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GRIFFIN, GEORflIA, II 8. A,
Gridin fet tl»* lieet Mid molt promising little
|t.y ia the sAmth. It* record lor the past
b«ii °}*Tl
gtirtii, teiil.litig and eontempliited, prove thi*
o rl Hiwiunm* rtatemrat and not a hyper-
oIleal deeoril-tioo.
ihiring that time it lia* built and put. into
moot anerwMtful ojicratlon a |100,000 cotton
aehiry and wltli thi* year ntarted the wheel*
u wood of more than twice that capital.
It lia* put up a large iron and brae* foundry,
a fertilitor factory, an immense Ire and bot-
t|in<r work*, a saeb-tmaA blind factory, a
broom factory, opewiNp the flneet granite ha*
quarry in the United State*, and now
pur large oil mill* in more or lea* advanced
etuge* of con*traction, with un aggregate au-
tboriied capital of over half a million dollar*.
sl.
pliwl for t* o charter* tor *treet railway*. It
hue oersted another railroad ninety mile* long.
And while located on the greatest system in
th* South, the Central, has secured connec-
SSteSH^fcMtt
WJ direct independent wWlireak ground
tamtoga aad the West, and
n u few day* for a fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent evotein.
With its five white and fonrcolored church-
re, it baa recently completed a $10,000 new
Presbyterian church. Ithae increased it* pop¬
ulation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around its bordersfrait growers from nearly
every State id the |WoB,p|#iU*ihn^* by orchards ffs
rounded on nearly every side
^d Yfc||*Nl-i!*% to ha|lfppfr1|P||^lfWe«l the State. It id the Home s
frnit evaporators has
of th#grape andits winemakingcapacity
doubled every year. It has sucressfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
seven year* curriculum, second to none.
Thi* is part of t-lie record of a half decade
and simply shown, the progress ol an already
admirable city with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
*ntj -
t of Spalding couu-
have _ wi at .......J.....rfy#?tj* alow estimate between 6 000 and
wifi
‘ 7,000 people, and tkty are ail of the right
*qrt—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
etifom> ta .h*» ti cWn | haritotwto esrttrpde-
siruble settlers, who will not lie any less wel¬
come if they bring money to help build up the
,.we. There is about only one thing we
need badly just now, and that is a big hotel.
We have several small ones, but their accom,
modations are entirely top limited for onr
urine a, pleasure and health seeking guests.
If yon see anybody that want* a good loca-
lion for a hotel to the South, just mention
is the place where the Gbiffiw Nkws
s published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper In the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamp* to sending for sample copies,
aad descriptive pamphlet of Griffin.) ‘
‘ This brief sketchie written Aprill2th, 1K89,
wait will tavAlo b* changsd to a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
ofapieted.
iiENHY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
uatf BBftw
JOHN J. HUriT,
ATTORNEY AT*£aW,
obiffin, uegsuu.
Ofltee, «l HOi Street, Up Stairs, ow i, H.
White’s Clothinc Store. mai-22d&wly
rHOS. R. MILLS,
“Vt'rOfiflE'r’to" PArir, ■
Witt practice in the
Coarts. Office over George nov3tf
roriitU eTBWABT. host. t. daniel,
-...... WiWAHT * DAW EL -
ATTOENBX8 ,^T UW
Over George A Hartastt’s, Griffin, federal Gft.
WK practice in the State and
urte. inlvlOdtf
te» -L—- V tom Jfa ,i.s tf& j* -H * ii «L A-.l itt- a -Ai- . m .,..——
CLEVELAND k GARLAND,
k MNTIITSy r t-». ■
ATTOBNBt AT LAW,
•Ml Pprompt pcariilcahL attention afi givfii tesH and bvriness where
*•* CoBeetiousa spsciaftf.
«0TEL CURTIS
Under {few Management,
*■ *•
™«ssstSSli
^ P*M.rtato^eudbwiiM-mp.rl
ymp fo.
mt. apS«n)«m
WITB 50 O SKINS
The Sailing Schooner Minnie lie-
turns from Behring Men.
She Hr .I Been Boarded by the
Rush July 15.
The *50 Skins Then on Board Seised and
a S|an Placed ou Hoard with Orders to
i rifaitkar^Ite. Brw ^tctoNs-Mony sjp fd
frig and Then Sailed for
Other Sealers at Work.
