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VOLUME 18.“
1K1FFIN, GEORGIA, 0 S. A.
rriffln i« th# best and moat promtoSng little
, tor the
i« in the Sooth. Its record paat
k <)«■»•>»■ n “ ,uw ‘ y ll0w enterprises in oper-
,,j 0 „ tmildiu* and contemplated, prove this
0 „,’ a business statement and not a hyper-
nlical deacription.
Daring that time it haa built and put into
„ 0 *t successful operation a #100,000 cotton
■ lor , and with this year started the wheels
•fa second of more than twice that capital,
it low put up a large iro D and brass foundry,
* factory, an immense ico and bot-
f«rtiliw>r sash uni blind factory, a
works, a
worn factory, opened up the finest granite
MtTJ in the United States, and now has
ear large oil mills in more or less advanced
stages of construction, with an aggregate an-
tfcoriied capital of over half amUhon dollars,
jt is putting np tha finest system of electric
fghting that can be procmred, and has ap¬
plied for ti» o charters for street railways. »
{iks seen rod located anotherrailroad the greatest ninety mileslong. system in
pad while on
the South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion with ito important rival, the East Ten-
dmcm. Vir^oi^ Georgia. It» has obtain*
«i direct independent connection with Chat
tauiooga and the West, and will break ground
ns few days fora fonrthroad, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With its five white and foureolored church-
M it has recently completed a #10,000 new
, church. It has increased its pop¬
I’raehy terian
ulation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
prouud ito borders fruit growers from nearly
.very State ip the Union, uutiHt is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every Side by orchards
BB d vineyards, It has pnt up the largest
fruit evaporators in the State. It is the home
of tiiegrape audits winemakingcapacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
•eves years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply shows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
winter, in the world.
griffin is the county seatlot Spalding coi
tf, situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
above sea level. By the census of 1890, it
wffi ha vs at alow estimate between C 000 and
1,000 people, and they argali pf the right
sort-wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and ansious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not he any less wel¬
come if they bring money to help build up the
own. There is about only one thing we
need badly just now, and that is a big hotel,
y* have several small ones, but their aceom
rnodat ions are entirely too limited for our
Mine a, pleasure and health seeking guests.
IS yon see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a Hotel in the Sooth, just mention
Griffin.
Griffin is the place where the Gmvrw Nkws
t published—daily and weekly— the best news¬
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
aid descriptive pamphlet of Griffin.1 ,
Thie brief sketch is written April 12th, 1H89,
aadvill have to be changed in a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
on plated. H
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
g 'ia'.uu* 1 — 1 --~~
HENKY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW ,
HAMPTON, UKOBOL.
Practices in all the State and Federal
curt*. ortSidftwly
JOHN J. HUNT,
attorney at law
ttlUFriN, OEOBGU.
Office. 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. H.
White's Clothine- Store, mar22d*wly
rHOS. K. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice tics ia the State and Federal
Courts. Office over George A Hartnett’s
nov2tf
- AOHN • STBWABT. BOBT. T. OAMfX.
STEWART & DANIEL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Urer George ft Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ha.
Will practiee In the State and Federal
arts. julrl9dtf
CLEVELAND & GARLAND,
1 DENTISTS,
GBIFFIS, r i : : GEORGIA.
0. L PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
wooDBrur, okoboia.
Will Pprompt attention given to all business
business practice in all tbe Courts, and where
v«r ■W- calls.
Collections a specialty.
HOTEL CURTIS
JRIFFIN, GEORGIA
[ Pnder New Management
A* 6. DANIEL, Prop'r.
V 1 lets n.#(,t »I1 tr»)p#
I Agents l*i every Town and
•Sand ICounty to sell our Goods.
us osn ooLBAi, and w«
> you sample that sails for three dol
#H» jooina business that will pay
I to #300 per month.
TJio Trial of the Alleged Slayers
of Dr. Oroniii.
Judge McConnell’s Room Fill¬
ed to the Utmost
With Eager Spectators Anxious to See
liurke, Woixlruff, Coughlin, Beggs,
O’SnUlvan and Kunzo—111 roe of the
Defendants A«k for Separate Trials;
Strong Appeal for Lut Named.
