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"liKIFFIN, GEORGIA, U S. A.
Grifflu is the best and most promising little
ityinthe th. Its record for the past
half decade, its many new enterprises in oper¬
ation, building and contemplated, prove this
o be a business statement and not a liyper-
olical description.
During that time it has built and put into
Bvost 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 foundry,
a fertilizer factory, an immense ice and bot¬
tling works, a sash an 1 blind factory a
broom factory, opened up the finest granite
quarry in the United States, and now has
our large oil mills in mow or less advanced
Stagesof construction, with an aggregate au¬
thorized capital of over half amiliion dollars.
It is putting up the finest system of electric
ghting that can be procured, ami has ap¬
plied for two arters for street railways. It
hassecured another railroad ninety miles long,
and while located on the greatest system in
the South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its important r^val, the East Ten¬
nessee, Virginia and Georgia. It has obtain-
d direct independent connection with Chat
tftuooga and the West, d will break groun
na few days for a fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With its five white and fourcolored cliurcli
es, it has recently completed a $10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It has increased itspop-
nlatiou by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around its borders fruit growers ham nearly
every State in tbe Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
rait evaporators in the State. It is the home
otthegrape and its wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It haB successfully in
angurated a system of 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 of an already
admirable city with the natural advantages
of having, the finest climate, summer and
»iuter, in the world.
Griffin is the county seat of Spalding coun¬
ty, situated in west Middle Georgia, with a
healthy,fertile und rolling country, 1150 feet
above sea level. By the census of 1890, it
will have at alow estimate between fl 000 and
7,000 people, and they are all of the right
sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable Settlers, who will not lie any less wel
come if they bring money to help build up the
wn. There is about only one thing we
eodbadly justoow, and that is a big hotel
We have several am all ones, but their accom
ffiodattons are entirely too limited for our
usiue B, pleasure and health seekig uguests
If you see anybody that w ants a-gooii loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin. '
Griffin is the place where the G biffin News
b published—daily and weekly—the best news¬
paper in the Empire State of Georgia. Please
enclose stamps in sending for sample copies,
(-AT-)
A£T TEMPLE!
A In cap white for darling baby’s hue, face,
and every
Embroidered silk and dainty lace
S And very cheapest too.
: The babies are the cherubim
In paradise below,
And indin in our our caps caps with wit ruffled rim.
- Their laces brighter glow.
The kings and queens of hearts are they.
And That lead the human race,
Ind in in oui oui Temple’s Tempii cha vast array.
They hold a ned place.
With them we now- the prices lead.
That every one may buy,
And you canprove prove all that you read
' If you 'will coi come and try.
For every sale a guarantee.
That no. one may compiain—
•’ - And il not what it onght to be
Just bring it back again.
MRS. L. L. BENSON.
THE
MITtAL LIFE MM ill,
OF NEW YORK.;
Organised in 1843. Assetsaver $120,000.
8 company is the the largest in
the world, and the advantages it otters to be
surers make it the safest, cheapest and best.
8. W MANGHAM’sSONS. Agts
_
HEW CHOP TURNIP SEED!
iB the best varieties, bought direct from
P UNTB and OILS at the low-
** Ererything in the DRUG LIKE. HARRIS Call and
»«• J. * SON.
‘JSdSai
CARRIED AWAY!
CHATTANOOGANS BY THEIR
RECEPTION HERE,
And Their l>ea<l Heroes by the Ten¬
nesseeans—Beautiful Exercises at
the Church Yesterday.
THE PASSIXO OF TUI in:AD
High ’hove the sea in golden light.
O erlooking farm and forest lands,
Leonine to the eagle’s flight,
In busy life our Griffin stands.
Wide-spread her shield o’er lull and dole.
Emblazoned by the fruitful sod,
The model for a fairy tale,
Fnll sculptured by the band ol God.
Pomona busp here and there,
And ttleds that seem alliukcd with snow,
Sweet vegetation everywhere,
And healthful springs that ever flow.
