Newspaper Page Text
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VOLUME 18.
G 111 FF1N, GEORGIA, IT S. A.
OrlfBu i* tli© bent and most promising
Ity in the South. Its record tor the
bait decode, its many new enterprises in
ation, building and contemplated, prove
o t e a bneineee statement and not a
olieal description.
During that time it has built and put
most eu«ve.«fttl operation a #100,000 cotton
actory and with this year started the wheel*
of a second of more than twice that capital.
It has apt up a large iron and braes
a tU*l fertiHser factory, un immense lceaudbot-
works, a sash ho I* Hind - factory, a
broom factory, opened up the finest granite
goaiy in the United States, and now has
our Urge oU mills Tn more or less advanced
, tages ol construction, with an aggregate *u-
thorited capital of over halt atnilUoudehors.
It is putting up the finest system of electric
ghting that can fie procured, and hips ap¬
plied lor two charters for street railways. It
I. as secured another railroad ninety mile* long,
and while located on the greatest system in
the South, the Central, haaeeenred connec¬
tion with its important rival, the Bust Ten-
m esee, Tirginia and Georgia. Ithasobtato-
d direct independent connection with Chat
tanooga and the West, and wM break ground
na few days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With Its five white and fourcolored church;
«s, it has recently completed a #10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It has Increased Its pop¬
ulation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around iWborderefroit growers frem nearly
every rounded State in nUttiy ^||fJMon, until side ft by is now orchards sur¬
on re e rj
and vin efifitifis . It ha* pat np the largest
irolt evaporators in the State. It is thehome
ol the grape and it* wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in
augurated a s y isS — of public schools, with a
seven years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a hall decade
uud simply dhows the progress of an already
admirable city with the natural advantages
of having tbs finest climate, summer and
sinter, la the world.
Griffin to the county seat of Spalding coun¬
ty, situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
above sea level. By the census ol 1890, it
will have a|f low estimate between6 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all of the right
sort—mde-'aWhte, np to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable* settlers, who will not be any less wel
.some a they bring money to help build up the
own. There is about only one thing we
need badly jnst now, and th at is a big hotel
We have several shmlfones, but their accomj
modations are entirely too limited for otfr
urine s, pleasure and health seeing nguests
If yon see anybody that wants a good loca-
Griffin. Griffin B«. ’ ii : §|§J|S*s' ttSkjdpce where the Gbiffin News
rifttn a i
s pul ----.-™ n Wished—daily aM; an w«kly-the best news¬
_____ _ _ Georgia, _ Please
paper in the Empire State of
eudose enclose stamps stamps in in sending sending lor for sample sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet of Griffin.
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1H89,
and wfil have to be changed in a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
empfetsd.
STAhlliNG EVIDENCE
Of the Cure of Skin Diseases whew all
Other Methods FaU.
CDt/ire lwuy KJIU SUM* BCBIW. uww Spent i—,
itchy, and bleeding. Hair all gong
hundreds of dollars; Pronounced inenra-
Cnred by Cnticnra Bemedies.
My disease (psoriasis) first broke out on
my left cheek, spreading acres iss my nose, and
almost covering my face. It ] ;.an into my
•yes, and 1 the the physician i afraid I would
el*™*** ereright altogether. , It spread a’l
lose my altos
over my head, . and my hair all fell out, until
I was entirely baid-headed*. It then broke out
on my arms and shoulders, until my arms
wate fast onesore. It covered my entire body!
my face, head and shoulders being the worst.
The white scabs fell constantly from my thicken head.
shoulders, and arms; the skin would
and be red and very itchy, and would crack
aad Weed if scratched. After pronottuesd spending inenra- many
hundred of dollars I was Remedies, and
We. I heard of the Cctkxba
after using two bottles Cotiotba. Resolvent, taken
I could see a change; and after I had
four bottles, I was almost cured; and when I
tad used six bottles of Cuwccsa Resolvent
and one box of Ctmutnu, and one cake of
CotkjbuA Soar, I was cured of the dreadful
disease fissass from fromw which I had suffered for five years,
I 1 thought thought the the disease would leave a very
deep rear, bat tbe Ctrmcmu Remedies cured
I t without any scare. I cannot express with
a pen what I suffered before usingtlie Cctjcu- fed
ka Remedies. They saved my We, and hair I is
it my duty to recommend them, My
restored as good’ as ever, and so is my eye¬
sight. I know of a number of different per-
sons who have need the Ctmcoax Bemedies,
and all have received great benefit from their
use. ' Mis. ROSA SELLT,
Rockwell City, Calhoun Co., Iowa.
