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ili SUN.
, U. S. A.
lor the past
* onterprimw in oper-
, prove this
and not a hyper-
operation*! <W,000 eottou
this year started the wheels
than twiee that capital,
iron ron and and brass bn lonndry,
r factory, an SmS* ice and hot-
■ ,, a sash —- nn l lactory. a
, opened up the finest granite
United States. States and now has
Ighting that cite be procured, railways. and has ap¬ It
plied lor tw o eharters lor street
lias secar^danother railroad ninety mile* long*
aod white locate od th« greatest system in
£«rdSca;&'3Us:
nessee, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain¬
ed divert independent, connection with Chat¬
tanooga sued the West, and will break ground
With Its five white and lonrcolored church¬
es, it has recently completed a 110,000 new
l'reebyteriancharch. Ithae increased depop¬
ulation by nearly one filth. It has attracted
wound ite borders fruit growers from nearly
every State in the Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchard*
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
fruit evaporators in the State. It is the home
of thegrape and its winemakingcapaeity has
doubled every year. It hae successfully in¬
augurated a s ysteraoipuhlic schools, with a
sevwu years curriculum, second to nope.
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply show* the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
winter, in the world.
■griffin is the county seat of Spalding coun¬
ty, situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
healthy,fertile and roiling country, 1150 feet
above sea level. By the census oi 1890, it
will hava at alow estimate between 6 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all of the right
eoHH-wideetwake, up to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable setters, who will not be any less wel¬
come if they bring money to help build up the
own. There is about only one thing we
need badly Just now, and that is a big hotel.
We have several email ones, but their accom¬
modations an entirely too limited for our
usine s, pleasure aud health seeking guests.
11 you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion fora hotrt la the. South, Just mention
Griffin.
Griffin is the place where the Gwffis News
s published—daily and weekly-the best news¬
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet of Griffin.)
This brief sketch is written April 13th, 1K89,
add will have to be changed in a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
ompleted, -
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENKY C. PEEPLES, »
ATTORNEY AT'LAW
HAMPTON, OKOROU.
f the State aud octSd&wly Feder
JOHN J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
•nttriK, GEORGIA.
Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. H
White’s Clothing Store. mar22d&wly
~~
TH0S. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice in the State and Federal
Conrte. Office over George A Hartnett’s
'corner. nov2tf
JOHN n STEWART. ROOT. T. DANIEL.
STEWART & DANIEL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Uver George 4 Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice In til* State and Federal
carts, ,.,2& july!9dtf
CLEVELAND & GARLAND,
^."iDiiiTisTs, : : 4 :\
GRIFFIN, j : : GEORGIA.
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
wooDBrnr, acosou.
—
NOW’ NOW! NOW
Money Wanted for the
Stark Plantation.
muMB- Now If; hi__________ S to inside buy
i re -riipertyti H advanc es any higher as it certainly
lower now than it wHi ever
BOMDJT SEA.
Loss of the Steamer Lorenzo D.
Baker, of Boston,
While Several Hundred Miles
From Land.
Captain Wiley’s He port of the Catastro¬
phe—But Two of the Twenty-Seven Per¬
sons on Board Lost Their Lives—Picked
* Up By the Franklin—A Steam Barge
Burned on Lake Michigan.
- JSfW Bedpobb, Mass., July 23.—The
steamer Lorenzo I). Halter, of Hob toil,
with fruit consigned to the Boston
Fruit company, has been burned at sea.
Her crew arrived at this port on the
whaling schooner Franklin.
The Captain's Story.
D. Capt Wiley, his of the steamer- Lorenzo
Baker, in report, says:
“We left Port Antonio, Jamica, July
10, with bananas for Boston and had six
cabin passengers, Mrs. Elizabeth Sime,
of Dundee, Scotland; Josiah Dillon, of
Iowa; Lorenzo D. Baker, Jr., of Well,
fleet, Mass.; Jeremiah O’Callaghan and
his nephew Jeremiah G. O’Callaghan,
of Boston; Ernst B. Wing, of Lynn;
Lawrence Jenson and Peter Saxild, sail¬
ors, who were working their passage,
and nineteen officers and crew-in all
twenty-seven “At midnight persons. July 15, when
on . we
were in latitude a 38.15 38.15 north, nor longitude
69.49 west, fire broke out in the engine
room. The engineer could not get at
tliepnmps. to be used, notified I ordered the the fire backets and
ordered the boats to be passengers out By
this time the flames had swung burst through
the top of the engine room and the star¬
board boat was on fire. We swung ont
the port boat and lowered her to a level
with the rail.
