Newspaper Page Text
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i best and most promising lit tle
Us record for the past
_j»y n«w enterprises iu oper-
,
alion, building and contemplated, prove this
u -e a business .tatenmut and not n hyper-
o'ical descri) tion.
During that time it lias bnilt and put Into
successful ojierotion a $100,000 cotton
artery and with this year started the wheel*
«f a second .of more than twice that capital.
1 1 has put op a large iron and brass foundry,
* (rrulixer factory, an Immonse ice and bot-
lling works, a sash nud blind factory, a
broom factory, opened ap the hm.s! granite
uuarry in the United States, and now has
onr large oil mills in more or less advanced
stages of construction, with an aggregate au¬
thorised capital of over half amilbon dollars.
3SttC?ttC233£S? charters for street railways. It
plied for two
has secured another railroad ninety miles long,
atfd while located on the greatest system in
t he South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its important riyd, the .East Ten¬
nessee, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain¬
ed direct independent , connection with Chat¬
tanooga and the West, and will break ground
na few days fora fourth road, connecting
with »fourth indepeudentsystem.
With its five white and font-colored church¬
es, to has recently completed a *10,0(H) new
i'reeS/teriau church. It has increased its pop¬
ulation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around its borders fruit growers born nearly
every Slats iu the Union, until 111 to now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
f raft evaporators in the State. It is the home
of thegra|ie and its winemakiugcapacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
seven years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decode
and simply shows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
of haring the finest climate, summer and
K griffin to the county seat of Spalding coun¬
ty stalled in went Middle Georgia, with a
Wealthy tortile and rolling country, 1150 tret
above*** level. By the census of 1800, it
will hare at alow estimate between 6 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all of the right
rort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
i and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel
come il they bring money to help build up the
own. Ttiers to about only one thing we
used badly just now, and that is a big hotel.
We hare sereral small ones, but their accom¬
modations are entirely too limited lor our
nsiue a, pleasure and health seeking guests.
1 1 you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin.
Griffin to the place where the Gbifkin News
s published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper in the Em pi re State ol Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
and descript,ire pamphlet of Griffin-I
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1H89,
and Will hare to be changed in a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
ompfeted.
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENKY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
HAMPTON, UEOROlA.
Pr«ti4s I* «*« State -and octftiAwJy Federal
......... JQH* i- HUoT,
attorney at law,
SRirPIN, OEOHOIA.
Office, 81 Hill Street,, Up Stairs, over J. H.
While's UloMiinr Store. mar22d&wly
rHOS. H. MILLS,
attorney at law,
Will practice in the State and Federal
Courts. Office over George 4 Hartnett’s
sorner. nov2tf
John d rraWAwi. BOUT. T. DANIEL.
SI EWART & DANIEL.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Mr^ f ^i8sss®s e an#is«ws««^ , «^ ■«*.
Will practice f In tits State and Federal
aurte. julyl»dtf
Cleveland & darland,
Ot£KTIST8,
G BIFFIN, : GE0BGIA.
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
wooBnmr, oRonou.
P Prompt attention given to all business
Will practice in ail the Courts, and where
rer business calls.
*•* Collections a specialty.
NOW! HOW!.....NOW
Honey Wanted lor (he
1 Stark Plantation.
-
707 acres land, well wauted and timbered,
I Ga. Midland HR.
lor
ther hotrsee not sold.
jaagg^iBiama and tots, and lands lands tasid« iosid<
L Property is tower now than it will erei
J8h«
i
;
The President Leaves for a Trip
* to Bar Harbor,
i
’
| Where He Will Visit Secretary
of State Blaine. •
,
:
■ Secretaries Windom, Proctor anti Busk
( Also Out of the National Capitol—An
Interesting Discovery Made While Look¬
ing Up the Government’s Bad' Debts.
Other News of Interest.