Lvitoi^fL Prepared Cokpobation, ’ by the
„ ____ nd Chemical
**- Send for “How to Cure Skin Diseases,”
Wgages,50 Uiuetrations,and 100 testimo-
a Soar.
IT STOPS THE PAIN*
, Bade ache, kidney and pains, muscular weak¬
ness, rheumatism, bf
I BELIEVED IX ONE MINUTE
- Ayr*- Pam PiasTsm pain-killing the
. first and only instantaneous
piaster.
HEW CROP TORHP SEED!
Ml the best varieties, bought direct from
he growers.
Urg* lot P klKTH and OILS at the low-
. •. a I '
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 25 . 18 * 9 .
IN 1*.
Boulanger and the Dtonarchusts
Badly Defeated.
The Republicans Again Tri¬
umphant in France.
Th* Government Majority in th* Chamber
Will Be Over One Hundred—Crashing
Blow to the General and His Support-
on—Some K«balloting Necessary.
Paris, Sept. 24.— Official returns from
638 eWtoral divisions allows that the
Republicans in have unti-Repnblicans elected their candi¬
dates 217 and the in
divisions. 158. Reballots will be necessary in 166
elected Among the MM. prominent Fallieres, Republicans RAot, Jules
are
Roelie, Grsnet, Deville, Deschanel,
Barbs, Sarriea and Reinaeh.
where It is believed that 127 of the divisions
re ballots will be necessary the re¬
sult will be favorable to the Republi¬
cans. In the other thirty-nine divisions
the opposition will probably elect their
candidates. electing The Republicans from the also colo¬ rely
on ten members
nies. They will thus hold 354 seats iu
the new chamber of deputies.
Inofficial circles a government major¬
ity to considered assured. Although the
majority compact will not and be large, homogeneous it will be
more more
than that m the last chamber.
Returns from the elections in this city
show that the Conservatives did not
elect a single member, while the Repub¬
licans returned one Mil the Boulongists
four. Reballots will be necessary in
thirty-seven M. Theveuet, divisions. minister of justice, has
been re-elected, bat reballots will be
necessary in the districts in which M.
M. Constant minister of the interior, and
Yves-Cuyot, minister of ptflHic
works, were candidates. Their election,
however, is regarded as certain.
MM. Among Milude, the Republicans Goblet, § Jules defeated “ Ferry, Mil¬ are
. districts
liard liard and and Jpabert. Jpubert, while in the
in wlrioh MM. Millaraud, Republicans, Passy, Lock-
roy, Floquet and Barodet,
Lauer, and MM. Desuuie Andrienx, and Laisant, Noquet, Yergern, anti-Re-
tmblicans, trill were candidates, Dillon reballots'
have to be bad. Count was
elected.
Later Betaroi.
•Later returns show that the Repub¬
licans have elected their candidates in
819 Re-ballots di visions will and- be the necessary Opposition in 176 in 156. di-
vi H4M. Bretuil, Tbe Conservatives Domteanville, Rave elected
MM. Soubeyan,
Mackau, 1 Montgolfier and Bishop Frep-
P*
______
This S*ttle< Boulanger.
London, Sept. 34.—The Paris corre¬
spondent of The Times says the elec,
turns in France Sunday resulted in a
crushing only defeat twenty-one to the Boolangtets, members who and
returned
whose chamber, entire after representation the rebooting, in the will new not
exceed tliirty-six members. The Con-
gervativos elected 181 members and wul
* get ilii-ty more. k
The Re; ipublicaas " returned 218 and
will secure strength over in 10# the more, chamber malting between tbeir
total e
833 ;ird H(iy, against reactionary-Boulan- 220 or 280 repre¬
gist senting coalition. the whole The of the Re¬
success
publicans and the defeat of the mon¬
archy and CfBsorism the election is a puts happy fact end
The result of an
to spiracy. the Boulangist-Monarchist con¬
- ■
.
