Newspaper Page Text
VO Li! M K 17
^Griffin . (in.
Orittlit D d"' ’iv*elpliu-kienl, iihi-i pro
•fWM'iW tt>W> ->t Georgia. 1 It!- i' ll'l 1)J 1 i-
re' glica'. ilr-iv ■ lion. lit tli'- ......, 1.1 re ti • ;.
. jjTt> year* w;i| show.
§5 (I Durini; lh»t time It lias tan• It a .<i put into
m of>t (access fill ope ration a #100,000 mi iuu
factory auJ is- now building another with
nearly twice the capital. It has pnt up a
’ a ge iron anl ' ,irnr " i foundry, a fertilizer fa
an immense ire and bottling works, a
6 aih and blind faetory, a broom factory
eued up the finest granite quarry in the
,,Pelted State", and has many other enter-
*iprises in outemplation. It has secured
f Miotbet allroad ninety miles long, and whi!
1 uoateu on the greatest system in the South,
the OentrA has secured connection with its
important rival, the East Tennessee, Virginia
. *nd Georgia. It has just secured direct inde¬
pendent W> st, connection and has the with President Chattanooga of fourth and
• the a
I fgjiroad residing here and working
w Its uitiiua'e completion. With
its five white and three colored
eharches, it is now building a #!U,tX)0 new
Presbyterian church. It ha- increased iU
population by nearly one fifth. It luts nt-
trscted around its borders fiuit growers from
nearly every State in the Union, until it is
now surrounded on nearly every side by or
ehards and vineyard. It is the home of the
grspe and its wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully
-..“taaejfwatcd a system of public hcIoio s, witl
1 seven years curriculum, second to a one.
a
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply shows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
wilder, in the world.
Griffis is the county seat of Spalding
're county, situated in west Middle Geo gia, with
» healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1160
feet above sea level. Hy the census of 1800, it
will have at a low estimate between *1,000 and
t,«00 people, and they are allot tin righi
sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
eebi tnestrangers ami anxious to secure dv
siiabie .-ettlers, whowill not be. any U-re. we)
vouie if they bring mom ) to help i>uild up
the town. There is about only one thing w<
need badly just uow, and that is a big hotci
We have several small ones, but their aecoiu
| modations are entirely too limited for our
bisinese, pleasure and health seeking guests.
If you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin.
Griffin is the place wltei - the Gbim-tx
News is published—daily ami weekly—the
i.est newspaper in the Empire state ot the
| oeorgia, Pletse eiu lo- stamps in sen ny
for sample copies.
This bnet saetcii will umivcr -July 1st
18SS. By January 1st, 188‘d, it will have lobe
changed to keep up with the times.
r-UhLOiil Ji'i.'\L UliU. I i i i
H ENRY C. PtEPLE-.
A I r O it N E Y L A vv
HAMk’TUN, (*EOULlv
Fractivt*,' m h: 1 luc Stut© auti i s ;.i,;l
( uurift, o« f’.MtViv,is
J NO. J. HiiNT,
A T I O It N E \ * I L A W
GRIFFIN. (lifiOHUlA.
oaictf, 61 Hill All tel, Up Stair*, o\vr 1 .
White’s Clothing Store »jar22diSw 1
I.IUSMLKS V M •Xli.UKS
OfSMUKE & COLLiWS.
LAWYERS,
OHIFF 1 N, t»A.
i> hoe,first room in Agricultural Bui- n
.stairs. uiarl-difcwtf
THOS. R. ?u!EL >
r T O B N E i T * '
GRIFFIN. <lt
■a ,11 practice in tin- ‘State am: I •
G.Hi'th. Office, over Georgr »v H-a’
.> ir rt.
( B .s l>. STBWAbT. EOIU I. US'
STEWART & OAf‘itEL
ATTORNEYS AI L \ re
Over George & Hartnett’s, Gr. . 1
Will practice in the SU.ie ■ :
. ourts.
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT EASY
WOODBURY, : : GEORGIA.
i unapt attentioa given to all business
AM practice in all the Courts, and where
ever business calls.
yr Collections a specialty. aprbdiy
-AND—
HEADQUARTERS FOR FLAT SHOALS
CORN WHISKY.
Also, all kinds "i Wim'S, Liquors
and Oiyar6such as are kept m bod'. a nrst
class eetablishment. Every To, :s
nvited to call and see me at N
West side Hill street,
s21dA*3rr> JOHN ISON.
New Felts
Jl tJT RECEIVED!' AT
MRS. M. L. WHITE’S
Millinery Store.
Clark Building. Corner ofJHill and
Broadway.
TV* ^ f - If - 4*4 *11*7* ■ .-*■■■# '■■<£** »t
-
iv t v IS HIE
Charges ot Pecksniff Shepard are
Consistently Refuted.
1 THE south owes its success
TO THE SOUTH.
