Newspaper Page Text
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, U. 8. A.
*’ ««. jJ^uL n zsrrsf s
Mn -■ ,wf
•^s^r ■isSrrsisxs seeks*
wsiSArssp; <«»*==££?
Jrerry tent* l. oil tte mill* vJt*d ra mow But-. orl«w advanced " OW JJT
oar aggregate au-
stage* ol eonatnietion, with an
tliori—d capital olorer hall amUliopdoUare.
.tswnatfEfltftfS charters for atmt railway*. It
oHcd lotftao rernttawraUroadutertymUealong.
ham-red great—t ayatem in
•nd while located on tha
the South, the Central, ha* -cured eonnee-
tioa wfth it* important Dyd, the B-®
Mnee. Virginia and Georgia. It hoa obtain-
•4 direct independent connection with Chat¬
tanooga and the Weal, and will break ground
•a lew days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fonrth Independent.vetem.
#ith ite tvs while and lour colored ehurch-
„ it hM recently completed a *10,000 new
Pr— byterian church. Ithae increased itepop-
nlatioa by nearly one filth. It ha. attracted
eroaad ite border* fruit grower, lrom nearly
„erywtatein tbeOnion, Until It in h*W *«r-
rounded on nearly every aide by orchard*
and li?hM: M t up the largest
Jrait eraporatora in the State. It ie the home
ol th* grape and ite wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It baa aucceenfully in-
enguraUd a ayatem ol public echoola, with a
■even year* curriculum, second to none.
Thi* i* part of the record of a half decade
and simply (Bows th* progress of an already
city, with th* natural advantage*
e'-yr m r— «■*.
,*aaas and rolling country, 1150 feet
healthy, tcrtile
above Ida level. By the cen*u. of 1890, it
will ka— at alow -ttrnat# between 6 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all ol the right
taaBattaasssr lee* wel-
tireble eettlere, who wiU not be any
aome If they bring money to help build up the
own. There ie about only one thing we
need badly tnet now, and that ie a big hotel.
We have several email on—, but their accom;
■odatioua are entirely too limited for our
seine a, pleasure and health a—king guest*.
If yo* a- anybody that want* a good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, Ju»t mention
*<M&il* the pin— where the UnirriM New*
apn!_ Vliahml^daUy and wrekty-ttebretnews-
paper r inttoUmpireBtate in of Oeorgla. Please
enclose stamps in reading lor sample copies,
aad d—criptirs pimphlet of Grifflni 1888,
jaBflBSaBSSnS and iths
• •-jJJ’ “V jf w»
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
H£NKY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
HAMPTON, QKOIOU* UKORUJ
and Federal
octSdiwly
JOHN J. HUM,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
aaiyna, ukobou.
Office, »1 Hill Street, Op Stain, over J.
White's Clothinr Store. mar22d*wl
Will practice in the State add Federal
George * Hartnett’*
. nor2tf
join » ernwABt. BOBT. T. DANIEL.
• SI&UURI k DANIEL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Over QeHV rn M f. H UMn , Ga. ■**«
Will It Federal
tart*. julylSdtf
CLE^I t8K T;
wo * WMS*
DCNTMTI,
GHimi! ll,l, *'T fc YM5MIUIA.‘
&XMMEH, ■
iM S AT:,L * T '
.SrSMt^rta&'U'ie:
*75 U
wh i lN_____ jg.|
f-temey w itt aWy sssjjtagd ^ _
Dsswaaaas'r.TS
m 9K fRMpgff SfiKD 'i 1
i r.i
direct fawm
1 andOILS at the low:
tte DECO LINE.
'
' d*
LK iji !#*■ w!
AS SXT' « ■■
M n
FIELD AND TERR!
Polities Made Enemies of Them
Fourteen Years Ago. '
So Says Judge Terry’s Former
Law Partner.
lb*. Terry Saenreit the Arrest ft Justice
Field, but He Is Immediately Released
on * 5,000 tiafl—Funeral of the bead
Jodge at Moofctea — The Government
Will Defend Nagle.
Sabatoqa. N. T., Aug. 19.—R. Porter
Ash, who was a law partner of Judge
Tony, has kuo.u him for many years,
ns hit father, a graduate of West Point,
was a Texa-i reader with Terry in the
Mexican war. a:il they were fast friends.
