Newspaper Page Text
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Win th*South- .HBHRHHHI enterprises in oper-
decade. it* randy new
bnMing and contemplated, prove this
..ai, statement and not a hyper-
'.e a l>u*ina*»
JU-4.1 description. !
nering that time it ha* built and pnt into
.uccrosful operation a 1100,000 cotton
-tory and with tide year parted the wheel*
„( $ second of more than twice that capital.
it ha. put i|P a large iron and. brme fouudry,
fertiliser factory, an immense ice and hot-
.
works, a sash anl bUnd factory, a
broom factory, opened up the fluest granite
enarry in the United States, and now has
«»r large oil mills in mow or lees advanced
.owes of construction, with an aggregate nu-
Mrised capital of over baM amilbon doHm*
plied for t« o charters for street railways. It
bee seewred another railroad ninety miles losig.
while located on the greatest system in
the South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its important rival, the East Ten-
It has obtain-
*1 direct independent connection on with with Chat Chat
___ ^
tssooga and and the the Week West, and and wiB willbmik break ground ground
ns few days fora fonrth road, connecting
With a fosrt.li independent system.
With its five white and fourcolored church
«. A hss recently eoAplsteda flf&KH) hew
Presbyterian church. It has increased itspop-
Slstion by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
eround its borders fruit growers from nearly
ftery State in the Union, until it te now sm-
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
fruit evaporators in the State. It is the home
of thegrops and its wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
aereo years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
fiw l rtimply ikowB tli« progress of an already
admirable city with the natural advantages
af having th. Unset climate, eummer and
winter, in the world.
griffin is the county seat of Spalding coun¬
ty, situated in west Middle Georgia, with, a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
above sea level. By the census of 1890, jit
will have at alow estimate between 6 000 ahd
SriOT
welcome strangers Mid anxious to secure de-
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wri-
com* if brittg money to help build up the
,.wn. There is abont only one thmg we
heed badly just now, and that is a big hotel-
We bare several email ones, but their aoconiA
jnodations are entirely too limited for our
usins s. pleasure and hsalth seeking guests.
If you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffis.
Griffin ia the place where the Gbiffin NKwb
published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
sad descriptive pamphlet of Griffin-I
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1*89,
and win ha vs to b* changed in a few months:
o embrace nsw enterprises commenced and
ompleted,
1‘UOKESSIONAL DUIEOTOBY.
i-.ENKY C. PEEPLES,
attorney a¥ 1*AW,
HtMPTON, ORORuli.
Prosttero m all the State aud Federa
snrts. ortftdAwly
JOHN J. HUM;
attorney at law
liBIFFIN, OEOUCU.
ssjsfss .”<• •sas**/
rHOS. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
«Wgs
JOHN S STEWART. BOBT. T, DANIEL.
STEWART & DANIEL.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Uvm- Georgs A Hartnstt’s, Griffin, Go.
Will practice iu ths State and Federal
Brte. julylfidtf
CLEVELAND & GARLAND,
dentists*
GRIFFIN. • : : r GEOBGIA.
*“
0. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
wooMrsr, obobqia.
t attention given to all business
■*" ’ “ the Courts, and where
calls,
rps pin a specialty.
c: mIfi 18
JRIFFIN, GEOBGIA.
;r New Management.
L 1 SANftL, #P0R'ft
1 ter* meet all train*.
CROP TUMIP SEED !
* best varieties, bought direct from
* lot'p UNT8 and OILS at the low¬
ing in tin DBtTG LINE. Call SON. and
J. N. HABRI8 A
■ J ;
mm Mis tc svery Towa and
i«ty to Mil our Goods,
ad ns«n douo, aadwa
i sample joote iptothat t sells for three dol
tttoWS a business that will pay
per Mouth
Not a Battle in Which j^oiitond-
* ing Annies Particijiate,
E-fta Sham Naval Engagement
In Milwaukee Bay. *«■
W*« Men Wounded by AccUteatf—Fli*
• Amendment Favoring the FenStoHtng
of Soldiers* Widow. Who Stidtf Agfcln
Condenmsd by the Encampment—Other
Proceeding* of the. Kncaiup.ui<uit. .