All of the Mines, Mint Furnaces itml Other
Enterprises arc Backed by South¬
ern llratnsaml Capital— \n-
Other Lie Nailed.
Nashville. Dec. 0.—The American
prints an interview with Col. A. M.
Niu ok, gen r .1 manager of the Tennes-
se • t oal. iron and Railroad eoriipaiiv.
It says :
The republican organ and
of tiie Vaudcibiit interests since l he elec¬
tion of Mr. Harrison inis thrown aside
all di8gni.se in it- editorm! columns ami
daily ponys In. ■. ia!> of its impotent
wrath upon the solid south,' The
."news columns of the paper are now
wedded to the same course of malice and
misrepresentation, a« its utterances upon
the ma.Ciial udvamvmentof tins s.ction
illustrated. The Mail and Kxprcss. with
a fine flourish, proclaimed that the pro
gross of tli ninth is largely due te
"Northern capital and northern enter¬
prise."
■There are two furnaces in the south,"
said Mr. Shook, "operated hy northern
men. One is the Pioneer furna o. at Bir¬
mingham, which is owned by the Thom¬
ases, of Pennsv iv.inia, and of which
Samuel Thomas i, president. The other
Is the Eureka furnace, tit Oxmoor. Ala.,
six miles south of Birmingham. Tills
furnace ia owned by the Louisville and
Xa.hville railroad company and Cincin¬
nati capitalists exclusively.and managed
by Thomas \. Ma d, foruaerlv of (Cincin¬
nati.
"The other furnaces in the Birming¬
ham distri't arc owned and managed bv
the following parlies: Slosh Iron and
Steel company. now "( crating four fur¬
naces. largely owned by Richmond and
Birmingham capitate is. and managed !>>
Thomas Siddom formerly of Richmond.
Y a . and. by the wa\ a son of the old
Confederate cabiai i iclic. r of the same
name. There are \ furnaces in tiiis
district on nod I* the Tennessee (_Val,
Iron and l.ailroad company which are
immediately Hillman. in charge of Ten no. sec C.
Loth the names "Tinnessee”
and "Hillman ' aiv purely southern, anil
su inseoarabl of v i onnet ted with the manu-
fa ture iron m me s,„,„, ,, _
less to rebate whether this is a southern
con era,
;ther tiirnacoH in the Birmingham
d, tisot are the Mary Pratt Furnace com
;•••! v. owned and managed largely by
tli t nd<. rn <> d Birmingham the
Williamson Fuimi ■ company, m» ne 1
and Birmingham, managed by Mr. Williamson, "f
who. b- it said to bis cred¬
it, started a small machine shop in Kir-
miimham about twelve years ago, and
by close large attention business, and hard and work built it
up to a in that shop
built every part of tins furnace himself,
and then put it tip himself, and is now
running it himself.
"The Dcbardeletieii Coal anil Iron com¬
pany at Bessemer, the president of which
is Henry- K. Debardeleben, who is per¬
haps the vvi althicst arid most i nterpris-
ing man in the Pinuingliam iron dis¬
trict. is a southern mao. He has always
been identiiiod with Alabama industries,
and married a Miss Pratt, of Alabama,
after whom the celebrated Pratt Mines
are named, and for whom the Mary
Piatt Furnace was named. lie has as¬
sociated with him a number of South
Carolina capital!-:.-, h is hardly southerners. neecs-
scry to mi ■ that they arc
They own and operate building two furnaces at
Bassem -r, an i are three more.
"There is a furnace being built at Trus-
viile. about fourteen miles north of Bir¬
mingham, in which there is some north¬
ern ra da! inve-ted: I don't know how
much.
"At (Gadsden. Ala., the <fads,ion fur¬
nace, built by Lewis controlled S. Colyar, of south¬ Teu-
res-c .is tied and by
ern capital. Mr. < olyar is also building
a .chare .d furnace at Attalhi.
At Vnuiston. Ala., the Nobles, who
have Ce i identitied with the south and
the cev, lojc: eyi of the iron industry largest
here for thirty years, are the
owners of a;i the f urnaces for both coke
and • lum-<>al.
• \t shed: eld there are five furnaces,
own d ami controlled by southern men.
Col. K AY. i oV. of Nashville, being pres¬
ident of three of them. Enoch t n-ley, of
Memphis, of one. anil Alfred H. Moses,
of Montgomery, of the remaining one.
Tiicr ■ is one furnace at Florence and
,one at Dc< atur. both largely owned by
’eoutheiTi men
"Two furnac s at West Nashville arc
owned almost exclusively by Nashville
parties. The AA’arner Iron company, the
.Etna Iron company and the LaGrange
Iron company, of which Mr. J. C. AVar
ner, of Nadivide, is president, are all
owned and controlled by southern men.
‘•The Hising Fawn furnace, of Dade
Count -, (la.. iielongs to the Dade Coal
companv. of which is president <Iov. and Joseph principal K.
Brown, of Ga .
lowncr. Ti.e Chattanooga Iron company
is al-u owned and controlled by Gov.