The son studied law with ex-Judge
Terry and l>oca:a* associated with him
1ox busiut*^. -
“As to this killing,” says Mr. Ash,
“instant ttea.b is * pretty severe punish,
meat for slapping a man on the face.
ment, True, it is in accord would with hardly western senti¬ such
but one expect
retribution from the supreme court I
have on suspicion that Judge Terry
meant to kill Justice Field or do him any
harm further than to humiliate him.
Be was a very passionate man. I never
knew one more so and he felt very bit¬
ter aga u : Field, what whom he he regarded as
his eiiemv of for considered his
severity late toward his wife. I shall
never forget that scene in oourt when
Justice Field ordered the marshal to re¬
move and Judge Mrs. Terry Terrv from warned the oourt room not
lay hands her. everyone
to on
“Theirs was an old feu l of fourteen
years' of the standing. Sharon The fight but out didn’t of grow poli¬
out case,
tics. and I suppose that Justice Field
thinks at last he has triumphed. It was
at the the Oakland convention for delegates
year Hancock was nominated, field
then had the presidential bee in his
bonnet He wanted the delegates.
Terry, Who was influential and who was
to be an elector, opposed him because
he believed him to ba n The oorrupt judge
and sold his decisions. resolution
for California to support Field in con¬
vention was lost and Field blamed Terry
for it
“Before the next convention Field,
desiring dneof lbs to associate conciliate judges Terry, of the wrote to
that if would supreme
bench saying him Terry not
oppose he would aid in his political
preferment That letter is in existence.
Terry Field wouldn’t lost the do California it and a seoond delegation time
through tion made him. Field This hade persistant Terry opposi¬ he
and
tried to get even."_
Arrested and Released.
Saw Fbancisoo, Aug. 19.—Justice
Field was arrested here Friday on a
warrant issued at Stookton on complaint
of Mrs. Tarry. He is oharged with be¬
ing a party to the killing of Judge
Terry. A writ of habeas corpus was im¬
mediately applied for and granted, and
'Justice Field was released on $5,000
bail fV .
,
Nagle 1* Saved.
by A United dispatch States was reoeived Attorney here Carey Friday from
the department of justloe at Washing¬
United ton, instructing States him, on behalf to of the
tite defense Deputy government, assume
of Marshal Nagle,
who shotJudge Terry.
Hew Tfelal X .senary.
The supreme court of California last
July Sharon-Hifl-Terry reversed the divorce decision and in the
manded case re¬
the case for a new trial, lbs.
Terry before the supreme oourt applied
order fora
the application
>url supreme
Terry*# Funeral.
Stookton, Cal, Aug. 18 .—The body
' ~ “ ~ “ removed from
was
and taken to the
where it lay in state
•sAt the „ rs. Terry ant several occupied times a
near corpse,
threw read herself the upon the casket. after A vestry¬
man body interred, Service, in the whioh the
was oemetery at
:-X«*t* Released.
Oal. Lug. 10.— Jud i Saw-
son
JtatT
resst.
WRECKED BY A BRIDGE.
sjriveaie nafr Bead.
Phtsbubo, Western Aug. 19. —The south bound
train on the Pennsylvania : Seven' road
W, the track near station
»y afternoon aad wee totally wreok-
Frelsnt* Calllde—Three lejured.
tsars, Oolcxbot. stock dealer, 0., Aug. Steubenville, 19.—James
of
* * « • * * | F,mrinoor Btok
two. sections injured of
a
S=&‘
Collected Money for Jehnatewa Saflsrers.
poeketed.
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. TOKSDAV orning; august 20 , mv. 1
THE P ftgBtPjMTt VWfT. '
To Ba Hm People’s Geest While In ItK*
•iiepolls—The Pr et wis
Indianapolis, Aug. 1$ —President
Harrison addressed a personal letter to
OolR 8. McKee, who hod extended
tha hospitalities of his home during his
stay in for this the oity, formally while declining here the he
same, himself reaeon the
would consider , the guest of
monument it advisable oommi—ionere, to be quartered end at the thought hotel
in order that all the call people might have He
an will opportunity be registered to upon the him. Hotel
m
Pexmiiwm.
