Newspaper Page Text
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GEORGIA, U. S. A.
Hv* —♦—*
t and most promising Httle
RIP record tor the paet
mf iWNnterprises in ope*,
f and contemplated, prove this
I statement and not a hyper-
ion.
i time it has built and put into
ittf100,000 cotton
l this year started the wheels
oI more than twice that capital.
> icon and brass laundry,
n tmmenee ice and hot-
fash and the blind factory, a
opened up finest granite
States, and now has
ton, with an aggregate au-
l of over half a million dollars.
! up the finest system Wf* electric
j that can be procured, and has ap-
d tor tw o charters tor strest railways. It
1 another railroad ninety miles long,
i while located on the greatest gystem in
s Smith, the . Centmi, has secured connec¬
ts with its important rival, the East Ten-
msee, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain.
I direct independent connection with Chat-
i and the West, and will break ground
i few days fora fourth road, connecting
•| a fourth iudependent system.
(.its five white and foureolored church
■ '"* r completed A 810,000 new
It has increased its pop-
i by ((©arty one e fifth. fifth. It It. has has attracted a<
I its horde**fruit in growers from nearly
ate the Union, until It is now sur-
ded on nearly every side by orchards
i vineyards. It has pot up the largest
6 evaporators in the State. It is the home
I the grape and its wine making capacity has
_/ year. It has successfully in-
d a system of public schools, with a
i years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
1 simply shows the progress oi an already
able city, with the natural advantages
f having the finest climate,, summer and
nter, in the world.
(jtiffin is the county Mat of Spalding coun
, situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
level. By the census of 1890, it
will have at alow estimate between6 000 and
' and they all the right
7,000 people, are of
-wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
»strangers and anxious to secure de-
settlers, who will not be any less wel-
f money to help build up the
about only one thing we
Sartr, and that is a big hotel.
.We have several small onss, but their aecom-
4 " entirely too limited tor our
are
, pleasure and health seeking guests,
f yon see anybody that want* a good loca-
i for a hotel in the South, lust mention
Griffin is the place where the Griffin N kws
s published—daily and weekly—the best news-
to the Empire State of Georgia. Please
i stamps to sending tor sample copies,
uni uvseriptive pamphlet ot Griffln.l
This brief sketchis written April 12th, 1889,
and will have to be changed to a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
leompleted.
------ DIRECTORY. ’*®| :' T - ‘
PROFESSIONAL
C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
HAMPTON, OEOROU.
Practice in all the State —
JOHN *J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
|| ’ GRIFFIN, GEOBGIA.
Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J H.
White’s Clothing Store. mar22d*wly
THOS. R. MILLS,
fATTORNEY AT LAW,
Wffl practice in the State and Federal
ui i |j. nuL« t— 0ffioe OTW - — Ge «----£ ° rge Hartnett’s
nov2tf
JOHN B STEWART. HOST. T. DANIEL.
STEWART & DANIEL.
AT LAW,
Over George A Hartnett's, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice to the State and‘Federal
ourts. lulylSdtf
CLEVEMN0 & GARLAND,
IP oENTirrs,
GRIFFIN, : : GEOBGIA.
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WOODBURY, GEORGIA.
Pprompt attention given to all business!
Will practice to all the Court*, and where
ever business calls.
B»- Collections a specialty.
LOOK!
inlilkMtiTsi!
1250 acres Land in 18 miles of city, lying of
m river and creeks, in 8 miles of depot
. ft F, BB. 7 room bouse, 6 double^ tenant 800
.
I condition ' and -* hands ' [‘Sufficient on — place &
l8HMSS£S5£h»-.*, iSS^A'SSSSWfB’eSft
10 « “ « '« “ “ fruits.
as «i ii ii *• •*
•ad-VRcanJ lots too numerous to
i having property to seU will do well
S. A. CUNNINGHAM,
Threo Indictments Found Ef the
Cook County Grand Jury
......... .. ......*$1*
Against Coughlin, Sullivan and
Woodruff,
Each of the
Turning
Confesses
All He Knows—More Pointers.
