Newspaper Page Text
W ••."•, -■; .
. . i
i, QEOBGIA, U. 8. A.
e beet and most promisiug
„th. Its *«o»<d for the
K m m** MwentorprteM in
— 5 and contemplated, prove
I statement and not a
t time it has built an<j put
a a #100,000
itWs year started,the
....
1 of more than twice that
t a large iron and brass
story, an immense
, a sash and blind factory,
ry, opened up the finest
B the United States, and now
ii mill" in more or less
| construction, with an aggregate
1 over half a million
faa procured, and has
i for streefcrailwnys.
nedbsrrailroad ninety mile* long,
s located on the greatest system
„ji, the Central, has secured
* its important rival, the East
l and Georgia. It bas
indent connection with
____ m
i and the West, and will break ground
for a fourth road,
i independent system.
I five white and four cohered chnrch-
entiy completed a *10,000 new
ichurch. It has increased its pop-
i by neariy one fifth. It has attracted
I its borders fruit growers from neariy
sin the Onion, until it is now Hur¬
on nearly every side by orchards
iyards. It has put up the largest
, _
t evaporators in the State. It is thehome
i and its wine making capacity has
every year. It has successfully in-
Jyears HBted' a system of public schools, with a
curriculum, second to none.
{is Is part of the record of a.half decade
Ubnply shows the progress of an already
i city, with the natural advantages
the tipcat climate, summer and
», in the world.
In is the county seat of Spalding conn-
sated in west Middle Georgia, with a
y,fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
k level. By the census of 1890, it
Ihavs at alow estimate between0 000 and
) people, and they are oil of the right
ide-aWhke, up to the times, ready to
9 strangers and anxious to secure de¬
settlers, who will not be any lees wel-
9 if they bring money to help build up the
l There is about only one thing we
, J badly Just wrtr, and that is a big hotel.
Shave several small ones, but their accOm-
are entirely too limited for our
, pleasure and health seeking guests,
i mo anybody, that want® a good loca-
i UfT a hotel in the South, just mention
i is the place where the Giuvra News
ablished—daily and weekly—the best ne^rs-
f in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
i stamps in sending for sample copies,
I descriptive pamphlet of Griffin!
i brief sketch is written April 12th, 1889,
1 will have to be changed in a few months
irinbraee new enterprises commenced and
spirted.
jgriu)FES8I0NAL DIRECTORY.
®" HENRY C. PEEPLES,
^ATTORNEY AT LAW,
HAMPTON, GBOEOIa.
Practices in all the State and Federal
Spirts- oottKMtwiy
JOHN J. HUNT,
■attorney at law,
GRIFK1N, OKOKGU.
KB, ai Hill Street, Dp Stairs, over J. H.
e’s Clothing Store. mar32d&wly .
mOS. R. MILLS,
jj|TTQRNEY Em at law, Federal
practice In the State and Hartnett’s
Office over George A
novUtf
11> STIWABT. BOBT. T. DANIEL.
STEWART A DANIEL
ITTORNEYS AT LAW,
J Over George 4 Hartaett’s, Griffin, G*.
PIB practice in the State and Federal
nrts. I-*—— iuiyl»dtf
CLEVELAND A GARLAND,
DENTISTS,
R1FFIN, : GEORGIA.
"
rr*
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
| woonnrBT, skobcua.
and where
r business calls.
■ Collections a specialty.
»OK!
—
Isle Acceutei Time!
1 condition and hands sufficient on ttfc place
*N’!SSfWfKiSS
I inside city limits.
»inside city llmite—good dwelling.
f“ a .V : “ fruits
I « 1< II « <> .<
and vacant lots top numerous to
bag property to sell will do well
rit, I take asl have option applications if desired. ev-
it on
A. eUKSIffGHAS,
Beal Estate Agent
mm
BIRD IT WORK.
p
life Returning to the Prostrated
Conemaugh Talley.
The Stupefying Horror of the Situ*
tiou Is Now Over
And Thousands of Men are
Clearing Away the Debris.
THREATENED WITH INSANITY.
THE MENTAL CONDITION OF MANY OF
THE SURVIVORS IN DANGER.
JOHSSTOWN PEOPLE SBEMtO HAVK
LOST FAITH IN PEOVIBESCE.