The G. A. R. oomp fire will be held at
night, at which time there wUl be ad¬
j§r£lS%i— dresses by Hon. 8. B, Varies, of Sslam;
^ _,.
Srifii tins city, ^nd ana Mrs. luxse liammona, oi
Greencastle. On tiie following day will
* meeting at the same tint
ifflRINTHEPEN
John L. Sullivan Knocked Out by
a Mississippi Jury,
Whioh Finds Him Guilty of
Prize-Fighting.
The Verdict a Surprise to tha Clytmptoa
and Sporting Men Generally—Referee
Tltspstrlok Plead* Guilty aad Is Fined
*300—Ktlrarn Noupulsed aad Shaking
in His Moots.
Pcnvis, Mis*, Aug. 19.—John L.
Bullivan^ lias been sentenced to one
year's imprisonment in tiie penitentiary.
The jury Friday night found John L.
Sullivan guilty of prize fighting, The
verdict was a surprise to the big fellow,
but he took the matter cooly. He ex¬
pected to be cleared, and had made his
arrangements to leave few home before
tiie jury came in,
A motion in ar-. ost of judgement was
made by Sullivan’s counsel, but the
(mart postponed hearing the argument
until Saturday morning. It is said that
none of the jury wore lor acquittal
Referee Fitzpatrick pleaded guilty
and was fined $200.
According to Mississippi laws Sulli¬
van oan be leased by tiie state to a private
individual who smut pay the state $8
per week for his services. Sully will
doubtless have no difficulty in finding
pome one who wonts his “servioe&''
* f f | Motion New
for a Trial.
A motion for a new trial was entered
at once by the champion's lawyer, and
M it be overruled an appeal will be
taken to the" supreme oourt of the states
which will be determined at the Ootobei
i i'fc, . A so!
Kilrain Worried.
Baltimore, Aug. 19. —When Jake Kil¬
rain heard the result of the trial of John
L. Sullivan he was surprised and wor¬
ried. Sporting men generally expected
an acquittal or a disagreement of the
If ’.. ...
? A MO RMON MA RTYR.
Arrested for Digamy In Tonnossoo—The
Rider lst.nrl.veil
Chattanooga. rider, Teun., Aug. ill—A
Mormon calling himself William
Spry, Mho has been in this city for sev*
end years in charge of the southern
work * of ' the " Mormon Unite---- church, was ar-
by ‘
Oity, issued on indictment preferred
v b fe, tor*
Xb conversation Spry stated-that he
wag conscience simply soke, undergoing and that martyrdom all things for
would be right by and by. He his been
living here under an assumod name,
his S?^3°3liS ml name being Franklin VW& Haymour.
section ple-mined u people induoing ignorant and sim-
to immigrate to the
west, and he has hod Georgia some severe ex¬
Alabama, periences in and North has had and Norm flog¬
one or more
gings. He is very bitter toward the
south, and denounces the peepl
A Waning to Hotel Fferteve.
waTa Minneapolis, fatal Minn., Alta. 19-Th
accident at the late Hotel!
etonka, Fri<
drop in rawer neaviiy, ana discharged. a revolver u I
wag some manner
buflet passed through the trunk, «nt
ing^Kelly s head. He died almost
Murderer Boa eon ore g ulp s*.
LouisviLun Ky.. sio Aug. have 19.-William
Benson, who was to been hanged
Thursday tentiary, bat night in saved the Jeffersonpriu- by Governor
was
Sxsssw his sentence ..... to im-
. I, was taken from hts
convict’s cell Friday garb. morning mornini He aad then dressed assigned in a
w*~ wm —
to wdtk by the warden.
0*e Hoad rod Million, for Browe rl ee,
Aug. I*. - Mr. J. J.
repreeenUtive in this city
19. —At s brick-
Faitar Wols
To Receive n Pardon or Coraniuta-
tion of Hentenee.
>>■ ■}■* .•%>•*** t iffiJSs;- '
Result of th© Conference at the
Home Office.
4 . f ■ t •r'’'' .
