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jSl mMm i* l*. a 3ST «*■ ^ "n » ....... V + STJ3ST
I, GEORGIA, U. S. A.
... t and moat,promising little
u Its record for the past
h many new enterprise in oper-
l contemplated, prove this
» a business statement and not a hyper-
ription.
t time it has built and put into
111 operation a f100,000 cotton
j and with thin year started the wheels
eo.ud of more than twice that capital.
, put ojfVlargv iron and brass foundry,
»rfactory, an immense iceandbot-
: works, a sash and blind factory, a
i factory, opened up the finest granite
f in the United States, and now has
ge oil mills in more or less advanced
i construction, with an aggregate au-
d capital of over. 1
/ that can be procured, and has ap-
idfor two charters for street railways. It
j, secured another railroad ninety miles long,
d wtnle located on the greatest system in
Sooth, the Central, has secured connec-
i with its important rival, the EastTen-
^ee, Virginia and Georgia. It ha^obtaiu-
i direct independent connection with Chat-
.auooga and the West, and will break ground
|u a few days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
’ Witifits five white and fonrcolored churc.h-
t> it has recently church." completed a $10,000 hew
bytsrian It has increased its pop-
on by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
nditsbortlersfruit growers from nearly
r Statc in the Union, until it is now sur-
ded on nearly every side by orchards
1 vineyards. It has put up the largest
_it evaporators in the State. It is thehome
rf the grape audits wine making capacity has
loebiol every year. It has successfully in-
ubed a system of public, schools, with a
__a || years curriculudirfecond to none.
This is part of the record of a halt decade
1 simply Shows the progress of on already
mirable city, with the natural advantages
! of having the finest climate, summer find
| winter, in the world, .
I:ty, Oriffln is the county seat of Spalding eonn-
situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
t above sea level. By the census of 1890, it
J|; | will have at alow estimate between all of 6 the 000 right and
T,000 people, and they ore
I % sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and aBxioua to secure de-
sirable settlers, who wUl not be any less wel¬
come ifthey bring money to help build up the
g; I ■ town. There Is about only , one thing we
need badly just now, and that is a big hotel.
P'- 1 We have several small ones, but their accom-
modations are entirely too limited for our
! business, pleasure and health seeking guests,
g If you see anybody that wonts a good loca-
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin ' - * si !
Griffin is the place where the Gnirris News
s published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
.enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
■ and descriptive pamphlet of Griffln.1
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1889,
and will have to be changed in a few months
to embrace new enterprises commenced and
completed. •
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
attorney at law,
HAMPTON, UEOBClA.
PtactiwK in all the State and Federal
onrte. ortMdwly
JOHN J. HUNT,.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,'
I * qkifpin, obosgia.
Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. H.
White’s Clothing Store. mar22d*wly
THOS. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
will practice in the State and Federal
Courts/ Office over Georgd & Hartnett’s
corner. novatf
JOHN B, STKWAET. ^ BOBT. T. DANIEL.
'STEWART & DANIEL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George * Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
WUl practice in the State and federal
Courts. jnlylfidtf
“
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT 'LAW
GEORGIA.
j Pprompt attention given to all and business! where
Will practice in all the Courts,
ever business calls.
«*■ Collections a specialty.
HOTEL CUJRTI8
I *' oeiffw, Georgia.
Under New Management.
S. G. DANIEL, Prop'r.
: , :-4- 1 1 tan meet all train*.
LOOK!
*nl:Til Willin'
^ ,-r..... -^0$ ’ "ii■ -
in 13- miles of city, ly
1 mill
KSasBtf i cotton,
to feed them. A bargain will be given in this
1 ' « * “ fruits.
•* ,r «* “
t .. .< „ .. > -
and vacant fotc too numerous to
to sell .wUl dowel!
lev-
CRONIN’S M11H
The Chicago Mystery More Mys¬
terious than Ever.
The Cause of Death nor Shown
By the Post-Mortem. . *
That tlie Doctor was Murdered There Is
No Longer Boom fie* Doubt—Who Did
It and How W« It Done—The Bogus
Dispatches from Canada—A Keporter
Makes a Discovery in the Cateb -Basin.
Chicago, May 25.-The Cronin case
will.go down jm the annuals of crime as
one of the most mysterious that has ever
puzzled the ttie wit of the’ detectives or fas-
ciliated imagination of the morbid.