Brown and the Dade ( oal company,
The Citico Furnace company have one
furnace at i hattanooga, of v\ hich Capt.
H. N. Chaiub riain is president, Cleveland. ( apt. O.,
Chamberlain came from
as a voung man, about the close of the
war. and went to work with Gen. Wilder
at Rock furnaces wood. at He that has place now in in addition operation to
two
the one at Citico. This property is less
distinctive!-. - inthern than any other in
the sout'> while all the men that are
.
now connected with it were not raided
111 the oiitb. tin y haw Is-en there about
twenty years. T- there fur-
• At liuv ton, cn.. are two English
naces. mi ned exclusively by
capitalist*, of which Sir Tit ;- Salt is the
principal The Tent.- owner. Coal. Iron and Railroad
see
corapenv : a e four furnaces in Tenner-
tm three at South Pittsburg and one at
Cowan This is non trolled by so ithern
men. with Nat IltUman Baxter, vice-president, jr.. president anu
Tenne»s.
A. M Shook manager
'JRIFFLN. OKORG1 A. Fill DAY MORN 1 NO. DKCRM 11 Kll 7. isse.
STI 1 , 1 , A - G HKSSI Nti.
Yankee NoPmis of Aspirants for tlie
Corning Cabiuet.
BLAINE.HOAR. LONG THURSTON
AND HAWLEY
Matue Will l,c SiiliilU-.l Wtlli lt»e l’luliicil
(vnljjlit or Notliinj?—M usmm-Ikim'IN
ItKull l.nmlly for Frl-tMi-
flour—Little fthody.
Pohti.vM), Me.. Dec. (i.— Maine repub¬
licans know JamesG. Blaine better titan
they ,1" President-Elect llatri >n. II is
their wish that Blaine should bo secre¬
tary of state, and it is the general "pin
ion that he will lie—if he wishes it. But
he has not .-is yet intimated to any one
here thal he has been asked. He is a
man, however, Who keeps bin ow n coun
sel, and ii he is not Harrison* Secretary
of state every man in Maine will say it
was because be preferred private life.
No one here believes for an instant re-
ports printed regarding his becoming
senator. Newspaper mention bus been
made of Congressman Boutelle as secro
h.uffch /
telle was a naval officer of ability, al it is
the conservative opinion that he is bettet
titteil for flit legitrfafive chamber. Ben
ator Fry e and Congressman Dingley are
ambitious, and in the opinion of their
friends either would be an efficient cabi¬
net officer.
But with Mr. Blaine as secretary of
state and Tom Reed as speaker of the
house. Maine will U.> satisfied.
Concord, N. H . I G.—it is not
considered probalu- that New Hamp¬
shire will bo represented in the cabinet.
Win. K. Chandler, ex - cretary of the
navy, is in the fiel i as his own successor
to the United Stair, senate, and lifts a
long declined lead over Jacob II. Gallinger, whu
a re-election to the house that
he might enter the senatorial lists. Mr.
Gallinger seconded the nomination of
Harrison at Chicago, and it has been
suggested that he might be solaced with
u cabinet office.
Montpelier, At., Dec. ft.—Uedlkld
Proctor is the only A ermouter mention¬
ed for a cabinet position. He was chair¬
man of the Vermont delegation at Chi¬
cago and cast th>- eight votes of this
state for Harrison iir.-t, last and all tho
time. He is 57 years old. He is a grad¬
uate of Dartmouth and was colonel of
the Fifteenth A’ermont volunteers. Hr
was governor from 1 h?m to 1880. He is
a leading marble producer and a wealthy
man.
Boston, Dee. ti.—There are many Mas¬
sachusetts men who are mentioned in
9RJMI?cUm make 'Uiii.Lbe^abinjt. efficient Therjuys Mr.
would an successor to
Bayard. One Boston John daily Long, is advocating but the
the claims of D.
general afford opinion is that Ex-Gov. Mr. Long Robin¬ could
not legal ability to accept. services
son’s and party arc
the basis of the claim of his friends that
he AV. should Hoard, be former attorney general. A latino!) is
state treasurer, al-o
suggested as being R. I.. good cabinet *!.—Benjamin timber.
Providence, Dec.
F. Thurston is the man many Rhode
Island Republicans would liko see attor¬
ney general. He i.-, ono of tiie leading
patent lawyers in the country, and his
practice before the supreme court has
been large.
Hartford, Conn., Dec. 3.—General
Joseph R. Hawley has been mention, d
m connection with Gen. Harrison's cab¬
inet. When seen. Gen, liawley mid
that he expected nothing from the Har¬
rison administration, that he was con¬
tent to remain in the senate, and that
rumors connecting his name with a cab-
net portfolio were without foundation.
No other Connecticut man has been
prominently inentio .oil.
