The Griffin daily news and sun. (Griffin, Ga.) 1889-1924, May 29, 1889, Image 1

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......... 1 ' , ' J m S TX 3ST )LUME 18. f, GEORGIA. U. S. A. j the beat and most promising agouti). It* record for the s, its many new enterprises lding and contemplated, prove ness statement and not a cription. ig that time it has built and pat into neressfnl operation a f100,000 cotton t and with this year started the wheels d of more than twice that capital. > np a large iron and brass foundry, r factory, an immense ice and bot- sash and blind factory, a n factory, opened up the finest granite F in the United States, and now has i oil mill* in mors or less advanced xmttaruction, with an aggregate __ 1 capital of over half a million dollars. f up the finest system of electric > that can be procured, and has ap- pt two charters for street railways. It i another railroad ninety miles long, while located on the greatest system in B th. the Central, has secured connec- i its important rival, the EastTen- , Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain¬ ed independent connection with Chat¬ 'S and the West, and will break ground t days for a fourth road, | a fourth independent system. * Tp. it# five white and four colored church- $ has recently completed a $10,000 new rianchnreh. It has increased its pop- tin by nearly one fifth. It has attracted lits borders fruit growers from nearly l State in the Union, until it is now sur- I on nearly every side by orchards t vineyards. It has put np the largest ^evaporators in the Stater. Itisthehome *grape audits wine making capacity has fd every year. It has successfully in- ated a system of public schools, with a • years curriculum, second to none, t is part of the record of a half decade nply shows the progress of an already dc city, with the natural advantages the finest climate, summer and >, in fie wprid. i is the county seat of Spalding coun- ifsitnated in went' Middle Georgia, with a y, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet ,j sea level. By the census of 1890, it fi have at alow estimate between 6 000 and 1 people, and they are all of the right awoke, np to the times, ready to ? strangers and anxious to secure de- settlers, who will not be any lees wel- j if.they bring money to help build np the There is about only one thing we By just now, and that is a big hotel. |have B several smalt ones, but limited their lor a ccom- 'ations are entirely too our Bess, pleasure and health seeking guests, t wee anybody that wants a good loca- brahotei rescuesswnwnr, ju»u Bn to the place where the Griffin hiews nbltobed—daily and weekly—the best news- r intheEmpireState of Georgia. Please T jtt stamps in sending for sample copies, t descriptive pamphlet of Griffln.| I brief sketch to written April 12th, 1889, id f n have to be changed in a few months lemorace new enterprises commenced and dmpletedfr- i . IFESSIONAL DIRECTORY. HENRY C. PEEPLES, ATTORNEY AT £ A VT , HAMPTON, GSOROlA. lives in all the State and Federal * oct9d&wly JOHN J. HUNT, PtOBNEY AT LA \V,/ GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. TW,OJ. 81 JQUi Hill Street, awwb, Up Staire, over J. H Clothing Stow. mar22d&wly TH0S. R. MILLS, ptTTORNEY AT LAW, l practice in the State and Federal Office over George & Hartnett’s nov2tf - I B 8TK.WART. BOBT. T. DANIEL. STEWART & DANIEL * ATTORNEYS AT LAW, fcover George A Hartnett’s, griffin, Ga. will practice in the State and^ Federal D. L PAgMER, TTORNEY ArT LAW, WOOratRT, GEORGIA. ompt attention given to all practice in all the Court#, and where t business calls. Collections a specialty. OTE1 CURTIS P SKIT FIN, 0X0BOU. ler New Management. A. 6. DANIEL,' Prop'r. » liters meet all trains. LOOK! | j | --- Isle Accepted Tine! 9 acres Land in 18 miles of city, and creeks, in 6 miles of depot of . 7 room house, 8 double 1 miU and gin house, press, Ac. i cotton, 170 in corn, all up and in Jndition and hands sufficient on tivate it, with mules, corn, fodder, Ac., i them; A bargain will be given s, part inside city limit#, sin the woods., 4 room bouse, Ac. B inside city limits. ■ inmde city limits—good dwelling. H “ ’• « “ “ fruit#. « ft ft tf .