Many 'of Them Throw Away Their Bible*,
While Others Barn and Destroy Them
#lthout Any Attempt to Conceal Their
Action—Kerrsvllie’s Sanitary Condition
Mot the Best—The Town Has a Narrow
Escape from Destruction by Fire—Gov¬
ernor Beaver Arrives at Johnstown to
Confer With Adjutant General Hastings.
Johnstown, June 8.— The valley of
the Conemaugh is fall of labor oh all
Hides; of long lines of. men pulling at
topes and tearing away the ruins; of
men with steel-pointed poles and axes
cutting .Oonemangh and shoveling away the big drift
at the bridge; of railroad
building nml winh&triugiug; of soldier
boys pitching white tents on the place
where the city stood that toe 10,000
workmen may have shelter; of the-build¬ 80j000
ing of along, low stable where
hefrses are to be stalled a day when
pluck and • grit arc getting the master
hand of hard nature.
The Horror Is Ove; Now. .
The horror of it is all over now', and
heroism people talk of more of tile bravery, and
some of those who went
down than of the terrible fate which has
Overtaken so many of the living in losing
all that made life dear. The sentinel at
the gate in burned Pompeii is not with¬
out his brother in Johnstown. Buteven
to these stories there is given little time,
for there is $ duty upon the people—a
duty to the Hving.
Upon the hill which overlooks the
srity made - viMW their itU headquarters, »« wgp o ) » Mr the Baaew- odor ls a vc of
death is becoming plainly perceptible.
No time must now be lost in clearing out
the jam below where so many of the
dead rest In the town one can not
perceive but this, for the first keep down the
stench, the sanitary committee pile has
gone to work in earnest and every
of debris which is supposed to contain
the drenched wrecks with of carbolic humanity acid, has while been
nearly the whole force of men has been
put at work on these places. At . the
same time a notice was issued by Rev.
31 Beale, the chairman of the morgue
committee, that all bodies not identified
within twenty-four hours will be
buried. This may be hard on the friends
of the dead, but any other arrangement
■would be fatal to those who survived.
Many Mind* Threatened.
The mental condition of almost every
former resident of Jolmstowu*is one or
the gravest character, and the reaction
can scarcely fail to temporary produce many insanity. eases
of permanent. or
Most of the faces that one meets, both
male and female, are those associated of the most with
profound melancholia, the
an almost The absolute disregard shaws of the
future. nervous by system tremulousness
strain it has borne a
of the hand. «
PROPERLY GUARDED.
Mane Allowed to Enter Johnstown With¬
out the Necessary Passes. ...
In many respects Johnstown presents,
the appearance of an armed camp. It
looks now not much unlike the pictures
of the cities shelled and captured by the
armies in the civil war, taken after the
soldiers had entered the town and
pitched their white tents there. The
soldiers and not keep only marauders patrol Johnstown but at
night they guard all approaches to away, the city
and allow none to enter who afe not
provided with passe:-. The passes must
be signed by Gen. Hastings and Sheriff
Stevenson, of Cambria county.
Sightseers allowed Kept Out.
No persons are to leave Pitts¬
burg nOw for Johnstown except those
having the required passes. At the
Pennsylvania sold railway point depot east there of are Boli¬ no
tickets for any and Ohio
var, and on the Baltimore no
tickets are sold Relief for any trains point beyond
Rockwood. them is are jealously run aa
usual, but entrance to
guarded, tod nqpe but those having the
provisions allowed and clothing eater, actually in
charge are to
NO FAITH IN PROVIDENCE.
Bibles Thrown Away and Destroyed by
the People of Johnstown.
The people of Johnstown have lost
their faith in Providence. Many of them
have thrown away their Bibles, and
since the disaster have openly burned
them. They make no concealment of
this. «
•Thin la No Time to Pray.”
During the flood one of the most up¬
right and devout merchants in town was
rescued as by a miracle. It was with
Considerable difficulty that he was re¬
vived, but as he was lying on the bed, a
clergyman, who was earnestly present,, began dropped to
on his knees and
“Ijeave me!” cried the merchant. to thank
•This is is no no time tiifie to to pray or faoe
God. I I never never want want to see your
again/' Record*.
Toi e Out the family
A lady who had lost her husband and
four children was gathering together toe
records of her home when toe caffie
1?' births of her children, A
'
GRIFFIN,
out she proffered the book to him. The
man “Do happened realize, to be a madam, clergyman. what
you yon
asi&r£: “Perfectly, ” was sz&a&tsi the reply. •Thavn
SW-VSSKYWiyRS book ”
any more.