The lovely flowers still are here,
The cherished children of our clime
That breathe upon the atmosphere,
’ perfume with a sense sublime.
The wood in ev’ry tint appears.
Touched by the autumn ripening breeze,
And yet the falling leaves stem tears
Shed by the melancholy trees!
The trees do weep the leaves they shed.
And Griffin, too, sheds tears to-day;
For from her breast the noble dead
By kindred arms are borne awa.v
Farewell, ye heroes of the past!
Heroic still in memory;
For you the angel triumph blast
Will sound immortal reveille.
—Old Saint Bkioe.
Griffin. Ga., Oct. 30, ,89.
To-day there are two less of noble
dead in charge of the Griffin Memo¬
rial Association.
To-day the crumbled remains of
two immortal souls, after twenty-
five years of peaceful rest in the cem¬
eteries of this place, will rest in their
native Tennessee soil, there to await
the final reveille of the Angel Ga¬
briel.
The Chattanooga party arrived
here on Tuesday night and was com¬
posed of the following gentlemen:
J. C. Webster, Col. Tomlinson Fort,
J. H. Warner, Dr. T. Y. Green, Major
W. G. Payne, Capt. S. J. A. Frazier,
J. P. Smartt, of N. B. Forrest Camp;
Lieut. James Byles, of Winchester,
Tenn., a messmate of Wright Haek-
ett, and L. G. Walker, managing
editor of the Chattanooga Times
and son of the deceased soldier, Gen.
F. M. Walker.
The party was shown the ceme¬
teries where their dead comrades had
rested, and offered all possible atten¬
tion by the Griffin committee.
At a little after 9o’clock yesterday
morning the exercises were com¬
menced in the well-filled auditorium
of the Methodist church by tbe
singing of the hymn, “Calmly now
in death thou art sleeping,” by a
choir consisting of Mrs. J. M. Bell, the
Misses Mallory, Dr. Moore and Hen¬
ry Mooney.
This was followed by a brief and
earnest prayer by Rev. M. McX. Mc¬
Kay, in w’hicluhe asked that wo of
the South might ever be saved from
the base disgrace of repudiating the
deeds of the heroic men who fought
for Southern homes, but that the
youth of the land, as full of patriot¬
ism as their sires, might always
avouch the deeds of those sires as
their deeds. In concluding, he asked
that while holding to. our stand¬
ards and our principles, we might
yet be free from any bitterness
against those who defeated us in the
arbitrament of arms; and let there
be no affectation in our love and
affection for our brothers in the
North, who are none the less breth¬
ren because of once having fallen out
with us.
The choir then sang, “Through
every age eternal God.”
The memorial address was deliver¬
ed by Hon. Jno. D. Stewart in the
best style and taste, tendering the
bodies of the dead in behalf of the
Memorial Association who had so
long cared for them. We cheerfully
relinquish this dust, once the bodies
of heroic men, but their imperishable
fame belongs in common to us and
to all the States. The heroic men
who were willing to do and dare and
die for Southern homes werenot trait¬
ors, but'as noble characters as ever
adorned the pages of history. The
annals of Rome, of Greece and of
down trodden Ireland are bright with
the deeds of nations fighting for
their liberty, but the Confederates
arose to the zenith of human glory.
Their names and deeds have passed
into history and their cause is no
more, but we, their survivors and de¬
scendants, can exhibit the same zeal
and fidelity in the peaceful vocations
of life that they did in war. For twen¬
ty-five years the noble band of wo¬
men composing the Memorial Asso¬
ciation of Griffin had watched over
this sacred dust of the dead. He did
GRIFFIN GEORGIA. THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOB&t 31,1889.
not know which was the greater or
more to be admired, the courage and
ardor of the soldier in the forefront
of battle, or the self-sacrificing spirit
of love and devotion that animated
the wives, and mothers and daugh¬
ters, who watched over the cou .’h of
the sick or wiped the death sweat
from the dying. In their behalf and
in their name, the speaker returned
these forms to Tennessee and hoped
that the hour would never come
again that would darken this coun¬
try with tumult and with war.
