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GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, U. S. A-
3 ,ssai* 2 ssss“'
d**a«. iu m ’“ iy — ,n #5®
building and ooutemplated, prove tbU
■ e » business statement and not a liyper-
0 description.
..ucul built and put into
Hiring that time it hae
most successful operation a $100,000 cotton
tor r and with |M» year started the wheels
., gecond oi more than twice that capital.
It has P«t nP tt lar *» iton an<1 br “********
-fertiliser factory, on immense Ice and bot¬
tling work*, » eaeh anl Wind factory a
broom factory, opened uptbeincst granite ha.
•mirry in the United State*, and now
large oil i»Ula in moro or lew advanced
our traction, with aggregate au-
oi cone an
tliarised capital ,of over half amilliou dollars.
nlied for two charter* for street railways. It
has sersred another railroad ninety miles long,
and whii# located on the greatest system in
the South, the Central, has secured connec-
its road, connecting
■ afewdaye fora fourth
with a fourth independent system.
With its five whit* and fourcolored church-
„ it h«« recently completed a $10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It ha* increased its pop-
■Istios by nearly on* fifth. It has attracted
•round it# borders fruitgrower* from nearly
.rety State inth. Upton, untij lt |n now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
sod Tinsyard*._ l$ i«PpIP«t Ft It thehotae
i ruit evaporators in the State. le
of tit* grape sold its wine makingcapacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in-
sngursted a system of public schools, with a
W ven year* curriculum, second to none.
This to part of the record of a half decade
and simply shows the progress oi an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
olhgving the finest elimate, summer and
winter, Hi iht wbfhh
, griffin is tbs county seat of Spalding coun-
ty, sitasked In west kfiddh ^eorfia, with «
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
iXvTaVTlow -hors asa level. -By tits census of 1800, it
estimate between6 000 and
7,006 people, and they ore all of the nght
*ort—wjde-nwnks, up to the times, ready to
welcome stranger* and awriopi to fceUr* d*
•irabl* settlers, who will not be any less wel-
oome if they bring money to help build up the
own. There 1* about only one thing we
used badly just now, and that is a big hotel.
W# have several small ones, but their accom:
laudations are entirely too limited lor our
usias a, pleasure and health seeking guests.
II you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion tor a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin. 6'wrrih NgWS
Griffin is the place where the
■ published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper iatbeEmplreState of Georgia. Pleas#
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
aud descriptive pamphlet ol ari«u.|
This brief sketch is written April 13th, 1889,
end wlH kit* to be changed in « tew months
o embrace new enterprise# commenced and
ompirte*
J __
— -r~: -■
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
HAMPTON, QEOHgU.
rB33 PrACfcieo* Uf
JOHN I. HUoT,
ATTORNEY AT L A W J
SBirriN, OEOUOlA.
Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. H.
Whi fhite’e ClothiiiK Store. mar22d4wly
FHOS. R. MILLS,
A ! ¥¥$ItN V ¥%T liAWi
Will practice in the State i aftl Federal
Courts. Burte. Office over George A Hartnetts
corner. nov2tf
JOIN il STUWAUT . BOUT. T. DANIEL.
STEWART & DANIEL
A T T OR N EY S A T ~ LA W,
Over Usurps d Msvb—tf s, fiiWiiOa.
eurfel. Will ■tar- .....ar id Federal ltd v
CLWlLANO i' GARLAND
DENrojCfts c .
|F*if»»!W|Prri f
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WOOBUrUT, OEOBOIA.
JPprompt Wilt practice attention In ail the given Courts, to all and business where
’tfaaatm***:
win . „„.a.
. *
[■ Honey Wanted (or the H
Stark Plantation.
wmm
city limits,
A GREAT VICTORY.
The Strikers Win the Battle In
the Coke Strike.
Eleven Thousand Ovens to Be
Started at Once.
Che Scale In the Future Will Be Ninety-
Five tents Per Hundred Bushels tar
Mining asd Fifty-Five for Brewing, an
Advance of IS Per Cent.—General labor
Hatters.
Evkbsox. Pa., Aug. 10.-The great
colte strike ia ended with a victory for
the men at an ndvanoe of 13 per cent
This \ma brought about by a conference
of the labor lenders, which lasted all
day, with the three large coke firms, H.
