G. K. GEAHTHAM, Editor j t y- ! - - 11 Bender Unto Caesar the Things that are Caesar's) Unto God, God's. , l$1.00 Per Annum, in Advanc VOL. IE TjlF SOUTHERN J JURIST DEAD. Chief Justice. Fuller Announces th w - -..vv I in nqi . Washington, D. C!. When the United .,-. Supreme Cor met as usual at uiv. v"" "-u luuacui Justices f,::iv and Brown) draped in mourning, s.,'m told the story! th it between the (.d . nnmcnt of the ;ourt and its reas on linir. there had passed awav one of - members. T mi jrSTICE L. b- C LAMAR. The death of Ju3tce Lamar was not t: r iisirj to his Associates, for they had r. ii'--cl when he left the city for the S'i'tth that in all probability he would not his sent on'the bench; yet it was !i: xpe ted, and a stjock to them, for the 1 '( news they hid ffom him was to the ! t that he was improving and getting ui'-i'i; quite well. f The liar and audience quarters of the ( uit -.v ore rilled when the justices filed i:.t th ir places and the court opened. hi of Justice Fuller announced Justice l.i!tiar"s d-.ath in a few words, saving: (' ngiin becomes rriy melancholy "duty f . irinouncethe death of a member of this court Justice liamar died at Macon, ; i , Tuesday evening at 8:5 ) o'clock. N' Lu-iutsi will tje transacted. The art will adjourn until Monday next." j The court crier at j once declared the r in t aijuu ned ijhe justices, with a !i v exceptions, attended the funeral of .Ju-tice La am. I Interfering With Uncle Sam. Charleston, S. C. In the United States Court Judge JSimonton, on motion of Joseph H; GanahT, counsel for H.. M. Comer, receiver of $he Central Railroad f i Georgh, issued !an order requiring Sheriff Nance, of Abbeville county, to th-jw cause why he should not be com mitted for contempt; and also an order forbidding him from interfering with the property of the Porj Rojal and Western Carolina Railroad, which is leased and operated by the Georgia Central, or ar resting or interfering with its conductors or trainmen. T The suit grows dut of the arrest at Greenwood on Saturday last, by Sheriff Nance, of two trains of the Port Royal r- ii 1 for taxes due j State and county. The trains escaped from the sheriff, who threatened to airestj the first train that parcel GreenAvood again. X tice of the ordjr of court was tele graphed to Nance. SO. CAROLINA' rUlLROAD SUITS. Ihey are Dismissed in the TJ. H. Supreme Court for Want of Jurisdiction. Washington, - Ej. C The United S ates Supreme Couj-t has dismissed for w;tit of jurisdiction with direction to th United Statei Circuit Court for the i strict of South '"afolina to do likewise 1 . 1 . J 1 Tk-T J 1 a. T.-.i1 - fiiiH orount nv t he Northeastern Rail way C.-mpanv ant Central Railway Com panv, airaiuit Wal er et als, to enjoin from the collection on railroads by the thf -j co.iuty officers o! t!;e tax imposed Stale. '- - The taxes were .State, county ano C.y. tax s Th Tillmin board of f'l'iilia'ion assessbd railroad property and it is claimed that this i3 unconstitu tional. The questi&n at issue has stirred up the railroad companies of the State, a-;d has b:e i made j a political isue ai we'l iat At tn the two wings of the .South ( a!uii'a Democracy. It is held that jurisdiction cannot be made to attach by combining various f t-nis of tax in a mimber of counties, an 1 th.i; swelling tpe 'total amount in volved to above $3.j)00, the amount nec e u v to take the dasa into the Federal (' mt. The meritsjof the cise were not no into. The opinion was g'.ven by J'ltic e Brown. , i' THE SOUTHERN FAST MAIL. i Th? Item Restore and the R. & I. to Carry! the Mail. Washington, d C The ppstoffice oommittee reconsidered its decision at the last me ting anil added $196,684.22 fr special fastlnai facilities, but chang f d the route so as to run from Springfield, "Massachusetts, via . Washington and Atlar.ti to New Orljeass, instead of by th? c ast Line to . iTarapa, Florida, as h-i-. tofoiv. It is sate,d that the Coast Lias did not rsk ai extension of the fa f lit.ts. The transfer of the fast mail ad vantages to AtlanJa and Charlotte is 'arcely dtie to Col.jA. B. Andrews,of the r odmbat Air Linej Senator Senna Died Poor. Washington, D. C. It has just be force evident that the late Senator Kenna. l West Virginia, died a very poor ttw. He left his widow in almost des titute circumstanced, his long illness nd its attendant Expenses having con--fumed what little money he had .saved f'oin his salary.