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The Asheville Weekly Citizen from Asheville, North Carolina • 6

Location:
Asheville, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I 6 THE WEEKLY CITIZEN TIIURSDAYFEBRUAIiY20189() READS LIKE FICTION COHINDI IN WKMTERN A HENKbXRK SPEAKS Through special arrangements we offer THIS PAPER in combination with JOHM WILSON HANGED Tie American $2001 Th American Agriculturist In Nnln al Rnrd Mffzln of pftW with eover Aye ri rotu I "iT u- ami or -llminii it 0rt i ill HiHt er purbiuOmi to agriculture aod tbo oldest aud monthly edited periodical ui tt duu hi i be world 0 IV ADDITION WK WIU FORWARD mm to ptert HuhMrlrr to th above combination tending Iff oenta extrm (or THE Fill iO IISEILD CYCLOPEflIA 544 Paes 249 Illustrations a tfpt brrfrr hbrnrff fr farmer and houekeenFr heln filled with ttsrfol us mi il huIj iMintiilri to rural and nffaim ui rlngtii tut i ud ipsr I nii vxl jiMCtlml 'd hoiii in hii ivihs cmimrlta Th' 1k fpf bi n- an re-ul a fxim-I cu'itahi bMICft H'lll I ulted tvprr book si tvrv iU'ilt cou and I dl ldii iieif tlie book Chalmers Speak! In Favor of a Federal Election law Washington February Chalmers of Mississippi made an argument to-day Itefore the house committee on the election of president and vice-presi dent and on the subject of the necessity I a federal election law for the State ol Mississippi He declared that he did not come before the committee to assail thi white people of the South but merely to ask protection for the white republicans of the South The negroes were able to sieak fully for themselves He said that be would trust his lile with Southern democrats but he declared that when they stole or roblied the ballot box ai elections they thought thev were doing God's service Congress should pass an act to enforce in the South the 15th amendment to the constitution It had liecn said that the lSthnmendmentcould not lie enforced in the Southern States This was a serious matter and required attention Congress had a right he insisted to provide a federal election law It was not necessary to apply a remedy where it was not needed but where it was needed there it should lie applied Supervisors of elections would answernll purposes in places where elections were conducted fairly hut where they were not conducted fairly some other means must lie at hand for this purpose He thought the law might lie enacted providing that whenever a certain numlier of citizens asked for registration bv the United Slates officials such requist should lie granted Chalmers favored the hill introduced bv Representative Kelley of Kansas with some modifications as a measure that would tend to meet the needs which he insisted existed in Mississippi of "a lair Kl'HIAN ATROCITIES cream or -uhetanre of iioh than a dozen ord narv AgrlculmralDiMl hoiineho th' on)) fir uikofitiekliinovera Id ai If than do-hir It 1-u ik to tmeon 11(111 (iirft 1 he r-ad at all time with tnteieat and profit Itismicbft farmer a Iioiiftekeeper no 1h fo have sup ylinr be nn vr el want of ar 1 -4ii ev 1 1 rehiiuif io tin farm a household The work 1 i rofu'Hy tlhiKfrated two gene al hea liu viz Thk Farm and Th HoranHoLn each uf ftbicb occupies Tb 'se arc ajalu Mibdivuied iuto a number of deparuueuua follows 2 Rural Architecture Fences and Gates Field Crops Fertilizers The Gardi Orchard and Vineyard Small Fruits Live Stock The Poultry Yard The Dairy1 The Apiary Farm Implements Around the Farm Cooking Becipts Fancy Work Floriculture The Home Physician The Toilet The Laundry Hints and Helps ATI of tba aikora unhjoct arr fully and hiy treated In tbn valuable book It ti a vart torf honae ntfi bint and mk4 tho of thFunuoftt vaIii io farmer and housekeeper and uo man who baa a or of lati-i can wiroru io win-i ii oat ai no to money or up roe order check draft or by registered letter orders to Rrnilt by no ddreaa all CITIZEN PUBLISHING CO ASHEVILLE A Mineral Product In Which Thin (lection Leads the World Editor Citizen: A brief de-crip i in ol this valuable mineral now found in quantity in various sections of Western North Carolina may prove of interest to the readers of The Citizen Corundum is pure crystallized clay or1 ilnminn und is the next hardest substance in nature to the diamond In its crystallized lorm when colored by different proportions of oxide of iron it becomes a gem and tlie-e nine in numlier are known as oriental sapphire rubv asteria emerald topaz amethyst gira-sol chatofiunt and white or colorless sapphire which is often used in plate of the diamond From the time of Solomon tlie corundum gem localities have been known and wanked in Armenia