Newspaper Page Text
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
ST. C. Milner Ardimok
Milner & Anderson,
Attorne*’’B-at-Law
caktersvillE, ga.
I>OOMS UP-STAIRS, BAKER ft HALL
baildiuK. Practice In all the court*.
DR. R. B. HARRIS,
DENTIST,
Baker & Hall Building.
ARMSTRONG
HOTEL
Homo, Cos.
er.t.-al! located. Cuisine l\rst-cl*J. I.arf*
•ample rooms. Rates according to iocatioa ol
fOOOOJI
J VV. VOUNQ, Propr.
H. h. CASOA’
IBTISX
fOrer Young's Drug Store)
CARTERSVILLE. GA
G. H. AUBREY,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
CARTERSVILLE. GA
HE. (IE. B. PU7
(Health Restorer and Blood Purifier.)
Cares any form of
fcKRVOUS INDIGESTION, I.IVER, KID
NEY, BLADDER TROUBLE, CONSTI
PATION, HEADACHE, CHILLS
AND FEVER.
l r, /ervbody In the United tales should try one
ixttle > this wonderful remedy.
Every Bottle Sold Under
Positive Guarantee.
Oja't be Without it. A great Household Rem
edy Try it on Old Sores, Eczema, Scrofula
and Blood I roubles, no matter how long stand
tng
•G- ALTH IS WEALTH, DON’T FAIL TO
IRY THE HEALTH RESTORATIVE
AND BLOOD PURIFIER.
O JOLEY’S White Wonder Soap,
for Infants, for Chaffed Hands,
Ctc.
C < >OLKY”S Pain Balm, for Cramp
Colic, Sprains and Bruises, will
relieve iu 10 minutes.
CATARRH
itarth i.i a Blood Disease and nothing but a
•T-iod medicine will cure it. lie Ke, li Pu. is
Sold under a positive guarantee to cure catarrh
Will also aie all teinaletrouble Sold In Car
lei-wills by
YOUNG BROS.
Druggists.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
11 urti ficially digests the food and aids
Datura iu strengthening and recon
|o ructlng the exhausted digestive or
fpuis. It is the lalcßt discovered digest
ant and tonic. No other preparation
Can approach it in efficiency. It in
Oi iintljr relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
flick Headache,Gasldalglft,Cramps and
lit 1 other results of i in perfect digestion
rrlcosoc. and sl. I/uua size contains 2K timet
.mill I sire. Book all aboutdyspepsbi muUtxl fret
by E. C. DeWtTT A CO., Chicago*
HALL & GREENE
IIUZ WELCOMES M’KINLEY.
e,i,ient of Mexico Remit. and
RosreuiUtiro to El Paso.
The presidential party reached El
Paso, the gateway of Mexico, at 9 o’clock
hmday morning. President Diaz, of
M eiieo, had hoped to meet the presi
dent there and ehßko hands across the
border, but as the Mexican congress
i* in Houston he oould not leave the
capital. He sent a personal message
to the president, however, and also
d'spatched General Jnan Hernandez,
the commander of the second military
c<<ue of the state of Ohihnahna, per
squally to present his good wishes to
Pie chief magistrate of the United
Ltafas.
OA.BTORI/L.
Bears thrt /t Tks Kntd You Hare Always 80.7 M
TANARUS"
FRUIT GROWERS MEET.
tf mlh Oeorgin Association In Annnal Sc*.
• lon at ( alhoun.
The North Georgia l ruit Growers’
association met iu Calhoun Thursday
in its fifth auuual session, with Pn-si
deut ti. H. Miller, oi Rome, presiding.
A feature of the meeting was the es
tablishing of a question box relative
to tlie best method of peach culture.
The questions were answered aud de
bated by tho members.
UNDER MARTIAL LAW
Jacksonville’s Devastated Dis*
tricts Patrolled By Miliiia.
HELP FOR HOMELESS THOUSANDS
Governor and Legislature Take
Action and flany Outside
Citizens Make Response.
Additional particulars of Jackson
ville's fearful conflagration show that
one hundred and forty-eight blocks
1 of the city were laid waste.
Ten thousand people are homeless,
and many of them left for St. Augus
tine and other coast cities and nearby
towns, while numerous river craft took
many to little places on the St. Johns
river. Supply stations have been es
tablished in various parts of the city.
