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I*ol4. yOL 8$ p Poiater^^ I HANCOCK COUNTY, MISS. 1 Hm M many Ut* and progressive people as any other Lft of the State, and- of- bourse its merchants Ke strictly up to Ike best odbualncftir methods. They use ■Ltfr bill heads, monthly statements, shipping tags, Cfulir letters soliciting trade, oct, and should hare all of ■be best quality dud especially should it be well and neatly K)ti n ted. The first point is to make a good impression up- E thoe# of your patrons who will see such work, but the Eurpest point is to know where to have such work done, ■jefflbers of the business fVaternity and all parties in need Kf gtek serricea will he glad to learn that The Echo job [feting office is the place. Work not only solicited from ■tv St Louis but from all farta of Hancock county. We L. sipresH chargee. : .&A ■ SEA COAST ECHO. kaoht Sails and Rigging I Vw of high-class Yacht Mis awl nh| *l W I prices very ipojh below those obtainable on the leibwei. Abo I I I jrv Outfits For Flsbennea. p ;/ Sfyd uitianrTiskons of your boat and we will submit I I li X aw * estimates on her complete outfit. I / VV < Flag SandS and I / \t ' A Teryts . I J \\. MCtS (H AV&ripe 1 Send Bc. (stamp#) for new lUustrataA SrtMoiue' of Sells end Marine Goode. I GEO. B. CARPENTER & CO. Br to II I So. Veter St.. CHICAGO. lUU Hi. (iKiiDKS KBTAIILIBHKD 1870. j # jf i of.udes I A. Cerdes & Bro., nil Mafcerss & Dealer in Cotton Dock, ■Oilvinlzcd Iron end Brass Ship end Techt Hardware and Fixtures, Oil, Hnb ■'Md Leather Clothing. Coppc' Paint of all Brands, Nam leal Instruments and ■vtn, Ship Bell Clocks, Oyster 1 agues, Anchor chains, Windlasses, Etc I 506 and 307 Julia Street, New Orleans t MISSISSIPPI ■News, and Views I *"Of THB I NEW ORLEANS ptagwit ri'HTiin* ku ,tbl'.kv* *1 r-ttmi. i ti* Cfatfal at MlwHufapl. ■UhEAU OF tNTELLICENCC B>to U rmMU Muk*<U'ttt at tkk< B nd Arcumpllkbkl i WM(Mi|ri Sauruktltt, ■ WWA* ft WJIBO*. ■* *1 m Creel/ aofl broadly k!l W" 11 "* *• poll'ttki, U.lu.trttt mat MCUI ftf. Ot MUuleutypl. fc:|r aHsart ■' ? ***- •vury.aurutmr h*. ■ *** .^at^taranm M jgHg ftAMwr V*?us TUT. •2L*S H ' ■*! w Mmm | ttMto. mkL to i%rj| plfTBSw ■ IDIA * MISS., B ihii * I,U Entering Bafbtt Feb- B ’■■* 1,1994. I book keeping with beoMnn nil they eon ■L£* r ** l busiftsas. All the H,y jT f* rel, fictitious and ■tW( ,i ary - The ext bock Kmi .1 001 m * ke record of ■ rtfti DUOt [° n ’ b*- gels bo lf w b!S* M ‘ bei ’^ wwk that of #ott,al busine ■u •.„ Cl “ ** v * student ten tout in , fc . * c,u * l business know ■ k school !* mont bstban any text lnte “ montbß - FANCY— I PRINTING •• Hr - *tly xvm w B AT TH *S OFFICE . . ®lir Coast CcEo. v- WATTT. PrWTOO 'ks TS TOC It OWN HAND. 1 MeUetry wn fa toll *fat Uw ifaw la ftm haMiaStakM. It will ,UM jam. It ufakiu* Bun. 11W Am dkffM Sm eipktfa BmIT. Ska fanflb kf MfaWIHS OV UriHkM >rofakfa Vu wtikk you will lira. Buck BhXcKLXT Sham you <Mrtr WuH-awbuS Li MS or , HftAß <MW Wi ** ; (kMf UMX OV I VOBTOMX. (urn ur rkhfa. Bo* iwMmIMW uncceuu fa Itfu; ban you nut Sum up *lih nfai 1 Mama fa wte fa. Tm *lll S*S pMM; at Hum fa I BmumWu VufaUy Mumulm, ao MUMliyniy hm, Mufad Hut mij kiutn at tku family fa amm- IkfakS. bfakdumauflMfaMfaMM. A CIJUR UNB OV HSkRT tejfiih falkiua k Mnfal Sr i&JSPS a? ssna — SfaW Wl M *UI Sfa kMAk kfafa WWI. M o*ku WfaUfal pubtfahW M ■* kw*th Tom *m tsaatiWm at (|lul fal jltotfaeWMA .raeaya ■ at fafaiM* übou* fau yesnaeaffl! MS wUfa BNhMWth fa UK > Mta aaswfak, MRAwaaßytriffJS36 S'U.n f?rt.TT-—OV THPlift Ssfaifay. 