- - la order to provide for tte w idow and her large family the West Virginia delfgatic;n in Congress met and united in a strongjplea to President-elect Heveland,-asking jhim to appoint Mfs. K?cna pos mistresk at Charleston, W. v , as soon as jhe enters the White House Th salary of the office is about As Senator Kenna was one of the very few Cleveland met in the United States Senate it is thought probable that Mr. Cleveland will make the aunointment. WI VIVJ. vf ' 1 THE N. C LEGISLATURE. What They are Doing In the General Assembly. Bills Upon Bills All Intended for th Good of North Carolina. Raleigh, N. C 16th day. Senate. The bill to encourage the killing of panthers, wildcats, etc., in the counties of Buncombe, Yancey and Mitchell passed its third reading. The bill rela tive to the drainage of the lowlands in Rowan and Davidson passed its third reading. The bill to give justices of the paace jurisdiction in cases of cruelty to animah passed its second reading. The bill to prevent bodies of men, known as detectives, from "going armed in this State, after considerable discussion, passed it3 third reading. House. Bills were introduced: To reduce tax on marriage licenses to $1 ; to require we ter furnished through water works, for drinking purposes, to be fil tered ; to prohibit the sale of liquor in Lincoln county ; to prohibit justices of the peace from holding office more than two terms; to make 6 per cent, the legal rate of interest; to make the defilement of a church a misdemeanor ; to amend the constitution by abolishing the home stead. The bill to exempt Vance, Robe son and Anson counties from the opera tions of the opossum law was taken up and passed. The bill repealing the act allowing surveyors' fees for laying off a homestead passed. Raleigh, N. C 17th day. Bills were introduced in the Senate: To re peal an act prohibiting the sale of liquor in Gaston county; to establish State banks of issue. The bill in lelation to the running of daily trains on railroads, passed its thiid reading, with a slight amendment. The bill to pay solicitors an annual salary was tabled. In the House: The bill to allow the people of Buncombe to vote for a judge and solicitor of the Criminal Court was defeated. Monroe's chatter was amend ed. The bill to create an additional cause of divorce came up and with an unfavorable- repott. It was promptly tabled. The Buncombe county road act, based on the Mecklenbuigact, passed its readings. Mr. Vance's bill to forbid the shooting of live pigeons from traps came up with an unfavorable report and was killed. The bill to repeal the law as to the sa'e of seed cotton in Mecklenburg was unanimously passed. The bill to create degrees of murder was taken up with a favorable report. It provides for two degrees. It provides: Sec. 1. All murder which shall be perpe trated by means of j olson, lying in wait, imprisonment, starving, torture, or by any other kind of willful, delibeiate and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed ia the perpetration or at tempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, burglary or other felony, shall be deemed to be murder in the first de gree ind shall be punished with death. Sec. 2. ' All other kinds of murders shall be deemed murder in the second degree and shall be punished with imprisonment not less than four months in the county jail nor more than three years in the penitentiary. Sec. 3. Nothing in this act shall be construed to require any altera tion or modification of the existing from of indictment for murder, but the jury shall determine whether the crime is murder in the first or second degree, and if the prisoner confesses his guilt the court shall ascertain the crime by the ver dict of a jury, upon examination of the testimony, and render judgment accord ingly. Sec. 4. This act shall not apply to any crime committed prior to its rati fication. The bill was then set for Thursday at noon. It is of great im portance and will pass. Raleigh, N. C 18th day. A peti tion was introduced in the Senate that county commissioners shall not issue oi recommend liquor license unless by a vote of the majority of the people. Bills were introduced to establish a Reforma tory School ; to incorporate the Durham & Charlotte Railroad Company. The bill to amend the election law was tabled. In the House bills were introduced to change the dividing line between Lin coln and Cleveland counties; to submit t3 the people of Stokes county the ques tion of the sal, of liquor; to require that in cases of assignment?, a sworn state ment of the cash value of property be filed with the clerk of the court, and also a sworn statement that the amounts as stated in ths preferences are justly al lowed. There was a bill to incorporate the town of Kelford, in Bertie, which caused a good deal of merriment. On motion of the member from Bertie it was tabled. Then a bill to incorporate Rox abel in that county came up and the member found that it was the Kelford bill he wanted to pass, so it was taken from the table and the Roxabel bill took iti place there. The town cf Inander, in Buncombe county,, was granted a charter, but the commissioners of the c. unty weie forbidden to give it author ity tissue liqu r licenses. The charter ofthst .waof Waxhaw. in Union county, granted in 1889, was repealed. The bill to amend the charter of the Raleigh & Western Railway came up as a special o;dtr. Mr. Adams asked its recommit tal to the committee on internal improve ments, in order tbat certain gentlemen interested in the bill could be heard. Another special order was then taken up, this being the bill to create two degrees of murder! This