Milwaukee, Aug. ^fitoroTfawtiday
trains brought in about from SO, 000 addition¬
al visitors, mostly ' WweoUsin fthd
and their .rives, these seats being re¬
served f v f them- The battle was a splen¬
did .spectacle, being participated in by
about sixty vessels, besides a stationary
’ moron- flc.+ antl byaliont 3,000 infantry-
by a hostile batteries, fleet supported and repulse by by the the In¬
more
fantry. I'he line of bottle fleet was led
by the United States man-of-war Michi¬
gan and and Fessenden. revenue outters Andy Johnson
; ;»f |feu*ir<ffit<r U It” ri-' ■ - ;
Five iueu were wounded during this
engagement: Two on the Fessenden
by One a of prematura Ike discharge will lose of hand. a cannon. Two
men a
sailors uot on seriously, a mortar boat injured were by painfully, explo¬
but the
sion of a mortar. A young man on,
board the steamer Henry Sill was also"
injured mortar. by the premature discharge of a
the Several heat and veterans smoke, were but overcome taken by to
were
the tents of the Bed Cross, where
lAUlUJi pounds UfVVV outiiu, of fireworks Tjt/VW iwoaowj l»«U
* KK)^ were ey-
The signal was given at 8 o’clock, illumi¬ and
os by magic the whole bay was
nated and the! spectators could see the
animated artillerymen mo vein and cute of infantrymen, they got
seamen as
ready for the conflict.
Then darkness succeed os the line-cf.
SSMfSSSUSOTS*' passed, and the latter returning «S$ the
tiro the spectators It is a splendid spectacle the vessels which
now see as
pur teSf ia their port Are, and the land
«d ^ g». to
charge makes the their circuit nasties, the vessels and as the continue fleet
------- their inking, broadsides, and the
tteries aim their guns at
H 2 SE
hour, _________a the brisk brilliant action spectacle lasting'about of hissing an
;|n ahot and shell, flaming Ii‘-■*-*- rockets shooting
boom of a gun whs heard. sard. Mistakenly
SSSkw they had silenoed the
leave in small tacking all boats foroes and now
prepare to com-
plCte the victory.
But capitulate. the beleagnrod The infantry oity is force not ready that
to
has until now remained in reserve
presses forward on the beach in front’erf
the batteries ready to meet the landing
foroe—A^they round, pour into their the midst steady of file, the
found after
approaching boats, the roar of musketry
has superseded the boom of the cannon¬
ading.- The invading party is repulsed and
retreat in confusion. that Two vessels are
Y disabled they are blown
up A with magnificent powder. pyrotechnic display
followed the battle.
Rejected.
The resolution the pension favoring laws an which amend¬ sol¬
ment to Dy
diers’ widows should continue to receive
pensions in the erent of their remar¬
riage was rejected before in the the adjournment National en¬
campment Thursday afternoon, just Strangely enough,
no the reference report of to the the offioial matter stenographer appeared in
nor is the resolution among the docu¬
ments of the day on file.
Corporal Tanner was one of the speak¬
ers in support of the resolution, and he
he is credited with using in the course
of his speech the following sentence:
“I want to say that to fail toadopt some
such immorality. rule is to There place is a not premium week upon that
*
there are not a great many where Caere that
come to my lambskins knowledge of their virtue women to
have made pensioii.*’
retain a 5
spoken A number to Friday of delegates morning denied who were that
tne commissioner of pensions had ex¬
pressed himself in the literal terms,
although they admitted that he made
rather a broad remark that in the ’
language of an Ohio delegate “brought
down the house and made those present
shake their sides. ’ ’
The encampment resinned its session
Friday morning. An adverse report
was made by the committee on resolu¬
tion on the resolution submitted, by
Gen. McMahon, of New York, declar¬
ing against the recent decision that a
didu onorable ■* discharge from --- the army
is no bar to the securing of a pension. in favor
Gen. Fairchild’s resolution of
markin g the rebel table. lines Other at Gettysburg resolu-
was laid upeu the
STAaSSAfiBS^Rt will be oon-
. they have
after
_____noney, and re-
.soldier arnment to furnish each tiie
physician JSgirel with a copy of of
medical aud history of the war.i
- * I. .die* »f >h ■ <**««» Armr.