“I had the lady passenger placed in
this boat and ordered it manned. Two
other passengers now got into the boat
but the men had gone forward. The
fire was within three feet of us, and the
heat was intense. Placing the boat's
painter telling him in the to hold hands it of test, a I sailor, ordered and the
first mate to take the bow, and spring¬
falls ing into to lower the stem told thinking the men at the
the boat afloat away, and detached as as bo soon from as
was
tackles to return on board and get get oat
(he raft and small boat
“When lowered the boat capsized on
striking the water and threw ns into the
sea. The man let go of the painter.
The mate and I righted the boat, put
tile &e passengers aboard, and we put away
for steamer which had drifted half a
mile. On the way we encountered the
raft which had eight persons on it, and
took them into the boht By this time
the wreck was more than a mile away.
sailor ‘ ‘After floating rowing some the time we picked steps. np
a on gangway
He said he had gone in the small boat
and that four sailors and two firemen
were on board the steamer, having been
out off from the boats by the fire. One
firemen had been drowned in trying to
reach the small boat The distance be¬
tween gradually us increasing and the burning when ship was
we saw a
schooner bearing down to the ship. She
took off some men and then picked us
np. She proved to be the whaling
schooner Franklm, Capt Rose, of New
Bedford.-
“She had taken five men from a spar
alongside had been the steamer. drowned Another in swinging fire¬
man
from the steamer’s bowsprit to the spam
to which the sailors along. At the time
the steamer had burned to within three
feet of the water’s edge, and was a mass
of flame from stem to stem
“We soon found the small boat and
twenty-five who had out been of twenty-seven board souls the
on
steamer were safe on board the
Franklin. The most generous treat¬
ment Capt Bose was and accorded the of to the ns Frank¬ by
crew
lin. Clothing, and the best of all they
had was freely given. The Franklin's
Capt voyage Bose was not up for immediately a month, into but
port" brought us
______
The Km.
Boston, July 23.—The Boston Fruit
company state that the cargo of the
steamer Baker was valued at not less
than flu,000, on which there is an in¬
surance of $5,000. The vessel is in¬
sured for $50,000._
BURNED ON LAKE MICHIGAN.
Steam Barg* Destroyed—Crew Reeeued
fry Life-Savers.
South Haven, Mich., July 23.—The
steam barge J. P. Faraam, from St Jo¬
seph to Escanaba light caught fire
about 8 o’clock Saturday afternoon. The
flames spread so rapidly that all efforts
Baits to get ont the hurriedly boats were improvised unavailing. from
were
the hatches and a few planks that were
drew fortunately of eleven on board, and upon the which captain’s the
men
Wife placed themselves as best they
could. Fortunately the lake was unus¬
ually calm at that hour, to which fact
tile crew largely owe their lives.
Lifs-gavsrs to Hv Bmcm.
The station beach discovered patrolman the of smoke the life-sav¬ about
ing o’clock. He hurried to (he station to
4
give file (he alarm. The steamer Glenn, of
pened Williams to be in Transportation port, and taking line, (he hap¬ life-
saving crew aud life-boat and a few vol¬
unteers, made all possible haste to the
^The°Glen?'«Tived alongside the burn¬
ing wreck about 7 o’clock. All were
rived safely inside got on this board harbor the Glenn, about 10:15 and safs ar¬
> With DMtieolty.
>, reached shore
Terrible Experience at Sea.
H*w Yowl, July 23 ,-The
3SSrA\
: 'l GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, WEDN1 MORNING, JULY 24.1889.
AERO NAUT HO GAN.
