Newspaper Page Text
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A. 3 SIX 3 STJ 3 ST -
fnikin ....... ip llisi's!
FOR THE
Greet Fail In Prices
in
For / • considera¬
the youi following few ■
tion
facts with an eye sin¬
gle to the wants
<-***» IQttM
broad platform of Pro¬
founded gress atid liberality
upon immense
facilities. We have the
latest in styles, the fin¬
est in quality. The ut¬
most combined in variety have in
been mighty effort by us for
one
trade. You must see
our goods whether you
buy or not, and it will
give us great body pleasure
to have every ex¬
amine,handle DRESS and price
our stock oi
GOODS, HATS. CARPETS, SHOES,
RUGS, CLOTHING, &c., that
so
they maybe convinced
of our ability to make
prices on best the like quality of
of Goods
which is unprecedent¬
ed.
SILK lad WOOL DRESS GOODS
comprising in part our
latest Paris, consignment London and
from
New York.
VELVETS AMD SIL^S
An immense stuck of all
floods, including the new*
est Shades and Colors to
be worn this season.
UNRIVALED BARGAINS
St nil (Miras’ Sis.
Boy» Suits at $1.50, $3.00.
Reduced from
Boys Suits at $2.00, 50.
Reduced from $3
Boys Suits at &2.50-
Reduced from $4 50.
Boys Suits at $3 CL.
Reduced from $5 00.
Boys Suits at $3-75
Reduced tram $5 50
B e „ , „: t .. tt «00, df ^ s65o
Boys Suits at $5.50.
Reduced from 07.50,
All the above are Jack¬
ets and Pants Suits for
Boys age 4 to 14, and are
ina e from the finest Casi-
mere in an assortment of
Stripes, Checks and Plaids.
Bents 1 Clothing.
We propose for a short
time to make a sweeping
all-round reduction.
When Yon Have Made Up Your
Mini le fill Sell Yen
A Suit.
we have th very Finest
Griffin Largest '
■ «• Wfer the
Chaise ef New Goods and Handsome
Styles ■
Because we make no • xtoriionate
charges Because but are always the first-class lowest.
fit time. yen can gets
These every
are facts that appeal to ev¬
ery buyer. ’ They touch his taste, his
perse and his comfort
CARPETS AND RUGS.
The Newest and Greatest Variety
of Chsice.styles at the Lowest Prices,
lev M Store.
i ROCK-SLIDE. 'll
FrlghtM Calamity Occurs in the
City of Quebec.
Houses Crushed Under Tons
of Rock and Earth.
About Thirty Families Buried is
the Debris.
It M Estimated that tbs
Kllle.l and Injured Will Beady <* Lea»t
Tws Hundred -Thl. la tbs Third Catas¬
trophe of the Kind and Another i*
Feared—A Large Fores of Men Sssrieb-
Ing tbs ItnltB for the Dead and Injured.
Quebec, Sept 31.—Thursday night-
occurred cue of those terrible rook
elides ■which mark lWgbts the slow process by
which Abraham Are crumbling
away. ■ ; dr
The slide started near the citadel, at
the summit of Cape Diamond, and
swept down with constantly gathering
force, overwhelming everything in its
track. The liver front at the base of
the rocky heights crowned by the cita¬
del is crowded with dwellings dear %p
to the beginning of the ascent, and at
least five oi these are buried out of
right. the of the ; ' i
At foot cliff is a narrow
street which occupies all of the space
between the cape and the river. Along
the river side of the street were situated
the houses which were crushed, and
whose inmates were either pinioned
among the debris of the wrecked houses
or buried beneath the great mate of
earth and rock.
Two Hundred Victim,.
The houses were occupied by about
thirty families, and of men, women and
children 200 are victims of the oatastro-
phe, of whom it is not yet known how
many are killed The eleotric light
wires were broken mid intense darkness
added to the horrors of the casualty.
The work of rescue in which the fire
brigade, Battery B, the police and
others engaged heroically, was prose¬
cuted under difficulties. The rescue
began with those in sight, but the
majority were beneath the piles of rook,
from whence came occasional smother¬
ed cries of “Help! help.”