passed its second and tMrd reading. The bill to require pub lic officials of the counties to be in all ca"s responsible for funds lost when de posited in bank-, and repealing the act wh'ch rel'eved them from responsibility in case of the failure of a bank in which such funds are deposited, passed its sec ond and third readings. The bill to al low minufacturers to sell liquor made on prem ses by the quart failed to pass The bill to restore the right to give and re ceive railway pa was taken up with an adverse report. An effort to table it faded end it was recommitted. It is said most of the Senators and members of the House favor it. Raleigh, N. y-19th day. In the Senate several petitions were presented aeamst the sale of liquor in certain lo calities Among the bills reported from SimUteetwatthe bill to abolish he bureau of labor statistics, upon which the committee reported fworablj . The following bills and resolutions .were U- DUNN, I ' L . " ' "" -I , .. . . -, . . , , I-, . III! .Il-I... II I " ' " " "" " " ' troduced: To cover the sale of contin gent interest on real estate; to establish a Criminal Court in the thirteenth judi cial district ; to prevent the desecration of the Sabbath by the running of rail road trains; to punish the sale of deadly weapons to minors. The bill .allowing the county of Rutherford to levy a tax for jail purposes passed its third reading. The bill for the relief of money borrow ers was taken up. Amendments to ex clude the couotiej of New Hanover, Buncombe and Brunswick were offered. Thev were rejected. An amendment that the bill shall not apply to subsist ing contracts, was adopted. The substi tute of the Senator from Guilford, with the amendment regarding contracts at tached, on a call of the ayes and nays, passed second reading: ayes 25, nays 25, the Lieutenant Governor casting the vote in the affirmative. Adjourned. In the House principal bills idtredced were as follows: To amend The Code in regard to dower under execution sales, providing that the widow shall be en titled to dower on lands sold under exe cution; to require the listing of dogs as property; to provide for the education of teachers, by providing in each of the nine distiicts of the State a normal de partment in connection .with a' high school; to allow Stokes county to vote on the question of county government; to amend the State guard act so that the annual appropriation for encampments shall be onlj 2,500, and providing that only one-half the companies shall go into camp annually; to enceurage the raising of improved horses and other stock: At noon the House took up the special or der, the contested election case of W. W. Long Demociat, against J. H. Wright, colored, Republican, from War ren county. Raleigh, N. C 20th day. The onbj matter of-impoitance occuring in the Senate was the discussion of the "dog law" for the promation of sheep hus bandry. The bill failed to pass its sec ond reading ayes 20, noes 27. At 1 :3C the Senate went into executive sessicn. R W. WhartoD, of Beaufort county.was c .nfirmed as a trustee of the Agricultural and Mechanical College. Few bills were introduced in the House, those of public importance being as follows: to forbid the employment of operatives in cotton and woolen mills between the house of 10 p. m. and 6 a. m., er for over 11 hours any day, un der penalty of $10 to $50 fine and 5 to 30 days' imprisonment; to in crease the annual appropriut on for the colored orphan asylum at Oxford from $1,000 to $2,000; to change the name of Fannie Heath to Kate Williams Shackelford ; to provide for the improve ment of the public roads of the State by the use of convict labor; dividing the State into nine districts, an equal num ber of convicts (serving terms of under 10 years) to be assigned to each district, a superintendent of convicts for each district to be appointed by the peniten tiary authorities; work to be done in proportion to the State tax paid by each county; county commissioners to have power to des goate the roads to be work- ed; a tax upn property to De also levied for the purpose of aiding: in the said im provements. To allow 25 cents to be paid by the counties for hak scales; to amend the charter of BausDury by mate inc the liauor license tax $500 a year A resolution wa3 introduced ra sing a joint special committee of two Senators and three Representatives to investigate the matter of Noith Carolina's participat ing in the monument at Richmond, Va., tothe memory of the C-nfederate sol diers and sailers. Raleigh, N. C 21et day. Senate. A bill to establish a State motto was in troduced. The bill for the lelief of money-borrowers (the interest bill) came up on its third reading and passed by a vote of 24 to 20. It gives 6 per cent, conditionally. The Senate passed a res olution of lespect for Mr. Blaine. House : The committee on judiciary, to which was referred the bill to restore to railroads the right to issue free passes, made a unanimous report against the bill. Bills introduced were: To lirnvide a system for working