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VOLUME 18.
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, U *8. A.
Orlffln to the beat and moat promising little
i tj iu the Sooth. Ito record for the paet
bait decade, it* many new enterprise* in oper¬
ation, building and contemplated, prore this
o tea business statement and not ahyper-
olical description.
Daring that time it has built and pot into
most successful operation a #100,000 cotton
actory and with this year started the wheels
of a second of more than twice that capita).
It has pnt np a large iron and brass foundry,
a fertiliser factory, an immense ice and bot¬
tling works, a sash uni Wind factory, a
broom factory, opened ap the finest granite
quarry in the United States, and now has
oar large oil mills in more or less advanced
stages ol construction, with an aggregate au¬
thorised capital of over half a milhon dollars.
It is putting np the finest aystem of electric
girting that can be procured, and ha* ap¬
plied lor two charter*lor street railways. It
hue secured another railroad ninety miles long,
and while located on the greatest system. in
the South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its important nval, the East Ten¬
nessee, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtaio-
d direct iadepeadeut connection with Chat
tanooga and the West, and will*break gronnd
n a'few days for a fourth road, connecting
with u fourth iadepeadeut System.
With its five white and four colored church;
«*, it feta reoently completed a #10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It has increased its pop¬
ulation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around it* borders fruit growers tram nearly
.very State in theMMon, until it is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has pnt up the largest
iruit eraparatooi in the State. It is the home
of the grape and its wine making capacity turn
doubled every year. It has successfully in
angarated a system of public schools, with a
seven years curiteuhim, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply shows the progress ot an already
admirable city with the natural advantages
of having tbs finest climate, summer and
* inter, in the world.
Griffin Is the eonnty sent of Spalding coun¬
ty, sitnated in went Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
above sen level. By the census ol 1880, it
wiU have at alow estimate between6 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all of the right
sort—wide-awake, np to the tunes, ready to
seicome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel
some if they bring money to help bnild up the
own. There ia about only one thing we
need badly just now, and th at ia a big hotel
We have several small ones, bnt their accomS
modations ore entirely too limited for oar
usinn s, pleasure and health eeekig ngueete
if you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, Just mention
Griffin is the place where tbs Gnirrat litre*
a published—daily end weekly—the best news¬
paper intheEmpireState of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
■ad descriptive pamphlet of Griffln.l
This brief sketch ia written April 13th, 1888,
and will have to be changed in a tew months
o embrace new enterprises commsnced and
ompieted, 1
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
riENrtY C. Kltltt,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
iitarroN, oeokoIa.
Practices >a ail th# State any Federal
ourt*. ort»d*wly
JOHN i. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
anipriit, ueosuia.
Office. 31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J.
White's ClothiiU' Store. mar22d£wl
rHOS. iL MILLS.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
<£££ 2u% KHge State A and Hartnett’s nov3tl Federal
comer.
on* », 8 TBWABT. aowr. T. HAMEL.
STEWART & DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George A Hartnett's, Griffin, Ga.
WiM practice in the State and Federal
rt» . iulyl9dtt
CLEVELAND & GARLAND,
DENTISTS,
' GRIFFIN. GEORGIA.
0. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
woouBray, ueorgia.
Pprompt attention given to all business
Will practice In all the Court*, and where
• business calls.
W Collections napaeialtv i
- TNI ?
mm issiasce m do.
OF NEW YORK.
the world, and teaadvaatages it often to «a-
nlv7dAw8m4p.
REV CI0P TURNIP SEED!
Ill the beat varieties, bought direct from
henmwera^^WT^ and OILS a* th* low
ret prires.
In the DRUG LINE. Call and
are. - *. J. N. HARRIS A SON.
tor
front _ .__
Store Horae No. 23
D. W. Shaffer. Best
city for drygoods or
IO "
J.H. KEITH.
TKUHSMK
Hundred* of Lives Saved by Their
Assistance
During tne Recent Storm
the Atlantic Coast
Sever Before ia So Short a Period, Cov¬
ered by a Single Storm, Have So Many
IteaeuaM Besa Accomplished by tha Llf«
Saving Smrrlvn n/ .lu ■ Country.