Viotobia, B. 0., Sept 4. —The
schooner Minnie, early Gapt. Monday Jacobson, ar¬
ia port morning
m Behring i)t(l se$t The captain July reports
it early on morning of 15
the Bnah boro down and boarded him.
Lieut. Tuttle came aboard with four
sailors and asked him for his papers.
Cant Jacobson gave them to him.
*te»fcTuttta. find discover! then W seeded freslf skins the ill fhipy the
eeltroom, took possession o«Sthe BuATTlien offoeanand
transferred thdm
after an honr’s waiting he told Swenson,
an able seamen, to take him to Sitka. United He
gave Swensen a letter to the
States consul, and then took off all the
guns and spec ra he coaid find and left.
As soon os the Bush was ont of sight,
Capt. Jacobson had Swensen brought
'*i&4'ii**li. «**<«.*.
you can do as you like. ”
Swensen, who is little more than a
boy, answered nothing and did not at¬
tempt to stop further proceedings.
Went Sealing Again.
The Indians at once started to make
fresh spear a ana the next day went
sealing. After this they captured 500
fresh skins and nine sea otters. Then,
anchor, and got out of the season Aug,
hiTrel
Many Other Sealers at Wo
got to the sea and at once started fish¬
ing operations, and Continued there un¬
molested. He did not sight the Bosh
at all and brought down 1,800 *'
1
He spoke the Maggie Mao, with a
of 600; the Mary Ellen, with a
1,000. and the Viva, with 1,600.
doing well Hie latter is out
Cape Flattery and is expected every
hour.
Th* Artel Hoards*.
The Ariel reports that on Aug. 1
Lieut Tattle boarded her, they had seen
the Rush coming iup and had 800 skins,
850 Under of which iiatohway, they managed Lieut* to secrete Tuttle
th©
come aboard and asked him what bank
he that was he fishing wak not on. fishing The fa oaptain r Behring replied
sea
RSfibaftrLAOtrci captain of the
warned the to get ont sea
£ As,aoon as the
Bush disappeared he started sealing
tured after being warned, He reports
speaking the Marie De Los Cruzes, a
schooner with 800 skins.
The seal schooner Henry Dennis,
rifo 400 skins, had a quick trip
Swtnieo wm Poirerlmt. * i
Sitka, but was power! Hfi
order against twenty-one men. saw
will the United Port States Townsend consul to Monday, deliver and tfe§
go to
letter to t he district attorney, them
Great Day in Chinatown.
San Fbancisco, Sept. 4.- Chinatown
Chinese, all featu* richly dressed, took part.
Hie main was which (to enormous
dragon. 100 feet long, was
by forty men. Its jaws were-constantly
opening Horse and and foot exhibiting soldiers a prooeeded, fiery tongue.
in gorgeously many wagons arrayed wme Qw al
as
urea. It was the greatest
town through ever produoed, densely and packed it
streets
Mongolia ns and .Americans,
Alleged Forger Arrested.
Kankakee, I1L, Sept 4—Dr. P. B.
charge Langdon of was forging arrested the Monday of County on
names
Judge Sawyer U38S . ami atioSi State’s to
.
or Dr. M.
*%SatiS3£“ ; ,W
murder suspect He is jail .in
of ft,MO.
__
A Rnmor Revived.
ministration droles it is evidently
nuner prove to be true, there is fear
the result upon the elections to be held
during the fall. This is one reason
given why the.o will be no ext ra session.
A> ether Maathaa Town Be mod.
i swept the val-
in a miner’s camp and up
ley, burning all the eastern portion of
Smtdllis, the comp. It hismfelndfour is snppoaad that children, a man
lost their fives. There are also three
mm missing, and they ware undoubted¬
ly burned to death .___
Paoenger Train Stoned.
iowvibl*, Ind., Sept t—A
** OT ***-»
John Boon,
1 and'
is the fifth
long^
urnie samn ’ral to wreck the train.
GBIFFIN, GEORGIA. THURSDAY MORAfJNG, SEPTEMBER 5. I88!>.