Col. Stewart was followed in re¬
sponse by Major W. C. Payne, of Chat¬
tanooga. who commenced, slowly but
warmed up intoan eloquent address.
He said that we were assembled a
quarter century after the close of the
war upon a mission that causes a
flood of memories to come rushing
upon the mind of every old soldier,
carrying him back through the crash¬
ing of cannon and the smoke of bat¬
tle. We see again the men, whoso
bodies lie before us, in the full vigor
of manhood, challenging the enemy
and meeting him in mortal combat.
But he did not propose to attempt
an eulogy upon Gen. Walker and
Wright Hackett, who had made a
name and fame more lasting than any
feeble panegyric that he could pro¬
nounce over them. He would nob be
guilty of such a sacrilege. But should
the question be asked why this assem¬
blage So long after the conflict had
waned, he would say that they had
come in obedience to all the nobler
and finer feelings of humanity. We
who heard their voices and sa w them
on a hundred fields of death, had
deemed it proper to gather and speak
few words over them dead. It
would be no answer to tell that the
cause for which they fought is lost.
We ar# not here to rekindle the
smouldering embers of war nor to
advocate the merits of the Confed¬
eracy. Admit that it is better now
that we gather around the altars of
an indestructible union of States, is
there one who would demand that
we not only lay down our arms and
pledge our fealty to the nation’s flag,
but surrender our honor and treach¬
erously condemn the soldiers who
fell by our side? Let us believe that
there are none so bast 1 . But was the
cause lost? Were our tears and
prayers and the heroic struggle of
these living and these dead spent to
no purpose? With all the fidelity to
the flag of the most loyal, I answer
no. I asssqrt that the autonomy of
these United States was en¬
dangered and was saved by and
through the struggle. We may have
been hasty, but we believed we were
right and we baptized our faith with
our blood. We have no apology to
make for what we did, and 1 have
yet to meet the first Federal soldier
who fought at the front who re¬
quired such apology, whatever may
be said by camp-followers and po¬
litical buccaneers to stir up strife.
Conscious of the rectitude of our in¬
tentions, with bitterness for none
and hearts full of hope for the Amer¬
ican government, we stand with our
eyes to the front, ready and willing
to stand by the flag of our union.
We love our country and our whole
country—New England with its ice¬
bergs and isms; the boundless West,
with its possibilities; but with it all
and best of all. we love our own na¬
tive Southland, with its sunny fields
and warm hearts. On behalf of For¬
rest Camp 1 desire to return tha»ks
for the care and protection given to
our dead, as well as the attention
bestowed upon the living. It has
touched the hearts of our committee
to find our dead in such fond a rest¬
ing place as the hands and hearts
of the Griffin women. Well might
we have left them to be adorned at
each recurring season with flowers
grown iu the Empire state. But we
have thought best to" carry them
back to their native soil to find a
final resting place among those
friends and relatives who were not
granted the sad pleasure of seeing
them die.
The choir sang, “A few more years
shall roll, A few more seasons come.”
Col. Fort, as chairman of the vis¬
iting committee, said that he could
not refrain from publicly expressing
their deepfelt thanks for the very hear¬
ty reception they had had, and hoped
that some time Chattanooga might
have an opportunity “When Griffin to repay such
kindness. wants any¬
thing, let Chattanooga know it.”
Rev. H. S, Bradley, after thanking
Col. Fort for his kind words, pro¬
nounced the benediction.
The addresses synopsis ofjvhich the above brief
is an imperfect were
and pointed and the funeral cortege
had plenty of time to reach the 10:40
train, on which they left.
The best is the cheapest. Dr. Bull’s
Baby tbe safest Syrup and is acknowledged reliable medicine to be
most
for babies. Price only 25 cents.
-
JAILED IN ATLANTA,
THE PIKE COUNTY DEPUTY
COLLECTOR UNDER ARREST.
Mr. Oliver Employs a Detective, \Vft<*
Thinks Mr. Matthews ltohbecl
The following is the latest from the
Pike County robbery, and is taken
from yesterday's, Atlanta Constitu¬
tion ; ■ ■ h iE&Lf'
There Is a pretf^her locked tip at
the station house.