King George of Oreoe* j$»ul HI* Premier
Deplore tfco Destiny of Crete—As a
Whole th* Mows from the Continent
H “ “ T,,u “ ,noy 10 the
ln B Of uutrnst—Foreign New,.
London, Aug.-19. —The conference at
the holhe office with & a view of arriving
at a decision the Maybriok case
lasted four hour* It is regarded as a
certainty that tiie home office is in
doubt, mid it is believed that the result
of the deliheitntions must necessarily be
a pardon or a commutation of sentence.
The preta association states that Home
Secretary Matthews will recommend to
the queen the commutation of the death
sentence. Uf Mm Maybriak to penal
servitude for life, and that the commuta¬
tion of penteuee will be announced
after the queen has given formal assent
Home Secretary Matthews and the
experts assumed that Mr* Maybrick
was not guilty, and, acting upon this
assumption, sifted every scrap of the
testimony given, and especially that in
relation to the husband*! craze for
arsenic, which is of great Weight and
will, it is believed, turn the scale in the
prisoner’s favor.
It is a noteworthy foot that the lord
chancellor is seldom consulted in such
eases, except when a reprieve is medi¬
tated.
The members of house ol commons,
who have Signed the memorial to home
secretary, urging clemency for Mrs.
Maybriok, now number e ighty-eight.
POOR LITTLE CRETE
TUo FMe of th* Island Bewailed by The
Grecian King ami Premier.
London, Aug. 1U.—King George, of
Greece, and his premier, Trioonpis, are
bewailing tiie fete of Crete sinoe they
received the very emphatio “No” of
the tointerier* powers to their modest proposition
The A.
papers of Athens take little oom-
lort from the promises of the new
UUU 1/UUIi ■
KWrious ... ........
the possession of Crete, and isrising the
triple alliance os an instrument, for the
Accomplishment They point out of her that designs. both Germany
and Austrial —----“• ' ’
tan 06
they would mat effectual!.,
scheme of conquest southward It is
would seize seize the opportunily with or
without provocation to descend upon the
Dardane and oentur-
ies, could her her fleet fleet England
have e powerful powerful massed at
a ________ation naval station Of Of bis bis own own so so close close at at
hand as the mouth mouth of of the the ADgean JEge-”' Archi- *” t ' )
S^abreatiwfrr pelago, both ^ Germany Germany and and Austria
33te the porte advantage ,......itapfi has been whioh mads to under¬
..., stand must result and
to has Turkey already from proposed this arrangement
teotorate for Crete, but b an the English bitter pro-
re-
monstortmoee <A Russia and those of
Salisbury France, her to defer oifly ally, decisive have led Lord
so a move
for tiie present
Russia from recognizing the danger to her¬
self noting that an Crete English proteotorate slowly and
from . Turkish was rule, diifting been
away has
anxious that Greece should secure the
island to prevent its falling into the
hands of a power whioh could, and un¬
fed doubtedly would, against turn herself it into a power-
weapon when the oc¬
casion arose. This is Greece the secret of Rus¬
sia's sympathy with in her am¬
bition to ^Bouje control of that other¬
wise insigmfica&t and worthless piece
of territory.
M. Trioonpis, himself, ", mokes no se¬
met of his belief that ttle { text great
European that war territory will hav Russia, re its origin he iu
has proclaimed vary tha" . the oootpation says, of
Crete considers b^aiy hostile one to oi the her, four would powers be she
re¬
garded that perfect os a casus belli while for proof
occupation a exists understanding he points to for the such
nn-
precedently of England, prompt Germany, and unanimous Austria and an¬
swers
Italy the to disorder his recent Crete. note on the subject
of in
The remonstrances of both Russia
kth* France will be of little avail to
d
ing fevoeabl* conditions at home for the
consummation Russia and France Of the will plan. stand Whether idly
and allow themselves, by such by
an occu¬
pation of Crete by a powerful hostile
navy to be practically bound over to
keep tiie peace, remains to be seen.
Th* CoutlnotN*! Situation.
information London, Aug. w&ioh 19.—Scattered from items of
come the conti¬
be nent, ealeolated though none to taken alarm, singly naturally would
cause
serve when token together to highten
the faeUng of distrust regarding the
two mot* iron-clods of the first ****- class,
modeled aft er the me ■ -
boata.^ of the Ehglliih ^ fleet a
rsrsw Yteb»ta e to
going, bnt could have been made for no
other purpose than to be so considered.