C. F i k A Oompauy, J. M. Schoou-
xaa ker & Company, and the McClure
Coke comp ny. This is ninety-five
** «* «*-
five cents per hundred bushels charged
for drawing. All other wages will be in
proportion.
N«» DthOi-tm tt itlnn,
There is to be rvo discrimination made
against til l men engaged in the strike.
Alt to have their old positions back.
This agreement id to last six months,
whether coke advances or declines, and
hither p rt j is to give thirty days’ notice
to terminate the agreement ,
Will Accede.
Serni-oflioia’ uoiaoa has been received
by the miners’ conference oommittee
that W. J. R ney, A. C. Overholt &
Company, J. B. Staufier & Company,
B. F. Keister & Company, Pennsville
Poke company, and the A. C. Coohran
Coke company will accede to the com¬
promise and will sign the agreement
The cokers are generally well pleased,
and there is rejoining throughout the-
region.
15 ■, To llrsuma at Once. . , .1 . f
About 1,100 ovens will start at once,
thus avertifag what promised to be the
most determined strike that was ever
known in the region.
GIVES S ATISFA CTION.
The Agreement Bet weeh tho Cake Opera¬
tors .nd Their Employ os.
Scottdalb, Pa., Aug. 10. — The
agreement between the coke operators
and their employes gives almost univer¬
sal satisfaction. The labor leadens ad¬
mit having blundered
one day few the
explanation Messengers of being sent
men. are
throughout with the the region terms to of acquaint settlement th*
strikers
Nearly all of H. CL Frick’s ovens were
charged Friday morning. MoClure &
Company’. ’s works are also running full;
Hadn't Hoard the News.
Early Friday morning the striking
marched to i of Morgan, Friok 1 Sc Company,
White works
whose men working king, and drove
them from the works, but^did no other
damage explained at that and place. —v- The situation retired,
was 1 and urn strikers r
were Frhm enacted tho B ^ldoorwo(ri ... H1 £ Southwest r scenes
end Alice works. Iks. At .t the the latter latter place pit the
workingmen fied into the pit The
strikers ooal cut the to pit ropes, down into allowing the shaft, the
wagons run
doing great stoning damage. The strikers houses, then
began tuo company’s
breaking in the windows ana doors.
District J. M. Assombly Dayton, master No. 11, workman caught of
was
and terribly beaten. The pit into which
the ooal wagons full of miners, dropped and with it terrifio is
force, was not
yet known whether any lives were lost
or. not The riot t1ie was situation finally checked, a
meeting the called, and they retired. explained
to noters, place
The furnaces at this are prepar¬
ing to resume. Only about one-half of
the Btaudard company’s ovens were
charged to-day. Later reports from the
riot at Alice works are that Thomas
'Love erh Bafai and a man l l injured named by Gilhooley, the were
p ning a them. a y oars run¬
over
puny stoi store e clerks were rough-
i and the e store store tauMfajg
before the rioters
listen to those endeavoring
to explain mat ters to tha n.
Suffering at . Streator. JMSI
minors_at Streator, III, headed and elsewhere
tern Illinois, Lawler, by Con-
Frank has issued an
setting making forth 14830 that there are who 4,052
dependent ____i, charity persons, this district. are
on in
-The committee says that the arbitration
oeapsomise pride for mining of seventy-
Lawler A telegram Mr. was W. sent L. Soott, Thursday of Erie, by Pa, Mr.
to
and Mr. Francis Bartlett, of Boston,
‘Strik* All Winter.”
Jomrr. HI, Ang. ooal 10.—After wrang- and
ling all tba operators
ssaraT arbitration
oents per ton reduction,
lition to settle on a five
which was
GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNINQ, AUGUST II. 1889 ,
| Iron Worker*’ lu cre ***.
Lancaster, Pa., Aug. 1ft—Tim Co¬
lumbia Iron company hag poeted notice
of an increase from $3 50 to 13.80 per far
ton for puddling ana other wages
made, that that when ’ trade grew better they
would increase. i
ST ANLEY AG AIN,
He Is Said to b* Nearing the Caret of Xau-
slbor With Basin Fssha.
London, Aug. 10.-The latest from
Zanzibar is that Stanley is owning down
to the coast with Emin Pasha, 0,000
men and an enormous quantityjof ivory.
The exact date of their arrival is uncer¬
tain.
