Newspaper Page Text
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VOLUME 18.
?FIN, GEORGIA, U. S. A.
griffln in the beet and most jWomising little
r ta the South. Its record lor the past
j decade, its many new enterprises in oper¬
ation, building and contemplated, prove this
• business statement and notahyper-
Inuring iitiieal description. it has built and into
thht time put
successful operation a #100,000 cotton
ipry and with this year started the wheels
wi second of more than twice that capital,
t put up a large iron and brass foundry,
^fertiliser factory, an immense ice and bote
works, a sash s»nJ blind factory, a
factory, opened up the finest granite
in the United States, and now has
r large oil mills in mors or leas advanced
of construction, with an aggregate au-
isonted capital of over half amilhoqdollars,
it is putting up the finest system of electric
righting that ean be proenred, and has ap¬
plied for tfo charters for street railways. It
^d bM secured another railroad ninety milss long,
while located on the greatest system in
gw Sooth, ths Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its important rival, the EastTen-
fejidf— Virginia independent and Georgia. connection It has with obtain¬ Chat¬
ed direct
tanooga and the West, and will break ground
J vfesa few days fora fourth road, connecting
w ith a fourth independent system. churcfi-
With it# five white and four colored
/ h, it has recently completed a #10,000 new
J Presbyterian church. Ithas increased its pop-
elation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
•round its borders fruit growers from nearly
•very State in the Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side.by orchards
k and vineyards. It has put up.the largest
r Iruit evaporators in the State. It is the home
r eftlie grape and its wine making capacity has
[ [ augurated doubled every system year. of It public has successfully schools, with in-
a a
| - seven years curriculum, second to none.
B ;; This 'ThJo is >u r»»r*f part of of the tl*o record of of ft a half half decade d
F and simply shows the progress of an already
J r IS. admirable city, with the natural advantages
oi having V the .. Mt". finest .._A climate, -1J__________ summer and
i winter, in the world.
| |i! Griffin is the county Middle seat of Georgia, Spalding with coun-
I ty, situated in west a,
l healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1180 feet
l 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
P sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
H welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel¬
come if,they bring money to help build up ths
own. There is abont only one thing we
need badly fast now, and that is a big botei.
We have several small ones, bnt their accom¬
modations are entirely too limited lor onr
business, pleasure and health seeking guests.
H you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin.
Griffin is the place where the GiurFis Nkwb
s published—daily and weekly— the best newer
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet of Griffln.l
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1889,
and will have to be changed in a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
ompieted.
______
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
- HENKY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
HAMPTON, UKOItolA.
Practices in a(l the State and Federal
ourts. , octftd&wly
JOHN J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
GRIFFIN, GBORGU.
Office, 91 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J J. H.
White’s Clothing Store. mar22d&wl.v
rHOS. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice in the State and Federal
Courts. Office over George A Hartnett’s
obrnsr. nov2ti
.
JOHN 1) STEWART. ROBT. T. DANIEL.
STEWART & DANIEL.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George & Hartnett’s, Griffin, Gn.
Will practice in the State and Federal
ourts. julyWdtf
& GARLAND,
if 1 st*,
GRIFFIN, « : : : GEORGIA.
0. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
wooonrav, oeoroia.
Pprompt attention given to ail business!
Will practice in all the Courts, and where
ver business calls. • '
*W CoBections a specialty.
LOOK!
-- --I
if Is Tto Accepts Til
-tot-
1380 acres Land in 13 miles of city, lying
houseilgood mill and gin house, press, Ac. 800
acre# in cotton, 170 In corn, all up and place in
good, condition and hands sufficient on Si
s
P 380 part inside city limits.
acres, the woods,. 4 bouse, Ac.
100 acres in room
58 acres inside city limite. •
IS acres inside eit^rlimits—good dwelling.
10 « “ •* o « “ fruits
31 “ “ " »- “ •'
Houses and vacant lots too numerous to
K'sS'iWKS’’ Panties having property to sell win do well
fl. A. CUNNINGHAM,
• Beal Estate AgefeV^
Another “Confession” in Regard
to Dr. Cronin’S Harder.
