Newspaper Page Text
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VOLUME IS.
I VUiisii, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, U. S. A.
*, -»'
| Griffin in the is South, the btot and its most record word promising for | or the th. little put
city its enterprises
toll decade, many new in oper-
I atiou, building and contemplated, prove this
to he a business statement and not a hyper-
r (mlieal description.
During that time it has built and put into
most successful Operation a *100,000 cotton
factory and with this year started the wheels
oI a second oI more than twice that capital.
It has put up a large iron and brass foundry,
a fertiliser factory, an immense ice and bot¬
tling works, a sash and blind factory, a
broom factory, opened up the finest granite
quarry in the United States, and now has
four large oil JtHJls in mrtr* or less advanced
stage* of construction, with an aggregate au-
thorUed capital of over half a million dollars.
It is putting up the finest system of electric
lighting that can bp Ptoffitob and^GP-
pgad far twoekartersfor street, railways. It
kassscarsd andfdmr railroad-ninety miles long,
and white located on the greatest system in
the Soutfc. the Central, has secured connec-
tion vrith its important rival, the East Teh-
nessee, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain-
od direct independent connection with Chat-
tanooga and the West, and wifi break ground
in a lew days for a fourtforoad. connecting
with n fourth independentsystem.
With its five white and four colored church-
es, it has recently completed a *10,000 new
around its borders fruit growers from nearly
every State in the Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has put. up the largest
fruit evaporators in the State. It is the horns
of the grape and its wine makingcapacity has
ikkStiM atery yiar. It. haasuseessfully in-;
of public schools, with
simply shows tl
admirabls city, with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate,., summer and
winter, in the world.
Griffin is the county seat of Spalding coun¬
ty, situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
raffing ceunfr.v,l ISO iNt
above sea level. By the census of 1890, it
will have at alow estimate between 6 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all of the right
sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and anxious to secure de-
sirable settlers, who wifi not be any less wel-
come if they|bringmoney to help build up the
town. There is about only one thing we
need .badly jnst now* and that is a big hotel.’
We bave several small ones, bnt their accom¬
modations are entirely too limited for our
business, pleasure and health seeking guests.
If you sec anybody that wants a good loea-
» paper p«lMMireu- in the Empire State e of (feorgia.
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet, of Griffin^
This brief sketch is written April 12tb, 1889,
and will have to he changed in a few months
to embrace new enterprises commenced and
completed,
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENHY C. PEEPUES,
attorney at law.
HAMPTON, BBOHOlA.
Practices in all the f State and Federal
Courts. oct9d*wly
' JOHN j. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT L AW,
Jflt j ' URtePIN, QKOWftA.
Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. H.
White's (nothing Store. mar22d*wl y
THOS. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice in the. State and Federal
Courts. Office over George & Hartnett’s
corner. pov2tf
'
JOHN 1> STEWAftl. HOST. T. MMW .
| STEWART & DANIEL
ATTO|l;iNEYS AT LAW,
Over George 4 Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice in the State and Federal
Courts. jnlylOdtf
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
WOODBVST, OEOBOIA.
______ Ba m*—*
BSC Coltectious a specialty.
HOTEL CURTIS
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA,
Jnder Xcw Management,
$. G. DANIEL, Prop'r.
Fiteis meet all trains.
or Rent!
ftt
JOSET HOUSE,
Rooms, Kfove Room and Kilchen, rich ri
spot and staqle. no block fro roin
i centre Hill street. Well located for
ling house. Also.
SHELTON HOUSE,
» Poplar Broom street, S rooms and one land acre. 6th
x house and 12 acres on
c ™«
s& VI' 2 ev ftl'J
-..itjk
U
A CRAZY
Revolting Deed Committed by
a Savannah Negro. ■ '.
HIS MURDERED CHILD
FUNERAL PYRE.
Attempt to Slaughter Ala sick Wife—
Believed that an Offering of. _
Should bo Made to the
Struggle with the Police omver* a-
Loaded Behind the Bare.