1 extraordinary Miscarriage of .Justice,
hoy DOS, Dec. ti. —[Special.]—An ex¬
traordinary miscarriage of justice ha?
just come to light, notwithstanding the
efforts of the authorities to keep the af¬
fair secret.
Two men named Brauigan and Mur¬
phy have been released afi r nine years'
penal , ervitude for a burglary of which
they were innocent. The burglary was
committed Northumberland, at Edlingham A'icarage,
in 1879, and was of a
mmt sensational character. The vicar’s
daughter heard a noise in the house and
called her father. Both of them de¬
scended, the vicar armed with an old
sword, to the floor where the burglars
were. One of the, burglars fired, and
the small shot struck Ixith the vicar and
bis daughter. But noither.of them could
identify their assailants.
The men were convicted on purely cir¬
cumstantial evidence, and it is now al¬
leged that essential links were manufac¬
tured by reported the police. that Gaixmchaie
It is Mr. will
bring 'lie matter before |»arliaiiient at an
early day.
AN ARCTIC- EXPLORER RET CRN ED.
III*fAompnnion Yet t'» Tell III# Talc* of Suf¬
fering an«I
Berlin, Dec. 5. - fSpecial.]—A com¬
panion "f Dr. Nansen, the adventurous
young Norwegian physician, who start
ed last summer to cro-s the inland ice of
Greenland, has returned to this city
He reports that b- left the doctor and
his friends m good health, and that they
had succeeded in their task, which was
performed on snow shoes.
The returned traveler rc-lao-s that 79
days wilderness. had t« en spent in crossing the icy
The party were sorely
pressed had for supplies, provided for for their only scanty
stores been two
month-.
Dr. Nant«u will not reach here until
next May. and until then the details of a
trip the over of a region will hitherto be unknown untrolden by
foot man.
Hilled on the Trsrk.
Everett, Mass,, Dec. 6. — [Special.]—
Geo. W. Qtimhy, aged 24, and Abby I*
Wiggin-. ageit. were killed by a tram
on the Boston and Maine road last night
whiie walking on the track. Both oodles
were horriblv mangle l.
A CARNIVAL OF < AStU.AI.TIFS.
Iaif* in the Metropolis Nowata *, far From
Being » Joke,/
New York, Dec. 0.—[Special.]—This
city has been the scene this morning of
several sensational casualties.
Louis Souland, waiter at Delmomco s.
attempted suicide with a razor
Louis Eichman, a German sailor, was
found at an elevated fioad station with
his throat cut and stab wounds in his
stomach and wrist. His injuries are pro¬
nounced necessarily fatal. It is supposed
he committod suicide.
Thomas Powers, a sailor, fell from the
masthead of the steamer Devonia, now
in port, to the deck, receiving -erioiis in¬
juries.
t'onrad Burkliardt jumped from the
roof of a A-pfory tenement to the side¬
walk, and was instantly killed.
Christian Kliner cut himself horribly
in the stomach with a razor, with stii
oidal intent, and will probably die.
TOOK or.VS INSTEAD OF GUMS.
And !*o tin* K-aili'oad Coropany Sued for
a Minion Dollar*.
NrmxGFiELD, 111., Dec. 6.—[Special.]—
The case of (’obb, Christy & Co., against
the Illinois Central railroad for a million
dollars damages is being argued in the
appellate court here to-day'.
t obb, Christy & Co., bought a large
amount of corn alon the liue of the Illi-
nois Centra! for the government during
,
the war. which the railroad could not
take as freight, .as the capacity of the
road was exhausted in transporting mu¬
nitions of war, and the corn was dam¬
aged before it could be delivered.
MILLERS ro MEET.
of No. 1 Hard to Confer in Mil¬
waukee on tin* 1 7t!» December.
Minneapolis, Jlinn., Dec. ti. The
Northwestern Miller states that enough
answers have hi on received from the
millers of St. Louis. Buffalo. Milwaukee,
Chicago, Minneapolis, and other ] oinfs,
to make it reasonable certain that the
proposed millers' conference at Milwau¬
kee, on tin- 17th of December, will tak'
place.
OlHriul Vot<* of New York.
Albany, Doc. b.- The state board ol
canvassers uiet in the office of the secre¬
tary of state at noon yesterday. A reso¬
lution announcing the constitutional
amendment adopted was carried. The
official vote of the state was announced
as follows :
Governor—Hill, (>30,-K>4; Miller. A’l.
293; Join s. 30.910; Hall. 0,338; Page,:!!:!:
AVardner, 30; blank, defective. et<. )
587. Total. 1,317,300.
Lieutenant governor Jones. 000,801:
Cruger. 028,6)7: Powell. 30.288; Putt
576; blank, defective, etc.. 1.090. Total.
1.817,487.
Ugly Charges.