OmoApo, Aug. 37.—Probably no case
in tlie nminls of criminal history in Cook
oounty has attracted more widespread
attention than the Croi|in murder and
the deep mystery in which it has been
enshrouded. That this Interest has in
no wise abated since the disappearance
of the unfortunate physician on May 4,
was demonstrated by the multitude that
elamored for admittance at the portal of
Judge McConnell’s room at 10 o’clock
Monday morning.
The united remonstrances of two bail¬
iffs bay were the necessary foot of the to keep stairs, the and mob at
at ever
and anon some nnterrified individual
even made it necessary for the deter¬
mined officers to resort to the alterna¬
tive of personal force in order to keep
the irate person from enforcing what he
considered his inalienable right of view¬
ing the wheels ol justice in their majes¬
tic motion.
Promptly at 10 o’clock there was a
slight rustle at the door of the judge’s
private entrance, and the crowd tiptoed
in expectancy as a deputy sheriff en¬
tered the room and cleared the way for
the appearance of the prisoners who
were to answer to the gravo charge of
Wantonly murdering a human being.
A moment later the door was thrown
wide open, and Burke, Woodruff,
Coughlin, Beggs. O'Sullivan and
Kunze entered the court and took their
seats facing the court and in the order
named.
‘•What is the business before the
not expect the
until som6 time next year.
torueyfifcongenecker, “If the court please, advancing ’ ’ said State’s to At- the
front, “I have received notice from
three of the defendants in the Cronin
case asking would, separate trials, and saying
that trial they the opening apply of for the a court separate thin
on application,
mominjj Their I presume,
“If your honor, please,” said Attor¬
ney Donaboe, “I desire before an argu¬
ment for a separate behalf trial, to present a
motion on of my olieat, John
Kunze.”
motion Mr. Donahoe asking the then court formally for read Order a
an
upon compel State’s the latter .Attorney to furnish Logenecker Kunze with to
a copy of the minutes or a memoranda
of the testimony taken before the grand
jury which found the indictment agaiust
said Kunze, tended or of any to testimony the guilt which of
in any way allow prove
said Kunze; or to the counsel of
Kunze to examine the testimony of siuto
witnesses before the grand jury whoso
evidence in any way tended to prove the
complicity of Kunze in the Cronin mur¬
der. The motion also asked that the
state's attorney furnish the names of
the witnesses indictment whose of said testimony Kunze. tended
to the
Mr. Donahoe then read a long affidavit
ofhisolient, in which Mr. Kunze re¬
cited that he never knew Dr. Cronin
during the latter’s until lifetime, never heard
of his existence after his disap¬
pearance on May of 4, and complicity that he was in en¬
tirely knowledge innocent of the murder any Dr. Cronin. or
ol
Think They Have a Clew.
Another imj
case was mostly
tells against Jol.
i wagon answered newly the pa: ascription ted. This of
wagon i del
the one in which John Kunze is be¬
lieved to have driven Dan Coughlin to
the Carlso n cottage the night of May 4.
GR AHAM AGA IN.
He Successfully Shoots Whirlpool Rapids
In a Barrel-Shaped Boat.
Niagara Falls, N. Y., Aug. 27.—Car¬
lisle D. Graham made a successful trip
through the whirlpool rapids Sunday
afternoon in a ban-el-shaped boat. At
first the boat traveled easy, but soon
was in the grasp of the moi-e rapid cur¬
rent that hastened its journey. It rode
beautifully. In the trip through the
rapids and it frequently when it struck disappeared the big from
in sight, front of Buttery’s elevator, it wave out
was
of sight to long that many believed it to
be lost The course it took was down
the oenter of Hie river.
At 4:52 o’clock it entered the whirl-
and the thousands of people who
had gathered there to witness his friends
recover the barrel were doomed to be
disappointed, for, instead of being
oaught in the main current and carried
across the pool, American as is usually side, and the case, it
hugged the was car¬
ried into the quiet water in front of the
outlet, and the Canadin was forced side. slightly For min¬ over
nearly it to question whether it a was to
ute was a down the river.
go But mound the outward the “pool” bound or current was too
strong, and at 4:54 p. down m. Graham through passed the
out of the pool Opposite and Foster’s flats,
fearful water feared by rapid
which is the most au Gr aham
navigators. All these and dangers Sey-
passed in safety, at 5:05 p. m.
mour Fleming picked and John Donsdale, little of
Lewiston him and his ves¬
sel up just above the old Lewiston
bridge on the Canadian side.
media Mail be Crzzr-
Nkw Yob*:. Aug. 27.-Steve Brodie
and his wife left here on the 9:10 train
Sunday night for Albany, where his
Wife oame from. Steve says he will go
alartiered by a Nsgro.