N» Clew t* th* Bank Bobbery.
Hurley, yet been Wis., discovered Sept 24 regarding —No clew has the
as who
whereabou ts of the robbers plunder*
ed the Iron Exchange bank Friday
sight Halbrick, a driver of Davis’
dray line, silver, picked up a bag containing
♦TOO in
where Cashier
were found
turned the money over to the officers. the
Dispart of the cash token from
bank, abandoned and is supposed account of to have its weight. been
on
Officers are watching .every nook noox and ana
corner of the known, town night not and the ’
so far as
(race of the robbers has been foi bund.
Ho White* Need Apply.
Nashville, Tenn., Sept 24.—V
much * interest ‘ ‘ is ’ centered attired ii in a new de¬
parture by the bfaoks of Toda oounty,
Ky., They have and organized Montgomery stock county," Company, Tenn.
a
» capital of #25,000, and will hold a
county officer and fair beginning employe is Oct black 10. Every
a man.
Only premiums, colored which amount can contest to #1,000. for
Fifteen hundred dollars are offered tot
purses in the horse rapes, and only
animals owned and ridden by negroes
can enter. The blacks the affair ore taking and thou- im*
mense interest in
ands will at tend,
Bold Safe Robbery,
Cincinnati, Sept robberies 24.—One of most
audacious safe discovered ever perpetra¬ Sun¬ Sun-
ted here was ______ at at noon noon
day. It was that of _ the _______ safe in the of-
flee of the Chesapeake sapeake - and — ____ A Ohio ___ Rail-
at the southwest —_
________ alnut and streets, the nearly op*
poeite the postoffloe, most pub-
uoplace in the city day and pried night A
door on Walnut street was open
for entrance and a combination, big claw-bar was
used to pry off the after
which oold chisels were used to cut the
tumblers. few The, notes burglars and got left sway not with clew
#500 and a a
L*ltk* Lynch* r* Get In.
fibs girl to the river, where hour he outraged later her.
was found an from uncon¬
scious, _____of and her apparently terrible y stS$L dying Guards the
have been placed about ouMhe station to
prevent a lynching
K*d of a hong BUS. _
^180 days. ^j^kwaptuidiifing time
117
THE PE RTH, IND., MINER#
Prevailed Upon to Bomaln Oat a Wow
Day* Longer.
Brazil, Ind., Sept 24.—The No. 8
miners at Perth, who last Thursday
voted without the operators’ a dissenting offer, voice waited to re¬
sume at were
upon tions from Saturday the striking and Sunday by delega¬ well
the miners, as
as by members of central relief or
executive committee. Their action was
earnestly besought protested to stay against, out till Thursday, and they
were all
when, it was said, strikers would re¬
turn at once. Thin would seonre equal
concessions to aU alike, and would indi¬
cate onion and narmony.
Word has been received that the No.
8 in miners, view of yielding the promise to the made, pressure, voted pub¬ and
licly to postpone their return to work
until Thursday. However, niauy of the
miners said privately of getting that rid thi of s the was dele¬ but
on easy way
gation, and that they would return to
work ‘■blacklegs” as originally at agreed. work in Thirty the
are
mine, voted to independent of the sixty-five who
return.__
Lhi“ gtrlki* Uetdareil OlT.
Lancaster, Pa, Sept. 24.- The long
strike at the Columbia rolling mills was
declared off at a meeting of the Amal¬
gamated association Saturday evening.
Most of the strikers’ piacoj have been
filled with non-union men and these will
be retained. The strike lasted nearly
seven months._____
1 be Spokane Wall* “Uo»iUen».”