Savannah, Ga., April 12.—Price Law,
a negro living on the Springfield plant a-
tion, reversed the biblical precent of sac-
riftwng children by slaying oftoofhmto
appears the devil. Law is crazy on re¬
ligion. ‘ .;
He said: “I became convinced that
unless some human being should be sac¬
rificed to thd devil his majesty would let
loose millions of evil spirits to destroy
the whole world. The devil appeared to
me in the shape of a' hungry lion and
said he would devour the whole human
race unless two sacrifices were made to
him. He wanted cine from the blacks
one from whites. I felt it my duty
to offer up up Wle v t>f f mt my family to save my
race. As my wife was very sick and
not rifice likely her.” to recover, I concluded to sac¬
Law went on to say that when he told
his wife of his intentions she jumped out
of her sick bed with her 3-days-oId infant
and fled before he could kill her.
»e then enticed.his 7-year-ohl son into
hopse and crushed in ite skull, with a
burning. In
the meantime, a messenger had has¬
tened two miles to the city and notified
the police. Officer Prenbibb was
sent out with - ambulance,
an
and all the negroes on the plantation
were In «, group a hundred yards from
the house. They did not warn the po¬
liceman, and he went up to Law and at¬
tempted fought savagely, to arrest and him. Prenbibb’s Law resisted,
from him, but got aid chance pistol
away not get a
to use it. After a fifteen minutes’ strug¬
gle, and Prenbibb slipped handcuffs overpowered the maniac
Him on him and then
brought is holding to this city. Coroner Dixon
Law's wife an inquest. fled from the
and has been found. plantation
not
THE CEILING FELL.
nEXettement In an Atlanta Court—-A Hasty
Verdict. Given.
scared jury in the superior court
Friday afternoon. About half-past three
the jury in the case of Joe Williams
against the Richmond and Danville rail¬
road reach were verdict. in the jury room trying to
a
Suddenly those who were sitting in
the court room heard a loud crash, and
ing every tliat attorney fight jumped going to his feet, in the think¬ jury
a was on
room One juror's between head jurors almost who failed instantly to agree.
peared the feet ap¬
gt transon, some ten
from the floor, and announced that the
ceiling had fallen.
The door was opened, covered and the twelve
men were foupd with dust and
plastering. About nine feet of plastering
had fallen directly square the bench and
over
table on which the jurors were lolling.
They did hot appear to like ’mi—I the idea and** of
• ------—
GOV. GORDON’S APPOINTEES.
To Represent Georgia at the Coming Great
Constitutional Centennial.
Atlanta, Ga., April 12.—Governor
Gordon has appointed the committee to
represent Georgia at the Washington In¬
augural centennial.
Each state and territory will be repre¬
sented by a committee of three,and three
alternates.
Georgia’s ,’s committee cornr is as follows:
Col, Charles ’ C. C. Jones, jr., of Augusta,
chairman; ; J. a. C. 0. C. i Black, of Augusta,
alternate.
Hon. George A. Mercer, of Savannah;
Mr. N. T. Mclntire, of Thomasville, al¬
ternate.
Hon. Nat. J. Hammond, of Atlanta;
and Mr. Pat. Calhoun, of Atlanta, alter¬
nate.
The members of the committees must
be decendants Anglo-Saxon of families of baker’s the original
and famous dozen
with General Washington in the disas¬
trous battle of Germantown, Mr. Pat
Calhoun, Col. Jones and other members
of the Georgia delegation, member although
state was the youngest of
great war syndicate,’” families. me descendants
Id colonial
In New York a grand dinner will be
given, which and only the chairmen of of
committees the governors
states and territories represented will
tend.
FIRE !N IN BROOKLYN.
flnitiBi Incidents and
#400,000.
Nsw York, April 12.—A fire started
In the jute plant mills on President street,
rieu Hoyt, Brooklyn. It was a
Iwall LyaU, and several hundred men
employed in it.
There were two hundred men and
employed there at day night, time. and about
hundred in the girls The hair on
the heads of three of the was
tirely burned off, so narrow was
escape.
factory the ex-
j setting fire
i
to the roofs ot time six the adjoining roof of the houses.