< f vacant lot# too numerous . a i. Speculation in Retatence to the Berlin Mission. Will Kasson or Phelps Receive the Appointment? Tli* President Takes It Easy—Anxious omce-scekers Disgusted With the Man¬ ner In Which They Are Treated—Where the President and Cabinet Will Spend the Summer. Washington, May 28 —John A. Has¬ son, of Iowa, and William Walter Plieljn, of New Jersey, are at Berlin as American representatives on the Samoan commission. There is an interesting question as to which, if either of them, will be appointed minister to Germany after their duties as Samoan commis* sioners have been fully discha^ed. About the time the senate adjourned it was learned from a senator that the president intended the to appoint Mr. Kasson minister, senate having re¬ jected the nomination- already made. This has not prevented, howeVer, a great position. deal of bilk When about Mr. Mr. Blaine's Phelps appoint¬ for the ment was announced most people set it down as next to sure that Mr. Phelps would be put in a prominent diplomatic position. Phelps Arranged Matters. A New York paper embraces some current talk in tim following paragraph: “When William Walter Phelps left this country for Berlin his affairs had been so arranged that he could make on in¬ definite sojourn on the other side. His business and domestic matters were wholly settled upon the chance that he might not return life for some and time. did He yvdded to his insurance other things that led his friends to believe that lie did not expect to eome back at once. There is every reason to German believe that mission.” Mr. Phelps expects the - Not Overworking Himself. Washington, afraid May that 38. - the Sympathetic president people will overexert who are himself and lose his health, may restrain their alarm. He works as chain much himself as he ought desk to, but like he does not to a a clerk. Mr. Harrison seldom omits his ride, and frequently hia. takes yachting to the water. He was off on second trip Sunday, and during the summer he will and make Deer frequent Park, trips else between spend this the city hot or months iu the mountains altogether. He he.,-, rented a cottage at Deer Park, and will have for his neigh bors Stephen Disgusted Statesmen. Some of the candidates for office, who have been kept waitmg since the 4th of March, are disposed to get out of patience with the their president’s _ demands. leisurely They indifference to magistrate can not see how the chief can talw any pleasure in an excursion down the river and bay while they are pay- frequently turns out that the longer a The man waiting waits the statesman less he has to getting hope for. im¬ are patient. Pretty soon they will be angry, and when their adversaries enough are abuse appointed the they will be mad to president for chnroh. boating But on Sunday what good instead will that of going do them? to Bound to Displease Somebody. The president seems to have serenely himself settled down in everything. to his proposition It must to please follow that a lot of other men will be dis¬ pleased. Philosophical men and women are rather running disposed things to admire his the presi¬ dent for own way while jje is in. It is not often a man gets four years’ lease of the White House ' achieved that eminence since 1833, and those two were the civic and mili¬ tary heroes of a great war. Patrick Ford Daappolntod. Patrick Fowl, of The Irish World, who promised Irish Republicans would Gen. Harrison’s election open to them the doors of any office in the ernment, from the highest to the lowest, is not so sure that the doors are locked. Ford is a sorely Washington disappointed to man, and he came to if could as much to Gen. Harrison, he reach him. Within the past few Mr. Ford had several interviews with the Plumed Knight Irish Republicans. upon the subject Ford, of patronage to as a result of these, conferences, is less a Blaine man than Harrison before, whether he is a# much a man is exceedingly doubtful, The Dove in mfint’n Best. ations , Washington, have begun May at 28. the -Lively White prepar. and in the families of the cabinet for the coming summer. Mrs. Harrison will get ready to move love up up to Peer Park, where she and the president are to have a cottage The does not expoof from from to this this spend time time Sunday till till al the Washington Washington middle middle of of September. on on Le Secretary Windom will take his to the Adirondaeks. arranged Secretary Proctor has to his family to the mountains. Secretary Tracy will take a short about a month hence. will his . wife, .. Secretary Busk escort son and daughter to the wilds of consin. General Wanamaker, ftwtmaster will spend ingqinrchased a yacht, and then down day* in a run now Chesapeake. Potomac and into the Attorney General Miller think* locating his family at Deer Park or Secretary .Blaine will again take family to Bar Harbor. The Haj tlan Commission. Washington, May 28.