The case is a very peculiar one,
and has created a startling sensation
in Pike county.
Rev. Edwin D. Matthews is a man
abont forty years of age, who has
lived near Milner, in Pike county, for
many years, without"a stain on his
character.
When Mr. C. 1). Oliver was elected
tax collector of Pike county, he end
ployed Mr. Matthews as his clerk,
and the two visited the various pre¬
cincts in the county and collected
large sums of money. Matthews re¬
ceived a percentage on all the collec¬
tions, and insisted on being paid as
the money was collected.
On last Thursday night he and Mr.
Oliver sat down together and count¬
ed the receipts for the week, amount¬
ing to $1,799.53. Matthews retain¬
ed all but fifty dollars of the money,
giving Mr. Oliver a receipt for it.
The fifty dollars consisted of thirty
dollars in greenbacks and twenty in
silver, that they agreed to take out
with them when they should start
out on Monday. The $1,700 was
placed in a large poeketbook, along
with a ten-dollar script, and Mat¬
thews placed it in his pocket, with a
smaller purse containing the $50 in
change.
Matthews says that on Friday
night a negro and a white man came
to his house, five miles from Milner,
and asked him to go with them to
the store and let them, have some
cheese and crackers. When they ar¬
rived there he claims that they set
upon him, andjvhile one of them be¬
gan cutting him the other robbed
him of the large poeketbook, contain¬
ing the $1,700.
As an evidence of t he struggle he
exhibits cuts in his pantaloons and
his coat and vest. Where his trous¬
ers were slashed there is a slight
wound on the left leg, just above the
kuee; and there is another wound on
the left breast.
Mr. Oliver heard of the alleged rob¬
bery and he called on Matthews, who
produced the small purse with the
small change, and the large pocket
book with the scrip and some re¬
ceipts in it.
Mr. Oliver suspected that there was
something wrong about the story,
and he employed Detective Shackle¬
ford to work up the case.
Detective Shackleford went down
to Pike county Sunday and began to
investigate the case. He thought he
had reason to believe that Matthews
was the guilty party. He went to his
home yesterday morning to arrest
Matthews, and the latter ran inside
his dwelling, pulled down the window
blinds and swore that lie would kill
the first man who came inside.
Detective Shackleford secured the
services of two men, kicked the
door open and covering Matthews
with his pistol, demanded his sur¬
render. Matthews submitted, and
explained his conduct by sayingthat
he thought the detectives were white
caps, who he heard were’eoming to
whip him.
The house and premises were
searched, but none of the money was
found.
Matthew’s bond was assessed at
$3,500, and he was brought yester¬
day morning to Atlanta for safe
keeping until his committal trial,
which will occur at Milner, on Satur¬
day next.
Yesterday evening Matthews ex¬
hibited the cuts in his clothiug which
he said he had uot had sewed up be¬
cause his wife was unable to attend
to them.
When he was arrested Detective
Shackleford found a long, ugly look¬
ing dirk under his tied, which he evi¬
dently intended to use hut was pre¬
vented by the wacchfulness of the de¬
tectives.
The New States.
Washington. Oct. 30.—The procla¬
mation of the president the Union admitting will the
four new states into not
be issued from the White House until
the official results of the vote on the
constitution has been certified to the
president. No certificate has yet been
received and consequently it is not
known at the White House just when
the proclamation will be promulgated.
BKTrE * accounts wanted.
rii*. riiti Trenton Grutid Crnn.1 .In «ltt y v f lulls »1 !h Attention Attention
to the I'rUoii M it tut ment.
Trenton. Oct. DO.— The Mercer grand
jury came into court with seventy-five
true bills and ;i presentment against the
warden of the comity jail. John O.
Mtiirlieud, and the court house commit¬
tee of the board of freeholders, com¬
posed of Matthew R. Laird, of the fifth,
and Louis Diehl, of the Eighth ward* of
the city, and Asa IL Drake, of Penning¬
ton.
