Newspaper Page Text
(Don’t Waste Money
On circulars and hand'
bills when you can put an
advertisement in such a
far/reaching medium as
The Tribune.
ESTABLISHED 1887.
NEW YORK
' ANARCHISTS.
• 1
They Celebrate the Mur
der ol Canovas.
HOLD A BIG MEETING
Imma Goldman Calls Anarchist Gclli a
. ’ Hero.
SOME BLOODTHIRSTY HARANGUES
(Red Flag Was Not Displayed,
But Red Was Worn,
<A MAN NAMED KELLY PRESIDED
In a Week, Hiccola Voice Md: a Speech,
Golli’a Relative Not There.
Other Details.
Nbw York, Aug. 18. "President
McKinley and Mark Hanna are shed
• ding crocodile tears over the killing ot
Canovas del Oastillo. In their own
hearts they are saying ’Peruaps I will
be the next.’
“I do not advise anybody to kill, but
whether I advise ft or you advise it for
tunately makes no difference. Heroes
do not ask permission of me
or anybody else to do their duty as they
see it.
"So long as tyrants oppress mankind
Gollis will be found to execute them.
"We are not enemies of society. We
are enemies of government, for govern
ment is tyranny.”
One thousand men and women cheered
the sentiment uttered by Emma Gold
man, the anarchist, at a meeting held
at Clarendon hall, Thirteenth street,
between Third and Fourth avenues.
The crowd was not one upon which
■ the hand of poverty seemed, to rest very
heavily. They were, as a rule, more
than comfortably dressed and they ap-
• peered to be well fed.
Such a crowd could not have been
brought together in any other Ameri
can city than this. They listened to
speeches in five languages—English,
French, German, Italian and Spanish—
and they interrupted the speakers with
expressions not only in those languages,
but in a variety of patois and dialects.
Celebration of a Crime.
A circular that had been widely dis
tributed brought the crowd together.
The circular was really an invitation to
rejoice over an assassination. It read:
"Mass meeting to celebrate the death
of the leading despot of Spain, Canovas
del Castillo, executed by Anarchist
Michel Angelo Golli.”
The meeting was the first at which
the spirit of anarchy as it exists in this
city has dared to show itself with any
strength since Herr Most, high priest of
, the Order of Disorder, was made to
serve a term in the penitentiary. He
has been quiet since and was not pres
ent last night.
Police Wet-e Informed.
The police were fully informed of- the
purpose of the meeting, and although
Acting Captain Diamond of the East
Fifth street station was present with 30
men, who had to stand by and hear
themselves called "dogs and thieves,”
the meeting was not broken up.
Emma Goldman evidently hoped that
it would be, and did her utmost to say
that would cause the police
to act.
The Goldman woman entered the big
hall after it was crowded, accompanied
by young and pretty girls, who seemed
to idolize her. They were followed by
as many young men, who wore red
neckties and vainly tried to look un
concerned. ,
Cheers for Goldman swelled into
frantic shouts of approval as she went
to the platform and hung up two pict
ures. One was a picture of Pallas, the
Barcelona bomb thrower. The other
was a picture of Santo, who assassi
nated President Carnot of France.
Kcd Flag Not
The red flag was not displayed in the
hall, for the police had ordered that it
should not be, but scores of the women
wore flaming red shirt waists and the
men waved red handkerchiefs.
One qneer feature.of the meeting was
that several of the women carried babies
in arms and there were a great many
boys and girls there.
A consumptive little man named H.
M. Kelly was called upon to preside.
He tried to make a fierce, bloodthirsty
speech, but his feeble piccolo voice was
not equal to the task, and the crowd
shouted for something stronger.
Kelly struggled on, though, and,
among other things, said:
"We are here fpatgbt MADarahbts “
THE ROHE TRIBUNE.
WANTED TO SHOOT
A Man Named Terry Cels
Very Wralhy
Trys to Kill One Furman For Bring
ing Forbidden Letters to His
Pretty Wife.
Atlanta, Aug. 18.—Quite an excit
ingJittle affray occurred here today.