Discredits all Statements
Heretofore Made,
And In This One Implicates Alexander
and P. O. Sullivan, Maroney and Mc-
Duugall and Detective Coughlin—An
Interview With the Prisoner Proves
Him a Fabricator.
Chicago, Juno 18. - Woodruff the
horse thief, imprisoned as ono of the
suspects in the Cronin murder, has con¬
fessed again. All statements that he has
made he now discredits, and
member of the
- j.. -, ™ »ya he was trusted
nip’s mfirclerers because he
Ftiufnp *#>*» with valuable information
during one of the military raids
into Canada.
Woodruff says be arrived in Chicago
on March 20, and obtained work from a
gardener on South Port avenue, not far
from the Qarlsou cottage. for After three
or four days’ work the gardener
Woodruff was taken sick.
’ lYoodrulTfi Story.
His narrative says: “With the inten¬
tion of going to the county hospital I
drifted into Sullivan’s place. I made
up my mind that he was a Fenian, ~ ’
reminded him of certain seem ~ a ~
the Fenian raid into Canada,
over during that raid as a voli
the whose Twenty-fourth headquarters Kenton were at C battalion, U4 ' k “ i *"
We went as far as Niagara,
time I was assigned and to the
partment, gave to
spies that came to our camp such
as I learned while in that place,
was my first connection with the Ckn-
na-Gael. Sullivau told me he would
get me some work if possible. From
there I came down and went to work at
Dean’s livery stable.’’ y ' s
Woodruff tells that he met Detective
Coughlin soon after and had a drink
with Coughlin him, conveying knew Woodruff the impression to be
that a
thief, and Wo draff l>e!ieved the detec¬
tive to be a “fence. ” While walking to¬
gether they diet- Sullivau, the ice man.
Sullivan mentioned and Woodruff’s request
for Woodruff employment that in Coughlin his line quizzed should
a man
•want “work.” Woodruff persisted that
ha was laboring for his board and
clothes at the went livery off stable. together. Coughlin
and Sullivan
He then tells of his seeing “Melville”
and Coughlin together. He also men¬
tions Coughlin. a man McDougall, Coughlin whom to he intro¬ saw
with was
duce Woodruff when the latter said:
“I guess I ought to t know ___• 3 Mac.
«‘TWr T* ___
Will do.
Woodrni
said: probably ‘A rose be by sweet,’ any other I name had known would
as
McDongidl, or as he now called him¬
self, Williams, as a rough-and-ready
fighter, and an old worker tor the Olan-
na-Gael. After a talk, which I did not
hear, Coughlin left, saving fieifcad some
business. “As • * - Coughlin \ out of sight
soon as was
Williams said to me, ‘Come on.’
In a saloon, subsequently, Williams
said, so'ihe story states, “How are you
fixed?” nearly
. “I said, T am busted. ’ He
said, ‘Why don’t you go down' and see
Alexander Sullivan?’ aud I said, ‘I was
not prepared to be seiit to Europe.*
“Williams turned to me, and, looking
me squarely in the face, said it would
not be necessary for me to be sent out of
town in this ease. ” Woodruff
The pair proceeded,, de¬
No. * 117 Clark street. Wood¬
clares, to demanded what
ruff says he to know he
would have to do, and Williams replied:
It ‘•You is needn’t deal, and know you anything will not he about impli¬ it.
a
cated.”
“I went to Dean’s barn and then re¬
turned and applied at Alexander Sulli¬
van’s. I said: ‘Mr. Sullivan, Mc¬
Dougall sent me over to see yon. ’ Mr.