The prompt action of Secretary of
War Root in tendering the use of the
barracks near St. Augustine was re
ceived with gratitude on every side.
A committee was appointed at a
meeting of citizens to wire the gov
ernors of various states to send all
tents they can spare to Jacksonville.
It will be weeks before anything like
permanent shelter can be provided for
the homeless thousands and Jackson
ville for soma time to oome wiil be a
oily of ismt*.
Saturday Governor Jennings de
clared the city under martial law.
Col. Lovell, of the First reg ment, is
is command of the troops.
Tbe following troops, iu addition to
local companies, arrived durin' the
day and are on duty: Governor’s
Guards, Tallahassee; Columbia Rifles,
Lake City; Snwanee Rifles, Live Oak,
and Gem City Guards, of Palatka.
The city is patrolled and the entrances
to burned districts guarded by senti
nels. Military headquarters has been
established and passes are necessary
to enter the lines in any pari of the
city.
FOOD AND RAIMENT POUR IN.
The hunger of 10,000 homeless peo
ple was satisfied Sunday upon the ar
rival relief trains and boats bringing
provisions from mghboring towns and
distant cities. A coiunl'iseary was es
tablished in the center of the city und
thousands were fed during the day.
An order was promulgated, under
martial law, requiring all merchants,
whose stores were spared by the con
flagration, to open their door3 and sell
to all who asked.
Five carloads of tents were received
Sunday, the property of the state,
which are to be used by the homeless
temporarily. These are in addition
to those ordered sont by Secretary
Root.
The Times-Union and Citizen esti
mates the total loss at $11,000,001).
These are baaed upon an itemized
statement furnished by a volunteer
committee of citizens.
MANY PERSONS MISSING.
Rumors of loss of life are on every
hand, ami the river has been closely
watched. Many persons have con
firmed the report of loss of life at the
Matkot street wharf. Numerous ad
vertisements appear in the local pa
pers asking for aid in searching for
persons who are missing. As many
have left the city for refuge, it is
impossible to ascertain who have been
lost iu the Market street pier tragedy.
TO ISSUE BONDS.
Chairman Poicher L’Engie, of the
board of county commissioners of Du
val, said:
“A bill will be introduce in the leg
islature at once to bond Duval for per
haps $200,000 to rebuild the court
house and the county jail. The bill
is being prepared. I understand that
a bill for the issuance of $500,000 of
city bonds will be at once introduced
also. Of this $300,000 will be used to
take up the judgment debts of tbe city
and the remainder to rebuild city
buildings. ”
The prisoners in the county jail,
thirty five in number, including many
for serious offenses, some capital, were
marched to Riverside under heavy
guard before tho tiro reached them.
Later on the prisoners were taken
by the sheriff to Green Cove Springs,
Foruandiua and St. Augustine.
SEVEN VICTIMS OF FLAMES.
Tt<tlm lllocked Way of Firemen and Holo
caust Wan the licnnlt.
Seven persons w'ere burned to death,
three fatally injured and several others
slightly burned and otherwise injured
in a fire that destroyed a throe-story
apartment building at 9316 Marquette
avenue, South Chicago, early Sunday
morning.
While the occupants of the burning
bnildiug were struggling to save them
selves, the firemen, who were respond
ing to the alarm, wore vainly waiting
for a freight train which blocked the
way of the fire engines to move away
from the crossing and give au open
road to the fire.
FILIPINO REBELS ROUTED.
They Get Worsted in Three Engage
ments with American Cavalrymen.
A Manila special says: Lieutenant
John D. L. Hartman, with sixty-three
men of Troop K, of the First cavalry,
encountered 250 insurgents near the
village of Balayan in Batangas prov
ince, Luzon. The enemy made three
stands and were each time defeated
by the American cavalrymen. There
were no American casualties.
THE WEEKLY NEWS, CARTERSVILLE, GA.
SPORTING BREVITIES.
Lakewood defeated Camden in the
polo tournament at Georgian Court,
Lakewood, N. J.
George Foster Sanford has signed a
contract to coach the Columbia foot
ball team this year.
“Major" Taylor, an American col
ored cyclist, has won the open kilo
metre race at Roubuix, Fiance.
A chainless motor bicycle that is
driven by a combination of bevel and
spur gears, has been brought out by
anew concern.
