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(tRIFFIN, GEORGIA, U S. A.
Griffin is the best and mast promising little
ityinthe th. Its record for the past
half decade, it* many new enterprises in oper¬
ation, building and contemplated, prove this
o he a business statement and not a hyper-
olical description.
During that time it has built and put into
most successful operation a $100,000 cotton
in'tory and with this year started the wheels
of n second pf more than twice that capital.
It has put up a large iron and brass foundry,
n fertiliser factory, an immense ice and bot¬
tling works, a sash an i blind factory
broom factory, opened np the finest granite
quarry in the United States, and now has
onr large oii mills in more or less advanced
stages of construction, with an aggregate au¬
thorized capital of over half a million dollars.
It is putting np the finest system of electric
gifting that can be procured, and has ap¬
plied forte o alters for street railways. It
has secured another railroad ninety miles long,
and while located on the greatest system In
the South, the Central, has secured connec¬
tion with its important rival, the East Ten¬
nessee, Virginia and Georgia. It hoe obtain-
<1 direct iudepeadeut connection with Chat
tanooga and the West, d will break groun
na few days fora fourth road, connecting
with a fourth independent system.
With its five white and four colored church
**, it has recently completed a $10,000 new
Presbyterian church. It has increased Depop¬
ulation by nearly one fifth. It has attracted
around its borders fruit growers from nearly
every State in the Union, until it is now sur¬
rounded on nearly every side by orchards
and vineyards. It has put up the largest
roit evaporators in the State. It Is Hie home
of thegrape audits winemakingcapacity has
donbled every year. It has successfully in
augurated a system of public schools, with a
seven year* curriculum, second to none.
This is part ol the record of a half decade
and simply shown the progress of an already
admirable city with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
winter, in the world.
Griffin is 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 of 1890, it
will have at alq^ estimate between 6 000 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 be any less wel
come If they bring money to help build up the
wn. There is about, only one thing we
eed badly jusioow, and that is a big hot? 1
We have several small ones, but their accom
modations are entirely too limited for onr
usine s, pleasure and health seekig nguests
If you see anybody that wants a good loea
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin.
Griffin is the place where the Gbiffin News
s published—doily and weekly—the best news¬
paper in the Empire State oi Georgia. Please
nclose stain ps in sending for sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet of Griffin.
This brief sketch is written April 13th, 1889,
and will have to be changed in a few months
o e mbrace new enterprises commenced and
ompleted.
^ .■■i-.a ;.u.—
BEAUTIFUL FACES
Framed In Fashion.
v Here Ifatnre with a lavish hand 4
Bestows incarnate graces,
And In fashion irt with frames an enchanting the faces, wand
The dimple cheek, with lighted. health aglow,
And eyes diyinslj show,
The When brighter with and styles the sweeter nnited,
oor
Our styles, oor shapes and trimmings too,
With colors troly blended,
And not a thing that «s not new,
Oor patrons say are splendid.
Our That Temple has a varied stock,
every taste entices,—
The people round our counters flock
And wonder at oor prices.
Our Bonnets, Hats and and Caps lasses. and hoods.
For matrons, maids
In styles and quality of goods,
No other place surpasses.
MRS. L. L, BENSON’S Art Temple.
Merchants and Planters
*i BANE, iky Js J|§i
v
6trltf}n, Georgia,
Capital, : : : : $100,000
J July 1,1889.
business intrusted
from banks, firms
Seem to Be AH the Bage Out
West at Present.
New Mexico Has Another and
So Nas Colorado.
Kansas and Iowa, Not to Be Outdone,
Bach Come to the Front With Snow¬
storm. — Snowed-In Passengers and
Workmen .Appropriate Food in the
Freight and Kxpress Cars to Appease
Hunger.
Denver, Col, Nov. Id. —Another
blizzard is raging from the divide coon-
try, in this state, sooth to the panhan¬
dle of Texas The Fort Worth officials
sent out orders to start all trains Mon¬
day morning, but by night the road was
completely blocked again
The Bock-Island morning passenger
arrived one hour late from the south,
and only got through with the assist¬
ance of heavy plows preceding it. Since
then no traius have arrived on tae Santa
Fe Midland, Fort Worth or Rio Grande.
The Fart Worth passengers who were
on the snow-bound trains at Texline
and Clayton, got as far as Trinidad,
where they were again detained.
TUo Loss to Cattle and Sheep Men,
in The Colfax loss to cattle canuot men and sheep be men esti¬
mated county but ltia known even that at least
7.000 bead yet, of fatted beef cattle ready
for market have perished or scattered,
so that they are as good as lost to their
owners, and not le3s than 3,00u head of
Bheep have perished from exposure.
Ill Bodies Recovered.