and keep ing in I repairs the public roads. This was ordered printed, it proviaes mai for every f 60 raised Dy a county Dy tax ation for road purposes the State shall furnish an able bodied convict and pay one-half the expenses of workiDg said convict. It Drovides that a county shall not have less'than 20 convicts, as it does not pay to work a . smaller 6quaa. it further" nrovides that several counties may, if they desire, join in raising this tax and in working the roaas, ana aiso in purchasing machinery; to provide for a display of North Carolina's resources at the World's Fair and to mate an ap propriation thervfor;to amend The Code regarding divorce, by making three TPr,' absence constitute a cause; to in corporate the Carolina Real Estate and Improvement uompany ana toe urns oi Nnrth Carolina, both of Lumbarton. There are wild animals of a dangerous rhAi-Hrtcr in the" western counties; a bill passed allowing a bounty of $5 for the calp3 of panthers, wolves, etc., in four counties. After pas; ins resolutions 61 re pect for Mr. Blaine the House ad journed. The Newspaper "Ad." Does the Bus iness. From the Lewiston Evening Journal. A neat illustration of the value of sa gacious advertising was given at the Port land Young Men's Christian Association meeting Sunday, when General Secretarj McDonald stated that he held some cur iositv to know what method of advertising reached the most people. He had cir culated thousands of little dodgers, giv ing notice of the meeting, and he asked those who had seen them, and had been moved to come through that means, to rise. The hall was packed as full as it could hold, and of the entire number about fifteen arose. Then Mr. McDonald asked all who had read the notices in the newspapers, and had been influenced by them, to rise, and the crowa rose in body. : Cleveland Bides the Goat. New Yobk. President-elect Cleveland was initiated into the Sigma Chi college fraternity. A badge of the fraternity was presented to him. It was accepted and worn by the President-elect with an interest worthy of the enthusiasm of, an undergraduate. HART CO., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1893. .4 HE DIED PEACEFULLY..! Blaine's Long Sickness Is Ended "at Last. And He Has Passed Over That Biver of Death. Darit Washington, D. C. James G. Blainei died at 11 o'clock Friday morning. He passed a restless 'night and in the morh-f ing was very weak. Shortly before . 8 o'clock a change for the worse occuredjf and both physicians were hastily sum-U moned and rem ined at his bedside until he died. ; JAMES G. BLALYE. i His death was quiet and peaceful anfi; he retainei his'consciousness until a fej; minutes before death. His whole family, Miss Dodge and the trained nurses -were at hi3 bedside. j Dr. Hyatt said that Mr. Blaine's deatlji was due to sheer exhaustion. He wasj unwilling to make any statemeat regard;-! ing the exact disease of Mr. Blaine unt,i he had received the consent of the familj.f The news of Mr. Blaine's death spread' like wild-fire. Crowds gathered on. th6 corners and visitors flocked to the housHj Dr. Hamlin, who wa9 passing tfe house at the time the announcement f death was made, at once entered and rif maired with th? family some time. jj Word was sent to the President immf--diately after hif death. At 11:25 Priffl-, dent Hariison, accompanied by Private Secretary Hal ford and Lieut.. ;Parkftrj' walked over to the Blaine mansijn. Tfte President showed marked sjgns of grjeli Postmaster General Wanamaker followed the President. : - t I To a reporterDr. Johnston said : ! wa3 called Friday msrning to the Blarfie. residence about-v9:30 o'clock' and fouid Mr. Blaine in aT very exhausted! condif tion. He had grown weaker during te early morning hours; and about 8:0. o'clock the nurse observed that his breath ing was more difficult and his pulse more feeble than it t id been. Dr. Hyatt wjis also sent for and arrived there about0 o'clock After my arrival . Mr.! Blaise continued to grow weaker very rapidly, his pulse becoming more feeble. Jlfc died at 11 o'clock. He was perfectly conscious up to; within a few moments of his death, arid recognized all those aroundjiini. He died without suffering. The President had been warned of Mr. Blaine's approaching end, through prcss bulletins which informed him that &t. Blaine could not live through the df-jf. A few minutes ?ater he received the i'n nouncemeut of :his death. The cabiit was immediately notified. Secretary Foster, of the State Department," was at home prepaiiug to leave town when (he was notified by telephone of the ex-Secretary's death. He postponed his tip and ordered the State Department tojbss c osed. ', t i V The President issued a proclamation announcing the death of Mr. Blaine ajad oirecting that on the day of the funeral all the executive departments at WaSh ineton should he closed: that on all 'the public buildings throughout the United States the national flag be displayed,! at half mast, and that for thirty days Jlhe Department of State be draped in mourn