Bactria India Ceylon and elsewhere In size brilliancy tailor and artistic execution there are no modern precious stones of the mineral equal to those that have come down to us from an early date Some of these gems to-day outrank in value as they have ever done the costliest diamonds In grunufiir form corundum was known to the Persians ns Armenian stone to the Chinese as adamantine spar It is taken from the Hindoo word korunda or cinnamon stone the Hindoo variety Ireing of this color The chief sources ol supply heretofore have been certain districts in Hindustan in the Himalava mountains and Irom these districts not to exceed twenty tons per annum have been sent to the markets of the world as the united product of all Asia From a very early ieriod corundum has been used as an abrasive power During the first French empire the emperor placed an obelisk from the hanks of the Nile in the dc la Wishing to inscrilie the date ol its removal upon its base his workmen destroyed in tneir labors several sets of their best steel tools hut failed in their purpose Yet the same column is covered trom tip to base with hieroglyphics by the workman of 3000 years ago Oil the other side of the Red Sea whence came the harder monuments of the Nile valley there have recently been found corundum it all the indications of ancient workings From this locality may not these ancient workmen "skilled in all the wisdom of the Fgrptinns" have lound their tools with winch to execute thonsandsot square yards of exquisite workmanship with seeming ease to imitate a tew lines ot which successlully exhausted the re-sourses ol the mechanics of Napoleon Bo-uapat le Emery is an impure cortimdum and consists ol a mixture of alumina and magnetic oxide of iron It is mined to some extent near Ephesus in Asia Minor at Nixos Greet and at Chester Mass The abrasive powers of pure corundum are much greater than those of emery Taking sapphire as the standard at 100 the product of our best Western North Carolina corundum mines lias a power ol 90 to 1)7 as an a bra site while that ot the liest enierv (Naxos) is Irom 40 to 57 When connected in vitrified wheels this corundum eats readilv and rapidly granite clulltd iron hardened steel all the eoriiiKlum gems and even tile diamond Out-of Us Inst tests is the bringing of a stiel tool rapidly to a cutting edge without heat or loss ol temper The first corundum mine ever oiiened in this country was that at "Corundum Hill" Macon county in this State by Col Jcnks of New York City in 1S71 This with another secured and iqiened at the same time and now-owned and w-oiked hv Dr Lucas ol Plulach Ipliia pay the largest profits of anv similar mines tins country Other alines are beitigdeveloicd and worked wi ll grat results in several western counties in the State and as the demand is great hath here and abroad it is only a-question ol time until the mining ol Mr Kennan the Hiberlan Traveler Thlukathe Report True Chicago 111 February 12 Mr George Kemmn the well-known Siberian travel rand writer who is now delivering a series of lectures in this eit on the Russian penal system was asked in regard to the dispatch from Paris yesterday detailing the outrage to Mme Sihdn bv the prison official at Kara and the distressing train of events which followed He said the dispatch bore the impress ol triitlilnlness contains a large numlier of Russian refugees and they ha vc penal have The Yakotilok massacre came out through refugees in Paris and it is evident that the person who wrote the dispatches knew something about the location of prisons at Kara I have licet) there and know that male and female prisons are somedistmee apart I never met the Indies mentioned hut knew of Mme Kalmalitskaya ami have heard ol Mme Sdida I will undoubtedly hear something of this matter in a few days hut at present I know only what I see in the dispatches" "IIovv could such information get out of a closely guarded ienal settlement "Some officer might have Inch present who did not approve ol the outrage and told some of the prisonersahout it Then some of the women mav have seed it and sent word to Paris Such outrages never can lie covered up They are hound to out some wav Th re are seventy or ciglitv male prisoners at Kara and some them manage to convey iulormation to their hiends at Paris or elsewhere" r- Particular! of the Execution In Burnsville on Friday Editor John Wilson who win-convicted at the spring term lHMOol th superior court of Yancey county for murder of Thomas Edge on the 27thdat of December 1888 was hung at Burns-ville February 7 John Woody the sheriff ot Yancey county with hisguard arrived in Burnsville with