The osar has conferred the Cross of 8t
Stanislaus upon Maj. Grueff, whoso
only title to distinction is the disgraoo-
fell pert be played in the abduction of
Prinoe Alexander, and his of persistent Bulgaria, plotting three
yearn against ago, the present regime in that
coun¬
try. The singling out of this notorious
traitor for this high distinction is re¬
garded Bulgaria. as an open not of hostility to
•
_
Another Manifesto. ;
and London, Boohforto Aug. 19.—Boulanger, out in manifesto, Dillon in
are a
they call attention to their own
conviction court of of the the and French Frenoh sentence senate. by "They *“ the speak high
™ orgib arbite^ Ss,
of ^ M a of
calumny and mendnoity, and toy that
to spite of a fi-oeb coup d’ etat, which is
people heard from shall at have t he polla an opportunity to bo
i Capture:! From the Dervish**.
Cairo, Aug. 19. —Information is re¬
ceived tured the that friendly of Singat natives from hove the cap¬ der¬
town
vishes.
_
NEW POSTAL C ARDS,
Contract Awarded for Furnishing Them
at a Redaeod Price.
Washington, Aug. 19.—Acting Post¬
master General Clarkson has awarded
the contract for furnishing postal tiie cards of
for the four years, beginning 1st
Ootober next, to Albert Daggett, of
New Yoik^the lowest bidder under tiie
ut ca!
__ such J fey samples -py-i bidders _____ might wish ——
upon to offer. as
The Contract is awarded upon the de¬
partmental which wife samples, found the be proposals advanta¬ upon
to more
geous to the government titan the pro¬
There posals is ’ on " samples material ” * offered reduction bybidders. in the
ore a > ’
cost though by the the cards ohange of the contracts, contract! al-1
in new
are old superior in besides, quality the to public those in will the be
one and
afforded better facilities for correspond¬
ing of two and for advertising sizes of cards. by the Size addition No. 1
new
measures two and fifteen-sixteenths bjr
by weighs four five and pounds five-eighths twelve inches,
ounces a
thousand. The eost of this card will be
thirty-seven Size No. 2 oents is of the a thousand. dimensions
same
three’by card, and five-eight weighs inches five as the present five
thousand. The weight pounds of the
ounces a
present oard is five pounds four ounoes
a thousand. The cost in the new oon-
traot is thirty-five ' H 3 it* ^fort?- WCHMItiMt
and in the old contract
seven thousand seventy-one cords. e „.hundredth Size No. 8 measures oents a
three and three-fourths by six and one.
eighth inches, and weighs nine pounds
one ounce a thousand. The average
weight of the three sizes is a little over
six pounds, and the average cost is
about forty cents a thousand.
This is a reduction of nearly 17 per
cent, in the price of the cards, and an
increase of about 27 per cent, in the
weight weight, tint Allowing oords for the about difference one-third in
are
cheaper old in the the new oonttaot price than in cards the
one, about average of the
being old contract nine and cents about‘six a pound cents in the
a
pound The estimated in the new number one. of cards to be
pentraertenn required during is the thousand four years million, of the
two
a cost of $800,000. The reduction in
cost for the four years will amount to
in fully the $150,000 old as compared to the prices
contract.
The postage on the estimated quan¬
four tity of cards will to be amount oalletl to for $20,000,000. during the
The years, contract will
tons of require nearly of about 7,000 six
tons for paper, each working or an average day.
The use of postal cards was first intro¬
duced issue for into the this first country in 1878, about and 100,- the
000,000 cards. The year was price
contract was
then $1.89$ cents a thousand cards, or
about three and a half times as much as
the average price in the new Contract
just awarded. AST
RIO T IN TEX
Blao4y Sequel to a Political Fend et
Richmond. . i.f:
Richmond, Tex., Aug. 19.—The feud
between the “Jaybirds” and the *‘Wood-
* “ .....a
and returned. immediately Parker opfen wounded, and
was
ran toward the court house, pursued by
Grif Gibson.