—The Herald says: “The wmmiamonere pointedHo visit Hayti, Gen. Le* lace and Ool. , Beverly Tucker, will during the latter part of this week Port-au-Prince. It wra expected SHXS’C delay 2*S.UW their structions some not m been It has — GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY MORNING. MAY 29. 1889. son and his cabinet will take when they come to oonsider the instructions in cabinet meeting. The question of a coaling station for the United States in Haytian quisition waters of territory and the is prospect of the of pri¬ ac¬ one mary motives of Secretary Blaine in this matter: ” The state department still refuses to confirm the statement that a commission will be sent to Hayti. In Bahair of Gen. Swain. Washington, May 28.— Congressman Butterworth and others are themselves again in behalf of Gen. Swain. The sentenoe of the court, twelve years suspension from rank and President duly is regarded Harrison as has a very promised severe one. to the matter his personal attention. power of mitigating the sentence alone with the president. The are now at the White House, and president early date! will take up the matter at __ Bayard to Wed June 18. of Washington, May 28. —Tha Willing ex-Secretary Clymer Bayard is and" Miss announced to place church, on in June this 12 city. at Si John’s MICHIGAN STYLE. The Terrible Fate of Albert Martin, Negro Tramp, Wbo Brutally Mrs. Gtllis at Port Huron. Post Huron, Mich., May 28.—On afternoon of May 11, a colored entered the house >of John Gillis, farmer living-' about four miles west of this city, and made a brutal on Mrs. Gillis, beating and kicking her, and stamping on her prostrate body. Mrs. Gillis was alone with her little year-old daughter at the time, and thqngh die offered strong resistance, was finally overcome and the brute complished his purpose. The Port Huron police discovered hiding day morning, in the woods May near and the lodged oity in jail He 12, gave, the name of Martin, GiBis’ assailant. and was fully Mrs. identified Gillis as terri¬ Mrs. was physician’s bly maltreated, and has been under condition, and care, is 'lying not in a 'expected now ljve. A Mob Metes Out Justice. mob Shortly of nearly after midnight disguised Sunday a 100 men peared at the jail, overpowered sheriff and turnkey and took Martin from and shot the jail. He least was terribly beaten at at ’twenty times, one or two bullets taking effect, ever, and then dragged through the street to the bridge on Seventh where he was hanged from a stringer. He was probably ably dead dead before before the the bi — mi -,. II „ , 1 . „ ,. I . „ « < ^. A, . -ALA - oooupy more i than 1 twenty minutes. WON DERFUL NE RVE. A Philadelphia Girt Who Does Not When Threatened With Instant Death. Philadelphia, May 28. Brady, a lawyer, of West Philadelphia, has a daughter who lias no equal pluck and courage. After having precipitated down a thirty-foot ment in the dark at Berwin, ‘ ■ lL - ‘— 1 " the ties and struggling horse, so that oould not it move, mi she e lay there while the western express train oame on, killed not knowing and whether fainted. she would For¬ or not, never tunately her head was six inches the rail. She felt scorching heat of fire chamber as the engine dashed by, but smiled when she was released wanted to clamber up the bank herself. Miss Brady and HT F. Ward mile Thursday drive morning to Westchester for a and abouts, Mr. Ward is a photographer, and went to obtain some landscapes. Just after dark they Lancaster storied for home way of Paola and pike. fore turns reaching abruptly Berwin to the right station at the clump bushes. Ward got out and went to the head, but the animal began to back toward the embankment. Ward ran the phaeton and tried to rescue W. Brady, but it was too late. George Johnson and is brother William, live on the other side of the ment, track. came rushing down and across rumble Suddenly of the from Philadelphia train. One came of seized express the Johnsons down the track just lantern the and as gleamed around the enrva He the there light frantically, trouble and The put engineer the was on Mr. Ward called to Miss Brady asked if she oould move herself, and answered “No.” God. the girl to side, the two men sprang one crashed into the horse and the phaeton, both of which projected over the The train oame to a stop just before last two cars reached the debris. forward, Mr. Ward, expecting by this to time frantic, her beheaded. see Before he oould reach her he heard voice saying she was all right. She never lost her nerve while the hot of the engine snorted in her face tore away other. the phaeton and horse on Miss top Brady easily extricated was now, her and