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. WEDN KSDAT MORNING, AUGUST 28. 1889.
M ILWAUKEE .
ir City Gaily Decora tea In Honor of
Veler.im Who Are Fust Arriving.
Milwaukee, Aug. 27.*—From an
early hour Monday morning the inspir¬
ing sound of the fife and drum oould be
heard on the streets leading from the
railroad stations and steamboat docks.
wives and
■JL..... DPI early Testing as tt
comfortably ~the curbstones <W and in ’
on
stairways office waiting that for they the might headquarter be
to open, m
signed The crowd to places. increased with the passing
momenta, and by 8 o’clock the maroh-
ing companies, baggage wagons and
omHftmsses' made the street crow
day, Milw-mkee's hospitality will be
taxed quarter to the its, visitors. utmost to entertain ana
contingent, George Warner about and the Kansas put in City
about 800 o’clock strong, marched an
appearance 10 and
to the Plankinton house, which is toe
headquarters of theeommander-in-chief.
A unique feature of the morning’s ar-
; rival was the entrance into the harbor of
a hugh ark from Sturgeon boy, bedeokod
in the tri-colors and greens and loaded
to the guards with veterans from the
neok of country reaoliing along toe lake
to Death’s Door. The ark was in tow of
a tug and had a pleasant voyage.
At the Plankinton house, where Com¬
missioner crowd of Tanner veterans is quartered, not guests there of the is
a
anxious hotel filling to get the lobbies sight of and the hallways,
dispenser. a pension
Gen. Shennau himself does not at¬
tract much more attention than does the
.“corporal.’’ Roughly estimated, there about
was
ing, 40.000 strangers the crowd in town being Monday swelled morn¬ by
and was
every train.
than The city is time more in elaborately its, history, decorated scarcely
at any
a left building untrimmed. in the business The residence portion portion, being
too, has caught the infection, and red,
white and bine streamers in the air
from pillar and porch far into the out¬
skirts. factorily Everything for successful is working of satis¬ the
a outcome
great encampment and if the weather
holds fair the Milwaukee meeting will
- flguiuas the most suooessful in toe his¬
tory of the Grand Army.
KNIG HTS TEMP LAR.
An Imposing Conclave to Be Held In
W»»l*lnffton In October.
Washington, Aug., 27.— Preparations
for toe twenty-fourth Triennial Conclave
of the Knights Templar of the United
States and Canada, which is to be held
in this oity October 0-a, are nearly com¬
pleted. About the’headquarters of the
committee on arrangements all is bustle
and activity. The work of securing quar-
. - ■* "■ ~ ‘ ind their wivr“
____-.mmittee bus*
October 8, great and parade, which promises which 3
to occur
to be one of that great the brilliancy, are so each far
advanced commanders of
of the twelve divisions have been selected.
The all oOmnmndeiies divisions are so from arranged state, as to plaoe far
one as
as possible, in the same division.
-the Up to Sunday of Mr. the Harrison Washington Dingman,
mittee, secretary has received notification from2l8 com¬
: Knights, oommanderies, that they embracing will be here 15,750 take Sir
to
part in tbe parade. With the 213 com-
manderies taining in are all 2,000 seventy-five musicians. bands, More con¬
than 4,000 Sir Knights will bring their
wives with them. In all accommoda¬
tions have so far been scoured at the
various hotels and boarding houses for
20.000 Knights Dinginaq Templar, has their also wives notifi¬ and
Mends. Mr. Knights the
cation that 2,000 Sir from
states of Iowa, Wisconsin, Mississippi, Tennessee,
Nebraska, Alabama and not
given in this list will be here, but how
many oommanderies they represent is
not given in the letters of notification.
The line of march will extend about
four miles over smooth asphaltum
pavements tiful sections and of through the city. the most beau¬
AN INDIANAPOLIS TRAGEDY.