A man named Terry and his beautiful
wife board at a hotel on Houston
street. Sometime ago Mrs. Terry met
a woman from Florida who advised,
her to leave her husband. The woman
afterwards wrote her letters from
Florida to the same effect until Terry
“caught on,” as it .were, and com
manded his wife to cease writing to
the woman.
After this Mrs. Terry had the letters
sent to a man named Furman,' who
would secrtly give them to her.
This racket worked all right until
night. Furman went to the door
of Terry’s room, and, thinking be,
Terry, was asleep slipped the letter
under the door.
Terry, however, was not asleep, and
with pistol in hand, he set out after
Furman; this gentleman finding him
self in close quarters, ran in a ba.th
room on the second floor and locked
the door behind him. Terry broke
the door in, and would probably have
shot Furman had he not jumped from
the window and fled.
Today Terry has been looking for
Furman with a shot gun, until he was
arrested on a paace warrant late this
afternoon. He refuses to talk. ;
Furman'has not been seen for some
time. w
FULLER IN JAIL.
Father of the Abandoned Child Found Naaf
Atlanta is Bound Over.
Atlanta, Aug I.B—Bud Fuller, the
father of the abandoned child found
near Atlanta, who was arrested in
Woodbury yesterday, was today bound
oyer under a $750 bond. He failed to
make the required bond, and was sent
to Fulton county jail.
National League.
Washington, Aug. 18.—Boston and
Baltimore are playing fast ball. New
York again defeats the Phillies.
The score is as follows:
Baltimore 6, Brooklyn 2.
Boston 8, Washington 0.
New York 8, Philadephia 5.
express our empnaxic endorsement ot
the execution of Canovas by Golli on
Aug. 8.
"We are so anxious to have peace all
over the world that we celebrate and
rejoice over the death of the Spanish
despot. Canovas has gone! May his
like never be seen again!”
Golli*. Relative Not Theae.
Antonio Rossi, who is employed in a
Franklin street restaurant, is a cousin
by marriage to Golli, the assassin who
shot and killed Premier Canovas of
Spain. Notwithstanding the relation
ship to the man condeined to be gar
roted for having caused Premier Cano
vas’ death, the Rossi’s do not believe in
anarchy.
The Black Mheep of the Family.
According to Mrs. Rossi, Golli is the
black sheep of the family, and his cor
rect name is Michael Angiolilli. He
was well brought up and bis parents
endeavored to furnish him with a good
education. In furtherance of this in
tention, they sent their sou to college,
and it is owing to his association with
the devotees of the red flag among the
students that he acquired his ideas of
anarchy.
"He was born in Fioggia,” Italy,”
she said, "where his father kept a
clothing store
"Michael was kept at school,” said
his cousin, "and subsequently sent co
the College of Commerce. When he
would come home he would talk about
the new ideas, death to tyrants, kings
ana all those people, but his father,
who was a decent, well respected man,
wohld only laugh at him. His father
is a strong believer in monarchy. ”
Montgomery ' ouiiXy must Vaooinate.
Montgomery, Ala./ Aug. 18.—The
board of revenue of Montgomery county
is determined that smallpox shall not
spread into the outside beats in the
county, and as a safeguard have iunu
gurated compulsory vaccination in the
county. Dr. Owens, the county health
officer, ha. appointed a physician in
each beat, who is to go to work at once
and vaccinate every person in their re
spective lean. There have been no
new cases in the city now for six con
secutive days, and practically all anx
iety has been allayed.
Atlanta, Aug. 18.—Atlanta received
her first bale of new cotton Wednesday.
It came from Griffin and was sold for
8U cents. ' . . ..._
BOMB. GA., THUUSDAY. AUGUST IF), 1897.
HOBNOBS
WITHCZAB.
President of France
Visits Russia.
FAURE IS IN FAVOR
” ——————_ ,
Bomb Explosion Causes Great Excitement
at St. Petersburg.
%
ANARCHISTS SHOW THEIR HEADS
Circulation of the Wildest Ru
mors For a Time.