___
GHAUNCE Y M. DEPEW ’S PRIZE,
Ho Would Surrender It Only for tho
Prottitleucy of the United States.
Nnw Yoke, Aug. 10.—The talk oi
Chauneey M. Depew resigning place from the his
in
Vanderbilt sys¬
tem and going
into politios
makes hit
friends smile.
They know
what the gos¬
sips do not, apparently vis.,that
Depew offers by refused Gen.
Harrison of a
place in the
cabinet and the
___English mit-
OHATJKCEr’k ^ mtPBw. oould sion. Mr. De¬
pew refused because he not recon¬
cile it with leave his the notions Vanderbilts. of duty and grat¬
itude to Peekskill, with
He was an attorney at
a small practice, when Commodore
Vanderbilt made him one of the lawyers
of the New York Central Since then
his abilities have caused his advance¬
ment, until his income from his earn¬
ings in addition to his investments, is
about $125,000 he a year. feel bound to the
Even if did not
Vanderbilts by close ties of be gratitude, good
this income might seem to a
* ’ Mr. understanding Depaw, however, with
—-------------1 United United derbilts that for for the the preaid presidency relinquish relim
of the States States he he may may
everything and leave them. A short
time before Mr. Depew he went said to Chicago, acquaint¬ last
summer, to an
ance in whom he had confidence:
“The presidency is a great prize. It
is worth trying for. A man can give up
everything “Then for would that" take that and give
railroad you business?"
up “Yes. your Everything for that; . to be
president is to be immortal. It’s the
foremost sinks into place insignificance on earth, and in comparison everything
with that.”
Lots of Mr. Depew’s friends believe
that his ambition may yet be gratified.
A NE W CATTLE PEST.
Report of the Agricultural Department
as to It* Nature and Treatment.
Washington, Aug. 10.--Last summer
a new pest Delaware, was repented in cattle in New
Jersey, Maryland and north¬
ern Virginia. The pest has again made
its appearance this summer. It ia a
small fly, half the size of a house fly,
whioh settles in groat numbers around
the base of the horns and on other por¬
tions of the body, where It cannot be
reached by either tail or head. It sacks
a moderate amount cattle of blood, reduoes the
condition ol the and lessens twe
yield of milk by from one-third to one-
tnrougn Howard, tne who acting has succeeded entomologist, in tracing ia v.
the entire life history of the pest. Hd
thinks that the fly lays its eggs usually
at and night, that in feu freshly the development evelopment dropped cow from from dung,
the
perfect egg through fly again the maggot of stage twelve to the
days is a space only
The preventive necessary. is obviously lime
to
the dung in the fall in plaoes where the
cattle preferably stand at night At the
present time applications may be made
to miloh cows and valuable animals,
which will keep the flies away. The
tar, application with may little be sulphur; (M fish oil and tobaoco pine
dust, when a the skin is broken: (3)
not (3)
tallow and a small amount of oarbolio
acid. ' ' ' ) ,
_
Where Will Thl* Thing Kndt
New York, Aug. 10.— It is given out
in scientific circles that Professor Eddi-
son’s sudden visit to Paris is direotly
connected with the invention of the tele¬
photo by M. Courtonne, the well known
French inventor. Edison has for a long
tune promised an apparatus which will
hear far off sounds and movements.
This, & is claimed, is accomplished by
the averred, telephoto, transmit and luminous it will further/it &
through kind obstacle vibrations
any of on a wire
for hundreds or thousands of miles.
of Courtonne his discovery promises well to give public full details
ments inside of two as months. as experi¬
Mexico May Get the Kxporttion.
temational exposition in 1893 in MaxieO
excites much interest The co-operation
of the government will be neoeasary,
however, to insure suooeas. It ia be¬
lieved that if Mexico ia the first to
vriE°waive their elaims in favcr^of'^Ws
Helena ta th* capital
Hsunu, day Mont, Aug- 10.—After bal¬
capital loting all of the on tike in which location of the
Billings, Great state, Bozeman,
Missoula Falls, Anaoonda and
motion “ i ' were " successively the provisions defeated, a
biting sasihra.___ loib^tooatiDii of of the capital was ro¬
and this leaves the capital at
Knocked Oat With Soft Glo
Hemic a, Mont, Aug. l(t
place, and Jam*
fought fifteen
lUWyWNB
1 Flourishing Colony Pirated la
the Dominion,
Just Across tho Uno From
Washington Torrltory.
