Newspaper Page Text
* L ti
IE 18.
FFIN, GEORGIA, U. S. A.
i the best ana most promising: little
he South. Its record lor the past
i its many new enterprise* in oper-
ilon, building and contemplated, prove this
, 1 • a business statement and notahyper-
>lical description. ’
Paring that time it has built and put into
t successful operation a f100,000 cotton
f and with this year started the wheels
at a second of more than twice that capital.
• • »put up »large iron and brass foundry,
.iliter factory, an immense" ice and bot-
g works, a sash and blind factory, a
d'factory, opened up the finest granite
'In the United States, and now has
r large oil mills in more or less advanced
ow-H CUpilIM VH ww stall aBlUllUllUUHiirB,
i putting up the finest system of electric
ting that can be procured, and has ap-
i for tw o charters for street railways. It
ured another railroad ninety miles long,
[ white located on the greatest system in
■“ nth. th# Central, has secured eonnec-
its important rival, the East Ten-
Hee, Virginia and Georgia. It ha. obtain-
. direct independent connection with Chat¬
tanooga and the West, and willbreak ground
! toh lew days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system,
fifith it* five white and fourcolored church-
f n, ft ha# recently completed a *10,000 new
' Presbyterian church. It has increased its pop¬
ulate* by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around Its borders fruit growers from nearly
every State in the Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded nearly " side by orchards
on every
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
I fruit evaporators in the State. It is the home
the grape andits winemakingcapacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
% **f»* peaks curriculum, second to none.
te This Is part of tfie record of a half decade
and simply Shows the progress of an already
admirable-city, with*the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer- and
winter, to the world.
Griffin is the county seat of Spalding coun¬
ty, situated to west Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
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
|g welcome strangers and anxious to secure de-
? ’ slrabie settlers, who will not be any less wd-
S322 r to help build up the
only one thing we
and that is a big hotel.
We have several small ones, but their accom¬
modations mu entirely too limited for our
business, pleasure and health seeking guests.
If you see anybody that want* a good loca¬
tion tor a hotel In the South, just mention
Oriffin.
Orifito is the place where the 0 Birr is News
s published—daily and weekly—the beet news¬
paper intheEmpireState of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps is sending for sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet of Griffin.)
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1889,
end will have to be changed in a lew months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
a:,,', jn'm.: 1 ','i. 1 f.-e: .
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
,'4 t HAMPTON, OROBOU.
Mflf - Practices B- to all the State and Federal
ortftdiwly
^ JOHN J. miNT,~
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA:
Office, 81 Rill Street, Up Stairs, over J. H.
White’s Clothing Store. mkr22d&wly
fHOS. R. MILLS,
UTTOBNEY AT LAW,
Chiicte. JmU practice Office to ths George State & and Hartnett Federal s
over novStf
corner.
JOHN D STEWABT. BOBT. T, DANIEL.
STtWART & DANIEL
ATTORNEYS AT AT LAW
Over George A Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice in the State ajid^ygdcral
levelano & garland,
DENTISTS,
GEORGIA.
W Dr L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WOODBIBY, GBOBOIA.
ever business calls.
ttr Collections a specialty.
LOOK!
__
MIsMciMTiii!
1950 acres Land to 18 miles of city, lying of
B. river and creeks, in 6 miles of aepot
tenant
,4c. 300
uvrce m i vi -r and to
to feed them. A bargain will be given in this
[ rf arallimr
IIMICBME
How Decoration •Bay Was 0b-
served at Vicksburg.
Union Craves Decorated
Ex-Confederates.
Speeches Made by Men Who Fought on
Opposite Sides—The Orand Army and
the Old Soldiers' and Sailors' Asso¬
ciation Have a Bow In a Chicago Ceme¬
tery—Arkansas Insulted.
Vicksburg, Miss., Juno 1. - Decora¬
tion Day was observed here in a man¬
ner never before known. Heretofore
the negroes had monopolized the tjeaa-
tifnl grounds of the National cemetery,
and the people here greeted with pleas¬
ure th* coming of Gen. Jacob Gray,
department, commander of Louisiana,
and CoL William Wright, both of New
Orleans, vho took charge of the ceremo¬
nies the pappus hem editorially, wel¬
comed the change. Business houses
closed in the evening, and a large num¬
ber of citizens assisted in the decoration
of gva- es and other ceremonies.
of Tin) both platform sides of the was filled the with Old veterans Guard
: war.
an organization of ex-Confederates,
ay, delivered a beau¬
tiful address, and referred to the past in
feeling tenns, he being one of the be¬
siegers tribute to of* Americans Vicksburg in the 1862. grandest In tis
as na¬
tion he said that twenty-four years had
dissolved the lines between .the north
and south, and it was forever more one
country. Mi'. Heinan Denid, an ex-
Oonfederate, replied to him in a patriotio
speech.