Governor Denver Arrives.
Governor Beaver arrived here about*
Adjt Gen. Hastings and others,
the disposition oftlie relief funds.
AMreadful Stench. J
Even the undertakers were unable to
remain at work in the Fourth ward
8n rniu
.....room. All the
were taken from toe room and placed in
the front yard. They will be kept fear *
day or two longer, but in toe hot ton
decomposition will set in very soon. &
Another Victim Rescued Alive.
Another victim of toe wreck has been
rescued from the rains alive. Thursday
night of toe Mrs. prominent George photographers Stantler, wife of one
from of the
town, was taken the wrack of a
house down near the point. Mrs. Btaat-
beneath ler was lying pile when of beams found and in a rafters, cavity
a
which held up the mass of ruins and
prevented She them unconscious, from crushing and her. just
was was
breathing. Her hold on life Was a very
slender one, and it is not probable that
she will live, although toe is receiving <3
the tenderest care. When the news
her rescue, after six days and nights of
exposure and lack of nourishment
people. spread through crowded the about town, toe hundreds stretcher of
on
which she was being carried to see her.
It is considered almost miraculous
"that she should have remained alive so
long. The rain and cold were enough
to kill her without toe bruises and
wounds which she received during the
flood. ■
r — At Nlnevoh.
At Ninevah alone Thursday 750 bodies
were buried from the morgues about
town. Father Doirn conducted religi¬
ous services at the St. Colnmbia Catho¬
lic church, in Cambria City.. The army
of the dead was placed in trenches. Less
than 100 had been recognised claimed by friends.
None of them were for for private
burial, however, as in a majority ity of in¬
stances the survivors were too poor to
stand the expenses. These bodies were
river
commission-
oounty furnished
the plat of the ground where they sleep.
KE RRSVIL LE.
The Town’s Sanitary Condition Bad.
Threatened With Destruction by Fire.
I e®d-
ed. Four persons were found sick, and
there is'no morgue in toe town. Rev.
Mr. Reed says there are still 10,000
bodies in the ruins at Kerrsville.
Threatened With Fire.
Byron’s 's Kerrsville Eei woolen mill
destroyed time it looked by fire if what Thursday. was' y. left At ax of one the
as i i
village would be brick, destroyed. . The mill
was a three-story situated____ itod in the
midst of tho wrecks of several .houses.
The ruins were on fire several times but
were extinguished after a hard fight by
the bucket brigade. Mr. Byron’s hand¬
some residence near by was ruined by
toe waters. .
Pneumonia.
There is an unusual amount of siok-
ness at Kerrsville. The physicians
claim that several hundred cases of
pnuemonia exist The children are also
afflicted with measles and kindred com¬
plaints. The reaction, now that toe
great left shook hundreds has of passed survivors in a with measure, their
has
nervous broken. forces badly shattered and
HU Hair TuiMd White.
Zill Gruber,
morning last fii__ That
tache battle and with board. the waters. night Oh Saturday
morning his hair and beard began to
turn with gray white. and they Gruber we now attributes well streaked toe
change to his awful Friday night’s ex¬
perience.
_
THE CITIES OF THE DEAD.
A Reporter Makes a Visit to Each of tlte
#x Cemeteries.
Cincinnati, June a— The Post pub¬
lishes the following from its Johnstown
correspondent: I have made tour of toe cemeteries
a
to see how the dead were disposed of in
burying their last grounds—two resting place. to There the south are six of
this place, one to the north, .and three
in MorrellviU on toe west The prtn-
e is Sn&dy Vftl
cemetery a* half HomerviUe, mile from thweity on Ston
meek, about r oi
Johnstown, the subsided the
As angry waters
pretty oemetery was wrecked as badly
as was left the standing. city. Scarcely Tail a columns monument
was are
broken like pipe stems, and fences and
evergreen bowers were almost a thing of
toe past * Whole houses, their
on
with their roofs on toe ground, oc
toe lots, the beach, or blocked up path¬
ways, while other houses in fragments
strewed the surface of the ground from
one end to toe other of toe cemetery,
once the pride of Johnstown. I found
that some of toe trees which were stand¬
ing had feather beds or articles of fur¬
niture up in their boughs. Here and
there was a dead oow or a horse, two’or
three wagons and a railroad baggage
oar. beautiful . .