1 or tvrrrtx suMkuM msssssrsissf. s.tasus ~POPLARVILLE HIGH SCHOOL, FOPLARVILLE, Pearl River County, MISSISSIPPI. W. I. TKsmet, Pvinolpsl. Sunoml eosiiton open* Monday, Septem ber 4, IWS, and coi.Sta v> nine monthu. Our Currioulnm inelntle* all the ttlindlea persneU in the best eroded Wuh eh>l in our State; also Bookkeeping, Latin,Muic, Art and Elocution. Expense*. —board $7.00 to BJI.OO per month. Tuition, from $1.60 to $3.50 per month. Art $3.00. Elocution SI.OO. Wank ing 75 cents to SI.OO. Our people have ereetou and wpiinpoa a magnificent haildiug and are deteriafned to make this school aecond to none In South Miasissippl. We invite a critical comparison of our inducement* awd with tbt*M of similar inatltiitkuia. Send for circular. T- B- Whitb, Sec’y School BuartW Or W. I. THAMES, Principal, ~ Poparville, Mis St. BAY BT. LOUIS. MISS., SATURDAY. APRIL 1.1894. - In Cent (&chs. An official organ of ilauconk enmity Chao cory Court, Mississippi. TERM or fIURMCRIfnON : Ona dot. c “ h in advenes* Adrertlslng mtee mens known npon sp- P t!-*S J *i P^ n " • |wetalty? Tnr Echo <m be fiuikl by wiaitorn unit advertissr* in Ifauiphia, TeM., at 38-40 York Ct>~at a* Hnlldhig; In Chicago at 188 ■"* D *!l r iT n ’ * trM, ‘ AdvertUsmonta at either of these offices. ANNOUNCEMENTS. w K °“ cn . iltt ! Bl *- ,tll Wffirtet. M. WALTER M. DEyVV-, of .laeksoa oomty, as * rxndl*ru£e ft* His. •CMieafsaippl, subject to the action Election, Tiies rOß COMORRSi-ffih Diet riot. * We are authorised to announce j Majoa GEORGE M. GOVAN, of Pike county, a* a candidate tor Con gress from the Math Coogresaional 18s tnct of Mississippi, subject to the action of the Democratic party. Election, Tues day. tlov. H, 1894, EDITORIAL SOUIBS. At present the State has leased out 42b convicts. The total on band Is 800. 9KS !_UL ff Columbus is preparing to enter tain the State Sunday School Con vention on the 28th of April. Prof. Brown-Sequard, the eminent physician, the supposed inventor of the Elixir of Life, died at Paris last Monday. There are 3094 pensioners on the Mississippi pension roil, an I they have been paid this year, $20,76 each. The Tillman whiskey law may not be |n the neighborhood of what it ought to be, but there is no discount on the Tillman brand of nerve. Friend of other I>craocrats who to be public printer will forget their personal disappointment in rejoicing that so good a Democrat as Thomas E. Benedict, of New York, will get the office. Republican Senators are open In their threats of prolonging the tariff and ‘bate indefinitely. Which party controls the Senate, anyway? The J whole Democratic party is interested in the answer to this plain question. Score one for Secretary Morton: be warns the public against wasting money on alleged rainmakers. Had Congress been sufficiently warned seveaaJ years ago Uncle Sam's strong box would hsve been some thousands better off than it Is. If a flew of the fighting South Caro linians could be induced to migrate to South America there would be fewer revolutions over there. The average South Carolinian does his shooting before bis talking. What a pity it is that men cannot be prevented by vaecinnation from taking the indecent gossipy disease, as well as smallpox. The man gos sip differs from the woman gossip; he is most always indecent. The Miss. City correspondent of the Biloxi Herald says that the reme dy so extensively given out by the Mississippi press, of burnt cork for bog cholera is a mistake. It should be bunt cora. The wnter adds: “Burnt oork is what negro minstrels eat to make them black.” Thb Echo rises to suggest that at the meeting of the State Press asso ciation that a committee of three or or more be appointed as “committee on introductions.” At every meet ing, there are new faces and it would tend a far way towards making the meetings much more pleasant if this suggestion was carried out. The Greenwood and other papers might study this. ___ President Cleveland has the same right to veto a bill when it docs not meet with bis approval that every Democrat in Congress has to vote for against a bill, and his financial opin ions were ns as well known when he was last nominated and elected ns they are to-day. These are facts that should not be overlooked by those who pretend to see nothing but a disruption of the Democratic party ahead. Brethren, the Democratic party will be living and winning elections long after we are alt dead and forgotten. Thf Han to fon The Piedmont Knquirer of a recent tseue cental Ms the following lines which are la exact touch with The