Washington, Aug. 7. —Tlie presiden¬
tial party, consisting of the president,
Secretaries Windom, Proctor, Rusk and
Private Secretary Halford, left Wash-
togton a
New
road. The party occupl
Roberts’ private car. At New York
they took the Pall River boat be
for Boston, where the president will
met by Walker Blaine, who will escort
him to Bar Harbor. Rusk will ,
Secretary leave the party in
New York, where he will make an in¬
vestigation tle to tbe seaboard. of the transportation of cat¬
Secretary Windom will leave the
president at Boston to attend to some
customs business in that city.
Secretary Proctor will altfb leave the
party in in Vermont Boston, for going short thence visit. to his
home a
The crowd at the depot of was small,
composed waiting principally for trains. people Secretary who
were
Windom spent the few minutes he had
with to wait the on representatives the platform in of conversation the
Secretary Rusk the last of press. the
was one
party to arrive at the station, and hav¬
ing no time to spare nodded a quick
farewell to his friends and went directly
to the private car,
“Cade Sam” Sold Slave.*.
Washington, of the treasury Aug. 7—Solicitor department, Hep¬
burn, effort to eolloot is
ber making of a old strong judgments in favor a of num¬ the
United States, and to that end is in cor¬
respondence with marshals and district
attorneys in different sections of the
country, the urging matter. prompt There and vigorous about
action in are
nearly 10,(WO of $35,000,000. these judgments, aggregating;
These cases ore all old, some of them
dating back fifty years, and most of
thorn nave generally always been regarded as “bad
debts,” because of the in¬
solvency they of rendered. the persons The against solicitor whom is of
were
the opinion, however, that at least a
tenth of the amount may be recovered
by government energetic action officers. on the Some part of of these the
eases are very interesting, there being
one which showed that the government
seized and sold among other things
twelve negro slaves, seven of whom were
females, to satisfy in part a judgment
against a delinquent creditor.
Ceding Their Land* to the Great Chief.
Washington, Aug. 7.—The Indian
bureau has received from the commis¬
sion appointed by the president to ne¬
gotiate with the Chippewa Indians in
Minnesota for of a relinquishment part of their to the
tion government lands information a reserva¬ than
that more
two-thirds of the Indians on the White
Earth and Red Lake reservations have
signed consent the of the articles Leech Lake of cession. Indians The yet
remains to be obtained before the rights
of the government attach. These reser¬
vations contain in the aggregate about
4.000. 000 acres, of which it is estimated
8.000. 000 acres will be surrendered to
the United States, the remaining 1,000,-
000 oeres to be allotted to the Indians in
severalty.
_
Wanamaker and tlie Western Union.
ter Washington, to President Aug. Green, 7.— of In the a Western long'let¬
Union, Postmaster General Wanamaker
says serious the blander telegraph in company holding that makes the a
privileges derived from the acts of con¬
gress dicting are this purely imaginary. Wanamaker In cites contra¬ in¬
Mr.
stances where the courts have sustained
the companies in their rights to take
To Bo Applied to the Sinking Fund.
Washington, ; Aug. 7.—Secretary
Windom has directed that all the bonds
6f purchased July last by be the applied government the by sinking the 1st
to
fOna fiscal Until the requirements estimated at for $47,000,000 the cur¬
rent year
are met The amount already applied
to thjs purpose is $3,068,450, of which
all but $15,500 was in four-and-a-balf
per cent bonds
The Surgeon’* Knife Prove* Fatal.
Peru, Ind., Aug. 7.—The funeral of
Mtb. William Levi took place at 10
of o'dook the Monday largest morning, and here, was Rabbi one
ever seen
Zerndorff, of Cincinnati, officiating.
Mrs. Levi died at Milwaukee, where she
went to have a „ tumor removed. The
operation weighing seventy was performed, pounds and taken a tumor from
from her, but she soon after regaining and con¬
sciousness pired in t hours. began sinking, ex¬
wo
_
The Cherokee Election.