Washington, Sept 28.—The most
heroic oinvKur in the history of the
life saving samca will ba the record of
the Hie save.-* during the recent storm
which along the Atlantic
Brief telegraphic reports are all that
have yet >»«ui received here, but from
this it can be gathered that hundreds of
lives and thousands of dollars' worth ol
property have been saved through the
sfforta of the crews of the various life
saving stations.
Nothin# Like It la History.
As soon as telegraphic communication
was restore 1 with tha stations along th«
coast, Wip'd iutendent Kimball request-
»d ro ods from each. Nothing like
die sum© number of rescues wiihiu a
peri-d c ' i by accomplished a single storm, him
ever is*«<»rc lieeu in th*
histor.. o. Hie life saving service of any
sountry.
t»’ii of t ta*» U»*etM»Mu
Along the coast of Massachusetts nine-
teen in . is in distress were reached by
the i f saving crews, and either assist¬
ed «> a i • crc js taken ashore. Thirty-
five persons were rescued along that
coa-t.
Aiong _ Rhode Island
tin- coast two
crews, cued. ngg w -1 ing nine man, were res¬
to on crews, comprising twenty-fonr
persons, were rescued on the coast oi
New Jer.-c.. .
At the Delaware breakwater twenty-
two vessels iu distress were assisted, and
164 persons taken ashore.
At Cope Henry three stranded vessel*
were reached and twenty-fonr lives res¬
cued,
Will A»k for More Pay.
When the full returns of the work
done by the life saving service during
the recent storm reaches Superintend¬
ent Kind mil, he intends to compile
them and submit them to congress with
the recommendation that these nigged
heroes be re© gnized, at least to the ex¬
tant of giving them adequate pay for
their courageous services.
- , A T-RRI BLE. N IOHT.
Che One Fauod by 700 Passenger, on a
Sturm Lued Lake Erie Steamer.
Detroit, Sept. 28.—The steamer City
of Detroit arrived from Cleveland Fri¬
day morning after a very rough experi-
•nce. No sooner had the boat left
Cleveland Thursday night than she was
struck on the port side by a monstrous
wave which fairly lifted her out of the
water. As the vessel proceeded the lake
became rougher, and bv midnight she
was laboring heavily bulk-heads and badly strained.
The good puddle deal box and leak discovered were sprung
a a was in
their vicinity.
When this information come to the
passengers„ of whom there were about
700, they became badly frightened, liie-proservers. and
most of them donned
When the bulkheads gave away shortly
after a terrible panic ensued, xhe water
was forced into the boat at every revo¬
lution of the wheels, and rose rapidly.
In tha after-saloon on the main deck
the officers' apartments were also flood¬
ed, us well as the ladies’ saloon. The
water rose inoh by iqcb until it was
fully six and a half feet high in the
■shins.
During this terrible clustered situation in the
passengers were a Saloon
all pre paired for the worst. One man,
whtsa- nrime could not tie ascertained,
This, of course, added greatly to the
confusion, fied and made difficult the already terri¬
passengers to manage.
The male passengers seemed morn
fright*»ued of the than boat admit the women. The rough offi¬
cers it was as a
night as they want Friday to see. The appear¬ shows
ance of the boat morning
what she has gone through. The cabins
were still flooded.
Betmied from > Wrecked Vessel.
Norfolk, Vo.
Tay line, arrived here .. with ________
ship-wrecked Friday who taken threfi
the schooner seamen, Olay, were
off Henry at 7
o'clock Thursday morning, seven miles
southwest of Bleak island. The schooner
was bed leaking sails all badly Mown when abandoned. She Mid
badly wrecked and the away. wind blow¬ was
was
ing schooner heavy from the north. York The
was bound from New to
Portland, Me., with a cargo of jeon.
The seamen were transferred to the
steamship ton. They Dorchester greatly and exhausted sent to Bos¬ by
were
constnut work at the pumps ana ex¬
posure
The lake Oim np Its Dead.
Cleveland, O., Sept. 28. —The bodies
of the five remaining Lorain oif---- citizens,
who the met lake a fearful by the death blowing Sunday ay of night
cm Frida; np > the
yacht Leo, were recovered iy, oom-
engineer, had been horribly iy o singed and
mangled by the explosion. The shoes
wore gone, showing that when the Leo
sank his he Ufe. was alive The bodies and prepared will all to be swim
for sent
will be ended.
_
Two V«Hh Wrecked.