SERIES OF FETES AND RECEPTIONS
Distinguished Honors Being Shown the Vis
tore—Anarchist Arrested on
Entire's Train.
. Paris, Aug. 18.—The departure of
President Faure on his visit to the ozar
at St. Petersburg was marked by a
scene of greatest excitement, accompa
nied by the circulation* of the wildest
kind of rumors After his departure a
bomb exploded along the route the pres
ident had followed, and although no
damage was done and in spite of the
fact that nobody was hurt, the most in
tense excitement prevailed for a long
time afterwards and the sensational re
ports had it that those who exploded
the bomb had intended an outrage of a
more serious nature.
The president received an ovation
from the public when he started on hiS
journey to Russia, large crowds of peo
ple lining the route from the Elysee
palace to the railway station and greeted
the president with enthusiastic cries of
"vive la .republique, vive la Russia,
viye Faure,” etc.
Ten minutes after the president’s de
parture, when the crowds were return
ing along the route traversed by M.
Fatfre. a bomb exploded at the corner
of the Boulevard Magenta and the Rue
Lafayette, in front of the Restaurant
Duval.
The report caused a panic in the neigh-
. borhood and all sorts of wild stories
were circulated, based on the statements
attributed to anarchists that their next
effort would be an attempt upon the
life of President Faure, Upon investi
gation by the police, however, it de
veloped that the explosion caused but
little damage and that nobody was hurt,
the bomb being a comparatively harm
less affair.
The coincidence of the explosion of
the bomb along the route so recently
followed by the president was the sub
ject of constderrble comment and an
official investigation into the affair is in
progress.
President Faure was accpmpanied on
his way to Russia by M. Hanotuux, the
minister for foreign affairs, and by Ad
miral Bosnard, the minister of marine.
The first day of M. Faure’s visit to
Russia will be devoted to .his reception
at Oronstadt and at Peterhoff, the ex
change of official visits, a banquet at
the Peterhoff palace and a gala per
formance at the Imperial theater.
On Tuesday, Aug. 24, the czar and
his guest will start to St. Petersburg.
There the French president will be wel
comed by the municipality of St. Peters
burg and will receive in audience dele
gations froc the municipalities of the
principal cit’es of the Russian empire.
Tne preside.it will also on Tuesday lay
the cornerstone of the new French hos
pital, and in the evening M. Faure will
preside at a banquet whioh he will give
at the French embassy in honor of the
On Wednesday, Aug. 25, President
Faure will be present at a grand review
on the parade ground of the Krasnoe-
Selo camp. The review will be followed
by a grand military breakfast and the
day’s entertainments will wind up with
a brilliant fete in the gardens of the
Peterhoff palace.
On Thursday there will be a grand
review in Oronstadt roads of the com
bined French and Russian squadrons,
at the term,nation of which Preside it
Faure will bid farewell to the czar and
czarina and will return on board the
Polhuau. which will immediately after
wards sail for France. The president
should rench Dunkirk on his return
journey on Tuesday, Aug. 8L
Anar oh Ut Arrested on Fanre'M Train.
London, Aug. 18. —A special dispatch
from Paris says that a man named Pe
tier was arrested on the train in which
President Fanro arrived from Havre.
The prisoner was found to have a loaded
revolver in his pocket and is known to
be a dangerous anarchist who has al
ready servec a term <>f two years im
prisonment or having in his possession
an infernal
ADDRESS OF ECKLES
Comptroller of Currency Speaks
to Hie American Bankers.
»
Reports Prom All Sections Show
Marked Improvement of
Conditions.
Detroit, Aug. 18.—The auiiount?
me nt that Comptroller of the Currency
Eckels would make an address drew to
the bankers’ convention an audience
unusually large.
The roll of states was called and from
each state a member of the nominating
committee was named- This conven
tion will meet at 9 o'clock Thursday
morning in the Russell hbuse to select
.new officers of the association.
A representative of each state was
then called upon to give a brief state
ment as to the general condition of bus
iness in his locality. This drew forth
in every instance reports of good crops,
reviving business and encouraging pros
pects for the bankers. Marked improve
ment in business conditions and indica
tions for better things in the future
were the characteritic features of all
the state reports as detailed by the dele
gates.