Portland, Ore., Sept 24.— A Spokane
Falls special says the trial of the alleged
“boodlers” in connection with the citi¬
zens’ relief fund is in progress. The first
of defendants to be put upon trial was
Maj. city council, S. D. Waters, also commissar a member geneial of the of
v
tile National guards of Washington
Territory. mittee testified The chief that olerk he had of relief permitted com¬
Waters to take a load of provisions to
his residence upon his representations
that he was unable to purchase else¬
where and would pay for thei William
Seaborn, Seaborn, an an hauled express wagon driver, testi¬
fied tiiat he two loads of supplies
to Waters’ residence under that gentle-
man’s orders. Waters had instructed
him to go around the back way and not
' J any one " ~ ’ ’ ’ sliver the ie goods,
with • hauling two pairs Waters blankets had l which presented had ated been hii
taken from relief tent
Can Dissolve the Hard**£ Stone.
St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 24—A Bo¬
hemian stoneoutter of this city, named
August Boorfried, has discovered a com¬
bination of chemicals by the use of
which the hardest stone can be dissolved
and oast into any desired shape, the
able casting of taking being os hard brilliant as flint lustre. and cap¬
on a It
varies in color according to the stone
used, and eau be had from a bright red
to an azure blue. While in the fluid it
made in this way. He will start for the
east in a few days to secure the backing
of wealthy capitalists.
Killed at» Oak* Walk.
provoked Culpeper, murder Va-, occurred Sept. 2-1. —An Saturday un¬
night on the farm of Sam Jones about
four or five miles from this place. It
seems some negroes were having a Sat¬
urday night lair, or cake walk, at the
house evening of James of the Fitzgerald. During Kiss¬ the
ed the wife one of Fitzgerald, negroes present whereupon
the latter seized his gun and fired at
Ilia wife, the whole charge striking her
ip the fell left side, makingsfearfu} in wound.
She and expired about fifteen
minutes. stairs and Fitzgerald bed. coolly He walked arrest¬ up
went to was
ed and is now lodged iu the jail here.
A Lofet Mina Found*
Monterey, Cal., who Sept.24—One live of head the
Foreman boys, near the
of the Carmel river, has found the long¬
est mine kijowa by early settlers has as the
“Maria Roman mine.” It often
told how this Indian woman used to go
away and in the course of a few days
would return with large amounts Where of ore,
which she would assay herself.
the mine was located lias always been a
mystery. The pews has created great
mine.
_
Two Deaths from a Snake Bite*
Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 24,— The farmer i2-
living year-old son of George Peacock, a
in Winton county, was oitten by
a rattlesnake Saturday the morning. The
boy ran screaming to house, and told
his father what was'the matter. Pea¬
cock immediately planed his lips to the
wound and attempted to suck out the
‘ "'here was a sore
HMU i e poi^ n took j
his’Von's jt he was life dead, fruitless. He
save was
failed had token to get effect, out and all the the poison boy died before about it
an hour before his father, ~_
5 Schwab, Hidden and Neebe.
Springfield. Ill, Sept. 24.—The Sbhwab, at-
tprnevs for the Anarchists, doing
Fielden anil Neebe, who are time
in the penitentiary for complicity in the
Hay mark* >t massacre, have made several
visits to this city of late, for the pur¬
pose of securing a writ of error horn the
state supreme United court Stdfes. to fhe They supreme ask
court of the
an amendment of the record iu the cose
by taking out the words, “Come now
the parties, ” so as to show (what is the
foot) that the when parties tbe were decision not in court the
in person, of
court was announced.
_
Woman’s Evangelical Missionary Society.
Reading, Pa., Sept 24—The Na¬
society tional Woman’s adjourned Evangelical here Sunday Missionary
even¬
ing, alter choosing Rochester, meeting. Ind., Sunday as
the next place Rev. of W. O. Kantnsr, of
Lafayette, morning the Ore., preached the
ann
sermon, and in
H Hammer, of
_ Mission¬
“Impressions of the London
ary Conference. ” and Mrs. F. G. Stauf¬
fer, of Ashland, 0-, on “Exposition of
Giving.” a ,, . - 1
_
Tbe (aintfl of SilT«r.
Denver, Col., Sept. 21—Resolutions
■pumosp lsw restricting of the „ coin- .