-Sullivan Williams, said: ‘McDougall! don’t you?’ Oh, I said: you
mean him
Yes, I guess so. I Sullivan slept with last
night. nothing ’ Alexander I have replied: met ‘I
have to say. never think
von before. ’ ‘Well,‘I said, ‘I
I have out met yon before recollection ; although sinoe I have I
grown iron oryour ~
came job,
“I William? V 1 '. 1 him had I was recommended looking for a Jo
and mw i ; , me
him. He said: 'No, I have no work
lor anvbody. ’ He looked at me
ly lor and replied: fllle......... f'll Tf l hear of any
Cfit? thing thing for yoa you let Mr. Williams know
Shoithr afterward, Woodruff, Will¬
iams aria Sullivan met. Woodruff says
Sttlliyan took WiUiams aside and said:
“There, now pay that rent” The
Wednesday before the murder Wood¬
ruff met Coughlin, to Sullivan. who asked This him note to
take, a note over
was in cipher, the same as had been
used by tiie Fenians when Woodruff was
at Niagara. Woodruff looked at it and
says it read: “Going up to P. 0. Sulli¬
van's- . the confession deals
The remainder of
mainly with the night of the murder.
Coughlin, so Woodruff Lincoln alleges, paid
him $25 to bring livery to stable avenue
from Dean’s a carried. convey¬
ance in which a trunk could be
Near Ashland and Lincoln avenues Mel¬
ville and a man named O’Shea, alias
Michael McDougall, joined Woodruff.
that e Ilftll S11UWU he said mu, he had also uaaum met
Ean. Melville, in connection with
before in in Peoria Carlson
Irish affairs. They drove out to
cottage, reaching ’ring there there about about 2 2 a. ■ m.
The two ------went men went in, in, andjocm and afi after P.
0. Sullivan, Melnile end Wilhams came
out of the dot* carrying a trunk, which
thev placed in tiie wagon. of the ride
Here follows a new version
with the trunk and disposal of the
body in the sewer. Woodruff now says
the intention was to have the trunk sunk
in Lake Michigan, off Lincoln park,
but, thinking andoned. they were Wooarufl pursu<*T oiairns .the
plan r was al
" at Cronin's instrument caa
Jvburned osxthrown ’Williams in
elviDo and
! wagon in
sent gratuitously, to keep strict and silence, that this lawyer Alexander hail
as
Sullivan’s attorney would work: in uni¬
son, and that oris of Sullivan’s bondsmen
had agreed to pa$r for Woodruff’s de¬
fense.
He Proves Blue elf a IsMlar.
Sunday afternoon Woodruff was in¬
terviewed on his “confession.” He said
he is but 29; yet took an active “ part " in
the Fenian rebellion, The rebellion
occurred in 1865-80. He says
at 117 Clark street April 20
iams, March yet Williams was not Melville
22. He said ha met at
McCoy’s hotel April March 2. The register
showp Melville left 20 anq re¬
turned Woodruff May stated 3. in the, interview that
he was with Cronin night and Sullivan, murder. the
ice man, the of the He
stated, body however, that though he saw dark the
in the trank, the night was
and he did not recognize it as Cronin’s.
The public take tittle stock in Wood¬
ruff’s story. They searched for the doc¬
tor’s medicine case where Woodruff said
it had been hiddden, bat found nothing.
Arrested la Manitoba.
A man, supposed to be Martin Burke,
alias Sunday. Delaney; An was officer arrested has dn been Winne- sent
peg, to bring him to Chicago. His descrip¬
tion tallies with that ofDekney in every
respect. had He was fairly well-to-do lyell dressed and
the undoub appearance of a labor.
This is tedly the man wonted.
MIKE DILL ON IN TERVIEWED.
He Don’t Know H'bst to Main of Wood-
./.rnlTs Alleged Confession.
Luke Dillon received no word from
New York Sunday. He is anxiously
awaiting the result of the test, and con¬
siders that upon Marouey’s identifica¬
tion the hangs prosecution. the fate of When the present asked theory what
of
he thought of Frank Woodruff's alleged
confession Mr. Dillon said: “I do not
know what to make of it. Woodruff
certainly made ijo several inconsistent
statements. I not care to discUsaius
story until I have had time to make
a more thorough examination of itsde-
tails. ”
blacksmith “Do you on know by the of any Philadelphia of Mo-
name
Doogall?” do Woodruff meant
“I not may have
McDonald, New York the man now under arrest
in city. ”
“What do you think of Michael Dav-
itt’s reported utterances on the Cronin
ease?” >•': • , >
‘ ‘Michal Davitt would show -better
judgment lie knows if about he talked He about will have something to an¬
swer for the language ho used in that in¬
terview, if he was reported correctly.