• U8T OF 0a.EQ ATE8
To the C eng r ese of American Nations to
! Be Hold to Washington Neat Meath.
| New Yob*, Sept 4—lb. Charles R
Kotic^nX W*r^$&ron commissioner
ot hia appointment as to
represent the United States at the oon-
gtess «t Amerioau nations to be held in
Washington on the 19th of October
next
Mr. Flint also received from the sec¬
retary of the state the official lint of the
delegates who wifi be present and repre¬
sent the following countries:
Argentine Republic -Seuor Vineenti
^Bolivia Senor—Jitah E. Velarde.
Brazil — Councillor Lafayette R.
Peroirih.
Colombia—Senor J. M. Hurtado.
Costa Rieo—Senor Pedro P«ez Zele-
don.
Ecuador—Ex-President Jose Mann
Camoano. u *»-f
Guatemala -Dr. FeinMido Cruse.
Honduras—Jeronimo Zelava.
Mexico -Angel Qrtesey Monasterio.
Nicaragua—Dr. Pern Zegorra. Horamo Guzman-
-F. C. O, -
Venezuela—Nicanor Bolet Perasa.
States The commissioners the conference from the the UMigR follow¬
to are
ing named gentlemen:
John B. Henderson, of Muaonri.
SsJESS' T. Jefferson Coolidge, of Masvaahu-
setts.
William Henry Taacott, of South Oar-
MorS JL Esteo, of CaliforniT
John r . Haunon. of Georgia.
MURDE RED HIS FRIEND.
Mysterious Death of a Young Englishman
at Denver. 11 f
Denver, CoL, Sept 4— There is a
mystery connected with the tragical
death of H. H. Turner, a young En-
g |i'nliToun who came from Birmingham,
England, vested $4 ago. He in-
county and lost it Arriving in this city
ggSSffi. e vco'^llS
i urn Or went zo mg room iaonuay
and a shot was heard a few min
later. found him The lying landlady in pool rushed of blood in
a
a bullet hole through his temples.
As Turner had been depondent for
sometime over the loss of his money and
because of a separation that had oe.
coned between himself and his wife,
who, with their child, is now in Wet
mountain valley, the theoiy of suicide
was at firet accepted, but it was found
that his skull had been crushed like an
:-shelL though the no right wonnds (were viai-
t over PreSSe<fsUarplTagaln8t eye, where a
W
____
The head was in suoh a pulpy con¬
dition that it yielded to the touch of a
finger Snw and ...........its the fort head fell in of its own oi
ug*** s -w r _ m. that it
was a case or jnurctey *u wuiou oh the toe Yi vic¬
tim had been sandbagged before the
shot was fired. Upon this statement
Cox present wae lodged surmised in jail for his The only cattse de¬
at supposed
sire to have his friend out of the way ia
tween traced him to reported and Turner’s relations wife, existing be*
F TAL BRIDAL ROBEQ.
A Georgia lowly stricken Dead on th# Kv«
of Her Wedding.
Atlanta, Ga. Sept 4.—Near Bowder
Springs Monday what was to have
been neral. a wedding The daughter turned of out CqI. to John be a Mo- fu¬
Fadden And Edward Smelt, at Charles¬
ton, were to have been married at 3
.’clock. Col. McFadden, who is one of
eat maids. irom several states to act as brides¬ ,'#!
1
layed Sunday bemfi night the her bride robes expectant far the
m friends. W-
speotion of her For a few mo¬
ments the greatest hilarity existed,
hand when to suddenly her forehead Miss McFadden with pat and her
a scream
fell to the floor. She was dead. The
body, arrayed as it was for the wedding,
was hud out for burial, and when Mr.
Smelt the appomted rode up time, Monday he found afternoon, j£at fig he
was at a f uneral instead of a w edding.
Stabbod to Death by a Farmer,
Bloomington, 111., Sept 4— D. B.
Lindley, a prominent merchant of
and Kenny, almost DeWitt instantly county, killed was Monday stabbed by
J. D. Waldron, a fanner, living near
found upon lindley going fo iris res¬
idence he there with his
(Waldron’s) wife whereupon, under compromising in fit
circumstances, he killed a t™ of
passion, struck and
Lmdley tation while has Waldron always borne has a been good notori¬ repu¬
ous for his violent beepdid temper, and hm
wife’s rep utation bus ow par,
Snlalded |a th* 8*0.
