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GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, IT S. A.
Griffin is the best and most promising little
ity in the South. Its record tor the past
half decade, its many*now enterprises in oper¬
ation, building and contemplated, prove this
o lea business statement and notahyper-
olical description.
Paring that time it has built and put into
most successful operation a $100,000 cotton
actory and with, this year started the wheels
of a second of more than twice that capital,
it has put up a large iron and brass fonndry,
a fertiliser factory, an immense ice and bot¬
tling works, » snsh <«l blind factory a
broom factory, opened np the finest granite
quarry in the United States, and now has
our large oBwiltein more or less advanced
stairea ^construction, with an aggregate an-
t horired capital of over half amillion dollars.
It is putting up the finest system of electric
ghting that can be procured, and has ap¬
plied for two: arters lor street railways. It
has secured another railroad ninety miles long,
and while located on the greatest system in
t he South, tbs Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its important rival, the East Ten¬
nessee, ¥irtpaia aod Georgia. Ithasobtain-
d direct imbpaalent connection with Chat
tanooga and the West, d will break ground
n a few days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With its five white and fouxcolored church
ee, it has recently completed a *10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It has increased itspop-
ulation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
•round He borders fruit growers from nearly
every State in the Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded oil nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
rnit evaporators in the State. It is the home
of thegrape andits wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully in
augurated a system ol public schools, with a
seven years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply Shows the progress ot on already
admirable city with the natural advantages
Sharing the finest climate, summer and
(IrfianIs Mcounty seat otHpaldtng coun¬
ty, situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150 feet
above soa level. By the census of 1890, it
rriH hartt at alow estimate between 8 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all of the right
sort—wide-awake, np to the times, ready to
welcome strangere and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel
come ifihey bring money tp help build up the
wn. There Is about only one thing we
eed badly Just n ow, and that is a big hote 1
We have several small ones, but their accom
modations ore entirely too limited for our
iisine s, pleasure and health seekig nguests
If you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a hotel la the Bouth, just mention
Griffin.
Griffin is the plaoe whore the Gbiffin Nkws
s published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
and descriptive brief sketehis pamphlet written of April Griffin. 12th, 1889,
This
and will have to he changed in a few months
o embrace gew enterprises commenced and
ompleted,
r-rsr™'
SS"-‘ *as£a~fss2r'°”
Tbs cotton picked by honest hand*.
r sheds its colors here
ht and shade,
>e as the autumn sere,
t never lade.
Here ever bloom the tevely flowers,
1 all that Fashion plans,
‘ l from the Peacock bowers.
.Juno fans.
% Pelt and Straw,
tafl asw,.
i onr harvest show,
[ofirti what . shall
s you may reap we sow.
it we may reap *mr part._
HEW CHOP TURNIP SEED!
til the best varieties, bought direct from
••
fm
lot P VINTS and OILS at the low-
'"“•’’M.K.S-K
$1,000 DAMAGES
Gained by a Griffin Han From a Pat-
ent Medicine Company.
After several years lathe courts,
J. M. Cooper of this place has gained
fl,000 damages from the Botanic.
Blood Balm company, of Atlanta.
The supreme court on Monday af¬
firmed the judgment of the lower
courts to this effect’
Mr. Cooper purchased from a drug
store in this city two bottles of Bo¬
tanic Blood Balm and took the alleg¬
ed remedy, as be swore, according to
the printed directions. He had pro¬
cured u third bottle, when symptoms
bf poisoning from iodide of potassium
began to manifest themselves. It
appeared, in the evidence, that that
drug played a prominent part among
the ingredients of the stuff. But the
B. B. B. Company claimed that it
did not exist in their medicine in
hurtful quantities.
This case will be of especial interest
to lawyers, in view of the fact that it
is only one to be found on the books
where a purchaser has obtained
damages for injury sustained from
taking any kind of patent medicine.
The court held that it made no dif¬
ference, so far as the liability of the
manufacturers is concerned, that the
medicine was not bought directly
from them. Also that while the pur¬
chaser of a well-known poison must
handle it at his own risk, in a case
like this, where the ingredients of a
medicine are Secret, and meant to be
kept secret, the buyer was justified in
relying on the representations of the
manufacturers as set forth in their
printed directions, and that for in¬
jury sustained by reason of the ob¬
servance of such directions, the man¬
ufacturers should be made liable.
It is but just to tne company to
state in this connection that they
have also made some noted cures in
this city. The medicine simply did
not agree with Mr. Cooper’s constitu¬
tion, that was all. But the $1,000
will probably agree better.