The presentment charges "that upon
information received and witnesses ex¬
amined the jury find that gl ass exist negli¬ in
gence ha i existed and does stilt
the management lagen o'f certain affairs ! ~
the charge, of the warden and under the
super vis! rt house cotnmit-
tee. the merchar in that is visions being that kept of
ro are
from time to time ordered and received
by the warden and his deputy for the
feeding of the prisoners, and as well iu
for the the auditing of by the the accounts court house and bills
same com¬
mittee, thus making it possible to
do what, in the opinion of the mem¬
bers of the grand inquest, has repeat¬
edly been done—render, audit ana pay
bills containing items for merchandise
that lias never been furnished.”
Mr. llhiim.’s Secret.
New York, Get. 30. —The World pub¬
lishes what purports to be an interview
with the physicians in Florence anti Mi¬
lan who attended Mr. Blaine during his
illness’ there two years ago. They partial say
that he was suffering from
paralysis contracted in the St. Gothard
tunnel and hypochondria induced by hit
condition. He wrote his famous Flor¬
ence letter declining to be a candidate
for president by the advice of Dr. Bald¬
win, an Anglo-American Baldwin physician it in
that city. Dr. says was a
case of life or death at that time, but
that he believes that Mr. Blaine has
now fully recovered.
-Joseph Harper Kirks.
New York, Oct. 80.—Joseph W,
Harper committee has resigned the world’s from fair, the and genera) the
on
firm of Harper & Bros, have declined to
subscribe to the fund unless the pro
postal to use part of Central park as a
3ite be abandoned. Some other opposi¬ promi¬
nent citizens have shown their
tion to the use of the park in a simila
way.
New York Han a Million.
New York, Oct. 30.—Among the sub¬
scriptions to the world’s fair fund were
the following: William Steinway, $50,-
000; Broadway and Seventh Avenue
Railroad company, $.50,000; $25,000: Eugene
Kelly, $35,000: J. J. Astor, $25,000;
Long Island Railroad company,
J. C. Johnston & Cdt, $10,000; Fifth
Avenue hotel, §10,000. The total sub¬
scription, $1,103,762.
Another Big Railroad Deal*
Boston, Oct. 30.—The Boston news
bureau says: The Union Pacific-North¬
western Traffic alliance may hasten the
consummation of a yet greater railroad
alliance between the Chicago, Burling¬
ton Northern and tjuiney, Chicago, Manitoba, Burlington oi
and anil the west
Chicago, with the Pennsylvania east oi
Chicago.
Hie Alleged Turkish Outrages-
Pesth, Oct. 80. —The Pesther Lloyd
confirms the statements made by the
British consul in Crete that the alleged
outrages by the Turks have not actually
occurred. On the contrary the paper
asserts the reports of outrages have been
manufactured for political foundation purposes
w itliout the slightest for
truth.
Still Held HS Tascott.
Philadelphia, Oct. 30.—The police
still have possession of the man A.
Sutherland, supposed to be William 11
Tascott, the murderer of Amos J. Snell,
the Chicago millionaire, and although the
he has not yet been identified by
Chicago authorities are confident that
lie is the man.
Tli« Wowlmjen’* Fatal Ax.
Mendocino, ('al.. Oct. 80. — John
Clements ami Andrew l acosta, woods¬
men. fought here, and Clements struck
Dacusta in the bieast with an ax. Da-
costa then got possession of the ax and
struck Clements in the face with it, kill¬
ing him. Dacosta’s wound will proba¬
bly also prove fatal.
llelgiaii (jlnnri Works In PitUknrj;,
Pittsburg, Oct. 30.—It is stated that
a .company compo ed of Belgian glass
manufacturers propose to erect a Iai
plate glass plant in this vicinity in order
to hold their American trade in the
United States. It is said the new work*
will be larger than any on this side ot
the ocean.
A Victim nf the Cigarette.