Providence, R. 1, Sept 4 —John B.
Haines, hospital aged 05, the an inmate insane of here, the But¬
ler for com¬
jumping mitted suicide info Narragansett Monday afternoon bay from the by
UlSaSlWsriSJ&lSK steamer Day Star, in which he was go-
instantly been struck killed. by foe The paddle deceased wheel moved and
to and Boston from about Pittsburg fifteen with hi* wife
two sons, yean ago,
He bought a fine house in Roxbury and
a palatial residence at 334 Beacon street mind
Lost spring when oil stock fell his
became no affected. i
They'll . Be la She Soap.
Baltimo opened .dkpnday be, Sept 4—The morning, oyster qdbty sea-
,...... son . a
forenoon several vessels have amvad
with small cargoes at the retail
in EastB<imore. The bival
large mid of fine quality, and s
ing month briskly foe at good hare prices. the waters For this fo
themselves fcmgers free from the mol stati
e
foe dredgers who are not allowed by
law to begin work until October. Some
oystanuen rijorts who have been over tlm beds
the oysters as bring vary pleats*
Hotel Banal.
LuiOkroA
wM BPJ
a.t«rei> Loudos Ih Wwl; »rikerH. Am..* the
k ia* j
Consequently the City Fears
-w an Outereak.
Tire AuUnwItt*. Fwintrtnt for > an *m#r-
B»***y—Th# Book Eohorer* of Uvsrpool
Strike—Dl»oont»»t AsSohg SeMrik U-
bnrere -Mr. 0-8rl*s1 Trl.nd* AIaras#d
atitt* A.Nsw*; '
London, Sept 4 - Hunger ia doing
its Work among the army of strikers,
and the general imprecate* prevails that
the point usually ha* been disregards reached law. when neces¬
sity Conse-
concentrated near the river front end
rsr
t at once ro-
Monday ■i delegation ipany man¬
agers to the repre-
seoting them the eighty privilege ship of emptying owners, refusing men to
load and discharge their ship, it is
feared will produce a depressing effect
upon the strikers when it beoomes gen¬
erally known among them, and that de¬
crowds spair might have wondrously lead to violence. thus far mani¬ The
fested the virtue of patience, and when
they reach the oonolusion that it has
oeaied to be a virtue than will follow a
terrible tumult in London. H ’
Three thousand tailors struck Mon¬
day and were out on parade.
Skip Owners’ Proposition.
A deputation headed by Sir of prominent Donald Currie, ship called own¬
ers,
upon the committee representing the
the'men, my should
engage and pay Mr. ■. Norwood,
ehmrman of the joint dock committee,
foe companies ^^ could not ao-
■“ ^’ foriher dis-
oommittee of
..... .
owners a definite ..... answer, amf ex¬
pressed tion for a discussion willingness to ci^es'and to the submit Ijoint the commit- ques¬
tees of the dZ requesfod *’ n ’ M K i dill ship TV
He that the eom-
panics submitted express s their their views views in in —’ writing 1 ‘- - to
be to the ship owners’ meet-
Folioe Armed With Revolvers.
For foe first time since foe beginning
This certainly
indicates , that trouble is looked for.
Notwithstanding city appeared this quiet precaution, Monday foe
fo«n more and m
ing ing tested fested than less less Sunday, Sunday, pnpatienoe lmpatieno and foe foe UM foan strikers strikers for manL m
some
cgfes* at f moment night, i In At by still anticipation may foe considering be wharfingers accepted of this a
event any foe remain but
easily men that quiet, it’ can
be seen under their assumed
of the pending followed negotiations by deeds would of be
at onoe savage
vengeance upon foeir supposed op¬
pressors.
to a« fhmUnnsd,
The strikers, at a meeting Tuesday
morning, decided to continue foe strike.
Fraq^. Germany mid Switzerland.
John Burns Tuesday acknowledged foe
receipt Threats of £3,000. have been matte that if Sir
Donald Currie took his vessels to South¬
ampton single steps ship fr would unload be taken ing. to prevent
a om
Diseautent in Scotland.
the Dundee, trades Sept 4,—The chairman in session of
here, in an address to the delegates
dwelt in southing terms on the discon¬
tent wrought owing to foe among uncertainty the working
classes of work
and foe unequal distribution of the
fruits of labor.