Chicago, May 8^ -TS^'Ii
Tuesday uight found an indictment for
tiio murder of Dr. Cronin against Daniel
Coughlin, the deteotive, Patrick O. Sul¬
livan, the ice man, and Prank J. Black,
alias Woodruff, the horse-thief. They
were presented in one bill with three
counts, the first charging murder with a
blunt instrument, the second with a
sharp instrument and the third with an
unknown instrument.
No evidence was introduced to proven
conspiracy and Dr.’ Cronin^ private
papers were not placed before the grand
jury. The witnesses who were called
were those whose stories have been told,
in general 'outline in the press. No
mention was mad© of Clan-na-Gael af¬
fairs. This matter will oonje before an¬
other grand jury. • .
Knoll Anxious to “Squeal.”
The reports Tuesday night indicated
that Sullivan, Coughlin and Woodruff
line, were in running a race in the “squealing”
order to beat each other in se¬
curing immunity from punishment by
becoming a witness for the state. It
was said Coughlin was in the lead.
' Woodruff’s Confession.
It is stated that Woodruff, alias Black,
confessed his connection with the mur¬
der to Capt. Sokaack, He says he
simply which disposed acted as of the the driver body of the wagon
in the catch-
basin. He says he was directed by those
who had charge of that part of the plot,
to obtain the horse and wagon, to Live
to the Carlson cottage, and he also
knew for what purpose he was to go
there. Woodruff arrived at the eottage
about twenty minutes before Cronin
was driven up. Three-q carters of an
hour later Williams, who rented the
the cottage, front gave steps the and signal stamping by appearing his foot. on
Woodruff thereupon drove up and the
trunk was loaded into the wagon. The
horse was headed for the lake, where the
corose would have been sunk had the
Lake View police not appeared. The
wagon was driven on for nearlv an hour
and the corpse thrown into the catch-
basin. It was decided to take the trank
back to the cottage and bum It. The
fid kftV of the kicked fcrUnV in Lwll—*•*-- and the body drawn
was the
out On the return to the wagon-wheels cottage
ly
was found.
Cougitjin Makes u Statement.
It is rumored that he when Coughlin sent
heard of his indictment at once
for Capt. Schaack and gave him a com¬
plete statement of all he knew, acknowl¬
edging that he had lied from from beginning Hancock,
to end about the Smiths
Mich., plaining in order to save himself, with the and ex¬
his connection reach con¬
spiracy fully. An attempt to report
Capt. Schaack failed, and the
could’ not be verified. Black, alias
Woodruff, was also mucb concerned
over Ms indictment and was known to
have had a long conversation with a de¬
tective after midnight, in whieh he gave
the names of several murder. persons alleged to
be implicated in the
Persecuted by England.
Beinarkable circumstances and concerning his family
the history of Dr. Cronin
are contained in the record which he
gave to the Independent Order of For¬
esters when he joined them five years
ago. Dr. Cronin says that he had,five
brothers and five sisters. When asked
the cause of their death he answered: and
"Persecuted by Ireland. English government Out of' fam¬
died of fever in lived a get
ily of thirteen but, three had to
to America.” When asked as to the
cause of the death of Ms mother the re¬
nte was: “Died of bereavement and old
age-”- .
Coughlin’* “Friend” Arrested.
It is quietly riven out that the police
have made another arrest in the Cronin
case. Willard J. Smith, the who Michigan is
friend of Coughlin, is the man re¬
ported to have 1
ered in by the p>
for whom Coughlin the says night Dr. Cronin .
horse and buggy on Smith,
who was murdered/ suddenly turned A day up, or two denied ago that he
went out riding that night, but later de¬
velopments inchoate that he lied when
he made that statement
Smith has the same crossed, bead-hke
eyes, shifty and small,' who described let the by the
livery man, Divan, out now
famous white’ horse. Furthermore Mr.
Smith is positively identified as the man
who came to Dr. Cronin’s house that
fatal Saturday night and lured him to
his death. Altogether it seems as
though the police had’struck another
important lead in the case. • , •
More Pointer*.