Little Rock, Ark., held Aug. in the 7.— Cherokee Returns
from the election
nation of members officers indicate of the legislature victory
and district a
for the Dawning and Mayes party, who
chum five out of nine districts and a ma¬
jority in tile legislature. The Downing
party are almost a unit in opposition to
tiie sale of the Cherokee strip to the
United States.
A Tory Short Strike.
Albany, N. Y., Ang. 7.-A Strike
which threatened to be serior
place at the Rathbone Said *
ny’s stove works here certain Monday, piece
firm refused to pay a moldere. i
and discharged one of the The
other molders, about 350 in The number,
struck for his reinstatement mat¬
ter has been settled and work will be
resumed.
-
Family Gore Hewn With a
and five'
GEORGIA. THURSD MORN, AUGUST K. 1*89
'
; BLACK BART SU SPECTED
Of Having Been Couneeted With the
i Kansas City Train ltobhery.
j the St. authority Louis, Aug. of 7.—It postoffioe Is given inspector, out on
I ; a
’if si
this the famous city, ban¬ that
dit and train
robber, Black
Bart, was in St.
Louis for ten
JsVJKJs it is suspected
that he had
something with, if fie to did do
not direct in
nelson,Retrain
black City babt. Sunday night. robbery near
Kansas
Bart took his meals at the Hotel
which he displayed donja, ostenta- of
money, tiously, . and he lost opportunity to
t, himself no He
surround with mystery.
did what not business give his he name, engaged however, in, nor say but
was
attempted to convey the idea that he
for west fanner. 1 ‘
was a . i
He Ordered a largo lunch at the res¬
taurant Friday evening, and said he in¬
when tended lie to has leave not the been city by train,, It is since not
seen.
known in what direction he went, but
there is a strong disposition to connect
him with t he train robbery.
ON A B AD FOUND ATION.
Indiana** Institute fur the Blind in
Danger of Tambliag Down.
Indianapolis, Aug. 7,— In making
exoavations for the new addition to the
tion of affairs respecting the foundation
of the main When building the earth has been removed uncov¬
ered. was
this examination foundation disclosed began to that crumble, and
never was a
building this. with more flimsy support than
The wall is made of small stones,
were crevices thrown and together boles, with so as to leave sign that big
no
mortar or cement was ever used to bind
them of the together. ground kept Only the the whole bracing thing power from
crumbling away. The discovery ! neoee-
masonry
a buttress
; otnerwise tnewnoie building is
endangered.
WAYL AID AND K ILLED.
Shocking Murder and Multilation of on
Aged Tenne»«ee Farmer.
Nashville, Aug. 7.— John A. Huff¬
man, about 71 years of age, was mnrder-
ered at his home in Decatur county. He
went to his garden, 1O0 yards from the
house, and after getting a pan of pota¬
toes for dinner was waylaid in a little
skirt of woods while returning. His
head was burst open with a large hick¬
ory club and his throat cut, the head
being almost severed from the body.
The murderer then dragged his victim
about ten feet and hid the body behind
a Uge, log. Suspicion rests from upon Steve Troy, Gul-
a young man near in
Kentucky. familiar with Gillige the old made himself quite
him several times man, day going and staying to see
a
several hours each time. Since the
murder he has not been seen. The old
man widower was frightfully and lived mutilated. alone in He little was
a a
cabin doing all of his own work.
Dlaappeared and 91,000 Short.
New York, Aug. 7.—A Newburg
special to The Herald soys; R. J. Grans,
a disappeared, Newburg sewing short $1,000 machine agent, has
iaadcs ou, onwiv < on collections
he had made for Superin¬
tendent Heckey states that before he
left town Craus broke down and ad¬
mitted that he had been misapplying
brother in Albany and was allowed to
start on that errand. But he has failed
to return and an effort will now be made
to arrest h im.
Died of Hydrophobia. l r ’
Randolph, Maffit, Aug. 7.—MfrrvJB.