Nothing stupefying or dangerous, into
no laudauum or opium, enters
the composition of that famed reme¬
dy, Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup. Price 25c.
Bested by a Hotel Clerk. .
N. Y. San.
“Human nature, as seen in a big
hotel, is rather envious, isn’t it?” I
queried ol the day clerk as I leaned
on.the counter.
“Y-e-s,” he slowly and dryly re¬
plied. “I
“For instance,” I continued,
have a chandelier with five burners
in my room, but three of the burn¬
ers are plugged up and can’t be
lighted. The soap is cheap and
poor, the looking-glass is cracked,
the marble-topped stand is staind
with ink, and one leg of the lounge
la broken.”
“My dear sir,” he replied, as he
paused for moment from his work of
pigeonholing the noon mail, “I was
obliged to put you in a room just
vacated by a Western merchant and
his wife. He got drunk and broke
the lounge and cracked the glass.
She took away with her two towels
and two cakes of fine soap. He is
responsible for the ink stains, and he
stuffed two table napkins into his
pocket and carried them off, and
she broke a dollar pitcher and a
■eventy-cent pane of glass. We
plugged up the burners because they
lighted the whole five and went off to
the theater. I think he carried off
one of the keys to the door, and I
know Bhe cribbed a boqnet holder
from the parlor. How’s that for
traveling human nature?”
I was silent for the want of argu¬
ment and he presently continued:
“Here are half a dozen telegrams
and a score of letters for men who
will call around in doe season and
enquire for them, or want them for¬
warded to points in Maine or Texas,
and give me my trouble for the pro¬
fits. And perhape you’d like to buy
some of these dozen worthless checks
for 10 cents on the dollar, or take
some of the score of trunks in the
storeroom and settle the bills for
which they are held. Oh, yes—oh,
yes! This human nature is a big
thing, and the longer you live the
the more yon will be convinced that
I all the advantage in not on the
hotel man’s side.”
Electric Bitters.
This remedy ie becoming to well known
ssss.- 0 ^E^=^a.-
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. WEDN MORN] 16 1889
THE CRONIN PLOTS.
Developments in the Conspiracy
to Bribe Veniremen.
ATTOMEY F0BBEST IMPLICATED.
A Deep Ulil Plot to 1 «ot the J»rj—Six
Indictment* l»y a Special Grand Jar;.
Contention of Conspirator*—Court Offi¬
cial* Involved—Mere Sensational De¬
velops! onto Expected.
Chicago, Oct. 15.—The full extent of
the Cronin conspiracy has never been
realized or appreciated until now, and
jury, it will be some time before all the
facte come out. The names of the in¬
dicted men are: Fred W. Smith', son-in-
law of James Reynolds, of New Haven,
Conn., ex-treasurer of the Cten-iupGael;
Thomas Kavanaugh, the man who set 1
up the job for corrupting the Cronin
jurors; Jeremiah O’Donnell, a tool of
Kavanaugh; Baliff Mark Solomon and
Baliff Al" llHau iks, to whom was intrusted
the work of summoning h and the John men Joseph picked
iut by Kavanau^ whom Hanks had made
Kohn, to *1,000. par¬
tial arrangements to pay
The Plot Penetrated.
Smith, Kavanaugh Clan-aa-Gael and O’Donnell organiza¬ are
lembevs of tlie
tion and also Kolomon belong haven’t to Camp No. this 80,
Hanks and even
excuse, but were “fixed” by Kava¬
naugh, who promised them *1,000 Hanks each
for their share of the work. was
flint corrupted and then Solomon was
brought around.
Kavanaugh was a friend of Ha»ka,
and when he gave the bailiff to under¬
stand that there was “something in it”
for him Hanks was willing making and let
Solomon into the money secret
Kavanaugh made it his business to ap¬
proach various men and suggest that
|l,000 by could be made tlie as Cronin easily as jury, finding and
it serving on
would be given to Hanks,
these men would be summoned.
Hanks told the foreman, when sum¬
moned, that it would i>e worth *5,000,
or even more, to him if he were to sit
on the jurv and hang out for the de¬
fendants. The foreman had a con¬
science, however, and told Judge
Longnecker,
Attorney Forrest Implicated,
The “I made Herald publishes reports the to following: William 3.
This my declaration by Tom
Forrest.''