Bocklaku, Me, Sept. 84. Advices
from masted Swan schooner Island wenfwhore on
Thurodav. BnU She lodge, seen late to s^Hwt. strike
was
roll ovm jurt a* the fog shut i* and
g? ported her cable
Brie, of Gkrn -ester, wrecked Ten
Tnnradav and was gale, Tbeorew on
Ponml Ial.ind during while a she drifting,
left the vessel was
The struck. vessel wait to pteoee M soon as
she
GjUFFlN, GEORGIA. TrTESDAl’ MORNING, SEPTEMBER 24, 1889.,
BISHO P FOWLER AGAIN.
He fiq* War With C|iin* b Not a Cer¬
tainty, Hat Probable.
St. Paul, Minn., Sept 23. —Bishop
Fowler, of California, says: “I didn’t
say at the ministers'meeting in Chioago
that we would have war with China in
less than ten years. The substance ol
what I said was this: That when any
oountry goes back to its own treaty,
suoh action is dastardly; that when this
oountry allows a man to go buck on his
.
own oountry, with the assnranoe that he
oan return, and then passes a law in his
absence preventing bis return, it is not
right "As to I do not there will b«
I war say what the
a war. know not future
holds out. Let me
tell you this, the
most extemive mili¬
tary preparations under are in
now way
China the Prince Li,
vioeroy, manufacture is order¬
ing of rifled the and
cannon
wakships haudams, .arid im¬
proved arid is reorganizing
the whole army. The
Chinese move slow-
bishop priwnisB. ly, and Prince Li
says that in ten years he will have
things where he want* them.
‘‘And then { know not what will
come, but let me tell roil the Chine*#
are that, a great they people, people and of more than all
I think that are Prince a Li is great courage. of the
one
greatest statesmen the world has ever
produced. at this; The Speaking Chinese of priople war, just number look
400,000,000, and they could land 5,-
000,000 in San Francisco easier tha®
the United States eSuld put 500,00C
there.’’ ♦
BACKE D BY A M ILLION.
The New Base Ball Syndicate Coming tc
a Focus.
New Yoke, Sept. 23.—The new bast
ball syndicate seems to be assured.
James J. Ooogan, the millionaire furni¬
ture dealer, admits that he has sub¬
scribed a large sum to back the brother¬
hood lease in its enterprise, grounds and adjoining that the
of the new the
polo grounds will soon be signed, He
also says he knows that grounds have
been secured or promised in at least five
cities. Notwithstanding Tim Keefe and these “Buck’’ definite Ew¬
statements
ing profess to know nothing of the pro¬
posed attack on the League, and say
further that no member of the New
York club is interested in it. President had
heard Day and the Manager Mutrie bat know say they nothing
definite. of move,
Reliable persons with money have
been found iu each League and eitv who are
ready ments to back being the made players, arrange¬
are for grounds so
that in ease the brotherhood players de-
e delay to leave forming the league there org.iuiiation. need be
in a new
None of these parties have hired 1
grounds outright, but they havo op¬
tions. That’s the plan and if the
League forces the players to the .wall
they will carry it out.
Tim MuriiaiHj’fi Views.
Washington, base bail editor Sept. 23.—Tim of The Boston Mur-
nane, “I have known for
Globe, writes: the League brotherhood some
time that was
making preparations for a move this
winter that would be anything but
pleasant for the magnates of that august
body. President John M. Ward has
worked hard since he arrived home this
spring and has held secret > meetings
with all the different captains. The
have already promised to work for the
new deaL"
_
Not Released.
Woboestbb. authoritatively Mass., that Sept. 33.—It is
stated Burketts and
Wilson, of the Worcester reported. battery, have
not been released as Their
services have simply club been of let town. for a day No¬
or body two to some 1 out
here knows where they have gone
except the otSeens ol the club, and they
will not tell.
Cuii.luctop*' Brotherhood.
LosAngei.es, Cal., Sept 33.—The
first annual convention of the Brother¬
hood of Railroad Conductors dosed
here Friday. Officers were elected as
follows: Grand chief, Georg© W. How¬
ard, Of Evansville, Moore, Ind.; assistant grand
chief, C. T. of Los Angeles;
grand secretary and treasurer, D. J.