Con. mbps, O., Dec. 0.—It is rumored
that when the g> neral assembly recon¬
venes in January steps will be taken to
investigate the management of the re¬
cent so-called Ohio Centennial Exhibi¬
tion. It is alleged that there has been
some remarkable with juggling the of forty-day figures in
connection recent
show. all creditors There have is a been large asked shortage, to discount and
their bills 25 per cent. As none of the
officers of the board have to furnish a
sworn statement to anybody, opportuni¬
ty is ottered for "addition, division and
silence."
Gold in Montana Sovrer*.
Helena, .Mont. Dec. 6.—A second
mineral strike in the streets of Helena
ha- been made. The first was about a
month ago on the principal street of
placer gold. The present strike is in the
residence portion of the city of gold
quartz, the vein being seven feet wide
and assaying handsomely. the The residence discov¬
ery is located in ff-nt of of
Thomas Cruse, who sold the Drumlum-
on mine for $1,000,000. Property excited. owners
in the vicinity are much
The Parn«dl Con>niiK*ion.
London, Doc. <i.—[Special.]—Patrick
Malloy, arrested for refusing the sub-
prena of the Parnell commission, has
been sent to jail, and will be examined
to-morrow. The Times people expect
important testimony, as it is belived
Malloy is fully acquainted with the facts
concerning the murders of Cavendish
and Burke, will implicate and it is certain thought Irish ilia leaders. testi¬
mony
Th« Hevf nteenth Mbgouri Itiver liridg#
Siovx City, Iowa, Dec. '-.—jSpecial. J
The new Chicago and Northwestern rail¬
way bridge was formally opened and
tested here yesterday. It makes the sev¬
enteenth bridge no bridge w spanning the Mis¬
souri rivt r The is a truss, has
four maoi -pan-, each 400 feet long, and
59 feet above tin- a ter, length of bridge
and pproaches. four miles; cost. $1,000.
| 000
j 8*70,000 for Taspott’* Capture.
I j Dec. 6. —[Special.]—Mrs.
( HiCAOO.
j ! Henrietta L. Snell, widow of the mur¬
dered millionaire, A. J. Snell, to-day an¬
i she will $5 i,0u0 for
j nounced tiiat pay the
capture of AVilliam B. Tascott in any
part of the wopld. This reward is of¬
fered on the same terms as the last re¬
ward of $20,000. and will to good for
four months.
Atlanta's Mayor-Elect
j j Atlanta, Dec. 6.—[Special.]-John
j Thomas Glenn will be tendered a recep¬
tion by his constituents in honor of his
| election for mayor of Atlanta
j Mr Glenn's majority was an even one
thousand, and the entire conservative
| ticket was successful.
j :
I Knocked Out tn tho titk (lotinu
) has Francisco, Doc 6 —[Special.]—
j Young Mitchell, of this city, champion
middleweight of the Pacific coast, and
Paddy Gorman, of Austral^.fought night hare
for a purse of $850 last uortnan
was knocked out in the twenty seventh
round
i.Ufiir abort uaovi n.
Acruvi'd «»f iliitfiki f)«T*lo|N»(t .t I «>u«lnr*«
for Strong: J augttagf-
AVashinoton. Dec. (V- -One ot the
most vexatious duties the president ha*
tojierform is to make certain army ap¬
pointments which nifty b m.ule from
the civil ranks ot life (>/!< m meat pres¬
sure ia brought to liear particularly of
a social nature, to indue him t" take up
some family pet and pul'him over the
beads of army officers w ho have fairly
earned promotion. The president has
always and been opposed had to this sor; of thing, with
lias not too much patience
those who* have sought to change his
will. One dai la t week, uwo.uan. a
society civil woman, railed on him to urge a
president appointment of this {irmly kind. The
Then the politely enlisted but said no. of
woman the services
a bureau chief, who is on good terms
with the president. The chief called.
“5 ho woman, you know," ho saul to .Mr.
Cleveland, "will not rako no for an an¬
swer." "1 am glad you have come," tho
president retorted, "for 1 can —.* say to you
what I wanted to say to Mrs. 1 can’t
make the Appointment, she knows I
can't make it; and I'll be d—d if 1 will
make it . even if she brings all the women
in Washington to urge it." The matter
ident was dropped right there. Even tho pres¬
of the United .States can be par-
dorn il for swearing in a good cause,
IN ( ON*. It ESN.
Tint !!*•« I In\«*■*!fgulIon to be ( ur
rlf«l on.
Washington, Dee. The president
jii'ii tern, laid before the senate certified
eopie of ee: titieutes received by the
state Kansas, department from the governors of
Mary land, North i arolina and
Georgia, eject ah to the result of the election
for irs for president and vice-presi¬
dent. Ibis is in accordance with the
law passed in ISX7, re uiring copies of
those certificates to be forwarded to the
two bouses of congress by the secretary
of state Mr. Sherman raised the <jue*
tion its in itie constitutionality of tho
the law, ami the papers were refen ed to
the committee on privileges.
Al 1 :U5 the senate resumed the eotisid-
er.Tt.yn of the tariff bill.