- - 'I
A«ure*r*c*r the D.parlre.nt of th. in¬
terior Report* WooOfrtel Progrre*
Mad* by th* New RtttaUBtHl D*|r
gotten of Three Bides* Visit* Ottawa an
a Diplomatic Mluiea.
robiom thrust upon ner ia attracting
ide attention ve^Yeoent In the Dominion. & is
danger of birtk In 1888
8. Dennis, a surveyor of the depart-
ment of the interior, roaming through
planted themselves on Lae’s creek, in
Alberta, just across the boundary line
from Washington territory. The colon¬
izers were Mormons from Salt Lake.
| Mr. Dennis, Wondorfnl in his Program. report to the de¬
partment, “Any soy*: visiting the colony ..
toot help person being struok with the wonder¬ can
ful short progress time they made have by been them ia during this the
coun¬
try, and I have never soon any new set¬
tlement plished where so much has been accom¬
in the same length of time. I
am satisfied that they are an exceeding¬
ly who industrious thoroughly and understand intBiigent people, prairie
forming. “There is, however, something to be
said against the immigration ol these
people in large numbers. In the fink
place &L there is no doubt that some of
, *rJfS£i" 8 Jaf‘£±£
quence of their having praatioed polyg-
any reason for their immigration ,r
.
Eider* van Ottawa.
Mr. Dennis' report drew the attention
of the government to the new subjects,
The main object oi this
sion was to assure the
the innocuous character at Mormonism
and the peaceable and law abiding dis¬
position of the Mormon settlers.
Refused Certain Privilege*.
be They molested, were assured tongas thattbey they obeyed would not the
so
law of the laudLThay also desired to
obtain certain special They privileges, which
were denied them. led the gov¬
ernment to believe that they were not
preaching intentions polygamy, for the future but in certainly that respect their
were In the very meantime vaguely expressed. Mr. A. M Stem
lative house, assembly formerly a member of the of legis¬
of the province Brit¬
ish Colombia, and a man of some peti¬
tion and wealth, sold out all hfo posses-
sion* in British Columbia, and joined
the Latter Latter Day Day Saints 8* on Lees creek.
The i delegates delegates ware w< not home many
months when a letter lei appeared in the
British Columbia] iolumbia papers over Mr. Sten-
house’s sij signature to the effect that
polygamy Mormons, jr was ’ Mid on that article it would of faith be pieoe with
ormona, religious intolerance a
of unworthy of a
British oountry beliefs. to prevent men from
following their
The Danger Realised.
The department fully realizes that in
i the sooial cancer that
' long proportions in Utah in may the have Do¬
l
minion.
________
CHINE SE RETAL IATION.
The Effect of the B«*l«sl«a Aet on Oar
Celestial Brethren.
Ban Fbakoisoo, Ang. 10.— Among the
passengers on the Chinn steamer Ambio,
were the Rev. J. M. Talmage and wife.
Dr. Talmage is a brother of Brooklyn’*
eminent missionary divine. He has been engaged
in work in oooiuaetioa with
his wife, sinoe 1847. When he first
readied the soane of his labors there
were but two Chinese Christians, and
now there are about 5,000 who have em¬
braced the teachings of tike Bible.
“When I first reached Amoy,” said
Dr. Talmage, “Americans were m la high high
favor, bat •d Voted and
Stntesis everybody MUSS the In
climate. Canton a bad
is worse. Hero
coolie* or lower ur classes ore kept b<
informed of everything touching__
their welfare, and Americans are treated
as in badly early days as Chinese by hoodlums. were in California
“Among the higher • classes classes the the thattWr feeling 1
’“verybitter, Is very bitter, as as “they they claim claim that i
counnymen have e been very
act treated Itefoom&foclass by the portage ol of tne people exclusion that
thoae of the lower ord« receive their In-
notice is taken
Ameri-
sens. oocuixed. Several oases of mobbing have
_
Died la Agonjr.
night Cmvblahd, O., Aug. boys 10.—Thursday
a crowd of were amusing
tnemselves by peeping under tnsoan-
vus of a cheap ohous on th# West Side.