By 2 o’clock Friday morning thirteen
dead and sixteen badly injured had
been taken out It will take several
days tojrecover all. Six hundred men
are now at work. The blood and dust
make a sickening spectacle.
■B Warnings Were Disregarded. —
, The extent of the disaster is likely
from present indications to fall but
tittle short of that which occurred on
nearly the some spot on May 17, 1841,
when eight buildings were destroyed
and thirty-two persons killed. In 1852
several others were killed half a mile
further up the street by a similar aval¬
anche of rock. Still the warnings were
disregarded and people continued to
build and to take up their habitations
immediately below the overhanging
masses of rock that juts out from the
point of the cape, and the narrow street
that bears the name of Quebec’s founder
and that occupies all the space that re¬
mains between the cliff and river save
the wharves, which serve also as the
backyards of the houses where the last
disaster ooourred
The federal government, warned by
the representations of the Hon. Thomas
HoGreevy, member Quebec, of parliament for
the division of west, expended
a large sum of money about the year
1881 in purchasing and removing sev¬
eral houses on the cliff side of the street
and building a huge retaining wall sev¬
eral feet thick to prevent disaster from
falling rocks to the dwellers aorossthe
street. Those portions of rock which
protruded in the most dangerous man¬
ner were also removed
Another Fall Feared.
Two fearful days of rain and flood
suocediug a month of dry weather filled
the crevices of the soil immediately be¬
low, and beyond the southern extremity
of Dufferin terrace. More rocks are
falling, and it is feared that the whole
bowlder, forming the highest point of
Quebec, will give away.
Dafferln Terrace Unsafe.
The mass of rock detached from the
cliff’s side ieft a vacant space of extraor¬
dinary dimensions. The houses in that
locality were built of stone and briok,
and inhabited by ship laborers, eta
The officers and men of the Boyal School
of Cavalry and the Redemptorist Fath¬
ers went to the rescue with ropes, picks
and shovels. About 600 men are now
at work. The damage is estimated at
$100,000.
The Work of Excavating.
The Work of exoavoting still goat'on
at the scene of the terrible land Aide.
But few bodies have been taken out
since midnight A large number of per¬
sons are still missing, and there is no
doubt but that they are beneath the
ruins and so deep down that they will
all be dead before they are reached
The loss sustained by the surviving
victims of the disaster is almost total.
In addition to their homes, mOst of the
sufferers, who are working men, lost all
thair summer earnings. The injured
have been removed to the Hotel Dien,
where they are receiving ail possible
care. -
_
Woman Guilty of Murder.
St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 21.—The-' Mg
in --------■ the case of Clara Blate, on trial fog
the murder bad of John Dougherty, living, _ Thursday ly, with with
whom she been
first receive degree, the
_ that she ex.
tj of the law, or I
What Doe* Fapa Thick af »t
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. SUN DAT MORNING. SEPTEMBER 22.18*9.
LOUISIA NA BOND FRAUD.
I Amount nitfullr Iinnd Expected to
> Uewh sroo.ooo.
Hew Obi.ea.N8, Sept. 21.—The excite¬
ment about the bond frauds increases
rather than abates. In addition to the
discoveries already noted it now trans¬
pires that many thousands of dollars’
worth of utterly worthless bouds whtoh
never was legally issued have been put
upon the market. The first trouble was
over something over #800,000 worth of
eoUsge and .state seminary bonds and
coupons which had been cancelled and
ordered burned: but and which, by some the
means, were stolen put upon
The frauds did not end here, how-
$500 series of the same
Class' had been legally We issued, discovered bonds of
both these series been
in circulation whose numbers are away
above the authorized figures. At pres¬
mine ent it how is utterly of impossible tease fraudulently to deter¬
issued bonds many in circulation, bat the
are
latest story is that, while Maj. Burke
receipted for some $600,000 worth of
the constitutional bonds, and only
$217,000 of them were legally issued
there is t<? be found in the state tress;
urer's office no record of the destination
of the remainder, nor no trace of the
bonds themselves. Assuming that all
these bonds have been issued, the fraud
on this constitutional series alone will
be $388,000 or thereabouts, and this,
with the college and seminary bonds
undestroyed ana floated, will make the
shortage People not here less do than not like $700,000. to who is
responsible for all this, though say primar¬
ily Treasuier much of Burke. the onus No will one Ml will upon accuse ex-
Maj. Barke of dishonesty in the matter,
but planation in the it absence looks of any much personal though ex¬
very as
tile state had been robbed by men whom
Mai. Burke had trusted custodian too of implicitly the state
while he was the deal
treasury. lation to There whether is a good not the state of specu¬ will
os or
pay the bonds thus fraudulently issued,
but ly reticent at present the the subject. officials are thorough¬
on
A BAD MAN S ONS.
