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VOLUME 18.
GEORGIA, U.S. A. CROP REPORTS.
Grifflu 1 h the brat and most promising little
ity inthe South. Its record for the past
half decade, its many newenterpri.ee in oper- J- ftrmers Complaining to
ation, batiding and contemplated, prove this Agricultural Department
o be » business statement, and not a hyper-
olical description.
E Ka* built and put into bout the Reports
We He ve lenty Left
mq \p
AND-
■f WIY ASSORTMENT OF
Guilds, Gitas, Prints,
.
DOMESTICS, FLANNELS, &C.
Wiill be fou c Desirable and Cheap. Splen¬
did Lino of
KOOiaeiRrsr i
*»
CiilLDRBN'S SCHOOL HOSE A bPBUIALTY.
GOOD LOTTON CHECKS 43-4 els. PER YARD
Stylish Hats,
In Soft and Derbvs,
But no Fancy Price on Them.
SEE MY LINE OF
IN COTTON AND WOOL.
---W-
lau Ummi oii m>tb*« Oll/C rK,‘USA lli£sdL?KSr¥
and oee box of CuTUJUBA, and one cake of
OuTictnu SOAP, I Was cored of the dreadful
disease from which I hod suffered for # ve years.
I thought the disease would leave a very
deep scar, bat the Cctwura Remedies cured
it without any scare. I cannot express with
a pen what I suffered before using ilng the the Cuticu- l
ba Remedies. They saved my life, and I feel
it my duty to good recommend and them, is My hair is
restored as as ever, so my eye-
sight. I know of a number of different per-
_______ sons who ho bare ami the Cvncoaa Sememes,
and rtf have received great beueflt from their
nee. Mbs. BOSA KELLY,
Rockwell City, Calhoun Co., Iowa.
Cutleura Remedies
Cores every species scaly of agonising, and pimply humiliating diseases
itching, burning, scalp, and blood, with lorn of hair o
the skin, all humors, blotches, eruptions, sores
ana simple,
scales and crusts, whether scrofulous
or contagious, when physicians and all other
remedies fail.
Sold everywhere. Price, Cutkcea, 50c.
Soap, 85.; Resolvent, $1. Prepared by the
Potter Dbuo and Chemical Cobpobatios,
Boston.
®T- Head for “How toCure Skin I
04 pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimo
ihap-
CTWIT-
a Soap.
IT STOPS THE PA.N.
Bask ache, kidney pains, weak-
---, rheumatism, and muscular
IS RELIEVED IN OWE MINUTE by
l Anti- Pais Plaster, the
flrst and only stantaneons pain-kilhng
plaster.
THfc
iiTiAL m mum w.
OP NEW YORK.
Organised te 1843. Asset* aver $126,000,
■fiteCEwsSSEfe 000, Paid members since orgaamatton over
the worid ami the advantages it offers to £
snrersmake it tbe MA^HAM’SSONS. safest, cheapest and
8. W
nly7dgw6m4p. . .
*,*< «. Or'
- « -rr-
crooked dealing have foot-
one The promotion onl" interests the its government makers report
oan n nave
are in its truth. Organized trade oan
recitic its linta and iuformatiou with its
own vetonrees, »:i-l should it have the
exnhWro knowledge of crop prospeote, would be
I nlh in- poors and consumers
EMPLaRS' CONCLAVE.
71* aaa.1 Men to Take Part
the 1'urail*.
asm.-g.-on, Oct 1—The twenty-
th triennial oouolave of the Knight,
plara of the jurisdiction of the
ted States will week begin in this ofay
7. The whole will be a round
vities.
th«| jjsrede^it 22,000 is in estimated lina or more
Templars than have ever here-
mdrohed in procession on one
and exceeding by 13,000 the
a line at the last triennial oon-
in St Louis. The oommanderies
from all parts of the United
be rei
thl though Canadian not preoeptories—as in this jurisdiction, subordi- Sev¬
ern denominated
1 i dte bodies are in Cana-
—will be in line. Fully 350 cities
es in line. The
juassaoiiusetts it representation and Rhode
,av< . u ue
3land, which comprise Pennsylvania, one jurisdio- Ohio,
pnkpu, New York,
lna linois, and Michigan, suburdinate there being no
vs than twenty-seven oom-
tuinanderies from Ohio alone, twenty-nine
aDQ om Illinois, and twenty-eight from
and Thejwrade will be reviewed by Preei-
ol T .ent Harrison, who will the o ccup Wlute y a_stand House.