It is stated that Coughlin and Whalen
hurried a man uight off/m of May a ft the date of
train on the
Dr. Cronin’s Tuesday disappearance. made another in¬
The police of the Ashland
vestigation and discovered new avenue nails in the
some
floor. Officers were detailed to pry
tiie flooring, but the result of then search
has not been found made public. undershirt,
Two boys an a
of drawers and a vest in the woods
Evanston avenue Sunday, wMch the po¬
lice have token in sa^they charge. the man
The Carlsons rented’ saw their cottage,
Williams, who
nin was a British spy and marked
bv the Ctou-na-Gsel for death. It
a’North Side ballot, camp appointed the committee a
tee by secret onin's oval
and.decreed Cr rem .
Y REACHING FOR EGAN’S SCALP.
The Brlti»h-A*t>«rte»" Ueeentte'Ftad*. s
demns th. Seleetton
Chioaso, May 80 .—The]
can association to taking
the excitement i
and to J
r.o: MORNING
United mates minister to Chili It reads
Our Our organisation orgaulsa holds as one ot It* oar-
SSgtiSl Tte lacto prom0tio “ ot pUr ®
Moftraw&n appolntmsnt by tbs president and
by ftis ot tiw United
States of oao Patrick Ejan, of Nebraska, to
the {Keitlon of minfkter to CtoU Is a publio
•ot that calls for reprobation and protest ai
one Insulting to tbs sens* ofdecei
tons citizens and a dsgradatlon of
trative statesmanship for tbs
1. This Patrick Egan is one of those
whose conduct Is now under Investigation
by a special committee of British judges As
to participation to what every cMUssd
..........
1
ability the nation can afford, and not made a
payment for party service to a mere polit¬
ical Arab. Especially is this patent when
we remember the humiliating circumstance
of the rebuke this nation received through a
commission appointed to that same country
under the administration of President
Arthur.
8. This appointment is insulting to the
National dignity and ability of fiO.OOO,-
000 of people comprising this great republic,
for it virtually proclaims to the world that
of all its sons to the manor born and other¬
wise there was not to be found one among
them all to well qualified to represent this
greatest American nation in .the progressive
state of Chili as this fugitive from the power
iff British justice.
ft The present jinfortunate condition of
the trade and commerce of this country
with the states of South America, and of
Chili in particular, demands that the repre¬
sentative sent there slipuld be one that that
government could receive Aa one whose
record would bear the most searching in¬
vestigation, and not one to whom the law¬
less, discontented and dangerous classes of
their own population may find encourage¬
ment and strength to tbe honor conferred on
this man Egan. We therefore call on all
members of our branches to take action by
directing the attention of their fellow-citi¬
zens to this unfit appointment as one insnlt-
ing to the better sentiment of American
political life.
In making this protest to the sense of
National decency Ot the American people
we appeal to no feeling or prejudice of race,
creed, or political bias; we put It upon the
honest pride that every true citisen is pre¬
sumed to desire that in' all international re¬
lations and duties this, country should stand
second to none to the exhibition of that
courtesy which one nation owes to another,
that its diplomatic duties should be per¬
formed by agents who reflect the best ele¬
ments of its National life and are a fair
sample of its manhood. This being our con¬
viction we ask our fellow-citizens of the
United States whether ip the -appointment
of this minister to Chili their agents at the
seat of^ go vernment their duty; at Tfasbington have
to the intelligence,
THE CCTNNA^GAEL.
The Society Ha* a Scheme by Which to
Capture the land League Convention.
New Yoex, May 30. -The convention
of the National Land league, wMch will
be held in Philadelphia in July, is sure
to cause a wide Preach between the
Irishmen who belong to secret societies
and the Irishmen who do not The be¬
lief that the late Dr. Oranih would make
serious Chargee against certain men aft
the coming Land league convention to
one of the alleged causes of the dootor’s
murder. . convention
The call for the Natioual bodies of
is so worded as to exclude all
Irishmen who have not sent their mon¬
ey through the Rev. pr. O’Beilly, of
Detroit a Catholic priest, said to he a
member of the Clan-na-Gael, but at any of
rate a staunoh friend and supporter
the me it who have for years controlled
that Under Irish the secret present sbeiety. call for the Na¬
tional convention and gentlemen Eugene Kelley, of their kind
Browne from
who have sent so much his money
this city to Parnell and associates,
are not entitled to send delegates to
Philadelphia, nor or any other Irish
bodies that have not sent their money
through the Rev. Dr. O’Reilly. Thus
it becomes apparent that the
will be conspicuous largely controlled in the Clan-na-Gael by the men
now so
organization.