Raymond, Mur.Urcr, Kobber anil Hnr-
*lir, Rtareil t.i Mi ni-sola.
Moorhead, Minn., Sept. 21 .--Joseph
Thomas Raymond, alias Thomas
Brown, was hanged in the corridor of
the jail here at 4 a m. Friday. Ray¬
mond shot and killed Policeman Poull,
in this city, last November. Though
but 26 years old, the murder of Poull
was not his only serious crime. Bur¬
glaries and robberies by the score can
be charged to his account and at least
jamas, prize fight oi Winnipeg, in _ barn , _ was at Grand killed ... Folks, in a
a
The murderer murderer was was never never apprehended, apprehended. the
Brown's confession clears up mys¬
tery. The man Casey, who otherwise killed Fulljames known
was “Boston’’
as later “Box Car” shot Casey, dead by aud-a Brown few days
he was near
Hillsboro, Dak., in a row.
Claims the Heart of Cleveland.
Jaokson, Mams., ., Sept. Sept, 21.—Michael
Kinney, oi this city, ity, stati states that he has
Cleveland, O. When her grandfather
asserted that by seme means the prop¬
erty was stolen from the children. Mr.
Kinney goes to Cleveland next week.
He refuses to give up the name of the
young lady, but states that Bhe has the
proper papers. *
Seer.tei-jrMWng -**“■ -'*** With * US.OOO.
’ ■'
l up over the
____________Jrestfall, and sec-
of the Mutual Trust Loon
association. He left last Friday stat-
ing would that return be was next going day. to He Atlantic, did hot and
re¬
turn, and an investigation was begun
which showed that Westfall was snort
$15,500 with the Mutual Trust people.
Besides this there are a dozen promi¬
nent business men mourning for large
sums.
Sherman Favor. X.v York. g‘
the New world’s York, fair— Sept. providing 2L—The that site New of
'
York Thursday," gets contains the big about show—as selected and
400 acres,
tivo committee, W. C. Whitney "vice
chairman and £. D. Stokes secretary.
Senator Sherman has written a letter
announcing his belief that New York is
the proper place for the show.
Bowie-Knife Vann* Revolver*.
Water affray Valley, Miss.. Randolph, Sept. 21.— A
terrible occurred at on
the tine ofCalhoan and Pontotoc coun¬
ties, Carr, last brothers, Monday attacked uight. Lon Bob and Ike
shooting at him with revolvers. Connelly, Con¬
nelly was armed with a bowie-knife.
Bob Carr was killed and Ike fatally
wounded. wounded. Connelly ' was only slightly
.; • -
Twelve Year* Asleep.
Utica, Minn., Sept. 21.—Herman
Homes, discovered the in letter-day this little Rip village, Van has Winkle
now
slept The continuously authenticated, for twelve and years.
cture is well the
doctors my the man may continue in
his present state for twenty years more.
The about thr peculiar ough chronic disorder chills was brought fever,
and
Tho QUee-.i of Pickpocket*.
Detroit, Sept 21.—The notorious
Sophia United Lyons, States, queen locked piokpooket Thursday of the
the charge was of suspicion. up She
on was
caught in the Bussell house with s Chi¬
cago crook named Woods, and a lot The of
jewelry found in their possession.
arrest caused excitement and the police
refuse all information on the subject
- y A ftepewteFe fltel
New Yore. Sept 21-WiffieriJT.