ing. ; j-i The funeral took place . Monday fcjfje noon at Washington, where the dciad statesman was interred, temporarily, 4tMs said. The attendance upon the servjjees included all the omcials of the Govern ment and everybody ot note in the cipi- tal The crowcts were overwneiming ; i ' m A PALACE BURNED. B i The $700,000, Casino at St. Augus tin Destroyed. Jacksonville, Fla. A special from St. Augustine says : A fire, which start ei at 3:30 o'clock Tuesday morning, " in the Casino building, axjoining the Hctel Alcazar, raged tstiibbornly for about 75ve hours, but was confined to that structure, which was badly gut ed. The loss vHll probably reach $103,000. j j The fire was caused by a servant prill ing down a pas fixture while attempting to lig it it. lne names spead rapidly around the northwest and south part bf the top floor and soon communicatee! o the ball room on the second floor. There they were kept in check by the opening in the wall which leads to the Turkish b.ths. : I- i!? The principal damage by fire is tothe ball room, sleeping apartments and wall room roof, but. the whole structure?', is deluged with water, and it will take two months to repair damages. I "f'j Ths sruest3 in the Hotel Alcazar f 'ad joining were. aroused but there wi"j j T-ori fur ttior 5w that thp firn rnri l""-" , -- .r not penetrate the massive concrete wUs, so they returned again to the; building, and breakfast was served as usual to 2 )0. gutsts. While the fire was raging at ita wclrst, about 4 o'clock, assistance was asked from Jacksonville, and Chief Hansy cijrme over on a special train with a steam ;6re ensine. four men and 1,000 feet of his but the fire wai under control when? he reached here I The Casino was built in 1897 by H..W. Fhgler, at a cost of $700.000. ; if; Alliance Men Oppose State Bazka. Waco, Tex. The district Fa'rcjers Allisnce of the Seventh Congressipna district adopted resolutions opposingHhe State Bank bit! now before the Legislature and urging Senators and Representatives o vote against its passage as a measure utterly inimical to the interests of f the farmers. . I . l' DIXIE NEWS. 1 The Beloved South Gleaned Epitomized. and All the News and Occurences Printed Here in Condensed Form. The taking of testimony in Tom Wat son's contest of the congressional elec tion in the tenth Georgia district began in Augusta Wednesday. A new Loan & Savings bank is to be established at Charlotte, N. C. The citizens of Hampton, Va., are very much excited by the discovery of a Lplot to burn the town . It is reported from Russell county. Va., that a child froze to death in hi3 mother's arm's during the cold snap. The Carolina Mfg. Co., of Barnwell, S. C, has been incorporated to manufac ture textile fabrics ;capital stock $100,000. Gov. Cam of N. C , has appointed Oliver P. Mears judge of the Criminal Court for New Hanover and Mecklen burg counties. The friends of Colonel O Ferral', Con gressman from the seventh Virginia dis trict, are pushing his gubernatorial can didacy, and an organization has been ef fected for the purpose. W. L. Campbell, city treasurer of Charleston, S. C, for 22 years, died at his residence in Summerville, S. C.,aged 62 years. He served through the late war as captain in the Confederate army and was oue of the most popular and highly esteemed office s . Anew railroad compiny has been chartered by the North Carolina Legis lature to build a railroad from Durham to Charlotte. J.' M. Hyams, the fellow who faked he story of the Bakefsville, N. C,. lynch ing riot, has fled from Johnson City, Tenn., leaving an unpaid board bill. Nancy Garrison, a negress living at Holly Springs, Miss , has the longest hair robably of any woman in the world, he is about sixty years old. Her hair she wears in three plaits. The side plaits just touch the floor, while the plait be hind drags two iett nine inch'.s on the floor and measures eight feet in length. It is a tilver sable in color, and she wears it coiled up on her head. Edward Gibson, son of a farmer living near Cascade, Pittsylvania county, re ceived a slight wound in the knee several days ago with an axe. The wound was not regarded as at all dangerous, but the boy sojn developed a genuine case of lockjaw and died from its effects. In the matter of new cotton mills erected in 1892 Massachusetts leads with nineteen, while North Carolina is second on the list with sixte"en. South Carolina follows with eleven. This is more than half, there being only seventy-three miles erected in the whole Union. Sam Milling, colored, was arraigned Saturday! morning before 'Squire Max well, of Charlotte, N. C, charged with bigamy. Sam, it seems, has a wife in Wiunsboro.S. C., one in Georgia' and two or three more scattered around down South. He was brought to time by Ma mie White. A lot of revenue officials from Greens boro went up to Wilkes county last week and made one of the biergests hauls for two days work evtr recorded in the an nals of raiding, at leistin thi3 part of the country. Thirteen distilleriesjin full blast were captured, with