c eoted in front of
“ u nother stand will be erected for the
cotlrand •djfcS master - of the encampment, who
i Roome, of New York, will
f ar tarker, of this city, of
18 . Jingman Lj twelve os chief s
divisions,
bo' Many state headquarters will be es¬
tablished )hio knights during this secured conclave. the The
have armory
f be the Indiana Washington Templars Light infantry, that of ana the
ational Rifles. Htute headquarters
be handsomely deoorated, and the
.ory in which ‘the Indiana knights
be represents tended field.
tlle > , California Comm i i I .tries Bn Route.
San Fraxgiboc. Oct 1. — The
adtnighls .(iigcles and Templars Fresno, from left Saturday Oakland, night Los
wtl , ^id • special the triennial train for conclave, Washington to at-
Wed MRS. JA MES 4. BLA INE, JR.,
^ Soon os She Recovers, will Brine Sait
m0 ; for • Divorce.
8ac NEw York, Oot l.—Gsn. Martin
I. McMahon, counsel for Mrs. James
tew. Blaine, Jr., said —In Sunday that as soon
" — — her pres-
be begun
for divooe. It has
_iot u yet been determined whether the
mit will be for an absolute or limited
lessor Doremns’ house, she asked termiaa- that
l .in case her sickness ha I a fatal
lion Mr. Blaine should not be allowed
i!to have her child.
Robbed of Over 13,030 In n Sleeper.
Elmira, N. Y., Oct. 1.—A. W. Bar-
fc, ibed of of Oswego, $3,6(17 in a cash cattle and dealer, $1,500 Was in
dLackawana ieeks while riding Western in a sleeping Delaware,
and car
°iurning last Friday night. his home Mr. from Barrett New was York re-
tfeity. to
pillow He in had his placed ve-.t the pocket, money During under
D ”ffie ms
night for he had occu iou to leave his
nberth a few moments, and when he
gpeturued the vest and contents were
bis nissing. loss He the immediately iaetor made and wanted known
to con-
the passengers searched. This the con¬
ductor refused to h-.tvc done. After¬
ward the vest, with t he pockets turned
inside out, was Ton 11 under one of the
.berths. Mr. - arre.r vfsl an ac¬
efficient -iss'istaur, and - a of clerks,
co-ordinates, compares, sifts and finally
publishes the information so extensive¬
ly collected.
“Only to dishonest, unscrupulous middlemen, reck¬
nations, less speculators seeking or lower prices combi¬ the
to to
producer Hi and enhance them to the con.
"" - ?rompt and - * * - • *
this careful,
dealer, prejudicial. To it every of
honest as to every fanner, is
the utmost advantage as a protection
against the farmers rapacity fully and appreciate imposition, the value and did to
themselves of these monthly reports an
edition of 100,000 copies would more
likely be needed in place of the present
edition of 3.',*>30, and no donbt if a
special appro})’iation demand for were the made for it would a special be
forthcoming. purpose
“The eagerness with whioh the press,
receive, and especially and pnblii-ties the agricultural all information press,
the statistical division can snpply bear¬
ing upon the supply . and demand for
agricultural products, and the coarse
of the market, aiforus attached ample the evidenoe dissemi¬ of
the importance reliable information to these
nation of intelligent on class
subjects themselves by a most largely interested in of
people, agricultural prosperity.