It is- -•-jffimgeofthe proposed to send a
—
trues: Ogaint the office an
of the xl int t&r damage*
NO MORESLAVERY
After November ft Will Be Abol¬
ished ffl Zanzibar.
The Sultan Issues an Edict to
That Effect.
' i
—T“* . , ■ ; ■
British KsjM't* Annina* to S«a tit* Bo-
port of the German. Hoard Sen* to Mm-
vMtigate th® Condition of the Navy.
Spunlxh q.iAilran Sent *<• Ta-iclert.
Zanzibar, Sept 24-With the object
of assisting Great Britaiu and Germany
in suppressing the *Jave trade, the sul-
fja«1 uCKU gxncr■ Waal, iaaita.1 issuou a» uuau* o/Krtt emttn euspu niAW h wi no the hue■
commanders of English and German
warships to search alt Zanzibar dhows
and other boats. The decree also pro¬
vides that oVery person who enters the
sultan’s dominions after November shall
be free.
_
THE GERMAN HAVY.
EnglUh Expert* Curium to Know Its Ex¬
act Condition.
London, Sept. 24— A good deal of
genuine curiosity is felt by English ex¬
perts to see the report of the board
officers departed by the Gen mat a
miralty, the vessels to investigate belonging the the condition navyf ’itioh ivyf tiie of
to
dock yards and facilities for adding [ding to
most number important of-ships of all at brief the notice, student and,
to of
maritime warfare, the institution of a
novel order of tactics.
selves Englishmen build know ships that that, they notwith- them¬
can
......le equals
il seafaring honors
erably good bat uxswpline there is is feeling a tol¬
if one, a
that there arc any improvements to be
lishmen made in should sailing know or lighting ships There Eng¬ is
them. a
journals sneering and tone in the remarks of some
si
those of others,
detected an anxiety to know what mys¬
terious maneuvers the German board so
confidently effective recommend in of need. as likely to
prove case
An object of Dread.
The German army is an objeot of
dread and the same iron discipline ap¬
plied make to the the sister navy might might not
arm of th the. semoe are
nations. equal tenor article and iuThe menace to other
Navy Gazette Ar Army and
prominent signed with the initials of
a naval authority gives as
the writer's opinion that the day of
fleets and euuoerted plans ins gone ”
new methods superiority of training of seamen English is
fldent of the sought
manship to any to be manufac¬
tured to order, and alludes to the
proverbial difficulty of making ducks
out of hens. ,
Kot » JUfr lf,
Iu the meantime the confession of
proof Constructing that the German Engineer naval Pannecke service is is a
by no means a model to others, as yet
so named many officers implicated of high in rank the have immense been
os
frauds at Keil that it is most likely that
while some of the offenders will be
quietly suppressed punished and the further matter reports allowed will be to
die out.
Hicks.BeACh'a Scheme.
Further apropos of naval affairs, Sir
Michael Hicks-Beaoli will find that his
recommendation of the formation of a
naval reserve to be composed of fisher¬
men and merchant seamen to be drawn
upon work in an smoothly, [emergency Such is not likely detest to
the navaf very service, -They men too Inde¬
are
pendent to take kindl.- to the rigorous
discipline, and moreover are of an
age at which they have* formed their
habits of life and desire last of all to
form new ones. All prominent naval
officers are of the opinion, though they
might not care to express it. that in the
ioned event resort* of a prolonged impressment war the would old-fash¬ be
found imperative in spite of tlie outcry
jt would produ ce.
_
South Arneric™ Sept ftoma Ex-Presideat
Guayaquil, 24 Guayaquil, left
Caamano, governor of
Saturday for the United States as min¬
ister delegate plenipotentiary to the Washington and Ecuadorian interna¬
tional congress. He has l oon granted
ninety days’ leaves of absence. forbidden the
The government hi*
importation inferior of Colombian the Nu.’ional pesos,_ coinage. they
being to
The government prohibits Chines©
immigration. "
Spain DWpatsn®* » -*iu ■a**'' • for Tangier*.