Congressman Kelly’s Bad Break.
Fobt Smith, Ark., June 1.—- Con-
gremauan of Decoration Kelly, of Day Kansas, speech mode here. a mess He
ms
eaidgn ■‘The substance: of Arkansas is
state in disrepute.
Comrades Benjamin and Clayton were
assassinated in this state because they
The were loyal of to the the entire flag of Country their country.
Arkansas. eyes I are upon and
comrades I will am a ertngressmae, that
tested if influence see and you. power‘can are pro¬
effect my it, if have
can even we to resort to
martial law. ”
The indignatiomof our citizens at the
speech of Mr. Kelly culminated in a
spontaneous Democrats, meeting at Republicans the court house and
at 3 p. m.
resolutions Grand Army denouncing men took part Kelly and jn adopted scath¬
ing language. Kelly has Baft
Unpatriotic Vfcteriifcii.
Chicago, June 1..— For sometime
Soldiers’ and Sailors’ associations the
Grand Army claiming that the members
of the other organization were dis¬
charged of man. the Old Decoration Soldiers’and Day' when Sail¬
two’men
ors’ association wanted to contribute
floral MarfrasriEs pieces to grave decorations Mo-
upon one of the men tlireiitefiMto shoot
the first man 'who opposed litoj. After
a minated time the and ttesoemly the floml quarrel pieces was ter¬ al¬
were
lowed to remliin.
A MchtorialDay CdE^-June FatlU%: ' While
Canon City, 1 .— the
Decoration ing from the Day procession Thursday, was return¬ team
frightened cemetery and tearing a
became came
down thdVstoeot in the “..... ’
. They mude_ in a t urn with
wagon contact a iiglifWagon in
which were three women find five chil¬
dren. Both wagons Were thrown into
the air and ‘ came -• " together which in a heap.
,,,, -------- —-— was
or three
Sheak, Sirs. Charles injured White are:
Mrs. S. A.
and infant, Mrs. W. L. Jones and three
small children. • • . ■
General Un«wey Creates a Sensation.
Baltimokf, June 1.—Gen. Cyrus
Bussey, first assistant secretary of the
interior, night by created reference a sensation to the south Thursday in his
a
speech at Ford’s opera house, where
memorial exerblsfes were held by the
Grand Army. Tie said it was proper for
their ex-Gonfederatesjf dead eSmnvdes to honor in the memory but when of
arms,
they boasted of the righteousness of the
lost Their cause, if was quite not right; another it thing.
cause was was a
mime, and they should hot teach
rising generation that the lost cause was
a just one.
In the City of Mexico. ,
Got of Mexico, June 1.—Decora¬
tion day was observed by American
ladies in this city who decorated the
graves of Americans who fell in 1847.
A COPPER FURNACE EXPLODES
Seriously Injuring a Number of Employes.
Two Likely to hie. _
Elizabeth, N. J., June L—An ex¬
plosion occurred Thursday afternoon in
the New Jersey extraction works on
Staten Island sound, below Elizabeto-
port, A furnace blew up and threw
boiling copper over a number of em¬
ployes. William Dale was fatally burned
firing and Edward bolt and McNamer is in critical was struck condition, by a
a
Jouics Wright and Samuel Elliott were
also badly injured, damage but the will works probably amounts re¬
cover. The to
to about $6,000.'
T)<a(h Ride of • Trump.
Memphis, June 1.—An unknown
tismp, who was stealing a ride on an
st!round freight tiain of the Memphis
Cliarleston railroad last Sunday
due tor,’ Ed. Ham. The dead body
then thrown on the track near Ii
Miss., and not discovered until it
been run over by the eastbound
ger train early Monday been arrested, morning. and
a have Conductor Ham has
has confessed,
•kipped out.
Iron Discovered to Oklsbome.
St. Loot?, June L—I
i u -i... *
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. SU1 MORNING, JUNE 2. 1889. ?
A PROT OCOL DRA WN UP.
Samoan Comml**ioners Welting fur te*
st ruction. from Tbelr Government*.
■Bkblin, Sawn June b—A protocol has been
up by the Samoan eommissionsrs
which .will be signed if favoraffle
answers are received from Washington
and Lendon. No farther meeting will
be hold, until the forthcoming instruc¬
tions arrive. ■
* Everybody Mum.
