Newspaper Page Text
m DOWNBl A LOADED HVNDlAH. Ni GRO LYNCHED
D. T. ALLYN IEETS WiTH A
SEBIOUS ACCIDENT. dan ahren assaults a 1.ady
Te)r)|rapklc *pnrL. pad Other Arenas
ter Banner Readers
—TTork has been commenced on Ma
cau’s new sewerage system.
—A telephone exchange is being es
tablished iu Cordele.
—Tne people in Maoon are talking of
Hon. Nat Harris for the State Senate.
—They say that Desha Breckinridge
totes a “gun.” He is loaded forjudge
Wilson in r he cross-examination.
—The Savannah police have been
armed with new Winchester repeating
itWO PRISONERS PLACED IN THE
CALABOOSE
line in Montgomery.
-Richard Croker, the New York
politician, left San Francisco Monday
last for New York.
-The Baptist Convention has *d- |j$
j ourned and will meet at Wayoroas next
year.
—Tbe Memphis gas company, with a
bonded indebtedness of •100,000 baa
been aoM under the hammer for $125,-
000.
-SodiM in theconferedate cemetery at
Chattanooga are almost expoeed, and a
movement is on foot to make necessary
repairs.
-The Maoon Bee says that the people
of that city ought not to be discouraged
because Gov. Northen saw fit to pass
DU Escape, 'Itkttss sad ttceierj. Plstk,
Paralysis—S KaTrosdU Insratitsde.
(Prom the Wal ace, Neb,, H-rsU.)
Last summer Hr O T. Aliya <4 this
place, worked for the B. & if. R. R., as a
ate tan hand, on the Mtho extending east
from Tecumseh, the county seat of John
son County, Nebraska. On the 2d day of
July he met with an accident that neatly
coat him his life. He and five other men
were working a hand car front of w&ich
was a posh car. Mr. AUyn was standing
o the front part of the car, with his bock
towards the direction in which the car was
bang run. Jost aa the two cars came to
gether, the foreman ordered him to step
from the car on which they were riding an
to the pash car, and at the same Him.
signaled another of the men to apply the
la Spite of the Appeals for
Reduction—Judge Cobb’s
Talk in Delivering the
Sentence.
When He Went for Them
They Were Gone—Chief
Oliver at Loss to Under
stand the Matter.
rhe People of Greensboro and
Adjoining Country Make
Quick Work of Dealing
With the Brute. -
And Injured Mrs. Mary Yin
cent—It Struck Her in the
Fye and She Will Lose
Her Sight.
Yesterday morning Judge Cobb, it
city court, passed sentence upon C. C.
Dean, con rioted of assault and battery,
t od refused to reduce the fine of John
6. John ion, convicted of selling liquor
illegally.
judge Cobb said that he bed been
•iked by the wife of Mr. Johnson to
reduoe the fine he had imposed upon
fclm a short while since, and that eouo-
sel bad alio aakid it, but in view of the
feet that ha bad already let a boy. Mack
Sailors, pay only twenty-five dollars
isJ costs for the same offense, on the
ground that he was r : irply the tool and
eient of Johnson, and in view of the
fee! that the t flense for which Johnson
its convicted covered a long period of
r ioUt'on of the law, tbs court was con-
grained to let the sentence stand as it
vu at first imposed and It was ao or*
dtrsd.
— - shotguns.
Gbkkkbobo, apbii. 6.—Dan Abren, —Rev W. 8. Parker has resign*
colored, went to the home of Mr. Dan pastorate of .the Presbyterian chart
Chambers who lives about four aOes ^aycroas.
from Greensboro, during that gentle- —The sale of the North Georgii
man’s absence and assaolted his wife Marietta road has been poetpom
Thursday evening. May 8.
Citizens captured the negro and car- —Senator Call is making a hard
ried him before Mrs. Chambers, who “ 4 wiU Probably defeat the lei
identified him. He confessed the crime *PP°i ntm8rus * cr Florida,
and it took oool heads to keep him from —Coke workers on strike in P
He wsa brought to town and tnrp«d
over to Sheriff English, who placed him ~ A mob at BakenvUle, N. O,
j„ 4,1. Holland BugUsh, a wife murderer,
„ Jail and lynched him,
Pablio sentiment wss so outraged by
the heinonaness of the offense that a do- y^Tf***!* **?» J *»
* John Mahoney, a Howards town (
utand was made on the sheriff for the distiller, beheaded him with a hah
keys. bn. he refused and matters ap- _ At Dablin . ^ Monday , Mt
parently qnited down. As a safeguard, steamer Annie Qarbutt was sold t
however, the sheriff called upon the'Oconee River Steamboat Company.