Madrid, Sept. 24- Tito Moorish min¬
ister of foreign EpauUh affaire Wreplied to relat¬ til*
note of the government Spanish vessel
ing to the rapture of a
off the Moroeoo coast. The minister
iflaking the Spanish inquiries government into the
assist him in
matter. The Mailn.1 government is not
disposed to submit to release any delay. the It de¬
sires the immediate of cap¬
tured crew. A Tangtej*, Spanish squadron has
left Cadiz fqr
^
Von Mounter a >*l B. march Confer,
Berlin. Sept 24 -Count Von Mun¬
ster, the German ambassador to France,
has been with Prince Bismarck «wae
Friday. It is rumored that the count
wishes to resign, owing to his age and
ill health, but it is more the likely situation tiiat the in
two are discussing L”
Eranee. *___
Situation on »V> Congo.
London, Sept 24- ' r ail advices from
the Congo are reass a-”..tide, • nag. Tbe Arabs
maintain uhinterruptcJ. a oordial ffippoo M»d Tib is
tion is helpful-
submissive and He has post¬
poned his jour ney to Zanzibar.
Ilelr rrepn tr. Defense.
Rome, Sept 24 -hb * Italian govern¬
ment has ordered few Kropp a num¬
ber of masked towere for the defense of
the Alps. ___J
Prlo.t! An»p«a*od.
mg against the govermneu# -r;it 1 L
— *
Starting < n
San Francisco.
Rowe, the Ohiwmp W
from the Palace hotel
THE PARIS E XP ;S ITiON.
How A*»*»lo» t* U*pro.*nt*d at Dm
G res* Show.
Washington, Sept 24—Professor a
depitmacut V. lli%, who has ogrimtltare been in charge of the
of exhibits at
th© Palis exposition, has just returned
to months, the city, Professor after an Riley absenoe thinks of that five
some of the criticism* of th:< American
exhibit at Paris have b v.i essentially
whole it nevertholes reiooto credit on
the country which it rejire-onU
“Almost everyone at the ©x *ositibu, “
he suys, “agree that afto. F.iuiee ttel-
gium quantity took of the her lead general in the display, qtuditv "then, and
perhaps, fourth thelust England; of exoellenoo. America eesidng
on I be¬
lieve that the awards will oonfirm this
estimate. This standing is very credit¬
able, indeotl, when it to oonsidered that
other Belgium, countries Spain, appropriated Italy, Portugal and. of
sums
iting money their to dofray goods the far expenses in of of exhib¬ that
excess
provided for in the act of congress,
which work. appropriated but #250,0011 for the
many regarding it its the moat ohar
acteristic of the American display. The
agricultural Chomps display do Mars was removed and most from fre¬
the
quented that it parts often of the not exposition visited grounds, those
so who passed was through the other by sections
and There passed judgment complaint Upon of them. the
is no cause for
lack of facilities given us by the mana¬
gers of the exposition, although we did
lack roo m for a proper display iff what
Newspaper* oomraente abroad on the
agricultural he exhibit complimentary. from this oountry,
says, were very M.
Grandean, the agricultural editor of the
Temps, devoted tar more space to it than
to the exhibit of any other oountry, and
in ing a most the flattering great amount way. In of comment¬ territory
on
possessed dered what by the would United H totes, he won¬ the
become of
European producers when the acreage of
America to practically doubled by im¬
ticipated proved methods from the of farming efforts which he an¬
renewed we are
making through the instrumentality of
our Morning experiment Post, stations. he has The London compli¬
mented by series says, of articles giving
us a
a very full, of intelligent the and appreciative
aooount agricultural exhibit
railing lent classification especial attention and to its to statistical its excel¬
and educational value
A C HILD MOTH ER.
A West Virginia Girl Decora** a Widow
»- at Twelve.
- Ho-r*-aKw»», W. V«:, Bopt ALt-fifas.
widow, Agues Bloedel, I2^jears m old, and a
has giv to a well devel-
oped, healthy South girl baby. Samuel R.