Ronoev, aged 12, the adopted dan
The wound was cauterized
utes later. On Aug. 1 the
frightened at her. She by a large toward dog the which”jumped house _ bark¬
ran
ing like a dog. This lasted only a few
minutes, but on Aug. 3 she began froth¬
ing at the mouth, and from that time
grew^rapidly worse until the time of her
Pronounced Dead, Rat 1* Recovering.
Elkhart, Ind., BosluUer, Aug. 7.—A young
daughter illness, of F. pronounced M. dead after Monday a long
was
morning rayed in by shroud. a physician, and was ar¬
made for a the funeral, Preparations the were
when girl was
restored to life, and is in a fair way to
recover.
_
Captured by Brigand*.
New York, AUg. A World special
from Cincinnati says word has been re¬
ceived there that Mrs. George Pendle¬
ton Bowler, of that city, who has been
traveling been captured in Europe by bandits for several in years has
relatives, however, think she Italy. is safe Her in
Paris.
__
A Woman’* Horrible Death.
Christian Jeffersonville, Warfel, living Ind., Ang. 7.— Mrs.
tempted to the fire near here, at¬
start with coal oiL
An badly explosion burned followed. and The woman
was crawled an out¬
building, The house where burned she died the this mnvpfnpr
was to ground.
Gentile* Carry Salt Lake City,
Salt Lake City, Ang. 7.—In Mon¬
city day'selection by majority tbe of Gentiles which, carried tiie
serted, a 41 it is as¬
insures a Gentile city govern¬
ment elated next February. thin result They are greatly
over
Sugar Worire Burned.
Topeka, Kan.. Aug. 7.—The Top eka
m
Between Two (Closing Factions
of Chinese Coolie
|s >' —
Flyp Thousand Mar n Engaged
in i th« the Conflict Confll
Many People $lal» $'
Called Oat to ftaell the DUtarbaneo.
Emperor WOlRn* Wtt«o«»e* the Kevtowr
of the Ifrltteh S*vy la Forumonth War- 1”!
bor—dt4er''For*fau Hew*. ;
San Pbascisgo, Xm L—Tlie City Jabou of
G azette, reoeivetl by the steamer
Peking, 8u«#ty, oonfadBi an aeoonntn*
a terrible riot between two factions of
m Chinoee coolies at Sang Kong, the
Siam. Aboat 5,0(10 men engaged in
conflict. ! « ->ii
•
Many Killed.
Spears and ftiuirras were used, and
many persons were killed. The coolies of
were more or less under the influence
liauor. and fomrlit like demons. Spears
WCTwMnlWl law Hie IKKUeil OI W 1>UUU-
hidcousty., «
B Troop* Called Oat.
The Siamese troops charged the riot¬
these, ers, and, quelled after bayouetihg disturbance a number and of
tile cap¬
tured (tOttof the rtetere, who were after¬
ward fined and released.
Grand Uxvlev of the lirltllh Navy.
Aug. 7.—-The review of
Sit
cess. Upon its conclusion Emperor
William received admirals commanding
yacht the British Hoheuzollern, fleets on board and congratulated the imperial
them u-^on the splended appearance of
The demand for facilities mliS to witness
Sira the shore and filled
to its utmost capa¬
brought city every private vessel that works could be
the sea front mto at at requisition, requisition, Stokes Stokes b boy, the Fort Monofc-* on
ton. __ Point Battery and
were crowded with spectators.
WWt« Traders 019 «i$ Congo.
has Brussels, just returned Aug. here 7. —Lieut. after Dhannes
three in the Congo a sojourn country. of
He reports yews that upper growing
commerce is
stations rapidly in that region, and Nineteen that trading
are the prosperous. steam¬
ers ply for on traffic. river. During The natives are of
eager sixteen days foot, lwtween a journey Leopold¬
Matahdi on
ville and Lieut. Dhannes met
lation thirty along white the travelers. river is A fast trading develi loprog. • popu-
Wltneuet to b» Froaeoutod.
ferred Dublin, fry the Aug, 7.— The against charges Canon pre¬
Doyle and others, government of hiding illegal
meetings County of in Wexford* and about have Arthurs been aban¬ town,
doned, as every one of the crown's
twelve witnesses have refused to be
sworn. The crown will now prosecute
these and other persona accused on the
charge of conspiracy.