Con, of Los Angeles; SEeasley, executive G. com¬
mittee, W. H. G, Ward
and William M. Ups her oil, of Los An¬
geles. The next session will be held on
Sept 18, 1890, tendered *t Toledo, banquet G, The Friday dele¬
gates night were a
__
Tub Sale o( l iquor In Oklahoma.
Guthrie, I. T., Sept 23.— For several
months the government had made no
effort to prevent the sale of the liquor hi
Guthrie, and as time went on liquor
smugglers became emboldened, and
ning over a in dozen flail groggeries blast during have been the run¬ last
refused, month. yet The to granting all of licenses the was
eminent winked at appearances its sale. Friday gov-
a
deputy United States oollecto%dropped
into the city unexpectedly, and before
night twenty-two men were under ar¬
rest, and will Be sent to Wioblta for
trial.
_____
llnnied to Death.
Helena, Mont, Sept 38 . — Mrs.
Charles K. Page, the wife of a prom¬
inent stockman residing at Chontoau
night City, was burned to death on Thurday
Her husband was absent from
home at the time. Mrs. Page had re¬
tired for the night the and bed in clothing some unac¬ took
countable way
fire. The unfortunate woman succeeded
in reacting the door with her night
robe but before in flames aid arrived and screamed she for badly help,
was so
burned that she died shortly afterward,
----—
Deputy Marshal rha gfiJ With Murder.
WASlTAlBSTAKfi
The Exclusion of American Salt
Meat from France.
Deputy Lalande Thinks that
Probably It Was.
He Advocate, the AdaUtls* of Salt
Most, and Hog FroUnct. If Uncle Sam
win He.luce tlic Tartar on French
Wine.—Kinporor W’HHxm In.nit. the
French. .
Paris, Kept. 33. —Amid all the bustle
of this election there is considerable
uneasiness felt among feftmeh econo¬
mists as to what the elfeot will be Upon
French trade of tlie coming meeting
lios. of representatives of American repute
■
Deputy Lalande, whose conscience
appears to have been awakened by a
artirie possibility in The of Debate future reprisals, that in an
the United States has says not been possibly treated
altogether fairly in the matter of ex¬
Statute cluding is its relic salt of meat, but that the
been allowed a to remain imperialism, in foroe and rather has
abrogate through the it neglect than of the chamber to
as a discrimination
republic against an whose important welfare product <ot a but sister
cannot be
ardently desired by the French people.
Wheu a French statesman begins to
mingle time for sentiment nations interested with business it is
to exercise a
oommemlable caution.
The prospect of a Pan-American zoll-
verem is not all an attractive one to
scheme to be successfully consummated
Deputy United States, Lalande as proposes the most to placate formidable the
member of the oomb: nation, in advanee,
by ducts admitting in salt meats and hog pro¬
return for a lowering of the
tariff on French wines.
William*. Vi.lt to Italy.
Berlin, and Sept. 38 - The German em¬
peror empress will meet King Hum¬
bert at Honda on Oot 14, Mid will re¬
main the^e two days. They will then
go to Genoa and embark few Naples,
where they will remain one week in¬
German cognito, probably sleeping aboard the
From Naples imperial they yacht will Hoheuzollern.
While Emperor go to Athens.
in Greece William
will visit the Peloponnesus, 1 1 view the
excavations and other archwologioal
works. The Greek government ia re¬
pairing the roads in readiness for the
emperor's visit,
Tlio SeraaiV.* <« r the Papal Crown.
The indecorum of the aeramble for
the BueJuisor hip to tu in-
1 — — Alj OI 0
terests involved; and the bitterness of
the parties supporting the different
candidates. Cardinal Zigliara is agree¬
able to France^ but this fact only serves
to of concentrate the Italian against him Mgr. the majority
votes. Di San
Filici is handicapped by the rumors
that his advancement would be grate¬
fully received at the jQuirinal, and it is
likely that an will obscurer name than those
mentioned be written after that of
LeoXIH.
_
The lJu ch Object.
The Hague, Sept.. 2a.— The obli¬
by gatory the Dutch military with service aullen bill defiance. is received
a A
strenuous but opposition the condition will be of mode the to ita
passage, able king will doubtless vener¬
prevent a seri¬
ous When outbreak his death during his it life-time. will be
oceans,
quickly people in seen Europe when the ‘eady most obstinate
1 to tamely
submit from whioh to a yoke they upon have always their f freedom prided '
themselves.