thecondemiied man at 6 on the 6th trom Asheville where the prisoner had been sent for safe keeping Wilson looked very pale and was in feeble health and with his crippled arm was a pililul object to behold Braver was had at the jail with him before the execution The sheriff and guard oi eighteen men left the jail for the place ol execution (in an old field north ot town) at 1 At the gallows Wilson requested that the 51st 1'salin lie read which was done by a Mr Koliertson alter which Wilson bowed and prayed first for the large crowd that bad gathered to see him die Second for his wile and children who were present third tor the widow ol Thomas Edge and her children fourth for himself When he arose he said thnt he was prepared to die and spoke to the crowd stating that if any one wished to ask him any questions he was ready to answer them No questions were asked He made no public talk His wife and children remained at the gallows until a few minutes before the execution when they retired The rojie bolding the trap door was cut 124 by Rilev Koyle The fall was five feet At 154 his heart ceased to beat At 204 lie was pronounced dead by urs 0 Lewis and Kay He apieared to die without a struggle The body was then loweied und placed in the coffin and turned over to his Inends who started at once to the home of his widow Nothing unusual occurred at the execution The shenff and his posse discharged their duty in a solemn manner as the laws direct The crowd was very large and very quiet und well henaved The weather being bad the crowd soon dispersed Romeo Duke of Orleau Found Guilty Pakis February 1 The Duke of Orleans son of the Count and Countess ot Paris who came to Paris last week with the avowed intention ol enlisting in the French army and who was then arrested on a charge of violating the law exiling from France all pretenders to the French throne wns again arraigned before the triliunal of the Seme to-day He was adjudged guilty of violating the law and wns sentenced to two years imprisonment The court room was crowded with spectators ho had gathered to watch the proceedings against the young Duke When the prisoner was arraigned the crowd broke out with loud cries lor the army the Duke of Orleans and republic They liccamc so demonstrative that the gendarmes were comicllcd to clear the room Before judgment wns announced the Duke addressed the eouit in his! own behall lie mid: "I came to Fiance to serve us common soldier I have nothing to do with polities hull only concerns inv father hose olualient son and tailldul servant I am 1 know that by entering France I render iiivsell liable to the law hut that knowledge did not Stop me 1 love my country and ro serve her 1 am guilty ot no ct line The Duke will lie allowed to remain in the Coiuiergerie prison lor a lew weeks before luaug removed to jail The government grants him tins privilege in order to give Inin an opportunity to appeal trom the sentence ol the court ORPHAN AMY LI' ON FIRE Over Four Hundred Ilo In Hie IlulldliiRt but no Live Lost New York Fein unry 12 A fire wns discovered shortly alter 8 o'clock tins mm lung on the fourth (lour of the Roman Catholic Orphan Asvlumnn Filth avenue opHistte the Yiimlei hilt mansions ami on the Hock above the cathedral There are 415 orphan hoys U-t ween the ages 5 and 13 years old in the us lum under theilifrgrol twenty-six M-tcrsnl charity The children had ust finished ihoir'ireuk- fast and had taken tlliir seats in several class looms wli thesiqicrioress i mother Mnrv Martin learned ol the Outbreak of the hie She at oneesoumleil the alarm used in the tire drill in the asylum iiml allied by the other sisleis marshalled all the cluldieti in orderly files Irom all the class rooms down to the Madison avenue cut ranee when- they wire in ierfeet safety The children knew nothing of the presence of the tire-in the building until thev hud heard the clamor ol the fire engines hurrying to the asylum The fire find broken out in a large room tilled with unused hooks and other truck The room wns locked up and no one recently entered it It is upjtosed the fire was caused hv defective Hue 'The firemen fought tlie (lames for half an hour bctorcthey uhlued them hut they succeeded in picvcntigits spread to the lower floors of the nsy lum The damage it ciaseil is estimated at $10000 mainly caused hv the flood ol water that descended through every floor the south win Navama Inland Mardee Eases Haltimokk February The jury in the third Nn utter liciug locked up all night brought itr ft-xmln't this forenoon As to the killing ot Samuel Marsh the jury finds Edward Smith guiltyjjf murder in the first degree