Washington. IXc. (>. [Special.] - In
the Senate Thursday a resolution was
adopted giving the committee ill vesti¬
ge till-.; the dressed beef trust the right to
sit after the close of tho present session
of congress.
Senator Blair introduced a hill estab¬
lishing bureaus of information and aid
d i persons in iml gent circumstance*.
The m nate tin n took up the tariff bill.
In the hou-e the res gnat ion of Con-
givs n an Perry Belmont was received
and announced hy the speaker. The'bili
refunding dicot tax was taken up and
mi agreement made for a vote on it
Wednesday next.
U tility's NEW BREAK,
rrincipifts.
East Saginaw, Mich.. Dor. 6.—(Spe¬
cial.]—T. D. Barry has issued a mani
festO to the w orking people of America,
announcing himself the leader and
founder of a new la! or movement, to be
kno.vn as the Ihnth'-rlion-l of United
Labor.
! lie cardma) pfin iple- ot the brother¬
hood are :
1 li st - the right o: man to the use of
tin- earth. Second be taking from usu-
i r.. and shylorks tli r glit to control our
currency Third t in-government own¬
er hip of the mean > of tran porting [>cr-
ons. freight and inielligunce, and taking ot
tho- e engin s of human happiness out
ill - hands of stock gamble:'* and spacu-
lator- and operate iheni for the benefit
of pnxhx t r and consumer.
V <o*i of tlio HliniliiKham Mnhleiei.
Atlanta, Dec. T {Special. [--This
morning tho ch ef of |iolico received a
t< legram from the chief of police of Bir¬
mingham asking if any of the children
of Richard U. Hawes were in Atlanta.
Hawes is in jail in Birmingham for
the suppo-e 1 murder of his daughter.
A ro|Hirter went with the police to the
residence of Hawes brother. 140 Walton
street, and found there AN j 11 >• -, a little
soli of K. K Haw e , aged live years. Tho
child ha-, been here - veral months,
\ \ iriou* Anar« hl*t.
Indiana! (H.is, Dec. *i. George Hack¬
er, a socialist, yesterday murderously as-
saulted his Is nefactor and employer, J.
A. Bruce, a baker. Uonceahng himself
in the 'oakery, he sprang upon Bruce,
driving a p imard nine times into him
and laying his bead open with a hatchet.
Mrs. Bruce heroically came to the rescue
of her husband, seized tie- murderer by
the ishing throat bis work and prevented Tin* him from tin-
cause of the as
mult was Hni'e g d -fime of the Ameri¬
can government and his reproof <-f Hack¬
er's anarchism. *
w and th# .V«tr Cabinet,
Wasihnuton, Dec. 6. —Hon. John C.
New, ot Indiana, when asked to-day to
what cabinet office he aspired, said:
••I have not male up my mind yet,
and neither has Gen Harrison. I'll tell
what 1 do know, though, and that is
iliat the coming president has not come
to any conclusion as to any one of hia
cabinet officers. H - has not made a
single galiou promise, and he and he is under 'ork no obli-
lias not got to • yet
to make up his- slate.”
1 lie Stamlxnl '>*i’Com pa").
Lima. O., i)ec. 6 .— [Bpecial.] — The lat¬
est projei I - f the Standard Oil company
is the construction of a jfijie line from
ihiscity to St. Ixitiis, for the trans{>oi ta-
tion vf on for distribution over ti»e south¬
ern and < nth western states.
1 he St [xiuis line will be built after
| the ii anner of one and already iu q»e the be¬
tween this city icing ( hicago and
right of way is secured Active
work will be commenced in the spring.
ii l;«.tliy .iljvf.
New York, Doc. 6. —[Special.]— The
Herald priRfc+advire* received from Lon
dm wliicti -»>y a runic* has rea ched Bon¬
ny fro* the proceeding Upper Niger the that back Henrv of the M.
Stanley is at the Briual,
gTeat oil liver- uttuer ftag,
and tha* the natives are frt«>d|v
*•&.' m
TKA<‘H 1 -\(i A \ A H( IIV.
Young “Ideas Taught How to
and Barn.
SOCIALISTIC SCHOOLS AT NEW
YORK'S VERY DOOR
Ood end »hs Scripture, end Other
Fe,hloued Idee, Kttrerted From
the Infant Mind—Socle! Rev-
olntlon ef Blood.
Nkw York, Dec. 8.—School where
doctrines of socialism and anarchy
to b« inculcated in the mind* of
children will toon achieve a
foothold in this city.
This evening the "HocialistUche
SchuLo erein." or, i»» it would be
in English, "Socialistic school associa
tion,” is to meet at its central school
building. No. 142 East Fourth street,
disease ways arid means for encourag¬
ing attendance at those of their
already in existence, ns well as for ar¬
ranging to establish additional “Red’’
kintergarten* throughout tenement
tricts where poverty and discontent,
with the present conditions, promise fer
tiie soil.
