Newspaper Page Text
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/ • { *?,..
AKP rgarCTJST.
VOLUME 18.
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, U 8. A.
Griffin i» the beet and moet promising little
ity in the South. Its record for the part
hall decode. ite many new enterprises in oper¬
ation, building and contemplated, prove this
o ! e a bu sin ess statement and not a byper-
olicol description. into
During that time it has built and put
most successful operation a •100,000 cotton
notary and with this year started the wheels
of a second of more than twice that capital,
ft hns put up a large Iron and brae* foundry,
a fertiliser factory, an immense ice and hot-
tling works, a sash «u I blind factory, ft
broom factory, opened aptheflnert granite
qnarry in the United States, and now has
our large oU mills in mors or lees advanced
stages of construction, with an aggregate au¬
thorised capital of over hid! amfltamdolta**.
it is putting up the Street system ol electric
h-liting that can be procured, and|has ap-
plied for two charters for street railways. It
has secured another railroad ninety mileelong.
and while loeated on the greatest SyatemiB
the South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its Important rival, tire Bart Tsn-
uef see, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain¬
ed direct independent connection with Chat
tanooga and the West, and will break ground
n a few days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With its five white and fonrcolored church
e», it has recently completed a #10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It has increased its pop-
ufatio* by nearly ok* flfth It bos attracted
around its borders fruit growers from nearly
iMisry State in the Union, until it ia no# sur¬
rounded on nearly every eide by orchards
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
I ruit evaporators in the State. It ie the home
of the grape and its wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
seven years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of u half decade
and simply iStaws the progress of an already
admirable city« with-the wrtwri. advantage*
of having the finest climate, summer and
sinter,in the world. ;
Oriffln is the county eeat of Spalding coun¬
ty, situated in went Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
above sea level s By the penans of 1890, ft
sill have at alow estimate between 6 000 and
7,000 people, and they are ail of the right
sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wcl
come if they bring money to help boild up the
own. 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 too limited for our
usine s, pleasure aud health seeking guests.
If you see anybody that want#a good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the Sooth, jnet mention
Griffin.
Griffin i* the place where the Griffin Nuws
s published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
und sill have to be changed in a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
o in pie ted.
■» r> ;
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENKlf C. PtEPLES,
ATTORN BY AT LAW,
n • urrox, okoiiuIa.
Practice* u all the State aud Federal
onrts. ortlWdwly
JOHN J. it HU JPtol T, f?
A T T O U N13
orikvin, ueohuia.
Office, ill Hill Street., Up Stairs, ovet J. H.
W iti te’s Clothiw Store. umr22dftwl.y
IH0S. a. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice in the State and Federal
Cuurte. Office over George A Hartnett*
corner. nov2tf
OHM D STEWART. HOST. T. DAN1KJ..
STEWAnT & DANIEL
A T TORNEYS AT LAW,
Uver George A Hartnett.’*, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice in the State and Federal
rts. julylftdtf
ClEVcLANO & GARLAND,
DENTISTS,
GRIFFIN. GEORGIA.
HOTEL CURTIS
jfWituuL
Under New Management.
A. D. DANIEL, Prep’r.
• » let* meetsMtrniw.
RUPTURE
No A detention written guarantee to AMokurtlaf 0pn*.
from bneinese. Endorsed by
“.....I Rultcd State..
MW CROP TORRIP SEED!
Vli the beet varieties, bought direct from
■ growers.
I OILS at tiw low-
fin the DRUG LINE. Call and
J. N. HARRIS * SON,
Perilous Fxperience of tbe Bark
Alsylvla’s Crew.
Kept Continually at the Pumps
for Five Days.
■eroisat at the Captain'* Wire—The Ves¬
tel Finally Abandoned—Picked Bp hy a
Paeetag Steamer—Lui of tit* la the
Vicinity of Ltvu estimated at Vorty-
Thrno—Damage Sot Over as.ooo, oeo.
other Notes of the Great Storm.
Kxw Yoke, Sept 14,—The unparallel¬
ed storm whioh has svyept the Atlantic
ooast the past week furnishes many
tales of suffering and disaster. The
dark piotured is brightened occasionally
by bits of personal of heroism.