The ladies of the Grand Army con¬ fol¬
vention elected National officers as
lows: President, Mrs. FranoreJooA
Mn^N. a ftsjnolds, of CfoiMff); «,“-
.. .......... ... """ •*—
OHIFFIN, GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER I. 1889 .
Johnson, of Altoona, Pa. ^ Mrs. Nellie
P. Aude son, of Sm Agtonio, TW. j
Mm Charles W. Gter^ig of Allegheny
’Ae report showed, among other
things, that The the membership relief of is Maine, about
15.00a state corps
which works upon the same principles
as the ladies of Die G. A R, admitting
to daughters membership of veterans, only wives, sent mothers proposi¬ or
a
tion *o unite with the order, and*
union will no doubtless be effected in a
few months, thus adding 3,000 mem¬
bers to the title of the Notional organ-
izntion.
The business session of the National
Wothan’s Belief Corps was resumed at
Immanuel Presbyterian church Thurs¬
day.
A report was submitted by the pen-
siou and relief oummittees recommend¬
ing that the names of all army nurses,
volunteers and others be placed on the
pay rolls of tile corps. It recommended
also that the incoming president ap¬
point seminary, a committee to visit the which Madison has
been at Madison, G., Corps
offered to toe National Belief
as a home for soldiers’ and sailors' wives
and mothers, and report whether it
would be wise to aocept the offer. There
were four sites offered in different parte
of the oountry.
In the fifternoon resolutions of condo¬
lence on the death of Mrs. Lucy Webb
Hayes committee were adopted. The report relief of the
on pensions and wag
adopted. Philadelphia, Mrs. Anna elected Wittenmeyer, president erf
was
JOHN L. FIGHTING CRUNK.
AU Huston Terrorised By IBs la fa riot wl
BTOlrer.
drunk from another. that he But hardly he knew kept one goald face
on
very ^Thu^a/he ugly frame started of mind. for this His
ion kept house Mm pretty quiet ehed. until Then the 8
mont was ret
insisted upon getting a drink and c
derod tiro driver endeavored to stop. Annie
postulated the carriage, and but she might to keep 1
in M i
have tried to Stay a locomotive. J>
was bound to go and he went
tered the bar room with an i
gait beaver and hot called tilted for a bottle his of head wine, in
was on
artistic manner and his fooe looked anjN -
tiling of the bnt hand pleasant, he issued ™"l§
a „
tion to the crowd to take ‘ to then. V
few responded, but it was
fear of the ohaiupiou than
desire to be sociable. t -
•DfiEadtakags' ed at one of the tables. Then the
trouble began. Capt. Cooke has in
times past given h» opinion of the
champion’s terms, and Sully carousals drunk in unmeasured enough to
was
resent what he considered an insult
By the time he had reached the table
where Capt Cooke sat his faee was
black with r
fists he
le grudge he owed the
police board, end ordered the driver to
go to police headquarters, vowing to
dean out the whole force. He entered
headquartora and demanded to see
thwarted Chairman the Whiting, champion -but the by olerk stating sternly that
Whiting was absent! Finally, the big
fellow was induced to go to his home in
South his End, where Meantime he is still all keeping Boston up
spree. is
anxiously awaiting the outcome.
Not Changed Politically.
W. Aug. 31-A special to
The says:“Great Post from Henderson,
been N. C„ the stress has exodus recently from
North pnt Carolina. upon Referring negro to it In
an
interview, Congresaman Henry. P.
is not changed either way by tl
her the majority already emigrated, and from I
was women
and from the further fact that
cieuoy has mare than been supplied by
by emigrants from adjoining states."
Whites and Blacks a* Fsver H*»t.