A Farmer Cincinnatian Kill* Hi* Sweet¬
heart and Attempts Su’eide.
Indianapolis, Aug. 27.—On Saturday
night, near the limits of the city, a
woman and man were found, both with
their throats outs, lying not far apart
and The apparently whose in a dying condition. first at¬
tracted woman, moaning the
attention, > died shortly after
discovery, but the man, who proves tf
be Ed Aszmann, formerly of Cincinnati
Was taken to the hospital and was fount
not to be fatally Sunday injured. night He to recovered tell the
sufficiently '
story. He had cut the throat of his com¬
panion, Berth Elff, as a result Of a quar¬
garden, rel while returning low resort. from The the Kissel beer is
a woman a
dressmaker, married, but separated
from her husband. Her neighbors say
she has has borne had a number good character. of unfortunate Asz-
manu a
matrimonial adventures and is twioe
divorced. His first wife of twenty years
ago was Mollie Ryan. They separated
three three; She is ' now toe " wife ** of
years Donnelly, ago. who lives “the
Patrick in
barracks” on Court street. Aszmann
afterward married a young woman of
Indianapolis, and remarried. who Bertha obtained Elff a divorce his
was
third love, and jealousy caused the
deed. .
__
A Pacific Cable*
San Fkancisco, Aug. 27.— The cham¬
ber of commerce committee recently ap¬
laying pointed to investigate the feasibility of
an ocean cable from this point to
Australia, has reported in favor of toe
project The cost of the line from San
Francisco to New Zealand by way of
Honolulu and Tahiti is estimated at
#10,000,000, United and suggests that the
States government grant a sub-
for the purpose to toe extent of
Be issued nteeing by three-per-cent incorporated bonds, to
a company States.
under the laws of the United
They claim that the line will be a paying
investment and will also materially re*
dace the ops* of cabling to toe Austra¬
lian polon ies.
Brittohi
San Fbxnciso, Aug. 27. —The Japan
Gazette states Manila, that the steamer Gravina
“ at from T
tbe crew and
Earls to Be Outdone by London In
j Tall Towers. ?
Scheme on Foot to Erect One
2,000 Feet High.
flu Area Required for tk. Halo *f tta
Proponed Sky Scraper Bztlmatnd at Six
Aeret—Arrangement* for **»• Departure
of the Pope from Home—Famine la the
Boudan—Foreign New* Heto*.
London, Aug. 27.-If Now York
wants toe tallest tower in tbe world it
will be necessary to enlarge such plans
as have been dismissed, as London is
pretty certain to have a tower *,,---
high. The projected London
assuming definite shape .
toe minds of the promoters.
The Compeer* Solicitor
Mr. Perks, solicitor to the company,
sees it an accomplished fact; so enthusi¬
astic and confident is he over the enter¬
prise. He anticipates no lifficulty that
will not be overcome by negotiations, he thinks
and as a financial speculation
it will be a successful venture. -
"Sir Edward Watkin, ” he said, “must
have the credit idea of the inception of toe
tower. The of constructing a tower
of 2,000 feet, that shall eclipse every
other tower, first occurred to him. As a
guarantee itee of ol the the soundness sound of tiny pro-
jeot of Sir Edward’s* brilliant i yi you enterprise have only he has to
look at the
originated this year. His project for
coupling the great North Manchester
ana Sheffield systems of the north with
toe north, tli, Metropolitan he he has brought railway to systom the '■stem i of the
vei
parliament completion, project tor piecing together
a
into one united concern abend thirty
disjointed and broken up Welsh railways
into one great Welsh railway zolverein.
He has bridged too Dee at Chester, and
brought North Wales for the first time
in direct communication with the Lan¬
cashire district
“The whole scheme has been
fieted iD
is one of toe greatest iron and coal pro¬
Sir prietors Edward in England, has appointed and a man director whom
as a
of hia Manchester and William Sheffield railway.