Echo'c sentiments ea Iks subject: After Ml foe abuse that has been beeped upon Mr. deveiaed by mea inside of the Deftaoeratio parly, for conditions and things be was in no •dec responsible for. be stands to-day Juet where be ban always stand, and la upheld by man} of tbs wisest and purest men us the party. His stale raansbip is such as to oommeod uei verssl respect, and no doubt history will, ere long, vindicate ibe wisdom nod conservatism of his-course. The U *°waue party ewMJu.preeenl Wneo €t power *e Mr. Cleveland. ll# of all other mea was chosen to lend ns U> victory nad the psgly swept the continent under his leadership. Many party men who bars differed with Mr. Cleveland all along, have lost no opportunity since his election, to criticise and find fault with bis ad ministration. By tbsir unwise and in consistent course the party has suffered incalculably, and is still suf fering from the petty strifes going on within its ranks which arc due altogether to those unreasonable at tacks. It is high time Democrats were upholding a Democratic admin istration. Blver and Huber A ppreprtations. The Rivers and Harbor* bill which is completed, contains appropria tions for the State of Mississippi as follows: Big Sunflower, $5,000; Noxubee, |3,000; Pascagoula, $13,- 000, and so much of ibis amount as may be necessary is to be used for removal of the b-r in Horn Island Pass; Pearl river, between Edin burg and Carthage, $500; Pearl be tween Carthage snd Jackson, $2,400; Pearl, below Jackson, $5,000, which the Secretary oJ War may, in his discrelioa, expend north of Colum bia; Tallahatchie, $4,000; Tchula Lake. $3,000; Yazoo river, $20,000, of which the necessary amount may lie expended to removing the Ur at Yazoo City and the bars at the upper and lower ends of Tcbula Lake, beginning with the bar at Yazoo City; Cbickatabay, from the mouth up to the tailroad bridge near Shu buta, $6,000; Leaf river from its mouth to Bowie Creek, <2,500; mouth of Yazoo, $225,000, to be ex pended according to the approved plans of Capt. Willard. ■L-L"i."l"aj!l-li Ueergla’t Mew toaster. Mr. Patrick Welsh, editor and owner of the Chronicle, Augusta, Ga., has been appointed by Govern or Non hcra ns United States Sena tor to fill Ibe vacancy af Senator Col quitt, deceased. The appointment is a happy one and congratulations are pouring in from all sources to those concerned. It la a high honor and just tribute to the journalistic profession and does unlimited credit to the lofty Judgment of Georgia’s distinguished chief executive. Mr. Walsh is a ready writer, an impres sive speaker, well informed upon the questions of the day and gifted with a rare good bmines Judgment, he will make a good senator. According to the United States census in 1890, Mississippi in 1880 bad, all told, 1,479 manufacturing establishments. employing 5,827 hands, their wages amounting to <l,- 192,745. The value of the products was $7,516,302. In 1890 there were in the State 1,698 establishments, giving employment to 15,817 bonds, and paying in wages <4,918,863. The products were valued at $lB,- 705.854. From these figures it will be seen that during tbit decade Mis sissippi has increased its maoufac. luring products more that/’two and one-half times in value, 'there has been no wild-cat scheme inaugurated to bring about this result, but it has come from steady determined efforts by those who had faith in the supe riority of their State and its advan tages. It will be the stimulus to others, for Mississippi is the equal of any other Soutbens State for the location and successful management of manufacturing enterprises.