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ition a $100,000cotton
year started the wheels
;hau twice that capital.
, an Immaw fee and bot-
nH an J tpA. factory, a
fwued np the finest granite has
it«l States, and now,
i In more or Jess advanced
iion, with ou aggregate an-
that can be procured, and ha. ap-
t* o charter, for street railways. It
Ml another railroad ninety miles long,
.located on the greatest.yetem in
It has successfully in-
uf public schools, with a
tn, second to none.
record of a half decode
e progress of an already
5E 2*3*1
53225 de¬
welcome strangers and anxious toi secure
sirable eettlere, who will not be any less wel¬
come il they bring money to help build up the
own. There is about only one thing we
need badly just now, and that is a Wg hotel.
We have several entail ones, but their accom¬
modations am entirely too limited for our
asms s, pleasure and health seeking guests.
the place where the Gmfwn New.
d—daily and weekly-the best news-
e Empire State ot Georgia. Please
JUps hi tending lor sample copies;
fitive pamphlet otGriffin.1
if sketch is written April 12th, 1*89,
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
attorney at law
JOHN J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
o Birr in, oBosau.
MULL* 1..1 ’I.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Kill practice in th. .State and Federal
2 ES «•» w
.. . 1— uJ~
-------,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
•d Federal
julylOdt!
QBlFFHTf
*1»«
ATTORNEY AT LAW
, IftiHg*!"-! if'MmffTtiYiiiiiiimrt r
a, # 1
for the
.
The Murderer of Colonel A. E.
Jones, of Cincinnati.
—
Charles Blythe, His Colored
Blow Which Crashed His Skull—Blythe
Admits Biding His Victim’s Pockets.
Ha Bad Ho Partners—Th» Funeral.
OinoWi, July SOL-Charles Blythe,
ville by Train Operator Patton, who
telegraphed to Ool. Deitsch. Detectives
Moses started for and that Schnuoks village and immediately located
soon
Blythe. He had attended a ball game
in the afternoon and had been recog¬
nized.
Those present at the arrest were the
by four r
made no:
aity anived wob at i 8 o’clock via the Midland ex-
press.
Tho Confession,
The prisoner was at once taken to the
office of Chief of Police Deitsoh and
t&sffigst's
wall I only hit him once. When I saw
I had killed the old man, I tried to
think how I would hide him. Then I
■aw the bag, and pat him in it
"T didn't search him or take his
watch. When I came to his feet, they
•rat of drew up, and went in easy. Then
I tied the sook up with a strap and hid
M in the manger, and went on with the
work; I came back to the stable about
9 o'clock, and put the sack on my
shoulder and started off with it When
I got down to Francis lane I laid it
dowh and went out into the street and
opened the man-hole. Then I>went
back, got the body and dropped it in.
drove As I was patting Then the I cover home. on a carriage %
past waul
Mokes Another Statement.
Sunday he made another statement
c ha nging a number ol material points.
He admitted taking the watch and one
silver dollar from the pockets of the
corpse. He went down town on Thurs¬
day and Sunday night and accompanied pawned the the timepiece, officer to
the place—Frank Smith’s, on Sixth
Concerning the question as to whether
GoiL Jones was dead when put in the
sack, the condition of the skull makes
sufficient answer. The omnium was
examination horribly crashed. Dr, Marshall At the post Keyt, mortem of
one
the physicians conducting the examina-
{SMJSdVUUnK
The funeral will be conducted with
all the military honors accorded to a
brigadier general, which was the rank
GO T HIS WI 8H.
He Frayed God to Paralyse tha Man Who
Had H|s Ftps, sad Dies of Foralysls.
IHMS, St).—Several days ago
foteiityjM tegher frit
: don't care, *’ he said. “Here, with this
mlifted hand to heaven, I pray that my
Jreetor will paralyze the man who has
re his utterances had died away
■alysis. Death ensued in a few
.RSSSSIsaaaE looking through his olothes,
ay, in
•ftfeh gaoling Schooner Seised.
!
i
“J W vMft “>«
?-'-2.... JULY 31,1889.
THE CERNEAU SCOTTISH RITE.