_____
Strike at Liverpool.
sels Liverpool, here has been Sept, suspended, A —Work on the all doek ves¬
men who had been employed on the
grain and flour laden ships having
struck for an increase in their wages of
a shilling a da y.
Mr. O’Brien's Friends Concerned.
London, Sept is serving 4—Mb, William
proclaimed pow a sentence
1 causing a hw friends meeting muoh at
iwren;, by his *- positive refusal to allow
oonoern
them to trice his any release. legal steps with a view
to securing
Terrible Earthquake.
London, Sept 4.— A severe shook of
Waal* a Fall Over a Barrel,
Chicago, Sept. 4, — A special dispatch
to a morning paper said that C. D.
Graham, foe man who “shot Niagara”
to a barrel, had received a letter signed
by Mum May Maroband. of fois city, to
whioh she expressed a desire to go over
foe falls to the same way.
Northern Iowa Cara.
Iowa Sept, 4—T, 8.
through frost nr Iowa Mftfeas demon-
| 1 WPSrS better
seen crops in
i£jj|^a»edr eighteen years,
Monopoly's- Esteifin. '
foe
NORTH ILLINOIS MINERS.
teas* Troubles Settftd Raeapt in to. Z.
- v. Scott’s Minos.
Joliet. HI, Sept 4— The conference
of foe ooal miners and coal operators,
held here Monday afternoon, resulted
in a settlement of the wage troubles
throughout the northern Illinois coal
fields and an early resumption of work,
exoept in the mines of W. L Scott
The operators, all of whom were repre¬
sented, barring Mr. Scott gave their ul¬
timatum about 5 p. m., after a two hours'
session.
Their terms were a reduction of seven
and one-half cents a ton, no disoount on
store orders, a reduction ef 50 per oent
fields
sition until addition Monday evening amUinally
sired in the item of rent free
daring going to foe work. strike The and no victimizing refused on
operators
be as desired.
|. |_____ . and R oa d In s-
Reading, Fa., Sept 4.—This Motion
big of foe industrial Schuylkill boom valley Monday. experienced The roll¬ a
ing milk pipe and tube mills and foun¬
dry idleness of the Reading of months, Iron company, resumed after
an six par¬
tial operations Monday afternoon, and
in a week’s time are expected to run
full handed, when 2,000 men will again
be steadily employed. The company’s wfth.
sheet mill is already running mQl, 300
men. slight trouble McUvaine’s with its rolling employes, after also a
re¬
sumed. This mill employs 300 men.
Hteol-Workers Out.
Pittsburg, Sept 4— The new em¬
ployes works, ot who foe Allegheny took foe Bessemer place of steel the
strikers against last spring, scale presented struck Monday city foe
a new
firm. scale to On the Saturday employes, foe Ity the firm acceptance offered a
of which, foe firm claimed, more money
could be made by the workers, Sun¬
day night foe scale was presented to the
men on the night tarn, but they re¬
fused to accept it and struck. Monday
foe same thing was done by the day
turn, and the mill is idle. About 500
men are affected__,
, important to CJqarmakem.
St. Louts, Sept 4.—In foe United
States circuit court Monday Judge
Thayer that the rendered counterfeiting a decision of to foe foe union effect
label used pn cigars cannot be prevented
cigarmakers’ or punished. organization The ruling will in foe affect United foe
States and Canada, it is claimed, very
seriously, foeir label as is it of practically value whatever. decides that
no
PUBLIC DEBT STA TEMENT.
An Xasreate Darin* tbs Month ot Aiqut
of Over Ed,000,000.
Washington, Sept. 4—The public
debt statement just issued from foe
treasury deportment shows an increase
of foe debt during foe month of $6,076,-
693. debt During July past the increase thus in
the amounted to $1,017,811,
two making months foe increase of foe in current the debt fiscal for foe
$7,094008. The bonded indebtedness year
has been reduced $16,890, (WO during
the past month, and now amounts to
$878,578,803. The net cash or snrplus
to foe treasury to-day amounts to $48,-
mouth 489,909, or 133,307,180 less than a
National ago. bank depositaries hold $83,-
835,985 of government funds, or about
two millions more than , on August 1.