Tho l’ope to Germany.
Berlin, Aug. 7. —Herr Von Schloezer,
the Prussian representative at til e Vati¬
can, has arrived here with dispatches
from the pope asking the government to
fulfill its pledges and restore to Catho¬
lics in Prussia the rights held by them
before the adoption of tbe Falk laws.
Ominous Preparation*.
tile Belgrade, Servian Aug. 7.—The increases muster the of
reserves war
alarms, and there is fever of expectation
of something This momentous about to hap¬
pen. is increased by the which requisi¬
tions for vehicles and horses ac¬
company the muster.
Eighty Nlhilltfi Arrested.
St. Petersburg, Aug. 7.—Eighty
Nihilists have been arrested at Kharkoff.
The members jtolioe of are, raiding Socialist the society houses of
a new at
rested. Odessa. The Many society members is largely have composed been ar¬
of Jewa
__
Royal Groat* Bill 1’asaed.
London, Aue. The royal mute
bill was passed fry the house of com¬
mons this'afte rnoon.
Foreign Mete*.
Fanny Lewold, the German novelist, i*
(toad.
Tim cotton prospect* throughout Egypt
are exoellent.
The anti-slave conference will not assem¬
ble before the middle of October.
Gen. Phllippovitob, tho conqueror of Bos¬
nia, died at Prague, Tuesday, from apoplexy.
The shah has conferred the
> President ‘3F"!
'•**'
_ naval
l " Eleven r “" man
‘ Cspt.
trouble, as h* Is anxious that Count Herbert
should remain with him.
President Carnot opened the new Sor-
The ttu-
’has issued a declaration in
which ha say* that the accusationa against
him ore Infamous slanders, nod that be
re to* upon the French people a* bit sole
*Privy Councilor oomplicity Kruger has fa the been arrested
OB su*pic ! 04 < of corruption
recently mcs*rih*l in
for ton* severe! naval
A deputa’ o from the First Dragoon
guards of B-rlin, of which regiment the
queen has been mad ; commander by Em¬
peror William, has gone to Osborne to
ly the regimental re-
Dtipatches from Abyssinia that Mas-
saval and the whole of Abyw
of Tig e l Ave
who while
the Russian infa Mir a
three
THE COKE WORKER S STRIKE.
Pittsburg, Aug, 7.—A Oonnellsville
special to The Leader says:
A ma« meeting of ookc strikers was
held at Youngstown Monday night,
after Leith, Which the men marched in a body
to reaching that plaee early in the
' the men
reported that at Youngstown an advance
of <H per emit was offered to the men
“a by tkeH ^
; ASSrew , the ih-
long tendent one. Smith, of
maker k Company—called his men to-
confer with the strikers* executive com¬
mittee, he replied that he would recog¬
nize no labor organization.
The men rose in a body and inarched
to Mborwood, thenoe to the Standard
works and They were then, joined by the woridng- mMo^d
nwn. Mi V*00 guard ■tr^g. that had
:to Pleasant. A
strikers away. Hie
the guard and I ti I . I,
rmmdidm no damage to property and re
At Jimtown Yhe guard fired several
shots Tho at the strikers, bit without the effect works
strikers marched past
quietly, retiming to Jimtown at a later
hour, held a mass meeting and induced
works to strike. The entire works of
Bchoonmaker & Company are mow idle.
The report of bloodshed things is false, but
it cannot be denied that are as-
g *a very serious aspect lost
evenihg Superintendent Brennon, of
McClure ft Company, offered his men
an advance of 6i i>or cent, but the offer
A rejected. general masting wiU be held
mass
here, and over 8,000 strikers wjllbe
It was reported Tuesday afternoon
that Sclioonmaker ft Company have also
offered C± per cent advance, and that
the offer had been rejected.