Hla Wire Gives Up All Hope as Bis Death
New Seems Amoved.
Jackson, Mich., July23. —Mrs. Hogan
has heard no news from the professor.
believes
Sunday States
■ .................... $M»0
in cash and a balloon and outfit which
he must have left with friends.
birth. Hogan He was had 46, and ohildken. a Canadian He by
no was
regarded world, having as the made foremost aeronaut successful in the
over 400
balloon ascensions and thirty-two para-
never unms, wwweu w buumw
wasdmo wn ae a man whose word
The Air Ship Passed seed at at Sea, Sea.
New London, ...... Conn., . .. l. July July 28. 23 — Mr.
Emma, Hamilton, owner having of the sloop yaeW Fri¬
day, reports Blaok island, passed Campbell’s on air
near side
He ship did floating not know with till the he yellow ashore up..
came
that he Hogan would and have the made ship were effort misting to pick
or an
it up, or at leas t to examin e it
Was Net Experienced With. Gas Balloons.
Peovxdence, B. I, July 28.—Profes¬
sor J. K Allen, the aeronaut who made
an ascension “ last December at Coney
*” ' " ~ says
!
ing hot _ .....|. Allen _, thinks a ... this be¬
air balloons
may aooount for the mishap which has
befallen H ogan.
__
A LAND OFFICE D ECISION.
Three Claimants to a Quarter Booties to
Oklahoma Bou eo e d . . ■ .1?V v u
Lille Gotham, L T., July 38.-Register
and Beoeiver Barnes, of (he land
office here, have rendered a decision in
the first claim contest case in Oklahoma.
The evidence in the case showed that
there were three claimants to the quar¬
ter section adjacent to the Santa Fe
railroad right of way opposite Oklahoma
City.
The first was Deputy United States
Marshal White. He was on (he ground
at noon the day Oklahoma was opened,
in his official capacity, and ho staked his
claim at 12:01 p. m.
0. J. Blanchard was on the Santa Fe
railroad the right of At way os he an employe stepped of
company. noon an
the Vestal quarter Cook and drove in the his stake. Chickasaw
was na¬
tion at noon, but with four confederates,
Messrs. Lille aud Barnes bold that all
of the persons named violated the laws
governing the occupation of the lands
by homesteaders, that none of them are
entitled to the quarter in question, and
that and they hold haw homesteads forfeited in all the rights Indian to
Territory.______
PLUTOCRA CY OR NA TIONALISM.
Edward Bellamy Speaks of Trusts mod
Their Effects.
Gbbknfteu>, Mass., July 23.— Ed¬
ward Bellamy, author of “Looking
Backward,” new-fangled and patron idea, saint nationalism, of Bea¬
ton’s
was accorded a hearty reception at the
Deerfield SL He summer spoke of school trusts Saturday and their
period,” "Eventually, he said, and “feooiety at no ver^r remote be di¬
vided into a few hundred al of
Sependent prodigious wealth, their favor, but olass
upon ex¬
cluded from equality with them and un¬
derneath and a vast workingwomen population of absolutely working¬
men
without hope'of bettering their condi¬
tion, and who would year by year rink
more hopelessly into serfdom. If the
nation does not wish to tom over its
industries, and that means its liberties
as well, to an industrial oligarch, there
is but oue alternative. It must assume
them itself. Within ten yean the peo¬
ple of the United States will have vir¬
tually decided their choice, plutocracy
or nationalism. ”
CHUR NED TO P1 ECE8.
Graham Sends Bis Second Barrel-Boat
Over the Niagara Falls.
Niauaba Fapps. July 28.— Carlisle
Graham came near going overboard in
the gorge Sunday afternoon with ohagrin
and disappointment, when his seoond
barrel-boat went to pieces in a trial trip
over tiie Horseshoe Falls. The craft
was let loose at 8:40aoouple of miles
above the cataract in the deep-wrier
rode channel the rapids Unlike all the right, torpedo and in boat, about it
ten minutes reached the brink, over
which the last it of lightly it, for dropped. the tons That of was
churned it up and threw the fra*
out into the current
Would Have .'Suicided.