About the same
fell in, sending up a mass of flames
scorched them but slightly.
sS,^S Twelve enmnes were at work
e $^Sr tiOB -
-GKfFKIN, GEOEGU:
How Fre»W*Bt Martinoeu Go* Bio laugh
on the “Wlaard."
| New Yoke, April 18.—Jay Gould's
plans to again obtain control of the Mis¬
souri, Kaunas and Texas raflway at the
next annual meeting, which will be held
“about the middle of next month, have, it
Jis bud, asserted, and stockholders been adroitly who nipped have in been the
fearful that their u^lgiip property was again
neither vill have Gould place nor in any the directory. of his satellites
a
President Kudolph N. Martinson has
eturned from a ten days’ visit among
^ stockholders in London, Amsterdam
. Martinsen related a hummous
fetmy of how his trip to Europe came to
be made some days before he intended to
soil.
•I was coming home by the Hixtli ave¬
nue elevated road Hie evening of March
8, and got into conversation with a
couple of strangers about Gould and his
ways. One of them remarked: ‘He’s
jaid a fine trap for tiiqse Missouri, Kansas
and Texas fellows this year.’
j ‘“How’s that? Tasked.
“ ‘Why. he got notice that Martinsen
was going over on the 18th to get proxies
from the foreign stockholders, and he
has ordered a lawyer named Bennet to
go ovcHy to-moiTow’s steamer to get
1 ‘ ‘That was enough for me. I got out
bt the Twenty-eighth street station,
rushed down town by the first train to
the Cunard, and asked them sail if by a man
named Bennett was going to the
Aurania in the morning.”
’•“‘fete a lawyer?’
“ ‘AH steamer.’ ‘right. I’ll tako a cabin in the-’
same
“I intended to sail by the German
samcr on the 13th, but on hearing that
went home and packed my trunk and
nt it down to the Hotel Brunswick,
whore I lodged that night, and bright
and early next morning was on my was¬
te Mr. Europe. Bennett On opposite my first day the out table I found arid
me at
got into conversation with him. ‘My
name is Bennett.*
‘Ah! A lawyer, I presume,’ said I.
‘How did you know?’ he exclaimed.
‘Oh, ■Yes, by the way you look and talk.’
from? I am a lawyer; and where are
you ‘From Chicago.
“
Ha! ha! He completely fooled,
but I went on m; iv mission just the same,
and everywhere the people were perfect-
ly should willing, continue even anxious, in its present that the road
ment.” manage¬
•
BUSSEY’S LITTLE SCHEME.
A Muu N.u»wt HamiltonU„U a Penal.n for
Injuries at a Circa*.
Washington, D. C., ; April 12.—Gen.
Silas Bussey, assistant secretary of the
interior, reversed another of Pension
Commissioner Black’s decisions yester¬
day and perpetrated another of his own.
marvelous feats of justice and jurispru¬
dence. The applicant in the case is
named Z. Hamilton. Be was a private,-
It appears from the testimony in tl
that the claimant audience was injured witnessing while seat¬ Cir¬
ed among an a
cus performance, by a fail of seats, but
was at the place
a was in progress
as a member of a detail ordered to pro¬
tect and guard the circus, and was with¬
in the tent by permission of his superior
officer.
The' decision holds that his being in
the circus tent looking incidental at the his perform¬ being
ance, was merely the place place member to of
on guard, duty Vat and and at that that the he he as simply a awaiting a
was wa
there the proper time to arrive when
he would he again required to walk his
post as sentinel, and was in a place where
he had permission to be near his post of
duty; in a position where he was ready
' in a moment to any call that
made upon him, and, in the
tt of the assistant secretary, was
line of his duty as a soldier and a
member of said guard at the time the ac¬
cident occurred.
“Nor do I think,” continues reasonable the de¬
cision, “it is just or to hold
that his pensionable status should be in
any way affected by the circumstances circus
that he was a spectator of a per¬
formance, which happened to be trans¬
piring at the time.”
TCI EXCLUDE THE LOTTERY CO.
A Rumored Movement to Induce Harrison
to Accomplish This.
Washington, D. ,C., April 12.—There
is a rumored movement to exclude the
Louisiana Lottery company from the
mails; also, the four New Orleans banks
interested in it. head A prominent the Louisiana
man is at the of movement, and
when he approached Harrison and Wan-
amaker, who are well knov&i church
members, on the subject, it is said they
at found once agreed which to to base It, if action. a law could Attor¬ be
ou
ney General Miller, another religious
member supply of the cabinet, is expected to
or find a suitable law. Sttyrng
arguments have been made to Wan am a-
all ker on the subject, in and his he has promised
the assistance power.