Three cup defender races will be
run oif Newport, R. 1., by the Consti
tution, the Independence and the Col
umbia early iu July.
The report of the State Racing Com
mission of New York shows a great
increase iu taxes and premiums under
the Suite Racing Code.
Messrs. Scott and Etting won the
doubles championship of tlie Philadel
phia Racquet Club, defeating Messrs.
McFadden and Cassatt
Riders who are taking out wheels
that have old, dried-up tires on them
will find their pleasure about doubled
by investing in new ones.
Oxford and Cambridge athletes have
agreed to the American conditions of
eligibility for the international college
track games in New York City.
Nearly 1000 race meets will be given
permits by the National Cycling Asso
ciation during the season of 1901. It
is estimated that the amount of purses
to be given out w ill foot up $304,000.
A measurement of the Shamrock 11.
shows she draws exactly nineteen feet,
compared with twenty feet four inches
in tlie case of Shamrock 1., and nine
teen feet six inches in the case of the
Valkyrie 111.
An unmistakable sign of the return
of many women to road riding is
found in the statement of chain mak
ers, who report an increased demand
for short chains of the kind used on
women’s wheels.
PROMINENT PEOPLF.
Count Tolstoi is expected to take up
his residence In Paris.
Andrew Lang recently celebrated his
fifty-seventh birthday.
United States Minister White lias
returned to Berlin from bis trip to
Italy.
Zola’s royalties on his books during
(lie year 1900 amounted te 125,000
francs.
Sir Edwin Arnold is said to tie to
ady blind now, though he keeps up
ids literary work.
The German Ambassador at Wasn
ingtou, Herr Von Holleben, denies that
lie is to wed next fall.
Former Senator Gorman says he was
invariably mistaken at Washington
for a diplomat or a priest.
Professor Rudolph Virchow, the
German scientist, will be eighty years
old on tbe 13th day of next October.
Lieutenant B. J. Mitchell, who
helped capture Aguiualdo, is a cousin
of Funston, and only an inch taller.
Former Empress Eugenie lias never
worn anything but black since the
death of her sou, the Prince Imperial.
Lieutenant-General Miles has resort
ed to walking as an exercise, and takes
long strolls about the streets of Wash
ington.
King Edward VII. declared to an in
timate that he had no idea of tiie
1 mount of hard work the sovereignty
involved.
Germany's Crown Prince is striving
to emulate Ids father’s many sided
ness. He has now taken up the study
of the violin.
It is to Charles M. Schwab’s credit
that he is so very human that he is
still Called “Charlie” by the men
among whom he worked when a boy.
Now that Andrew Carnegie, Warner
Leeds, Henry Phipps and other steel
and iron manufacturers have bought
property on upper Fifth avenue. New
York City, that thoroughfare lias been
facetiously dubbed “Steel Trust alley,”
BANK HAS NEW OWNERS.
Institution in Crescent City Controlled
By Gothamites.
An officer of the National Park hank
at New York admitted that directors
of that institution have secured a con
trolling interest in the National Union
Bank of New Orleans. Tho New Or
leans bank has a capital of $300,000,
and deposits of $1,500,000. It is said
the capital will be increased to $600,-
000, and that representatives of the
National Park bank will hereafter di
rect. the management of the New Or
leans bank.
scoirs
Emulsion
of Cod Liver Oil is the means
of life, and enjoyment of life to
thousands: men women and
children.
When appetite fails, it re
stores it. When food is a
burden, it lifts the burden.
When youlose flesh.it brings
the plumpness of health.
When work is hard and
duty is heavy, it makes life
bright.
It is the thin edge of the
wedge; the thick end"is food.
But what is the use of food,
when you hate it, and can’t di
gest it?
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod
Liver Oil is thefood that makes
you.forget your stomach.
. if you have, not tried it. send for
free sample, its agreeable taste will
surprise you.
AnoSP*, oi ®OWNE, Chemists,
4 °?rL earl New York.
SOc. and SI.OO : a!! druggists.
ASSIGNMENTS OF BISHOPS.
Cor 'erences of Methodist Episcopal
Church, South, are Allotted
By College of Bishops.