Similar ‘‘Sunday-schools’' during the
past few months liave sprung up like
mushrooms in tho revolutionary quar¬
ters of Chicago, and thousands of young
children, who sit under the instruction
of prominent anarchist agitators, ara
taught that the true heroes of the nine¬
teenth century urn five men who died
upon the “Anarchist Calvary," at the
gallows in Cook county jail of Novem¬
ber II, 1887, have been denominated.
The principal down-town socialist school
is located in the building of the “Freie
Deutsche Nehule."at No. 142 East Fourth
street, ami boasts of four male teachers,
including l’rof. Rosenberg, secretary of
the national executive committee of the
socialist party.
Rosenberg Speaking of the Fourth street school,
said : •
AVe have an attendance every .Satur¬
day morning ami afternoon of upward
of two hundred children, mostly Ger¬
and mans, Russian though Polos. there are many Bohemian
All instruction is
given William in i ho German language by myself,
< iuudelach and two o.her teach¬
ers. Children are taught the ordinary
courses of study and singing."
“But are they not instructed in tho
principles of socialism asked the re¬
porter. "Well,
we call it 'natural science,’ and
then vve have exercises in ‘logical think-
logibaTxhimfing. thinker become >jno mum and oe mentally U tog teat
to a true
well equipped socialist."
‘Does this study embrace any com¬
ment Oh, on religious don't beliefs ’t"
we sav anything at>out God
ami the scriptures, one way or another,'*
he replied. That is. we make no direct
statement in the affirmative or in the
negative in reference to Christian doc¬
trines, but we teachers, as well as all
members of our school as ociation, are,
of course, thoroughbred free thinkers
and socialists, and when the young mind
is imbued with tho right fundamental
ideas from the Ktart, there is little dan¬
ger that it will stray into the church
crowd later on."
From other sources it was learned that
in this and other socialist schools pupil*
are taught to regard the rich as their
natural enemies, who must, as soon as
possible, bo overthrown. Teachers take
pains to impress upon their pupils that
because of these rich men and corpora¬
tions the jKsir are growing poorer with
the result of soon creating a race of ab¬
ject slaves. Next the little ones are told
that there is no such thing as a future
life. When man dies he is dead, and
that is the last of him. His memory
may live, but his soul does not. In fact,
all Ridicule religion is is sneered at.
priests, who heaped denounced upon preachers and
are as charla¬
tans and tricksters, wtiose only wim is
get money out of their followers.
equality of mankind is taught, and the
axiom hammered into the heads of
children that no man should have
exclusive right toproperty or the instru¬
ments of production. All property
should Ixi m common, as no man could
produce unaided. anything Their or accumulate any¬
thing object in life, it is
argue-J. is to prepare for a s<x;ial revolu¬
tion, in which they are to be active par¬
ticipants.
Besides the school on Fourth street,
the socialist party controls a similar in¬
stitution at Fast Seventy-eighth
and Second avenue, with Herr Bach as
principal, being more the than average 20b children. attendance
ia to be founded on the West side, near
Wes' Fifty-fourth street and Tenth ave¬
nue while in Brooklyn the socialist sec
ti n ha- no levs than three schools,
la-t week an evening school for the
agation of socialist ideas among the
young was opened at Zubetti's hall
Centra! avenue, Jersey City Heights
The miiJ Knoliber*
Sl’Rt.s'OFiF.LD. Mo. Dec. 5.— Col.
arrested at Seymour Friday night, is
trial. Silsby is a notorious
and w as arrested on the specific
of intimidating government witnesses
the last term of the federal court at
ferson City. Jack Silsby. a brother
the colonel, was convicted on
testimony of Henry Ragsdale, of
county. A few months ago
Silsby, with a gang of
visited Ragsdale s home. Taking
out. thev first hanged him to a limb
nearly dead, and then tying him to
1 j tree whipped him with hickory
Ragsdale is yet in a precarious
from he the took. assault John Silsby Matthews boasts of
part banged the 11th, and Wm. ia to
on
the bald-knobber chieftain, on the
of the present month, at Ozark.
There GanrraMon- Hurnrti io Drath.
Plymouth, Ont., Dec. ft—
Michael Dwyer's house, about
j mile* from here, was burned this morn
iRg Mrs Dwyer, tier daughter
three -cinWren were burned ~
death
NUMBER 241
| ^ee^v though led.
A CatleeMae at VnvareltluW Sale* that
Flesh Over the Busy Wire.
Eleven prisoners in the Council Muffs.
Ik . ^ail made their 'escape Four w«r*
recaptured.
Hmallpox I tea made its appenran—
among viile, the garrison stationed* mown*-
let.
Mr*. William Brown, agnd sixty, of
Marion. <\. had a violent fllof noogteng
and died in fifteen minutes.
ettTka&asjtisae: was arrested at I ronton, O.
Harper in the Jordan has been ooavieted of
mntier first degree at Clarksville.
Ky. He killed John Nolan.
