I (Jive Notable
Spread.
The Duckworth club, cf Cincinnati,
.rave its annual Jackson bnuquct Frilav
night.
This club has given ninny notable
banquets, but the one mentioned was
the most distinguished in its history, !
because of the presence of Col. Win. j
T. Bryan.
Democratic leaders from all over tho j
Onto held conferences with him our- f
ng the day, joining in the large re- ,
leption given Colonel Bryan nt the '
hnmber of commerce at noon. Ov.?r
100 plates were turned at the Gibson j
louse Friday night, and tho decoralions
were elaborate.
TROOPS AT CHARLESTON.
IVIII Hoard tin- Transport Saratoga For
I Hlttllll of Cubit
The first batalion of the One Hun- j
Ired and Sixtieth Indiana r? giiueut i
left Columbus, Ga., Friduy night over |
:lie Central of Georgia railway for
Charleston, there to take tho transport i
Saratoga for Cuba. As much as a j
week may elapse between the depar- |
hire from Columbus of the various i
lattalions of the regiment,as the transiort
Saratoga will move all the regi- !
lient to the island, carrying a battal- |
on at the time.
OBSERVED "KING'S HOLIDAY." j
I lip Clllirnii of Havana Celebrate ? Kixeil
Cimtoiii u* Heretofore.
A dispatch from Havana states that
'King's holiday" was observed in that
uty Friday just as though the king
eigned over Cuba. Tho business
louses were closed, but the Americans
.r^wf III a rvii K! t a f i fti /ino otiar?
ivas a man-of-war regatta iu the afternoon.
LAST OF CAMP POLAND.
All Troop* nt Knox villi-, Tonn., OnlKrril to
Savmiunli.
A Washington dispatch says: The
secretary of war has directed that the
camp at Knoxville, Tenn., be broken
up and that the 31st Michigan volunteer
infantry and all other troops now
there go by rail to Savannah with a
view to their transportation to Santa
t'lara, Cuba.
( ENKHAL WOOD ARRIVES.
*nntIngo'ii Mllltnry Oovrrnor Will Confer
Willi 1'roHlilrnt MrKlnlry,
The United States transport Mississippi,
which sailed from Santiago on
the evening of January 4, arrived at
New York Tuesday. On board the
transport were General Ijeonard Wood,
military governor of Santiago, and
Lieutenant Ilnnna, aide-de-camp; Dr.
Castillo, a Cuban, and Colonel Gibson,
who superintended the distribution
of provisions in tho island.
General Wood, who was interviewed
at quarantine regarding the protest of
the people of Santiago over tho disposal
of the funds of that province,
nam lie <li<l not care to talk on that
matter liefore he visited Washington.
AT WIIKRLEK'K ItMJlKST
A SiKiiin<iuil Mcnmri) Im I nl rmlnrnl Itjr
AI h l>? in it fun an num.
A Washington dispatch says: Representative
Htnllings, of Alabama, has
introduced in Congress, for General
Wheeler, a hill providing that officers
of the regular army who served with
distinction during the war with Spain
shall, when retired, he given the
highest rank held hy him in the volunteer
service.
IIIPSlEHJf UTTER.
*
WILLIAM HAS A WORD FOR UEORUIA
FARMERS.
ADY!SES THEM TO "HUSTLE" MORE
I>l versification of Crops Is Sa(B?lled?A
Facetious Drunim?r'? Monkey
Story.
Not long ago a one-horse farmer
from the hack woods came to our town
with two hales of cotton and sold it
for 5 oents a pound. This was his entire
crop, and he was complaining bitterly
to one of our merchants aud said
that tho farmers would perish todej.th
in another year if there wasent some
change for the better. A mischievous
drummer, standing by, said: "Well,
my friend, you must quit raising cotton
or else buy some monkeys to pick
it out. Over in India and Egypt they
make the monkeys pick their cotton,
and that is what's the matter. A
monkey will pick a thousand pounds
a day and he feeds on the seed. 80 it
costs hardly anything over there to
raise cotton, and our farmers in Mississippi
and Texas have sent over for
a hundred thousand monkeys, and
they will be over here in time to pick
the next crop and the price will go
lower still, and if you don't got you a
monkey or two you had better quit
growing cotton, for you cau't compete
with monkeys." The old man took it
all in seriously and said: "Well, what
in icn jrritr?. imiMir im h imiti riieii|>er,
not much. Wo still pay the seme
for cooking and washing and work in
the garden. If anybody has a reason
for complaining of hard times it. is the
town people, who have everything to
buy. The farmer who is not in debt
and owns his farm is better off than
he ever was and the prudent renter
can pay rent and make money farming.