Graham had gone up under the cliffs
to see how the Boat behaved.
ble Andrew Horn, of Niagara Falls,
found him contemplating (he
on the Glass Island rooks in such a mel¬
ancholy ference he mood would that have but for sought Hern’s the inter¬
of his two boats in the boiling waters.
Talmagc at Marmont, Indiana.
• estimated Marmont, 29,000 Ind., July people, 28.—A heard crowd, the
at
date all who desired to
Minnesota . He will also vis it Oregon.
Pnddler Stabbed t» the Heart.
Birmingham. Ala.,* occurred July 23.—A gen¬
eral drunken row in a saloon at
First avenue and Fourteenth street late
pnddler Saturday named night, Hudsbeth in which a rolling stabbed mill
was to
toe heart, dying immediately. Three of
the participants were arrested charged
with the crime, bat a« yet it cannot be
fixed on a ny one in particular.
Mast Die in Prison.
±r Bob
hkta>ther8 *
THE CANTEEN,
Not the Old-Fashioned Receptacle
for Apple Jack, Etc.,
But an Army Feature That Will
Benefit Soldier* XI
ifj’t ;••,r* aV>
fi«*t«etable *** ’ Wo**, Non.
Intoxicating Drink and Amassment*.
The Plan Given all the Possible En¬
couragement Hr til* War Department
tion now outside of the ranks, and
Which has the approval of the officials
of toe war department, i* what is known
as the “canteen.” It is beat known in
the English army and l ifor its object
toe providing for sokliei foodidrint
and amusements.
At present the i named, aside
from the necess the soldier,
which ore provided ) commissary
sartas ,by the post
the past few
years was profitable towns the business bat, the a- ite.’sssfa KvifTtTtfian
new near
fell Off until now his enue is derived
largely win from his sell beer and
a.
In many oases it
trader abuses the
quahrt-- of whisky and brandy, f^the
rial to*
post, Kis this fact,
any other,
of the “canteen” system.
VAlnniaMr The “canteen” 4 is controlled AT. oAldiAiwi by a
volunt ar y ra ftssocmtion gmm njMjt ■ . t oi cno « sokulofs.
at The the supplies post trader’s, are purehssed but and spirituous sold as
no
liquors are sold, and no liquors of any
include tabling both discipline. indoor and The outdoor amusements
recrea¬
tion and sports, and ft is this feature
to which the officers look for toe
best results in the morels of the enlisted
men.
The results of the system have been
so officials satisfactory and heads that of the the war department give aU
possible encouragemeat army to its growth
In a short time a complete list of the
location of “oanteens'L-Nnll be made up.
island. They New are known York h|rbor; to exist Columbus at Davis
barracks and several poets in the west
It is expected that toe reports now
coming in will be so favorable that the
extension of the “canteen” Bystem to
every army pekt wiH -»oon be aooo
EIGHT H UMAN SK ELETONS
Found ia u Cavern in the Chalk Cllflk,
Near St. Helena, Nebraska.
Yankton, Dak., July 28.—The Utile
village of St Helena, on the Nebraska
side of the Missouri, ten miles below
Yankton, is in a state oi excitement over
a ghastly discovery made there Sun¬
day. Parties who were prospecting in
toe material chalk for cliffs manufacturers of that neighborhood of cement, for
came upon a small opening in toe Mis¬
souri river face of the rook.
carved It was by found nature to be in a the large soft, apartment, ohalky
substance, the incident bat the the startling discovery feature within of
was
this cave of eight human skeletons.
These such disorder were lying to about discredit the the oavem theory in
as
that the cave might be an ancient burial
place. The age of the bones cannot be
determined, but they have undoubtedly
been tome a long time. The belief pre¬
vails that three are toe skeletons of
early the settlers, who sought the shelter of
cave when attacked by Indians
years ago, and that they were either
killed m a body or starved to d eath.
The Cost of the Turner Festival.