The Bishop Inquest.
— ‘ -In th< the Bishop
New Yoke, May 30.— In
ttty Coroner or Jenkins Jenkins testi- I
fiecl to having on May 18 examined
body of the deceased mind-reader,
opening the incisions previously made.
He found the body well preserved. In
the chest cavity he found many vital
organs, and also the brain. The organs
all seemed to be in a healthy condinoh,
and in their death. appearanoe Portions of presented the no
cause for missing,
and of the vital organs were
however, so that the witness could
speak with certainty as to the condition
of the whola._ _
A Jail Delivery Plot.
_______food to her husband, who to
jail charged with a murderous
on a young woman. Three files,
fine steel saws and a ohiael were
in and a waste three pipe. jail ‘ Apjot to
companions murderer, to
Barrett, the wife was
bepn cons ummated Tuesday n ight
V*e ter Mormon MiMtofttrie*
Tuscola, HL, May Three
and masked men attacked the' Rev.
son in the dark Monday night and
alleges tried to kill him.
andleft town. He was the leaden
band of men hero who
be getting Mormon
missionaries were
beaten at Carmago
Mine Operator**
Wheeling. W. Yi
_
final meeting and and Tuesday the the committee of
•Mtaers’ operators ProgrMsive union, the
tors demanded a uniform sctole
Moundsville, Elm Grove,
and Wheeling, which waa refused.
mines will all shut down. Yffiltk - About
men are t hrown idle.
To Bmc** Admlrmi KB
San Fbanciboo. May 30.
MINERS.
The Author Think They’re
Taucfht 1 a Lesson
By Obt^i From
‘ iftnd Belgium-
r Depressed at the
Manner la Which They Were Haedl-
eapped—Oeeat Activity Among the Rus¬
sian Military—Another Disagreement In
German au-
atth© lesson wMoh
strikers Westphalia they have taught the
in at the cost of
comparatively little Violence, consider¬
ing the threatening aspect of affairs.
Sufficient coal was readily obtained
from England and Belgium, mid the
object trated. of the German miners was frus¬
8 ?S$S VJS 3 SiSii!£££l
was promptly crippled.
Depressed at Their Deftat,
The striking minors are greatly de¬
wMch pressed their by the sacrifices Unforeseen have manner hpen in
ren¬
dered nugatory, and there to a bitter
feeling whieh to against altogether the English workmen
not deserved.
Tb*Droam of the Future.
An international laborers’ association
is the dream of the most intelligent, and
a prejudice possibility and of National the future, jealousies nut race
hard are
to overcome, while the quickness
of modem communications gives em¬
employed ployers an in immense dealing advantage over the
which with necessities
can be produced in widely differ¬
ent localities.
Yet the difficulty is one that will have
to be met again and again by those who
traffic in human labor, and with every
recurrence the workmen gain experience
and confidence.
Other Strike News.
The oommittee of the coal pit miners
in the Essen district recommend warn¬
ing work the Friday men that unless they resume
manently on discharged. next they will be per¬
The strikers at Ptlsen have assumed a
ordered threatening there attitude. to Troops have been
The strike the preserve order.
of tramway employes
atPragup The has ended. Prince
emperor and Bismarck,
TueseUg^ttended a council to discuss
London, May 30.—The military prep¬
arations throughout Russia are more
extensive now than at any time within
the past seven years, being on a scale to
suggest a belief that wfir is imminent.
The that military will party be maintained profess to believe till the
end of peace the although it to admitted
that Russia year, to watching with jealous
concern a^prnce, the and*it development asserted of the triple that
to even
commanders have »already been desig¬
nated for service in the event of war.