Washington, June L—State depart¬
ment officials will say nothing whatever
the Samoan '
oc
be made with
will be kept secret
of the congress when it
) presented to the senate. ‘ .
Te>.. ,g RfcftktJ. - hoUKflY fi f tihlltr if Hi ft lfWY l
should delay, unless something
occur.
As great » reticence is
the department about the
matter, learned. Nothing official
—
AN INT ERESTING RELIC.
The First Key to the National Treasury
Made by Alexander Hamilton.
Washington, June 1.— The National
museum has just received from A. G.
Winslow, of this city, who was superin¬
tendent of the mechanical division of the
b key is of iron, about nine inches
long, two and king has threa within independent the frame wards, of the
worJ
largest, windings , and of all the marked metal, evidently by intricate in¬
tended to fit into similarly arranged
tumblers in the lode The thank is
hollow, and each handle. of the wards is turned
by Mr. a separate Winslow that the lock, which
has not been says preserved, was’ opened
when the several wards wem at right
angle to one another. The key is an ex¬
cellent specimen of handiwork, and,
while large, is not at aH clumsy.
DR. LEONARD WILL ACCEPT.
HI* Choice Yet to Be Approved By the
Boose of Bishops.
Washington, June 1—Rev. Dr. W.
A. Leonard, of St. John’s church, who
was formally notified Tuesday of his
election as bishop of the diocese of Ohi6,
received the committee again Thu
afternoon, and told them that he i
forward a letter of acceptance
the chairman of the committee.
B. Putnam, to Rev. Dr. R. L. Gaunthor,
president the diocese. of the standing committee Of
Rev. Dr. Leonard’s election Will come
up for approval before the house 6f
bishops October, and at the he general will probably convention be In
con-
searated in New York during i&sM>sskm
of that body, immediately i
consecration he will go to Ohio to li
He has not yet decided where he
THE ST ANDARD OC TOPUS.
Rice, the Marietta Oil Man, Fighting the
Monopoly.
Washington, June 1.-—George Rice
the oil refiner of Marietta, 0., has ar¬
rived in Washington to look after his
case, which will comb before the inter¬
state commerce commission, comprising
£3£», complaints against the Union Pacific,
which will involve about 150 small
lines.. . . ‘
The sensational feature ot the ratio
will be the charge of collusion between
the Standard and the cotton seed nil
carried trusts, which allows cotton seed oil to be
at one-half Or one-third rate On
coal oil Discrimination between the
character of oil in tanks and barrels, and
charges of violating, the long and short
haul clause, will also be preferred. The-
case has just been set for a hearing on
June 18, and is looked forward to with
great interest
CAPT URED AT LAST. T i
After Over a Year** Chase a Noted Former
has
Flynn trad Kehoe of the Central station.
It is Dr. H. L. Moody, of Washington,
D. C.. and he had eluded the shrewdest
of the go' ’secret
service 1 * a year,
For ei^ lias ih
nothing, else but follow the
The oharge cat which Dr. was
drift
numl
less ive „ who 1
here, t
An Impr*<fti<hCbl» mmm fitfietae.
eastern
aeenaJ^o have buE liWra it The
impracticable. scheme is generally Mr. Hoffhcimer, regarded as of being Not?
York, who, it is has been endeavor-
ing to open — witb some of
the large c to
Umountof capi-
Mlnliter Ryan Banqnattod.
City of Mexico, June 1.—A
in honor of United States Minister
ing to the toast, “The PresidentoPMex-
tween 1
A Demand on Fran<». .
N*w York, June l.—Tbe Herald
Washington correspondent telegraphs
lot unce, three and New instating ^k
...... ... ........... ......
Cougfilln,
Sullivan i i Woodruff ,
Not of a Character to Warrant
Their Conviction.
It U Beliaved. However. That They Were
Implicated in n Dr. Cronin’s Murder—An
■l~*h® Murdored
to very geW-
far not sufficient
evidence oi a positive character has
been obtained to warrant a conviction
of the three men inilioted for the assas¬
sination of Cronin. It^a believed, how¬
ever, that the three men took an import-
The actions of the pgj(h»e officials be¬
tokened something out the common
to be on band for consideration.
Superintendent to his office until Hubliard late. did He not
come* was
at the North Side at an early hour, and"
.thence he went to the office of Luther
Laflin Mills, who is engaged by Dr.
Cronin’s friends to prosecute the case.