Each new discovery of supposed links in
the chain of circumstantial evidence but
complicates the .difficulty of solution and
serves to disprove all tenable theories to
explain the murder thus far advanced.
That I>r. Cronin was murdered there is
no longer any room tor doubt Scores
of his friends have identified his body.
The fact has been definitely Bettled skufi by
tile physicians that the victim’s
was not fractured nor cloven, despite the
dozeu scalp wounds upon it It is cer¬
tain also that he was not strangled.
What Killed Him?
doctors y made, and kept half a dozen
at work, nearly three hours..
The skull was cut open and the brain
removed. After physicians the scalp had been
taken off the discovered-that
the bones composing the skull had
scarcely the sliarp been instrument, marked by which the blows it, of
was
There thought caused sign the of congestion doctor’^ death. about
was no
tile brain, but the lungs *aud pulmonary
cavity were filled with blood. The phy¬
sicians said tlfat this might have result¬
ed from the fact that Cronin’s body was
placed basin. A head cut downward one-half inch in the deep catch
was
found upon the neck, and several bruises
upon the lower limbs.
death The theory easily that exploded. he was The choked doctors to
was
found no signs of suffocation, and disr
covered no bruises about the neck such
as would result from strangling a man
with a towel windpipe or rope. The passage
through the was unobstructed.
Great Complin
s attorney, bein
„efinita, soldi —-----.... —...
information the police have, we are con¬
vinced that there was a greataxmspiracy.
track Bight of at this moment whom officers knew, arc almost on the
a man we
beyond a doubt, was a principal in the
crime. In twenty-four hours I ho
believe be will be behind
then the whole hellish
come out"
Woodruff Talks.
“I can clear the trunk mystery up in
forty-eight hours;” himself, said Woodruff, or
Black, as he calls "and when I
do that I clear up the Cronin mystery.
The two or identical.”
Why do you soy that?” asked the re¬
porter. “Because I know it I won’t give
but I know it X’ll admit that my
reasons, have thus far
I know more than I told
of this whole business. ’ ’
Col W. P. Bend, a friend of Dr. Cro¬
nin’s, says: the who
"If we can fix on persons
have attempted to cover up this murder
by liogas will dispatches have much and trouble other in finding means,
we not
the instigators of the murder, it not the
perpetrators themselves. In fact any
persons throwing who have been implicated in.
the .officers off the right track
in this manner are, in the view of the
criminal punishable law, accessories after the fact,
and as such.”
A New My*tery.
William B. Hotchkiss, a reporter for
the Inter Ocean, found the suburban po¬
lice had neglected to search the catch-
basin removing where Cronin’s the body was found
after The corpse.
the newspaper man decided to under¬
take work. In the bottom of the
sewer basin, concealed in the water, was
tne one wiucu was wrapped auuui orou-
in’s head. human Further finger. groping The brought member up
a single decomposed, and if impossible
was was
to tell whether it was that of a mail or
woman. Woodruff told a strange story
of a woman’s body in the bloody trunk.
had The woman’s cut body, into small Woodruff pieces, said, and
been up
the finding of possible the finger corroboration is pretty gen¬ of
erally taken as
the prisoner’s story. It is certain that
the finger is not from Dr, Cronin’s
hands.
Was* Croat* <* Canada?
Charley Long, the young man who
claims he saw and interviewed Cronin in
Toronto, was asked last night in that
city what hi thought of the matter sinoe
the finding Tiave of the had doctor’s three years’inti¬ body. He
claims- to a have conversed
macy with Cronin and to
witii him. His theory is that returned after his
visit to Toronto, Cronin Go
Chicago and was mfirdered
He tells interview. a very plausible story of the
alleged
An Empty Cottaffb Cut* a Figaro.
It was discovered Thursday that a
cottage near the residence of Patrick
O’Sullivan, the ice man, was rented a
little less than two months ago by un¬
known parties, who paid one month’s
rent in advance, but never, so far as
they ly Irish _ workingmen, __saa«a going to work for Mr* fcmlli-
van" ___were improbable that the cot¬
It is not assassins of Dr.
tage was hired by the
Cronin* n*d he was decoyed body to it, taken mur¬
dered there and then the
away in th edarank, ,
Th« Van tic Disabled,
boom. She heading was steering New north Yor k. by west,
probably for .
Taro Children Drowned.
Fort Atkinson, Wis., two children May 25-— of
lav evening
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. SI MORNING, MAY 26 . 188 <>.