The gold fund balance has decreased
about two million, and to-day amounts
to $180,654670, and foe silver fund bal¬
ance, exclusive of $6,000,000 trade dollar
bullion, has decreased about seven and
a half millions, and now amounts to
$19,963,640,
Government receipts during foe past
monfo aggregated than $34470,905, about
$135,000 Customs less to August, round 1888.
bers, $90,500,000, receipts were, in $31,970,000 num¬ to
August, 1888, and ftgamBt internal revenue
re
ceipts million were and $11,955,000, half or than nearly a
gust a greater in Au¬
a year ago.
Expenditures unusually during heavy, the amounting past monfo
were to
$88, *69,349, 1888. against $24,115,888 to
August, foe past month The amounted pension to charge $20,248,- for
August, 969, or nearly 1888. $9,000,000 The pension more ohargo than for in
the two months of foe current fiscal
year amounts to $35,402,214 or fully
$9,500,000 more than for the months of
July and August last year, but about
this $6, iKKLOOO and of pension used money to paid pensions out
due during year the was pay
lost quarter of the pre¬
ceding fiscal yean
Receipts and expenditures for the two
months of the current fiscal year, com¬
the pared preceding with the corresponding were months follows: at
Receipts, July and yoqr, August, as $06,-
July and 1889,
857,105; August, 1888, $65,-
828,078,
$90,267,842; Expenditures, July July and and August, August, 1889,
1,257,300,_ 1888,
Poison In th-. Cheese.
Cleveland, hands O., Sept 4.—Fifteen
thrasher were poisoned Monday
near m!— Tiffin, O. eating cheese. All
were taken violent iU, and it ia feared
some of them will ie. Particulars are
not at hand, ■king but Bettsville it Appears foe men
were worl at a on the farm
of Joseph SchwartzmiUer. Cheese waa
freely dinner. partaken Soon after of eating by the fifteen laborers of foe at
men were taken violently ilL
Lowry's Present Mission.
Jackson, occupying Sept his 4.—Governor attention with Lowry foe
is now
race troubles. He induced the whites
who bad assembled at Greenwood to
disperse, the trouble. instead Nothing of going yet to the has soene been
of
heard of foe troops emit up foe river.
Roe* War In Alabama.
Bibminghae, Ala., Sept 4, — Last
Tuesday night Us John Lawrenoa, by colored white,
was killed m store two
burglars. The negroes were captured
and lynched. The tragedies have set
the whites and blacks wild, and both
sides are Mining with Winche sters.
Reunion or Abollttonbts.
tionists Boston, will Sept be %—A held Sept reunion 83, of to Aboli¬ Tre-
mont temple, to oalebrate foe qnniver,
Eitehlre HOB lia, o town uwu boiii QAnt out ou, tn w suuvisvsrj anti-elavorv
men throughout the country.
SM KING.
Malfeton Returns from the Mar¬
shall Islands to Apia.
His Flag Recognized by the
Americans and Engliah.
He Is Accompanied b j Tw Chief* aad
HI* Brother Who Were Deposed with
Hint—Mstoofo and Malletoa on Oood
Terms with Raoh Other—The Former
will Continue to Reign for th* Preteat
San Franomoo, Sept 4.—The oorre-
tat
Molietea, king of Samoa, who «i« de¬
ported by the German naval forces near¬
ly two years ago, returned from his exile
at Jaluit Marshall islands, Sunday,
Aug. 11. foe The German o'elodk gunboat Wolf
arrived to harbor at 3 to tbs
afternoon. * ,
. Hi* Flog Recognised.
When the vessel came to anchor Mal-
ietoa was seen standing on the deck.
The flag of foe returning monarch was
immediately hoisted ou shore, aad
deported with also
were
Canoe* Keep Their Distance.
No canoes were allowed to approaob
SASsWrt
day. A little before dark, however, a
number of foe natives were seen hurty-
im rathe direction ofthe Matautu,
where ft* German consulate was situa¬
te* 1 - aseertainwi that Malletoa
and foe chiefs were oomtog ashore on
one of the Wolf's boafovnfo Dr. Stne-
bel, German consul of general, and Folsu,
chief magmtrate Samoa, who had
gone aboard the Wolf an hour before.