He evidently totally misunderstands the
temper of the Irish people of America.”
Michael Davitt’* Opinion.
London, June 18.—Michael Davitt
says he puts no faith in the suspicions
has against always Alexander known Sullivan, upright whom he
as to man.
He believes Sullivan’s arrest was spite
work. • . ■_ - ■
President Fitzgerald’s Views.
, Lincoln, Neb., June 18.—-John Fitz¬
gerald, America, president of. the Dish league Cronin of
has his doubts whether
is the really murder dead, has and been thinks committed, it possible,- that if.
the hand English in it. secret He service declares may the have Tories had
a
have agents in every city in Amer¬
ica trying to di sorganize t he league.
Maroney and McDonald Not Identified.:
whp New York, here June to 18.— identify -The Chicagoans Maroney
came on
and McDonald, failed to do so.
A Fl TE EN-ACRE BLAZE.
The Upsetting of a Damp Causes a Big
Fire in a Canadian OH Refinery.
Montreal, June coal 18.—Sunday lamp night
the upsetting of a oil caused fe
blaze covering an area of fifteen acres
belonging to Bushel oil refinery, at
Mile Ena. The works are situated along¬
side of the Canadian Paoiflc railroad
track, and a large number of freight
cars were soon burned.
small Surrounding ponds into the which works the are blazing many oil
ran and formed a number of lakes of
fire. Had not the sp?«*d of the fire been
stopped in a certain direction the fully Cana¬ two
miles of track together with
dian would Pacific have station been destroyed. arid other buildings The loss
will probably reach $30, OW). *
Murder Over > Bet.
night Danville, III, railroad June 18,—Friday at Cayuga,
as some men
Ind., engineer were offered discussing to bet $50. a horse John rOoe. Sher¬ an
wood, just out of the penitentiary, put
in, saying he would bet fifty omits the
engineer did not have a dollar. Frank
Beatty, a brakefnan, gave. Sherwood the
laugh, the abdomen, When the inflicting latter shot fatal Beatty injuries. in
Sherwood remained unmolested at Ca¬
yuga all night, local officers being afraid
to morning. molest him, and ' left early Saturday
_
More Stringent Titan let! Tear.
Ottawa, Ont, June 18. —The Domin¬
ion government has instracted com¬
manders of government cruisers not to
overtook any infraction of the fishery vessels
regulations, but to seize any
found guilty of violating the law when
the The evidence will warrant such a step.
instructions are said to be more
stringent than those issued las t year.
The Alleged Indian Outbreak.
Hr. Paul, June la.— Hon. Robert C.
Dunn telegraphs from Mille Laos noun*
tty that the reports ot Indian trouble
there ahd that have it been is simply greatly exaggerated, of big
a case a
drunk on the part of the Indians. Only
one > man, Magruff has been shot tod
the county autho authorities without are aid. able to quell
the rities
A Doomed Man’s Last Message.
Kingston, Ont, June 18.—The fol¬
lowing letter was found in a bottle near
Gananoque: “Captain of the Bavaria;
help, the ship is sinking; all have been
washed will overboard but me. About I expect 100 yards my
turn come next
off Galoup island, Imke Ontario. ”
Fifteen Persons Rilled.
Galveston, June Iff —Later advices forty,
from the Oily of Mexico state that
five wounded people have been taken
from the wreck of the reoorer^Tl^Him- market, _________ and that
cjiterssa twenty.
over fifteen or
The Glare Therefrom Lights Up
the Entire Conemaugh Valley.
- .--
Thn Drift Soaked With 250
Barrels of Oil and Ignited.
Quiet Reigned In the V»He/ Sunday—The
Sound of Snored Hymns Heard Instead
at the Rooming of Charges of Dynamite.