A Kttle baud shipwrecked mariners
was rescued by the steamship Yemassee,
from Charleston, after a terrible
struggle with the storm. The rescued
party consisted of Gapt J. P. Bull, of
the Norwegian bark Alsylvia; his wife,
a woman of rare oourage; their two
little children, a boy and girl, and thir¬
teen two days sailors. and two They nights were to the exposed fury for of
the elements, every minute
that a wave would sworn
their waterlogged craft
wounds Yemassee. as he lay in a berth on the
The Captain's Story.
On n weighed the the morning anchor of Sept at Perth 3, the Alsyl-
via and sailed sailed for for Copenhagen. For Amboy four
days fair weather of Saturday, prevailed, Sept, but on dark, the
afternoon 7,
threatening the barometer clouds began obscured to fall the hori¬
zon, rapidly and the wind freshened. very
As
the night came on it beoame dark and
moody. The barometer was still fall¬
ing and every hoar the wind, whioh was
now ham east northeast, was increasing
in violenoe. About 10 p. m. Sunday
the storm had increased to a wild hur¬
ricane. Capt Bull decided to heave to,
A° terrible ^^SfronMng making clean aad B of. *iS the
waves were a sweep
vessel’s deok. ,H >:
heavy Monday battering the storm of the continued. began The to
waves
tell and the vessel began to leak. Pumps
were started, but the water increased
rapidly. disclosed Tuesday nearly morning three the feet pump of
wells
water in the hold, and it was fast in¬
creasing. Capt Boll concluded to head
for shore, and ail Tuesday, under bare
POlCB. lift n/vii /I flA.1 hftfflTfl tl,Q IlTlTTiCfl.il0
Mindly he should malting have his to way abandon for Und his in ship. case
Amid tiie hurricane’s wild roar, his ves¬
sel Fathom water-logged, bank lightship the lights of dimly the Five visi¬
were
ble Wednesday had morning. feet of water The in vessel her
bow over ten
hold. Her decks and cabins were a
complete wreck, and everyone aboard
was exhausted from exposure.
away didn't help mat
deok was almost flush i with water. The
crew endured untold hardships 1
A Brave Woman.
That night the cabins were entirely
flooded, and Mrs. Bull and her two lit¬
tle children had to go up on the ooop
deck, while the captain and his men
bravely tried to keep their vessel afloat
nntQ assistance oame. After a wild and
compelling Mrs. Bull to lash they a child to
each of her arms while grimly
faoed dawned their and found fata the Thursday Alsylvia morning ready to
■ink wind at and any moment. had moderated Although only the
sea a
trifle, Capt Bull launched his two boats
and all hands left the vessel. They set
signals distance of from distress the ship. and rowed a short
Beieaml.
Hope at last came to them. Away in
ing the down distanoe a steamer them. was It proved sighted to bmr- be
the Yemassee. upon Both boats rowed toward
the steamer, and after a most perilous
trip reached her in safety.
THE L OSS OF LIFE.
The United Free* Place* it at Forty-Three
In the Vicinity of Lewei.
Lewes, thirty Del., Sept 16- Twenty-nine
of the oottages at Point Pleasant
were washed away by the storm, and
oooupants were forced to take to boats
to escape.
The town of Milton and Slaughters
Beach were also partially submerged.
The number of lives lost here is vari¬
ously estimated at one to four soore.
None of these estimates is based upon
fnetn hoing merelv suppositious found-
od on extravagant rumors heard on
street ' v
ownry oanmr. -
The United Press computation of the
number ol look within a radius of right
mile* of Lewes/whioh is the oenter of de¬
struction is as follows: Pilot .boat, Ebe
W. Tunnell, total crew mid pilot,
fifteen; schooner Bryan, six; schooner
Snow, six; schooner Parker, seven;
barge total, Wallace, forty-three. five; bugs Towanda,
four; actual list however, foot
Hie may, * up
twice the number.