Judge and Parker geneml was joined fight by ensued, more offi¬
cers, a in
whioh J. W. Blakely and Sheriff Garvey
were killed W- H. Frost, Volaey Gib¬
son and William Andrews were wound¬
ed. M. Schmidt, a Texas ranger, was
SLIGHTLY WOUNDED HIS WIFE.
However He Thought He Sad Killed Her
(tad Suicided.
Lootsvillb, Ky., Aug. 19.—At 2
o’clock Friday night Adam Beutel, who
lives near the city limits, during a vio¬
lent quarrel with his kill wife, her, made a deter¬
mined attempt to firing several
shots at her.
Mrs. the Beutel fled for her life, but one
of shots striking her in the leg near
tiie foot She fell, crying, “My God,
Adam, stop, I’m shot. ” ‘
Beutel thinking hC had in his rage
Start, accomplished at the evil seized promptings with of his
was once remorse
and turned the muzzle of ball the revolver
upon himself and fired, the making
a death wound from which he died an
hour later. Mrs. Beutel is but slightly
wounded.__
, Terrible Gas Explosion.
New York, occurred Aug. 19.—An kriday explosion night in of
i
store of Thomas McCabe,
heavy plate ' glass struck
,’CErt
Twelve others
i more or less seriously out or in-
Thfl Oelppee.
£ Jacksonville^ FIa, Ana 19.— A Key
West special says; The Ossippee ar¬
rived hero Thursday, and sailed for
Hampton idly quarantined Proads. Friday white in She was and rig¬
allowed to laud/or port to no
«*# was g« on
Was the Condition of Busl-
ntm During the Post Woefc.
The Great Industries as Good
as Last Week.
Good Evldouoo ot Improvement la Iron.
The Beltlemeat of the Coke Strike Wilt
Doabtles* Cmh on Ail vouco—Woolen
Mills Working Shot! Tim*—Dan’s Re¬
*
view oi-Trade. „ t,
New York, Aug. 19.—R. G. Dun A
Company’s weekly review of trade says:
In-all directions business prospects
oontinuo enoouragtog aad the changes
during the ie pert pact ■ weekha' ave been
right side. Efforts inorease and a spec¬
ulative rise in breadstnfb has been
checked. Interior cities report increase
in the volume of trade, and tiie
markets continue
though The great rate are industries gm .____ to
fully good condition appear tart
with clearer as evidence of improvement as wees, in
iron. ernment Further advices, Sop and hews strengthens sustains gov¬ the
prevailing impression that the August
small advances in some products, the
general ally changed, rsnge of aad prices railroad has not earnii materi¬
continue have good, though been cleared all controvert
aSSss not as yet as'L'SsiafS away.
sstesSCTrtaa is slowly increasing,
mand for money
and lenders are a little more cautious et
some points. The treasury has obtained
but few bonds of fate, and surplus
hr* 'oonfldenoa risen above $70,000,000, bnt bnt th there is
a at at i the department
bonds will be freely eely offered offered Whenever whei
there is any need of more money in the
principal markets. The impression
among bankers, however, is that most
treasury price.
.The capaoii Ity • of of iron furnaces in blast
Aug. 141,417 1 was tons 1 a? ' 889 tons and weekly, 119,889 against
y l, tons a
year ago. for the Notwithstanding month of this in¬
crease over 8 per cent,
in the output, prioea of pig are every¬
where well maintained.
The settlement with coke workers and
advaaoe in wages will doubtless cause
2?^ coke to adtoaoe ‘ “
p,Sd uoa d with SmelfortKike^
fuel. But the character of tbemSrtre- the market
generally liable and is best peculiar/ known brands For the de¬
mand exoeeds the supply, but for
other kinds the reverse seems yet to be
the fact
Wool is dull dealers waiting for an
advance and manufacturers for a fall in
prices, tiie mills meanwhile workfe;
much below their full capacity. Bu
there are some signs of improvement in
the clothing sail, tirade.
With of only 7,000,000 bushels,
wheat advanced two oents, reacted, and
dosed only one-half oent higher than a
week ago. Com, with sales of 5,000,000
bushels, rose nearly one cent but dosed
with only one-quarter oent advance, oats
retaining The bureau the rise report of three-quarter encouraged cents.
some
speculation for higher prices, but it was
and foreign demands. demands. Oil Oil took took a a specu¬ spscu-
lative dip of five oents, and recovered
about two cents, with no visible reason.