—Ya zoo City Herald. Eugene Field, the celebrated Western poet, will read several of his productions at the New Orleans French Opera this evening. The affair will be a fashionable one and promises to be equally as brilliant. KwtMa IdyL From Kansas ooraes the unexpect ed- To KaosM is due the freak features that have made late cuu greeaee a joy forever to the funny paper and a boon without price to the cartoonist. From r.fM Puf. fer’s have streamed over the land for gusts of laughter to blow through. •Simpson’s sockless feet have tramp led on sensibilities of the B athetic, and roused the nsiblee of the ribuid. From Kansas Mrs. Lease burst like a Frankenstein upon the astounded world. All things are possible in a country that can produce such phe nomena as these; but the wonders of Kansas are not llrited to its fauna, aad the above examples are merely died io order to lead up, as it were, to the latest cyclone story, which is told by a grave and veracious gen tleman, whose Christian character even the wayfaring fool must rever ence. This gentleman, it appears, was seated calmly in his Kansan home, when a sudden darkness and an inky sky made him aware that something was about to transpire. It was no time to vacillate. He •prang down a whole flight of stairs at one bound and hurled himself headlong into the cellar. As he •truck bottom be liesrd a rush and a roar and glanced up in dazed amaze ment at the blue sky and summer sunshine. The cyclone had come and gone while he Jumped and carried the house with it. He and the cellar were all that were left to tell the tale. A lllark Economist. At the recent meeting of negro farmers at Tuskcgee, Ala., a colored land owner who was born a slave made a speech in the course of which be said: “A mortgage is a thing dat don’t sleep. Shu’s lyin’ in wait and she’s g rowin’ when you dou’t think. Yon see the waive trot walking at the door an* you say: “What you gwine do?’ an’ she says, ‘l’m gwine to sweep you out.’ Do good work. After you’ve got anything put it Hi your pocket and save It. You dig cotton and jon won’* wear it. How } ou expect dere’U ever be a price on it ef its own people are feared of it?’* The speaker explained Ida success in accumulating property by saying that he was “Jes ’Urrained fer ter have somethin’. ” In bis homely dialect lie talked at sound economy as Benjamin Franklin ever put into bit essays and maxima. If thera are many such nrgro farmers in the black belt, tbat region will tome day be very prosperous. When an ex-slave can make bimaelf a small capitalist and talk in the fashion of tbe Alabama negro farm er thete is hope for tbe entire race. They can he happy and prosperous here*- Atlanta Constitution. Tbe Louisiana State Fair Associa tion la heavily in debt, and unless something it done by those interest ed in Ibe valuable property of tbe association will be dispose of at forced idle. In order to avert this action and keep tbe association in tact Judge Qeorge W. Buckner has come forward with apian which may commend itself to tbe other public spirited gentlemen interested. Jndge Buckner propose# to contribute one thousand dollars aa a loan to the as sociation If nineteen other stock holders will each advance a loan to the association in an equal sum upon easy terms. A fund thus raised would, says tbe Baton Rouge Advo cate, entirely liquidate all present indebtedness and leave money in tbe treasury sufficient to put tbe entire grounds, buildings and stables in ex cellent condition and enable the di rectors to car<7 out tbe aims and ob jects of tbe association. The Herald, one of the weahbleet and most popular of the Chicago big dailies, discontinued its weekly edi tion because, witk a circulation of 20,000, it fniled to pay expense of publication at $1 per annum. It was but a trifle larger than tke other pa pers, and being made np matter from tbe daily, cost nothing for the type setting. Yet there are plenty of people wbo think tbat paper, with only a small circulation compared with tbe Weekly Herald, can afford to furnish their paper at $1 a year. A country paper at f 1.60 or 12 per annum is cheaper than wheat at 50 cesta a bushel. n IMa Trial. TU IHtl of Bernard KloU and other*, charged wiih shooting and wounding Mr. Wm. Scholl baa boon feed take place next Tuaodajr be fore Judge Moise, of the Criminal Diatrlct Court of New Orleaaa. It will be remembered that the shooting took place tone time ago at Ike Olympic Cleb on Royal street. Mr. Scholl