and Charles TTrSmiUgSleve 1 eters AI Johns James Rubu son Juttics Phillips Amos Lee murs Johnston Ciesar Fislierr Henry Jones James Davis and Edmund Francis guilty ol manslaughter George Karlt Moses Williams Norman Ynos- i-i i i eraiin Ltlwuril noiiioot not guilt as to the Willi lifrtk YYilut in Shea All of the tlelendunts are ruiLgu ilt Tie hotly ol Sliea has never Ixx-rt loun -Halstead Become a MagazliilNt New YoKRTFebruary urut Halstead left New York lust verting -uaj lie "western express Some time ago the offer wot made to Mr Halstead to conduct nt a handsome sulirv a new department in the Cosmopolitan Magazine in which lie wns to treat everv month of important public events in nn unpurtisan mnnner After giving the matter" carelul consideration Mr Hul-Xtend came on to New New York and -w ileher-accei' ted the proposition ol the e3 i oft Trf-HlierCosma po ji a His first article ill appear in tfit April issue I ''I' i I I Carrie Turner Tell How Stae Got Her Divorce The following remarkable and rnthcr funny story is told in a London cable to the New York World: Carrie Turner well remembered in the Paul Kauver and young Mrs Winthrop companies secured her divorce She said to-day: "lam His no longer 1 mean I am no longer Mrs The young American actress was married it will be lememlrered in 1883 to a rich Swiss manufacturer who wanted her to leave the stage and to live with him inSwitzer land she said to-dav could not stand inurriage he so respectable and conventional I so Bohemian He bored me I hoiked him Busmesscalled aim all over Euroie Business kept me constantly travelling We were always aoart for the last two years I never re-ccired any citation ancTthc Swiss courts will record a divorce unless appearanceis ntered within six months on the ground of desertion "1 determined to appear I cameove-in January and went to Morgenthal where my husband lived He reeeivid me in a great big house most formally We dined together on the most friendly terms and agreed that incompatibility ot temer rendered divorce necessary I (elf very kindly towards him and I am sure he felt affection for me I felt strangely awkward in my husband's house with no haperon or other woman Heconducted me to my room and hoped 1 would not feel frightened "For ten days my husband and 1 lived as comrades and I quite enjoyed his society yet I realized theawful dullness ol such a respectable life Then the day of trial came My husband drove me to court in his dog-cart We both had the same lawyer The judges expressed sur-praise that I should lie willing to relinquish a worthy and wealthy husband I confessed that our wavs were so different that 1 could not live with him I did not dislike nor dispise him but simply could not give up my profession for tire life ofa Swiss matron During the recess of the court my husband and I lunched together judges granted the divorce reluctantly telling me that if 1 should change my mind within two weeks they would annul the decree They gave me the custody ot the child stipulating that the lather should see it whenever he chose My husband myself the presiding judge and his wile all dined together and we were a merry party I left lor London that night and my husband traveled with me lor three hours amt kissed me good-bye Though longer man and -vile we have the greatest esteem and friendship for each A BREATHING CAVE Knoxville Nightmare Gel Into Print The Knoxville Evening Sentinel shows its regard for the truth when it prints the billowing: In the range of mountains in Western North Carolina known as the "Fork a most singular phenomenon exists It is the "Breathing Cave" In the summer months a current of air comes Iroin it so strongly that a iersoii cannot walk against it hile in inter the rush ol air inward is just as great The cool air from the cave in summer is felt sometimes for miles in a direct line Irom the mouth of the cave At times a most unpleasant odor is emitted upon therurrent irom animals sucked in and killed livcom-ing in violent contact with the walls The loss ol cattle and other stink in that section during the winter months is always great and is accounted for in this way: Thev range too near the mouth ot the cave and the current carries them in At times when the change Irom inhalation to exhalation begins the air is filled with hairs of the various animals not iiilicqnentlv small dry bones have Ix-en carried tor over a mile from the mouth ot cave as though shot from an air gun air has Ixen known to change quite suddenly duiing exhalation trom cold to not accompanied by a terrible roaring and gurgling sound Many sci-itic men have visited the place but the