Kavanaugh, the plumber, who stands a
confessed member of the gang that has
been trying to pack the Cronin murder
jury, made the lawyers for the state
start with amazement. It was the AM
time that * shadow had been east on
the name of the defense, gentlemen Kavanaugh who are con¬ bad
ducting the the sweat box hour, and
been in over an
at first obeturate and silent. His silence
was overwhelming evidently due to testimony his ignorance that had of
the
accumulated against him, for he was
unaware pf, the fact that his tool O’Don¬
nell was in custody and criminality. had made a
clean breast of his own
Tremble4 lit Slgbt of His Tool.
When despair, the lawyers of were them about to giv* the
up in one bringing Kavanaugh suggested and
advisability of
O’Donnell when face to Kavanaugh face. This was quickly O’Don-
done, and saw
us on tlie hip hip, Is and tell tlie tlie only truth. way I’ve to save told
ourselves to
it and you had better do the same.”
Kavanaugh he reflected would make a long statement time and if
finally said
thev would not press him too hard.
“We make no promises,” was the r
joinder.
KRTanfmgh Corroborates* O’Connell.
Tlie plumber spent a few more min¬
utes m reflection and then, shaking him¬
self together with an effort, he sat bolt
upright in his chair and began a sensa¬
tional narrative of his own part in the
Conspiracy. He porroboygtea admitted O’Donnell
ip every particular. He hav¬
ing met the gauger OH the street and
having hired you?” him Mr. to procure Hynes asked a juror. in
“Who iiired
a confidential whisper, as he drew his
chair closer to Kavanaugh’s. “No¬
body.” After considerable questioning
Kavanaugh said:
“Well,! made my reports Not to another W. S,
Forrest, the attorney. ”
word notwithstanding could Kavanaugh that bp he persuaded pressed to
say , was
harder than returned ever on all him sides, the add custody finally
the lawyers to
of Chief Hubbard, who had him sent
away to a police station.
Fo; !■**!’i Record Unblemished.
This is the first serious accusation that
has ever been laid at the door of A ttor-
ney Forrest during the whole twelve
years of he Cook has practiced and at it the is little criminal
bar caused county, the lawyers for won¬ the
der that it
state to start fa surprise. believe They Kavanaugh, hardly
know whether to
but, being without evidence to show
that he obliged was not take telling his the story story frntb, for to what they
were to
it was worth. Forrest is is the senior
counsel for the defense. He is the per-
___attorney and of Dan he is Coughlin the directing
Martin Burke
spirit of the whole defense.
Th« Judiciary Involved.
The Globe says: Thw ramifications qf
the scheme to frustrate the ends of jus¬
tice is wider and more extensive than i*
generally supposed. It permeates one of
the most important and it public is offices surmised in
Cook county, reached higher even
that it has sources.
Proof already found in the case is suf¬
ficient to procure the indictment of at
toast one Lawyer and a well known pub-
lie officer connected with a department
of the judiciary pf Cook county.
How Connecticut Voted.
Hiimroxn, Conn., Oct 1*.—3
..... Monday’s election from all
ot teat ex-
XSF one Of th« 168 towns fa Connect!-
THE TAB BUUNED
I»r. Talmage’* Church A gal* Ua-
strayed—Oth ffate Hi.-The Ihimacvd.
Rkoo.cl.yn, famous
Brooklyn n tabernacle, of which wh the Kev.
De Witt t Talmage i* pastor , has for tlie
neoond time time In Its history _ received its
baptism by fire, and for a second time
totally destroyed. The fire was dis¬
covered at 8:45 Sunday morning by a
policeman who turned in an alarm.
The flames lad gained such headway,
The three erhorn "story street 'structure, caught fire, No. how- 858
Schema
^ rt gr»s^V The became roof ignited of the 8 > S5sr«
ch,mh
No. 857,
owned . ...----y by John John Awes, Awes. sustained «_ a loss
of ‘ *8,500. * ~ Buildings “ ” ■ retire on the west w side of
the street were also damaged, damaged. Incl Including The loss
cm the church m. of the building, bniiiiing. finest in tlie the
organ—one *150,000, well covered by insurance. country,
is
The origin of the Are is unknown.
Dr. Talmage will postpone his trip to
the Holy Land on account of the fire.
The Monarch* Km brace.
Berlin, Oct 16.—The czar and his
son, the Grand Duke Gcoige, drove to
Char lot tenburg, where they William placed
wreaths upon the tomb of I.
The czar and the emperor were there
entertained at luncheon by officers of
the William Alexander offered the regiment. toast to the Emperor Russian
army and alluded to the fact that his
grandfather had gained the Russian
cross of 8t. George and the honorary
colonelcy of the Knlug the battle regiment Bar- by
his signal bravery at of
samanbe in the days when the Russian*
and the Prussians fought shoulder to
The czar replied in German acknowl¬
edging the emperor’s kindly sentiments.