Five Thousand Men at Werk—Danger-
one Blasts ot Dynamite, y
JosmwrowH, &*., June ta-riM*bodies
were recovered Sunday. They were in
an advanced state of decomposition, and
were buried without identification. The
channel Sunday in the drift was opened Sunday twenty night
feet afternoon.
280 barrels of oil were emptied into the
drift and ignited. The wreckage burned
' V ':A >■/' THE BROKEN DAM.
fiercely for 200 yards, and the entire val¬
ley was illuminated. The debris wge
searched previous to being fired, but no
bodies were found.
Sunday a Quiet Day.
Sunday the .quiet reigned here, and,
instead of booming of dynamite, the
sound of sacred hymns was heard. In
the few churches remaining services
were held, but the largest meetings of
the day took pjace in the open air. The
weather was fair, and the men seemed
glad hard of work an to opportunity religion. They to turn gathered from
about the rough pulpits by the hun¬
dreds, and the blue coats of the militia
Six were denominations freely distributed among represented the jeans. by
were
the clergymen who conducted the serv¬
ices.
Five Thousand Men at Work.
o'clock Fully 5,000 Monday men morning reported and for work im¬ at
7 were
mediately assigned the to aeverti places under the
management of contractors.
Dynamiting Resumed.
the Dynamiting shocks that the the jam town waf received resumed from and
the Notwithstanding explosions was the simply fact that terrifying.
citizens
have notified those in charge of the dy¬
responsible namiting that for they will damage hold the done state
any to
rific property blasts, or person they caused heavy by these ter¬
are as as ever,
and every shot shakes buildings, etc. the
for squares around. Several * times
flying graph wires, debris causing has prostrated much delay the tele¬ and
House Damaged.
The third charge knocked of dynamite fired
Monday front of Henry morning Fritz's house ont Clinton the
on
street. The house was brick, but had
been badly of workmen shattered cleaning by the the flood. A
gang street iii
front Several narrowly them escaped slightly being crushed.
of injured.
It was reported that two workmen were
burned, night, and to that death by had the been fire Sunday
one blown to
death lack by dynamite. confirmation. The reports, how¬
ever,
Fire Engines at Wot*.
arrived The Philadelphia and fire engaged engines have
several are large now in pump-
ingout different parts of the pools city of in water which in
many bodies are expected to be found.
Remains of Two Women Found.
The workmen removing the debris
from near Wood, the Morrell |& Company’s
store found body of a woman in an
advanced Btate of decomposition. Her
clothing bore traces iff elegance. It was
first stated that the remains were those
of Miss dollars Paulson, trf Pittsburg. the One hun¬
dred- were found in dress
pocket besides: fen elegant gold watch, a
solitaire and three ooatly gold rings. A
careful aoription comparison left by the with friends the de- of
Miss Paulson was made but they do
not tally ha any particular, and the
corpse lies at the morgue, marked “un¬
known.” The free was entirely gone,
maining. only the lower almost taw and one tooth re¬
> It is certain that the
dead woman was one of the p
Sunday^]nigEt recovered in the Cambria remains of a woman
were remains buried unidentified. City. The
were
Indignation and Uneasiness.
A crowd of citizens collected at the
general office of the state board of health
the Monday sanitary morning, condition hoping of to the ascertain town.
They physicians were disappointed, in charge however, as
the refused to an¬
swer not issuing any questions the health or bulletins. give reasons There for
is much indignation tod uneasiness in
COH86G116Z106
It is stated that arrangements have
been heretofore perfected whereby the
Children’s Aid society will sill send abont
#03 weeks. persons They to Atlantic will probably City Cifr, leave for a in few
a
day or two.
Viewing Ike Broken Dmm.
Pittsburg, June iff—Sunday morn-
of rtolrord and city officials The pur¬
pose of the excursion was to view what
remains of the wrecked dam and the
wa sh ed oat valley below. By the mW-
dte of next week a double track will
have " " been will completed again to Altoona, tie and regular the
run on
About 4000 men are at work
structlon of the road. The
the work h^| been almost
—
RAGING. WATERS.