Henry F. Yates of Nebraska said the
golden grain of the ripened and ripen
ing harvests in his state did not reflect
the calamity tint to which the utter
ances of so many of its public men and
the vote of the state last fall had seemed
to consent.
• John W. Faxon of Chattanooga,
Tenn., derided Mr. Bryan’s claim that
the price of silver controls the price of
wheat and said the recent fall of the
one and the rise, of the other offered
conclusive proof of the falsity of that
claim.
Only a few states failed to respond
with a statement of industrial condi
tions. : • ;
When Comptroller Eckels came for
ward he was greeted with a most gen
erous round of applause. Throughout
the reading of his address the large au
dience gave him careful attention.
STRIKE LEADERS RETREAT.
Men Advised to Go Home to Their Fam
ilies and Find Work.
Pittsburg, Aug. 18. The indica
tions are that the oamp about DeAr
mitt’s mines will be abandoned and
there will be no more marching. Uriah
Bellington reached Plum Creek about
noon and calling the men together, told
them of the adverse decision _of the
court. He told them there woul'd be no
further use in remaining in camp, as
no more food would be furnished.
"You had better go home to your
families,’,’ he said, "and find work
where you can.”
There was considerable murmuring
among the men, but shortly afterward
abput 25 started for their homes.
Bellingham, Kelly and Tompkins.
wh2 Ijad charge at Plum Creek, then
took the train for Pittsburg, abandon
ing the camp and demonstration against
the DeArmitts’ mines.
The miue managers expect that all
the men will be at work Thursday.
The coal operators are preparing for
an aggressive move to break tjw strike.
The expenses of starting the mines,
as agreed upon, will be borne by all the
operators. If the old men do not go to
work new ones will be imported. From
50 to 60 per cent of the diggers can
mine all the coal necessary to supply
the demand.
Clerk Fatally Shot by Ganger.
Louisville, Aug. 18 —Max Wiley, a
clerk for Bernheim Bros., whiskey mer-
has been shot and fatally
wounded by Joe O. Kouwenbergh, a
ghuger. The shooting occurred in the
store where Kouwenbergh had his office
and was the result of an old grudge.
Wiley is a well known whisky man,
while Kouwenbergh is a brother-in-law
of Collector Ben Johnson aud promi
nently connected throughout the state.
G. A. K. Encampment For Richmond.
Richmond, Aug. 18.—A letter has
been received here from Murat Hal
stead, in which he advocates the hold
ing of the G1 A. R. encampment in
Richmond in 1899. He says it is time
for the north and south to get closer to
gether. Richmond will send a com
mittee of 20 to Buffalo to ask for the
encampment.
To in ash Two Engines.
Macon, Aug. 18.—At a meeting of
the city council here it was agreed that
there could be a collision between two
engines at the Central City park on
Oct 12 under the auspices of the Cen
tral City Carnival association providing
the association gives a $5,000 bond to
indemnify for any loss of life or prop
erty. , _
To Organise strikers.
Columbus, 0., Aug. 18. Henry
Lloyd of Boston, general president of
the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Join
ers of the United States, has reported
for service as deputy organizer in be
half of the miuei's and left for Mont
gomery, W. Va., the place of his as
signment for work.
0(10 >trlke Settled.
Pottstown, Pa., Aug. 18.—Tly wage
question between George B. Lessig,
proprietor, aud the employes of the
Universal mill, has nt last been settled
and the plant has resumed work with
800 men.
SUBELY A
FAIRYTALE.
$30,000,000 of Lost
Gold Searched For.
BEATSTHE KLONDIKE
It Was Buried on Cocos Island By South
Americans.
ONE MAN SAYS HE HAS FOUND IT
Island is 400 -Miles West of
Costa Rica.