Tint of course there is a large class
of shiftless, unthrifty people who will
not succeed at anything, and they
blame everybody for it but themselves.
Cobe says that the Lord had to make
poor folks to keep rich folks in money,
and so Cobe is contont in beirfg poor,
for it is the Lord's will. I know folks
who have never planted a fruit tree
and who will not even plant a garden.
Poverty makes soino folks shifty and
others indifferent and despairing.
There is an old negro woman cQmes to
our houso every Saturday and brings
ns a gallon of big hominy?old-fashioned
lye hominy, and it is a luxury.
We pay her 15 cents for it and she line
seven other customers. One peck of
corn that costs her 10 cents make;
four pecks of hominy, for which she
gets SI.20, and that makes her a good
living.
I read in the last Home and Farm
about a successful experiment in
growing ginseng, and if I was a farmer
I would try it. This was in Ken
tucky, whore a man planted it in n
well-shaded forest of bench and dog
wood and gum trees, and it grew hott
from the seed and the roots that he
planted and gave hiir. a good crop. Itf
nut ttrioa iu ft! n tiniitbl T Irnrtu
that it could bo grown in this mountainous
region, among the foothills. 1
know a good farmer who makes monej
growing turnips for their seed, and lu
sells all his crop to Peter Henderson,
of New York, and Peter sells it back
to us at ">00 per cent profit. Anj
smart, industrious woman could make
money right here by growing rosef
and hothouse plants. Our people send
<>1T lots of money for such things and
is n poor farmer to do if he liasent pot
the money to buy the monkey?"
"Grow something else," said the
drummer. "Grow corn and wheat and
sorghum and potfttoes. Plant apple
and peach trees, raise chickens and
eggs, and a yearlin calf or two to sell.
Get up soon and stir around lively
and make every member of your family
work. Work at something, for if yen
don't you will perish out. Go back
home and take a new start. Don't sit
down and grumble and blame somebody
else with your poverty. Quit
cotton until you can buy half a dozen
monk' ys."
The man went back home and circulated
the monkey story, and for ten
miles around the one-horse farmers
have sworn off from raising any more
cotton. That's what they tell me. Thev
say that before tlie war the poor man
eouhlent compete with the rich moil's
niggers, ami now since he has lost his
nippers he is imvin' monkeys to take
their places, and the poor man won't
have any chance at all.
Of course there is no truth in this
story. l>ut there is a pood ileal of philosophy.
New methods, new plows
and new machinery are the monkeys,
and if the poor farmer does not work
early and late he will keep poor T
know some country women who make
more money on their chickens and
eggs and butter than their husbands
do on their cotton anil wheat. Initio
thinps well nursed count up more than
hip ones. The thrifty farmer always
brings with him something to sell
when he has to come to tow n. Some
fowls or epps o" potatoes or a sliote or
some fruit in its season. There is a
pood home market for all these little
things. In fact, if we leave out cotton
everything the farmer grows
brings ahont the .same old prices of
ten years apo, and everything he has
to liny except coffee is much cheaper
now than it was then.
Everything that is made of cotton
is 50 per cent cheaper and everything
made of iron or steel or tin is 100 per
cent cheaper. Beef and pork and
chickens and turkeys and eggs and
wood and potatoes and apples and
peaches have not come down a nickel
some of them are no account when
they get here.
Nobody around here has ever raised
auy asparagus to sell, but they buy it
iu Atlanta at 25 cents a bunch and
bring it home, or they buy it canned
from the grocer at 35 cents. A man
in Marietta grows it by the aero for #
Atlanta market and makes bi<r money.
Why not grow it here? Shifty is the
right word?we must he shifty if we
would keep up with the progress of
the times. Wit and wisdom are very
noble qualities, but necessity is the
mother of invention and eoutrivauce.
We must get out of the old ruts and
learn of our northern brethren. New
England girls sit mound the lire every
night and plait straw for hats and bonnets
and baskets and chair bottoms,
and they have a good time talking
abont their neighbors and neighborhood
news. Why shouhlent our girls
leArn photography and have a gallery
in every town? It is a beautiful art
and peculiarly fitted for women ?
pretty youug women who can talk
their patrons into a pleasing expression
and can pose the little children
and arrange the young man's necktie
so nicely.