The important work of assigning
the bishops for the annual confer
ences for the coming year was com
pleted by the college of bishops of
the Methodist Episcopal Church
South in session at Louisville, Ky„
the past week. Following are the con
ferences assigned to the various bish
ops:
Bishop Hargrove.
Kentucky Conference—Shelby ville,
Ky., October 2, 1901.
Louisville Conference Bowling
Green, October 9, 1901.
Western North Carolina Confer
ence—Gastonia, N. C., November 20,
1901.
North Carolina Conference—Fay
etteville, N C.., December 4, 1901.
Bishop Duncan.
Montana Conference—Deer Lodge,
August 29, 1901.
East Columbia Conference—Wes
ton, Oregon, September 5. 1901.
Columbia Conference—Medford, Or
egon, September 12, 1901.
Pacific Conference—Oakland, Cal.,
September 26, 1901.
Los Angeles Conference —San Die
go, Cal., October 10, 1901.
Virginia Conference Newport
News, Va., November 13, 1901.
Bishop Galloway.
Brazil Mission Conference —Rio de
Janeiro, July 12, 1901.
North Georgia Conference —Rome,
Ga., November 20, 1901.
South Carolina Conference —Colum-
bia, S. C., November 27, 1901.
South Georgia Conference—Macon,
Ga., December 4, 1901.
Baltimore Conference—Baltimore,
Md.. April 6, 1901.
Bishop Hendrix.
New Mexico Conference —Deming,
N. M., August 22, 1901.
Denver Conference —La Vet, Col.,
August 29, 1901.
Holston Conference Knoxville,
Tenn., October 9, 1901.
North Alabama Conference —Annis-
ton, November 27, 1901.
Alabama Conference Greenvile,
December 4, 1901.
Bishop Key.
Indian Mission Conference —Chicka-
sha, I. TANARUS., October 26, 1901.
Arkansas Conference—Conway, No
vember 13, 1901.
Little Rock Conference —Hope, No
vember 20, 1901.
White River Conference —Batesville,
November 27, 1961.
Bishop Fitzgerald.
Tennessee Conference —Pulaski, Oc
tober 31, 1901.
Louisiana Conference —New Iberia,
December 18, 1901.
Bishop Candler.
West Texas Conference —San An
tonio, October 31, 1901.
German Mission Conference —New
Fountain, November 7, 1901.
Northwest Texas Conference —Cor-
sicana, November 7. 1901.
North Texas Conference —McKin-
ney, November 27, 1901.
East Texas Conference —Tyler, De
cember 4, 1901.
Texas Conference —Huntsville, De
cember 11, 1901.
Cuban Mission —Cienfuegos, Febru
ary 21, 1902.
Bishop Morrison.
West Virginia Conference —Hunt-
ington, W. Va., September 4, 1901.
Illinois Conference —Murphysboro,
111.. September 19, 1901.
Memphis Conference —Dyersburg.
Tenn., November 13, 1901.
North Mississippi Conference —Wi-
nona, December 5, 1901.
Mississippi Conference McCornb
City, December 12, 1901.
Bishop Wilson.
Japan Mission Conference —Kake,
July 24, 1901.
Korean Mission —Seoul, September
14, 1901.
China Missioa Conference —Soo-
chow, October 17, 1901.
Western Conference Council
Grove, Kas., August 29, 1901.
Missouri Conference —St. Joseph,
September 4, 1901.
St. Louis Conference —Frederick-
town, September 19, 1901.
Southwest Missouri Conference —
Marshall, September 25, 1901.
Bishop Granbery.
Florida Conference —Live Oak, De
cember 12, 1901.
Northwest Mexican Mission Confer
ence —Guaymas, January 23, 1902.
AFTER COALING STATIONS.
Naval Officials Have Covetous Eyes
Upon a Number of Islands.
A Washington special says: The
attention of leading American naval
officials has been directed recently to
the advantages possessed by some of
the islands of the Azores group In the
Atlantic and of the Galapagos group
in the Pacific as sites for coaling sta
tions and naval rendezvous, and they
are urging that steps be taken by this
government to acquire rights from Por
tugal for a station in the Azores, and
from Ecuador for a like station in the
Galapagos group.
GalTestiHi Raises Relief Fuud.
Over a thousand dollars was raised
at Galveston Saturday afternoon for
the relief of sufferers at Jacksonville,
and more will follow. Committees are
at work collecting for the fund and it
is growing fast, both rich ar.d poor
contributing.