MATTHEWS’ SUCCESSOR.
Attorney General Miller Vrtll Very Likely
Be (he Man. -
Washington, May 26.-*-It is now re¬
garded as almost certain that Attorney
General Miller will be appointed to suc¬
ceed Justice Matthews. The announce¬
ment is expected shortly, and the delay
is said to arise frofti the difficulty of de¬
ciding upon a new head for the depart¬
ment of justice The matter has pro¬
gressed so far that New York has soented
the vacanc y and is after it hot foot
>r’- PENSION CASES.
Three Important One* Decided In Favor
of the Claimant*.
Washington, May 25.-—Assistant Sec¬
retary Bussey has rendered a deration in
the pension claim of William ___ _—, Powell,
late of Company!), F< -seventh Penn-
his application, volunteers, alleges ■■■■■■■■I that on Jan. 9,
1869, while in camp atCad waloder^ Phil¬
out adelphia, and paid" Pa,, he waiting walking to bo in mustered the bar¬
was
racks, when a corporal of his company
threw which struck at him him a five-gallon the left demijohn, leg under
on
theknee, whioh inflicting a severe wound, from
he has never recovered*
The claim was originally rejected on
the grounds that the injury was. received
after the applicant's discharge from the
service, and that if in service the injury
had no connection with his military
duty, and hence was not pensionable.
From this latter view the assistant sec¬
retary dissents, and directs that if,, upon
further examination, it is found that ihe
service claimant's did not actual separation until after from he the in¬
oocur
curred tiie disability, though his dis-
Tuttle, widow of Josiafa Tuttle, late of
Company and B, John Sixty-fourth Cex, late of Ohio Company volun¬
teers, Fifty-ninth Ohio volunteers.
C, In the
former case the question involved was
one of fact. In the case of Cox the
records show that while running the
claimant ’
Following ing heavi „ the decision HI
. .
man case, pension Was granted.
THE SECU RITIES AG a NO GOOD.
ErtMtu* Wiman Advlass Electrical Com-
panie* to Form a Syndicate,
New Yoke, May 25.—Erastas Thursday Wiman
talked to the Electric club
night about electrical possibilities as
vieWed by a business man. He advised
the electrical companies to form a syndi¬
cate rather than spend their time in the
courts. ■
“I went into a bank the other day to
get a little money, ” continued Mr. Wi¬
man, “and they asked me for my secu-
"les. I offered electrical^ securities,
■(■I .■■©■■■ppiffii lasp'to),
wrong,, and there is such strong
competition, 'and, moreover, yon *---— never
can tell when when another another new ~ “—■ mayor is com¬
ing along with an an ax ax to cut down your
poles.’ “Competition has been described
as
the life of trade, but it is the death of
profit. characterized Speaking The of the Little Western Wizard Union of
he
Wall Street, ’ as the Old Man of the Sea,
who sat upon its back and straddled its
neck witii his legs. ’ God help any poor
devil exclaimed. who suggests any improvements,
he
Mr. Wiman ’s address was full of wit
and interest, and a’ vote of thanks was
given him wit h a will.
_
Weald Be a Mighty Combine.
Chicago, May 25.—A bit of last year’s
gossip, concerning a prospective alliance
pf the the Chicago, Chicago Milwaukee and Northwestern and St. Paul and
roads,, has been revived. The story
goes that the Vanderbilts, who now con¬
trol the Northwestern, will St. secure a con-
trolling interest in the Paul com¬
pany, and, without consolidating the
two systems, will so unite their power
and influence as to make them joint
masters of the Northwestern situation,
an
that this rumor appears to be mace
widely credited now than when it first
came to light______
IUTestlfrotliijf Ancient Mound*.
Waterloo, Iowa, May 25.—Professor
Webster, the of Charles City, who investi¬
gated ancient mounds near that
place a few weeks ago, has just finished
opening five mounds near Bradford, in
Chickasaw county. He found in them
thirteen fairly well preserved skeletons.
The skulls ,of all of them proved the
same characteristics of low development
that were shown by the skeletons found
near Eloyd. Webster From is of his the investigation opinion that
Professor
there was Cedar quite Valley a population in prehistoric in the
Upper
Gone Ont of Blast.