“Then there is Mewburn,
railway who is the stocks. largest owner of (southeastern
“The fourth name ia Thomas Andrew
Walker, the greatest contractor in toe
world, and at the the present moment enterprises carry¬
ing oAheage. out some The of Manches greatest ter ah te <wpal
is one &nd the Bueno* “y***
works for the Argentine government is
another. Walker is toe man whom toe
Great Western the Severn railway tunnel, selected and he to made con¬
struct railway through
tire-undernround Lon-
“The fifth is E. H. Carbutt He was
a He member well of known'meohanical parliament for engineer, Newport.
is a the
and chanical he has engineers. been president At present of he me¬ is
One of the representatives of the British
section at the Paris exhibition.
“Next is Franois Pavey, well known
in financial circles in the city, and es¬
pecially in connection with American
railway stock.
“Then I am solicitor* H. H. Fowler, I am partner M. P. of I
toe Right Hon. ;
am Sir Edward Watkin’s private solic¬
itor, and law adviser for the under¬
ground railways tunnel in London, for the
channel and many other enter¬
prises with which Sir Edward is identi-
“We contemplate, first of all, putting
np a tower with all toe public accessor.
suggestei wul English
The tower be made by
Scotch Scotch contractors, No and has of English
steel. firm yet been se-
seoted. Though of toe such number magnitude who can is
accept limited, a contract three four of the leading
or
English iron bridge and iron contrac¬
tors will no doubt tender. The tower
will not be which far carries from the. Metropolitan it upwards
railway, of of people over
90,000,000 per annum-
Tbs Site.
“No doubt the best site the promoters
could obtain, and the One they will nat¬
urally probably first look at, would be
the place where the great colonial and
other exhibitions have been held, in
South Kensington, but this must depend
upon the view which the exhibition
commissioners, who are the owners of
the South Kensington estate, take of
prise. Nothing could add
_• of the Imperial
__________ Various scientific institu¬
tions centered in Sonth proposed Kensington to than
a tower such as it is probably erect this
jn their proximity, convenient and center for
would be toe most
Londoners. Jt would be almost possi¬
ble to calculate approximately how
many persons would ascend the tower
per per day. day. There There are are five nv* millions of
people in London. We We have a fixed
population five times the the size of Paris
to to work work upon. upon. oh We undergound have have 1,135,000,000 railways,
travehno’ traveling which unite on at the th. Kensington. This would
give our tower an immeasurably super¬
ior chance over the Eiffel tower.
“Passengers would be taken up by
one lift from bottom to top, with no
change, as in oould the alight Eiffel at tower, the different though
passengers We have designs plans,
stages. yet, have no decided or
as nor we the style upon of archi¬ any¬
thing with For regard what to
tecture. we propose six we
should require an area of acres for
the base.. in £1 shares.
That ’ ’"The estimate capital will is £200,000 be amply sufficient
to build a tower of the size we contem¬
plate, and of course we shall build for
cash. There will be no such t hing M
promotion the of money stocks, and and no watering founders’ of
shares, company’s of the modem no financial
devices H*SS*#* nor lor any putting the risk
m one
JW" ■
to allot, _______________
what view p*rlia-
pubiic authorities
... . „„ ssunot oonceirait
possible that a building of thi. sort
would receive any opposition from
either the municipal authorities or from
attempted in London before, nor, so
far “Aw as I am aware acquainted in England with ” Mr. Edt-
•on’s scheme you for tower in New York?”
“Mr. Edison’s * proposals
were snot
known until after the company was
registered. This company Was regis¬
tered on toe 15th of this month, and the
interview with Mr. Edison did not ap-
The London Strike.
dock London, laborers Aug. 27.—The strike of the
embracing workers u rapidly in all extending industries. and
Seven thousand men employed in the
ironl works on the bonks of the Thames
have joined the strikers. The shipping
pelling work the laborers ,Tl»« in all branohes strike of
mwon
are largest perfectly mills orderly. Blaekbora Four have of the
at sue*
L
was no riotous demonstrations of any
kif^ t
i#o XIII to Lory# Rohm.
Bokb, Aug 27.—The decision of the
pontifleial of tiie major Vatican domo guards to refuse their to usual offi¬
cers
leave of absence points to the eventful
jssat’Tsift™. s&J?
K; b i.£Cb;',s < r*.
sea nal to prelates Spain. will A follow small number the of cardi¬ who
will delegate extraordinary pope, to
the chiefs of congregations powers remaining
here.