THE VESSEL RETURNS TO VICTORIA
This Expedition Would Not ‘Divivde With a
Man Who Was Found on Island and
Says He Knows the Secret,
Victoria, B. O, Agg. 18. The
schooner Aurora, which left here in
April last with Captain Fred Hackett
and other sealing captains and. Mrs.
Brennan to search for the treasure al
leged to be buried on Cocos island, has
returned to this port. They were una
ble to find any treasure, but Charles
Hartford, 'who came up on the schooner
as a passenger, says he has located it
and knows where can lay his hands on
i $30,060,000. Hartford says he intends
to return there as soon as he can get a
vessel to take him.
For 70 years and more there has been
tales of a treasure on Cocos islands.
Back in 1831, so the story goes, the
refugees of the war of emancipation be
tween the South and Central American
colonies, fought against Spain, carried
their riches, gold and silver, 400 miles
over the Pacific ocean, from Costa Rica
' to the wild mountain rimmed isle of
I Cocos, where the buried it, million upon
' million.
■ After peace had come they sailed
afier the treasure.
. As the years went on expeditions
were fitted out and sent to Cocos island.
Some of the adventurers returned to
tell their stories of hardships. Others
were not again heard of or seen alive,
but their successors, lauding on the
shore, found a group of skeletons, grim
’relics of the failures Chat had gone be
fore. But the treasure, if treasure there
is, remained behiud.
A Spanish chart, passing from hand
to hand, through unnumbered and un
noted changes, came into the possession
of Mrs. Mary Brennan of Nova Scotia.
■ She studied the chart with zeal and at
! the end of her study she set forth for
i the western coast, convinced.that if she
ever got to Cocos she would find the
• riches.
| Business men of Victoria, upon her
I representations, organized au expedi
' tion aud six mdnths ago the schooner
! Aurora sailed for Cocos with Mrs.
! Brennan, Captain Fred Hackett and a
crew of eight men aboard. The storms
blew them about, aud even after they
had sighted the island, it was days be
fore they could land. The Aurora an
chored and a small boat with Mrs. Bren-
1 nan in the bow put into shore. On the
island they found Hartford, who claimed
to have been there since last September.
For weeks and aud months the expedi
tion sought the treasure, following the
chart Mrs. Brennan .had brought with
her, but with no result. Hartford re
fused to direct their search because the
terms he offered for a division were not
satisfactory to the hunters.
INJUNCTION IS PERMANENT.
Strikers Must Not Interfere With Those
Who Want to Work.
Pittsburg. Aug. 18. —When oourt
opened Judges Stowe and Collier handed
down a decision in the injunction pro
ceedings of the New York and Cleve
land Gas Coal company against the
United Mine Workers of America, Pat
rick Dolan, William Warner and others.
The preliminary injunction was made
permanent, and the plaintiff was or
dered to file a bond of $5,000 to answer
for suoh damages as may be sustained
by the defendants by reason of the in
junction.
Immediately after the filing of the
decree and upon motion of Mr. Thomas
Patterson, the court ordered a similar
decree to be drawn iu the case against
the Bunola miners, in which the in
junction was applied for by Rufus 0.
Crawford. • .
To Build Horseless Carriages.
Dayton, 0., Aug. 18. —The most
prominent manufacturers and capital
ists of this city are considering a prop
osition to start in this city a manufac
tory of horseless carriages under Chi
cago patents, electricity 'to be the mov
ing pow Ar. A committee is going to
Chicago to investigate. The company
will be largely capitalized.
Talk to Your Trade.
The Tribune Has the
largest circulation of any
newspaper in North Geor
gia. It reaches your trade
daily,
PRICE FIVE CENTS
THAT COLORED GIRL .
Who Graduated From Vassir
Now Lives ia Boston.
Librarian of the Boston Public
Library—She Spends Much Time
With a Lawyer’s Family.
Boston, Aug. 18. After her four
years’ course in aristocratic Vassar, the
negro girl who, as told in these dis
patches, was graduated from that insti
tution at the last commencement, is
making her way iu the world.
With the knowledge gained during
those four years Annita Hemming is
particularly well equipped for her du
ties in the Boston public library.