ThO total number of idle ovens now
are working few and they will probably be
idle in a .hours.
EtEVEN SP ARKLING DIAMONDS
Found Clan died In • Glganlls Fossil
Found Ik Phalli* County, 7.-^. AfrthnwYa.
Kearney, Neb., Aug. R. Moles,
a farmer living in Phelps county, about
twelve miles from Kearney, fa in posses¬
sion of a curiosity which fa a valuable
relic the continent of pro-historic Home times time in this part while of
excavating for he exhumed ago,
a oave. a
large pounds. bnown When stone, the weighing over twenty
from it large fossil clay was removed
clenched a hand revealed. representing The sped a
was
imen had brokon from the mammoth
print arm just of above the cloth wrist and (he im¬
a coarse or some woven
back material of the was hand. plainly outlined on the
For several months the specimen had
laid about the house, and no one who
saw it had any idea of the great amount
of wealth held firmly in the grasp of the
stony fingers. A small boy in the fam¬
ily, whose beginning faculty to of develop, smashing things fa
just conceived
out eleven brilliant transparent stones.
The discovery public of these beauties was
not made until Sunday, whan
Mr. Moles showed them to a jeweler,
water who pronounced diamonds without them genuine speck first
their a or flow
nearly to mar uniform beauty. in shape, The pieces are
and are about
the size of Lima bean a They have the
appearance of bo.ug water worn. Tlie
possessor of this valuable find will dig.
pose of tho diamonds, and will at once
dig up his faun in search of the other
part of the giant’s antique anatomy.
BOYCO TTED ITA LIANS.
They Objsct la th. Way tlie Xrt«U Oat
Back at Tham fa X»w York City.
New York, Aug. 7, — About 3,000
Italian residents held a mass meeting
Monday night to denounce the boyoott
which a certain, labor organization hat
placed upon stores in front of whioh
Italians are allowed to keep fruit stands*
The boycott grew oat of the murder of
an Irish lad name! Barrett fry two
Italian fruit dealers some b time time ago. at
~ ‘it was drunk, and am uscil * * hims *
■fruit The Italians <
died him. At the meeti
lubons were adopted all (
unjust for to the condemn fault few; mombers
race of a denouncing
the boycott as oowariBv and illegal;
nying the assertain that Italians were
always statistics ready to to show use that the knife; Italians quoting
com¬
mitted no more th-.m tlteir proportion of
crime; and appointing a committee to
law the matter before the legal authori¬
ties.
It was declared in the speeches made
that the Irish were inclined to bring
about a race antagonism between them¬
selves mid the Italians.
Fatally Wonn lml TI.rea Men.
vameviluk, Ind., Aug. 7. AtPrince-
Ky., Monday after nfternoon, John
Frank Lunu. inflicting styHrHHiH fatal wound.
a
All erable the prominence. parties wore The farmers shooting of consid¬
was
the result of « - uiT udgo which existed
between Hutohi Lewis brothers
for under some time Tim uiurdeerr was placed
arrest
Follower of Nspoleoit
SJS'&iSss 0 anton. O., Auk. 7.—Georse 7.- Held.
was a soldier under Napoleon during
^d^ , toc^totel‘a^° m Moscow ’
I Ills Heart.
*-AKSSI “
Workmen on it Narrowly
cape Watery Craves,
i A Urge Milt si 'tiW' *
Pruptrt/ Badlf
New York, New Raven and Bird
Raflraail Track* frniiarmlnsil by '' I
Hunting ef a Man fa Onbttectta
1 Flood. In Iudlss. , ow l Kanfa*. *
£, Aug. 7,—Pnttiou-
lare !•« ofc. of a waohout wsriwut at at North Nortli Scil Scituato,
too stfltf), i]
storm have pist readied this dty. ms
Moswausiout Manufaeturing eompomy's
dam brokG awaj- just before
was a new
Men lmd Wn at work all the morn-
ingcalktojr the crevices, in the solid aa*
down, the stream. The workmen aban¬
doned their places and rushed; for Ufa
hillside. They were not a second too
soon, for tlie great pile of masonry
■* i
to I’raperty Vsry Groat. '
The mill dam alono cost $10,OOtt The
mirted SyaJt and much household
SteSKS*' j
mercy of the torrent* Some «f the
highways are gullied tw enty feet deep.