_
Startling Inerewfl of Socialism.
Bnblin, Aug. 27.-The Silesian Ga¬
zette publishes statistics ofSodaffi showing an un-
interrapted city of Berlin growth in The
1883 contained twenty-
four Socialist societies, nowit contains
over lfW. Bavaria in 1888 had 1,021 so-
has cietiee, with 58,000 members; she now
bers. 2,300 societies, with 122,000 mem¬
’
Famine sad Cannibalism.
Egypt London, Aug. 27. - Dispatches from
say that a famine prerails at
Khartoum, river Kossala, The Tokar, and other
towns. survivors ore said to
About be feeding twenty upon deaths toe bodies from of starvation the dead.
daily are repo rted at Tok ar.
The Czar Bound for Denmark.
I -The
; A SLI GHT MIST AKE.
Arabs at Castle Garden Worship Inger-
soll’z Picture as that of a God.
Naw Yobx, Ang. 27—Eight dirty
looking Arabs arrived at Castle Unmhnvg Garden
on the steamer Suevia, from .
The commissioner held them to await
the decision of toe collector as to
whether they should be landed or not
On toe left side of the garden is a long
wooden counter, formerly used as part
of the restaurant. Above was a picture
of Bob Iugersoll with an inscription
advertising toe - counter ..... a * lay brand ' beer of bottle, cigarettes. loaf lo On of
a a
bread and a piece of bologna
which had been left by some emigrant
The dusky crowd of Arabs gathered
round tiie picture and be^an to jabber
in a peculiar way. At a signal 1 fr from the
oldest oldest man man I' the party fitefr threw themselves
on the floor, wfih 1* bared heads
turned toward the picture of the lawyer.
It was seen that they were adoring the
picture. They believed the picture picture was was
that of a god and the bread, bologna
sausage and beer the counter were
offerings to him. and Two they of the led Arabs into
were women an were
tbe hospital admiring building glances they at CoL threw Inger- book
many soll’s classic but shiny head,
MORMON ELDERS F LAGGED.
Three PolygainUu Haas by the Thumb*
sad tVh<t>r«>! in Alabama.
Biuiincirau, Ala.. Ang. 27.—Three
mormon elders named Engel, Taylor and
Laired were severely whipped by regula¬
tors in Marion county Friday night
They for sometime, had been and proselyting their in the oounty
among who converts
Were two married women left their
homes and families to follow the elders.
Thursday tor" handed night a to notice the elders. signed “regula¬ It read:
was
“If you are in this county to-morrow
night you will be in hell next day."
The elders refused to leave, and toe
masks following took night them a into band the of men woods, wearing hung
them whipped up to them trees severely by their with thumbs, switches. and
The women were their warned families that unless
they returned to at once
they would be treated the same way.
There is no clew to the identity of the
regulators.__
Cigsrmakerz Betur<il»g to Work.
Jacksonville, Aug. 37.—The strike
of About tiie cigarmakers mostly is practically Americans ended will
150 men
resume work. Without any : concerted
action by resolution or the otherwise, these
men are satisfied that offer of Mana¬
ger in Gatto the to side pay of off the through stairway a is window, all the
cat
concession The that can element reasonably be tiie ex¬
pected, Cuban among
Workmen may hold out for another
week, but it is thought ail will be at wdtk
by Sept 1._
Woman Snffrago a Snceeaz.
Boston, Aug. 27.-The Woman’s
Journal publishes a letter from tiie gov¬
ernor ai : Wyoming, Wyoming, Mr. Francis E.
Warren, stating stating unqualified unqualified that tha: woman suffrage
there there is is an an success, the
women having voted with great wisdom
and discretion tor twenty years; that
Wyoming’s people will pnt woman's
suffrage in theirstato all other constitution, states do and
will l be be glad glad to to see
The Journal M. also Ca re^, publishes mingW^ele- a letter
from_John Wyo
Psart Fishing at MrMtn, m.
; Bxltiderb, HL, Ang 27.—Pearl fish-
SiStfiSS®
bora #80 to #40.
Thieving Canadians Have Injured
it in Behring Sea.
Ia England In Sympathy With
the Marauders 7
Bhs’i standing in Her Own U(M if Mm Is.