When she was seen at the home of
Lawyer Henry Lewi»—who was an old
time Harvard center-rush —she said she
deprecated 0e attention she was re
ceiving. Orner life at Vassar she de
clined to talk, simply saying she was
proud to have been graduated.
She was only about a year old when
her father, Robert J. Hemming, and
her mother brought her to this city from
the south. They settled in the West
End, and by industry and thrift saved
enough money to buy a home for them
selves at 9 Sussex street.
Annita was a pupil in the Prince
Grammar school. She graduated in
1888. Going to the English high school,
she took the full course. Then a
wealthy woman of the Back Bay, who
is a member of Trinity cnurch, became
interested in her beauty and intelli
gence and sent her to Dwright L.
Moody’s Northfield sohool.
At Northfield Annita prepared for
Vassar, and there she was the roommate
of Miss Bessie Baker, who is now the
wife;of Lawyer Lewis.
Her father and mother are now at
Martha’s Vineyard, and while their
home is closed she is the guest of her
former roommate, Mrs. Lewis.
FATHER OF BOY FOUND.
W. B. Fuller of Woodbury Arrested
and Brought to Atlanta.
Atlanta, Aug. 18.—W. 8., known as
"Bud” Fuller, of Woodbury is the
father of the cripple child who was
■found in the woods near the city a few
days ago, where he had been left to die. *
Fuller is now under arrest and will be
held until a full investigation is had.
Dr. J. M.'Hooten of Woodbury read
in the papers the story of finding the
child, which he decided from the de
scription was the child of Bud Fuller.
He communicated with the police and
was requested to come to Atlanta to
identify the child, which he did.
Fuller says he did not leave the child
in the woods. He brought it to At
lanta for the purpose of putting it at
the Grady hospital, but found the price
mqre than he could pay. He then left
it with a Mrs. Willingham, whom he
paid $5.00 for its care.
An investigation of Fuller’s story
shows that he went to the hospital to
see if he could put the child there. The
physician in charge states that he said
that the child was not his, but a friend’s, •
and upon'being told the hospital could
iiot take tFie child he left. Fuller de
nies that he said Jhe cfrild not his.
It is also shown that he registered at
the Jackson hotel as W. H. Byrd, In
dian Springs. He says in regard to
'using assumed name that this was
merely a piece of foolishness in whioh
he frequently indulges when traveling.
The child was in a pitiable condition
when accidentally found, being almost
famished and too weak to talk. It is
now receiving the best of attention at
the hospital.
LOST HIM IN THE LAKE.
A Negro Rapid Is Securely Bound and
Damned Into Mud
Apalachicola, Fla., Aug. 18.—A ne
gro boy aged about 19 was discovered
in the room of the 17-year-old daughter
of R. O. Stone Saturday night.
The negro attempted to jump from
the window, but a shotgun stopped him
He was placed on the front porch, tied •
to a post for safe keeping until morn
ing. About midnight a party of armed
men rode up, and despite the remon
strance of old man Stone, took the ne
gro off. They stopped at the shore of
Mud lake and the negro was securely
bound. Three of the men picked him
up and threw him over into the water
and then rode off. This makes the fifth
man to get "lost” in two years.
Steamship Uues Will Not Kedtice Rates.
New Orleans, Aug. 18.—Saturday
morning’s paper* stated that reductions
would be made by the Morgan and
Cromwell steamship li”es in the freight
rates from New York and New Orleans,
on account of the Galveston fight. Thia
is premature. No arrangement for re
duction was made. The Morgan and
Cromwell lines explained that it was
impossible to do so without creating
widespread demoralization. The report
has been positively denied by morning
and evening papers. The merchants
here understand the situation and are
waiting patiently for the finish of the
fight at Galveston.
Deserted Hie Voting Wife.
Qecatur, Ala., Aug. 18. George
Lewis, a young electrician, failed, to
show up and it developed that he had
deserted his young wife of three months
and skipped. Lewis came here from
Cincinnati bout a year ago. He made
friends reaudy and was doing well. No
cause for his disappearance is known to
his friends or his wife. * M
■