Hie damage to shipping within a
radius of ten miles of Breakwater, which
it was at first feared would exceed
$5,000,000, it is now thought will fall
below t8.000.0 0ft ,
Large Vessel Gee * Aehore.
Babnesat, N. J., Sept Ift-A bag g
shin on her beam of the ends gale and i . i uin|rf > i b by
at fiie mercy keeper was seta of the
Capt J. H. life Bidgeway, saving statacm. F riday
greasing Banegat about three miles off ahore/wtn
the station. She continued to drift in
boat r^^sasrstssfiCre
__
S art tier Vessel Akaadaned.
n a cruise Friday, 1
and arewof tost
in a
' m J miles south i ol
Towed te the li Breakwater.
The steamer Old Dennison whisk
arrived here Friday, when thirty miles
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA! TttESDA 1 SEPTEMBER IT, 1889.
off Fenwick
dismasted aud The wallowiwt Old Dominion in the trough towed; |
ol On sea.
s js heavy »
Philadelphia with ice. Suoh a work
aea was running that it waahard
to get a hawser condUtod aboard. oFtwelve The McFar-
laml crew men be¬
sides the captain, who had lus wife
aboard as a pas senger. r ,
Still Another.
Boston, Bept 18.—Bark Catarina B,
from Pensacola tor Swansea, was aban¬
doned in a sinking condition on the 11th
insi The captain and five men were
drowned. The remaining seven were
rescued and landed here by the steamer
Dana. , -
Three Women Be eeoed. ' '
New Torn, ^ept lft-Ohmdes Ereis-s
for, his had wife been and two imprisoned grown daughters, then-
who mmdpws, in
dwelling on the Hoboken
were rescued Friday. They had been
confined to the second story of their
small house for two days, and had been
without food for thirty-six hours. The
water was above the first floor, and the
prisoners were assisted out through the
window. ■ ■ < ■
B ASEBALL .
Standing of the American J
tloa and League Clubs.
ASSOCIATION GAMES.
Athletic........'.......... SLLouti....................... Brooklyn....... Baltimore..................... ................ f
Cincinnati... ......V,.. St
KaneeaCity..............«
Columbus. ............ *8
■ Louisville................ — ..St
NATIONAL league.
"■ ‘ ■ ’Wsa.
Boston....................... . 70
New York...................... «7
Philadelphlk... ..... ...... 57 s
Chicago..................5-^ 5*
Cleveland...................
Indianapolis-........... 89
HtWbmg ....................... «
Washington............... 38
GREA T INDIGNA TION
In Louisiana Over the Recent t utors ik ^
.. t ,; In Lafayette-
,
Nkw Obleanb, SepL 16.—There is
sonsiderable excitement and very gen¬
eral indignation here over the repent
outbreak in Lafayette. There are
many here who do not hesitate to say
that if Louisiana cannot do better than j
she has been doing lately iu the way off
suppressing lawlessness, peaceable and
law-abiding citizens will be forced to
ask fiie interposition of the Federal
authorities in the cause of humanity,
and for the protection of life and prop¬
erty. The dispatohes from Lafayette
furnish additional details of the butch-!
exy of old Cormier and big daughter ,
2f
publish the names of any suspected of
being The implicated flogging is in thus these described: crimes. John
Judioe, the man slain by Cormier, night open¬
ly boasted in a bar room the be¬
fore that he was going to whip a lot of J *
negro men if he got Ins throat dut for
it The first that was known of the
regulators by crowd being of about was working their discov¬ in
ery field, a who negroes riding down a.
corn saw them
They the road knew leading they to L’Anse regulators Bennehan. from
were
the fact that they were mounted and
armed with Winchesters, and all were
masked. sought In the a moment hedges the and ootton secreted pick¬
ers
themselves as best (hey could.
On rode the band Until they reached the
Utile cabin that contained the negro Lu-
rien and Montgomery, Toby Cobb, his his fnend, wife and who, children, being
belated spend the on the night road, They had dropped first tried in to to
get the occupants to open the door, but
being refused, forced it and seizing the
two negro men bonnd their wrists.