Denbte th* Nnrnbsr Auuuslly KlU*d
vast Was Contemplated hr an Aet of
Congress—All officer of tbs Alaska Com¬
mercial Company Interviewed.
Rutland. Vi, Aug. 27.—Dr. Henry
H. McIntyre, ol West Randolph, Vi,
superintendent of fisheries of tbs Alaska
Commercial Commercial oompany, oompany, sare that the
_ before lear-
Canadian sealers arranged
Viotoria to rendezvous at Land Far-
ent, Ounaga Island, where there la
neither a port of entry nor a customs
officer. There they transfer their seal¬
skins to the steam tender Wanderer,
went from Victoria for that purpose.
Canadian Harattdots.
“These Canadian mariraderg have
ly wt injured" few years," the s<
i
number of seal:----- ,—— --
ate at nearly one-third leas than
time there was a constant increase in too
ana and density of the rookeries. The
killing of 100.000 seals per annum was
the depredations of Canadian fishermen.
Too Many Kilted.
“This is more than the rookeries eon
stand, and there should not be more
than 40,000 or 50,000 skins taken each
year for the next two years. It matters
obntinue as they have tor the next lew
. not be long until I
has not sent one shows con¬
it does not intend to in
Alaska ___„„__interests exactly opposite of England to those la* at
are
Canada.
Hot Likely to Back Canada.
from „ “England toe seal derivea flsherire a larger than does revenue the
United States. The value that is added
pockets not think of that English England workingmen. will back I do
Canada to the detriment of her in¬ np
own
terests. There are several thousand
workmen in London who dress seal
skins, and toe British have millions at
seal •Wtars invested in the business. It the
monqpoiy will be thrown H nrokeu out of employment work¬
men
and the capital invested will have to be
placed elsewhere.
Ssalsrz Not Armed.
“I do *ot think any of the Canadian
sealers will resist the revenue cutter
Rush. They have no force, while the
Rush is well armed.”
Dr. McIntyre has been in toe service
of tbe Alaska Commercial oompany lor
fifteen years. He spends part of the
year in Al aska and part in Ver mont.
Wrack on the Santa Fe.
Chicago, Aug. 27.—Eleven persons
were injured in a wreck which ooourred
west at 7 o'clock of Kinman Monday and morning, fourteen one miles mile
east of Streator. All the care on tire
train were derailed, the chair oar rolling
on one side in the ditch and the two
sleepers The partly tipping (smoking ovsir. and dining
baggage, left the The train
cars were near raus.
was the vestibule limited from Kansas
at City b’olook. to Chicago The and was of due toe in accident Chicago
9 cause
is unknown. The train carried about
125 passengers.
Many persons were aboard who are
prominent of the in injured toe G. have A been, &, but far, no
names so
obtainable. As soon as the ordered accident oc¬
curred surgeons were from
Kinsman and Streator, and arrange¬
ments made for taking the wounded to
Streator. Division Superintendent
Crocker says that no one is dangerously
hurt
_
Cherokee Strip Colonies.
Wichita, Kan., Aug. organize 27.—A Cherokee meeting
was held Sunday to a
strip oolony, the the object strip being to to make
an effort to open settlement
This last few is the days, sixth and oolony outlined formed the in oolo- toe
as
nies possible will in aim numbers to increase and membership, as rapidly as
and petition congress congress at it its next ses¬
sion to .open toe ship.
Foreign Notes.
Tbe czar’* second son has arrived In Faria.
Along the liae of the Panama canal an ahr
Of abandonment prevails.
The Emperor and Kmprees of Germany
arrived Sunday at Potsdam.
The old tbe palace at Potsdam U being pre¬
pared for reception of the czar.
The Princes* of Wales and her daughters,
Princess Victoria and Mend, have arrived at
Copenhagen.
It is announced positively that the Duke
of Haamn has been betrothed to Prinoees
Margaret of Prussia.
It is stated ia political circles that the
Shoon mission will conclude an agreement
for Italian protection of Abyseinlo.
It is reported that at the argent request
of friends Gen. Boulanger wfil not come to
Paris to stand trial before the elections.