eight copper stills and 13,000 gallons of beer, but if they causht any of the men engaged in the nefarious business we have yet to hear of it. A bill has been introduced in the Ala bama legislature requiring railroad offi cials to instruct conductors ou trains of their resDective roads to report all casual ties or accidents immediately after h&p- pening to the nearest telegraph operator. The operator is to at once telegraph the particulars to the nearest newspaper pub lication. A penalty is attached for fail ure to comply with this law. J. H. Freeman, of Americus, Ga. , has purchased a 50-acre tract of . land near that city, and is stocking it with poul try and planting fruit trees. It is his in tention to raise fine fruits and poultry and to give some at'ention to the dairy business. Already he has several hun dred chickens and eight well bred Jersey cows. Nearly 5,000 fruit trees, peach, plum, app'e and pear, 400 grape vines and 12,000 itrawberry plants, besides numerous vegetables, have been planted this month. Not in Love w ith Dakota. Washington Post 1 Repiesentativc Catchings, of Missis sippi, f aid the other daj : "I used to be interertcd in a Dakota wheat farm. It is a creat country in the spiiug and summer. The days are so long that I have shot prairie chickens at 9 p m. It is easy to sit in the front yard and read a newspaper at 8:30 in th; eveuing It is bright daylight t 3 a. m But in the winter it is tei r.nc l he horses were kept from freezing in the stabl- s only by banking manure half way up the side of the l.uildiog. They get ral ft in there. The hostler Jived a hundred yards away There was a stout rope stretched "from his house to the stable door. He could never else have found his way in the blinding storm. That country is so far north that the mers all run that way, owing, maybe, to the curve of the earth. The land of the neecy cotton, the sugar cane that is nearly black in its richness, the glowing sunsets, the soft winds, and the scent of the magnolia blossom upon the air for me. No more Dakota. A Turkish Girl for Saie in Indiana From the Indianapolis Journal. TinoN. Ind A eaug of Turks, twen ty-three in number, are camping in the centre of a large wooas ner js.empi.on, in the western part of thU county. Their outfit consists of several horses, dogs one monkey, and five beats They chi fly live by begging from the m lghbors. Among them is a g:rl, 17 years old. whom thej are offering to sen. l n price asked is $250. " Destructive Fire at Winston. Wisstox, N. C. Another destructive fir occured here. The Tise block, in which was the Snetd Furniture Company, and in which teveral other firms were tloiner business, was destroyed. The loss is estimated at $100,000. VIRGINIA VS. TENNESSEE. A Big Legal Battle Between the Two Precipitated.. Suit for One Thousand Square Miles Instituted bd Mr. Kufus A. Ay era A Humorous Side. Bristol, Tenji. (Special.) Virginia and Tennessee are preparing- to fi ht a great battle which has been brewing for years. A few months ago Hon. Rufus A. Ayers filed a bill in the Supreme Court of the United St i tea to extend the south ern boundary of Virginia eight miles into Tennessee. A subpoena was issued for the Attorney-General and Governor of Tennessee to appear and answer, which they did. The casa will some up in the Supreme Court in February or March and will attract national attention. The territory in dispute amounts to about 1,000 square miles, being ab ut 8 miles deep and 150 miles in length. If Virgiuia should win this suifshewiu get one-half of six counties, including the towns of Bristol and Cumberland Gap, the big Louisville and Nashville railroad tunnel at Cumberland Gap, several miles of the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and Louisville railroad, and part of the great East Tennesse, Virginia and Gtorgia road. The couutry involved is rich in mineral, timber and coal. On the temtory in dispute it is esti mated that there are about 40,000 inhabi tants. If taken from Tenne s.e it would not seriously affect that State politically, but would give the Democrats a bigger majority, as the voteis in this territory are largely Republican. By giving up the disputed territory the entire northern boundary, from White Top Mountain to the Cumberland river, would be a straight line. The present litigation is something over three years old, and staited in Bristol, when the Bristol, Tenn., Water Works Company started to lay pipe on the east side of Main street. The Bristol, Va., Water works Company enjoined them in the chancery court, and thii suit has gone the gamut of all the, courts to the court of last resort. Years ago the people of Bris'ol agree I on the centre of Main street as the State line for the sake of convenience In the water works suit Virginia claimed that all of Bristol was on her side of the line, while Tennessee claimed that the State line was really the east.rn line of Main street. This is the point they expect to establish :n the United States Supreme Court. The records in the case