Diphtheria Bagla* at Bacaa Villa, O.
deaths are reported.
NEGRO EXODUS.
The North Carolina Colored Peo¬
ple Going West.
Tho Movement Caused by La¬
^ bor Agitators.
:
An Emigration Agent Predict. that 60,000
Will Leave rite State During the Coming
Winter anil Seek Home In Arkna.au,
Mlwlnlppl »•«! |,n»W tie.
Raleigh, N., C., Sept. 21.— The exo¬
dus of the negroes from Norte Carolina
began las* January and ts now, after
a cessation of four months, to be re¬
sumed. By turns the allegation has
been made that there were political, so¬
cial and religious reasons for the exo¬
dus, bat it is now well known that the
labor agitators in Arkansas, Mississippi
and Louisiana the were not only the orig¬
inators of movement, but have kept
the agitation in existence. There ap¬
pears to whatever. be no political aspect of the
matter
Some OlntU Some Sorry.
Three-fifths of the white with people,- while
unkinduoss, looking on the will negro be glad to not the least him
see
leave the state. Of course not a few
wish the negro to remain and say the
state cannot afford to lose them as labor-
««. in the Then pasl M
scattered through
sippi. back from The them reports which They are brought
are bad. ore dy¬
ing, chudre mg, and an has the been mortal!! a ss
m gri
go sway is widespread among negroes.
A great many of the exodusters have
come back from the for south, and oth¬
ers are coming. and All give have discouraging
accounts, But say they attempts to run
away. most desperate
will be mode, in the face of these leave state¬
ments, to induce negroes to here.
Thl* Win.* "s Kvoiles.
The acting Rev. L. R l'crattoe, colored, however, who
i* as emigration agent, the
expect* 66,000 negroes to leave state
for Mississippi and Arkansas within
four months. He alleges that the prin¬
cipal the oppressive causes for their laws dissatisfaction -and low are
The desire acquire wages. lands,
negroes to
and there are no government lands here.
A South Cor. 1 is Wsv.
Charleston, S. C., Sept. 21.—The
Plain Speaker* a weekly paper, edited
by exodus: colored “The men. idea says of the proposed
ions of free American of citizens departing Cuba, mill¬
to
Mexico or any other place, is simply
preposterous. ^Oto' this* jiswtion, understand touching
the snbjeot, is We
our constitutional the rights and of consider to it
presumptuous dictate free on as' part to whether anyone they
to men
of must the go or and stay-in in other southern those sections states
state
where the negro is oppressed as a labor¬
er, has poor wages paid him—where he
is cruelly treated and there is no re¬
dress- where this is the case we advise
that a demand be made for better treat¬
ment, and if that be not given then
we counsel that systematic steps be
taken to similar inaugurate to devised an immigration in North
scheme one
Carolina.’’
Th. Georgia Remedy.
of Atlanta, Cobb county, Ga, Sept. of 21.—The the richest negroes in
one
the night state, in held of a colonization meeting Thursday iu
favor some
of the northwestern states. The speak¬
ing ers were the _______■ stand exceedingly that it conservative, impossible impossible tak¬ tor
_ was was
distinct races to live together. By col¬
onizing could in a get western together. territory, A large the ne¬
groes num¬
ber take signed a memorial in furtherance asking of coloniza¬ congress
to steps
tion.
THE I. O. O. F.
Business Meeting ef the Sovereign Grand
Ledge.
Columbus, O., Sept. 21.—Grand Sire
Underwood is very seriously hurt and
unable to preside over the meeting of
the sovereign grand lodge. In his ab¬
sence Deputy Grand Sire Buskee pre¬
sided. «.