Cincinnati, July 28.—The executive
board, who bad charge of the Turner
fang, the i $15,20462; are giv<
sources, hand,
$14692.86; cash on
t-bia balance has to be
_ about $800 for sums sub-committees, not yet re¬
ported while bills from amounting different to from $1,400 to
$1,600 are stiU outstanding. There will
therefore, be no deficiency to speak
about
_
Bather S e i se d By a Shark,
JaoxSonvdm*, Fla., July 28.—Ed.
Boe, a young Englishman, while swim-
ming in the Cumberland sound Sun¬
day with fifteen other by boys shark from which Fer-
nandina, bitoff was calf caught of of ..... a his 1 Roe
the one « but
os taken into in a boat at onoe, bled
to death before bef< medical assistance oould
be obtained, This is toe first instanoe
known these waters. of a shark attacking a man in
Soaday Ball Playar* Arrested.
tssx City, N J., July 28.-
no more 0 Sunday gmm will be per-
mitted.
Craw Creeks Sign the Staax BIB,
Ckakbehdain, 8. ohm! Dak, July 28.—
White wmte Ghoat unoatk bead neaa obmm oiihe oi i Crow
s^ srmsi .....‘ at Ms men,
opposed toe he bill i bill White
Ghort _____ utterly while
the commission was at Chow Creek His
signature now will make a dean sweep
there. -
_
ret a Mat eh la a Coal Oil Oea.
Williams, OotiUmbtts, aged O., JMy and 28.—Tommy Ms sister
5 yrere,
ignes, aged 3, put a lighted evening. match An in a
coal oil can Sunday ex-
boor._______
Died in:
July
SUNDA Y IN CINCI NNATI.
Meta In a Beer Oinltti Over Attempts to
Knfercv the law.
n, July 23.—The persistent
violation of the Owen Sunday law by
Moritz Eiohler, the proprietor of the
Clifton garden, culminated Sunday in
three separate fracases there.
lav and Order laaga.t Man Assaulted.
The first affair ocourred shortly after
4 p. m- when George F. Coon, of 8
Eastbourne terrace, a Law and Order
txr&r- _
sasa W1 XiUl mu> »uu WT0M u
The**
andTgenernrtumuli 490 people Three and the were300 crowd
or ^SSated present, ^MZ^hit
Oren
on tli8 head with canes, knocked down
and seriously beaten. He lost $14 from
ms pocset, nuii sucoeoaeu m wmswmg
meet
Officer Grist fowed*his way through
the ened crowd, to shoot njvolvre the inhanA^and who ap-
preached him. Has_____ vast
Coan to a patrol answreed. box and
•was
Strike? 6 and re ar-
rested. Coan was >taken to to thesta-
tion house to receive _ attention
zstjstjsire bar keepers, was'
tiie but
np instead, of his ossoiiants. bring ret Coan as
one
A Hotel Proprietor Ntobbrd.
The second affray ocourred at 10 p.
m., and another man was beaten, and
but for the timely arrival of the polioe
would probably have been killed. J. H.
Beck of the and Windsor hotel went lemonade, into
the garden called for a
le one sitting
is a “Law and <
Despite his ... protestations up<tt|-#i Coan he beaten
was
over the head with canes while a
waiter held his hands. The crowd had
began officer arrived. to yell “Lynob him!" when an
Tho Third Blot.
This riot was soaroely, quelled when*
third began, caused by the arrest an¬
otherTiar kreper, August Bepler. The
crowd rushed at OffieerKrey, who was
assaulted and hit over the head, but he
held to the _prisoner and reached the
patrol box, where be stood revolver in
band, until the patrol wagon oama.
Quiet Down Towu.
Downtown things were very qniet
A tew saloons were open and tiie parties
were shops promptly and arrested. of the drug All stores the barbre
closed tight many Butcher shops were
and gro-
eenre wer e open until 8 a. m.
THE E LECTRIC L AUNCH.
Steam oa Pleasure Boats Will Soon Be
Discarded.
London, July 23.— There ia at pres¬
ent afloat on the broad bosom of
Father Thames a craft (hat is destined
to sound toe death knell of the steam
launch.