Mr. Mills was not at his office, and the
chief concluded he would wait for him.
He refused to talk about the Cronin
case. He admitted that he hod heard
that a man named Williams or Mack
had been arrested, bat would say noth-
ingmore. Chief of Police Hubbard much
as as
admitted the Thursday night that his in men
are on eve of a great move the
Cronin mystery.
Ibis said that the man who drove the
doctor away from his home on the fatal
night has been arrested, and that the
murder conspiracy has been traced to
used Camp to 66 of the in .Clan-na-Gael, the North Side which Tum
meet
hall.
It is said on the best of authority that
all the members of this camp will be
brought strenuous before effort made the grand compel jury them and a
to to
give up the secrets which they are
known to hold.
S>M to Know Something.
It is said the man arrested on the
West Side by the police is named
McWilliams. The fellow is said to
know something about the oeimgante
... dxflioe B
who drove the doetor to . the assasination ... .....
den. He is locked up at Central’sta¬
tion. '
A. S. Trade has been engaged as coun-
aon cottage, which are supposed to be¬
long Lieut. to FT Ross O. Sullivan. stated Thursday that
Granin’s clothes had been found, but
where he would not state.
COLLAPS E OF A 8 UILDING.
Five Live* lent hy Accident at Danville,
, . , Virginia.
"Danville. Va., June 1.—A terrible
aooident occurred here Thursday. J.
G. Penn was building a large brick to-
b&oco factory on Bridge street, nearly
200 feet long and six stories high. The
walls had been completed and carpen¬
ters were at work on it. The wind was
o’clock the
siderable ruins, and a con¬
time elapsed before they were
extri opted.
FORGE R IN THE TOILS. ’
He Represents Himself as Agent for H. F.
West Brother* 4 Co., of Cincinnati.
New Yobk, June 1.—An ex-convict
named Daria was arrested Thursday for
passing a forged check of $500 on Mr.
Solomon, a wholesale dealer in silk
handkerchiefs, of this city. Davis called
on Mr. Solomon some days ago, and,
representing F. West Brothers himself & Company, as an agent ot for Cin¬ H.
cinnati, ordered a btil of goods amount-
to $860.
mted the forged
in change shipped $140 in
money. Before the goods were
scription the forgery of was the criminal discovered, led and to h% the de¬
ture. cap¬
.
_
IOWA WHITE CAPS.
An Iowa Farmer Wound* Several With a
Pitchfork.
Dxs Moines, Iowa, June 1.—A tele¬
gram from Mount Auburn reports brief
and persons
ly injured. The victim was a fanner,
and his barn was burned down. Being
“---” driven out ly the flames, 1 be defended
‘ - wounding impheated sev-
Wounded.
Sonfi ern Crop* Highly Promising.
Greenville, Miss,, June 1. — The
well agricultural the Arkansas districts river of the Delta, as
blessed as with fine rain Thursday, country, were and
a
the general crop outlook iafall of prom-
ire. sections Reports in toe gathered counties from of all Coahoma, farming
and Tunica, Sharkey, Bolivar, in Mississippi, Washington, and Issaquena Chicot
and Desha, in Arkansas, indicate that
consequen ce of too much cold weather.
Family Shat Oat of Revenge.
. ________ Utica, °N. Y„ June ___ J,—A T . _ dispatch ____
stone quarries there, was fatally shot ly
Nelson Brackett, one ofthe workmen, at
made 10 «0 Thursday without wanting^ night The assault *aa
an^was te«|>m;d
Kora, la Mexico.
ma
..... . .....
RUMOREDj STEAMSHI P DISASTER.
A Steamer Reported to Have Saak la the
fiulf of at. Lawraueo., I * ,, j-''
Montkeal, June 1.—-It .was rumored
here Thursday night that a terrible
steamship disaster occurred in the gulf
of St Lawrenoe. The" story goes that
the Beaver line steamer Lake Ontario,
which left hero on Wednesday for Liv¬
erpool with a full list of oftbin pas¬
sengers, including many of the leading
citizens of this cityr has gone dowu with
all hands. - ' . ;
From the last reports of the vessel re¬
ceived here she should have been in the
neighborhood of Anticosti, and aa it is
known that a terrible storm lias been
raging in toe gulf for the las}, few days
toe worst is antierpated. 'The rumor of
the disaster seems to be well autheni-
cated. The steamship Lake Ontario was
Sunderland a ship of 2,933 tons and was built at
in 1887. She was owned
by the Canada Shipping company, lim¬
ited.
May tw a Mintake.