Jarvis, a Carolina farmer, con
firms her statement that she to bat 12
years old. She looks no older. Her
father his employs farm. a Among large number them last of men
on German, Julias Bloedel, aged year 17.
was a
The Bloedel two young asked people permission fell in to love and
Agues. It refused and Agnes many
was was
sent to an aunt in Oolumbas. Bloedel
was He discharged. learned of Agnes' whereabouts
and started for Columbus and eloped,
get the girl selling to her her jewelry in order They to
money married and pay expenses. Huntington,
were came to
where Bloedel assumed a fictitious
name. He secured employment and
they feU ill were with living typhoid happily, fever when and died Bloedel in
a
week. The young widow wra very poor
and suffered much. She ww induced
to acquaint her father of her condition,
and home. he has forgiven her and wiU take
her
______
Wreck <u> the Northwestern,
The Chicago, limited Sept. 24.—The train Mail sa; &
Northwestern passenger railroad that left the on
Sunday night, was wrecked at Blaek-
statiuu The about sixty miles from
passenger train was side-
to allow a wild freight to pass,
the ough switch the carelessness left unlocked of a make- and
man was
and the freight orashed train into ran the through the switoh
passenger train.
isengera
are reti-
oeut, but admit that there was a wreck,
and that the engineers of the two trains
were badly and hurt, the newsboy. and, also a few pas¬
sengers stealing A tramp
a ride on the freight w as kilted-
lx Goff ■* Candida!**
Washington, ‘was in the Sept, 24.—Geo. Sunday. Nathan He
Gqff Park city Monday. over Hia
eer south-
lv for the reason that the president
understood to want the office to seek the
man, and partly because it to not yet
generally impossibility admitted for attorney that Gen. general Goff when to an
the supreme bench vacancy to filled.
Senator plumb is of opinion thet Maj-
Warner to not is out yet of final it, though Rea, of his Minneap¬ resigna¬
tion
olis; Brown, of Cincinnati, or some west,
mm Grand Army man not Plumb’s yet named,
if, be according the to commissioner Senator opin¬
ion, new .
KmHd In Mnr.lor,
Phobia, HI, Sept 24—A gang of
Lower Peoria ria hoodlums, hoodlums, who, who, under
the leadership of James Mackey, have
for months back been a source of
have brought their criminal career to a
climax by the murder of on inoffensive I
old man named drinks Cowan. for the Few refusing he _
to .last pnrchaiie Wednesday, beaten gang and locked was,
into a state of insensibility, Enters and yester-
&r£z2*i Haaloo in custody and ahnoet the
aw
entire police the foroe fourth are member searching named the
suburbs for said hare bben
Mackey, who to to Men The
leaving the city about noon.
chancre are ;ti»t he will he captured
within a f ew hones.
_
Talking Tea
JohnP- N*w York, Jeh%of Sept
St
ex-governor aliud
rinsssi
WILKIE COLLINS.
Demise of the Well Know*
gllsh Author
Whose Stories Wars Read By
all Other Novelists.
Hb First Library Fa*tar* Wm a Mag*,
raphy at HI* Fatkar 1* IMS— Frara
That Tiara Ha Davatadl Himself M Mb
Warn KaaawaaA
the London, well known Sept * novelist ^ : Wilkte Colling
..... died Mylar
sated wandered iorsev-
end hour* previous to his demise.
Magrahl al.
Wilkie Collin*—hi* full name to Will-
tom Wilkie Collins —was bon in Lea-
l *He
tbtte attend
urmFi
Inn when hto father died. Hi* euNest
literary father, with effort selections was a from biography hto jouraato of hto
and volumes correspondence, in 1848. published in two
S 3 S& A.W.
agf&gMi asaryww MnBa.*:
S 2 S, IrtLS'S
„ fren^Hto J^to Hto
„ Mammre . ’ and “Heart and Sotaaoe.”
Most ^ Mr Collins' books hay* been
- _______________It hone* oi
noed In 1857 at tbe hto Olympic !
“The Frozen Deep, nnpu * *
. *** „ ^ _
by 1888 amateurs “Rank and with Riotiea” great suoeees. produoed In
was
at met the with Adelphi oomplete theater, failure. Lo ndon , and
a
Naval Sat ai Ba raral ram. '
Parkersburg, W. Va., Sept * 4 -
Some aarrSa^ time ago a large 1, aerolite fell nsot
age of iron. The
vicinity got several ]
the iron, and sold it to a farmer
living at Worthington, new? th is city.