livnnmetton Mill remains unexiiluiiK-il the rrsith-nts that section tear a volcanic eruption Something is wrong sure DEATH OK A MIDGET Prince Luc (lie Smallest the World End Her Life Baltimore American Lucy aged seven months nnd weighing two pounds one ounce who was on exhibition at the Egyptian museum Baltimore stree -ir Gav was buiied yestirdav morning The parents ot the little mite are Mr and Mrs am ml Skipper No 1716 Jvlizalieth lane south Baltimore The father is a boiler maker and well proportioned nnd tlie mother is of the average j-ize They are in poor circumstances the father-being out work and their babv girl had occasioned so much comment that they vveit induced to place her on exhibition It was one of twins the mate a male having died at birth and the parents tea ml to lose this one also Motidav was the first day of exhibition of this midget It was fourteen inches long its hand measured 1 Vi inches the foot 1 indies the ankle and wrist lVi inches Lucv wns a bright baby and had big black eyes but was apparently not very-strong She must have caught a fold on Monday for on Tuesday she was deud Mining Excitement Charlotte February 14 Min-jug excitement is again revived in Golden i ITcY -nud-xi cin itv caused by a northern company opcningTtp-ajiew mine in the upper end of the valley This-eompany operating under the name of the Boston Mining arid 'Lumbering company has purchased some 10000 acres of land including mineral lands nt the head 'Of tlie valley nnd timber lands at and around Hard Bargain Gap in the South mountains The mineral lauds now being developed were purchused' frniLnwsn Smart who had takenoutgreat amounts Vrf gold J'jie mines were first discovered in the year 1829 hv the finding of aflarge nugget of pure gold nnd were worked until the great discoveries nnd iujl'nlifomii in 1849 when most ot the emigrated to California in a body These rnines are worked continuously When a big -puy is not operating the natives work on their'Own Uuok and make wages Mr Wanamaker proposeTTfresiahlisli in connection with the postoffice department a limited telegyaphservice throughout the United States ON Till-: ALLIANCE A Catholic ltlsliop lllHlIkc It Me- ert-t and Religious Feature Chicago February A di-patch Irom KuiisnsCity says: In a lenten pastoral letter to he read in all the churches 0 0 0 the diocese ol La icnw ort It Bishop shall prove me of the cutest Fink of the Roman Catholic clitucli re- I sources ol revenue in cstenr North Car-Icrimg to the I'armcis' Alliance move-I l' igricultural deques meat caused by the Col talks the father of the writer who is recognized as the foremost authority on corundum in the Slates has latily examined a number ol specimens taken from unde- nii hqied inims in which our fii til is inter-'CIIt the The quite LEGAL NOTICES OTICK State df North Carolina (In SnperiorCourt County of Buncombe Before the Clerk SOatJarvi of Nancy Hen ley deceased versus James Hensley and others the heir at law of Nancy Hensley deceased NOTfCK POM PUBLICATION OH SUMMONS Starling Henslev Robert Munson and wife Hire Munson Lucinda Banks and Glu-cilly Banks defindants in the above stated cause are hereby notified that said cause ha been instituted by the plaintiff above n- mei against said defendants and others heir law of said Nancy Hensley debased for has ned 1 thl av- purpose of selling tomakeassets for thepay mrnt of debts of said ecesed all or the right title and interest of said deceased and of said defendants her heir- at law in the land conveyed to said deceased and Elizabeth by Weslev Banks by deed dattd December 19 1861 whkh is regia1 ered in the office Register of Deeds for said county of Buncombe in Book at page 715 and hih said land is fully described in the complaint filed in said cause And the said dettndantsabovenamed are hereby required to appear and answer or demur to the said complaint before the undesigned lerk of the Snierior Court of said county of Buncombe at hi office in Asheville in said county on the 28th hav of February 1890 at 12 o'clock or the plnintitf will take judgment ugnii at them according to the praerof the said complaint Thi the 9th day of January RH VNOLDS Clerk Superior Court Cobb Merrimon Att'ysfor Fl't'ff janl6 6w NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of William Brown (let-eased late of Buncombe county this is to nomy all persons having claims against the estate of said dc-c as to exhibit them to the undersigned at Hickory on or before January 20 1 891 or this notice aa $11 be plead in bar of their recovery Ad persons indebted to said estate ill mae immediate pavnunt Thi January 19 1890 JAMES T'Mm RE