The steamship Ontario, of the Beaver
line, which rumor said was Rimm lost in the ’
gulf with all hands, passed '
going out early all Thursday right. The afternoon, telegi
was thou
offices below Rimouski have heard no
in^, to indicate that she met with an
t.ekb Steamer Alhorc.
Detboit, Mich., June 1.—A special
from Port Huron says: The Mich., steamer E.
8.’ dered Pease, of East Saginaw, Saginaw, Sagina foun¬
■ Thursday ________nde in n Saginaw dlar J John 1 MD bay. Sterling, ■ The
Pease Saginaw was mm oommandedby City. mm The consisting . m
of crew,
of uel Capt. Jamieson, Sterling, Mate Chief Martin Engineer Donahue, Sam¬
Second Mate William Gaines and eight
or ten sailors, are lost.
Tim Grew Rescued.
Later— A special to the News from
Port Austin, ashore Mich., says: The steamer
Pease Hope. is two miles above Port
The crew were token off by the
Huron safe. The City Pease live-saving is badly crew wrecked. mid ai-e all
MRS. CLEVE LAND A B RIDESMAID.
She Will Assist at a Hossler Wedding
Which Takes Place June 17.
PrrrsmrBc, Juno 1.—On Jtfly 17 Em¬
ma, the only Brookville, daughter iff Hon. late George
A. Jenks, of Pa., soliti-
tor general of the United States, will be
wedded to Congressman Benjamin F.
Shively district. from the South Bend., Ind,,
Mrs. Frances Cleveland will be brides¬
maid. Ex-President and Mrs. Cleve¬
land must necessarily pass and from through the
Pittsburg wedding, and on their there way is to movement
a give op
foot among local Democrats to them
a grand reception on their return trip.
Mr. cated Cleveland wife to that is end. now being oomimmi--
'
Will Have to Apply to Headquarter*.
Ottawa, Ont., May 81.—The Michi¬
gan Central Railway company has ap¬
plied permission to too to customs transport department United States for
Thirteenth troops through regiment Canadian of New territory. York is The in¬
middle tending ot to August. visit Minneapolis The about the
informed that it would be company was to
apply through the United necessary States
ernment. The Grand Trunk gov¬
company
Encouraging View of the Iron Trade.
RChattanooga, Tenn., June 1.—The
Tradesman is in receipt of letters from
producers and brokers who control five-
sixths of the entire pig iron production
of the central south, relative to the cut
in
on the southern furnaces, and the opin¬
ion among all is that toe bottom is
about reached, and an early improve¬
ment in the market is anticipated.
An llncontrolablo Artesian Weil.
Deb Moines, Iowa, June 1.—While
Smith, boring a well Bayard, on Thursday, the farm of S. T.
near a flow of
water was struck that bids fair to rival
the Belle Plaine spouter. All efforts to
control it have so far been unsuccessful.
An amount of gas is with the wafer,
whioh burns freely. Great excitement
prevails. ______
Boodler MeGarigle Surrenders.
Chicago, June 1.—Ex-Chief of Police
long McGarigle, time
a
ada, walked
and gave himself up.
The fine and costs in the case were at
once paid by E. J. Lehman, and MbGar-
igle was fr ee, _
Reward lor a Train Robber.
Milwaukee, W»., June 1—The
Milwaukee and Northwestern officials
offer $500 reward for the man who
robbed the train at Ellis Junction. A
been dispatch last below night Coleman says the and bandit Shawanee, had
seen
about eleven miles from the scene of the
robbery.
__
Another “Ga*eer” at New Bremen.
||Nbw Bremen, O., June l.-TIie Mi-
ami Gas and Construction company
drilled in another “gasser” in the StanB-
bmy afternoon, farm, with near daily this capacity oily, Thursday of
a about
4,000,000 cubic feet. .
Body Recovered.
Nicholasvillk, Ky., June 1.—The
body of fee young man, Robert Allen,
who was drowned near Little Hickman,
was found floating several miles below,
river. near Pifly’s Bend, in the Kentucky
___
Will Not Havo to Bang.
Philadelphia, June 1.—Mrs. Har-
riet Burrow, who wqs convicted of
der in husband tho first degree for the killing of
her last summer, has liadner
sentence commuted to imprisonment for
life.
Coiored Fire,
T. Surdam and H;
Cushman, at at North North Bennington,
were burned this morning. morning. Loss $8*000;
insurance $4,500, _______,
Drouth tn tho South Brule 1.