The main reason for the edict,
amity and Masonic correspondence with
the grand orient of France, the gov-
glish speaking grand lodge in the world,
because the grand orient has strioken
the name of God from its rituals.
The strand lodges of this country have
An additional grievance against the
grand orient of France, because the
EmKVfii of Columbia shall be required.to state
before^ admission that they are^not mcm-
i in any
Masonio h all is also prohibite d.
CABL E FOR CAN ADA
Dominion Government to be Asked to
Guarantee Half tha Honda
Ottawa Ont, July 80.—That Canada
is to have a direct cable to great Britain
& all but a settled fact, Its consumma¬
tion, however, depends on the Domin¬
ion government. Application is being
- s-sa Bara
miles. _.__
Fatally Shot Her Husband tn a Diva.
Bock Island, 111., July 80.-L. D.
Dimiok, s prominent livery stable
keeper, and the son of one of the
wealthy citizens of the town, was caught
in a disreputable house here by his wife
at a late hout Saturday night, and in a
of Chicago, the Bohemian July 30.—The soldiers’ corner stone
monument
was laid at noon Sunday in the Bohe¬
mian by E. National R. Lewis, cemetery, of Post 540, at Irving G. A. park, R
The monument, when completed, will
be the figure of a soldier cast in bronze,
with a flag in one hand, and a sword in
the other, on a handsome marble pedes¬
tal. At tiie soldier’s feet will be tho in¬
scription in Bohemian, “For Our New
Country,” "RnLormon ITnwwifl and on Ififtl-ISAS." the base, “To the
wife for th ree months. *
Boots Baa Together.
W. Baltimore, Whildjn, Capt July James 80.—The W. Foster, stettoer of
Baltimore, ran into and sunk the
schooner Rillie S. Derby, Naylor, of Philadel¬
phia, Capt. Thomas in the Dela¬
ware bav, off Instone Point, at 8:20
o’olook her Sunday morning. to Cape May The frith Whildin sixty
was on way ooal
excursionists. laden, bound for The New Derby Buryport, was Mass-
No one washurt_
The Western Union Replies.
Green, Nhw York, the Western July Union 80. — Telegraph President
of
company; General Wanamaker has sent a reply denying to Postmaster that the
oompany has furnished corporations any
such rates as asked by the postinaster
general in ment his orders reducing the rates
on govern messages.
Cleveland to go Yachting.
Washington, July 80 . -Ex-President
Cleveland, who is going on a yachting
trip for two weeks from Aug. 1, will
afterward go fax the Adirondaeks, and
Mrs. Cleveland will accompany him.
CoL D. S. Lomont will .be withliim on
the yachting cruise, and will then join
Ms family in Maine.
_
“Valuable Plato Glass.’’
Nhw York, July 80.—The remains of
Miss Madge Crawford, of Kittanning,
Pa., who arrived died here of Saturday, fever in shipped Rome last in
April, bot They marked “Valuable
a were
plate law, glare” which in order would to ;h»ve avoid prevented the Bo-
man
*-—
i Drowned in
Austria.
t— f'
Crops and
°™°r ; *
A to H. An.lou,
were killed, the crops
houses and enormous Mid darnagi te^disfatete of
churches, 1
Grosswondein, Tzeged #nd Mohacs
were completely ravage.
, women, and
children and cattle have been recovered
from the Danube, Tha 'm- «nd other
tore killed by
ie tefal majority churches of
are in ruins. Three of tw enty-four mills
on the Danube remain . A crowded
ferryboat Pesth, was and blown nearly agai nst II aboard a steamer,
near a were
drowned. A circus was swept away «t
Tzegsdin. 2* f
_
The gtrihen la Oermanj-.
spinners Berlin, and July 80.—The in strike the mills of the
weavers at
Brunn still continue, although most of
the mills are again running, some on
Ml time, with help brought from other
points. all the Over11,000 mills, but hands notwithstanding are at work
in
this, the leaders refuse to declare the
The general strike of the masons and
bricklayers doned and their in Berlin leaders has have been adopted aban¬
new tactics; which, they urge in a
win. proclamation They order just all issued, the are married bound to
men
back to work, and direct all those un¬
married and without encumbrances to
leave the oity. This plan has been
lin adopted in several minor strikes in Ber¬
heretofore with some degree of suc¬
cess.