feet although she her led shoes to were jutting torn was a where she sat down. One of the feet had been cut off and three of legs broken. He seemed insensible did not even remained groan. the cutover The train to hour, and the conductor endeavored persuade Miss Brady to come to town aspecial train fitted with a coach. * *, said she was all right, even 1 a pleasantry cm- two, and . Ations’ drug store, where wounds ware dressed. She had quite severe scalp wound and a 'large on her fo rehead. . K- __ Single Tax Idea la Dakota. I TSTfi known as the^Single Tm : party. It organized at Huron on i Saturday, and central committee appoin nted. It is party to c open t the in the new state of South the iHWfliaH of ' ■ the HDMIRT'S VISIT. The Continental Press Busily En¬ gaged In Guessing As to What Was Accomplished By the Journey. When Two Baler* Meet Europe I* in Sus¬ pense Until the Cause b Known—THU Time It le Frobnhly Nothing—India Rivaling Many Other Nation# in Special Products—Foreign Notes. . London, May 28 .—Now that the visit of King Humbert to Berlin lias been brought to a close, and indeed.for some days past the continental press from Si Petersburg to Madrid have organized themselves into a guessing congress, bent upon finding an answer to the wntmdram: What has the visitor ac¬ complished? Naturally the feeliug is uppermost in the editorial mind that so much fuss and feather must have some deep signifi¬ cance, and that in some mysterious way the fate of nations must have been de¬ cided for good or for evil at the little after dinner chats where two crowned heads That bob and nod so of closely such tremendous together. two persons importance as of the Italy Emperor might get of Germany together and the King oould be for some such purpose as sup¬ uncrowned posed to actuate individuals, ordinary, every-day, enters the never heed of the European editor, and since what thing, was cannot actually be discovered, accomplished, the if air Any¬ is filled with speculations. . Peace to Assured. As a matter of coprse the peace of Europfi is assured—two potentates never shake hands, but the peace df Europe is assured—but beyond this the guesses are as varied as slightest guesses must be which have not the foundation of knowledge interpretation for a basis. of the Probably incident the is best that it was a royal spree and nothing more. That both William and Humbert are willing this meeting that their people of stupendous should regard inter¬ as derstood, national importance and long can be the readily editorial un¬ so us brain is racking itself for a solution in " ‘ ”---a,' with the at BV-,---- j ,---- their international loyal subjects importance to attach to the lustre of what to them was simply a good time. Americans can laugh with them, but to utterly pianatioiT incomprehensible. of tireroyaf ii Close Observers Catching On. Close observers here, however, are be¬ ginning to realize that there is much more peregrinations toss made of royalty over these than periodical their im¬ portance warrants. The crowned heads meet, they have their talks, the people shout themselves hoarse in their enthu¬ siastic welcomes, much powder is burned, and then the monarchs kiss one another and say good by, and things Notwithstanding go on much the same as before. the effort to magnify the importance of with this fate junketing for Europe, tour into an event big it is more than probable that absolutely nothing will oome of the slightest im¬ portance politically. The time was when the fate of nations of interviews hung trembling such these, upon the results m but even in Europe that time has gone by.* _ King Humbert Lears# Berlin. Berlin, May 28.—King Humbert and the Prince Sunday. of Naples Several left princes Berlin at a. m. , assem¬ bled at the station to bid them a cordial farewell, and a large crowd gave the de¬ parting guests an ovation. The king and prince will travel incognito. Tite Progress of India. London, May 28.