Six bodies have been recovered to
date, and there are twelve or fifteen
cowboys, herders and stockmen miss¬
ing, among citizen them O. of W. Raton, MoQuistian, who a
prominent counting ont beef steers from the S. was W.
Dorsey herd when the first blizzard
struck the range ten days ago.
Drew on the Freight for Ration..
Seventy-five men shoveling off food snow for at
Mount Dora were cut from
two sheep days of and the nights. snowdrifts They and got roasted some
out
and ate them. A delayed eating passenger stations
train was out off from
three days. They drew on an express
car- for food. The laborers who shoveled
snow, when hungry topped with freight iron ears
containing canned goods an
chisel or other tools. Two live goats
the were hungry being shipped ont in their a caboose, throats a»d but
men
ate them raw.
The report says a sick man his traveling back
with two children lav on two
days helpless. Ho nod only, crackers
for nourishment,
Leg. of Life in New Mexico.
Trinidad, Col., Nov. Monday 13. —Late night re¬
ports from New Mexico
confirmed the previous accounts of loss
of life, and increase the number of
bodies found in Colfax county.
From Xmmperus the news of the
Mexican sheep of herders the perishing storm. Lugan on the
second day
Brothers, on the Se!gvca, lost one herd.
One man, name unknown, was aban¬
doned by his two companions, who as¬
sisted him as long as they oould in safe¬
ty to themselves. His horse was found
afterward frozen to death.
Another Begin*.
Snow had been and falling high wind at Clayton
ported since morning, from there a elock Monday was re¬
at 1 o
night. and It the was then 13 degrees falling above
idly. zero, mercury was rap¬
_
In Southern and Western Kansas
St. Loots, Nov. Tuesday 13.— A morning dispatch said: from
Kansas City
Advices from southern and western
the a northeast northeast 11 with it Monday Juonaay which evening in ana lo»
broi might snow, some
litres Arkansas is drifting City, City, badly. the the Indian Indii
At At Arkansas near near
reported Territory line, a regular “norther” is
At Wichita the snow is flying, and at
Syracuse the blizzard is of at. the its height.
Abjlene, in the center state, re¬
ports severe wind and thick snow.
been No reported hindrance yet. to railway travel has
as
Nine Men and 16,000 Sheep Perish.
Clayton. small N. M., Nov. 18.—Tidings
from towns and ranches off the
railroad confirm the reported loss of life
and property during the late storm. The
total loss of 'life so far reported numbers
nine of souls. sheep Several iu and more around are missing. this place The at
loss Several large herds
once is 16.000. m
the creek are not heard of. The loss m
cattle will not be heavy through as at first Monday, sup¬
posed. Trains all snowed got again Monday
hut were up
Bllmsard In Iowa.
Sioux St. Loots, City, Nov. 18. Tuesday —A special morning, Iron?
Iowa, "
1 heavy blizzard has 1 “
___® 11 o'clock Monday
skno
high wind.
Pardoned by the President,
Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 18.— Presi¬
dent Harrison has pardoned Orlando
Arbuckle and Orin convicted Staley, two Indiana
school teachers of counter¬
feiting. A singular feature of the cake
is that neither of the men has served
their sentences, both of them having
been petition permitted for their to be pardon at large while being the
was
urged. It is claimed on behalf of Ar¬
buckle, however, that he is dying of
consumption mended by and the his assistant pardon district was recom¬ at¬
torney. _
frill Korn for OIL
of ttuxna, Boston, representing Nov. a frtrtong Foley, oofi-
bany of American capitalists, which has
acquired 100,000 acres of land covering
the oil deposits at Gaspe, on the south
shore of the Gulf of St Lawrence, has
arrived at Gaspe with very extensive
machinery and a strong force of engin¬
eers, derrick builders, eta, and hasten¬
ing forward preparations for the sink-
ing of two wells to a depth of 2,500 feet.
Good Indication* of aDl.aster.
N. a, Nov. Nov. 13.—A 13.--A boat boat
___ the j vessel have vet JtfWI been has been ass gone foi-- lost to
all crew
........... ... .............. .......... ...... .... . .............. ■■■• "...... ■■■! — ■> .1 ... . I - ..... ......... ." ll .....I ‘ 1
GlUFEIN GEORGIA. THU1 MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1889.
0;)N M. DI CKINSON'S OPINION.
Ho I* Interviewed Regarding the Result
ot the Recent Flections.
New York, Nov. 13. -Ex-Postmaster
General Den M. Dickinson, of Michi¬
gan, arrived at the Hoffman house Mon¬
day from his brother’s home at Rapid
Ridgo, L I., where he has been cou-
fined l b by illu
“How do. yi regard the result of last
week’s ek’s election?” eh ” be was asked.