They then led them about 1,000 foet
Diacinff revolvers at their heads, warned
them nut to halloa. With a harness
lacerated traoe nailed their to a bodies hiokory and bludgeon limbs, whioh they
left wound* that will require months to
heal. concerned, In foot, it so is far question a* the whether man Toby he
is a
will ever reoover, .. ..
started Again by mounting the road, their tearing ponies their they vic¬
tims to get home the best way they
oould. Montgomery reached his home
to find that ins wife and children had
fled to the swmnps,
A Nonpftper Investigate*.
With reference to the possible capture
and oonviotion of the murderers, The
Times-Demoarat’s correspondent says:
"I traversed the entire portion of the
parish visited by the regulators, and in¬
that terviewed eventful everybody night and who saw gathered the mob suffi¬ on
cient faots short to justify time the number statement of that the
in a very a '
-------‘ *" the bars in
evident that
______ - no trouble in gathering al¬
all the evidence, not only to identify in this
most every man who participated
triple tragedy, but to convict each and
every one of them, if those who furn¬
ished it were guaranteed protection, but
without this nothing can or will be
done, for there is a reign of terror per¬
vading this parish that is appalling to
c«n “Men template. speak in whispers, and hardly
dare till* mob, to say anything afraid that they reflects that it upon will
to are
reach their ean. Some of the men who
testified before the ooroner's jury gave
pm bef that 7s they
than they wore willing to
-..a*.
astonish them. The whipped^S nepoee kfitodAnd
these who were beer the
lastVegrcteS end quiet,
ana were the tc here whom
believed would have
m C. FredmtitaaSs*. a V *J*
r H, O.j Sent, 1ft—A
Smith, of Iowa,
WfclttM
Tlw .a^ SHUd tie
•es tf- ■ - ■ t--■ « b*» I
Ttve Strike ra to Return to Work
Im mediate ly.
Tke Battrt- Ughkvrlnea the Lrn te Crfti-
See Areateu* Vke Atpil^qk-
■*»9
erihe;
mitted to
yes, mid the last ol
The Daily Telegraph i commenting on
the strike, says: It. !t is is not z too muon to
say toft A.Mft«M has t»*en squan¬
dered, while there aro n< i wanting
prophets, who declare that l * port of
London will norm reoover \ its fornwr
prosperity. We scarcely tiiink that
while if the casual laborer is well out
and replaoed by a mote
oiganized will have to set be of done w I .«S
<u
THE ANT WERP
The Dead Nee* here 1SB|
Antwebp, SepL lft—N<
of ilm cartridge factory
explosion occurred on the
village of Austraw*
ted 200 meters from
stood, and which
forty ^houses, has
i5®jcSirp«Ur of
the cranes. A number of merchandise
depots, inelnding the Prusabm stores,
For a distance yf from 500 to 1,000
being troleum surrounded got into the docks, (he ltepots
by a high embank-
m According to the official report 185
pensniai
100 were
Were killed by the explosion is not true.
Orl*ln Not Tet Established.
The governor's official report to the
minister of the interior says that noth¬
ing has as yet been clearly established e^ostoa.
‘
to those who
> by the disas¬
ter, tool gqvprnot ffiji: toe cartridge
factory worked three months without a
5SflS«lftSr5.TSJt the factory
after an inspection of and
toe imposition of striiigent regulations
for its management. The governor
Says he &ftftsb#l*o# *hether the city
authorities’ inspection was adequate or
not When; toe explosion occurred an
inquiry to aocident ww proceeding thaCEiS with resulted reference from
an
the unauthorized introduction of a
sufferers. ’nrn to
I
WHITE ECH A PEL’S LATEST
Will in All ProbahUtty Be Placed to the
.. * . Ripper*# Credit.
London, Sept 16. —In spite of all
probabilities the belief obtains among
the lower classes as well as in the minds
of many others that the mutilated body
found in the Cable street archway most
he added to toe list of Jack the Ripper’s
victims. . i •* i
New,paper Knterprlse.