would fill sev eral bound volumes of ordinary size, an i include hundred of depositions tiken at Bristol and along the line all the wiy to Cumberland Gjp, copies of surveys made at different tinus, and reports of the sev eral commission appointed . to establish the dispu ed boundary at different times. The records contain much valuable his torical matter which has never appeared in print. Going back to the beginning, there was a controversy between Virginia and North Carolina regarding the line be tween Virginia and the temtory belong ing to North Carolina now embraced in the State of Tennessee. In 1783 a com mission was appointed to establish the boundary, starting on the Atlantic coast. When they reached White Top Mountiin that bold sentinel of the Alleghanies which can be seen a hundred miles in any direction, upon whose summit the three States of Virginia, North Carolina and Tennessee corner, they disjgreed as to the line westward. Two lines were run from the White Top to Cumberland Gap, only three miles apart. One survey, conducted by the Virginia commissioners, was callea the Worth survey. The' North Carolina su:vey was known as Hender son's, and was made by General Hender son, who at one time had a harter for nearly all the territory now included in the State of Kentucky, and in whose honor the city of Henderson was named. Neither survey was ever adopttd, and the strip of disputed territory soon became kno-vn as t-No Man's Lnd, ' and was the rendezvous of thieves, murderer.Jind criminals of every description. These outlaws came from both side3 of the strip, and when a mau committed a crime within reasonable distance he made a i .i .i DieaK in mat direction, wnere ne was positively, secure from officers of either State. lhe co .airion ot aiiairs was the cause of 'a bit' cr controversy between William B'ount, first Governor of Tennessee, and the Governor of Virginia. They "fit and b!" a? the saying goes, over the matter from the time Tennessee became a State in l'i96 until 1802, when they finally agreed to pp.'int commissioners from each State to settle the bouadary. These commissioners agreed on a compromise equwijstant between the Worth and Henderson lines, which has ever since been recognized by both States The people 6n either side work their roads and pay taxes up to this line. - It is sup posed to be a straight line, but it i3 not. The law required the engineers to run absolutely due west from the1 White Top to the Cumberland mountains, but owing to the dtni y of the forests and to other natural obstacles there are several oflse's the most valuable of which ii in Denton's valley in Hancock county.and in Powell's valley, near Cumberland Gap. Th.re was no trouble about the line any more until along in the '50's, when the country had bed me mo e thickly set tled. Confusion then arose as to the proper location of the boundary, because of the dc6tructioa by fire and otherwise of marked trees In 1858 both States agreed on a joint commission, with power to appoint engi neers to run out and remark the compio- mise line of 1803. Thi Virginia commis sioners were Leonidas Baugh and James Black, of Abingdon, and Tennessee was represented by General Milligan, of Greenville, and Colonel George R. Mc Clelland, of Sullivan county. A careful survey was made and exhaustive rep rt? of the same submitted to the respective: Governors. The commissioners reported that they bad found no difficulty with the o'd line, and that it was cor.ect ac cording to the compromise. Governor Wise, of Virginii, recom mended t' e rejection of the report, which the Legislature proceeded to do. His objection was I aed on the fact that the engineers commenced their survey at the basj of White Top Mountain, instead of going to the top. Tennessee never acted NO. 50 on the report, and so matters existed un til the suits were instituted at Bristol three years 8 go.. . If the Commonwealth of Virginia gains this famous suit much that is novel and makes romances for Bristo.1 will be knock ed out. The magnificent new court-house and city hall will be useless, and the beautiful new school building will have to be converted into a church . The mu nicipal officers will be forced back tr their former professions. Father Bur roughs, who'has married more than three hundred runaway couples from Virginia in the past two years, will bava to move . to some small village near the line and that is not the worst of it. Thvse three hundred couples he has married will be unmarried, as the ceremony was per formed in Virginia. A very old lady who has resided on th Tennessee side all her life was grieving over the danger of Bristol going into Virginia. "I wouldn't mind it is much," she said, "if it wasn't that the Virginia climate is so much more severe thau the Tennessee climate. Then, ! would hav to give up my good limestone water." Every one knows that when a mar commits a crime in Tennessee he can run rver into Virginia and ,avoid arrest until a requisition is obtained from the Gov ernor. The officers of