.Nashville Lives SI,OOO to Jacksonville.
The Nashville Banner has authorized
the mayor of Jacksonville to draw for
* 1 °OO subscribed by citizens of Nash
ville.
I . are . 'J , n your " ;r 1 W
Sleep fails, and you are fa
Kj on the verge of nervous 13
fej exhaustion. VS
71 What is to be done? £]
Take £J
sarsaparilla
For fifty years it has
been lifting up the dis
couraged, giving rest to
the overworked, and
bringing refreshing sleep
to the depressed.
No other Sarsaparilla
approaches it. In .age
and in cures, “Ayer’s” is
“the leader of them all.”
It was old before other
sarsaparillas were born.
$1 OD a bottle. All drufg!sU.
Ayer’s Pills aid the ac
tion of Ayer’s Sarsapa
rilla. They cure bilious
ness. 2$ cts. a box.
• 1 have used Ayer’s medicine* for
more than 40 years and have said
from the very start that you made
the best medicines in tho world. I
am sure your Sarsaparilla saved my
life when I first took it 40 years ago.
I am now past 70 and am never
without your medicines.”
Frank Thomas, P. M„
Jan. 24,1899. Enon, Kansas,
Ws'ltm tho Doctor.
If you have any complaint whatever
End desire the best medical advice you
can possibly receive, write the doctor
freely. You will receive a prompt re
ply, without cost Address,
Dr. J. C. AVER, Lowell, Mass.
NEWSY CLEANINGS.
A cyclone has swept Paraguay, de
stroying one town.
It cost $10,000,000 to build the Pan-
American Exposition at Buffalo. N. Y.
The Standard Oil Company has
made anew boiler for use 011 war
ships.
The commission to settle war claims
will he known as the Spanish Treaty
Claims Commission.
Footpads on the liivera are rivalling
Monte Carlo in tlie work of lighten
ing the purses of tourists.
A $35,000 Y. M. C. A. building lias
been offered Columbus, Ga., by George
Foster Peabody, of New York City.
The Secretary of State for India has
sanctioned a scheme for five large cen
tral asylums for the insane in India.
It now seems probable that tue San
Jose scale, which has done so much
harm iu California, came from Japan.
Mexico’s Ambassador, at Washing
ton, denies 1 lat his Government has
given a concession of laml for coloni
zation purposes.
The increase in Russian savings
bank deposits was considerably small
er in 1900 than it had been for several
years previously.
Consul Hasst'eld, of Trieste, says
that the annual coal deficit in Austria
is to be made good by tlie importation
of 18,000,000 tons.
There is a movement for a great na
tional park at the headwaters of the
Mississippi River. In extent it is to
he 1297 square miles.
The Quartermaster’s Department, at
Washington, has given orders to pro
cure at Nagasaki, Japan, a better
luality of coal for transports.
A recumbent figure of Queen Vic
toria iu white marble has been placed
over her tomb at Froguiore. It was
made forty s ago by Baron Maro
clietti at the time that he carved the
figure of the Prince Consort, which
now lies next to it, and liad been
stored away until P was needed.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Sj?
Signature of
REPUBLICANS TAKE BALTIMORE.
First Municipal Election Pulled Off
Under New Ballot Law.
The municipal election in Baltimore
Tuesday, the first one of importance
held under the new ballot law, result
ed in a sweeping victory for the re
publicans. They carried eighteen out
of the twenty-one wards, electing
eighteen members to the first branch
of city council and all three candi
dates for the second branch. Only
about 65 per cent of the entire regis
tered vote was polled, and the colored
vote was very light.
BRITISH LOAN ALLOTTED.
About One-Thlril Will U Taken By Pier
pont Morgan ami Company.
Iu the house of commons at London
Thursday. Chancellor of the Excheq
uer Sir Michael Hieks-Beach. reply
ing to Mr. Channing, liberal, said
£30,000,000 of the now loan had been
allot-ted as -f+k>ws:
To the Rothschilds, £11,000,000; J.
P. Morgan & Cb., £10,000,090, aud
the Bank of England, £9,000,000.