New York. Oct 30.— John Barry, the
26-year-old son of Policeman Barry, latest of
the Leonard Street station, is the
victim of cigarette smoking. He is now
confined in t ;e insane ward of the Belle¬
vue hospital, and his family say that
cigarettes are the cause of his trouble.
Social I*tii*!ty.
Buffalo. Oct. 30. — At last night’s
session of the Christian workers' con¬
vention Anthony Comstock, of New
York, delivered an address, and Mrs.
Elizabeth it Bradl.v Iv spoke spokt on social
purity and the white shield.
To TiMYiiipiul’s
Cape May. < Vt. • 0. —Tim West Jersey
railroad will bridge over Townsend's in¬
let thoroughfare. Cape May county. A
small steamer at present connects the
island with the mainland.
* piTct a ■ v Halford
Washington, Oct. 30 — It is expected
that Private Secretary Halford will leave
Old Point Comfort for Washington to¬
night. lie is inm.li improved in health.
Snou JlayP Raring at lllrminghaiu.
Birmingham. Ala.. Oct. 30. — The Bir¬
mingham Pacing association announce
a seven days' if). running meeting begin¬
ning Nov.
Dreadful Accident in India.
Calcutta. Oct. 30.—A railway acci¬
dent has occurred at Hatras, near Agra,
in which fifteen persons were killed and
forty injured.
; ug Through a Stone Wit!!.
Portland, Oreg,, Oct. 30. — Five
prisoners escaped from the county jail
by digging through a stone wall.
< kief Arthur Re-elected.
Denver, Oct. 3Q.—The convention of
locomotive engineers re-elected Arthur
j chief engineer
*
T|ii; * llL \\ O tijls n \\v;\ \V\YFS f r ll f Lll
Make Life Miserable for the Sad
Sea Dogs.
TALES or PERIL ON THE DEEP.
Tin* Dungttroiin Flight of the Schooner
MorrUettc Oft* Delaware Bay-Two Men
Wnffhed l>%«rbm»fM—Tli# fit pin in and
TwoMck Uemaiii—Robert Cirant
Survive* Four Day-* in the lUgghtg of
the ftwirjff T. Miiiujoiih.
New York, Oct. 30.—The Old Dom¬
inion steamship Wyanoke reached port "
from Norfolk, Va. She had a verv
stormy trip. When off the Delaware
cape, she fell in with the schooner Mor-
risettc, of Bath, Me., with lumber. She
was in a sad plight. Her captain * v re-
ported that two seamen had , ,, been wa-rmri i
overboard and lost during a terrific gals'"
and that the mate had died from ex¬
posure.
The captain and two sick sailors were
all that remained to work the ship. The
captain, cally. He, toe. however, was in a declined bad way physi¬ be
to
taken in tow, being afraid of the salvage
claim, hut asked for two men and some
provisions to help him into harbor.
I-cft to Thflr Fate.
The Wyanoke had no men to spare—
at least her commander says go. A life¬
boat was lowered from the Wyanoke
and filled with provisions. It was
manned by seven sturdy mariners, and
they started for the schooner, which was
half mile to leeward. The sea was
running liferioat fearfully high forth at the their time, and ef¬
the crew put best
fort to reach the Morrisetto, but failed,
and were forced to return to the
steamer that without badly needed. furnishing the food
was so
The Wyanoke, when she found that
she could not render necessary assistance,
proceeded on her voyage. There were
two of the Italian Morrisette barks at in the the time, neighborhood and they
signaled answered. the Wyanoke for bearings and
were
ONE SAVED OUT OF FIVE.
Four Day* ami Three Nights lie Finn#
to the ltlgging of Ills Vessel.
Norfolk, Va,, Oct, 30.—The picked
life saving crew from stations Nos. 4, 5
and 6 succeeded in rescuing the only
surviving member of the crew of the
schooner George T. Simmons, of Cam¬
den, N. J., wrecked last Wednesday
night near False Cape.
Of the five members of the crew who
lashed themselves in the rigging when
the vessel wont into the only breakers, Rob¬ had
ert Lee Grant Was the one who
endurance to hold outdaring fcir nights
and three days and most of the time un¬
der a terrific storm and tremenduous
breakers.