The glass manufacturers of West¬
month phalia, after to coming raise to the an agreement their a
ago price of
product, action, have finding now rescinded the their for¬
mer that competi¬
tion of Belgium and Schleswig-Halstein
was They taking from them the all their trade.
propose to ask government for
more protection.
ines in Australia make IS? public
some startling their foots concerning the
treatment of speoial wards by the
whites there. In a letter from a newly
discovered gold field, the correspondent
of tho society says; “On arriving at
Boebumwesaw gangs of unfortunate
with aboriginals bullock chained chains, to making' wheelbarrows
roads:
others had tha chains rolled' around
their neoks and naked bodies. The
effect of the chains may be imagined in
a climate where the stones get so hot
they too painful cannot for be handled. of The from sight was
most us a free
land, and we were glad when our teams
started again."_
Want, to Bo King.
the London, lobbies July of the 30.— house It was rumored in
of commons
Saturday anxious that that the the Prince should of Wales abdicate, is
queen
as he believes that he oould secure a
favorable civil list at the present time,
while, if his asoent of the throne should
be deferred for any considerable number
of years, this would become exceedingly
doubtful. while recognizing The queen the herself, it of is said,
force these
considerations, long is unwilling to take such,
a stop so as her health remains
good. _
Given Ten^Days to Appear.
Gen. Pabis, Boulanger, July 80.—The Count time Dillon granted and M. to
Rochefort, to answer the summons of
the senate court having expired, an offi¬
cial Sunday publicly read before their
residences a decree giving the accused
ten days in which to appear before the
oouri will be sequestered Failing in and this their will property de¬
prived of all civil rights. thoy be
The police raided tho office of La
Presse, letters directed Sunday, and seized a number of
to Gen. B oulanger.
French Elections.
bers Pabis, of the July councils 80.—Elections general for mem¬ held
were
langer throughout contested France Sunday. Gen. He Bou¬ has
451 cantons.
been suooessful in Bordeaux, where he
polled opponent. 8,816 He votes, against defeated 2,691 in Montpe¬ for his
was
lier and Bouen.
Beturas from 550 cantons show that
Gen. Boulanger has been successful in
only twelve. Returns are still awaited
from 908 oantons. The hopes of the
Boolangists have fallen to Zero.
Dom Pedro’. Anuiln.
Bio Jankibo, July 80.— The Portu¬
guese who fired a shot at Dom Pedro on
the night of July 16, while the latter was
leaving the theater, is named Adrians
Valle. He declares that he was insti¬
gated to make the attempt upon the
emperor’s life by a republican associa¬
tion.
_
The ParneUlto*' Vote on the Great..
London, July 80.—'The Daily Trie-
graph, g£ commenting 5 on the vote on the
is of the most notable af .asa signs of the
one
times, and division that it signalizes between the an domestic almost
complete and American wings of the Irish party.
Of the Mpwapwa missionaries. B
■witii his own hand, murdered an
«f the East Africa company
Annlvortarj. of Peru*,
;as observeil The ordinary Somhiy w
asm. o
ANOTHER TREATY SIGNED,
The last explanations of the net pre¬
sented by the Chippewa commission
have been asked, for and answered on
this reservation, and the signature of
White Cloud, the leading chief, has
been appended to the agreement At
the opening of the session if Saturday
morning he wanted to know it could
be made certain that tho reservation
would be organized into a separate
eouuty, so they might control the
amount of their taxes,
Wright, s He was reminded by his son, Charles
n.l that they oould be taxed
_ not
during tie first twenty-five yean after
the act went into operation. A number
of other speeches were made, indicating
that they were afraid of coming under
tho jurisdiction of the National and
state laws, one of the speakers
Saying Becker in a laughing w*y, that
oounty bad sent an assessor
into the reservation last year to get the
value of their personal property, but
that he had not taken any valuation be¬
cause he was afraid tho Indians would
brain him. They were assured there
sion was no danger them of of the the premature laws, and exten¬
over were
informed regarding the exemptions from
a plements. levy on household tools, goods, forming im¬
etc.