Grand View cemetery, a
spot, was storied as a citizens’ cemetery
and incorporated two years ago, and is
now toe Pennsylvania. finest burying place It is situated in this sec¬
tion of on
toe summit of Kerrsville hill, between
600 and 700 feet above the town- It is
did not
hold lots sue to
four feet deeg,^ s ixtyl
prasen the
TS|i. to i side by
» -•*» made for
Jr, one grave and
_____,
Gen-
service, ’ received 1 telegrams hospital from
ms
Johnstown, Pa, toe situa-
tion there. rom Passed
Assistant f • in which
with Dr.
board of
1 had looked
is ,
sickness s danger of
y measures
are taken.
} require oonsider-
remain as long as fas services are needed.
Mako arrangesaents for .toast a
h
A I*r*o Pension Just in Time. *
Barclay PmsBuao, Thursday June paid 8—Pension largest Agent
out the
single nection pension with the granted Pittsburg during office. his con¬ It
amounted to *5,908.01 and Was paid to
Sarah. J. Mackin, a widow, living at
Johnstown. It is remarkably timely as
a relief measure, Mrs. Mackin having
been completely robbed of her earthly
possessions by toe flood.
From Williamsport,
people Williamsport, little Pa., June 8—The
breathe a easier V RUW now that LUttL
alt apprehensions of further sr dissipated? suffering ~ ’
from hunger have been d
Advices coming in show that s toe the toss of
property has been veay heavy in
places & total near wreck. here. Many Moms, mills, Tioga dwellings county,
a
and other buildings were swept away.
£n«nrance Companies Contribute.
JEtna BLartpobd, Fire Insurance Conn., June has 8.—The
tributed company con¬
*1,000 for toe Johnstown suf¬
ferers. The Phoenix Fire Insurance
company has contributed $1,000.
• TUo Fond of Now Fork City.
fund New for York, Johnstown June 8.—The mayor’s
has reached $163,-
000 and toe chamber of commerce fonds
$42,000. Other funds are also increas¬
ing rapidly____
NOTED C ROOK CAP TURED.
Lon Barrett Arrested at Indianapolis for
Passing Counterfeit Money.
InOianapolis, Ind., June 8.—Thurs¬
day a well known crook came to grief
here, Lon Barrett, whose reputation as
police, c
He was found to have nearly a hun¬
dred dollars’ worth of coanterfeit of the
short $10 denomination in his possession. A
time before his arrest he passed
one of them on a merchant. He recent-
, ty feits passed Decatur, a great many of toe counter¬
and-other at places in Springfield, IJlinois, especially Chicago
in Decatur, where he Came new flood¬
ing toe town.
Maj. Carter pronounces Barrett an old
Sam. crook Rivers and desperadoi of tt home member thieves, of toe in
gang
only a short time. •
. - Indianapolis. itobt to remove the
prisoner The penalty to is from two
to ten years,
and it is believed Barrett will plead
guilty.' -
j • EXECUTIO N 9Y ELE CTRICITY.
A Man Who is Willing to Be Experi¬
mented with for B5, OOO.
Albany, N. Y,, June 8.—A strange
communication came in the mail of the
superintendent nothing of prisons tods morning.
It was less than an offer on toe
lor. part of a man, whose name is withheld
the present, to act as a victim to sci¬
ence by testing the efficacy of the new
apparatus for executing by electricity.
The writer of the letter, which is post-
, tyg kek a poor
He understands
ibtettsto toe re¬
liability of toe eleotrical apparatus, and
that a trial of it would doubtless settle
all mooted questions and remov many
of the objections now urged so vehe-
He "is willing to be a trial victim, if
his family superintendent to provide "eft will^y for their $6,900. after to
want
toe deadly current The letter has las ’ll® taken ______ probably away vay their their be
cariosity - • in . Gen. p Lathrop’s
a
Flf«*jHl Murder to Blow C» a Chart*.
Pomeroy, O., June8.—Monday being night,
while services were held in the
Free Methodist ohurch, near this city,
an attempt was made to blow up toe
building. A lot of powder had been
placed under the church, to which a
fuse was attached and lighted, but it
missed fire. Fully half a peck of blast¬
ing building powder after was the taken attempt from under discov¬ the
was
ered hundred by the congregation. would have At been least killed one
had the powder persons been ignited.
Death From Cocaine Injection.