“Future ’ “---------the crop prospects now values exercise of
available that
course of the
market Boards will have of trade, all possible organised informa¬
tion. individual com¬
mercial bodies and even
firms now spend thousands of dollars
each year in supplementing tar th«r
own private use the monthly The additional reports of
the statistical division.
information thus gained tornado use of
in their trade ventures, and fa gives the
dealer an advantage over the producer.
and even exclusive information to use as
buyers or sellers, rather than for the
public use, but not the right to distort
or falsify the truth for the purpoees
deception and robbery of producers r
“Yet such selfishness will surely be
exhibited in the use and of attempts private crop to »■
i machinery public will , follow, lour, wniie greed mis;
the
GlUFFIN, GEORGIA. WEDN MORNING, CTOBER 2 im
tion Mainst the riuuoa.1 company to
Compel it to make goal uis loss,
Vkrlont D U it Iliriuinghsm,
Bibmikgua i, Ala.. Oci 1.—Ths
daily count in tuc criminal d catalogue
reports only to .r men dead by violent
means.
AtSIoss 1 f inincc villiam Mitchell
fell from the hoi t a 1 s nance of eighty-
five feet a id met in tan ‘ death-
A t North loading Birmingham old pistol, Diok Martin,
while an accident¬
ally shot an ! ^instantly killed Joe
Heard. '
At Coal burg a party of colored men
made a demand upon a party of pic¬
nickers for a division of the beer and
refused, whisky they notified were the enjoying, that they and being
o would
have and two beer dead or blood. Shooting left begun the
men were on
ground. The last killing is doubted
here, but i s reported by a depu ty sheriff
Sclcld d in Lake Michigan.
Chicago, Oot. t — Heniy Watson
Pratt, social a connection, young man of good for F. family L. Hed- and
& Company, agent coal dealers, at their
strom
himself Twent, -second Sunday, -street jumping yards, into drowned the
lake from the small pier at the foot of
Pearson passing street the lake Julius front drive, Hoglett and was
on saw
tre rhn young totiie man spot leap and from palled the pier. the body He
from the lake, but it was too late to
save the young man’s Ufa Pratt’s
friends can imagine no reason for sui¬
cide. He had been in the best possible
spirits SWaahin when last sew. His parents live
gton, D C.
An lafMUd Y*mwL
New York, Oct 1.—The steamship
from Gibraltar, arrived hero
pfSsarai jSlii? v^3 6r devolo£d
iwsteor-
jtsSs
and they
SPRING VALLEY.
The Destlt* te (kmilitiou of the
Miners’ Families There
As Described By Mr. Henry D.
Lloyd, of Chicago,
—c—i- *
, ;V ,.
Who Hu Jmt Returned Front a visit til
That Clljr—Sobool CHlIdroo So Weal
Fuat U«k of Food Thai tl»*x Fall
A»Uep M Thais- Drake—On the Taiga a*
Starvation—tnadafnalalf Clothad.
i Chicago, this Oct
of city, who
.a visit to Spring
distributed among the
medicines furnished by » charitable
New York lady; writes a long letter to
The Tribune, in whioh h# describes the
wretched condition of the people there.
“AmoogjAw means ofgetting intel¬
ligent and tfflbiaeed information as to
the exact state of things,” he says, "I
visited tbe Catholic school and the pub¬
lic school, in whioh together there are
over 600 children, and taMted 4bildren. with the
teachers and many of the The
sisters who teach in the Catholic school
■aid that their children gM* unmistaka¬
ble evidence of not having sufficient
food. They were paler than the year
before and they oould noi study as well
Children would frequent# fell asleep at
their desks from wealmNs. Bat so
sturdy was their pride impossible and self-sespeot
that it was almost for their
teachers to obtain from mem any ac¬
knowledgment that they > did net get
enough “Children to eat at home. unmistakably
who were
suffering for want of nourishment would
even refuse food when offered them by
their teacher, and, in some eases, the
sister superior said, when food was taken
by some such child, it wae immediately
rejected by the stomaoh, showing how
far the exhaustion of hanger had gone.
One of the teachers in the public school
stated that on her way to-the echoed in
the morning she would sometimes meet
as many as a dozen of her Olaas out with
boskets, going to
tiie little things,
hide from sight until she
both schools numbers <
were insufficiently clothed, little boys
and girls of the tenderest years having
cm underclothing. only some light sack or jacket, with
no It wae a cold, bleak
day, but many were barefoot How the
people have lived at all is a mystery.