One by one his dropped four comrades became
exhausted and into the sea.
When relief came Grant was almost
ready to follow his fellow seamen, for
he was worn out from bis long and ter¬
rible struggle for life. After he rapidly was
taken ashore Grant recovered
and is well.
Hi; Stuck to tlie Ship.
New York, Oct. 30. —'The steamer
Benefactor, of the Clyde line, which ar¬
rived here, reports passing the schooner
William H. Bailey, of New York, in a
disabled condition off Body island. She
was full of water and her anchor was
down, Her skipper declined to lie taken
off, but wanted to be towed in. It was
too rough for this, so the skipper con¬
cluded to remain where he was and
take his chances.
Ship* lteport Severe GalfM »t Sea.
New York, Oct. 30.—The British
steam-hip Lislione.se , f from Ceara and
Para; the Italian bark Gaeta, from Bat-
oum, with licorice; the Norwegian bark
Carte Blanche, from Pedang, and the
brig Daisy, from Montevideo, met a
continuation of gales during the pas¬
sage, and the sailing vessels were dam¬
aged.
Ran A ah ore In th© Fog.
Portsmouth, N. IL, Oct. 80.—During
the heavy laden fog the schooner Frank Mor¬
ris, coal from Ellsworth for New
Castle, went ashore on Odoirnes Point
at the mouth of the Cowes harbor. The
life saving crew succeeded in rescuing
Capt, Smith and crew of four men. The
vessel will probably he a total wreck.
Wrecked In a Fog.
Halifax, N. S., Oct. 30.—The Lunen-
berg liner Hey 11a was driven ashore in
Aspi bay. Cape Breton, during saved. a fog
and wrecked. The crew were
. A Neat Decapitation.
Coeyman’s Junction, N. Y., Oct. 80.
—A man sat down on the West Shore
track at C'anajoharia thundering as along. the express The
train east came
wheels took the man's head off without
mutilating it or the Ixxiy. The head
fell sixty feet away. Papers in the
man’s pocket of showed East that Windsor, he was Amos Mass.
P. Biown,
There was also a postal card from N. E.
Bert, of Swift River. Maas, offering
Brown a position. The suicide was
about 45 years old.
For Talma#©’* New Tabernacle.
Brooklyn, Oct. 30.— Rev. Dr. Tal-
mage turned the first shovelful of earth
for the foundation of the new tabernacle
at 4 o’clock yesterday afternoon. A
large reverend crowd doctor of people pronounced were present. bene¬
The
diction over the upturned soil and then
delivered an address. He was followed
by Rev. Lyman Abbott, of Plymouth
church, and other clergymen and there
was singing by the tabernacle choir.
slabbed His Wife Fourteen Times.
Pol'd HKltesHE, N. A’., Oct. 30.—Frank
Cava, boss of a gang of Italian laborers
at New Hamburg, stabbed his wife four¬
teen times. The woman, who was
about She is being to become cared for a mother, by her mother is dying.
m
the box car occupied by the family.
Cava is in jail.
To l’roeeed *o Samoa. tf
San Francisco, Oct. 30.— The United
States steamship Mohican which ar¬
rived at Honolulu from Calao a few
weeks ago is under orders to proceed to
Bamoa to reinforce Die Adams which is
there. *"
now
llw German* Abandon
Berlin, Oct. 30 —The German inn Pan Pan-
doland company has dissolved.
REF. DM3 ■ L___^ "iy«
'
He ID Discuss the Al leg e d !
Trouble in Hie ,t*“
Newark, N. J., Qct.
nation of Re’/. J. Saunders
Of Trinity Episcopal chord
to accept a call to Trinity
Francisco, un leading topic
sion in church circles here. For two
years past, it is said, there has been con¬
siderable dissension
mein lien of the congregation and the
rector over what tliej W!
handed manner in
church,” but that the trouble had beaffi.;
: adjusted. called?