AiMiitor ifam Gone. * amrn *
water JSra&stJzg ton feet deep, two -.aflSfj miles alxiv
here, broke Tuesday.
the, New York, Now Haven and Hart-
vert into the peat peat worits woits pond pond Untile
The culvert was too small for tho
tremendous-volume and a pressure wee
bound der track, the breach oxtendiug un¬
tim ties, A gang of mm with
loads of stone were
damage was ^ *
oould pass sk
Had the dam
still VU,--- rushing through e0!luiioa the culvert bat
‘ nofMtherdam
age \$n%£ t $[ -
_
Entire Family Drowned.
Mitchell, Ind., Ang. T-Sunday's
storm in this section proves to have bean
most most disastrous disastrous to to life life and and property. property. A
spring -waa father, wagon mother blown containing and ltd! from three three Mae a smalfohih small familyof roadside children five- into
Black creek and all were drowned.
Scores of houses were unroofed and sev¬
eral were demolished. The storm was
genera l throughout southwestern In-
Cyclone in Kansas.
doing demolished, considerable daunige. Twc
wore and William
tbe oocupnnt of one of them, was
injured, Several horses and many
tie were killed. The corn crop was
damaged path of the tothe cyclone extent of $12,000 The
was one-fourth of a
wile wide and six miles l ong.
WsfiJdcd in VtmtM.
7.—Gllie
were •.Mo. carried n-iia^rsaissS down by by the the current enrrent and aud
i
all were lost The
been married soon,
covered.
Countorfclt Money Csptnrsri.
Siielbina, Mo., Aug. 7.-The United
States authorities captured a lot ef
arrested counterfeit Ike money here Monday, and
of the Beeler,, The a prominent counterfeit young
silver n?*a dollars, city. And they ore
are so near per¬
fect that they have been pasting entreat
in this county for a year without dis¬
covery. The money was found buried
mw fagged to have been a part-
A Mardor nad Suicide.
San Fbaxcmoo, Aug. 7.-Monday
afternoon John Carter, who/
employed prison, shot as his f
she was dressing her hair before jto 1
ror and then shot himself the head,
dying instantly. Mrs. Carter lived bot
a few momenta. Jealonsv fa given as
the oanae of the shooting.
Broke Cult
jadilla, Mich.. Aug. 7.—Eight prfa-
srs confined in- the Wexford county
dropping pursuit to the ground,
are in
•* Almost« State.
Sioux Falls, S. Dak., Aug. 7.—The
constitutional convention finished its
work signed Monday their afternoon, when the mem¬
bers names to the docu-
ment ’ It
now
president to affix
work done gives general
Louisville, j U ?*
the various
m
the <
An, as..-.
.... m ...... M
.
trernrerl
IsascEtil
is found to tea I
1* to danger of fa
Mr*. Edwin C. 1
John i
bad OtargeWfi bis
Handle
rtreu ta ttem
Tbe Indiana Sbhaci Bock
Jacobi a i
from the,
which abet
. a si mm,-,
DW Of pwjw RT8 S
fadS^nrl
New York Sun, has pure*
Lu Ybo IflontiiiiTiji %
active busines apoa b
aitM July U -
on
too, wases
sna*
At s «
BtoiuUa took a I
wUudri totect
cause. Ste — v —- —■ ■ — - —
eoudltion. w ■* fe
At Woodward mines, near “*
Ate, George <
killed tostat
«x wsstsst. iostitutifaie tor tbsq
of * the I
esbtyMfei E
»h
: Paddy 1
"p of
for a puree
-miUouaf reertv* ‘
the
Kaafs-r
The "