"There have been during the last foui
weeks, ending Sept 35, five distribu¬
tions by the relief committee-all in
goods, no money has been given out—
and the extent of this -charity has suffi¬
ciently indicated by the statement taken
from the aooount of the committee that
each family of seven, and others in pro¬
portion. had received for the entire
period of four weeks, flour, meal, eta,
to the value of $5.88, or eighty-foux
cents’ worth far each person for ths
whole four weeks. The mayor of the
city, the editor of The Spring Valley
Gazette, the Congregational clergyman,
Mr. Stringer, all the physicians of the
place- every one, in fact, stated without
qualification, that were it not for the re¬
lief from without the people would
have starved and would be starving. To
check so scanty a stream of relief,
eighty-four cents’ worth of food foe
each person monthly, by talk about ‘ex¬
aggeration, ’ seems to me nothing short
of inhuman. ’ ’
Mr. Lloyd declares that tbe death
rate is high there, ami that it will be
greatly increase as tbe weather grows
oold. He deekwus, of his own
knbwledge, that the sick and poor have
been refused medicines and medical ad¬
vice by the poor authorities there.
OI L IN PERS IA.
Aa American Syndicate Develops s
Prom Ding Field.
Bangor, Me., Oot. 1.—For about
two yean move or less has been said
regarding by a syndicate grand Persian American colonizing
scheme a of cap¬
italists incorporated Maine, under the laws of
tiie state of the Amerioan end
Being of this managed city. Mr. Mr. by Clergue Clergu Fran“- Francis has TT El made m Clergue, ---
sev¬
eral trips across tiie ocean and has con¬
ferred with the Shah of Persia and the
Czar of Russia. Upon his return he has
each time oonsnlted with Secretary
Blaine syndicate. and the leading spirits of the
Last week he stated that exports in
various branches, such as railroad build¬
systems, ing, eleotric etc., had lighting, been sent erecting water from
over
New York last fell, and also that recent¬
ly valuable oil deposits had been dls*
covered veloped. hi Now Persia, cable and ware being to the de¬
a agent message of the Roths¬
syndicate from an
childs offers $1,000,600 for all privileges
in this oil discovery, providing the
shah’s consent can be obtained to tbe
transfer the Americans of tiie English that t capitalists. « the latter 1
say *
not witt deal with and or trust for this Englishmen. they
the* reason
which h able they to bold. so secure The the Taluablfrgrants English offer
he
will be____ ye refused.
Natural Gu Wav.
Green field, Ind., Oot 1. — Ths
mid gas war tiie Greenfield between r *»■ «u the ww Gas People's company f* stuQi
—- ^ ont nr H m r
raging. to furnish Tbe first named long Company
agrees gas aa as gas u
foand in this fieldfor the sum of$100
for one lot for all purposes, to be paid
for at $5 every three months. The
Greenfield oompany makes tiie same
offer, they practically, reduced their and monthly Saturday rate night for
stoves, grates, etc., to one-half their
former rates. A heating and stove second now
eretetuMM^se per yen a
A Waaktes*on photngraekar tort.
WAUnmnoF, Oot I. — Charles &
J -°r * ** “r. eM* «*
iv- -
teen
TROUBLE FEARE0 v -
WU«m the tllilted *fft lte< Cralser Ru»h
Co ill I-- South — ;oal«r* Mail.
Naw York, Oot, L—A special to
The World from Otta wa says:
British Columbia a Moos say that the
cruiser Rush will soon call at Victoria
cm her way south, and it is feared
trouble will arise betvoen tho orews of
the seized scaling schooners and their
friends and the crew- of the Rush if
the latter attempt- to anchor in the
harbor. The crow - of the sealers, meet
of whom are now at Victoria, are in the
wildest state of excitement over the loss
of their summer's work and the confis¬
cation of their skins. They say that if
they British cannot government get voih-ess they will through take it out the
at the United .States cutter that ‘-stole'
their soelakiu*.