Newcastle, Ind., June 8.— Rowley
Scott, a young mem whose home is in
Alexandria, dmd in this city at 6 o’clock
Thursday dose of cocaine, night from injected a self-adminfetered to allay toe
pains from urinary trouble He from which
he was suffering. Remained in a
time. His parents are well-to-do citi-
Bensof Al exandria. _.
MW. Maybrick Guilt,,
trank and a fflase chocolate box in her
Sflg Bsggar --
TtitfTBflttomt M ooting of Typ©#/
--« « , Joae 8.-A1---
MINI MILLIONS!
The Business Portion of Beattie,
Wash,, in Ashes.
The Greatest Fire Ever Known
on the Pacific Coast.
It Starts in a Block of Frame Buildings
and Explosions Spread tho Flames—At¬
tempts to Oheek the Progress With
Giant Powder Provo Hraltless—Several
Uvee Reported Lost.
SxAWidt, Wash., June 9.—What was
the business part of tola city Thursday
morning is now nothing but smoulder¬
ing rains and debris. Fire broke out
Thursday afternoon iji the basement of
a two story frame building on the south¬
west corner of First and Madison streets,
owned by Mia Margaret J. Powtena.
The fire originated in some turpentine
which caught fire in some way. The
first story which was leased by the
Seattle Shoe company, and the upper
floor being occupied for offices was soon
Although the promptly volunteer fire tho depart¬ alarm
ment responded to cheek
they could do little or nothing to
toe flames. The building, like most of
the others of its kind in the business
center, was not detached, but was a cor¬
ner one of a row of frame buildings, all
joined together and of various heights.
They were of timber and proved an easy
prey to toe flames..
Explosion* Spread tho Flames.
Dietz Adjoining the wholesale first building liquor store,- was
& Myers’
The barrels of liquor exploded with ter¬
rific reports as soon as the fare reached
them, scattering the. cinders for and
near, and in a short time the entire
which was a oqafeotionaty store, Gill-
more & Company s real estate offioe, and
several other establishments, including
a number of professional offices ana
toeTTcioman building, on Front street
to The the south, flames but spread of no avail Marion . street
across
to toe Palace and Opera House saloons.
Then for half an hour square after
square was laid in ashes. This took in
A S. Smith's grocery, Merchants i
sale confectionery, a fruit store,
Spencer, Lang & plumbing Company's and drug steam at.
tabUshment; R.1 l Graham, re
M od. burning, b rt.‘^, t op x‘nfc*
street, between Madison and Marion,
caught building, fire three-story in the upper structure, stories. owned The
a
by George. Frye .and valued With at $120,000,
was Seattle . soon pharmacy, destroyed. the Golden it went Rule toe ba¬
zar, Harris & Company’s dry good*
store, Company’s Abernathy's undertaking shoe Btore, establishment; Crouse A
Labour’s dry goods house, and Bread-
man’s paint and oil establishment.
The Kenyon block, a little to the
reduced north of to where ashes. toe la fire this began block was also toe
was
job pri?itiug Times, establishment Veuer A Vaughs of The Even;
ing store, and Barie’s tailor shop. music
From the opera house block the fire
sisted of two-story frame buildings GflifoiA occu¬
pied Clothing by E Lobes bazar, Gordon the Brothers’
tailoring establishment, company, the Oriental
bazar The and fire several department other struggled big ooneems. bravely
to save the most valuable part of front
street between Columbia and Yester
streets, which contained a fine row of
brick buildings two and three stories
high, and where four banks had their
Washington ciation and Guarantee Savings bank. and Loan The Asso¬
row
consisted ToMas, Singerman of a corner & Company’s block occupied whole¬ by
sale diy goods store, etc., the Pearin
building, toe San Francisoo clothing
house, toe Star block, the Aroade baiter
ing and toe Yester Block on Center
square.
Gftmt Powdar U«e«l Wlthoat Snoca
In Central square all the telegraph
offices were situated. The Safe Deposit
company Explosions hod of a giant building powder in this row.
were use¬
flames less to prevent and clouds toe of awful spread of the
to the i
dal mill and lumber yards, “The water
was giving out and the streams from
several lines of hose only readied the
second story.
Tacoma to tin Rowuo.