spent laat summer bere with bin family as guests of Mrs. Muller and the shooting by Ber nard Kiolx is one of much Interest. vrssssptsssntm TUe Chancery Clerk of Pontotoc county, who is a dyed-in-the-wool Populist, appears to hare gotten himself into bad odor with the de cent people of his tounty, as the Tupelo Journal says that “judging from a public statement with refer ence to his official record, be is about as crooked as a dog's bind leg, The herd comes from is shown by the < brand on ins flank. He has been faithful to the Populistic idea that the country needs more money, but has been over scrupulous about the means of supplying lha deficien cy, the charge against him being that of issuing county warrants to himself without any authority of law, the amount being 8225.” Culture is paint. Lore is steam in the boiler. We punish ourselves shea we hate other folks. Washing a pig will not make it stop liking mud. Indecision is a robbei with a dagger under its cloak. Starling for heaven on a gravestone it a very risky business. The devil can make anything be needs out of a loafer. The man who succeeds as a hypo crite has to devote his whole time to it. The devil is the best counter feiter and the oldest hypocrite. The man whose god is money never has any mercy on himself. The devil is not throwing any stones at the church that.raises its pastors salary by public entertainments.—Kam’s Horn. A druggist in St. Louis Mo., and a dry goods house in Memphis, Tcno., advertise that they will pre sent purchasers at their stores with a key. Among the keys given away each week is one which fils a pripe box in the store. The prise offered by the Memphis firm Is $25 in ossh. The result is publish each week, glv iug names of the lucky person and two other customers who happen to be in tbs store when the box ie opened. g-iMip-jß'mj Messrs. McCaughan, of Long Beach, have issued a circular eon raining n pen sketch of their well known device for outlets to the Mis sissippi river. It will be remem bered that when this device was first out Tnx Echo gave its readers a brief description of it, and sloes It has been patented a petition has been drawn by these gentlemen ask ing the city of New Orleens sod Louisiana to give their plan a trial. We wish these Mlssissippians much success. There was place*l in the hands of the clerk of the United Slates Circuit Court at Mississippi City Monday the declaration in the case of Mrs. J. T. Villars vs. Joseph F. Csaeoeuve, sheriff of Hancock county. Miss., snd sureties on bis official bond fur the sum of 12000 tor damages occur ring from an alleged exessire levy. The plaintiff is represented by Hon. W. 11. Maybin, of Biloxi, and Ed win Lazier, Esq., of New Orleans. Capt. Travel, a leading light of the people’s party in Dallas coun ty, la reported as sayiog: “I am out of polities. 1 thought I belonged to a reform party and having found out my mistakes I wash my bands of the whole gang. The crowd 1 belong to want offloe worse than you regular organized Democrats, and since I have gotten on to their little corves I will have no more to do with them.” At Taibottoc, Gn., a colored man in an eating match succeeded In eating eight boxes of sardines, two doxen of eggs, two pounds of crack ers, two pounds of cheese, one box of salmon, three bottles of pepper sance, and was stopped by the spec tators for fear he would make himself sick. 3S This section has been visited by April showers dunng the week. PRICE. 