Dubham, N. C., Aug.- 8t —At Oxford
Thursday afternoon two oolored men
raised a disturbance. Policeman Whit¬
field ' tried to arrest them, when i
shot Hr. Whitfield Several five times, injmi nghim
toe culprits in the . ,, suburbs irbs of the town.
The sheriff locked them up. .Thera is
talk of an effort being made 1 by the ooL
ored population to attack the ^ail and
rescue toe two colored men. In this
event there will be serious trouble.
niuhaiyyl Falltleiaas Killed.
Sataria. Miss., Aug. 31.—James M.
Newbaker was assassinated o'clook, bring Wednesday riddled
night, with tm-k-bot about 9 white entering his
own
house. litician and Newbaker candidate was a prominent for toe state po¬
a
legislature before the last coum*-nom¬
inating convention. About a ytetr ago
an attemp t was made to renom inate Mm.
S ‘ Carpenter-’ Strike Boded.
But VINO HAM, Ate., Aug. 31.-
the oontractora The carpenters struok
at good ** time * for such - movem^L
a a as
ing more than under 2,000 buddings are now go¬
up contract
'•* Heldelber*’. Borne
_
Tiffin, O., Aug. tl. — The finest
museum in America, valued at $15,000.
into a full-fledged universify
trial institute.
Shot and Hanfced.
Ohabmsston, W. Va., Ang. 8J -A
mob of 300 men went to John Fayetteville
and shot Turner,
Aug. 17.
STORMS IN JAPAN
1 -C
-
^
Thousand* of Uv«K toot By •
Series of Ti phooms.
* ’ t t “
. .
The Adjournment of the BHDeh
Parliament
Kxtrset* front ths Queea’» Speech U Read
In ths Shu #r tard.-The London
Bnnk enmiMMlM Issns » Ms n lfss to te
": ths ltfft» r«-l »ta»H »w luferornhle.
Other rWteten Ne- l<».‘
Skakobai u Aug. 3L—A aerie series of
unprecedented in tittir
and dc notifem, hata »w#pt
Japan and part of China. The damage
to property fa incalculable, rad the
lowest estimate Of the loss of life by
drowning plac it at 3,00 0. '
es
Now Rises I St 10,000. 5
..
Yokohama Aug. 81.-—By the recent
storms in the district of Wakayama 10,-
000 rendered people homeless. perished The and loss 20.000 of prop¬ were
erty is enormous___
•terilsnsui A<1J.
mt&m feat-
2 nnnnii gaft. ? c 6 St of*
lgtens •At my has suggestion consented the to King (rf the
summon a*
fhare Z^° r tU tiga ^ itB
apeoting the boui
“A postal adjusted.^ convention has been
concluded ney with France and Germany.»
••Gsamjoixsr of thk Housk of Com-
‘Mv Lobds and Gentlemen — Th'
fenses wiR enable my subjects to pursue
industry and enterprise in mow com¬
plete security and peace. Her majesty
then oommends toe act Scotland, reforming toe
local government of awl re-
I . Fhs Orest Bosk iishorsn' Strike.
London, Ang .» .—Thecrews of three
merioan cattle ships ships have have joined joined the
strikers. The dock Aompaiues hawe
issued the regular a manifesto, dock laborers in five five BM|MV per
ere pence pence
hoar hour ordinary time. time, The and companies six pence promise per
over
te abolish the contract system and wltom sub¬
stitute piece work, the rates for
will be six pence an hour ordinary- time
and eight pence an hear over time, ffie
over in toe tune evening. being reckoned from 8 o’clock
.
Mr. Bums rejects the oflkrae
a dodge to abolish piece work, and
all the men under the five penny st
He also insists that over time shall
reokoned from 8 o clock in the evening.
The ear men’s strike has collapsed.
The men tore resumed work on the aid
tanna.
The dock laborers at Dover tore VHe? gone
on a strike. t
AC»11 to All Worker*.