Orlando Smith, of CtaMtaaatf, hm
been elected president of the Bt kb s t|
and Conneilsville railroad company.
Joshua Hazelwood was shot by Leu
Houston and fatally injured daring a
quarrel about a women at K)co, IB.
John Rommel, of O., at-
morphine.
wid McKinley Reed of of Maine, Ohio. Gaunon td Ottnaift
the are all c andidate# for 1
speakership of the next house of
representatives,
Win. White, a prominent business sue*
of Cincinnati, fell down an elevator
sliaft and received injuries which may
probably result fatally.
P. J. Chaes, aged 82, and Mrs. 8umk
Ann Boston. Tilton, aged 83. were married rt
Chase had •sen bis bride but
three times.
Mrs. James O. Blaine, Jr., wflt go an
the stage. She will continue the prang*
oution against hyr husband, and wfshee----
to sara money to push Urn caee.
sasKSB-asanfsnsjt At Friendship, Dearborn county, lad.,
turner, aged 51, who has Id children.
At Fairview, Ky., Sam Finch was shot
in the breast and ana and fatally wound-
ed. but by whom is no* known, as tfw
difficulty occurred out doom and a num¬
ber of shots wem Bred.
Ira A. Spaulding, one ef oountyTUdi the largset
land holders in BUckfOrd
ana. Montpelier was fatally by hurt Sunday waedtMng eventing at
a colt be
jumping off a high embankment
Angier. General^ •. of Oeorgia, Inagstwet celled and IBs Gen. H«F-
. on
rbon at iadiaaaaoiu Mo nda y Onnemi
U.ngstr------ oiitical rant .......T» denied that there . wee mf
j significance in the vhw.
Thomas B Barry ss '-f
commence ‘
phia against *
___
character through its and officers, allagvd far Wnekmail. — ■
attacked George James Huoker, Bruce, a 0 - c
because the latter was ,-sk
iatic ideas. U acker i_ _
hatchet, inflicting eleven vesy
wounds.
W. C. Brown, a load agent fer (fee
Singer Sewing Machine company iferjat in Le-
s;;
alysis of the heart.
R. P. Hawes, commonly known ne
“Dick" cs Hauee, uttuse, an ma engin engin e ee er r on on t_____ the Geor¬
gia Pacific Rot' “ railroad, “ ‘ who * was amstvd “*
of ......has M<nda hts iv daughter, night, t, charged charged made with with the the t mu rder '
ifedeclt fftrteftnt)—i a etatemeut
in jail. . He declares to the el
authorities that hois Inaoott.. the hor¬
rible crime.
THU UKOaOIA ]
—In .*
Atlanta, Dec. • — [Special.] Ihg
house, the appropHation bill waa taksB
up at section 6. The appropiattga ef
«15,000 for the deaf and dumb institulo
was increased Harrell, to $17,000, Decatur, and, on m ttaad ot i o n
of Mr. of the
are to he sent homo woo a yeas to shut
their parents and friends.
The bill prepared provided by the appropriation
committee fli0,WP Cor the in¬
sane asylum. Mr. Arnhefm moved to
amend ported hie by substituting position by #175,000, long end and sup¬
t power¬ : I
ful speech on the waste and extrevn-
•xpei mded since 1881
9350, iunatics alone. annually ]ly Money for for the is • ed—nh of tho
rio* too high. He thought that 98,086
could be saved.
Dr. Felton replied briefly. He made
an lie eloquent thought defense Gov. of Gordon the manageaNut, would
nut
continue any man in office if any nheius could
of dalinqnency or mcompetouoy
be brought against him.
The ntnnUtr of patienU had bosn in
increased by ill, and the supervieor had
made a careful statement before the ap¬
propriation committee that 9186,000 was
could the least amount properly conducted. at which the asylum
)*.-
sixty Thousand Dollar Fir*
Wnrr Surwiion, Wia, Dec. ft—[Spe¬
cial.]—A fire yesterday destroyed Cattle the
buildings of the Powder River
company near here, f-oea, 980,000. jg
surance 922,000. The fire resulted nem
spontaneous combustion.
DAILY MARKET REPORTS
,sre> ixtx .1 KKvoarixD it Kivn a eatrrm
\ TLA XT A. Oft., LNMMMMMir !■
Opemojr and t'iuauic <jtxrt*«frot of rotonm
tufffff in sIaw York tA-affijr*
Opvetoe
Brtwntv I.JU8 IN
Jaauary
fetiruxt) ......
Hats ir
Apm ......
Jua*
July ...........
August
•sptxunovr OcAobei-
.
Noremocr ft
Ctseed weedy Saha. J 7k
reentpw axv.'.l.
■ blras* NxHM.
Cucaso, OL, Daoaashsr A
Wheal
December
January
Stay
Oorm
, December
January
May
rwa.
Dacamuci
JanuATt
Me?
LftrM
Da*»tr:
.».(* ....
Us> .T ■ '