While thus engaged Charles the O’Hsg, 1$
years dub old, in the was hands shuck of on of the throat thow- by
a one
The boy fainted, and was carried
. where he died in awful aerrmv
The
Sab Neither
President__ ■ Blaine
will consent to
tihe subject of lbs.
They tioffi have the reodved snbjeot, no
on
bnokkMthm Amariei
ae alt English worn
ner the
intervene.
Jui 'lMrenC K! Z '
Sr. lft—The
SENATO R PLATTS PLAN.
B* A d voeat** the S*ltU«a*nt of Alreka
With lee l sadew.
Wamonoton, Aug. lft—Senator Platt,
of Connecticut, chairman of the oom-
n territories, and who is now
his special examination into the
of Alaska, is promoting an
movement, intended to settle
t and heavily wooded region of
i river with a large colony
• idea is ultimately to take over to
’ w I 0 "* , , w
owing to the increase of voloanio
ter scattered over the plains and
i people of Iceland are said to be
On the Yukon, toej
Sre
uue
since risen to nearly 75,000.
with An Senator Icelandic Platt minister in the unddfoking. is operating
The consent of the alsthing, or lee-
be obtained, probably, if the govern¬
ment eral as contemplated becomes a gen¬
mu.
PAIN LESS DEAT HS.
A Deaden Chemist Sajr* Carbonic Arid
Ore Zs Setter Than Electricity.
London. Aug. 10.—WhBe the New
York papers are discussing the advan¬
tages and dangers of eleotritity penalty as a
means of executing the extreme
of the law, a suggestion has been made
herowhioh may possibly be worth oon-
needed would ^be to’ have
built . air-tight oell above imother,
one
with a connecting tube and a stop-cook
between them. The gas, whioh is very
cheap, should be put in the upper
chamber, cigar, if and the like, prisoner lounge with a in good the
you on a
lower.
On turning the oock the gas would de¬
scend, ,imd first slumber and . then death
i helmet and
sponares and
lute, chair elab 'especially orate and constructed ouriouaiy b sure arbarous. abso¬
We* to tit* Squire** Show.
Vincennes, Farmersburg Hid., Aug. saloon 1ft—Perry
Baker, convicted a selliBg liquor irittnuk keeper,
of
license, was released from the Sullivan
county bod jail of by the sheriff on Subsequently aooount of
he a case rearrested sore eyes. and jailed Torre
was at
Haute. His attorney got him out on a
writ of habeas corpus. The most singu¬
lar feature of the case is that the justice
at hired Farmersburg. hall and who charged oonvioted admission Baker,
a an
fee of ton oents. Jaokson refused Hinkle, admit*
Baker's attorney, was
tanoe until he paid the fee. On this
ground alone the defendant was re*
‘‘Stack She Peeper.”
Emzabeth, N. J., Aug. 10.—It is be¬
lieved that “Jack toe Peeper” the mys¬
terious individual who has been terror¬
izing the women of Elizabeth for some
time past, is Modutoy, responsible for the death
of Mrs. John who died a few
days ago. Her house was invaded by
toe “Peeper” about two weeks ago and
the inmates were all badly frightened.
Mrs. toe tons, McCarthy and the woe shook lying she very reoeived sick at
caused a relapse from whioh she was un¬
able to recover. The police are now
making the identit extraordinary of the mysteriou efforts to offender. disoover
y s
The White Hou*e Geek.
Washington, White House Aug. has kicked lft—The cook of
the up a rum¬
pus and threatens to sue tile president.
She says she was engaged for the whole
summer, but as soon os the party de¬
cided to go away Mrs. HarnSon em¬
paying ployed her a $15 old employe colored $50 cook, instead month. of
% cook, in her declares per the
White House bill of anger, fare consists
regu¬
larly of ham and amfthafc eggs for breakfast, din¬
ner and supper, the Harrisons
have not had bottle of wins in the
house the whole
Th* American Sugar Trail.
San Francisco, Aug. lft—Reports are
in circulation here that the American
Sugar trust has about completed nego¬
dicate tiations with tho the English-German markets
to get sugar of toe
under one supreme control.
bunding plantations fora fora short
sugar islands, Java
ne
would place the
main the contro sources l of of toe the syndicate. raw supply
Gweit* of Mr. Blaine.