The militia is hold ready to prevent
any attack on the cutter. There are
many men of the rougher aid element of
Victoria who would the RuaE~ indignant
sealers if the latter attack the
The Rush ;has captured five British
Columbian sealers in Alaskan waters,
and broken up the work of a dozen ves¬
sels in all. About 2,500 skins were con¬
fiscated, but all the vessels, except into one
American schooner, which put
Sitka as ordered, went to Vict oria.
BARRING NE QRoTs FR OM OFFICE.
A Mlwtwlppl Stats S .nstor'* Scheme to
Prevent B«t.i Trouble*.
Coffeeville, Miss., Oot L—State
Senator Joel P. Walker, of Meridian,
thinks that he has found a remedy by
whioh all Motion between the blacks
and whites will be removed. Ha con¬
tends that all the strife and discord that
arise from politics, between the and races the emanate demand entirely of the
negro to have the of state the offices whites divided, that
ana the avowal no
negro should hold any place wherein
the whites are interested.
He reasons that if you take away from
the negro all hopes of gaining political
to power it tiie will ballot dampen box, his and ardor by and his zeal
go to re¬
maining away the state remains peace¬
ful. Mr. Wmker will, therefore, in all
probability, ate, in January introduce next, in bill the prohibiting state sen¬
a
any negro blood or any man with
negro from holding a po¬
litical state office. He says, and other
eminent lawyers affirm his statement
that such an act will not conflict with
the fourteenth and fifteenth amend¬
ments to the United States constitution.
So far the proposed plan has not met
with popular favor, and the bill, if in¬
troduced, will not likely beca me a law.
LAW SCH OOL FOfj WOMEN.
Aa Institution to Ba Op*n«d In Hew
York by Dr. Emily Kemper.
Boston, Oot. 1.—Lillie Devereaux
Blake gives some foots about the new
law school for women which is about to
be opened in New York by l)r. Emily
Kemper, who has an office at No. lt>3
Broadway, where she prepares oases to
be argued in court by her young man
assistant She cannot herself plead, be¬
cause Dr. she Kemper is not is naturalized. LL. D., whioh de¬
an
gree was conferred by the university at
Zurich before she came to America.
Coming there to New institution York she where found that
was no one
could study law. Dr. Kemper proposes
to open her school, which is also de¬
signed for those women who want to
know all about law so as to be able to
manage their business affairs and to en¬
able them to fill positions of trust
Students the classes, are being which already wifi enrolled to-day. for
new open
Dr. Kemper has secured the services of
several The proposed prominent lawyers will as lecturers. three
oouree cover
years._____
A Fuol hardy Under taking.
Niagara Falls, N. Y., Oct L—
Floating down the Niagara river from
Grass Island and landing on the head
of Goat Island is considered at all times
a very hazardous undertaking, and Of
no plished practical several use, yet times. it nas This been accom¬
summer
“Jocco” Walker and one Darry were
carried over the Horseshoe Falls, when
it it to was was reach supposed suppored the island, they, the; bat too, those were casualties trying
did not prevent Anthony Walker, a well
known trip Sunday nver pilot, afternoon. from attempting Taking the
an
old scow he rowed over to Grass Island
and amid much excitement made the
trip goedmanagement successfully. Good landed luck him more than the
on
AAditlonal Fraud* in Louisiana.
New Orleans, Oct. 1.—The state¬
ment is now mala upon what appears
te be good authority, that what irregularities known
have been discovered in is
as the “baby” bonds, commencing at
No. 103000, with some slight irregular¬
ity previous to that number. Nearly all
of the "baby” brad* above Na 102000
are fraudulent The state auditor and
treasurer will soon take up this branch
of tiie investigation Attorney General
Rogers admits (bat “l>abj" bonds have
been abstracted or otherwise tampered
with to the amount of 100,000. Accord¬
ing to Judge Rogers figures the defalca¬
tion already in sight will reach more
tiianfl,200,000.__
Only a Sewpmprr Dn.