If I was a poor, smart, pretty girl
and no man wanted me that I wanted,
r ......,1.1 ......... 1 ........... i.
?. ?v\'?uia uiivc nuiun iconuiin ail |muiu^aphy
aiul open a shop. I thought
that the girls were crowding the young
men out of a good many places, for
they are smart and quick and don't
drink or smoke, and I am amazed and
indignant to read that 200 of them
have been turued out of employment
by a great railroad company in Chi-"
oago. I don't understand that. I
hope Mrs. Lowe will investigate it.?
Bmij Arp in Atlanta Constitution.
Do yon want an up-to-date, live
newspaper?one that will keep you
posted on affairs at home and abroadf
Tou will anstver the question aff rmativcly
by sending us your name and
subscription for this paper /or a year
or at least six months.
SPOT COTTON MAUKKT.
Official closing quotations for spot
cotton Tuesday:
Atlauta?Quiet; middling 5J to 5
9-16c.
Liverpool?Demand fair; middling
6 o-32d.
New York?Firm; middling 6 l-16e.
New Orleuus ? Firm; middling 5
5*1 tie.
Savannah?Steady; middling 5}e.
(ialveston?Steady; middli'gS9-16c.
Norfolk?Firm; middling 5U\
Mobile?Steady; middling 5 3-1 tic.
.Memphis?Firm; middling "?lc.
Augusta?Quiet and steady; middling
">; C.
Charleston?Firm; middling
Houston?Quiet and steady; middling
;e.
St. Louis?Firm; middling o7-16c.
M*K!M.KY lilYl'S A IMWKU
At Whic h i'uri* I't'iitv Are
t o{' | ||)ti?>|*
President and Mrs. MeKinley gave
an elaborate dinner at the white h uiso
Mondi y night, at which the members
of the Paris peace commission were
the guests of honor. Invited to meet
them were the members of the cabinet,
senators and representatives in congress
and a number of officers of the
army and navy who took prominent
parts in the war,including Major (Jen- .
erals Shatter and Wheeler and Admirals
Sampson and Schley and Captain
llobley 1). Evans.
MACHINISTS' WAKKS It AISMI).
Southern Knlluny < runts Itcmniitl of Itn
s||oj? Kiiinlnycs.
'I til. I1>(l?li l niutu ..in t. 11 ivn.l ii. iIia
Southern railway shops at Knowillo,
Tenii., have been informed by Grand
Muster James O'Connell, <>f the Ma*
ehinists' Union, that the Southern
railway authorities had agreed to grant
an increase of f> per cent to tlie machinists
at wage scale, to begin February
1st. This will apply to shops
all over the Southern system.
This sets at rest local speculation
among shopmen.t
ItKORUAMXK M A It IN11 Ft MIPS.
^ Provide* For Nix Thmttmnd Mnli-trd Men
tliiiler Command of Mnjm- (ifiirrsl.
The proposed measure for the reorganization
of the United States marine
corps was passed on favorably by the ?? ,
house committee o:: naval ntlairs Moni
?^ay,
It increases the enlisted force of the
marine corps to 6,000 men and pro[
vides a commandant with rank of major
general, a brigadier general, live
, colonels, ten majors uml sixty company
[ officers.
ADIHtKStt BY PRESIDENT
| Will Be Venture of the Meeting of Miintifavl
nrem at Cincinnati.
1 Chicago members of the National
^ Association of Manufacturers have received
news that President McKinley
will visit the annual convention of
1 that body, to bo held in Cincinnati,
1 January '24, 25 and 26, and will deliver
' an address to the members. His subi
or?f will l?o A movionit M ? > ^ *
I JVVV MV 4MUVI ivnil I I H'lU, 141111 IL
k is expected that much of the discourse
" will be immediately pertinent of ter'
ritorial expansion and its important
! influence on commerce.
FIVE DEATHS RESULTED.
1 F.iitclncer " imklmm Muki-H Klftli Victim of
The Collision Near Knoxvllle.
Freight Engineer Oeorge Huskison,
; who was injured in the collison on the
r Knoxville branch of the Southern railroad,
near Elk Valley, Sunday night,
[ died Monday morning.
This makes Ave deaths in all resulting
from the wreck. All trains on the
line ara delayed.