It,is generally believed that this war¬
like attitude of Russia is partially due to
King Humbert’s visit to Berlin, and the
dose political relations believed to have
been furthered thereby between Ger¬
many and Ital y.
UeObtlsa of Being a Czar.
St. Pbtebsbubg, May 80.—The dis¬
covery of plots against the life of the
czar are now of almost daily discovered occurrence.
The Russian police have
merous societies, with ramifications all
over the continent, whose Bole purpose
seems to be the murder of the Russian
that emperor. lead beyond The police the are borders following of Russia,
and are enlisting the aid of other coun¬
tries in their Be arch.
, Mr*. Mzybriek lUrred Another.
LrvEBJ?oon, the May 80.—The
Tuesday in case of Mrs. Maybnck,
niece of Jefferson Davis, accused of
ing damaging. her husband It by poison, testified was that
was
woman was enamored of another man,
and of hastened arsenic. Maybrick’s Stiles wMch death had by
use tained
poison were produced by
nurse. ' %
\V« Are Fairly Oeprewratml.
London, May novelties 30.—The
exMbition of novelties was
opened ..... I " ~
ball in: in the
of novelties arts,
manufactories which have -been
duoed and invented of late years.
United States to fairly represented.
Samoan Contereace.
London, May 30 —The Daily
Berlin correspondent important says point, that a
ably agreement the German on an indemnity claims,
arisen between the commissioners to
Samoan conference, and. that the
pects of an early conclusion vorable. of the
ference are less fa
Still Waiting;
London, May 80.— The Berlin
spondent of The Standard, in
to Samoan ootoferenoe, says; “The
solves of the delegates are altered
on the main question is still awaited. ”
Count Tolstoi'* Deform* to Be Tried.
St. Petersburg, May 80.-The
at finally Tolstoi’s elaborated, proposed and reforms will be
i
empire, with
m on
An In.an* Mother Kill* Her Cfatldrea.
and the other 6.
frem Se hciuse,, and baby, to still
escaped
JMttSBflsfc! hoe
I here
— . ....................... . ....................— .....
Lfv | t •>
UXORC IDE AND S UICIDE.
Aa Evansville Man Fatally Shoot* Hi*
Wlte and Himself.
i Evansville, Ind., May 8ft—About 7
o’clock Tuesday evening the police were
called to No. 812 Third avenue, where
floor they found Mrs. Hattie Wilson on the
of her bedroom, unconscious from
a pistol shot wound in her book, and
near her her husband dying from a bul¬
let in hffi head.
The two had quarreled, and
had separated. Wilson filled up
with liquor, and coming to his wife’s
boarding him place, which asked she refused her to to live do. with He
immediately again, shot her and himself. He
died in the hospital about an hour after;
the wife can live but a few hours.
Wilson was a brakoman on the Evans-
villeand Terre Haute railroad; he was
married about four years ago. to .Mattie
Combs at Seymour, Ind. Herparents
are very respec table pe ople.- “
Another of the Same Kind.
Baltimore, May 80.— Alexander M.
Walker, aged wife 89 years, attempted tlteir to
murder hto and kill Mmself at
home, No. 712 Stirling drinking street. The the pld
man had been during
morning, and at 1 O’clock quarreled with
his wife. The old lady to Waiter’s seriously shot,
and the bullet hole in chest
will prove fatal
JAP ANESE NE WS.
Earthquakes.Destroy Many House*—Great
Fire—Mysterious Dliease.
San Francisco, May 80.—Japanese
advices by the Pacific Mail sjfianiship
Oshema island destroying more
half the houses thereon.
anifcTfiftfer«rr£i of earthquakes, has
occurred.
Ten Thousand People, Homeless.
A fire occurred on » - May 8 at Yakato-
Akit .ta-Keu, Japan, which destroyed over resi¬
1,000 houses. It originated in the
dence quarter of the city about 10
o'clock at night, and burned for sixteen
hoqrs. peror subscribed Many lives were $1,000 lost for . The the em¬ re¬
over
lief of sufferers. About 10,000 people
were rendered homeless.