Certain London and provincial acial iour-
nals and one American paper' liave kept
men detailed in toe Wrntoo 'teohapel dis¬
trict ering for the months fiendish past in murderer, hopes of who discov¬ has
added a destructive name and method
to toe history of crime, but notwith¬
standing night their their efforts watching have night yet been after iff
as
no avail.
Eoeh one of them has a different i
cay and if the wretch lus murderous is finally can work
or toe definitely of ceases their labors, their suspi¬
cions story and their baffled hopes would be
really interesting reading wounded if they vanity could
be induced to put aside
and relate their true experience.
Ne U«e ft Amateur Detective*.
The police detest these amateu r de¬
tectives, refuse them obstacle any. in information, their
and throw every is tost way.
Their most haunting fear these
impertinent intruders upon their sphere
of action may really discover some¬
thing, with the obvious result of oover-
ing them their with the discomfiture, below depreci¬ its
ating reputation and making their stupidi¬ eVen
present ty iest status and by-word. They already
a
bear toe press no good will on account
of the sarcastio remarks lavished upon
their lack of shrewdness and energy,
and there aro unfortunately no signs of
abetter understanding.
The Paper*' Theory.
The dailies appear to agree that the
last case does not look uke Jack toe
Bipper s handwork, and that they there might is
even go further and say no
“W# Told Too So."
Of course the prop he ts, fortune tell-
smses stem, and of the believers in this
some X"^g
jS£^SA tSSl
toms of «ueh p rognostica tions.
Oeoaa Racer*.
L« Drtoon, Sept lft-It has been de
Cunard line to build
yew. y Oi*4 . The AUU
________________of the In-
Mfee, breaking the record previous-
1 v _ held bv the Qnnarder Etruria, has in
the minds of the managers of the
Cttnard Hue made such a step neoce-
will be monstrous twin
built to beat tho record-
aii eye to making a four-
M*w/ Ukudaf.
Dublin, publishes Sspt. 16.—Hie Freeman's
Journal a letter fr «n Patrick
Delaney, Phoenix Phoenix park park who murders was implied! and is in tho in
mui now
in to a srtioh prominent the omiriot
piteously oiaiiM . hto rdoase from prison
as London a reward Times for giving the evidenee ~ Parnell for The
> com-
mission.
Klvetleo* in Brnll.
Bio Janribo, Sep*. 1ft—The
toe 81, give the opfwisition parties thirtv
s < mem¬
bers in th e house of reprea
TANNER Y 8UCCE 83 :R*
n ts Said MJaor Warner Ha* Been OWereil
the Petition.
Cincinnati, SepL 16. -The Evening
Poet publishes the following ^ special
from Washington:
Maj. Warner spent couple # of hours
a
witii President Harrison at toe White
'SsissioneiKhip of pensions, but that he
b^ness ^ affairs con arrange that at his the professional end of his
____ness so
official official t© term he can step bock into his
SE&HpSS fore him, such as nas been the case,
when other.cwmm^iseioners have left the
brought dJewayS by that tlie greiti; O. prosSnre LB. and has other been
friends for him to aooept and that the
president him and with Secretary persistence Noble have
KWiSg urged to accept — be A
ap-
Boumin* General Harder.
Inmanapoms, Sept 16.—The Grand
iss a ''fa«r“‘Sd. , s
-■Kasift -for pension commissioner to
■ansaesd tion will Corpwai be forwarded Tannor, to Wa and sh a in peti¬ gto
n
E his here^tliat appointment. It is
’ he will .be
that Gen,
for political reasons.
ANOTHER C HANCE FOR BOOMERS.
Four Million Acre* ot Land to Be Opened
In Minnesota.
St. Paul, Minn., Sept lft—Maj.
James Whitehead returned here Friday
night with the welcome intelligence
that over 4,000,000 acres of land ip
northern and central Minnesota is
thought to be opened to settlement
Commissioners Rice, Whiting quarrel and
toe Marty red got into at a Leech violent Lake, and about
men oame
dose to losing their lives. Find-
W to «oa.»«l «***«. 41*1. w
He left tiie party on the upper Miss-
issippi, impletc ippi, npletc aud aud reports reports of of arKhging (fat titet they they for made made tiie a a
success success
opening Leech up of Lake, the Prairie following Point, Cass
tions:
Lake, Winnebagosish, Falls and Sandy White Point Oak, Pog- Hus
egama leaves but other reservation to be
one
secured, namely, Bois Porte reservation,
which the commission will proceed to
visit without delay.