Bristol. Tenn.. pursued a colored man for a crime he had committed. He escaped into Virginia, where the officers of the Commonwealth tried to arrest him for a robbery on their side. He ran back towards Tennessee, but about the time he reached Main strec thi thought struck him that he wai wanted on that side." He stopped in the middle of Main' street, put one foot "in Virginia and one in Tenness:e, white ox each 6ide stood two or three policemen. He defied arrest, and they left him stand ing there. . THE SPLIT IN THE ALLIANCE. Tillman of Tennessee Issues a Mani festo A New Organization to be Formed on a Strictly Non partisan Basis. Memphis, Tenn. The next issue oi the Nati nal Economist will contain a manifesto from a faction of the Farm ers' Alliance appealing to members, in the order to repudiate the acts of the late Memphis convention, by forming a new orgmization on a strictly non-partisan basis The manifesto is signed by J F. Tillman, of Tennessee, who, along with his office, was "abolished," -as far as the Alliance is concerned, at the Memphis convention. Mr. Tillman denouuce3 the men who now control the Alliance, and reviews the origin and growth of' the or der,' pointing out its original purposes, which he declares were in accord with the principles of the Democratic party and which he, as a life long Democrat, undertook to carry out and impress upon its membeis. , Referring to'and defining the aciion of the late national campaign, in which he is charged with treason to the Alliance by sending out,; under his official signa ture, numerous documents appealing to the Alliance t3 be tru? to the Democratic teachings upon which it was founded, he says: "I conceived it a duty devolving upon me, both as gen ral manager and director of the lecture bureau of the Al liance, and as an humble member of the Democratic paity to contiibute to the success'of a cause common to the inter ests of both. Thit the literature sent out under my s'gnature aided the Demo cratic party and contributed alike to the defeat of the Republican and Third par ties, I have no doubt, and freely admit in fact, such were my desires, because the Third p'rty in my State aud other Southern States was a lying with the Re publicans in its efforts to defeat Demo craeic principlcj." A call will b3 issued in a few days for a convention of the seceding faction, which will meet in Memphis or Atlant some time during Apt il. . A Great Divine Passes Away. Boston, Mats. Bishop Phillip? Brooks died at 6 30 Monday morning of heart failure, brought on by a a fic of cugh icg. His death was entirely unexpected. 'FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS. In the Senate. 27th DaT.-Mr. Woloott mad a speech attacking the new Columbian postage stamps r-The Antl-Optioa bill wai after ward taken up andl dltcuwsi for ao hour. 28th Dat. Th Senate took up the Anti Option bill, and Mr. George continued his argument in favor of 'his substitute. Hs was followed by Messrs. Washburn and Chandler. At the close of Mr. Chandler's speech the bill went over without action The Cherokee Outlet bill, which had come over from the Mouie, was taken up for con sideration. - 29th Dat. The Senate adjourned for th? day as a mark of respect to the lat A -"date J ustice Latnar. 35th IHY.--?u hur or the session was tsffen up in routine matters, none of then entitled to be regarded as of much public internet A bill was Sotroduced to in crease the nfvy by tw-mty-on ves3?t. 3ist Dat. Mr. Cullom introduced a bill to give a pension of 50 a month to the widow ot Elisha Kent Kvie, the Arctic explorer Mr. Gorman IntroJucela Jriat resolu tion authorising the Swretriej of War and TJavv to lend ensigns, flsgp, etc.. (exespt bat tle flags) for decoration of the World's Fair buildings, and it was pasjel- The Anti Option Dili was debited. 32v Day. Following roll all the death of James G. Blaine was announced by Mr. Frye, who also moved the adoption ot a series of resolutions. After this was done the Senate adjourned out of respect. In the Hoose. 30th Da v. Mr. Cummingi withdrew ths Fort Greene Monument bill The Senats bill abolishing post traderships wai jyisvs 1 The Diplomatic and Consular Appro priation bill was reported The floor was then accorded to the Comnitte on Com merce, and the Quarantine bill was cillel up and discussed until adjournment. 81st Dat. TbeQaarantioe bill was passed after a stormy, debate Ths Saadry Civil Appropriation bill wai discussed. 32d Day. The House refussi to a;ra ti motion to tike up the Sundry Civil bill, the fijht against it being mide by ths friends of ths Bankruptcy blu. Thi vote stood: Yeas, 1C7; nays, 137 Asa marior respect to the memory ot the late Justics Lamar the House then adjournei. 33d Dat. Ths day was cohramed In fili bustering against the Torry Bankruptcy bill. 34th Dat. The Sundry Civil bill was dis cussed The Legislative, Executive and 35th Dat. Immediately after the asssm blage the death of James G. Blaine was an nounced. Appropriate resolutions of re spect were adopted and then the House adjourned.