Buohtel, depression O., May in 25.—Owing the iron market, to the
recent
and in view of the vast amount of iron
now in stock at their various furnaces
in the valley, the Columbus Columbus and a Hock-
ing Coal and Iron n company company ’ Thursday
shut down their their Wiona Wiona and and Butchtel
furnaces fjimaces indefinitely. indefinitely. New Stmighterille, This This 1 leaves and the tite
Bessie, Bessie, at a Greendale. the only furnaces
Hattie, Hattie, at at Greendale, in the valley. tne only Four hun-
now in blast
dred men are thrown out of employ-
ment. '
, _
Blighting Frost In Northern Ohio.
New New Yoke, YORK, May May Findlay, Findlay, 25.—A 25.—A £>., O., speoial sp<
The _ke Herald Herald from from r says: s „
blighting blighting and frost frost is prevails prevails doing in great this part deal of of
the state, a
damage to field and garden crops and
severely injuring naif the inch fruit, in • Ice thickness from a
quarter to a
formed in water ppolft and it is feared
that the growing com and wheat cannot
, Quieting Lown nt Foreit City.
Little Bock, returned Ark, May 25.—Gov¬
ernor Eagle has from Forest
City. In his. opinion there will bn no
who was asked to rf.Su
citisens, is here.
not resign.
_
Sawed in two.
day Font morning, Wayne, at the Ind., Douglass May 25.—Thurs¬
saw
near Angola, north of here,
Great Damn i)one In the Lav-
tert District.
Several Per Drowned
Killed 1 1 Lightning.
Bridge* Wanked < t and Crop* Damaged,
What li the 3 or the Petty Dl»-
-A Pan-Servian
Flo# In Bounin «r*» Trial Po*t-
poned Until
London; Ma; severe thunder-
storm in the lx, district in Gar-
many has done _ icda&fig^ tocropft,
and occasioned loss of life. Nine lighl per-
sons were drowned or kflled by
ning. The railway bridge at Gossnitz
was destroyed, and all the rivers in the
vicinity have risen to an Manning
height.
th Tstr ikes.
Thonsands of Miner* Quit Work -In An»-
trla—Other Labor ’Amuhlpt.
Vienna, May 25.—Ten thousand
miners at Saar have struck.
The Prague tramway lines are at a
standstill owing to the strike of the
drivers.
The'miners in the Kladno district in
Bohemia are out on a strike. The
strikers number 1,100. The movement
is extending.
__
• The Dortmund Miner*.
Beblin. May 25.—Ai a meeting Thlum-
day 'held by the Dortmund miners, who
recently resumed work, it was decided
to abide by the protocol made at Berlin
with the mine masters and not to notice
the later concordat made at Essen.
imposed The Belgian duty chamber of 140 of francs deputies kilo¬ has
a a
gramme, on sacoharine.
Women Qnlt Work.
in Bomb, the rice May fields 25.- at The Medicina women employed PUP
e are on a
. .
strike. They have pilaged a number of
bakers’ derad to shops, the Troops i he have been or-
scene.
IV hat Do Th*y
London, May 25.-^Whether the
disturbance in wi'
that of Europe portended are the .,,PP|Pi P.
i
valves that relieve the overstrained situ¬
ation, time only oan tell. It is certain
that the the optimists of affairs loudly of all nations proclaim desire that
men
justify peace, and nothing continued has anxiety. happened The to
committee any appointed at Berlin, how-
ever, ', to report upon the alleged
tion of German merchants at tl the Baltio
At Rega, Bevel and other places where
the bulk of the trade was fn Ger¬
man hands, instances they have to close been their compelled estab-
in some
ments or conduct them through-Russian
managers. Berlin the • To Russian the representation authorities, from far
so
from of promising aftaits and to ameliorate giving the present of
state assurance
the future immunity of German traders
from Russian aggression, hinted that the
migration of the aforesaid merchants
would government not he and displeasing people, and to treated the czar’s the
question the as one of to damages be settled fully parties by
proved payment to have been to This is
small consolation to those wrong.. Germans who
by the shrewdnesuiond monopoly of the industry puMo had trade nearly
and
now see it wrested from them; but it is
not a cause for war, and the court of
views Berlin of is the not atter. likely to take extreme
m
Dr. MacKenxle WUl Sue.
physician London, to May the late 25.— Emperor Dr. MocKenzia, Frederick,
is about to bring a suit against The
London Times and Mr. Steinkopff, pro¬
prietor of The St. James Gazette, for
publishing.a letter written by Mr. Stein-
kopff, in which he accused. Dr. Mac-
Kenzieof conspiracy While treating tluw
emperor. '
The Greenland Expedition.