New Orleans, June l.-Disp
riS^ow^t Liters 11 JKtorf
1 ' ■' *
-
No Roivhoii for Uncle 8am to Ex-
pert TrouWe ■ m
v, %
With England on Account of*
ihe Seal Fisheries.
VT«» TXJM J • "'I'"
The Warlike Story ot the Drunken BrlUsh
Oibrer Denied In tho KogUeb Haute Of
Common* by the Parliamentary Sew
tnry-WImt the' War Vewei* Art to
■
.
dispatches from Victoria, B. 0.,
other places ooi
between tho Ul
Columbia are not credited as in tire I
I zw
weat Britain would certainly commit this
no act of violence without warning
country of her intentions, and this she
has not done. A warning that Great
Britain would by force dispute the sov¬
ereignty of Behring sea liod never been
communicated to the United States, and
this alone showed the imF obaljii % of
the story. '
:
It might ha that the three vessels
named fcfoS&xs were going to Behring sea,
probably consist in toothing more than
Saftta keeping a watch on the situation, to
vice. If our vessSis attempted
that was unwarranted, it might 1
the British officers would feel
upon to interfere. T
The United States sent vessels to th*
Newfoundland fisheries each year to
look after American interests, and th*
British vessels probably had a similar
mission ____ in ,_____ Alaskan M. waters, presuming
that thev ifniteJst^s would no there. ; -T
The mval force at pres-
ent available in Behring seaeontonraf t
the Bear, toe ,------ Thetis ; and i wenue cut¬
ter. These vessels are of no ns* for
actual warfare, and are simply police-
...... ^ eircum-
stances demanded it. The Charleston is
also at San Erancisco, butit will be some
time before toe will lie ready to go ifito
commission. -
d Wild Report Dented.
London, Jane 1.—In toe house of
commons Thursday evening Sir Jams*
Victoria,^. C., 4at three men^war in
by American men-of-war.
HE WANTE D~ANOTH iF~5R1NK.
A Chattanooga Man Fatally Cot* a Man
Who Had Befriended Him.
Chattanooga, June l.—A man
named Wheeler went to a saloon ™ in
South r- : " - - ^ *" .....*•
declined to let him have anymore to
drink, and a boisterous row between the
two ensued.
About that time Charley Dunn, a
member or the Carlisle Fire company,
was passing the bar, and, hearing the
voice of wheeler, whom he had be¬
friended on several occasions, he rushed
in an d tried to separate the parties.
carved Dhiui . ________ ....... .
were laid bare, the entrails falling out
upon the floor, and the transverse colon
in was tlm badly side, lacerated. toe Dunn and was the also neck, eut
on aim m
and his wounds are regarded as fatal,
though rity affords the best is being surgical rendered attention h the
Wheeler was arrested and is in jail.
Indian Scare In Nebraska.
Omaha, Neb., Juno 1.- Settlers keyapahoe for
miles around Norden,
county, protection are driving accounted into that great town for
on a
tcare. Tlie place is not on any i
or telegraph line, and reliable f
sion is difficult to secure. It is______
that the scare originated in the false re¬
ports from Pine Ridge agency of
Indian outbreak there.
_
Foreign Note*. .
A slight earthquake shock occurred on the
isle of Wight Friday.
Several earthquake shocks were felt on
the loft bank of the riv%r Seine Friday,
In the bouse of commons the Beotchfeoaf
government bill was read a second ttma.
Mr. O’Brien has gone to Nice. A friend
ofrthe Irish editor has placed a villa at hit
TtoEoumaniansenate has voted 15,009,-
000 florins to complete the fortifications of
the country.
The Marquis of Lome it confined to his
house with a severe cold. He has wholly
lost tho use of his voice. •
The body of Mr. Maybrick, who, it is al¬
leged, was poisoned by his wife, was secretly
exhumed for further examination.
Prince Alois Schwaraenherg and a lieuten¬
ant in the Austrian hussars, fought a duel.
The former was mortally wounded.
On the application Parnell of counsel tor The
Times in the libel suit, the case has
been postponed until next November.
Mr. Visetteily.ftbe well known book seller,
of London, has been sentenced to three
months’ imprisonment tor publishing r * ‘
novels.
Earthquake shocks were felt at Cher¬
bourg, Havre, Rouen, Granville, Coen,
Portsmouth and Havant Thursday evening.
No damage to property is reported.
The betrothal of the Princess of
_
second daughter of Duke Jhe Ware of
negro, to the Grand Duker Peter,
son of fee Grand Duke Nicholas,
of the czar,-is announced.
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