Hie czar departed at 4:17 p. m. last
night for Ludwigslust. There was a
brilliant assembly at the station, includ-
ing the emperor and braced the royal repeatedly, princes.
......JlecklenburgJ czar ra met and by
his family and was driven to the castle
amid the cheers <rf tlie populace along
tike road.
Bad Wreck al Rahway.
Nbw Yoke, Oct. 15.—The Pennsyl¬
vania express train leaving Philadelphia
for New York track at 9:40 Sunday N. morning J„ the
ran off the at Rahway, smoking
engine, five coaches and and
' track baggage owes torn leaving for 200 til® yards rails. and The the
was up
rolling stock badly damaged. The train
accident was running forty caused mites the an spreading hour. The of
rails the was Grand street by crossing
at where
were badly eltafcen up seriously and many in¬
jured, bruised, but no one was
The escape from more serious
disaster is considered marvelous. The
engineer engine promptly,, stock to his post, his reversing action prob¬ his
and
ably saved many lives.
We Cat tbs Kleetrlc Wire*.
stricken thousands of Citizens, has riven the
a haphazard mighty stir transmission to all this question of high tension of
electrical currents through a center of
population. The electrical mayor, as spokesman
of the board of control, ordered
all unsafe electric light circuits cut out
and the currents turned off. The prin¬
cipal companies responded with fa-
into which a box the nailed lineman to the telegraph his death. pole
on met
Student* in a Disgraceful Battle.
Burlington, N. J., Oct. 15.—While
John Ceyiyon was walking in the vicinity of
of Burlington of Military that institution college made some in¬
the students
sulting remarks to him, whioh Ceyiyon
promptly resented. He was then at¬
tacked by several of the students, one of
their number, a Cuban named Juan
Sebieva. cutting him in the face with *
large i fffp, inflicting a severe wound,
iSSS? ~ ' made issued complaint for to the Mayor
who warrants ar-
rest of of the tl offenders.
Blown Flit? Fret.
Chattanooga, Tenn., Oct. exploded 15. -
150 horse power boiler
Hughes’ Planing building mill, tearing and killing out the
entire side of the a
negro, Charles Bradshaw, The fireman,
Dave Pullman, w*» blowq fifty feet, but
not fatally injured. The will damage reach to
building and machinery
*10,000. defective The manhead, cause of the explosion was
a
---—?
That I*n<» Nareettve-
Baltimore, Oct. 15.—The statem
to The Jamaica Post, alleged Davenport, to have col¬
been made by Charles
ored, fa which he tells a thrilling of the story
of brutality on the part white
men over the colored and people after at reading Navassa it
was shown him
carefully he denied ever having made
any such statement to any one,
To Succeed Commodore Walker.
Washington, Oct. 15.— It is under¬
stood that Rear Admiral Daniel L.
Braine. ot the navy, will today be ap¬
pointed chief of the bureau of navigation,
m place of Commodore Walker, de¬
tached, and ordered to command the
European squadron,
---—
. The City of N*w York All Kteht.
New York, Oct. 15. — Divers who
have examined the bottom of the steam¬
ship City of New York report that no
serious damage was caused by the
stranding of the veeasi. She will
probably sail for Uvcrpool Wednesday
av i d h ff uilcd.
not on tho ttWNtfr
WAKtXNTON, Ga., Opt shot 15. — Maj.
Charles E. McGregor and killed
Capt. J. M. W. Cody on the street. It
was the closing chapter fa a feud which
has tested several years, and fa which a
rich young widow figures as the cause,
HISSED THE FLAG. !,
Btars and Stripes Distasteftil Distai to
Obioago ago Socialists.
HIE BED INSIGNIA OF AHAECHY
iMtiwit with IlaptllM.il* AppUUM at •
Nuiwtar Bare Mooting—A Simon Pure
SoclalUt Who fa Frond of Cfeleaco B.-
rauso She Will A Tonga f lie Martyred
Anrohlafa.
Chicago, Oct 15.—When the stare
utd stripes were raised at the SoclalUt
mam meeting in Vorwaert’a Turner hall
yesterday afternoon the flag wa* greeted
with Mates, which were succeeded by a
buret of applause when the red flag was
unfurled and fastened on the opposite
aide of the platform.
After this demonstration Martin
Schmiedfnfer was chosen chairman of
the meeting. He introduced Sergius 8.