The committee of the striking dock
gpgaegs circular was issued early Fnday mom-
shall, in the their meantime, concede the final
demands Six cf striking hour employes, for ordinary to
wit: pence an
work and latter eight penoe an from hour 0 for o’clock over
time, the to count
in the evening until 8 o’clock in the
morning. Under the contract system
demands arefortigktpanoe an hour
tera A than four meeting hours. of striker^, , \ will be
mass
held in Hyde park cn
the increase of wages as dam_____ _
the men, and the indications are any¬
thing but favorable for an immediate
settlement of the strike.
“S» Sn*rcmd*r.”
The manifesto issued by toe strikers’
committee labor organizations has been signed London, by all the
m in¬
cluding stevedore, sailors’and fire¬
men’s union, numbering 8,000. The
accession of these unions fa most im¬
portant. If the dock companies demanded refuse
to aooede to the terms forthwith. grave
complications mast <rf affairs ensue became
The condition more
serious hourly. Mr. Bums addressed
» meeting of <5,000 men rt Tower ffiU
Three thousand iron workers at Keigh¬
ley have struck.
Bnussus, sreseranr Ang. from 81.- B*igi««*. The Belgian
J° ri
Lopdrm to take the pfaoesc
men on strike.
• >,. to H#;, compelled ■ :
oouncil will to
to this pressure, as the moat ooa-
citizens among that libert;
to fix a day for the poUing.
German man PuwAer ] Vnotoriro.
London, Aug. 31.—The
crowded with ordera for the Austrian
end Italian governments, both of which
have adopted toe powder. There fa no
patent on the formula and any plant for
Urn ma * l/m m .....*'
ran
amol
H s tbe iis MmA
London, Aug. 81. -It is
fawn Pnnce Oetiinje Nicholas that uud the the quarrel 1
Bemaa
has been renewed, and some ver, __
notes Getting- have passed fatocoming between Belgrade ‘
B moree’
every day that toe Montenegrin
let is suffering from a severe attack
the disorder, known in America as
BEHEA DED BY A FRIEND. ;
Nani, the Hnrderm, finUlotlMil at 81
Pierre, Miquelon. At j*
Saturday Halifax, N- Ang. 81.— So’okxflc
morning. AUg. 24, about 2,000
persons witnessed the beheading of
the murderer, iu a public square
Piffare,
avs udwvu. a**" lw rv ’T*
;justaawelltodofanowae miy^other
A few xiinates later he , a
and * hie '' *' toade *i wtn
on
this a
fiOTSKtecifSSlfi lodges, raying that liquor oaaradhim
where he was beheaded. Hek
pries* six times before he walked to the
him ha asked: “Is it you who are
r*»i?g, said it was. t® kill 'Tl me?" you would The executioner kill me you
weedd kffl others, ” Noel replied.
Pierre, I am, sorry for what I have
”— God protect you all." j
around aiid A YniYtinml fh«
m w-^faoe top to bottom. He whs
■ on a
A MARY LAND HAN GING.
Melvin t Garllta. Wife Mnrderer, K*e-
•;.i . «uted »t CumherlaiuL
morning for to® murder of Iris wife.
He-showed no signs of tear on the scaf¬
fold. and died without extraordinary
Gorlitz^ crime was a moat atrocious
one. On March 83 last he shot kfa wife
toe trams on Urn streets <rf this his place.
He held the weapon so close to vic¬
tim that the bosom of her drees caught
lasted eight days. He agipeaied from
the reraict, the but the appeals. decision wae sus¬
tained by oourt of
Garlitz eloped from here with his vic¬
tim, Leah Eva White, a beautiful girl.
They were married in Pennsylvania,
but their married life did not prove
happy and a separation followed. Gar¬
litz accused his wife of infidelity, and
claimed shot that upon her forced admission
he her down.
Garlitz made a statement Thursday
night, gratified ns follows: appreciation - 'T desire of to the express kind
ray of the and his
treatment sheriff family
to me while in jail, and also the con¬
stant and considerate attention of the
guards. I would have liked to see my
buried tittle daughter betude before wife but I did father-in- and to be
law refused my both requests. my I die
without any malice in my heart toward
any perso n,"
_
»'• MI NE FLOOD ED
And Thlrtf-Fivs Xftner* Known to Bo Im-
prlnone<l«> Within.