Chicago, Oot. L— The Herald says
that the charging story published Jimmy in Gillan Sunday’s with
Tribune Millionaire
the murder of Snell, and the
alleged oonfeesicn by Gillan is alto¬
gether untrue. Rev. Father Sullivan,
of 61 Jar lath's church, who is said to
have vimted Gillan in tiie lower room of
the county hospital ths night he he died,
denies in foto the stray in that saw a
man named Gillan or ever received a
confession of the kind
him. A. J. Stone, Chief of the s
Uonaire’s nsire's family. family, uuiei Elliott erf cx rouoe auo-
bard rd and Sergeant all pronounce
the i • publication , . a huge distorted hoax, with all
the i foots facts th perverted perverted and to make
them fit e yarn.
MC11C'andMsey.
Boston, Oct. l. - The Globe state*
*■* Fourth * Xt? ISSATiffi
at the
ihilliron** interest Sidacy of
grass ° in that district; a that -1—j eulogistic £0?
t ___
Cm of Oot 1. —The inundated. dtr
Ml OF WAR
Suddenly ,Sou:iilM By the Press
of Genu;i iy and Altalrl*.
..C , taw rt 1 .'; 1 • I?;* t'$f\
Prince Bismarck Believed to
Be at the Bottom of It.
Gr»k S»t>*r*tlil«n Kuxartlinff Ik* Star¬
ving* or 11)0 Duka or Sport* and Prla**W
Sophia- Ki-Uuo<mi Nattllo lint urn* to
Bolgrada and U Itoartlljr Waleowod.
Other Fon lvn Now*.
Berlin, Oot l.- The Gorman *
Austrian press have suddenly r““
a war alarm, alleging that the i
railway be laid tracks whioh Russia has which she
to down, the engines
has ordered to be furnished, the aottve
movements of troops on the Galician
and Burkovinian frontiers, o* whioh six
regiments of cavalry and four of infant¬
ry nave arrived, together with the erec¬
tion of observatories along the Galician
line, indicate that the Russian army te
executing a strategic march. been
Bismarck's ray of mad dog lias
uttered so often that diplomatists im¬
mediately “What inquire after each now oss
does Bismarck want?"
On this occasion he is omdtted with
x? 1 .®r.. < su:
2S&KA tiie visit SUiSTfg Potsdam Ss has
czar, whose to of
been oold delayed contracted until by Oot the 9, czarina, on aooount into
a a
political conference, and i the tne m third i ra is is to
prepare thereiojteteg fer r the tile passage passage of i
tiie new army bill that will rill demand «
additional credit of $60,000, 000, UloZ OuO.
OraeklSHperitl!
The Moscow papers ask if Bismarck
dreams erf detaching the Greeks from
their traditions of a Russian alliance
The Greeks attach superstitious import
to tiie marriage of the Duke of “
and PrineessBophia, An old j
is recalled by the papers of At£__
reproduced boro, to the effeot that the
pT’%'it under the rule s l,.a"L of the l, Greek ‘a? 0 SS£;
namHi Constantine with wife emperor rolled
a
Sophia. of Sparta’s The coincidence Constantine, of the and Duke that
of the Princess name, fa. exciting the
imagination of all Hopliin, Greeks hopeful
as a
augury which of .*on-in« events, a feeling of.
Bismarck will take advantage
Tho empress will accompany the em¬
peror to Constantinople, and will stay
on the imperial yacht while the sultan
entertains his majesty.
EstetttitiO uy Ki«ctr lofty.
Berlin, Ooi l. - The emperor has
instructed tiie ministry of justice to re-
■will lute produce eertainty. painless He reads death with thing abso¬ at¬
evrey side
tained on the soientiflo of tiie
question, and has sent the ministry
copious notes on the American and
European scientists’ inquires into the
matter. His personal conclusion wee
that electricity ought not to bo applied
unless dm preparations for the exeeu-
methods 'SS££t hitherto “Sf&Eto suggested '££*SS clumsy.
are
Ex-Queen Natali* Kilter* Belgrade.
talie Belgrade, Oot 1.—Ex-Queen Na¬ of
time Sunday that fulfilled she her would promise return to
some ago
Belgrade. she Her entry entry ignored was triumphant bv the
eminent Aiuiougn officials, was crowds thronged gov-
the „ ,______
the streets to the number number of of 50,000 50,OOfi and
gave her a, royal weloome. She was
forced to appear on tiie balcony of her
residence to respond to tiie enthusiasm
of the citizous singing the National
anthem through the streets.