Shevitoh, of New York, who poses as
the leader of the radical, Simon pure
Socialists of America.
$ fcflSNk
to be the graveat crime ever perpetrated
In America. ‘ This statement statement and every
statement of the sort sort he he uttered was
loudly He said applauded. be proud ef the city to
was
which that execution occurred, because
he felt that one day it would he the
Paris — the city of revolutions — of
America.
Socialise* Expounded.
the Philip next Rappoport, speaker” He of spoke Indianapolis, to English was
and confined himself to the exposition
of the socialist ideas. The other speak¬
ers were Mrs. Johanna Greie, of New
York, and Franz Zeubert, of Brooklyn,
Little was jlone at tlie businese session
of the constitution of the Socialist party
in tlie morning. The report of the ex-
ecutive committee was read and com-
tnUtoes were appointed.
Senator Mamtereon'* Foiuilon.
Washington, Oct. 15.—Secretary No¬
■Mw ble has decided that the rerating of Sen-
ator Manderson’s
sioner Tanner was
the senator m the
Tlie rf'rating, application he
without and without medi¬
cal examination, was not in pursuance
of the usual practice, was not to com¬
pliance with rule and was therefore
unwarranted. Since receiving his no¬
tice Senator Manderson has returned
the rerated certification for cancelation,
with a tetter to the secretary, in which
he says: “It is dim to myself to say,
■■BlffiMlMHiMIliH "" '"w
might l to my own i
No Safety from Electric Wire*.
New York, Oct. 15,—A reporter in¬
terrogated Thomas A. Edison concern¬
ing the danger from overhead electric
light wires: "You. read of the accident
to the lineman'.'” ‘‘ Yes. It was pecu¬
liarly horrible, but the subway will not
solve (he problem, There is no insula¬
tion that will make an electric wire safe,
will fibers, the dan
gerous current creep ■eep into your
houses and will come up the manholes.
There is one way, and only one, to my
opinion; under similar that is, police to regulate regulations tlie to tendon those
governing the pressure on steam boilers.”
A Frightful Wreck,
CINCINNATI, Oct. 15.—A frightful
wreck occurred on the Big Four road,
half a mile west of Tranfman’s station.
A wrecking (rain collided with a freight.
Engineer Morris, of the wrecking en-
gfne, was instantly killed and Fireman
Whitstine and was brakeman fatally injured. Two
tramps the qf the freight
were ftlso killed. The wrecking train
was behind time. Doth engines were
completely demolished, reach and it is said
the kiss will *60,000. Be vend of
physicians the crew were Injured and the Cincinnati
were sent to scene
which is ten miles from this city.
SpUtvaa'* r«rl b«(i So.,m 8 ,|hmuUm 4.
Boston, Oct. 15.—That John L. Sulli¬
van was drunk and pmuiless, demand¬
ing of one of his women friend s money
with which to make another start to
life, within three mouth* after receiving
more than *20,030 a- the said result of his
victory over Kilr.v'n, is to be a fact,
He is “dead lu-oke.” Another fortune
has slipped All he through hit is lingers chance Ilk
water. wants now a to
string make another pile, r»solutions and with tlie usual
ot d he has started
in once more to punch his way to luxury,
In al'i of am. Clayton,
H, Montgomery, D, Clayton, president Ate,, Oct. of the 15.—Gen. Univer¬
sity of Alabama, died at Tuscaloosa,
after a brief illnSks. Gen. Clayton was
6S years of age and was one of the fore¬
most nu r, in the state. He entered the
war as colonel of the First Alabama reg¬
iment and rose before its close to the
rank ot major general. and military He honors. will be
buried with civic
VtollM of the Corona.
New Oh leans, Oct. 15.—The Times-
Democrat's Baton Rogue special says:
A body supposed of the to be steamboat that of Capt Corona, J.
W. Blanks,
was found in floating to the The body water. of An
inquest is progress. an
unknown white man. also supposed to
be one of the Corona's victims, was
found floating near Port Allen, Satur¬
day morning. ■>
With * Sloe* Tied to Bio Kook,
Lancaster, Pa, Oct 15.—The body ol
Emanuel Carpenter, of Lititz. aged found 45, a promin¬ in the
ent citizen was
famous Lititz tied sjwing. his A neck, fifteen and pound his
stone was around
death was undoubtedly act been diocoveped. suicidal. No
cause for tbs has
fUllwl te on Explaotoq.