Uichmond’! CeUaeteWs Shartaga.
Nnw York, Riohmond, Sept 24—A Va., Tribune spe¬
cial from in the collector’s office mysthe is mid short¬ to be
about age #80,000, and owing to the toUure
of the city auditor to moke an 1
report of the qffioe it to said the I
men will not have a dollar to pay.
to a 1 heavy Mow *• the •• city “ f '
shows a the S«f*?i loose manner of
c 2 2 £?«iS
of its effect on the election.
Hutto far Money.
Chicago, Sept 24—Tbe body of the
tiie murdered man found at Calumet
was ETReiniuger, positively identified of Mansfield, as tiiat 0. of Sam- The
nel
police have disco vered tiiat a gtu
hereby murderer, W. has E. blood Purdy, therasj
the man under arrest at
was the traveling oompa
inner, It to now prior known rnt the totter
had #2<X> just to hto death. Tbs
money has not been found.
AttanptaC Hardar—KMLM BfaWfU
Carson, i T„ Sept 2a.—At # o'clock
Sr/£^g.^?n^s,: shot at by Bradshaw. 11 ■ The The test shat did
waa
no damage and Bradshaw immediately
placed a revolver to hto own forehead
and fired, killing him*elf large instantly. He
leaves a wife tie and a family of small
children in poor Smtimmy witoMi
eased and Tyler had of threatened undue shoot Ms
wife, to
Wife and'
-
Stabbnf for Hto htwbnM*.
Falmouth, fatally Ky., stabbed Sept 24-Cen Henry Sm- Col¬
lins was during meeting of by folks at
gent tiie residence a of John Smith, young in the Mo-
Sargent to in jail
Man nnd Wire Arraatad far Malftr. .
Bbooivill*, Collier ImL, Ellen Sept cSilier, 24—Wilber wife,
M. and charged hto
were murder sweated of John Friday, Collier, twin with brother the
a
of examination, Wilber. They and waived a preliminary remanded,
were
The testimony given dam at the coroner's the de-
inquest fendants. was very a
_
VOS • DjrUdlWr.
Cincinnati, the well Sept known 24—Howard attorney traveling Dasg-
abroad, toss, suspected of bring dynsr
was a
snd taken prisoner in Germany, Mr.
woes out of the use which by
an asthma oare wae-
the deadly explosive.
______,«arera
.
Balwmorr, Md.,
Garr
, hto]
Iotas Batonday.
taSnSTS^ta ~W--- re e nw qg-
A /iKm IU. kmi m Mall Him
Orerga Waldorf has
»r«st of uiisa.......
At Par* Wi
jjjwa
Oar a^Wt lL^
en fight nser
"‘SLklrawto
sea at Butts, If out,
soddfeufy from th* I
tahtohsad.
—
at WUkasbarre.
lag and «m* arm.
-ESiSrsa*”
and worked*
draw claim* *
At <a^i
. 1 „ ’, ,
gj§ 3 f|j^ 'I*
Idse mstMatt .
to to.,.
.
banker!’ 1
Mtaterobesdl /
1
j
».V„1
Ottawa’at
Two tinamau,
in u
tobeks and f«U Both' »*•»_.
fiftean lest ware -
One man had U* arm
out
Solomon FWtdk, rataraa of ti
immiv Iron
Wist brie tatasbrata
How or by whom bet
CltT a_____ ,
dustry to Kaema. tb “
intrcnuttii Monday? [b* itOCk vtl
and left in t
i>oa,
Saturday
itor to Upper 8 u
« llgnttd mmum 1
WricK 1
far*#11
Ohatcarocwa,
critical condition.
Il*««!t *i * <
jzrr$ fc.lrf Suadt,,
has as engine*!, c
dos had ocoarioB to
need hi* dub
The 1 wo
shots firing taking at
e
breast causing
•--y
WDC RITA,
Latham, a
rieto, we*
five mile
wuseioae
Sd left I