The full bloods, who wanted to make
sure that they themselves should have
the first choice of lands under the
allotment system, wanted to know if
swu*i 2 % 3 s, zpz
ternoon session as to how much of the
reservation the commission thought
should be sold and why it was
affi&ttsjyuSfii sstoi 's.sttzti&'M
ment for sale, at least that portion not
demanded needs when bv the their prooeeds present would or be future
se¬
cure, rather than leave it to be burned
or sold by themselves, which would
soon result in their being minus their
pine The and short tho session prooeeds had also. Sunday before
the signing began was taken up by an¬
other rehearsal of the difficulties under
which the Indian labor is making pro¬
gress toward civilization, old including
references to the arrearages and
of some seed complaints and supplies about in former the distribution
Many expressions of respect years.
were
made for the commission, and also
apologies time explanation; for having consumed that the so much of
in reason
former their caution treaties was that not they fulfilled had found for
were
want the government of a perfect and understanding themselves. between
and Nearly the work 200 names of the commission have been secured maybe
pronounced entirely successful. This
treaty will open 8,000,000 acres to settle¬
ment.
_
CINCIN NATI'S SU NDAY.
One Handled and Thirty-Seven Saloonlet*
Arrested for Keeping Open.
Cincinnati, July 80.— The law defiers
were not very numerous Sunday despite
the bold announcement of Adam Lotz,
chairman of the saloon keepers who met
at Turner hall and resolved to keep
open, and his assistants, that they had
saloonists secured 1,200 to keep pledges their from places as many wide
open. Chief of Polioe Deitsch colled
out
every man on the force, and they were
all cm duty. One hundred and thirty-
seven saloon proprietors and barkeepers
were arrested.
ed Each with arrest hooting during yelling, the day and was greet¬ there
ana
were innumerable small affrays.
mite Warflinger. hall,-’ the arrested proprietor three of “Dyna¬ times,
was
and each time there vims a scrimmage
and an officer hurt
At the Bremen street station there
were outbreak, outbreak, extraordinary and and it it preparations in in this this to district district quell
an on was wre
that the most arrests were made.
riots Eiohler's occurred garden, Sunday where last, three small
on was open
all day, bat nothing but soft drinks were
in sold. the meaning, An extra posse it of police, found sent oat
was soon were
not needed.
Members of the Law and Order league
were side doors busy taking notes of and places arrests where
were open no
were made._
The Cat holla Indian* Will Sign.
Standing Book, Dak.. July 80.—The
old warriors at the agency have been
startled by the apparently authoritative
Statement that the young Indians be¬
longing to the Catholic societies are
favorable to the treaty and will sign.
There are several of the societies, Mid
one of them numbers 115. It is now
claimed that the Catholic missionaries
are favorable to the treaty, and that
they have induced n r rly every Catbolio
Liman at the agency to sign.
Death of a Noted Civil En gin eer .
Fabkinoham, Me, July 80 .— Daniel
Beedy died He had Monday been morning, noted aged civil 76
▼ears. a en-
ginoer and bridge builder. He built
the first steam flour mill in 8t Lotos,
and various huge flour and quartz mills
in New Mexico, California and other
western state*, beside* a large number
of bridges._
Cardinal Dai
•SasStsSas tt-atASiam
i* staying in Ottawa just now. “I
was United States consul general in
Tripoli up to 1887. I had not been in
my ert position Tripoli very lone before I discov¬
that wasthe center of oon-
;
to have their sympathy.
"On one occasion I was st
Malta, and at Tripoli. the same hotel
governor of In his re
had a number of slaves,
I intend attending Ca
anti-slavery the congress of a
open eyes some
W.Kirkley, Washington, of this July 80.—Mr.
city, has b
pointed to tha position of oivi
pert member ol the board on ti
cation of rebellion rewords. Th
as now constituted, Davis, consists
George Messrs. Lucian B. Perry of and the J, an 1
ley. has been The Axed salary by of the tho secretary civilian
excelleet one, M Be u the
i
■> t ■- mmmm
.