The fire department of Tacoma came
over by the Puget Shore railroad, making
toe journey in sixty-two minutes. How¬
ever, the local department and that of
Tacoma combined were unable to stay
the progress of the flames, and the at¬
tempt to blow, the Union block inflicted
more injury upon the firemen than it
did damage to toe building, and the
block -was consumed by the flames,
Some of .toe more valuable of the con¬
tents of Union block were removed to
places of safety.
The square to the north
in the dty.
The offices of toe Western Union, Postal
and Pnget Sound Telegraph comp
on Yealer ft’
with the'
Post-.
railway..------ ray offices, and a number
and . other
yers’, doctors*
skT-SESSI every newspaper, hotel,.telegraph office,
railroad • depot; and
waterfront,
"■krs^ *..
lAsuav rwmj *
dike
New Yore, ,
at tile time of the sudden
Allen Thorndike Bice that he j
intestate. It now appears
did leave a will, one
found about ten dap
Ms effects in Baris..
Ootting, of Mr. Rice's of Boston, one of the <
estate.
found Beyond the friends tlie fact of tool 1 .....
NE WS IN BRI EF.
A Condensation af Iiiterertla* Item* aa
Varlam So hi ecu.
The miner* at Oliver Springs are out on a
strike, refuting a reduction of wagea
John L Jones, a Mineral Ride coal miner,
was killed while sleeping on a track near
Canton, O.
Jaoob Baker, a wealthy farmer near Chat¬
tanooga, O., fall on a saw shears and was
Suuday school convention at
elected Hon. B. J. Loomis, of
The famous*Wilder brigade reunion tills
year will be held at Chattenoogaoothe 18th,
IBth and 30th of September. •
Wesley Lenoity, a ^year-old tramp,
from Hamilton, Ont, was killed by a pas-
senger train near KnoxviP*, X«UL
titiously
apolis authorities for S sulf of stripes,
William Ryland, aged 80,. of Wooeter, O.,
had the satisfaction of being buried in the
coffin made for that purpose % himself.
Madison 2nd council plsaisd strapis
once folks and made saloon ki
changing th& licemto fee trom m $15 f 15 to to 8150.
Cornelius Means shot and. killed
Prislean at Ridgeway, a C. Both
ored. Pruleau had ruined Means*
Capt Henry C. Lee, a brother of Robert
Lee, and nephew of the late Gen. E.
Lee, died suddenly of apoplexy at Rich¬
mond, Va.
Father Cathollo Arnold Damen, missionary, a J., a widely
known was stricken
with paralysis at Evanston, Wy. T. He is
over 15 years old. ?
J. H. Benjamin, editor of the Deland
News, Dou^Iau. shot and instantly killed Capt J. W.
fit New Smyrna, 71 a» v in
about an editorial.
A story is now told to the effect that gold
street’s has been, house found at on Gaines the ville, site of destroyed Gen. Long- by
fire some time pfo***
A special from Wilkesbarre, Pa, says:
John and Henry Gilley, brothers, English
miners, were crushed to death by the fall of
a coal roof in the Honey “Brook mine.
Mrs. Miroe, of New Boston, O., who used
a horse pistol for -cleatiitt£ a tack hammer Jim post-
ported her house while the contents
of the tool are picked out of her hand.
Miss Nellie Content, of CrawfordsvUle,
Lon Hewitt, a young ry ua 8 man Hwua or of ShelbyvOfe, opioyTiiw, ^
between Ind., was little two found small j’sxae.’ws TO and will probably dla
over a stream,- m,
Robert Bolingwr, of Hartford Ctty, tat.,
was sent to the insane asylum become he
had a mania for borrowing money. If this
whole towns will have to
day night, while kneeling a
prayer. Heart disease iei
been The the*....._ Brotherhood of Locomotive ...... Firemen, ......._
the Railway brakemen and the Switchmen’s
Mutual association, which were fused into
one organization at Chicago, elected K P,
Sargent preaidant
A Dane* re war*, wim ran into ssection
Foreman Smith’s hand-oar, Wedneeday, on* mile above
Albuquerque, N, M., on killing
tile foreman outright and probably fatall y
injuring two of the crew.
At Washington C. EL, three indictments f
' J ^ * dm Carter. ~—
. ............; to obey a
The Rev- Dr. Thomas P Davfea, for i
ty-one years pastor of St Peter’s ^
P hils 4fflrtjiiL boon * * “
■PH
■'V
’«!#*» 1 *
wordl*
'4%
mm '
Mataa tm and'