Greene Rifles to guard the Jail, which —The proud Kentuckians pr
they did and dispersed a crowd Thun- : that th»re will be a Corsican vem
day night Kentucky between the Brockinri
At half-past five this morning Blac*.burc3.
the guard was dismissed, and at about —The Sunday School conventic
half-put ten o’clock a crowd, supposed the Stone Mountain Baptist Asa
to be from another county, came in and tion will be held in Covingto
demanded the keys from the Sheriff;who April IS, 14 and 15.
again refused. Bnt the crowd were -I. * family quarrel IsadorTa
too determined to be bsffied, and after * Up aanduakV Ohta^roW
..bo,..Wytook.Wg, kkmm„.
crow-bars and broke down the door. M< |
A rope was quickly- placed around
the brute’s neck and he was led firm —In an address to Boston nnemi
the jail, while the sheriff and mayor Agitator H. I. Swift railed at <
begged the crowd to desist. The negro ® rnor Greeahalge and Harvard’s P
was curried beyond the incorporate dent, and called God a capitalist,
limits and strung opto a pine tree. Be- —Missing from home a week, Xi
fore death came his body was riddled X. L. Gauss, assistant city librarii
with bullets. Chicago, is thought to have comm
It is understood that the negro had suicide in a fit of nervous proetra
twice Thursday attempted to commit . .
the same crime for which he was lynch. “A Chicago woman punishes n d
J kdii httflhfinrf h« nmhiiifa Lwm 1
Tuesday afternoons gentleman named
McKinney came into the city with two
negro prisoners, Calvin Dupree end
Jim Hunter, and placed them in the
calaboose for safe keeping.
They were taken by Chief Oliver
merely as a matter of aocommodstion to
Mr. McKinney, who was to pay for
their feed.
Mr. McKinney eame from South Car
olina where ha captured the eagroes,
who were wanted by W. B. Lee, of
Coviogton- They were escaped con
victs, having been connoted of larceny
ana fornication.
The next morning when Mr. McKin
ney went for his prisoners they were
gone.
Chief Oliver has investigated the
matter and finds it wrapped In mys
tery. Officer Cox locked the negroes
up in the eage and hang the keys ap in
their usual place. When the meals
were sent to them, it wu reported to
him that they were gone, hut he
thought Mr. McKinney had come and
carried them off. So he didn’t report
the matter to Chief Oliver.
So he didn’t know anything about it
until the next morning. Chief Oliver
at once set his officers to work and
pursued the negroes with the dogs, hot
they had too big a start and got away.
Chief Oliver says it is practically im
possible for the negroes to have picked
their way oat. The only ooneloskm to
be drawn is that the negroes were turn-
Chief Oliver has
A serious aoeident occurred Thursday
at the Check Factory.
Mrs. Mary Vincent works at that
place, and yesterday wu standing near
a loom lost before quitting time.
Suddenly a shuttle, upon the end of
which wu a steel point, jumped from
its plsee and struck her in the eye.
Mrs Vinoent wu felled to the floor by
force of the blow and the blood gashed
from her wound.
It wu at once seen that it wu a bad
injury, and she wu immediately re
moved to her home in Bast Athens and
medical assistance summoned.
The injury is a very serious one and
the eyesight of Mrs. Vincent, ao far aa
one eye is concerned, is in all probabil
ity loat.
The aoeident was a very unfortunate
one and is deeply regretted. When
Mrs Vincent wu curied to her home,
her mother, Mrs. Bruce wu so over
come with grief that she fainted and Is
now in a serious condition.
load of five men, tools and water keg, in
all washing folly a ton, pasting over him
A rod on the under side of the car caught
his feet and don bled him op ao that his
feet struck his face As be rolled over, the
ball-wheel struck nis back and irflicted
the injury that came so near proving f«t.i
The car was raised from the roils and
thrown off the track
He wu carried to town and Dr. Snyder.
for their movement in this
—Tom Watson will speak at Madison
Saturday, the 14th, inrt. The railroads
have reduced the rate to one fare for
round trip.
—Milt Diggers, Will Lavender, Will
Adams and Will Bidenhanser wore
drowned in the Chattanooga river "»v
Colombo* on Thursday.
—Henry Xd wards, a Jacksonville ne
gro, has been fined 1100 for cruelty to
anlmali In driving an old broken down,
sore-backed, half starved horse.