Thrilled the French.
the Pams, French Sept. 23.— Nothing has thrilled
nation more of late than the
bitter atid defiant insult addressed to it
by the arrogant German emperor, in
his speech at Hanover. Of course, as
he said, the empire does not propose
ever to relax its grasp on what it has
once secured, have bat even when emperors
prophesied and the been of Europe falsi lied before be
now, map may
materially triumphantly changed opened, before is closed. the career, so
SmokclfriH r :» SlUfMB.
place Berlin, at Hanover Kept. 23.—A Friday sham between fight took
using the ordinary powder and troops others
using 1 the new stool eloss kind. The
great superiority of the smokeless pow¬
der judge was fully the" distauoe shown, tha direction euemy failing
to or of the
fire, rapidity and and ihe absence better aim of smoke to those insuring using
the new explos ive.
Iiow Gl td<toa?. S#«« It.
London, Sept 33.—Mr. Gladstone
writes that he regards Mr. Balfour’s
Catholic university conductor, endowment pro¬
posal divert as a lightning intended
to Parnell commission the lightning at from the striking opening the of
the session .
__
A Sm.SOO Bunk R illlUry.
Detroit, Mich., Sept. lshgeming, 23-—A special
to The N ews from officials Mi oh.,
says: d Friday ! night T the of the
' “
___ ___# eping
pay roll the money
was but it taken being to after the Iron banking Exchange hours bank
money was placed iu a small vault The
cashier went to the theater in the even¬
ing and when the vault was opened in
the morning the money was gone.
Every effort is being made to trace the
bnrglata.__________
!Mwrt to B it i h Mill*.
Duluth, Minn. Sept Dalatb 38. —The first
direct shipment of wheat to
British mills ever mode oh the merits
of Duluth the grain Thursday as shown by the sample, left
purchased on steamer
Alianoa. It was by John
Hardman & Sons, of Edinburg. The
identity of the grain is preserved in
transit This Is only the beginning ot
large shipments.
l.e.ih Cl iUii I
CoLUHHCS. O.. Sept iS.—The Switch¬
men Mutual Ail a - 'Motion increased
the death d*i i f •> * fJEI to j./ 00 .
TVy dim nr "At ->• wth the
Ur • it *
au 1% tt Ir ■. j .
the sd> >. - ; i i •
CO’ ’In • ‘ *
THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
Seal to B* Interested la Pellttre—H»jr Be
, Sent to the Senate.
Chicago, Sept 23.—A Tribune special
from Bismarck, N. Dak., soya that Civil
Barr ice Commis¬
sioner Theodore
Roosevelt is Inter¬
ested in polities of
the Missouri slope,
and that hi# friends
say that he is tha
man i for for the theU United
States senate. Mr.
ia a large tax pay
taaoaoa* Dortion portion of tbs
roohctol*.
claim a residence
ranob manager, A.
been nominated by
for the lower house in
oounty district, and owing to a
tha Republican party of
for oould may , for his his „ l: work employer. employer. ,.il&SUSi up It'ii It is thought o at doubt Bis-
marok tfiat Roosevelt isevelt will be found s
really formidable _____
candidate.
WITH 700 SEAL SKINS.
Another Punch In* Canadian Vtatl Ar¬
rive* at Tlotorln—Three Tot to Com*.
Victoria, B. O., Sept 23.— The seal¬
ing whooner Beatrice, Oapfc MoKeft,
arrived from Behring sea Thursday
night left with 700 sealskins. The Bsatrioe
Keit Behnng reports sea that on he Aug. 28. sighted Oapi Mo-
Rush, never the
and, of course, was not particu¬
larly On anxious to do so.
Aug. 18 he lost three canoes, each
containing six in number, two India©* in The the oanoes,
went out morn¬
ing, wind and during the day a very thick
the came np. About 7 o’clock three
of canoes returned, but the
did not Oapt McKeit
five days, burning a seal blubber light
at the masthead every night, in toe
hope bnt of picking up the missing hunters,
On nothing July 37 was Capt seen McKeit of them.
of San Francisco, spoke the
ghh^OOriuns, tutk o^Jolf 3i^oko^
100 skins. He also spoke the Annie 0.
days Moore, which arrived in porte a few
ago. The Victoria sealers to ar¬
rive are the Mary Ellen, Theresa, Mag¬
gie May and Favorite.