“I built the hull of the Bay Mead for
a steam launch, ” said its gallant owner,
timbering Kerby Bowen, her I “but decided before to make finishing
branch electric I my
an one. saw at onoe
it smell was the blacks, ooming thing—no heat, steam, no
always no ready to no start, getting rieanly, up handy
and noiseless—in fact, the beau ideal of
a pleasure craft. You see, although she
is as long and thin as a mackerel she
still will seat has plenty toirty of beam. at luncheon, Her saloon and
by persons overcrowded with
we are no means
sixty people built on her board. of toe best Burmese
“We
teak with copper fitting^—not an iron
nail in her. The saloon a of teak, with
retin-wood panels and stained glass
be doom. We told Immisoh that we should
by ready such for day his motor and and had accumulators them down
a we
and fitted in twenty-four hours, and the
following How’s morning that for wft time were against ready boil¬ to
run.
ers and engines!"
“At first we tried a Thornyoroft pro¬
peller— the firm that could give us the
number this of revolutions we wanted. With
we oould go ahead all right, but we
couldn’t go astern. This was tiie only
fault of our trial trip. Then Mr. Zingel,
a miech's, wonderfully who designed olever inventor the ‘switch’ at Im-
we
use in front of toe wheel and which
turns the current off aud on and changes
the invented speed—Mr. finished Zingel in set ‘delta’ to work metal and
one a
thia acts
, fallspeed,
more, bat on
the Thames high speed is not • desider-
“How about your electric store?"
“AH the aocumlators are under the
bottom boards of the boat. I use my
accumulators and motor as a racer uses
its ballast—below the water line—hence
the steadiness of the Bay Mead. My
accumulators, 160 in number, are in a
leaden tray in the bottom of the boat, so
that she is perfectly ballasted by them.
The only other machinery is the Ttnotor, ’
and this is have also under clear the bottom fore and boards, art
henoe we a run shafting
We have only five feet of from
the ‘motor’ to the propeller, and re
everything is fitted with hall bearings,
(here is not the slightest vibration or
noisa.” do
“From whence you procure your
electricity?” “From Immisch’fc, charging station
a
just by Bolter’s lock They have al
of them on the river. I pun
the ‘charging’ house boat, and
sMp hoars their wires toe to station my at and charging
live at to
slowly will give me Oxford—sixty-five power enough
run from here to
miles.” Meed
proved Subsequently wonderful strip on the utility. Bay She
her
glided through the water with no more
wash in her wake than would be nude
by a swan._
She ouc HHireu Nursed ueuvrni General Han s«agv each, wi
ed Mrs. Sunday. Mary
Shewi’^rt __ _ tesTd^ri __ _ a nostoffioe £o* or
railroad train during her life, She
_ Hanoook he
had nursed Oen. when was
an infant__
French Deputies Vilify the Ad¬
ministration,
And, Worst of All, In the Pres¬
ence of Strangers.
The Iron Chaneeilor Plaeed la a Battler
Ludleroa, Pneiiion By the Swiss Gov-
1 rumen t — But* la kiu>our*s:nj| Bnt-
*arl»n Sold leu to Desert—Spain and the
ingtheadministratom ofto vilify,
almost in toe presence of
rends of foreigners who s
Faria
More disgraceful i
--------------- si , ,
_ r i and any day in i toe oh«n-
of deputies, no a d m ni stration
attacks are mode now from the Bight
and now from the Left, though the ex.
sake ______ring of pofitecal personal advantage. reputation for
The Effect ««the Fttblle Mad.
.Thegenerrieffeot is (butt the "
mind recoils from the tactics of ft
and that it the the administration admin is tratior is
Iti?but^° T tho blunders b lmde ” a? of ^ its
it just to - say that re
M of toe Radicals.
. i‘- ***OfI»m the BeiraWle,”
It was a scene well worth ...
when, after one of “•— ■
scenes, M. O&zenove
former secretary of the
to the tribune. The entire Left.
one man and cheered the Btonch ]
mist,.who has never .sSh*M
the republic, who has
like a gentleman. ie
'
emy and maiutainiu^ my own principles
fighting for my own flag.
Bwcaivad Witt Applause.