5 CTO PER COPY. Sewbea and Heaherw Mad ware Mgad la the county JaH at Wsais ■ippi City cm Huaday fact m default of bail oa a charge 'of Ma/gl arising tb atore of Mraora. flHHai * Lai, at Perkiustcn, la Um lirltai (part of Harriaoa county. The iMw food* wore found oa tMr ptWlsai aad they both confessed feaOMg oae*- ■aittad 'he crime. Mr. Edgar 8. Wilson. tho hrllHunt Jacktua correspondent of tha No* Orleans Pieayuaa, ttjfii Newspaper* art party anwUwah, and bare to work la aaaaaa aad ou* aad tha aaaa who ignore* than ought to turn la we laaorad. Mo asaa Id the Htato la aa big aa a good, cou asaji^'sariß- ioataaoaa ha* heoa snubbed by U grataa it baa helped to lift iato pow or, asaarta Itaelf la tho matter of mhw iaationa, the bettor It w‘ll be, aad ‘ho greater ita iaflueaoa. la every otli'r State ia the Untoa party oali*, an nouncement* of meetings, public •peakiagaaod tha like are paid for at commercial ratea. Here the custom ba been, when aome geatloaaaa get* ready to run for oflloe, be paya b*a •übacription to hie home paper acd aod expect* a 120 pud. The New Orieaa* aooual flower ahow cloaed Sunday after a three daya brilliant display. Ilia ahow was unusually bright and attracted many flower lorera within the bounds of the big city. Siuoe there are to many lovely flower* grown on our coatt a very anccetiful exhib - lion of this limit could be well gotten up at some central coatt point. The regular New Orleans winter meeting closed laat week; after a most successful run of 97 day*. The weather was of the bett expelled of the season and not one single race was postponed. These winter meet ings prove well in many ways for the big city. Oov. McKinley probably breathed easier when he learned that Coxey’s army had crossed the Ohio line. It is now in order for the Republican papers in Ohio to begin demanding Uiat the Democratic governors of Pennsylvania and Maryland shall arrest or disperse tbe army. Hon Daniel L. Lament, U. 8. Secretary of War, paaaed through Bay St. Louis Saturday and sped a day in New Orleans while en rente to San Antonio, Texas. —i 'B=s==^—g Guardian's talc. |ii lue Chancery Court of Hancock coun ty, MimHwippl. By nrtne of a decree of tha Cluneety court of Hancock county, Miam-ainuf. made at tba January term. A D., IMM, ofaoM (Wilt, tha oudemigiMMl gunrdiac of ibc estate of Loon ItourgsnU, a luuatle, will on Monday, the 2imT day of April, I MM, >t tha Imnr of 19 M., at the fSnot door ot tha court bousa of llanauck coun ty, • May St lamia, MiSHiminpi, oxbow fur Hole a* public auction to the highest bidder far cash tba following daaorthad rtal "*li ordered to ba aoM.of 7..c0n Bou r gaoia, to-wil; Situated aod hniug within tba earporato limitc of tba town of Wars laud, in tba county of Hancock, Ntatoof Mlmlmippi; and dcauriW aa tallows > Beginning at a ataka ant on the went mar gin of Front otrsetaud rnmiiriu nnaeonrta north IS 9-4 o Ifts foot fonr iriehor from thaooa south 1147 fact to tba waatam mar gin of Front atreot, having a front on said rood or at rest of (M 13 fact. Tbe aosoud tot hogiming on tba Raatarn mat gin of tha Front rood ot atroet, and running south IS 8-4 coat 18ft feet to tbo water's udga of the bay ot St. Louis, nod from thence south 18 ■> east 413 fret; and from tbcncc an n course northerly 113 foot; and from tbawee nloug tha nastaru margin of tha Front road nr atroet to tba place of beginning; said land twinge portion of the "Loon Buargeuw Uwt” nt land tba •as deeded to him by Mumi Ilian Bonn gaoia and wile. Anouisk Bocmokois, * OlifililUMl. Bay Kt. Loots Mias.. Fob. 34, 1894. LOOKS WILKINSON’S BaMSIMa HWhsrto UM A IMS Tout# WELL WATER. SK■ LBTYILLS, TeNM. For three years ny wife’s sister has been very low. Her son-in-law, a physician, took her to hie house, but could do her no good. She was carried to Washington City, where she could receive the best medical skill from the moat eminent physcians. Stayed there six months, but gradually grew worse. I wrote her to come to my house, ii she waa able, as I believed that your Matchless Mineral Water would cure her. She came here in April. To-day she is sound and well, aa she expresses it, from head to foot. Her disease was complicated chronic diaxrhcea, diabetes and dyspepsia. She could take no solid food without ex cruciating pain after eating. Now she is eating all kinds of vege tables, even cabbage, or anything she wants. The water saved her life, after all the other remediea failed. The water has made many marvelous cures in this country. Wishing voa and your Mineral Water much success, I am Yovwo WiLHomt. —FOR SALE BY— >. Chas. a. Peak, 106 Camp 81, New Orieaa*