Fork products are generally lower, and
dotha cotton unchanged weak at $8.76. for spot An advance with print
in
some expeeted, styles and of the ootton jobbing goods is by many is
movement
large.
Philadelphia The trade in has t drugs __ and oheroicals at
though dye staffs are still dull
cod trade is fiat and disappointing, and
anthradte stove is said to be actually
for .... HRH
market steadily immoved
until Tuesday, when a slow decline set
in, Oonddering but as yet it without important the° change.
that all railroads,
obKoag cording $77,999,000 to in Poor’s dividends Review, last paid only
year, a de¬
i of one-eighth < al compared with
stodtj 1887, and loses than t per cent on the
reported, tr the - restoration ' of peace
this yi ear should have produced a rela-
pearecL tively greater greater change than has yet ap-
The business failures occurring
and 310 the week previous. last For the
corresponding week year the figures
were 819, made up of 187 in the United
States and 82 to Canada.
Colored Constable Fatally Shot.
returning cution of Thursday night their from the vehicle exe¬
with a warrant, Fred.
collided the buggy of Wal¬
ton, a blacksmith of the Allemania
plantation, Walton and in the melee that fol¬
lowed. probably shot Garter, who will
die. Walton was lodged in
Defaulter Alloa Gets Fourteen Tears,
New York, Aug. 19.—EbenfiL Allen,
tiie defaulting ex-president of the Forty-
second and Grand Street Ferry Railroad
company, who pleaded guilty to two
indiotm«#its charging him with the over¬
issue of over $100,000 worth of the stock
of tiie company, was sentenced by Judge
Gildersleeve Friday to seven yean’ im¬
prisonment at hard labor on each in¬
dictment
fif.
J
For Imparting !
Abner Taylor*
state oourt for
■A‘ *;4
REGULATORS
A Guilty ^
Columbia,
£
had no i
as thrown (
to
1 lowered 1 □K3C
the services <
1ihft t
i _
S52*a*J*Sj
who
.... short
i a <
StftBdtnf of
| ’ tlsn 1
8t. IaoIa.. w ....................I
Brooklyn........ f I
Bftltlmor© i
Ajhlyt iO............
BWllM vKj *.»»**..»*.»#**• K
Oolumbaio. ,...• •....*.«■
Louisville........................
uu atm game*
.......................E
* ClOVOifilld, ttufliwipai^H..... «•,.
» *« . •• « . . •
......|
PlttBbllTf... M ...*.... I
¥’* • > »* • 'im>****** j
r jJ]i klSMB
Breton Jewelry
worth of stuff.
-flT. SBv
J. S.
Ktowater____
Batavia, O., wist
Albert Daggott, of t Now Hsw '
postal cant for ‘ the ‘
< : i
Eliis Roberts «
deer near Bisby U~,, »„, __
-
vffie^Ky. It is supposed that tew
Willard Meeker, wdi haded
Oksana, O., was arrested far
horse.
ZsaesvlBs aad Ohio railroad b
have reorganised, with m CL G. 11. M' Wkdtir.
^ jTmlte MelSSrL Dennfa, ~ -
more victims of the factory «
Dawson, Ky., hare died of their i
A thousand persons;
at Lake Charles, La., :
areat, white, and Summer 1
Jack Gallagher, alias’
of
Mrs. Harriet Means, of I
have 986,000 more means than
since tbs will of the late Dr. 1
probated.
Greenup Henderson, while saw!
beratC. C. Hageraeyer ft Compai
mill near Butter, Ky., ted
sawed off.
The agony Is ovsr, Bismarck tan
Brandb^rr y funs ot, k
natural gai territory in Wi
consideration f13,000.
Ufiit$il Btatof Pension
Columbus. (X, is notified by the i
dopar tmon f. Pi.* f C ffQ ,
for the month of
Indiana’s
use their discretion as to i
school books prescribed by iaw.
Henry WsM FuBar, a ^
and borticultartat, died 9
CUrt J
*