TH# Haggle Her Arrive*. ;
.
The schooner Maggie May arrived
from Behring seaFriday night with
1,890 1.890 seal seal skins. skins. On Aug. ‘ 87," “ after *' a
ohase chase of of three three hours, she was over¬
hauled by the Rush, but after Lieut.
Tuttle had examined her papers, and fis
the skins seemed to be several days old,
she was allowed to proceed. Oapt.
Dodd said ho had determined to fight
Hdher than surrender tha «Vl««i nr th*
vessel. ^ UL.aaU
Lord Stanley, the governor general,
is expected to a: rive on Oct 81, and in
the mean ime grand preparations are
being ception. made Thu to Behring give him a fitting question re¬
sea
wfll be laid before him by the the seal¬
ers assooiu. ion.
Negroe- Strike.
Birmingham, Ala., Sept 23,—A dis¬
patch from Monteville, a town near the
soene of tha recent race troubles in Bibb
oounty, says the negroes have all re¬
solved to do no more work for white
people. The negro women are in the
movement and white families are una¬
ble to obtain cooks or women to do their
laundry The work. refuse to work the
toms and negroes farmers will be unable on
to gather their many unless they
obtain whito laborers. crops The only can
reason
riven that they by the tired negroes working for their action white is
are of for
people. _
British Whisky Trust.
Detroit, Sept 23.-Some time ago
Hiram Walker, who owns the great dis¬
tillery in Walkerville, Detroit, jnst across the
river from ana has 3,000,000
gallons conceived of whisky scheme in of his getting warehouses, all the
a
distilleries and whisky in Canada under
one the management, large distiller, and and took Goodcram J. P. Wiser,
A
Wertz, decided of Toronto, in with him. They
more than three months ago to
been r , made. „ iftproi It is of toe largest
one
transactions of rooent times, and in¬
volves millions of money. Every gallon
of whisky in Canada will be bought,
and the distilleries will go with ft.
Shot By HU Wife.
CmcAOa Sept 28. - Ex-fl
Donald, stationril WBO in the until Thirteenth ten dis¬
street
trict, was shot and fatally wounded by
his wife about 7 o’clock Saturday morn¬
ing The pair quarreled about money
matters, husband’s and Mrs. McDonald seized her
revolver and fired three shots,
all of which took effect one passing
between his shoulder blades, another
above the left hip and another through
the left hand- McDonald was taken to
the that county he could hospital, where Mrs it was McDon¬ said
not reoover.
ald was ar rested,
__
Hattie In Mexico.
Van Horne, has Tex., just Sept 28.-8. H.
Allen, who returned from the
Rio Grande river reports that Mexican
citizens had a desperate battle with
Mexican officers and soldiers in Mexico,
in which 400 participated and many
were reported killed. It is said the
citizens succeeded in routing the sol¬
diers when the governor appeared upen
the soene to assist L. quieting the re¬
bellion, but he was forced to leave or
lose his life.* The trouble was over the
oollection of enoraionii taxes.
Outraged Freaoh-r Ajtptil. for Fuad*.
Charleston, S. C., Sept 23.— Bar.
Rowe, the colored first-close preacher who was
ejected has issued from a circular passenger appealing ok, for
a
funds to sue the railroad in the United
States court.____
Merrill Not la th* Mace.
Merrill Lawrence, has josh Kan., nan., tele telegraphed Sept oept * * Maj. 23.- za—m Wi
draw ner at his Washington ton froi from to consideration absolutely wil
name
connection with the
A *300.00* Oil Fire.
0VF.lt PIFTl DEAD
Removed front the Debris of the
Quebec Land-SUde. 1
Tha Number of Woundod Will
Exooed Eighty.
Tk*K«aak*r ml Pa f S Hai a t as WMH.Ie-
real* Burled la Ore RMb Hi ffiatOk •
Mere Matter ot Oo«0**Suiu—Oa* ot to*
Searebm Injured kjr mm Bspteri**.
Quebec, Sept 88 -The dii
OtNIfld SB its XMMKQiiliis tilHh
tiona ot al l Th* aumba r of
ofdeStoHoT" "
woumlej oxjodd
iboyb I'WBidiii bmiod IrwwBOiiiii h
ii known ^ msttttiF of spoculdtioi
how m*oj ot th* „
were occupants of the crushed houses
are not in the hoHuitak. and. tberefcw*.