—D. R. Gbolston, a musician living
at Calhoun, Ala, wu run over and
killed by a freight train near Montgom
ery Tuesday evening.
—The Maoon Browing Company baa
declared a dividend cf 8 per cent, after
spending $15,000 in improvements and
carrying oyer a handsome amount to
the surplus fund.
—A man named Frank Haney from.
HearJ oounty, wu liberated from Ful
ton county ehaingang on Friday and
wu immediately arrested on the charge
of murdering his own child.
—George Jones, an escaped convict
from Pratt; Ala., coal mims, has been
re-arrested in Sommerses, Ky., and re
turned to Birmingham. He u wanted
at the mines under a life sentence far
highway robbery.
ha# h#fp
the B. & M. R. R. surgeon at Tecunaeb,
was summoned. Afterwards Dr. C. C
Gifford. Dr Yoden and Dr. Wales, all of
Wymote, Net;, were called in consultation,
but they could afford no relief. About tbe
1st id October be became paralyzed from
bis waist down. The sense of feeling
entirely left his kgs, wb.ch became < r*wn
one acro-s tbe other Dr. Livingston, f
Plaitamoutb, Ntb, tbe bead physician f
tbe B. & M. R B. system wu summoned
to treat the case, but finally informed bis
patient that be coaid not Uve to see July,
1893 He had not tbe means to pay the
expenses of a law suit against tbe railroad
company, but the company’s attorneys
very willingly compromised tbe claim for
damages by paying him $2,000 His con-
dition continued to grow worse, tbe ex
cruciating pdn in bis back never cess
ing. until upon tbe recommendation
Tbe court then enquired If Mr. Dsan
wm in the court room, and ho being
present, wu asked to step out before
tbe bench.
He did so and took a seat faring
Judge Cobb, who then began to pass
sentence upon him.
Jodge Cobb said: “This case hu «o-
lulted in one mistrial and in one ooc-
eiction «ub recommendation to mercy.
Counsel bave appealed to the court for
mercy by reason of the defendant’s op-
port unities and education not being
sufficient to render him n man of deli
cate sensibilities.
Cleveland, Tenn., April 8.—J. C.
Bryan, sheriff of Catoosa county, Geor
gia, came to Cleveland from Charleston,
where he had been to overtake and ar
rest John Phillips, a young white man.
who is charged in that county with
stealing cattle in the neighborhood of
‘Ringgold, and taking them to Dalton
and selling them. Phillips waived,
requisition papers and went back with
out any trouble.
Mr. Pollard Wu a Mason.
Looisvhjlb, April 6.—The records ot
the Maspnic Widows ond Orphans’ home
in this dty show that Horatio, John and
Rose N. Pollard, children of John D.
The plea of poverty <
and inability to pay a heavy floe has
alio been presented
“It is said that a fine ol fifteen dollars
and costs have been placid on the de- <
findant for contempt of court, which
bis been paid. This the ccurt cannot
nodes in passing sentence sa it did not
arise from the occurrence itself. Tbe
piss that tbe defendant has already
paid s fine of $75 and costs in Mayor’s
coart for this offense is to be considered
by this court in making up its sentence.
“A motion for a new trial in this case
U sow pending and hence the oourt
mil not express an opinion of it. The
remarks it now makes are in the light
of the verdict of guilty, assuming that
verdict to be right. The additional
pie* bu been made that young Lowe
was pestiferous and obnoxious and that
Ihis publications in the Augusta Chron
icle were aggravating and irritating.
■Tbit alio will be taken into constdera-
■kon by tbs coart.
I “In the light of the testimony and
■tbs verdict the Jury believed that either
■tbs defendant enticed Mr. Lowe
Ithrough the officer of the law to bis
and made preparation for his
Booming to pat this ind^nity upon
Bid or that the defendant after he dis-
Kovered Mr. Lowe pat it upon him
■Assuming this verdict to be right, n
vegre was sent to got tbe filth and pre-
■w it so that it aiekened all in the
voom. 0:her parties were preeent and
Bfr. Lowe was held while the slops
■were poured upon him.
I “ Ia tbe light of the evidence and tbs
fctrdict, the court is at a loss to con-
how anything could libel the
■character of tbe defendant. The mind
ffib.it could conceive and the heart that
ftoold carry ont this indignity it la diffl-
w character]* j with a greater de-
Brevity than the act itself concedes.