Cumberland, Md., Aug. 81.—The
water from the old Extra mine erf the
Boston company, broke into the Alle-
ghenny mine in the Consolidated com¬
pany at Frostburg, at li o’clock Friday
monring. be shot in Thirty-five tiie mine. men Whether are known livea
to
are lost fa not known yet.
Cronin Trial Bogin*.
Chicago, Aug. sl.—When Jndge
McConnell’f ,'s State’s oourt opened Attorney at 10 Longe- Friday
morning neoker announced that the state
was
ready to proceed in toe cases of Congh-
and Bnrke.
er then asked the
his Associate counsel
Luther Laflin Mills, George Ingham
and W. J. Hynes. The court assented,
and the record will show that they are
simply state and recognized not assistant as counsel prosecutors. for the
as
— -—’* * »
4 - Figfce for • Wife.
thorities Ohxtmnnx, do not Wy. interfere, T., Aug; unique 31.—If fistic au¬
a
encounter will occur within six mites of
Fossil, Wy. T.. Sunday. L. The Sullivan, proepeo-
tive contestants are J, a
railroad hunter Md employe, trapper. and A Tom girl Murphy, who a
method terminating court¬ sag-
grata this of
ship. goes to the winner oi a
She delarea that she fa entire .
ont aa to the result The woman te a
H. IM. STANLEY.
Sir Edwin Arnold lade the Ex¬
plorer What He In.
His Part In the Diacovery of the
Congo's Source.
II Wm H« Wha OifH Mr.
«h* t’ropriotor af Tho U « S«» Bally
TeUfroph, to feppwl Multjt’t IssiMf
Tkmitk Africa Aftrr Hi Haifewssls#
la FIimUr* Dr. Uvlasstoae.
2 R£?S tSS-WlSp
Stefa* Ate* partientere of the port*
great religioBBi authority he has < alv
devoted really to owing goographii to hf:
wm
Co m
fm atime akSiFef
m if he would hav* to be sent to the
«UiKSin« U. bJ* to
^iES%£t gtB%£*L 58 Lr
jsi^rc&tiow The two toon f to
man
problems vrastoatEkfwin earnestly tc
remit
Stanley and AfrioiTexploration, ^mirthim on
journey of
of whioh wra to follow the oourse of
across the continent from
Indian ocean to the Atlantic.
Mk'dlffivi Lawson Was willing
sent to Nev
expenseof pw pri o te * I___________ suoh joimmy ..... , TI . erf
a
support woudd «f have had toe
never op
be ft blank spade on our maps.
CONFED ERATES’ WIDOW* f
In Chtorgia to B* Fmdossd bf th* L«i) |
... tmtmm
t Atlanta, Gk, Ang. 81.—Georgia fa
about to pension the widows (rf her Con¬
federate soldiers. Ten yearn ago I m.
policy of pensioning to
soldiers tiring will
her borders. At the
present session of the
ernor Gordon, to *. a ; spemal a m ama g e,
nrgedthrtthewidows the Confederate* who
should also be penstone d.ThUrraom
mondation waff referred to
committee of thirty, wlrieh 4
air” 1 "
the The widows bill to only be thus <rf Confederate reported take* soldiers to
that died in battle at from wounds re¬
ceived in the service, or the hardships
incident thereto, Md who iv* re¬
raainod unmarried. T he yjcau st st also
have been married at _ __ of th* ___
service. A constitutional _ amandment ihpM tl
will be neoemmy to legalize these pen¬
bilithus sions. so the amount fa not fixed to toe
completed. It fa not believed
that there are over* 1,000 widows in the
state phans legible will not for be this provided pension. for yet, The toe or¬
sentiment of the legislature being that
they will be able to provide for them¬
selves without state rid. In the language
of a member of toe committee: “We
are afraid to open the gap, for the state
hasn’t the money.”
- A REI QN OF TER ROR.
Mx Pasple Kttlti hf Bafwslw la
Harlan County, Ky.