*W7Pv#* M3CA. A Uw ttfrwVM Umwp
will fall fallow 100.
A Workman Injured.
and the uae Frida; night ot an
rive to remove bowlders was eft --
it is not doubted, by fatal results to one
Joe Kemp, who was buried ohr^The
explosion and was when followed his mangled by a body shririt of
agony, exhumed he found be horribly wa*
was to
« urwi.
A Mr. Lawson, i
orushed a&d torn
wife, famed for her
It is thought that the king's bastion
oa the citadel, will have to be removed.
iciySb^tetoim* it* ia * *®“ wU **•
Helief ter tke fuOSre w .
lief oi the sufferer, by Thursday night’s
disfustff ~
Ballairge. A report showing waa read that he by had Engineer *raad
the Federal government yeare ago oi
the ooaditiim of roekal the
place where the accident occurred.
A STRANGE RAGE.
Ie Mo, ot leree, a Hlanee* F r e ri nee , Hi
San Franetee*.
San Fbanoisco, Sept 28.-little ia
known in this country tit the strange
race of people who inhabit toe Siamese
provinces of Laos. So Mo, the first na¬
tive of la
soil, r
rivotl ' Dr.' ll jirad
‘ daughter
■S*m£Z . ot * fWUJfaj*WH T
inissionuries m Siam.
•‘I came here,
study ftfiflifltftTlflfl American oi
ontoexpl
enJartLe montlis of thereat ere
Wages oi common laborers mage
from #3 to #4 per month. It is
ous to know too much ia Laos,
mechanical work is done by men
by the government, or prisoners.
drafted men receive ten
year’s ’s labor. _— -- The ---- fo
Laosj principally people " believe in Jrfrit.
iliesl i
have different
dances over their safety, held, I Once a
are
ticipate in them. Ilia danc* is 1
all day, and as. the women drink Inn
rather their movements “groggy.” toward nightfall
Portable ttomrek* ter Nicaragua.
New Yoke, Sept 28.
Hondo, which
additional
material were
Norte (Greytown), by the Nicaragua
Canal Construction Construction oo; company. In ad¬
dition to a party of engineers, the cam-
employers' panv ships a headquarters, large portable barracks, os
by 40 wide, time stones *
story considered forming the a largest large portable s
ever transported by sea. This 1 „
containing quarters for about lhO em¬
ployes, was made ia Chicago, and waa
brought from that city city loaded loaded oh oa tea ....
Two miles of water pipe
for for the * canal company’s
also on forty boacd tons toe of ,C* pn '
BmOy f »l to Hem
Albant, N. Y., Kept 28.-
from Blenheim, Schoharie oo
that a horrible oaae of inf«
vouovu H»vre» wrewaewisswi
pickers of that region,
woman, unmarried, s waa delivered of a
Dt«eu«te4 With rnUtaiw,
prohibition, Ka was Cm, colony Sept of 23.—Tired German* of of
a
Westphalia, Kan., to Texas, to porehaoe
land for them. Aa the result, he, yes¬
miles terday, northwest bought 2.200 at acres Grinwvflle, of land, Tex., eight
paying #42,000 cash. This winter ISO
German families will settle on th*
, Wwslaf or tthlt •<-»*«.
Norwalk. of Conn., the Sept 8#. — Chpt The
front door residence of
Pierce, a well known townsman, waa
embellished with large p mta s n. warn¬
ing him to leave polities or leave the
town, yesterday morning, and skull*,
oroesboaee and other WMtecsp davit
served to lead foroe to the Hah-
There is no dew to toe identity of tike
H*ru*U Killed kr Cure.
a hermit’s life on an island ia
river, waa bo -----* * “
stantly 3:45 ’clock killed ri 1
o
teeih.
CONTOCOOE, ]
"o .luirew
to. *t to. A
mmi T •
S»s=ses^
■•(*•**■*
4
M*k*tk*adl
at
*' '^ftffijtedlrite'^'' 3
SSfS’5;
.»**> !
ii» * "
ptoeto hands. toe «(
-
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taunkdi
5?^
at toal tatoa tw e y l
prtatel y oelebrutel FI
w rata v#I Wen
EMHtafffitti