The vote on the resolution introduced
by Representative foreign Kent jurisdiction of Mexico, pro¬
viding take into that membership under might 21,
but excluded from persons order those
the per¬
sons indefinitely who sell liquor postponed. for a livelihood,
was
The $300 prize offered to the oompany
making between the Springfield largest display lodge. was No. divided 83, and
West To the Jefferson lodge lodge, No. 412. best
in dress and making iu discipline, the appear¬ $200,
ance
Epcann lodge, Springfield; prize, No. 8 prize,
New Concord, $200 ; No. 4 Clarks¬
burg, $100; No. 5 prize, Pleasant Valley,
prize, $100; No. Columbia, 6 prize, $100. Mosgrove, $100; No. 7
The Daughters of Rebekah adopted a
constitution._
Double Tragedy.
Windsor, Ont, Sept about 21—About 11
a. m. Thursday, a man found 27 dead and in a
woman about 20, were
Dougall’s nursery, hours where previously. they had been The
seen sitting two shot through the heart and
woman was
the man had a gaping bullet hole in his
forehead. Papers on his person showed
him to be Silos Densmoro, of Bushville,
wife. Ind., and Traces the woman struggle was probably found his
of a were
and some worthless papers were found
In their clothes._____
Opyo.nl to the Cotton Tara.
Memphis, Teftn., Sept 21.—The Mer¬
chants'and Cotton daily Exchanges protests of this
city the adoption are receiving of the recommendation against of
the cotton Orleans convention recently held in
New to tare cotton wrapped in
into bagging twenty-four sixteen pounds. pounds and The that indica¬ in
tions are that the rule will not be adopt¬
ed by the Memphis exchanges .
Another of th. Leo'. Victim*.
Cleveland, D. O., Sept 21.—The body
oil. Lawler, another of the victims
of tiie Leo disaster, was found on the
ler's lake shops faoe Imre Friday badly morning. burned. Law¬ Four
bodi was
more es have yet to be fou nd.
Killed HI. Fatten.
Louisiana, Mo., Sept killed 21—Samuel by
aged Murray, 18. was Thursday. shot and He was drunk his son, and
frying to maltreat a younger son, when
he met his death.
INDIANA B LOCK C OAL MINERS.
Indication. That Mi. Strtk. Will Bad on
Monday X«k
Brazil, Lid., Sept SI.—For several the
days past the famous strike among
Indiana block oosl miners has shown
signs of brooking. Fifty-five miners
are now working in the Jumbo mine,
fourteen in Number 8, twelve in Num¬
ber 10, twelve in tee Nickel-plate, and
eight in Crawford’s, all at the operators’
terms. For three days past the miners
at Forth, Number 8 mini have been as-
next <
committee at once' waited on the
Brazil Block Coal company to declave.tho
work the oonoassion will proceed will be next granted, Mot and that
day Meanwhile specified. the Cardovia and Har¬
mony miners have called meetings for
to-morrow, aud io persuade all miners
aaoe from the Knighw of Labor if they
Will continue t he strike.
Seeking Labor ED.wh.ra. (fife
La Salle, III, sixty-five Sept. 31.—Thursday
afternoon about miners from
; ---- ----4 thirty-five from
or Book Springs,
ten-foot toed seventy vein. centsa The ton miners for miriaglnfn of the La
Salle consider HH. district the ■■ again business met yesterday men’s ” to re¬ ’
n ‘ —— propom-
don, and again voted to reject it and so-
'Sept half nothing cents but ton eighty-two last year's and miss one-
and twelve per inohes of on brushing.
Tws DaiM DrowiteS,
had been spending the summer with
him set out for a trip to Bear's Den.
While gone a heavy rain storm came up.
On their return they had to cross quite
a stream near Puroellville. In the mid¬
dle of it the harness on ope of the horses
broke and the wagon was capsized.
and Miss Susie Cator, of Georgetown, Alexandria, D. C.,
Miss Ella Atwell, of
Va., wore drowned.
Prohibition Too Kaeh ter Kim.
Decorat, Iowa, Sept $1—Julios
Myers’ Wednesday restaurant night building and he here perished burned in
the flames. He had been depressed
since his saloon was dosed by Prohibi¬
tion, and a few days wife ago got a jag of
alcohol, drove his out and rooked
himself up. it is thought that in his
delirium he set fire to the premises.