—The question of Indian The government trade assumes of India special by importance. the British epown, labor-saving the ‘ introduction machinery machinery and and of railroads, scientific - methods of agriculture, • added to the BLUUAtrt-l U.y J/VJiADlAJtbA cwuuuuow. Opium is no longer the product that it C was since ^the Chinese^resolved upon mi from goods____. Manchester, ...... —, which is also im¬ an portant foot. The reason for this is that the Indians send honest cloth, and not sized and shabbily-woven materials which form so large a part of the En¬ glish In output the Indians * holding their paper are own against even the In cheap wheat Belgium India and is German concerns. becoming one of the great producing countries, disputing United preeminence States, with Russia and the In tea India seriously threatens the-Chinese supremacy. And in fact there are few departments of industry or commerce in wluch the western nations may not look with concern upon this steady Indian development __ Oar Representatives Living Well. London, May 28 —The new Ameri¬ can officials compriMug the United States legation their in London, predecessors are decidedly in ont- d ring respect the aristocratic location and appoint¬ ment of their residences. In selecting a place of residence every one of .them has cast his eye upon the “swell” part of the metropolis, oblivious of all. ques¬ tions pf conveniences than the or fine desirability in other of tha respects surroundings. Mr Lincoln appearance has secured the house owned and formerly oocupied CadoVan by Lady Chds^ Lewis, Mr. at No, 5 square, McCor¬ mick has taken sb£et up his residence at No. 17 Albemarle Cork Mr. street, Emory and has the chosen to reside in legation other attaches of the remain at the hotel pending the future completion landlord. qf negotiationswiththeir What the Caar Ewwped. St. Petersburg, May 28.—Two found enormous bombs have been in Odessa, beneath streets which royal vis. iters usually pass on their way to the men in the trial of alleged Socialists at Mons was damaged by the explosion of a that dynamite the cartridge nivtridge. It placed is supposed the was m house by some ono who wished to in- ti ^ k LiSrai U j‘mmal 8 declare that the result suring of the the Government. trial is equivalent to cen¬ . Ex-Minister M«Lan« Balls. United Paris, States May minister, 28. - Mr, sailed McLane,. ex- La on Gascogne, from Havre, Friday, for New York. His wife and daughters will re¬ main in Paris until the end of the sum* mer. Collision at Sea. London, May 28.— 1 The British Syra¬ man- of-war Surprises was run ashore at cuse, Saturday, after colliding with and sinking of-war the full of steamer water. Vesta. The man- is ANOTHER RIQTAT^ GUTHRIE. Something Serious Might Hare Occurred Bat for the Speedy Arrival of Troops. Guthrie, O. T., May 28.—E. A. Weed, claimant to a lot on First and Harrison streets, also claimed by Mr. Hayes, engaged a large force of men and began Sunday morning to erect a bnild- ing over and around the other claimant The aggrieved party was soon reinforced by a large party of friends and idlers who were standing around the street corners. • • At first a protest was made against building on done the Sabbath day. the the This, of course, was ■ ..........See to engage sympa¬ thy of the crowd which had collected, and which numbered umbered by by this this time time nearly nearly 600 500 persons. After the • had wordy quarrel, contestants and at preconcerted engaged in a a signal, consisted the of frame the floor, of the beamsanofounda- building, which tion sills, was picked np by the crowd and carried into the street In doing this part of tire men canying the frame, in walking backwards, stumbled over a pile of piled lumber, in confused and men and timbers were a mass. Wwle the disturbance was at its height arrived United and commanded States Marshal the crowd Needles to secretly half mile sent distant, a messenger in for order the troops, hold a and, to the people in check until the soldiers arrived, sent two marshals into the cen¬ ter of the crowd. During the next few minutes one or two fights of little conse¬ quence occurred, one of which was occa¬ sioned by a thief, who attempted to ply his vocation. There was much excitement at this time, but as soon seen bulent coming element on a minutes later the quieted carpenters down, at were I the proposed man waned John Gilchriat was clubbed by nel’s. a soldier orders. for not muoh obeying the senti¬ Too credit cannot be given to Marshal Needles and his deputies keeping for their untiring efforts in peace. Denial of a (inthrl# Councilman. Chicago, May 28. — J. A. Gilthrie, Ellis, a member of-the city council of dignant O.. T., is at on the a visit published here. He report is very made in¬ by partment Inspector from Pickier Guthrie. to the interior de¬ In an open city letter council he explains chosen, how the mayor denies and wifro and he that the question of the legality of title to lots is one for the council. to settle. The charges that any member of the council was on the ground before noon of brands April 22, being and thus obtained lots, he as false. SU NDAY FIRE S A *330,000 Loss at Heno, Nevado—Dublin, Georgia, Jt»» a *40,0oh Blaxe. Reno, Nev., May 28.