Copenhagen, headed Dr. May Nansen, 25 —The which expedi¬
tion by left
for the Arctic regions in May, 1888, and
has just returned, made- an exhaustive
exploration of Greenland. The greatest
height above the level sea by the party
was comparati 10,000 feet. vely Their ntfnl explorations
were uneve
, King Humbert’* Day.
King Berlin, Humbert May 25.—The received emperor the Potsdam and
garrison took of luncheon Thursday, and state. afterward They then par¬
in
yacht, went to and Chorlottenburg drove thence in to the Berlin. royal
King Humbert dined at the Italian am-
:.......
Retetutag Member* Call.
members Berlin, of May the 25.—A reichstag delegation visited of King tiie
Humbert luncheon. and were The king’s entertained visit has byfim been
at
characterized by a series attention of friendly all
greetings and generous on
YU* Samoan Conference. .
Berlin, May 25 —ffhe. Post aays that
two more sittings will oonolude the Sa¬
moan conference, and that the negotia-
tibns throughout the proceedings have
been pleasant a ll around.
Alsatian* Charged With Treason.
Paris, May 25.— The Nineteenth cen¬
tury says that a number of Frenchmen
have been arrested by the German au¬
thorities at Soultzmatt, Alsace, on a
charge of treas on? ' |
Minister Wiwlibnm ot Borne.
Berlin, May 25.— Mr. John D. Wash-
bora, the new American minister to
Switzerland, has presented his creden¬
tials to Preside nt Hamme r. .
A Servian Plot Discovered.
Paris, May 25.—The trial of P ern .
Boulanger AngSsti has been postponed
__ _ ,
. Settler* Ordered to Leare.
Pierre, Dak, May 35.- &
(ho Bajrtlm Cmwtt,
Boston, May 25.— A speoial to The
Herald from Washington says:
The Boston and Ossipee will sail in a
few days for the Haytian coast, and the
Boston will cany out three, at perlmps
»« Hiwi Wire
om Gen. Lair ■PHPH. ..M
Packard okard oharged arc the by only the state pnes department now settled to
on, the revolution
ascertain the merits of
emment which will and can maintain
peaoe and order.
As an incident of their work, these
Domingo there is
mpiPiPPPPL^, that, Now ,,. UB that ...«..PP,, to have „
purpose. we are
a navy, coaling stations become of ex-
treme West Indies importance, and in particularly tile Pacific in the
ooean.
We have now only one important Honolulu; coal¬
ing station in the Paciflo—at
Mole itJ Nicholas, in the northern by
pm&oi who ■3IPH know the _ _ Haytian is mentioned ^ ___ harbors i!vr “aa those ^ the
best point for a United States coaling
station, ion. It is the same ! harbor which
was' r flamed ^ in the false report of a
the Frein rich treaty the other to the day French as being
gov-
ingMPut notioe that the it hT^tuated end of Chiba. at a^^tet look-
on
to accept the advice and meditation of
since
before a Port-au-Prince Port-au will have m itself
been ssrsafiii kept close secret ©yarts in the state
department, a very the Haytian minister
oven
here, entire Mr. ign Preston, of having it. been kept in
orance
ELECT RICAL PE ATHa
The Manner la Which New York Will
Hereafter Execute Her Murderers.
New Yobk, May 25.—The time for the
delivery chines of the electrical hand. The execution-ma¬ life-takers. I
is near at
three in number, will coat $3,750 each. .
Two handled volts are enough to kill a
man, bat 1,000 volte will be used. To
send a stronger current through 1 a man
would make charcoal of his body.
Under the new law the criminal will
firsj, mtrnim know the day mid hour of his exe-
be metal plates covered
sponges which form one electrode, and a
ssstsjshffjsfdtfe dynamo will be then connected with the
electrodes at the head and feet, the
sheriff will touch a button and in one
hundred and fiftieth part of a second the
criminal is de«d.
the body all the muscles become
the limbs will be convulsed and groans
will be heanl While these manifesta¬
tions the will part not of the be criminal accompanied it % pain hu¬
on seems
mane to avoid even the appearance of
torture, so the current is kept rabdutfive up until
the muscles relax, this taking ' i
seconds. Then the cap and si shoes have
only ready to foi for he * burial. f removed. * and the th body is
A REMARKABLE^ EVENT.