The North German Gazette, recurring to
tin subject of tbe Emin relief expedition,
bints that Dr. Peters would have poshed tin
expedition beyond the qpbere of German In-
terwt
A dispatch from Crete, which haa beast
officially confirmed, says that there has been
e sharp skirmish between Turks and Cretan
insurgents at Saspelaion.
which was tbe name day of Looks
patriot, was cele¬
brated in Perth by She performance of spe¬
cial theatrical pieces. Several societies, in
observance of tbe day, bald meetings, and
thousands of people marched in p ro ces si on
through tbe etraeta. There were similar
d i n i n *Twt r n f</ *"* in other Magyar towns.
Tha Boolangiets held a stormy meeting
Sunday to disco* th* akcteolcandidates
far the earning general election. M. Ln-
guerre declared that, although he was a per¬
friend of Gsn. ~ ‘
sonal
zszzjzr ideas
urn phot the *
*Wo
; <io,
says a duel was f
Charles 1
Mraandafell.
taohment a
Collins of I
affflfr were i
it was i
tiie hov
shots,
unable to a
called forn
doing so ■
driven up t
were wwtau
_
was 1
rived this srw
cer. His be
and he will
Jak* Kllraln say* be wants
to whip tho Oh^npkKh
A ▼wry tuccoufol
Char lea ton him bewn
Tb#o4or® Qrants a
dropped dead at Hew
MImi yoffl lh 1^, Bur lew
by a flA fo fo oar, At Krtnfflff I
Coi. Robert
Boar Soud&y j
John &
bssrt, In Nsw Y
Secretary of j
favor Chicago t
Tbs low by tbe
Columbus, 0,, is«
Charles *
There ore
st Moscow,
William SKf*
at Logan*port,
Aimer Hoffman, of C
newly married wile and f
ride. Jealousy.
Two toil
“doctor.”
and oaa is deed.
Henry Shaw, the i
died Sunday at St
valued at #2,500,000,
The o*U* of the TOO l------
r;Se l ^ , aC'C U L ’ "" T to 1
The remains Cf Ah. *
filth pyig ffiirni uqajt
jULlullulli__1 COlIUZuhMQ aiitiiida IUiCmIQ (m VJ « |
arrest rinfeehett, at Cfc&ts&i aUa*
bigAmy. He ackoowlw
D.a8edey # a
Chester, has brought i
York Times for libel, i
agea
The Spring Lake reset
R.L, burst burst Sunday aft*
eons wore ’ere drownedjand s
his afassirasrsi wife, inflicting fatal
a *
shot himself.
JAfSAzT.
Gilead, 0., is short ia t
bank has been closed. f
Jake KUrain reached Purr
day morning. His bond has _
#2,000. It was tigend Monday,*
the afternoon for the north.
Umt*^8ti^ b t^SatB
has been arrested upon a charge of a<
bribes from illicit liquor men.
Frank Blow, colored, in jail at * "
Jit for burglary, Attempted
fevering ah Artery ixi Me writ
was bunglesome and bis life was i---
The pork packing house of Swift A <
pany, at Kansas City, wa
to the extent of #150.000.
Tate Ml from a roof and was instantly
hilled.
Grove, Mho., a dispute a mong rival
dates for sheriff, resulted is
one man And the
other*.
George E, BtituH. of
jumped from the middle spaa <A
nati Southern bridge into the <
tenceof ninety-five and one-halt
escaped without injury ■
Humors are afloat that
determined to revoke
of Frederick Douglass
and appoint a white
more acceptable to
P. B. Been Wiled Lem
former, near
of a feud of years’' standing. The mi
precipitated, Beers claims, by On m
made by Rice on his wife and son.
AU but four officers and one prtva
Company D, Second Regiment, TnAtm***
Legion, are under arrest charged with in¬
subordination tar diaobeying orders in con¬
nection with tbe parade at the cornerstone
laying in Indianapolis
Charles the Shank, Pennsylvania porter on a Pullns
or on road, was
ously shot by Charles D. Cham
convict, who was trying to rob
gers, near Lancaster, Fa.
overpowered and am
John a Hunt, on
of age, shot himself t
residence, 208 East
Twenty-sixth street, New
spondency is the n
letters found in bis
b#s a wife hi Louisville, Ky.
Everett Crosier, soo of Rot
Newport bridge across i
nati about 10 o’clock
three of the a
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