Bar Harbor, Aug. lft— Mount The
dent and party arrived at
at 5 p. immense m. Thursday crowd. and They were greeted
by ately an boarded a train in waiting and
came to this place. The party then en¬
tered carriages Blaine's sad oofetage, were where driven they to Sec¬
retary welcomed by Mrs. Blaine. were
Still Fighting at Port-aa-Prl***,
It was report-
te bad landed
I sof the island
the city from
toe _ rear, in which case he would have a
decided a dvantage.
_____
Karri* Lorn HI* Jab.
has Anhapoub, been received Md., Vty Ang. Secretary lOt—A telegram of State
Governor Lowry, of
stating that be had revoked
toe ment ofDetootive Kilrain, Norris,
who was here trying to anftt
the prize fighter.
Qaaos i 8»*klng Trou
London, Aug. 10.—The G
doing their utmost to create a disturb¬
ance In Zanzibar, and a rising against
all Europeans is not only possible but
Garland'• Good A Dock. DUCK.
Of BailrOod General resident Washington, attorney company, Garland Aug. of ha* at the a 1 §15 salary,
$85,000.
A Great Falling Off In the Knights
of labor Reported,
deriy Contradloted.
A B— sa t looal Statement Appear* la Tfc*
Knight* ol Debar, th* Antl-AAmlairtra¬
tion Organ, Publlshod at Chicago—-Prob-
ably Net More Than 100,000 H*mb*»
Za Good Standlo - To-Day.
Chicago, Ang. lft • The lari Issue of
Th$ Knights of Labor says:
The general master workman stated
that the present membership of too
Knights of Labor wss about 115,000, In
connection with that statement the fol¬
lowing figures are interesting: The re¬
port of the Minneapolis in good convention stand*
shows a total membership District
tag of 959,000, and that Assem¬
bly No. t, of Philadelphia, had 3,814
members, it has Btaoe lapsed and retom*
edits charter.
District Assembly No. 8, of Camden,
N. J., had 375 members, and has sinoe
Sistrict Assembly No. ft of Pitt*-
K&SLr* now. 1 * 1 "
District UliWotiumiblj Assembly No. Ko. 11, 11, of of Soott- I
dele, Pa., had 1,703 i members; it has
gone out of existence.
Diririot Assembly No. lft of Youngs¬
town, O., with 005 members, has ool-
limnort
District Assembly No. 15, of B-
N.Y., with 480 members, has
Assembly No. lft Mr. Pow-
s own district, has been reduced
Horn 4,685 to less toon 4,000. 4,01-
Louis, Loufai, District with wit' Assembly membership of i,<Eft has
e
been District nearly Assembly wiped out No. 34, of Chicago,
had 8,503 and it now has less than 500.
District Assembly No. 95, of Oumber-
land. Md.. had 591 metnT and at
present it has no existence.
ibly No. 47, of
land, O., has been reduced from
to leM »ban 1,500. Cincin¬
District with Assembly membership No. 48, of of 4,627, bos
^District nati, a
Assembly No. 49, of New
York, hod 15,491, and it is wiped out of
existence
District Assembly Nix 50, of Detroit,
Francisco, with e membership of 88ft
grand army
District Assemblies Noe. 60, 63, 64
N. end Y.TBloomington, 65, looated respectively BL; New York at Utica, city
and membership dloversridfo, N. have Y., with a tofad of
of 1,159, gone out
Disfrict Assembl; of Troy,
N. Y., with a mcmh 2,780, has
ben.
Mich., Diririot remain Assembly in the Na order, 8ft of Bay they City,
as an¬
nounce, to watoh ‘‘poverty Palace, to
see eral that officers. it is not gobbled np by toe gen¬
District Assembly Noe. 108, of New
Bnmswfok, Indianapolis; JhJ.; 104, of Cohoes, of Kansas N.
Y.; City; 10ft of of South Norwalk, 107, Conn.;
lift Manchester, N. H., with
134, of an ag¬
gregate membership of 2,045, have all
gone. District Assembly No. 147, of Albany,
has lost more than half of its membel*.
District Assembly No. 186, of Kings¬
ton, N. Y., has preotoxdly quit with a
membership There has been of 31,15ft foiling off from the
a
various states assemblies of more than
25,000. Illinois may send a delegate to
the next general assembly, but it is ex¬
tremely doubtful, and if Kentucky does
he will represent nothing oroStion bat a barren
ideality. Inside inf wUl prob¬ «id
ably reveal the foot that the noble
holy order has to-day leu than 100,000
members in good standing.