jnnlO dl wtfeb 28 Admin sira or 'ril Write us and we will send you one on 15 Days' TestTrial In your own home We pay all freights No cash asked until you are suited Satisfaction Guaranteed Over 40000 Southern homes supplied by on this plan since 1870 Fairest method ol sale known Huv rs saved all n-sk and ensured Perfect Instruments at Lowest Cost We make it for all to buy Write for Valuable Information LUDDEN BATES SAVANNAH CA Fine Tobacco Lands For Sale I offer for sale 10000 Acres of Land In Cherokee count 10000 aens in Graham nnd 10000 acres in Swain The lands in Cherokee and Swain are fine tobacco nnd wheat and are suitnbleforsmaH fvrm Some of them are improved Partite desiring to punhase HOMES ON I STALL MFNTS ill do well to see these lands before buying The lands in Graham are mostly large tracts situated on the Tennessee river and proposed line of the Raun Gao railroad and are well timbered with Oak Ash Poplar Etc The land or timber eithet for sole Will furnish men in each county to show'property free of charge All information in regard to' titles etc will be furnished promptly by Ferguson and Ferguson att rnrv at law Wnvm svillc For further particulars address JAS THOM AS febldftw3m Whittier TEACHERS NOTICE Vacancies supplied with teacher Teacher furnished with employment Correspondence solicited from both teachers and school boards A A HAMLET Chairman Teachers Bureau feb2dltw3m Asheville NO MORE EYE-GLASSES MORE Eye-Salve A Oartaln Safa and Efhotlva Bamady fof SORE WEAK INFLAMED EYES Producing Long-Sightedness Restoring the Sight of the OIJ Com Tear Drop Granulations Sty Tumors Red Eyes Matted Eye Ushe in RMHtajs feix rnunn 11 Also squally effleadooa when naed In oth inalsdie such a Ulren ii may osd to advantara 8U fey mil DracalsU at Oeot janfl'Wty Blaine and TfanrattfL cabinet meeting on the 11th for time in six weeks MISCELLANEOUS Sp? Are AMERICAN and the BEST LEADING BU8INE88 PEN8 No 87 Falcon And Nrx 75 117 1 Acmb LEADING STUB PENS Ho 4 Carton Stub And Nos 119 102 Grant Pen LEADING LEDGER PENS JTo 99 Markham Olli) And Nos 101 506 030 LEADING SCHOOL PENS Ho 23 University And Nos 333 444 16 7h9 Miller Bros Cutlery Co Menden Conn MAtfUPACTURFRS OR Steel Pens Ink Eraser and Pocket Cutlery Sent postpaid lor 10 cunts a dozen or 80 cunts a urea Send for trial dozun assorted kinds JAS CARSON Asheville NC oct3 wly JUST TIIE THING A Noble Preiuium to Every Subscriber REPRODUCED IN 14 OIL COLORS At a Cash Outlay of Nearly $6000 GIVEN FREE Exclusively for subscriber to THE WEEKLY CITIZEN AND THE VOICE of New York Each copy of the picture will be very carefully packed so us to reach subscriber in good condtiun and will be delivered carriage free Subscribe Now OCR OFFER Anyone who will send S2 will receivefor one ear both TUB WKhKL CITIZEN and 1 HE NHW YORK VOICE and aFoacnpy of THE ANGELES mailed free of expense Addre THE CITIZEN ATTENTION BEFORE YOU BUY YOUR GROCERIES CALL ON 31 YOUNG 38 NORTH MAIN ST And ee hi fine of Sugar Coffee Flour Ba con etc He ha already a nice and complete stock of Fretth Grocerie and expects to increase it to meet the demands of the public He invites hit friends and public in general to call on him and get the worth of their money )uU wtf PROF YV BIRD rarsiciAN AND AGENT FOR REAL ESTATE AND ALL KINDS OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Cheap Town Lots and Taching aSp cfalty All ordeis left with Prof Falk or Western Hotel will Le promptly attended to -Address PROF BIRD Asheville Orfu-e-r We trn Hotel jftngft d2t w4t rXECUTOR'S N()TI Haring qualified as exeentor under thelnsf ill and xeiamcnt Susan in Deliru ede-e- n'ed late o' Buncombe countv North Car ollna thi is to notiiy an persons having -i againt thv estate of said ceased to exhibit them within the tim- prescribed bv law amt nil those indebted to the same will com forward and settle the same' ithin the same limit DKAVBR jan31dltw-3t Ex'r nf Husann I Hebrule TRUSTEE'S SALE Bv virtue of a deed of trust executed to me bvj Jervis on the 3 1th diy of March 188 to score the parment of a note tnen-tiooed tiler in sai I deed being duly rrgis-te-ed in the- Register's trice of Hiincombe countv in Hook 8 pag-2ymortcagere ord I will sell lor cash to the h'gh' vtbbtdcr at the court house door Asheville on Satnrdayr March 8 180t) his entire interest In a tract of land on the Black Mountain known as -rhecPcach Orchaid speculation" and more fully in said deed of trnst Thia February 0 1890 JJiLJBRVIS fcbd dlt w3t TVn- i I I 1 I i i sum says: "We may say that surrounded by a bountiful crop as we are in oiv ol our ieople are stiff ring and in misery and uncertain what they should el