Peculiar Fatal Epidemic.
A disease of an exceptionally virulent
and fatal character has broken out in
Tukadagun. within five hours Those attacked after being with taken it die
down. ,
_
The Boundary Line Ought to Be Defined
flocking Ottawa, Into Ont, the Yukon May 30.— mining Miners district are
in large numbers and the demarkation
of the boundary line between Alaska
and British possessions becomes an
dian government for the a American year or two past
has been co-operate pressing with it in settling govern¬
ment to of de¬
the disputed question. The cost
marking the frontier is estimated at be¬
tween $1,5 00,000 and $4,000,00 0.
Will Deduce Wage*.
PmsBTOo, May 3%—The Pittsburg
Forge and Iron company is the. next
firm which, it is said, reduction wilV announce in a
general 10 per cent, wages
at their mill. Others are will soon take exported place
to follow. The reduction
commencing with the scale year,. It to
said that there, is a general inclination
»ong all iron and steel mamtfaeturera
to redu Carnegie, Phipps &
Com'
sion of the Amalgamated convention in
Juno.
___
Indiana School Book*.
Indianapolis, May 80.—The state
board of education and the stqte officers
met Tuesday as tiie “ Btate ..... for wmem'M scnooi supplying book
commission to open bids with
pupils of Indiana schools text
books at lower None prices, of as the provided bids received under
the new law.
were in strict compliance with the law
and it is the understanding that new
bids will be solicited as scion as the
necessarv advertisements can be had.
There was a mistake in the wording of
the advertisement,
FroUibitionlut Murphy Warned.
• Pittsburg, May 30.—Edward Mur¬
phy, the*temperance advocate, was Tues¬
day the recipient of two letters signed
amendment. Mr. Murphy thinks, that
he knows whence the letters emanate,
and will at once take steps to prove
the correctness or falsity of his belief.
Trustee of lira Spragfne Estate.
Providbnoe, R. I., May 30.—C. 8.
Swcetland has been appointed the Sprague by
supreme court trustee of
tate, vice Chaffee, deceased. The cred¬
itors of the estate have been
that the accounts of the deceased
tee are no w ready for examina tion.
Heavy Tro-t* in Wisconsin.
Milwaukee, Wis., May
frosts ore reputed from various
in the state and great places damage where was
flicted to crops. The
frosts were Oshkosh, particularly Delavan, .severe Fort are
mouth, Ellsworth and Phlmyra.
son,
Ha* Had Seven Husband*.
Shelbyville, Ind», mantal May
Mollie Corwin, whose
beats the record, Joseph was granted Corwin, a her
Tuesday from
enth husband, from whom she was
vorced last winter and to whom she
remarried soon after . >
Another Brewery Gobbled.
New York, May 30.—Tt is repoi
that tiie brewery of George Bechtel,
Staten Island, has been tiie purchased being by
English syndicate, price
780,000. • . ___
Will Crui«e in Behring Sen.
Victoria, B. C., Mav 30.-Iho
ish ships received Svdftsure, orders AmpUion sail June an« 10
have to
their cruise'in 3fehrii}g sea.
Favor* IH*h Lieenvc,
opposed to prohibition, aad in favor
i license.
* -
GOOD PI K
Being Mad© to the Censtrartion
of the Cruiser Maine.
She'll Bo the First Real Iron-
Clad Since the War,
Which Ha* Be* Built hy the Failed
State* Government — Her J
Will Be Very Heavy—The Cnl. ____
Ha. la n Short Tlmo Become an
COQIitllUQr I ■"fl&fesMi.ncwSils. --1-^—
711 IftTI Win
Washington, May . , , . _
the New York navy yard are to
effect that nearly all the steel frai
the armored cruiser Maine are
place and that gratifying prog
being made in Maine the construction of
vessel. The if a vest*! fcoonstot- of over
8,000 tons, as fine in tines as
ent with the great power required to
bear up the enormous armament of
about forty guns, ranging from four
great 10-inch rifles down to small revolv¬
ing cannon. will
The’ horse-power be 9,000, oalou-
luted to drive the vessel at seventeen
knots speed, but the principal point of
interest about the ship to the fart that
TU* Dispute Settled.