Russell Harrison Arrested.
New York, April 12. — Russell
Harrison was arrestedj yesterday
afternoon on the charge of hav.
ing published in his paper. The Mon¬
tana Live Stock Exchange, paperT an article
talfen from a Buffalo accusing ejf-
| Goven)or John Schuyler Crosby, tewefry of Mon-
tana w ith having stolen from a
Washington lady, Mr. Harrison went
on from Washington for the purpose of
having The papers in the suit served on him
Warrant was issued by Judge Beach,
of the supreme court, who fixed bail at
! $5,000. Stephen B. bank, Elkins, and Vioe W. i. Presi.
dent Rice, or Park Ax-
keU. keU. of of Judge, 1 became Mr. ~ Harrison’s *
bondsmen.
To Beicaae Editor O'Brien.
London, April 19,-Friend* of William
O’Brien, whose health is reported very
poor, are trying toe to of gain release his consent of —’ “ to
accepting the Parnell commission. terms It is 1
t ont to i
. ■
DENMARK WRECKED.
Seven 1 Souls Probably
“ iJ Ocean.
FOURD FLOATING WITHOUT A
HUMAN BBIHOON BOARD
Who win Ever T«M Hu* M«*lory?-nre
Awful Story «* •" Ww « k **» HWomrr—
DM the ruMen**** »M Crew Escape
or did Hi* Wave* Swallow |Tlie«u
Up? Note*.
London, April 12.— The steamer City
oFChester, from Now York, which ar¬
rived lmvtngppred qtQneenstown lari night, reports
<* April 8 th.
in mid-ocean, the Danish steamer
Denmark, from Copenhagen to
New York. The vss9d ?5bad bemiatia-
doped and was in a sinking condition
She had apparently been in a collision.
Her bows stood high out of the water,
while her stern was sunken almost below
the level of the sea.
New York, April 19.—News of the
loss of the steamship Denmark of the
ThSsgvalla line lias created a great sen¬
sation here, Her agents says: “We have
a cable dispatch left .to the, effect that the
Denmark Christiaasand on March
2ti o» her first voyage under her flag and
name. 8he had been thought completely by all over¬ that
hauled, and it was fleet. There
she was tne best of our were
on board of people, her at the these time 630 of departure
at least 710 of were pas¬
sengers. To manage and to look
after the comfort there of this largo have number been
of passengers must at
least sixty ill the crew, and probably the
number may have readied 100 or 125.
There the are, therefore, to 77S b® accounted people. for
lives of from 710 to
“The Geiser was sunk,and a fearful loss
of life resulted.
“The Denmark was of 8,414 gross ton-
She was a three-master and had one fun¬
nel.
“The Denmark is commanded by Capt.
Knudsen, an old seaman, well known for
his courage and presence of mind. We
do not believe that lie lias abandoned her.
She may have been disahled, but we are
sighted abandoned is rifle in wlv’ csh^t
iru;. hi very easily have been at the time,
Apru Stff. She had at that time been
out from Christiaasand thirteen days. I
do not think it at all improbable that
some fearful calamity might have befell
her; but please allow us to state to the
numbers of friends of the Denmark’s
The Denmark is one of the line to
which the steamships Thingvalla and
Geiser belonged. It Will be remembered
these two steamships collided off New¬
foundland banks almost a year ago.
A later the Durian, report Hiuu confirming ■ - the story
at
.. hieh arrived at Queei
sighted tha Denmark.
A PITIABLE FREAK. H
Body Resemble* «jl«—. Hetal, and 1* Totally
HU
Without Senuttlon.
New York, April 18.—Another victim
of ossification arrived in this city yester¬
day and is now staying at the Intema-
■. He is a col-
, who was born
in Prince Wil-
on ’ ‘ January ’ by the 28, 1847. disease
when , he eight , HP utterly old, helpless and his
was years
right knee became gradually stiffened.
He suffered an intermittent stinging pain
in the part affected, which decreased as
the disease extended. awiip'>« All hisextremi-
ties 1870, were only his gradual!; head read attacked unaffected. until, Since in
- was
that time no alf has taken place in
his condition has suffered no
pain. Monroe has intelligent looking face,
an
with rather scanty hair and beard. He
appears to have been fairlv well educated
and greatly of good shrunken. mental.eapacity. His body His is limbs
are per¬
fectly rigid, however, and without sen¬
sation. - -■
—---------—
A Cheeky Scoundrel.