Knoxville, Tenn., Ang. Mt.— There
fa a factional war to the death to Har¬
lan county, Ky., to which a half dozen
men have been killed and preparation
made for the murder of others. Wilson
Howard and J. Jennings, In two despera¬
does, who me wanted Missouri for
murder, h*ve during to* part
month*- killed three brother* a
Turner. For these crime* Judge
sm Lewis, armed of Harlan started county, to wi
dozen men, out rapture
Howard and Jennings, who, with de
termtoed friends, had taken refuge in
ambush. A Moody members battle of the ensued, Lewis to
which three
crowd were killed and othms seriously
wounded. There is $1,000 reward in Mis¬
souri for Howard and Jennings, and
they have decided to die before bring
Dctparadoei Captarod.
Bibmingham, Ate., Ang. 81.—Jim
Snow Md George BmIca outlaws who
were members of the Simpson gsng in
westornpart the bloody Simpson-Howton of this county, feud wan in cap¬ tha
tured Thursday Thursday night and They lodged to jaH
here county were rap¬
tured to that Tuscalooc and by Sheriff They
fftag , mmoaaded of county, white asleep posse. to the
ware before
woods oouid and their overpowered Snow sad Beaks they
with nse their guns. leader, Tom Stomooa
were Jufy
at Mndd Greek, this county, on 19
when Simpson wm killed MdDeUcttvra
Morgan and J. B. Howton badly
wounded.
NEWS_
A CmIm«sUs 4 nf 1
.>. 'Testa* te
Burglars irs got got I MOO in s
Cornwall, O. f ... ................» ..... _
,S”*“
AW
■■I
rm
AU
ram CHia*, .<
TbsWo,
New York i
&.
Karmen near 1
&ss«nsp tom. ■>*
•
testreMvrt TCt-. mmmm
p ||
northern Indiana . I
vored secret soeiefc
fafira to th* widow on
cation of f
ths soldisrs 1 1
Benfamin Adams wm *
City on that
4m( *
•®j«!
sir
Bbewmad
ted. s ~ >i
state, to aMist in i
world 1 , fair (rf lga.
Frank %£££*** W. - - r
r. Rawlsea i
A millionaire of T
kflfedUswiteaada -V
iftstidmt j
ing thegeaer
Forest firs* near I
for two days, oauting i
tStSSSi,' -i'il
jsstxsn, ['l
Owing to the failure c f r
prevails in
vaaia.
The Berlin Post
only bar to a reoo..______________
and Germany. *
John Gelli brand Hubbard, tbs fast Barca
££££H* w- »«**«» te tm
Mtak Maybrlok wm hhhotwI w Wflidoff
Barah Bernhardt wffi appear in Parts m
Tassday. Bb. (todtara to pfagr fa aaythtac
In mltl.nK n aka fi rormsny im m| a acted antaA wun M |rt. |f M. ww_ tMr
Prinog Q^oiyii of LftUolitftnbMf, mm^
tia^mird daughter of tfca tbs nrtora of ffiento-
Tbs Prtacsand PriaosM H Wafea wtB go
to Athens to attend tho wodfUuff of PrhifiOM
« * va_______-•* A- at- J TO....... WW. .* * ' -to
- .
oopoio, oi .rrusua, 10 me trows fiM W
Greece. suiu.
.. ..
formally appeal to tbs
tbs protectum of Christians
ortregte.
Th* town of,
fall s< a povtioa of c Mount] to
▼Btagen escaped.
Tb ports bm l wfliral the f * -fe ro^.
kir Pasha, the governor of
riva do wars, fttid hu aw iSiTi 1ninad him
haiiitnarnariftn hufora 1
bwm. -
A gnvtiutamt,^ mistioa sent Jty tb*l
im -
room by King E
andterammy.
>fka loa ftertiftlio UBooue ikmmi -----
closed. It wm dM
nich in 1890. Ths pr
delegate in favor of
grass wss adopted. JhinA' *
It Is understood tint thft
Ooscit and t
to s proposed Catta *_I
ti^ tift by tbift
X. Lagusrro fe going to :
foliower* I