tion. in this eity, from tho Argentum
had minister been m signed Pans, by stating the that a treaty
governments of
Bolivia and the Argentine Republic, by
which the differences between the two
between countries them in regard had to been the boundary satisfaoto I
adjusted. Several times during the last _
s-wars the boundary line dispute, and its
over
Mineable settlement to received with He sat¬
isfaction Bolivian by and the the members of Republics’ both
legations here._ Argentine
New Market for Saw S«fc
Washington, May 30.—Erhard Bias-
mger, consul of the United g*Bs! '
Beirut, says in a report
’It is well known in fi
United States has become i
bly short silks, time and the an immense silk reel
taw
..
nianifestiucr much anxiety to* <_ _
to superior to that of Broussa, m Alda
rliich, I am informed by a lead-
Bayard’* Love Match. •%!; i&i
Washington, May 30 — Ex-Secretary
28. The distinguished statesman's home
Miss She to
mein1 beam ennsylvania. and character,
a’wsaanrtS'tfftMi ------ person
doubtless enter polities ag ain.
A PeiiKloa Grantod.
Washington, May 30.—Assistant See-
rejerted K3, B his rfSS claim ,f^A£Ef3fi the ground that
on a
special act of It congress shown, was passed however, for
Ins'benefit. was opposed
that Potter had no handin' it,
it, and refused to accept any benefits
under it, and desired his claim for orig¬
inal invalid pension allowed under the
general law. ■
Appointment*. m*.
Washington, May 30.—The .-The resident
has Orlow made W. the Chapman, following KlSlo
be solicitor Cfetton, general. of Maine, to be assist-
John B. ,
ant attorney ge neral.
Thetis Sails for Sitka.
Washington, May 30. -The United
States steamer W Thetis ash,, for saikd Sitk Tuesday Alaska.
from Tacoma, a,
A'fatal Tornado. -
Kansas Crrr, May 30.-BBtaJrts from
Empoiia, Kan., say that a disastrous
tornado passed over Clements, 9 thirty
SrtfisSB leg, and breaking sa and | leg
an arm oi ws
son. Reports verified of several other deaths
cannot ot be lie verified, *“ as the wires are all
down. l The track of the storm was about
fifty miles wide.
____________
Payne Not » Csnfiidats.
Cleveland, May he will 30.—Senator not, tinder Payne
announces that any
circuinstances be a candidate for reflec¬
tion for tiie United States » '
Foreign Note*.
Eight tenants evicted. oq
Ireland, were
Report* from the Congo (tote say the'
local tribal war* are ceasing.
Tbe Marquis of Londonderry, viceroy of
Ireland, Wfii retire retire from from that that office Aug. ft
The Empras Frederick
vast Forstenbeck estate near Kiel, tor IOT 1,500,- W
000 marks.
Capt. Wissmann wifi declare war
all the coast Arab* from Tanga to * ’
less they gubmit before June 1.
The wife of Philip Stewart Robinson, the
author, has obtained a judicial reparation adul¬
from her husband on the ground of
tery. Podhajoe,
A conflagration in the town of
Galicia, ha* destroyed 600 boafes, a church
tricated from the ruin*.
The Irish Times (Con* arm*™) *ay* that a
government commission of experte, which
*.
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of r‘
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Flotehsr I
to 1
a
for t
by hi* I
Ohio Grand 1
n ni rnffm at T
In Ohio Dea 3
cretae in
President Harrison u«
ftY>hie news flwd ” T
United r
field, O.,
- j
belief that the
3 tt».
Le Blanche, “
Lucie; of of the(
at the rooms
M»J. Jo Jones, nm, port tea
m* barrack*, __ , n rafp 1 *—* a
fraT-itorV ■laiming that and ^o-
Mm Harked
rtty, 0** - 1
by tow.
-
•sSEi
Th^rkrept
1
with!
in
.