I “The court will make an example in
ffibis case, vindicate the law and warn
ffibe defendant and others that they
B* Te tb* right to defend their homes
ffitri their castles, but no right to coin-
fr 1 ' »uca an indignity aa the one in
volved In this case.
I'U is the lodgment of the court that
■fie defendant pay within five days a
l M °f two hundred fifty dollars
m* costs; or, in default thereof, serve
■Mlve months in tbs chain-gang. Mr.
■tariff, the defendant is now in your
■utody.”
■ Mr. Dean simply got up and took his
ffiormsr seat the oourt bouse, while
ooaasel very promptly asked for the
•meant of bond in the esse.
■ Judge Cobb fixed the bond at three
■andred and fifty dollars, which hood
ed oat by some one.
some suspicions, but does not know
enough yet to warrant any arrests..
Mr. M. Kinney appeared before coun
cil yesterday and asked relief in the
matter, aa he had been to considerable
expense in capturing the negroes.
The council took the view that the
city had no right to do so, as they were,
n t liable. It is said that Mr. Me- 1
Kinney will sue the city.
The affair is one of these that cannot
be avoided, and is no. fault of Chief
Olirer or tbe police. It was the delib
erate act of some one who turned tne
prisoners out. ^
■*» it was before it was hurt.
Tnis spring he moved on to a faim
twelve miles southwest of Wallace, where
he hu planted a good crop of coin and is
doing all his work without any hired help.
Should anyone doubt the statement) herein
made, they are invited to sse him pen >n
sOv or write to him, and addr-ae him at
Wallace, Nib. He is thankful for what
Pink Pi le have done lor him, acd ! s will
ing togo to some trouble to kt others kaow
ol their wonderful curative properties
Dr ft ilhams’ Piuk Pills, It seems con
tain in a condensed. form all the element*
necessary to give new life and rtrintss to
To-day hundireas visited tbe scene of
lynching.
Sheriff English used the wires to
Governor Northern, but it was too Into
to secure assist* noe.
—W. T. Davidson, Xsq
sleeted as city attorney of Augusta to
fill the vacancy erased by the death of
his brother, Hon. John S. Davidson-
The salary is to he increased from $ly»
200 to $1,500.
—W. P. Jamera, the big farmer of
Webster oounty, has replanted GOO anno
ot corn, killed by the late freeas. Ho
was formerly a big cotton grower, but
is now devoting his attention to othsr
crops. He has 800 big and little hogs,
half of which will soon he fat enough
toUn-udMieoni .UU ML
—There is considerable life in the
Georgia Historical Society in Savannah.
At a recent session there came near be
ing a serious encounter- between CoL
W .—in op Pnto.1l and flharlaa V Waaft
Pollard, were admitted to the home in
1887 upon recommendation of Crab
Orchard Lodge, 432. These records es
tablish the fact that Madeline Pollard’s
father was a Mason, or his children
would never have been admitted to the
bound.
REPUBLICANS MEET.
they Hava a Great Tim* la Chattaaaaga
and Bi r Farads.
Chattanooga, April 8.—The third
annual convention of the Republican
league dubs of Tennessee and the first
meeting of the Republican press of the
state met here. Prominent Republicans
from all ov.t the st ito and probably 500
—Pelts Arthur, an Angnsta liqnor
dealer, has been fined $100 or nine
months in jail, and under the State law
prohibited from selling liquor for one
year, for selling whiskey on Sunday.
—As Evangelist Patterson preached
about fire and brimstone in a hall at
Leavenworth, Kin., fire broke cut in
the hall. There was a panic; two wo
men fainted bus were not hurt.
—Hon. Junes M. Dupree, of Macon
county, has been appointed by tbe
Governor to the vacancy oansed by tbe
death of the late C. B. Hudson, Solici
tor-General of the Sodtbern circuit.
—Hon. Usher Thomason, of Madi
son, has been appointed on the staff of
President Barrios, of Gautemala, at
$8,000 a year. He will accompany
Minister P. M. B Young when he re
turns to that country.
—The District of Columbia grand
lory baa returned another indictment
for manslaughter against Chief F. C.
Ainsworth of tbe record department of
tbe pension building as a result of the
fall of the Ford theatre.
—Mrjand Mrs. W. H. Faulkner, of
Henderson, N. C., do not regard them
selves ss old folks yet, although they
are the parents of eighteen children
and have forty grandchildren living in
various parts of the State.