The Russian minister and all the at¬
taches of the 'Russian embassy visited
the ex-queen, remaining half an hour.
Italy's Treatment ->f ths F«p».
Dublin, Oct 1. — Archbishop
Logue, the Catholic primate of Ireland,
preaching in Amah cathedral Sunday,
referred in the strongest terms to Italy’s
treatment of the pope. He deolared
that the Italian peasantry were over-
taxed and in a worse re condition _ than the
Donegal tiie Italians and Connemara emigrating peasoni faster ats; •than that
were
the Irish, and that too Italian govern¬
ment has encircled the Vatican with
knowing that if the pope da-
would soon grow in the
streets of Rome
The Rotterdam Strike.
Rotterdam, Oot, 1.—The striking
dookmen have appointed committees to
confer with the companies and to organ¬
ize relief measures The animosity of
the the strikers stevedores, appears who to be only aocused against of
are
sweating work the men. pending Many negotiations arc witting with to
resume
the employers. A speedy settlement is
expected.
___
School Bor* Strike.
London, Oct 1,— A novel strike has
been Harwich inaugurated tShool. The by the pupils scholars dems
shorter hours at their lessons and better
marten. teachers. They also denounce the
•
Great Storm i» Mexico.
Crrr or Mexico, Oct 1.—The
force of the great storm that visited the
Bajio country within the part few days
has lation abated, fa apparent although in its all tracks rides. deso¬ The
on
second crop of corn, which was
large, great suffering is a partial loss. the lab This ring will cl
to
Trains on the Mexican Central railroad
are again running regularly.
Erie eon'* Renting 1’lace.
New Yowi. Oct. l. A movement fa
on foot to placs the body of the late
John churchyard, Ericsson in this in a city, vault in close in Trinity
imity to that Robert Fulton, inventor prox¬
of tne steamboat The scheme also
oontemplates the erection of an elabo¬
rate joint memorial to honor the me
rice of the two great inventor*.
Lively Timet at a Celand Dmm.
Jeffersonville, Ind., Oct
a- negro hall Sunday “ItPiS ni
ns slashed with a razor ■
day morula 1.
- .
Saturday a
pfep, Vf v- ’* *
Rev. Patter t
richest t'ati
is dead at W
tmm
cr*""
The i
in tbe -
wires wu, ...................
•35,000, aSrurv" has
brea.
Coin VUIUIUMUI, mh«7n V., J
- -
jbi-uouncy kroteur&r
at charge Vtaton^tetorfey^ of mnbwx&Mxm
‘
Several hundred I
OOtlUtV ta^roivm WTfth jlJSr Km —m re
dremrtteeft&S
Two maiden sistur
burned to dsstii in
One tried to save (te <
treeswar ta Stark
rthtitei
BUJyQsttrtl’s,
poured oli on 1
rnlnf iajT^ fmm *n it
jsssa c
liwst"
Judge Luskin, of tte m jiiHwii i||B| mmt
dvarvia wng **«» fhraiihffil bUraulIVU Rk 411 ff,
Van Durer, an Irate attorue , . r
JU gw QM llUpUgHctl II
Willi am Waiters e : iin
Kar-M CRy, is i
charged with obte
Arm* in that city <
A newsboy sada l
tho San hum * ward 1
Safet y’^rttojkrtraq ,
Mossey sad
Thompson Burklsy te 1
Trim., fra *16, which tte J
At Chicago, Twomhty Bill* tte Hi mu i h ':
gineer m
»poii*.ble for (tel
engineer | v was drunk. H
who stole Mr IjMM
man
jvweirjr famalev icom at.. »uw a
l« KS* fifa^ 8u»dsy A oftte^’ rtghn y **
was to tail fra Hayti on ter.
Mrs. Catherine Betmesey i£k
tea pool of Mood rt ter
Her husband claims t
but one of tte
knocked down by <
chert Biggs, to
rag* upon a wh—
U.VZZA-
mLl
L Kingsley, tte rttigad f
officers fr C
wjgj..
iMrirliii.