Three Brother* Celebrate'Theit- Golden
Wedding at SeetUviUe, Kjr. *
remarkable Scottsville, Ky., nf May its kind 25.—The whichever most
event
tfie matory 01 the worla, took place cere
y. triple golden wedding.
was s ZToJS/ZX a
tad t there
father in
and r»ru
HHIIHpi|HHffiiffiMN#w are pan SMBI
ren, smne of whom ate among the veiy
best knewm andlfespecteble and all among tiie most up-
right tucky. T. A. Staid teres people Louisville. in Ken¬
in
The event celebrated was the golden
wedding of the thtee couples at the old
homestead in Allen county, where S. J.
" ’ still resides. There was i an im-
crowd. to participate Of people in at the the ie remarka- family
lg ’
occurre nce,
0o DoomF t (M It*
the .Washington. clerk’s office May of the 25-—It United is stated at
States
supreme court that there has been no
court in any caw in
t Shields against the
_ sflectal to dispatch company at mentioned
in » St Paul from Tacoma,
fuxther Wash., a paper. It is stated
that no such case is on the
docket.
Fooled Him With quinine.
Indianapolis, May 25.—Thursday
who him WSfSS morphine
and he took the latter, gave intent
on i
ate resistanoe on his part.
Killed In a Duel.
Brownsville/Madison BraMNOKUL Ala., May 25.—Near
James Roundtree and oounty, G« Thursday,
fought a duel with pistols,
feote«»tidshot, ai
Man and Toon .
Tceoola. the HL, May 25 -
tar and team he was
instantiv kiBed « “ ‘ ‘
OTOTtagathisi
Currant
Even With Thl* Amount
May Be a Deficiency.
BIslae W*at* ProtoottonUta i
lb* Cemail ship Wh*rs C,
E*l*t tor Culleotlnc onA »
Commercial StatUtle*— Mere ’
mUto».BnlIL
_
: ■
pose to meet
:e”K
aary to meet the d
and it may be that there will be a defi¬
ciency. but it is said at the pension of¬
fice (hat there is no truth in the state¬
ment that #105,000,000 will be ex¬
pended for qpmdons during the fiscal
SSrSB&SVK? trusted with the duty of seeing
ttttnsvs&ew-di
SKfij?
next month. It is thought that tl
when tne appropriation for the 3
fiscal said year that will become of available, !
it is some the
run out before that time.
Mr, Bell says that the *
for the next fiscal year, ,
too small andsthere will bo a
prevent pr9!S,S9! a <
tion was made, was, as it still is, con¬
stantly issatraaputBS; increasing,- so that it is evident
W ashingtoh, ;
reasons ons thefistof given for wnsatar^cJ
ingthe Blaine wants coi
the posts where ini
collecting statistics. and The
-
terest of the ways and means <
of the next : house for 0r J the
of the proteotten
sff”^s ? 1890. juts The an
Ge mr^ e
minister from Kentucky” to Denmark was Gem “ When i
His residence al
and he is now a _
publicly for that
Foster, of Indiai
ieo, Russia Mid
greater Success in
««*
witii the high tariff at hi*
views are much .nearer to ti
lisle than those of McKinley. I
broken With his party on the
hnthm symp athies are with terif
A third inetmrn it the
Hovey, ed lost tall now governor the high of !
on tni
hie party. He spent some'
Peru as the Amerioan
and since that time has
tariff. His views are well known i
his friends.
Men like Jarrett are 1
man-Foster-Hovey stamp,;
, WVtt Have » »a*jr Not.
partment Washington, has completed May 85,—The andv i
issue advertis
sals for the
S'’®.
limit or eont axed
.......
^rtng Ph ilad ttasir el p hia, May
Qlney Gilbert, arrested 14. Thursday and Ohs
15, were <
from Mr. John M. ~
City. revolver Each and was
baggage 2,000 rounds contained of a
fishing the -mraphernalia paraphernalia tackle, bade of ball
men.
New York
dasla^onwas!
Frert ta wabasb County, Tadlaa*.'
JWasash, In d., May r “
to the 1
fell in
county. Vc«
" Mh °
Portland, o .
JToa b2r
Meant,
ttotaoer
~
•
MS
t
PiwyfilMgffiyss
r.' .Tv'--'
ta haul
XrQmt
hrid i