—The Rev. “Tom’* Dixon, of New
York, preached a sirmon on CoL
Breckinridge last Surd iy, the sub-
atance of which was: “Br..kinrldgeis
self-convicted; may God forgive aim,
we will not.’ 1
‘ —The huge bell which was recently
presented to St Patrick’s' church, Au
gusta, has arrived from Baltimore,
where it was cast, and only awaits the
completion of the belfry to be hung in
place. It is very large, weighing four
tons, and was cast with extreme care as
to tone.
—Last January a farmer named Ganz
disappeared from Woodbury, N. J.
Since that time Gina’s body has been
found, “identiflidV and buu'ed at least
twfee. And now they nave again found
ana “posuively identified another body
of Gai a
CITY COURT ADJOURNED
Anri Superior Court WU1 Convene
Monday.
City cou - r dj ir:i«d yesterday after
quite a busy season, during wbioh »
large number cf oases have been dis
posed of.
Yesterday the csss of ff. J. Carithers
vs. W J. Whitehead, involving a part-
nerahip settlement waa decided by the
jury in favor of the defendant.
The oaaeof X. T. Brown vs, G. A
Hell, receiver of the street railway
company for damages to stock resulted
Inn verdict of $250 and costs for plain
tiff
Superior, court convenes Monday
morning with Judge N L. Hutchins on
the bench. The bar will have a calen
dar ot badness arranged and every
thing will move off smoothly.
Among other interesting feature ot
Superior court will be the trial of Osesr
SixOb, charged with the murder of J.
N. Thurmond In this city some time
sinee. CoL X. T. Brown will appear
for the defense while Solicitor-Gen
eral Russell will come forward for the
eases ss locomotor auxia, partial paraly
sis, dt Vilas’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
rheumatism, nervous headache, the alter
t Sects of the grippe, palpitation of the
heart, pale and sallow compkx’ona, that
tired feeling resulting from nervous
prostration; all diseases resulting from vi
tiated humors iu tbe blood such as. crufula,
cbroi ic erysipelas, etc They are also a
specific for troubles peculiar to females,
such as suppressions, irregularities, idiU
forma of weakness. They build up the
blood and restore the glow of health to
pule or sallow cheeks. In men they effect
a radical cure in ail cases arising from
mental worry, overwork, or excesses of
wh*’ever nature.
Tneqe Pills are manufactured by the Dr.
Williams* Mrdicice Company, behenee-
tadv.H. and Brockville, Ont., and are
sold in box» at GP eeats a box, or six bozos
for $2 JO, m eS are never acrid in balk.
Jackson county. Judge Talley is
charged with complicity in the recent
Skelton-Ross killing.
W«i» Iher Hi- Rucker 1 * Murderers.
Selma, Ala., April 8.—The bodies of
two negro men were found floating in
Mulberry creek, nine miles from here.
The two were tied together with a rope
and their ears cut off. They are be
lieved to have murdered Miis
Jessie Rucker, in Chilton county, aev-
driegaties are- present. The league 're
mained in session all day at the court
house and ebvted the following officers:
Waring Russell and Charles N. West,
both very prominent citizens. A state
ment made bv Mr. West that a combi
nation had been formed by Colonel
Bussell to bring about his dvfsat in the
election for canters, was the cause of
the whole trouble.
i-
—Tbe navy department is making aa
effort to recover the plats of the wreck
ed Kearaarge, which are supposed to
have baen carried to New Providanoe or
Kingston, Jamaica, by the native
wreckers. At the instance of Actinff
Secretary Mo Adoo, the State depart
ment hu cabled the United State# Con
sul st Kingston to endeavor to recover
these things ss historical relics of thn
famous ship.
—T ie Masonic Grand Lodge of Ar
gentine hae telegraphed to the King of
Portugal, the president of Brazil and
President Cleveland appeals on behalf
of Admiral Saldanba da Gams and hi*
rebel companions now detained no board
the Portugese mon-ot wur in the Bue
nos Ayres harbor. The suffering of
th8 men is reported to be extreme, food
and medicine being supplied by the Bed
Cross Society and CathoUe sisters. Two
cases of yellow fever are reportefi cn
one of the vessels.
oral weeks ago.
DM With * Clear In Hi* Month.
New Yobs, April 6.—Jacob Bringolf,
• cook, committed suicide by shooting
himself in the left breast in his room.
He wu found dead on the floor, .with a
cigar between his teeth. A letter lay
on the table. It said he had money in
the bank which wu to he used to bury
ster parade, rally and torchlrgat pro
cession. Congress iM.-ui Ch tries Grove-
nor. of Oiiiu, delivered the annual ad
dress predicting a Republican tidal
Three Murderer* Hanged.