Nagle Again Gnavdlng Ftold.
San Field Fuawchsoo, Sept 21.—When Jus¬
tice ldt for tee east it was an¬
nounced that two deputy sheriffs ac¬
companied him os a body guard. It to
now learned that Deputy Nagle, who
killed Judge Terry, was his traveling
quiet companion. for The of foot allowing has been Nagle kept
little privacy purpose in Washington. a
Calt.vrnlaKnighta Templar.
members San Francisco, the Sept 21.—About oommand- 200
of Golden Gate
ery Knights special Templar, will leave attend here the
on triennial a conolave twin Sept at 30, to Washington.
About 150 members of the California
commandery leave Oct 1, and the Oak¬
land commandery with ninety members,
leave about the sometime. ?
Wt.rrltV. SMM of Duty. > ?
commission Boston, Sept. commissioner 21.—Gen. Merrill’e
as of pensions
to soon expected from Washington. In
an interview he he say- say; • • “I don’t want
I if I mould consult my
personal personal comfort desires and I interests would as take wuu
asm; ---it not
it But it to being pressed upon me as
a matter of duty.
Brother. In Deadly Conflict.
Metamoba, Ind., Sept 21 .—Jacob
miles and Jolja south Collier, of .this brothers, place, into living four
got a diffi¬
culty Wednesday about tee ownership
of a team of mules, when Jake and his
wife attacked John with dubs, beating
him over the head until they fractured
his skull. He to now in a dying condi¬
tion. No arrests.
An Agile Fire Chief.
Kansas Kansas City Cm, Mo., Sept 21.— The
works destroyed desiccating by fire and Thursday refining
were Hal-
night Joe Estinberger and John
peeb, through employes, jumping were from fatally windows, injured and
Fire Chief Hale escaped only by the
hazardous feat of sliding down a fire
hdaq, ._ j, ...
Calf with Two HeadA
living Connebsvxlle, Ind., to reported Sept in 21.— Joi¬ A
nings township, monstrosity this It to
double-headed calf, and oounty. has mouth a
a
session of Joshua Chitwood, of this
city. ____
Chalkley Leenney la Camdea.
Camden, N. J., Sept. 21. - Chalkley
Leooney, suspected by tee Camden
oounty authorities of the murder of his
niece, Annie Leooney, near Merehant-
ville, on the 9th inst, arrived here from
Waverly, which place O., he Thursday had taken morning, the dead to
body of the murdered girl
Laproay in Indiana.
Jeffersonville, Ind,, Sept 21,—A
genuine case of leprosy has been dis¬
covered here in the person ot Louis
Drain. The disease made its appear¬
ance two weeks ago, Mid now the vic¬
tim's face, neck and breast are affected
and one eye to nearly gone.
Next Time la Topeka.
Columbus, O., Sept 21.— The sov¬
ereign hold grand their lodge, annual L O. O. F., decided
to next encampment
at Topeka, Kan.
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets cure constipa
tion, biliousness, sick headache, bil¬
ious headache, and liver alt derangements
of the stomach, and bowels.
One a dose. ,
A Fish Valued by afLady.
iat fish is most valued by a lady I
eolia. and relieving it teething.
KaaSIaappad by Thair Idd'i
AbMaaa— Aatt-Slavery Agraem.nt Eo-
twaaa the Hrltl.h and Italian Govara-
m.at*—Othar Faralg* New*.
straggte that has etq
for many y.
of pMttoans or auother
and when election
and the i
foj n
5£S*.tewf._-______
ItonLingl.t. Il.r ! XV rk.
The Boak&ffteta mafeim/ ~
ere
mto a semblance of life, i
they are sorely hs»
foroea ftossucti from , T _ r .____,, 4 ,
oiitiioiis of their hero they
In ktofii rimr un a Wti of iloW* In til ml*
£d sLT u&nttan2^3d
erhtened w’
to the Boukngi*fc mum nil
troops to all their meeting^.