Molietea Lands.
spot where foe landing w
foe boat touched mlied asaistedM^etoa the
Stuebel sprang out and
to land onoe more upon his native
shore. The latter was taken at once to
Folau’s house, where he was followed
by a number of people.
An Affsetln* Meeting.
The meettog between Malietoa trad
his relatives was most affecting. The
women fell on their knees and teased
his hands, and foe whole party, includ¬
ing The foe greatest king, were expressions weeping of all joy foe time.
ll were
heard, and a present extended sympa-
ned *r<s off * by ittwRiwpii foe Germans wroj ftnu and peen landed Oal,*
first at the Oameroons, one of the most
taken unhealthy shores to the world, and
from there to Hamburg os a steer-
pony whit with three 1 JSS of theh^|hesrcm»^i retamedp rty
re¬ DiJto *
'• United states
— for his assistanoe they would have suf¬
fered severely.
Oreeted By Mataafa.
About half an hour after Mal¬
ietoa had arrived at at the tue bourn. nouse.
Mataafa, who had been i ffiiff&iiiff dorioff
his absence, arrived
relative to be most oordially.
a careworn man i __
in health. Tho white residents present
drank the health of foe two mon¬
arch*, and an invitation was then given
to attend an impromptu edited hanquet, The
greatest good wfll between the
two kings. Among those who called
daring foe evening waa who United States
Vice Consul Blacklock, waa warm¬
ly reorived by both. On foe follow¬
ing day Malietoa ** went to Mataafa'*
where" ^ ■
house i he was received with
royal salute.
Perfect Amity.
The two kings will remain in foe
sime house for foe present. A
of Mataafa perfect will amity retain exists oontrol between of them.
until a satisfactory settlement is made,
Recognised by Uncle Sam.
The American schooner Lena Swasey,
lying to foe harbor, hoisted
flag acknowledgement on the day of his of fois return. kind No
was
ItytimBophte American British orWoH man-of-war There was to
or
harbor.
British Kea-ef-Wor.
The British men-of-war Opal, lizard
and %eria have been stationed at
o harbor recently. They
on the Orlando.
THE EXCITEM ENT WAS TOO MUCH.
An Aged Tennesseean's Witte aad
Ride on n Railroad Train.
Nashville, Sept 4 -Campb
Walton rede to his death Monday.
was an odd man of over 50 who lived
with his wife near Castlean Springs
Sumner county, and neither of
had ever been on a railroad train
Monday. and got on They foe train rode over oomtog to to
ville. Walton went into foe
car, leaving his wife to foe parlor ear,
He was apparently much excited
his novel journey, and in half an
from the time he started he
fell deed in his seat His wife was noti¬
fied and his body was taken from
tiara to Saundersville. His death
caused by heart disease, and
by foe excitement it is supposed, of
strange jo urney.
_
Mail Roblnr A xr—til.
San Franomoo, Joseph Sept
Messenger W. Quest
arrested employed here at Beaver charge Fells, of Pa, robbing has
on a
mails to Beaver last January. Falls for trial. He will While be
con¬
veying mails from the postoffioe to
train he Mole a package
$8,500.
Boater Killed by a PmlL
Chambkbsburo, aged Pa, Sept 4-
Needham, 22 years, was foi
Monday near FWairH*, fnr«
county He]
to get a squirrel he had killed.
< - - - - •<
Archbishop tUordan
Abe Iron, batter,,
linghatu, Ala.
Mr*4
Harbor Grace, If. F, I
Mr*. Jennie float as
H*<
out of d
A M
Iowa, 1
|?Sl wirewf- He * a
The ,
Hwry €
friend* or a
i^^i o f fi
to return to 3
Undo' Count 1
vocate* win will not not b» oe * i
Mto mal o a# tKa Hjtlfi-Xre s
D 19 fro tmtmi t
Ireland.
Betting a
on next Monday, is 1___
odd* of 6 to 4
The d- 11 -" military r '*
exDerimentiatc with m
tamtonetke doublet
to Kharkoff tba police 1
bsr of printing prasste
Austria The,.
Styria,bss unantbortaed bad to
the p
■S'W.-jA
Sbah c< Portia ww
tin, on hi* journey
trom the track'
city of Bar, in
saw
Jacksonville, ;