The work of tho commission will open
up for settlement 8,000.000 or 4,000,000
acres, only "rich, of splendid if regarded land, from which agricul¬ is not
an
tural point of view, but is well watered
and grown with valuable forests of both
pine regards mid the a variety terms of of hard the woods. He
beneficial to the Indians. treaty most
SYSTE MATIC STE ALING.
Row a Gan* of Clerk* anil Feddlvr*
Robbed Scranton Hawinm* House*.
Scranton, Pa, Sept. 16—A conspiracy
of clerks and peddlers organized for the
robbery of several of tiie principal
stores of Scranton has been run down
by the police arrested and nine Friday, of the and suspected held in
men were
boil for appearance at court. The ac¬
cused are wolf Johnson, keeper of toe
Russian hotel and receiver of the stolen
property, Charles A. Stroh, floor-walk
« and William. Bowto, eX-OlClX In
Germans’ dry Goodman, goods store; Alexander
Grass, Abe Max Goldberg,
Nathan Shipman, Herman Denier and
William Aoksreon.
The gang by was organized named John seven# Den¬
months ago a man stolen
ier. Most of the goods were con¬
veyed at night to Wolf Johnson's hotel
and Irwin k Tramfelter’a market in
Franklyn aftme, uflh price where considerably they were dis¬ less
than posed ooet of to party of peddlers who
a
were thus enabled to oiler unusual bar-
gams to their customers in the sur¬
rounding suburbs._
Fatal)* Stabbed a Minister.
Danville, Ind., Sept Clayton, 10.—Millard
Jones, a druggist of this ooun-
ty, Friday fatally stabbed toe Rev.
Smith, of the^Baptist church cl tills
town. Smith been abusing the
druggist of tiie town from his pulpit
and Friday he ind Jones met in toe
postoffice, a quarrel ensued and Smith
attacked Jones used with a pocket large cane, knife where¬
upon Jones several his upon
Smith, making outs in tiie abdo¬
men. Smith cannot survive Jones
wm arrested, him but toe toe ground magistrate that dis¬ the
missed upon
act was ju stifiable.
_
Ontrn* d Vet irao*.
Los AXGRLBS, Cat, Grand Sept l lft—At*
meeting of the four Ai Army posts
of Los Angeles As * “ Friday evening, a
<
of of three three from from each each port post wai was ap-
1 to investigate toe charges
&£&L ami
brutal treatment
tin paupers’ |
TBE 6EBM1E
About Those Who Emigrate
to America.
by Our Frankfort
Coneul General.
Oat u( Tan Are Fitted I* Bator «So
Varluu* Walk* ot Aetlvo Aaurlwm ll.'A
A* a Dai* TUey Are Stream Baaiettjr
and IotolUgaat, a ad Como With tho la-
tontlon of Workln*.
WAsamuTON, general Sept lft United - Jacob Muel¬
consul of the States
Frenkfort-oa-the-Main, writes to tbe
department in relation to emigra¬
to this country from Germany:
less than IS per cent, are
10 years, ft’» per cent, are between
and 5ft but by far rule,
20. 20. ™ Hie emigrants
are, as a
well trained and intelligent
The Greatest
business or labor in
trained, whom and iu wk_________
they go to the
Of tho &0 emiffratmar. factory opeii*
constitute 25 per cent, day labor¬
13 per cent, small farmers 25 per
18 per cent, miners # per oent,
10 per omit, with no definite trade
Notone emigrant in a dozen
They GdRnans Caw* Voluntarily.
With the their going is a
they have been told, that they must
nor do they hare day dreams of
made by doing nothiflg. in America, They
' a
is to be purchased one enjoyed by h. in *
______
NASHVILL E'S CITY H OSPITAL.