Denver, Col., April 12.—Frank H.
Cushman, wanted in Providence, R. L,
for stealing $3,000 from Ira N. Goff, of
that city, was arrested here last night.
Ten years ago, while he was a teller in
the Merchants’ National bank of Provi¬
dence, he disappeared, leaving his ac¬
counts $22,000 short. Detectives chased
him through the smith, New Mexico,
years’ term ended he went from toe
prison into the employ of Ira N. Goff, a
wholesale music dealer, and a big-hearted
philanthropist. befor 6off Nearly two years passed
Mr. had his aroused,
then Cushman fugitive disappeared again. No
trpee of the was found until
about a week ago, when-he wrote to Iris
former pastor in Providence requesting “
a letter of recommendation. The ~ police
answered it last night.
A Millionaire Want* a Divorce.
Buffalo, N. Y., April 12.—Allegany
county is stirred to its very depths by a
sensational divorce case which involves
sartreass of and
years banker of age Belmont
some woman in the
correspondent is Lawyer 3
is Siflriofme engaged to Miss
fieauty.1
charges that u.....
to his house
Florence 1
J*a»H Off »he
CTNcTNi n, Aiwil 12.-
teaFr-^fet high bvfoge on f*&“ the
’ f '
iea
AbrMffOd. ^
of*T;000,000. a ^p&ttoS
Germany
the Samoan affair.
The jute mills of Buchanan & Lyell,
be subject to quarantine at New Orleans.
On the appearanoe of Boulanger at a
departure.
1
noon.
Ex-President Grover Cleveland was, t
Friday night, elected a life honorary
member of the Manhattan "dub, at a I 1
meeting of the board of governors.
Three children of a German fanner
near St Cloud, Mkh were killed by
eating the toots of wild parsnips te a
field m which their father was plowing.
Hubert Kell, doing business os Kell &
Co., importers of woolens and plushee, at
480 Broom street, New York, and Brad¬
ford, England, has failed for a large
amount. ‘ • ';x
lishes The archbishop ih of Philadelphia '
a statement answer to
about his views on the
amendment. He is against! ,
a ual remedy, conscience and says the an true appeal remedy.
is
on the Chicago, Santa Fe and California
railroad, near Juliet,
.Mil day i
the other wounded are doing well and
will probably recover. * ,
Counsel for the New York Evening
Post moved Friday to dismiss W. W.
his signature. The ground meeting of the motion toe
was that Dudley avoids is¬
sue, and declines to answer the interrog¬
atories sent him. Judge Beach reserves
his decision on toe motion.
Jerome B. Burke, chief of the Gazette
division in the patent office, has been no¬
tified by the commissioner of patents
that, if tendered, his resignation would
be accepted. Mr. and Burke, declares however, de¬
clines to resign, his inten¬
tion to allow the commissioner to dismiss
him if he so desires. Mr. Burke is a
army man, and was at one time com¬
mander nf the department of the Poto¬
mac, G. A, R .
Lieutenant Parker, of the navy, will
accompany the Samoan commission,
which sails ffUtimEatesr***' from New York Saturday, in
the Samoan affairs, acquired during the
siatance stay of the to the Adams commisslan. at Apia, will Lieut. be Buck¬ of ae-
ingham, now naval attache of toe United
tached States legation <!ie Berlin at London, mission but lately similar at¬
to in a
capacity, Berlin, and will join the in toe commission at
also act capacity of
sw'rptftry.
The United States consul general at
Rio de Janeiro has reported to the secre¬
tary alarming of state that yellow there. fever Charles prevails to
an American extent died Roon Leslie,
an citizen, at of fe-
129 deaths reported on March
........ J ‘ " "— tover, l
■rs. an
supposed tu be wused by emisriontfrom
the sewers, which, owing to the scarcity
of water, caused by the dryness of the
season, have not been properly cleansed.
Wednesday night President Lowrey.of
the Minneapolis issued and St. order Paul reducing street car
company, an the
wages of all employes. The order goes
into effect Monday on all horse, cable
and motor lines, and is confidently ex¬
bonds with which to build new cable
lines. The men are sullen and uncom¬
municative, but no serious trouble is
feared. All the rest of the drivers and
conductors in the dty are expected to
follow suit.