—A fire, Atarted Sunday afternoon in the old theatre building just opposite the Depot hotel. It soon burned down the hotel and six other houses and offices near, and then in Pioneer succession hotel, burned Lafayette to the house, ground Pollard the house and Pyramid nouse. The Nevada and California depot was also partially consumed. On Center street the Are broke out and again ten and residences. destroyed five In business block houses one every building in another except direction one was burned in ashes. the round Fire house and turn table of the Central house. Pacific, The two Silver houses State and Flouringmilla one cement were next consumed and after Fogus Flouring mills. It is impossible to secure a correct list of losses, but they will probably be be¬ tween ®250,000 and $300,000. The in¬ surance amounts to about $125,000, being quite evenly distributed among twenty or twenty-five companies. Eleven Business Houses, tory the 8unday. The file originated postoffibe, portion of in the the town heart and of raged the until ness eleven business houses were consumed. Only one of the firms earned any ance. The total loss will reach $40,000. TerrlQe Storm In Western Illinois. Gunrcr, HI., May 28.—A terriflo this vicinity wind and rain o’doik storm passed Sunday over afternoon. The about 3 cyclonic in its and storm was nature considerable damage was done. Tile black, funnel-shaped cloud swept at a furious rate from northwest to south¬ east, intervals. descending Several to the houses earth and at irregu¬ barns lar were unroofed, by and great trees were pSUed np the roots. The full force the t f the storm struck a cemetery in southern part of the city and nearly every ^monument on. the grounds was demolished. So far no loss of life has yet been reported. DDplcaieri With Harrison’* Action. Indianapolis, May Committee 2a— The cd execu¬ tive officer# of the of Hundred the president are " >at displeased In remitting over the the fine action Sim is Coy, sewing the Democratic term in the politician, peniten¬ who a tiary for election frauds, and they have expressed their dissatisfaction in tions. They think that they should have been consulted. Thr Faanoefn**-. ’ 1 in OH 1 HOT SCENT. Detectives Think They Have One of Cronin’s Murderers. J. B. Slmonds Believed to Have Helped Kill Him. Tho Authorltio* Bald to Be la PomeMlon of Probable Clowa—• Detective Coughlin*# “Friend” Tar ns Vp and Contradict# Hi# Story—Coughlin Hold A* a Wltnc##. Whelan Suspended. Chicago, May 28. - Peter MoGeehan, a Philadelphia blacksmith, who is kuartwto have been an enemy of Cro¬ nin’s and to have threatened him, was arrested Sunday. P. 0. Sullivan, the ice man, was also arrested. Tha arrest of MoGeehan it is be¬ lieved, will eventually Cronin murder. land all Where partici¬ the pants iu the learned, prisoner is located could not be but it is believed that he is buried in ome of the deepest dungeons under head¬ quarters in tho oily hall. There were many visits made to that quarter Sun¬ day by police officials and several by Assistant Superintendent Frank Mur¬ ray, of the Pinkerton agency. On one of his visits to tho Central station “Bill” Gallagher, Murray, was whose accompanied extensive by ac¬ quaintance with all classes and charac¬ ters in Philadelphia is well known. The Prisoner’# Identity. Certain friends of Dr. Cronin who claim to have been instrumental in bringing about the arrest, ray that the prisoner is no other than the missing J. B. Simonds, who rented the rooms at ITF Clark street, opposite to Dr. Cronin’s office in the Chicago opera house build¬ ing, purchased the furniture and trunk atTtevell’s, and after keeping them in the rooms for awhile disappeared with all the traps found last week in the Carl¬ son cottage in Lake View. They further claim that they drove Dr. Cronin away, assisted in the awful struggle which re¬ sulted in Cronin’s death, and then aided ^ore in disposing of the doctor’s N ing going was some between mysterious the Central telephon¬ sta¬ on tion and Capt. Selioack shortly after the visit of Murray and. Gallagher. •’ In ro##e*»lon at Beal Name#. The detectives are said to be in pos¬ session of tho real names and actual identities of three of the men implicated in Williamses the assassination. and Simonds. They are the two They also know that the three men skipped to and three three different officers parts have of been the country, Bod for Coughlin. The Detective man Smith, Coughlin Coughlin “the friend,” for whom says says be hired the white horse, has has turned up up. He de- olores olares he he knowB knows nothing notl feaT