4* Claimed that the Patient* Rave Vet
Sufficient Food.
midfby aii Veiling* paper
reporter show a liormblo state of affairs
the city hospital here. Hie com¬
started from the neighbors, who
subjected the inmates, to piteous “For appeals God’s daily sake,
us to something death. ” Two to keep patients us from have
during the past week, and another,
who is now dying and who escaped from
it matters little to me. yet it may be the
means hind there. of helping Hie those who that are hospital toft be¬ is
managed is shame. way There is neither
a
attention to the medicine nor diet of
the inmates, and, white it isj
to die from sickneW, it is
y~ to »m.
breakfast; while, corn bread,
fcT soup, for dome; SSSti
bi«
were allowed no bread. For supper we
had black coffee and a biscuit
“I know from experience what food is
necessary for the sick, bat no prison
could be worse tiian what we got
and then not enough of it My stomach
would ffiib not bear »ucli food, uniTl and aa a re-
£82 is out little nope & for mo. now tfaere
told “When beggars We appealed to Dr. be Dnnn choosers, be
us must not
and our food wee good enough for pau¬
pers. I cannot live much longer with¬
out medical attention, but death is pre¬
ferable to returning again to the hospi¬
tal. It is worse than a prison, because
the Not inmates only neighlmrs are helpless. but patients and
visitors corroborate the story, and con¬
siderable excitement exists.
lllgamUt B i (*ed at Binning halo.
Birmingham, Hopkins Ala., Sept Ky., lft Jeff
Pncc of county, was
jailed here to this Friday county for early bigamy. lest winter Pnce
came
and located at Wheeling, where he en¬
gaged in business. In February last he
married Miss Fannie Palmer, a beauti¬
ful ^ and accomplished Ks&sWtuimt young lady, A
^
tucky. The matter trneS^He was investigated
and found to be married a
about Miss Edwards four in Hopkins county, Ky„
years a go ._ r
Didn't F l; fc* RaVre «.
New Orleans, has been Sept occasioned lft—Great in ex-
ritement com¬
mercial circles over the discovery that a
large number of floner millers In the
west their have been slapping here. The short fraud weight Has
to customers
been going on for months, but for some
reason the wbolsale men have faded to
make an exposure. The shortages have
been ranging all the way from one and
a estimated half to four that pounds these per fraudulent barrel. ship¬ It is
ments incl ude 10,000 barrels.
F«ntsk«l a rrdifacue,
Bikmincham, Ala., Sept lft-In Cull-
man qpunty, teacher Thursday of night, Bev. school, E.
R. Walls, a a country
was perhaps fatally of the assaulted school, ’ * by_ They a half
dozen patrons “ children wo-
cased severely. him of His whipping assailants their ir have children been
too
arrested and put under bond of 85.600
each to aw ait the results of hi s injuries.
«S**tl MfaeVs.
Brazil, Ind., Sewt, lft—The miners’
executive committee has derided that
the striking block coal miners may re-
is increasing.
Sept tb. —The
ft Guyasuto i
level Mum
N*w to*"
1ms stank
I have been I
read magnates
during «Hft i
dfe£K Jersey to j
°wfet ft ytto # ti
edr
as to benefit i
w.
Gordon, Tncnr, N. Y., i
i
Aalakta,
NewYoi
had some I
Jc
time v „
work of d
NEWS m
Ta rt — * I
K *“-’
hm. fries VMS
AU., far b%*iuy.
jzzsjrsr,
A. U. Corfcart died
day freon (
eS I ....
Arr** Disak '
LouisviUs Fridt
; ^ '
KQOWB piljSjl.IttUS l
Judge Blodgett la*d
that Me dressed terf,-
Ort Mto J
dXimn“ri fever. ^
Part O
an*, hast
bership Capt, in Sber the order. *_s*
arrested for tending Ob e c— s k
At Jersey Oty, “ “ ^
quarrel
mott.er.
Alf ratl Sa lmon
rttr** tSItedy
prompteJ tbe set.
Cardinal Mam
people in Loud,
in any place of
where the name
recognised.
With a population of i
moot ha* aft*
S 16 . 000 . 0 W to
One in every six «
hove money in tbe I