The settlers on the Des Moines river
lands are still defiant, resisting with arms
the attempts of the United States mar¬
shal and his posse to evict them In ac¬
cordance with a decree of a United States
court. But it is announced that in view
of the fact that the secretary of the inte¬
rior has officially requested the attorney
general of the United and States to examine
into the toe past past history history disputed and titles present present eondi- eondi-
to .the river
Mads, for the purpose of determining
whether it may not be expedient to bring
proceedings in the name of the United
States, he deemed it advisable to await
toe report of the attorney general, and
commands Marshal Desmond to suspend
the execution Of processes until further
orders from court. This puts an end. for
the present at least, to all proceedings
ag«nst the settlers.
Classical Welcome to a Payillst.
Boston, Mass., April 12—Paddy Duffy,
straight from San Francisco and his fight
with Meadows, received a rousing wel¬
come last night from three hundred or
more of his friends of the North End.
They the depot met the with victorious brass wind, prize-fighter fireworks at
a
stood waved in his toe hat and carriage bowed and the gracefully
ing multitudes, while the hand to applaud¬ whooped
Wea ther Indication* for April IS.
_
Washington, D. C. f April
I cations for Georgia,
■ utb Carolina and Florid. !
Fair, and warmer, souther 1
value to
SAUO*» so.
ro * “ V “ P001 -
Each of toe Dl«.!ema»,
8Hei.ee <MMl will *H»4
eU—-A Umoo Iu the »
- The HewlU* ami Mra.
wr i. * -4
Iavebpool, April IS.—Sir J
cefote, K. C. B., U. G. M, who h
1
He was escorted to the
. _
litical and personal friends,
rooms iverc
hi* recejrtiou, and there was
anoe of rare wines and choiee wines.
Although Sir Julian has not
tinctionasadipfomat.lt la tlwughttlmt
his -—— tact, ——. c—-— gained by » experience . :e will. with |m
,
officers, will aid him to throw oil on the
troubled waters at Washington. Sir
was taken fwisoner by the
^ir Julian Pauncefote waa bom *
nfoh educated just sixty-one at Paris ((■
s
first adopted I
appointed SrsIflpS.. chief justice of the 1
Wands. After, preridiag_<Ht tiv
fo r son n
sistcit to
the colonial office.
ill qf j t, !|, (yf
l e g$l assiwtant 1
ESS’&dSS'
him. ' ‘ “ ~
to a manner to mark -r further flw-
; ?*
THE COMM ISSIONER S EMBARK.
' '
'
«nd
New York, AprU 12,-William 1
Phelps, of New Jersey; John A. K
of Iowa, and George H. Bates,,
ware, the United States <
the Samoan conference,
Berlin, sailed to-^ymtoeCmiaKl*
Maine, who is clerk of the
Count Herbert Bismarck and
Bachin will
feronce, an?Sir Edward Malet, )
talk Phelps, about Mr. Samoan Kasaon nor affaire, Mr. Bates *
a
action to be adopted. Their aim and.
termination,Mr. “ * *
be to reach reeu __
interests of the powers
out interfering with the
independence. thought, might The lie re©
was i
dueing ed adopt tho various such natio
to an agreement as s
render it unnecessary to keep any.
siderable force at the islands.
til* Hewitt# Iette A
New York, April 12,-Mre. Abram
Hewitt and her daughters sailed d forEu-
rope to-day. the fa3. They They will will not return tum until
late in be joined ' ' in
Switzerland by Mr. Hewitt,
Mr*. R» vc*-Chanler Sail*.
She will remain abroad for an in
period, visiting toe places of hi
interest ; on ou the toe continent, continent,
Foreign Hole*.
sign Lord post Londonderry of Irish viceroy has decided to re¬
to in August.
Emperor Francis Joeeph has decided to
!ffi V r b« promised visit to BerUn on the
h of next August.
The proprietor of the Volks Zeitung
has received permission from the gov¬
ernment to resume the publication of
that paper.
Sir Charles Russell has consented to act
as arbitrator between the Vandekmr and
Four Russian officers have mode a »-
The demise of the
Gerhard Rohlfs, the .
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