MR. PARK MISTI ]
I J
Jud?e Candler Turns DoJ J
gia’s Slate Treasu3 1
DECISION IN MANDAtsI ‘
I
Dark Is Directed to Use H
From Sale of North* J
Road to Pay TeacheJl
7*
■
The argument iu the mandanl
ceediugs brought .gainst qJ
State treasurer, to force him A
j the teachers 0 „t 0 f t h e pabho A ,
fund, was concluded before I
John S. Candler at Atlanta 1
•flMsoos. The judge kKlk , h(
ter under , ud M|
his decision Saturday to the eff ,
Treasurer Park must pay the vra
drawn for the teachers’ salaries,
i Iu his decision Judge Caudle
j taius throughout the position
by Attorney General J. M. Ti
his opinion given to the treasoJ
regard to making the payment
the public property fund. 1
The money that the treasure*
ricted to use to pay the teachers*
Jqdge Caudler’s decision istiigl
000 received from the sale *
Northeastern railroad, the prS
acquired after the adoption i>f ti*
stitution of 1877. This $200,(9
gether with the $77,294 83 of’S
funds in the treasury will Inrnisl®
than enough to pay the $260,3®
the amount for which warrant*
been drawn in favor of the teach*
Judge Candler concludes hit*
ion with a mandamus order dir*
the state treasurer to pay tbe U*
rants diawn in favor of the tg®
from the funds mentioned,
The court did not
que of other
property
reason, as he that,^^H*
necessary, though it g.
probabur that the suprertiSjA|
construe tho law with y M.
portion of the fund alsc
matter comes before it for ■
Judge Candler held iu
place that as a ministeri. ®SB §
Treasurer Park should have HR t
school teachers’ warrants
ing “a constitutional
lay or defeat tlie payment
warrants.”
When the warrants were
at the treasury signed hy the
and countersigned by the
general, and after the attorn
oral had given the treasurer *
ion to the effect that the tnon®
and should be paid, tlie
that it was Treasurer I’m
have made the payments wit
nig any question. This
Attorney General Tern ll stt *
beginning of the opinion.
Treasurer Park, and then ll t®P
up with an opinion to
the payments so made 1
fectly legal and proper.
Judge Candler follows r
in the case with an opiniots
the portion of the fund, S2PK
ceived from the sale of ih •
ern railroad, property which
quired after the addition of th*®i£|
tntiou of 1877. lie takes
that it was not intended by th.Hpbfl
ot the constitution to mortgage
which tbe state did not then
iu this connection he holds |Hn
clause of tlie constitution in
“so fur as relates to tho
covered by the same, should "HPI
strued by tlie same rules as
cable to the construction of mn*N®
or trust deeds between
corporations.”
Judge Candler then states thaj
view of these facts it is unhecessaA
decide the other questions raise®
tlie petition. He orders that®
treasurer make payments forth!
An appeal will be taken at 9
from the decision of Judge Cat.all
As soou as Treasurer Park Dame*
the decision he went to Macon t ®
suit his attorneys with refererjßh
the further course to be pursue* A Jj
As the treasurer suited wh'A
question first came up, he
have the opinion of the highest i®|
in the state before he piays out® !
portion of the public property )j S
ROBRKBS BEGIN SENTENd*
Penitentiary Guard Ttk.i Chestnut e-J
Jordan to Convict Canp#.
Saturday afternoon a per j ,
guard left Macon, Ga., for R [ i
having iu custody O. M. Chi K r T*
C. It. Jordan, the two white men®®
have been sentenced to tbepenitej
tiary for seven years each for robbiij
Express Messenger While. Richwot
is in Dooly county, and state convic'
are worked there in the sawmill buf
ness. Within seven days of the tPJ
of the robbery the men were cang’W
convicted, sentenced end inmates ■
the peuiteutiary. No quicker worl®
a similar character has ever b®
known in the court annuls of the st.®
PAY Folt llhAll MTXICAN. A
Uncle Sara Hands Over #2,000 fo? J,
Lynuhlng; of Flov*ntin* Snaktwfl
The state department has pain®
tho Mexican government, tbrnngh*
Mexican ambassador here, $2,00(1 ®
full indemnity to the heirs of Fla®
tino Suaste, a Mexican citizen,
was lynched iu La Salle county, t<l
as, in 1895. Thepaj.mnt was 1
vided by congress out of humane ail
sideration, and without refereucAJ
tlie auestion of federal liability. 1