Newport, Ark.. April 8.—The -three
train robbers,. J. L. Wyrick, Thomas
Brady and Albert 'Mansker, who killed
Conductor W: P. McNally at Oliphant,
Ark., November 3 last, have been hanged
here. The drop fell at 7:55 a. m. The
men were pronounced dead at 8:06. All
three necks were broken.
An Old Firm** Failure.
Norfolk, April «.—S. Hamburger,
trading hero as Hamburger Brothers, to
bacconists, hu assigned. His preferred
creditors get about $34,000. The lia
bilities and assets are not stated. The
firm has been in business 31 years.
CMpwimu j Steel FUn*.
Cleveland, O.. April A—Congress
man Tom L. Johnson and others have
prepared articles of incorporation foi
the Johnson company. They will build
steel rail works at Lorain, at a cost of
$5,000,000. It will be the largest steel
works in the country, and will employ
6,000 men. An option is held on 2,000
acres of land on Black river, at Lorain.
Montgomery, Ala., April 8.—Tbe su
preme court of Alabama hu set apart
April 9 u a memorial day to the late
Chief Justice Stone for the delivery of
datagrams on his character, life and ser
vices to the people.
mide by Mr. Dean during the day.
he case u now pending a motion
1 °ew trial and tbs *-*-"t*r is —
it will be secured. They rest for a
float which left Chicago st noon Sunday,
are being picked up along the' shores ol
the island. She most have gone down in
the straits. Tbe wind shifted daring the
wight to the southwest and blew a gale.
More accidents are looked for.g|«;ffiH|p
A thoroughly tested Remedy
FOR ALL
BLOOD and SKiH DISEASES.
Naval Siam.
Savannah. April S.~-pints of terpentine
opened and closed at for recnUrs, sale*
tUO casks. Rosin opened tirm ana closed firm
at an advance of 5 cents on Urn three Ufiust
grades; s ties iviioat -V *.0 bb!s; A. K. C. and l>.
ll 1»; E. $1.15: r. f: 9-. G. 5i.«; H. $1 K;
L : S.Vi; K. SS.3S: M. window
class. $S 85; waV rwhite, tZ *5-
WixjrxoTd . April 5.—Koain, doll;
•trained. »>; (rood strained, 95; turpentine
firm at »J4:tnr9teadv a* 99:erode turpentine
steady; hard. $1.1-.'; soft and virjin. ;1XQJ
Ab-.u: one more db.covery
and identification will raise doubts if
there tver was * Gjrz.
—Tbe lately departed month of March
goes on record as one of the two warm
est Marches known during the twenty-
three years the United States weather
service has teen in existence. The on
ly March that exceed*, it in warmth is
that of 1871, the year in which govern
ment observations were first taken.
THE EYE ipiOYED.
Igan went ashore near here. It wu he:
first trip up the lakes. It is not known
yet how badly damaged the boat xs.
SHOCKING ACCIDENT AT K0NR0E
Daughter of Capt- G. M. Namer runsa
a Bookcase Over On Herself.
Monroe, Ga . April 6 -This evening
a shocking accident occurred to Flor
ence Napier, the four-year-old dsugh-
ter of Capt. G. M. Napier,of this place.
Th, little irirl nulled a bookcase over
Oottan futures opeaed steady.
—Heir Johann Most, the New York
ansrohist, who recently spoke of Eu
rope as being a better place for an- ;
trehists than tban this country, was
offered bv the New York Recorder a
flrst-elaas passage to any port in Europe
he might select and some other advan
tages if he’d give a $1,000 bond not to
come back. It is needless to say tha
he declined.
April.,
t'5 the searching-party could find were the
A-r—*** ' * - "... 7AS blankets of the men, which they said
September *•* tii-v would leave at a certain place if
Rev.6.R Enla^r** -IreJy an- ^ M P'
nounced that he will commence a pro-| —• - * — . —
tracted meeting at his church as soon as j Rev. L. W. Dowr *, of Ojonvs county,
the revival s»rvioes at First Methodist Wm in the city yesterday. He says
ohurch are o®er. Oconee street church that the wheat in bis section was min
is already ins good state spiritually, ed bv :ce freeze. Mr. Downs lives In
Vid we predicta gracious meeting when one of the most prosperous fanning
Or protracted aerricea commence, — sections of the country.
At’iot*, G*.
/ xy . ;V