in the In-ture Complaints come not only Irom laboring classes who arein the city without work hat esjiecially fi om the country districts fiom the fanning poptila turn wliicli It'ils thatninttns cannot he as they nrefor an indefinite mimls-r ol tears or they wonld'lose- their houses mil homes Owing to tfieiK-euliarstafe ot our country evert one sullcrs when the firming population is in distress Thoughtful X-rsons arc well aware that the present grievances of the li triers art-hut too true It seems that almost every industry in our country is pro tectcd in order to amass riches ihe hands of a lew bv which many will have to suffer The only classes not protected aie those that would seem to need it most the laboring men and the farming population" Tlu- bishop reviews the constitution ol the Farmers' Alliance and holds that no Catholic can join the order lieenuse it is secret and because it virtually has a religion and a chaplain ot its own This latter point he discusses at length and rdcol-m-xlluit if tlie Alliance will drop its teligious usX'ct the Cat holies can oin in ami work for the good of the farming classcs The Cron and White Case News Itiicrvrr fie mandate of the United States su-prcniecdirrt-4u file ease of Cross- and White has Ix-en receTvi'ft 7Hvdtllcd This mandate confirms the de isioiioTthe-Stifte supreme court hich tribunal had previously affirmed the sentence oi Wake suH-rior court The sentenctTwris that Cross lx- put at lint 1 labor on the public loads tor seven years and that White brkthe public roads for five years The attorney wilLpn next Sat-uriluv make a motion Ix-lore the Siqirenre court to have tlie intlgriu-nt cnteml tit contornntv with the muinlate ot ie United States supreme court Mr Hairy will lx- present to rt present thcilc-U-inTrrnts: lithe attorney general's motion entries fie nVandoteAVid he certified down to the supivme civurt iiftcr'xvfiicfi the sentence ot Cross and White will he executed hv the sheriff A voting imtl uitructive woman named Elizabeth Vincent T8'tmdeeanres: London for making an uttempt to WltT Lewis Henry Isaacs memlrer of Parliament Isaacs bet rated Miss -Vincent when she was fifteen years old and has since allowed her £400 a year The young vvomnii did not think this enough und induced him to come to her house when she tried to force him to sign a jt umber of checks He refused and she vsted anil pronounces them equal to iiiv tiling fie Ims ever seen A syndicate i now filing lormed hi Boston and New York to ix-rntc two ot these mines and excellent n-sults are anticipated The output ol the North Carolina corundum tnmes within the next five years should txeeed 20(H) tons jx-r annum Charies Junks RAILROAD COLLISION Engineer and Ten or Passengers Killed Bikxungiiam Ain February A bail collision occurred this morning on the Alabama and Great Southern railroad near Coaling Ala between a south bound Sxvial excursion train consisting of twelve Pullman coaches carrying over 1000 passengers and a north hound Tuscaloosa accommodation train Engineer Edward Doolittle of the Secial train was killed instantly and some ten or twelve persons on the accommodation train The trains were running at great seed and both engines and baggage car and several other cars were neniolislted The excursion train was enroute to New Oilcans None of the passengers on the excursion train nrereportedfiillcd They were Irom Chicago and points in Ohio and Illinois Su fur ns enn he learned the wounded are: Mrs: IX Irvin Birmingham cut Tirthefacc severely rs Alst on uscaloosn cut-in-tlrc facc PIulos Tuscaloosa cut in the heaiE'bmUygJmrt Martha Johnson Jane Coleman Robert Tohnsoiwolored seriously hurt Grateful Mr Grade Atlanta Ga February Mrs Ilenry-WAlrady has received since the death of Mr Cradyrsa many kind expressions of sympathy trom v7friotrS-State and municipal bodies organizations societies nnd individuals all over the country thnt she desires that all who have so kindly remembered her may know how touehingiind comforting their words have been to Tientnd-Jipw inexpressibly dear to her is nil that hns beetrso benuti- fully said and written ot Mr Grady SliF also wishes in this way to return henrt- 11 HI IYLUIII II Ycff-thaulvS to these kind friends ryery- where -The attorneys of Hawes thnt they are done with the case and will leave it to the law to take itscourse Thev had proposed to take the case up to the federal court by haliens corpus but find they have no good grounds for such movement.

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About The Asheville Weekly Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
24,169
Years Available:
1872-1917