Dr. Reed, when
to discuss the
tween certain man 1
and himself, and
authorize the stiff
reived a <uli from -
San Franci wo, that he ..
present cl urge and that
unanimously refused to * 1
nation. cation. Further Further than than this w
kilned to siicak on the pres*
ent.
T > -U ; ;:pd HART
I> «c;i-.-in,- r%- Ait|>»i'itinea*
(ieneva , Vt n »v rent <
Hauriyr ro, Oct. J
men are ..La (i.**hi
the mattei o the of a suCf
cesSor so the Luc It as nuv .]
jor general of the national
guard. “Tbe appointnii A premia
hands of the got Jjt no t vjl lor
dier. me to say obey anyth! a know soi*
to or iw.
what Governor do. and I
have heard noth!) ding btm
the vacancy will . 1 know ab-
solutely Governor nothing.” Beaver, it
is fe ant
binited to making his t
niority of rank, for that
observe •ved for the past twe: .
--.
A Saloon
Scranton, Pa., ,
ington tog, proprietor flats, of the ss
avenue was
at refused night to by admit three to H 1 “ 9
derers rattled* the ;
Sonntag called to
they battered and the
gave way then ,
came down stairs, hw
lowing when and drew adva 1
one a
over and causing the right almost hrei
instant a
Hungarians ficl, but tbe i
Sonntag's family, who wif
killing, the brought ~
and pobec. of them Hear
one
was identified as
and the fatal neat
where he was blade wm
stilt wet with his naan
is Paul Hoydo and V
panions was John '
a mining village n
cessones have not arrested.
Edwards vilV
Wilkesbarre, I A fire at ■
Ed wards vibe, a 1 on >d£
west side of the riv
struction of the v th*
place, ertions and of the it was Wi; t the ex*
ton fire department ttot£
rescue. The gen
of Daniel J. Lie
dwelling and of Cat
store residence c
the residence of T ‘
oral smaller
loss, about $10,006; fin me 1
A Hu re Ur Fatally Bit,
Lancaster, Pa., **
•gs££?«’ is the
man at I “
posed to be d
Bavaria, and
seven years,
g omery county,
Ended Ilfs i «*are« lor net
Lawrence, Mass., Oct. 3<
Watts, spinner aged 66 0 years, milts super
mule Atlantic Ulan tic 1
just returned He will probably! E
from a
taken for nis health, whi
had not been much improv.
lieen despondent; He » a
Odd Fellow and Elk.
Swept Over-the Fall* and
Bethlehem, Pa., Oct 3(
Kennedy, of Gatasauqua, 25
while attempting to cross
river in a boat to his xv
Thomas Iron company's iron <
ment. was. with the Uwt,
Johnstown Ha* Little _ Flood VJJjj Now.
a
Johnstown, Pa., Cct. 30.— The pro*
pecta of Johnstown good. being Rain ag
water are-very
falling almost continuously
six boars, and a great ma
st recta are already almost i
pedestrians. *==C-* -
^ - -
Harrisjh ru, Oct. i ' "
Beaver has rt-appointed .
C. Stewart Patterson and
inspectors of tire e
I ©ath of I
Harrusbcrc, (____
Story, clerk in the auditor
part ment, dfed here from 1
L V, j. #~}sss 'll' ,-trl j| *^
At New York- AKt ’
Now York . i 1 1 ! D 3 9 II i-t8 IS S B
Brooklyn..... 2000 0. 082 a-7at
Ratteries; Crane awl Ewing; Font®, Twrry
in,l Visncr. Umpires; ^115^ Lynch and Oeffnoy.
Cuirintrt* for the Ur»l»«r* Awarded.
Washington, Oct.
Tracy awarded the <
two of the new 2.000 ton crukent t
Columbia Iron Works and- Dry
company, of Baltimore, at their *
$1,225,000. They were the
ders. The contract for the t
was not e ward ed.
An Italian I UUKHTf
Pottsvilus, Pa.*- Pa., Ocfes.M Oct 80.— In a q
iSSSSSff^Sf
children. assrs,*.!^. Coffom was
- -
. \iSrl