aboul out the de- tectiveV hiring a i horse horse him. Smith’s .particulars about the upon unknown tap more knggy i r driver, (k Coughlin has been held ud Whelan, the other de- suspended. Them mff, the hired him captured Jjie police at 2 o’clock Sunday looking morning. for the are now expressman who hauled the trunk and furniture from 117 Clark street to the Carlson cottage where Cronin was murdered. Another 8n#pect Minting. The named Chicago Frawley, police who are has looking fora man for some time-been living in a North Side board- after ing-house, the date but of who the disappeared finding of Cronin’s shortly body. been the Frawley proprietor claimed of to business have formerly college Bnflkfo. a in suspicious, His and actions it is in thought Chicago he were was in some way connected with the 'murderous plot. Tried to Decoy Cronin Before. Shortly after the Carlson cottage was leased by the two strange men a tele¬ phone asking message him to call was at sent certain Dr. place Cronin, a on the South Side, where a man had been hurt. The doctor was absent at the time, and found but in the the place morning he had investigated, in* been strqpted to oome to was a vacant lot. Charged to the Clan-no-Gael. New special York. May 28.-The that Sun’s Chi¬ cago says the Olaa-na- death Gael not account only decreed of Le Caron’s Dr, Cronin’s on state¬ ment to the Parnell commission ffihat there were four mare in America but also the death of W, J. Hynes, Father Gleason, Oapt. I. P. O’Cohnor, John Devoy and two others. The dis- oovery of Cronin’s murder has given the others a re spite. _ Married Oufald* the Chnreh. Alice New Duchoehois, York, May for 2a -Mile. Victoria leading fashionable ten years soprano in Sk Vincent da Paul’s, has married outside the church, and so sang far the last time at St. Vin¬ formed cent’s Sunday. by Mayor The Grant, marriage whh is was Cath- per¬ a olic. He was not acquainted with the facts in th ecasa----- ......... Foreign Note#. Sea. Iguatieff has been appointed assis¬ tant Russian minister of tho interior. Lieut. Sandford, military attache to the United States legation, ha# arrived at Berlin. MM, Lsroux and Bernard, Republicans, were elected senators in the Ai#ne and Doubs department#. Several warehouses' in Lubeek harbor were burned, and $400,900 worth of cotton and flax destroyed. The Prince and Princess of Wales received Minister asd Mrs. Lincoln Monday at the Marlborough house. Advices from Zanztb-r bring appalling ao- countsot the ravages disease among tha English and German #H:;o in those water*. United States Minis *” Lincoln was pre¬ sented to the Prince a 4 Princess of Wales, at Lord Salisbury's r-.-epttoa Saturday nxhh Baussier, the Havre chemist’# assistant Q Soot* .11 i the F** SgS’S. chancery now a burg, A Bonk Cwhier I San ji Francisco, II from Lord, i Lord, Pomona, P ^ cashier CW., of W. t Omaha who 800 in money,) ho earned n clew to the 1 T«*»» 1 Sherman,’ C of .. " at Howe sdFBL be lynched. NEWS IN A Condensation of Tartan# v-,---- a . Urbana, O., has gone dry by 131 ’ Louis A. Dent is.to be Main*' Indianapolis had a quiet Sum rTsT***- — , more by i Baltimore Sunday, A unvenea av i ni is, j James Pallico, father-in-law at Canton, O., k pany has gone out < The saloon of Mrs. 1 was demolished by White ( Coleman been Smith, post Va., has arrested i Setra Grand Army post#, t membered their * * services Sunday. For the first time in was strictly observed Shelbyviilo, lad. Louis Clare and John anihent for life for the rick Mealey, at New < The Xenia Gas eomoanv controlling interest 1 * ** Power company of t At Denver, Col, Safe Fallaco, an Italian ten his aged father-in-law, Louis A Dent has been i . secretary to Secretary Blaine* i / Vabash Plain Heater says tl prime court hasn’t left enough of the late Indiana legislature 1 shotgun. Edward Bharpless, of Saturday of paralysis. His I i P i^ U ^ ed, “ th6 ^ 1 the nev. xit* m y flwAhviflnlrl ATreenneiu recta-of &L Paul'sJLHex_ seated to go to work at * At,. tne nnamlnMA operators rvt ox Tn/ltana Indiana ] I terms ot compromise. Miss Grace Moore, of S-- oiety^irl, forsook tha leading a The police at JI Louisville .Js are i f^ipM Hauler on !^wS?j . of No. 1437 Broadway, New ---- nearly 17,000. Tall lying did it. At Ifcw Orleans the juryte the r- Louis Claire and John Gibson, charge the murder of Hon. Patrick 1 1888, returned a verdict of _ r n S'S| i r t The penalty is i At a meeting in Dr. Crosby York dty, in^tbe interes^ of i notonly 1 who advertised t cabin at f Mr. Haskins sa Haskins’ brat anted them 1 ui^ay i , money aad« uffidtopayc Monday. Ini