Arkansas Tsws Flood*<1- SI* Uve* tie-
portvd Lost In Conssq lienee. ' ; f:„,
Fora Scorr, Kan.. June Iff A report
was received here Sunday evening Wichita to the
effect that Uniontown on the
tod Western railroad, has been swept
away by a stortiSaturdaynight and that
two women and four children had been
drowned. Uniontown, which is a place
of OW) infiabitahta settled ta id The tnidst of a-
thickly oountry and it is feared
that the loss of life is even heavier than
reported. As the wites are down for
fifteen miles on either side nothing
definite ean lie seourrod.
The storm struck the western part of
Bourbon county late at night, coming
of thing a cloud possible burst, has and, bean though done to obtain every¬
details by the railroads, all is uhoer-
I present. The part of Fort
der water, own and as people Belltown is being entirely taken’ un¬
'are
out with boats. . ” ‘
The Kansas, Nebraska and Dakota
track is under water for about nine
miles ont. Serious damage to the main
line of the Memphis route is confined to
one place / about 1,000 feet in length,
about ten miles north of Fort Scott.
It was reported that a woman and two
children were drowned there but it
turned The out false.
rain begat! falling in this place
about 7 o'clock Sunday morning. Old
residents say it was the hardest rain in
began thirty years. At Bgck Lamb Run the A Mead’s water
to rise at 8 a. m.
ioe dam on Sixth street burst about 10
a. m., causing the water in Buck Bun
to rise at the rate of about three feet an
hotir. Several houses and the bridge
across Sixth street were carried away.
A Dam Said to Have Burst.
St. Louis, June 18.—Reports from
Uniontown, Kan., says that the disaster
was caused by the bursting of a dam.
The towns of Uniontown and Belletown
were flooded, a nd several lives lost
An Indiana Cyclone.
Goshen, Ind., Juno Iff—A struck cyclone,
coming from the southeast, Cedar
Beach Sunday afternoon, unroofing
Jones’ hotel, and with a roar like many
combined railroad trains, carried up the
Water high. of the lake like a wall thirty feet
The wind, striking Syracuse, demol¬
ished buildings aud trees in its destroyed course,
and passing into the country,
a Ligonier number it levelecHuany of farm houses. houses, Beaching iuclud-
ing^the hotel, damaging it to the extent
It met a current from the opposite di¬
rection outside of the town limits at the
bridge and destroying across the that Elkhart ‘ river, twisting
strtii
Several school houses in Ligonier,tand
a strayed. foundry and machine shop were de-
The shop was owned by E. W. Hard¬
dence ing, whose just in family time rushed from the their falling resi¬
to escape
timbers. Tlieir little girl was seriously
injured. The cyclone There followed is a reported the Elkhart loss of river life.
in the direction of Albion,
Shot In tho Back.
Martinsville, Ind., June 18.—Will¬
iam Ryan, a farmer living near Emi¬
nence, m this county, started ont Satur¬
day afternoon to repair ft dam belonging
to "• his * fish ’ pond, ' ’ about 1 a quarter of
onse.
y starte .. . . .
with his head lying and dead back near riddled the pond with
shot He had been murdered .
To Fight “Moonshiners.”
Bibmingham, Ala., Jnne 18.—In the
northern part of Tuscaloosa county the
oom-
.. ‘8«P the
engaged in the ‘moonshine iting ’’busi¬
men ‘
ness. The "moonshiners” are defiant
and serious trouble is feared,
FINANCE AND COM MERCE.
Quotations for the Money. Stock, Produce
and Cattle Market for dune I?.
New York. — Money 2 per cent. Ex¬
change steady; governments 118 bid; four steady.