"SaftafirCra-i
administration, gustingtoe deoettt bill
ent men of all i
was
of the fol__
vote of 849
tempt of the °£d-
aimed at the Republican party
government, and passesto the
Rad Better Adjourn tot the Present.
For all that, it would be a good thing
if the chamber were to adjourn untU
cooler weather; for while toe petty
minority discredited, of disturber* the parliamentary of the peace system is
and the republic to which it belongs is
daily lowered in popular reteem.
London, July 23. —The exchange of
notes between the governments at Berlin
and Berne on the subject of toe Wohlge¬
muth affair has reached a stage which is
important, os the subject has a commer¬
cial side as well, and the last communi¬
cation of the Swiss Federal council
places Prince Bismarck in a somewhat
ludicrous attitude.
The German chancellor has been failed con¬
tending all along that Switzerland
in carrying her ont Article the obligations 2 of tho imposed
upon 1876, in that by she admitted to treaty her terri¬ of
tory subjects examination of Germauv of their without a vig¬
orous credentials.
The Swiss note reminds Frinoe Bis¬
marck that he most have forgotten that
he instructed Herr Von Bulow, the Ger¬
man minister at Berne, some time ago,
to urge the Swire government to be more
lenient in its enforcement ltd ^LXnd of the toe pro-
visions of Article 2 of the
Germans crossing into
The note soys toe Swire „______
greater can scarcely leniency reconcile in its administration this request for of
toe article referred to, with tiie present
complaint the Swire on government the part of Germany, suffi¬ that
were not
ciently ciently rigorous rigorous in i tiie enforcement at
its provisions.______
Bosnian* Collecting Bulgarian Deserter*.
London, July 28. —At Demiresdb,
near Adrianople, Russian agents are
collecting the Bulgarian the soldiers at who different desert from
along tiie frontier. army Tha Russians pointe
them liberally, give them alluring pay
isre of early employment, and tons pp
courage desertion all over Bt Bulgaria,
Just what object Russians seek eek to ao.
clear, complish but by that this it's maneuver not dictated is not by quite
a
m___________ has been _______imp. brought the | _ |JH|
ter to attention of
’■ ~ ’ ian representative at Si
with instructions to request
, Ion. and will be made the
of dipl omatic) neg otiations.
Cemmualsts* Grave, Decorated.
Paws, July 28.- The Marxists
marched in procession to the cemetery
of Per® Ia Chaise Sunday and hid
wreaths upon the graves ot the dead
oommunistA Herr Liebkneeht and
others delivered orations at the tombs of
Boerne and Heine. A band of Positiv¬
ists, headed by Mrs. Besant, also visited
the cemetery and decorated the Com¬
munists graves
ing plucked upon from them tho L of
executed graves
uts who were
Everything passed
manner. +
* All Quiet at Samoa.
London, July 2A—Cable advices from
Auckland, New Zealand, The report all is
quiet at Samoa,. United States
W:
M
hre
\.'i - -?
Henry Nutt, an «
tree boy* aod a pc
to arrest him.
4-
tern year* oil
Led,
to New’
The Orio reUey ,
baval
at the r
totiH.tr.
A
ter a,1
‘SSTtou i
Mr. Washington
cottage at r
In tha tu
Isgton Park,;
to which $108,700 1
no parse bring for ]
record for four and i
reduced by Tulla Bla
W. A. Smith and
prisoners tn jail at
Saturday night through
About niliifiiffht Haniitv
Goldsoli a §j
supposed to contain th» m
J fatauy i ll wottnoed. li il Llllulati ' a A number M a ^
SaotaSnSSSB
wo* crooked but not an
breaking par^N
r
A reinforcement of 800
been sent to Assouan.
Queen Victoria’s physician h»* i
to give op champagne and drink
it cod.
A OfiTHMW ftrna h i m
about 20,000,000 xuarln*
It is reported toot Ei
Austria, has requested that
tivitles he held when to vhdk
m onu me nt tm
with bnp oriag cure
memory of the Frenc
Russia in the famous c
After ai
exploring expedition cc
seven men, under an i
•2ft sniil i
the!