At Thursday sEmmdS ninht's meetine the at the
C irque iu Paris well
known Jioukiugists, Laguerre, Lds&nl
and Dilonrede spoke to over 4,000 of
thedr sympathizers, but i “
time they were compelled
their arguments to nearlj
polios by th© Mid minister© soldiers, ostensibly who ha
•der but really to overnw '
Notwithstanding their
______JTWr&a _
all parts of the great hall,
meeting arrested over 100 and of thrown those who into took pert
were with oharge whatever againri prison them.
HO
The belt informed opiuion iu Paris is
that the government wilt be sustained
at toe election by the people, though
they deputies will lose a considerable number of
r-*t
CHANC E OF TACTICS.
The French Ceuemtlro Soften TowarA
the Republics.
Since the opening of the e
campaign and the the Conservative which re
them newspapers to have undergone support
seem a verita-
That were as torn vehement of as they had they ever been. said,
incompatible government, with order and social
was
peace, and waiting the majority of Frenchmen
afford were only them opportunity for the elections of ridding to
on
the country once for all of a regime held
not so anxious as they had
overthrow the republic and _____
tion after haying first name to Au sgree.
went as to what sort, of a constitution
they most -tf desired. jpa&ii* Consequently ft?* they
vT* a __ coalition
refer with infinite can to the subject
of revision.
The TH« R«a*oa for this Cor Mm oheuge Cha»(«. of taeties | b$
reason
to that the Conservative candidates are
aware that the country to in no sense
inclined to follow them in their cam¬
paign fst against ti d tee republic. they They now
M M S that, were on the
wrong track and ere seeking to retrace
their steps. P erchance i t to teo late.
Am.rle.n Cotton Abroad^ ,
Lohdoe, Bern 21.—The tfanre’ nor-
respondent at that Preston American says: “Thereto
a prospect tcraoh cotton may that
yet fortnight’s seven stopple pence a in pound, October and will
a
ring. One hundred thousand spindles
and many thousand looms are Mopped
in North end East riven Lancashire, ttudf no¬
tices have been o/t more extensive
stoppages next Week. ”
----—■ |
rrocrAM «f ilio Vmfr* Ksp»idoH.
Beeum, Sept 21.—Private letters
from East Africa say that Dr. Peters'
August expedition not had, penetrated up to the further middle of
then
newspapsvs hare which have hitherto
favored the expedition are beooming
doubtful of the utility of giving further
support to the enterprise
Anil-Slavery AtNMtnt
Italian Some. Sept 21.-The English and
governments have signed a more
bee stringent hitherto anti-slavery existed. The convention than
new conven¬
tion declares the dave traffic to be an
act of piracy, and enables cruisers to
deal more promptly with captured
slavers. The Mediterranean is excluded
from the opera tions of th e treaty.
/ tgeriri * “A Sn*«kcD«l -In 1’uwder.
Berlin, Sept 21. the maneuvers
at Hanover, dog|L chiefly spaniels, are
being bearer* employed of dispatches. with great Thursday success the as
engaged in the maneuvers ex.
perimeuted smokeless on an extensive powder. The eerie supply with
new
this powder already stored to sum-
tor the whole reserve force.
Grid Bratm UnHSblna.
London, Numberg, Sept Augsburg 21. The gold Sell wabech
ana
termed formed a a ring nng for for the the first purpose of
already prices, ina and material tk» advance fruits
seen
e
of the
Umol
n,
mtalftry, bet
short rest.
Eiffel tower.
The I
Thirty-two iff
dates nomUuto
them are two i
too late to i
after •*>
i p es eh etl
slaught The.'" upon J
aandi 45 ;jgjft?, -y. - -ftM ~
.
ot the German *
—dot homor.
The residence Of a
CTX -
1 them in a
kiUing the entire party.
dwcoverod their mitt.
XZS£?S£',
In tee
ceiitly a body of t
set fire to a boeas ia ^
gan J. bad taken reft
male, and two other
the Same.. One j
A baqqm 1
of the Bart of
«i India. ”