139H’bid; Currency four-and-a-half>, sixes, 106% bid. coupons,
There was considerable pressure to sell
stocks declined in the K early % dealings, under the which latter
prices Pacific. to Rock per cent., Island
:» Missouri were es¬
pecially pressed for sale and recorded the
sharpest declines. The former sold down
IX per cent, In and tho hour latter IX per the cent market by
11 o’clock. the to noon
was __|______ extremely duff but t more support wae
extended the list. Ni York and New En¬
gland, and 8t. Paul were especially strong,
and advanced The The improvement improvement X and X Per cent, not fully respective¬ main¬ main-
ly. ly. was : iully
tained, however, and - at this writing the
market is weak again. t^StmSka.P
5
C., a, i V.... 78 N. Y. Central..,.K
fesidSjfe wSfteii.'
Cincinnati.
WffK ^WU^lfmvashed, AT^ aSte.
fine merino, 18ai9c;
one-fourth biood combine, Xfitzie; SSaSfcs braid medium
delaine and combing,
medium merino combing, and XX. S&tec; 28®iWcj fleece medii
X teSia
60®S ” ' ~ no-^oo. ■
prairie. #7 60; M ““
caT
fair. #SH®»«
hers, n ‘ ,ir^ 25®.* 27H: good fair light, to
to
H__-____ JMB»'00©3 *5; good
..... VpltisbariE.
CATTLE—Prime, $* ZSiM *>, common to
fair. HOG8—Pml&delpblas, #2 50®3 00. #4 5fl®* 50: mixe
*\!aIPbs-ss jpffisfSf-SiS co@ 7 to. ■
' Chicago.
^o choice, #8 S5®4 60.
New York.
1 State red, ffifetb'a 3 red
«8c; No. 3 mixed.
I *5 per WO pounds, Uve
i lYMIBiG
Grand Duke Paul Alexundroviteb,
m of UuadA,
d Princess Alexandra, of
Creeoe, Married,
Tho Procession as Elaborate a# That ot
ths Coronation of tho Caar—Stanley
Again Hoard From Under Date of March
19—A Proposed Cabls From Ostssd to
Amorlca—Foretsu Note*.
Duke Paul Aletaudrovitoh and Ms
fiance. Princess Alexan Ira, ot Greece,
Was illumi-
uring of officers, diplomats aud
The men were in gala uniforens and the
ladies wore medimval Russian dress.
The bride’s dress was of silver mohair, Her
embroidered with silver flowers.
l»ir was arranged in long curls, in fend ac¬
cordance with Russian traditions,
cm her head with was a heavy which gold has crown been
studded gems, brides for
worn by all Romanoff more
than a century. :........ forfress ,
The firing of voilevs at the
ssrslft dinner, jgb which tho toasted ths
czar
!ro3»v. their residenco the .—i Neva by
on whole quay a
torchlight process^ the imper¬
ial family acco mpanying them,
Flags Displayed In Orecee.
June Iff—Flags “
Athens, were
Russia. To Deums were sung in all the
churches.
_
Stanley Again Heard From.
Zanzibar, June 1 $.—Letters received
from Ujiji, dated March Iff say that
Stanley met Tippoo Tib and sent a
number of sick followers back with bun
by way of the Congo. ‘Stanley intended
coining to the east coast Emin Pasha.
Tippoo Tib would arrive at Zanzibar in
Tlfcte slave who brought Foiji the letter He Is
Wednesday last came from
still missing. The mission statical at
that Tippoo place Tib’s reports will
son
for here,
Otar Mill Visit Berlin.
London, June Iff—The Berlin oorre-
sponkent of The News telegraphs: The
German foreign .wSl office has been informed
that tho czar come has to Berlin, but
the date of his arrival not yet bee;
fixed. ’
The press Regent persists Christina that the
eznr Sebastian, will meet and Queen will thence to laa-
at go
.bon in September.
A Cable from Germany to America.
Pabis, June Iff—The T^ SHE
a cable
■■■■■PI ia ««!««• to ©f
render these oounteies independent
the English cable companies.
Foreign Notes.
The Prince and Princess of Wales hnvejre-
turned to Louden,
The French seriate advises that proceed¬
ings be at once begun against Boulanger..
The Shah of Persia has arrived at Amster¬
dam, He visited the Krupp works a* Essen
en route. „ i (
Boulanger, I-aguerre, Naquet and Laisant
hearled the poll in the municipal election at
^vry^ur-Seine, has de¬
T)«> Montenegrin government
manded satisfaction from Turkey for raids
on the Albanian frontier.