Wreck on the Deltlgh Valley,
South Bethlehem, Pa, Aug. 10.—At
4 o’clock a. m. a wild engine dashed
into a caboose lying on a siding of the
Lehigh Valley railroad, at which Penn Haven
Junction. In the car, was re¬
duced to splinters, were Conductor Otto
Sanders and Brakeman William G*r-
ren and Mark Christman. Garren was
injured. instantly Sanders killed and eivwpod Christman unhurt fatally Gar¬
ren was unmarried. Christman has a
wife and three children. The engine
gineer, was running Bennett, at high asleep speed and and the en¬ tty
was ran
toe signals . » _
Tftble'aiKMwar* Tract.
New York, Ang. 10.—A special from
Pittsburg trol manufacture says a gigantic of table trust glassware to con¬
the
is being organized, Pennsylvania, and that toe Ohm princi¬ end
pal factories Virginia of will be included in tho
West
combination. The headquarters will be
in Pittsburg, and all 'of toe manufac¬
tures of that city ore said to have joined
in the mov ement
_
Horn Killed B y a BwlL
Jackson, O., Aug. lft—Two valuable
horses, belonging to Warren C. Schet-
lettger, who resides about six miles
south of hero, wore gored to death
Wednesday night by a bull The ani¬
mals were in toe Mme pasture; and the
boll, tffkJ^tartaX^ becoming enraged, killed one of
the other being
mangled so badly that it was neoessoiy
to kill him
A Sofis Investment.
tern ol purchase pries. Oal
tion. awssspas It is “
iaar«
THE OLD
Aasteo* to Hi
Wakkototon, Ang. 10
toe dries
1
triotio
sot
eas^Amerioa’S' l
pBU- rtK
frSlfa
ago. an
United St atiess a ‘
Supposed Dead Mm AUh
da SahFranojhoo, Ang.
professes to hd*e
tericmi" ^
__ to be a wheee defaulter
. .000, and *
sa°sst 5 r#i
E 3 SI
VM
.
Twe Mnrd«»*r*
Nnw Orleans,
Democrat’s St
toe arrest near John
Yates itad
murderers of Dr, _.
bum plan tation in 1
petal Cterk.
late Wabhinoton, clerk in Aug.
a
with office-has the mails.
NEWS IN
dsy.
w. T. Hancock, of Chicago,
over speculations.
t George hri Sieuthaur the Indiauapoiia
bier, lost hU mind.
V. 0. Harris shot and killed
4 S,£rrii‘»a„
Madison, In A, has surrendered.
Striking brakemsn at Toungitown, O.,
$100 to kill ft me** of fish by dynr-“*
After iK ry ftT w H ffi tl PB
Mft n t innit remains at t pf 1
Hon. Jam^ B. (Med___ Dooli
Chicago lawyer, ail
yeeta ’ ■ >1
h« fallen helrto$40,000 bytoo * ‘
“ SfclSS pushing wa*,
lost an arm while str
A Philadelphia syndicate Knoxville, has
the horse-car line* at ' 1 ’
ing over $300,000 for them.
Heavy rains carried Chicago’s sewage out
in th* lake s* far a* her water works, and
thetypbotd fever epidemic is attributed to
The bankers w% pur cha s ed the
pipe line bonds now refuse to accept
tcok.Uk. Standard ofl was still in the
G, A. Stevens, a farmer near Fox'’
death. -■
Newark, O., was flooded with «
dollars and halves byagangwhi
fore the spurious character of the
boy of 18.
Bishop GUvn QM y m’t teU toe
interviewer whethi
forty-three charge*.
Three more bodies have been
the Johnstown rains near the
town. One was a Uttie girl and
in the middle ol Market street.
Rev. Dr. Fartffiurst’s Prohibition
files preclude his Occupation of toe
theology to DaPauw uair
So say tile politicians. He
wAvW lu ft sOkwJiy
^
con^^tio^^ulnSt^ hUreL
Bail
Bonkers pronoui
srafgsaG&L. Kirt Bolden, a resident of Re
***•*■«• »«*•. i
-
American syndicate will
Eucruoijads wvsrsl hif
pl an tu t i o nE. Th e repor t
JJSgSSMBSg mllfoT.TLl
UkciatoJdtoM^^
twhow