Greenwood, Mtea, Oct. 15. — New*
has just reached here at the death of
Mr. McMillan by thee
4 tourer w«ri
NKW YORK, ©oh:
mtfi spssr
A DIOR Oft
»•—•*-v • i
Button, Md..
door on the track,
bound extra 1
ington and 1
Philadelphia. <
more stiHiuafL'l „ __
mile below Northeast, in Odl
on the Stony Run curve, near tin
tend Kaolin works. 1
fatalities i l»ut tbeaa i
Be*Wr.
Binghamton, "
tent-1**.:
w -
W.V4
mm Mr*. ....
C. A- Law-ton,
dctphla; J M. Reno.
The trafa waa
tia^klrad landed*^ ^
about 800 feet away,
ahead past the ioeom
man coach was turned
when baggage it finally and si
tion
passenger gideic coaches were re
Fire broke out
car and before it
P.G. Doyle a c
"gj |....... ‘ :v
con
bunted,
were rescued just i
PAN-AMERIOANB AT NIJ
Thoy View the
Niagara Falls,
train bearing the members of the Jj
national American congress arrived 1
at 9:30 Saturday nigbt. The pci
met at the depot by a reception <
tee and escorted to Cataract J
Sunday morning carriage* a
and the members of the p
driven to the various points <
about the falls. The day w .
and to cold that no long stops were r
during the drive. At Prospect pot
SWJSSSW 1 '
as close to the
boat could go.
The afternoon was spent in i
the Canadian side of the river.
party o'clock. bringing up at the
at 6 A
in honor of tire guests by Hon. Brutus
Wiiuan, Many ' informal speeches were
made, and at a late ate hour hour the party re-
turned, to Buffalo tlie Cataract _ . bouse. They
went to this ’» "ft
Cap ami Gown In <h» Street*,
Baltimore, Oct. 15.—Johns Hopkins
university and students will soon wear the
cap gown on the street At a meet-
ing fourteen movement signed Mr. a paper tinowden in favor of
the at the
head of and fifty young marched students, Hi
two two,
streets to the gymnasium.
made an eloq eloquent appeal. Many tore
signed on condition com that the sign
should not hold I - unk-ss ti
were secured.
-
Ha-reH Orcawoe of Ufa Color. i
Baltimore. Oct 15.—T
medical colleges have ti __ ,
colored James population Orntii, by refusing colored xdm
to a young „
who is auxious to study medirine.
to pay the usual tuition fee was
away. He will go to the Don*
College hospital, to Brooklyn, 4-^ ■
- n - nu. i .J W te ffi J I S' i e re »>ISW Wf S*»‘ . » - /
3(1.000,000 Foot of Lumbar
BROCKWAYVILLR, board
fire in the j
wright’s mill at Horton City
50,000,000 feet of lumber, Doss,
$175.00
The teowtSMB.
jg&p? %S& s Z£&Z
NUGGET8 OF NEWS.
A dispatch from Montreal says Canada |
pose* logo In for leather and flood thei
coantry with cheap footwear.
The Freni-h farmer* of Quebec fearafamine
from a failure of their grain crop*.
Kx-Mayor Seth Low, of Brooklyn, has te¬
dded to aerrpt the we*ltency of Colombia
college. t 1
President Woodruff, of the Monnan
says **(«fa mean to obey the antf-pefytamy
of the crew were badly hurt
Mike McDonald, the Chicago gambler, met
hie truant wife ia Stow York and a reconcilia¬
tion may be effected.
The Episcopal bo»« of deputies is divided
on the question whether there shall or shall
not be any more changes In the prayer book.
Henry M. Ntanhw fa tm command, saps
believes that Stanley and Emin Pacha
now together in Uganda.
The steamer City af Mew hank York, which had
been stuck on a sand near Oedney's
channel, in the bay, m floated.
Jack the Ripper writes to the Whitechapel
vigilance committee to expect to hear
him on the 18th Instant.
Bismarck tries to convince the rear that
Is beet for him t j adopt » policy af eoncila-
Paper manufacturers have decided ea «
shut dawn of their mill* at Christas** to re¬
duce the over supply now In the market.
account of m health. “ ---
elected on Nov. A,
P, T. Barnum. now in his Slst year, it on the
>»u bound for England where h* will
lit ‘the greatest show -on a earth, 1
Cagliari, 8ardinl *. J
^ftfor Geneva. From Geneva he will g* fa
ffika Bffi ateawr "Ss7z ew ajuvww^ fit a«a re# v* vfldfregreffirere '* **
»
York to 0!«*go«s collided with
aa board.
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