The tomb of Emperor Frederick was com¬
pletely covered with floral offerings Sunday,
Among them was a wreath of White roees
trom Queen Victoria.
The Italian government asking^^tbe has joined Russia
and Germany in Swiss authori¬
ties to maintain a stricter surveillance over
foreigners In Switzerland
Three of Capt. Wtosmann’s steamers are
reported to have been lost on the Benadlr
coast, German men-of-war have gone in
search of the missing vessls.
The Swiss bondasrath has decided to ere-
ate a public prosecutor’s deportment, and to
strengthen the government control over for*
eigners residing in Switrerland.
The Freni* government has fired the gen-
real elections for Sept. 33. Second
ballots will be held on October A M.
Savigny was Sunday elected senator for
, Sierra, * . , ■
A German oomposi tor, , working ft® the
Strasburger Post, crossed the French front¬
ier last week, and wae suddenly arrested.
After being kept in prison four daya he was
dismissed without apology.
A proposed Boulangist meeting at IMeux
was prohibited by the authorities. MM
X^guerre and Deroulede and other Bou-
langists, who went to conduct toe meeting,
were received with cries of “Vive Carnot”
“A has Boulanger. 1-
CRO P PROS PECT&
Little Bain in the Northwest, bnt Plenty
In the Central States.
Washington, June 18.~Thc weather
crop bulletin for the westendiag Satur¬
day, June 15,188# says:
The weather for the week wastmr
ssasass
w and Arkansas the crop
were improved week,' bv Corn the is wea reported
present atf
W so® 16
JSiSnS^fSS^iS& week.. abort of ‘
nods n^t A crop
crops have improve-:. Vat execs
Srpt
NEWS IN f
U "-’J. r ''nriT."
" tu Chill Kfl 1
The Kantud
Charles Dfiger i
-A jury has
no til
James 1
W.Al
Jjeetfrfem,_
mit his #1,0001
Cera De V
viUe,l
"
widow# -
■■
. ,
Uver m i
glandfsaw hhu 01
whence ha sailed
One person to *»«,
of Connecticut took <
North Carolina rer '
ents, one to every S
“Water yon
ShTSw. th»
$13,800 for ewe. ™ ^ '
school dsildren i
Otto Leuta, trf C
rtiAtotoe coWHWt* ‘
Mi» W. L. Bishop, -*
Scotti Bishop, who wsj ft
egate to the National B<
at Chicago, has been an
at Floyd Court House, V*.
Two chfldreft ot B4 wm
liHcl flov on red 1
Tho siew flags 1
Z ex,
stare. July 4 all the <
Cftliofi in Jf **“ ———
Vll Diesvuio, ACStIUa ■' ' loa., a i
pipe, When natural
water weU *
near
plosion. He was 1 _
'W A ftur nHfi fllhtiif 1 I
penitentiary top ]
sheet‘
President I
000 which 1
ImgXwW
have been »
track into jaU
ties.
Frank Is'i
ISLres.. bond,
Saturday, Thetyp* J|
Cincinnati ftisd Caron ,, fflf ]
Atlanta, Ga.
It U reported that f
Muldocfl, his fci
Church bartender hotel, oat of .____.... the house _
mn ZZtTLeZy ra Hmtnr Tffal imntmft ' a
ik A W If, Wnftota n « a 'KWilrra#' OMAir ,
Mo., left #8,«1» worth* 1
*., reiurneu a ~ e 1 iue . og«u* ' v *........ wvrv , i
S f_a ________
o. m found that I
i arise
heir,
yss a n. obliged Mm ^
t>mm . wen
tSETtSint
pVtyffiLr% )flrt rtf Dtiflllflia
M_-| | ut 'xrvWtill ins nn nf w* BlvtlQrU eKAml
'
J. A. Newomne, of 1
it was s
notrtiothimself, butt
in the Clearwater bank,
is dally 1
“I^roay be 1
used to the «