“Like 'Like every good Democrat in the
land, swered. swored. d, I I was was *1 “The decidedly result all pit pleased,"he the ftn-
over ooun-
try than was probably a more the overwhelming most sanguine victory of
us
anticipated, but it was a result that all
thinking men and students of political
sentiment were readv\to see recorded.
The results in Ohio and Iowa are to me
an emphatic outlined indorsement of tariff re¬
form as in the last message of
President Cleveland to congress. I
know that it was' the personal desire of
Governor-elect Campbell that the fight
should be made on the tariff reform
issue, and I know that on that general
ontlineit was conducted. The result
in every state in which an eleotion was
held is a splendid achievement for the
Democratic party, and one iu which
the nation is to bef congratulated. The
break Republicans the solid tells south us they the are tariff going issue. to
on
Before the sonth says protection New
England declaring will be solidly tariff in the ranks of
states for reform. ”
“Do you think the administration of
President Harrison was to any extent
responsible for the result?”
“There was doubtless a dissatisfaction
in many quarters, But I do not wish to
disonss the odmiuissration at this time.
Republican that sufficiently leaders well. seem I to be doing
see no reason
why a Democrat should interfere. ”
C^IN A AND JA PAN.
Latest Advice* from Those Countries
Brought by Steamer.
San Francisco. Nov. 13. —The steam¬
er Oceauica arrived Monday from Yoko¬
hama, Jbeating the record. She made the
trip in 13 days 14 hours and 6 minutes.
Latest aooonnts from this Chinese
river Kiang port state risen that tire extraordinary Yang-Tsze-
has to on
height, Hankow Bund is under water,
anq that there is terrible suffering all
along the river. Crops are ruined and
there must have been enormous loss of
life. Ten thousand families are home¬
less around Ning Pa and 500 families
were drowned at Wenchow.
The province of Fuchien, suffering adjoining
the flooded district, is complaints from
drouth. There fire many fuiltires. of
hard times and many
Hankow It is reported railway that will the the be Peking Peking indefinitely and and
ned.
execution of new treaties will be in¬
definitely Thirty-five postponed. implicated . in the
attempted assassination persons of Count
Oknma have been arrested-
LIKE Y E OLDEN TjMES.
Hundreds of Bibles Publicly Burned
in Quebec.
Ottawa, Ont, Nov. 13.—Agentleman
who lips just returned fronj the provinoe
of Quebec says that in one parish after
mass, on Sunday morning, he saw sev¬
eral hundred Bibles publicly burned in
front of the church at the instance of
the them care from of the his parish, parishoners. who had collected Agents
from one of the Bible societies have been
selling large this numbers particular of the province, New Testa¬ end
ment in ||jjft|
after purchasit warning | «■ r’
house ool
who had disobeyed _ his orders the books
they purchased. The society has now
devised a scheme by wlrich they intend
bringing the priest before the coarts if
he work. attempts The agents to repeat will bis loan sacrilegious the Bibles'
to those desiring them, and will then be
in a position to prosecute should the
books be destroyed or taken from the
holder. •
MARRIED A CHINAMAN,
■ '' T
Jang Landsig, a Celestial, Weds a Con¬
necticut Young Lady.
Hartford, Nov. 13.—Jang Landsig,
a native of China, residing in Cleve¬
land, was married Monday afternoon to
Miss Nellie H. Sparks, daughter of Mrs.
G. W. Sparks, of Vernon, Conn. The
ceremony wgs performed qt the resi¬
dence of the brile by Roy Joseph H.
Twitchell, of Hartford. Hon. Yung The
Wing was among the guests.
groom came to this country in 1876 to
tire Chinese government school in this
liter the recall ot the mission he re¬
mained in the service of the Chinese
government as lieutenant in the navy.
He returned to this conntry and wqq
graduated from the Worcester polytech¬ he
nic institute in 1887. Since then has
been employed by the Pratt &
oompany, of Hartford. He ha
accepted a place with the Brus
Light company, of Cleveland.
Stopping Illegal Fishing.
Tolbdo, O., hired Nov. 13. - The state fish
commission ’ m' * *
- of Lake r Erie. , jdlfigally The tug returned in this portion Mon¬
day and had 150 nets as prey. The
points visited were Sandusky, Vermil¬
lion, Huron, Catawba and Island, Niagara
Reef and Tonssant, at all of these
places seyergl pets were found ip water
less than sixty feet deep, the limit erf
the law. There were some lively tus¬
sles on the expedition, but the state
authorities were victorious. The pen¬
alty is $95 on each net.
Mast Answor for Two Live*.
Raleigh, N. C., Nov. 13.— A speeial
from Selma states that John Starling,
son-in-law of Mrs. Cenia night, Brown, who
was murdered Friday was art
rested charged with her murder and
WSb the result ittie of of grandson. the the coroner's The ipqnest ; -----* arrest
oor—
held at Smithfield. Monday. Starling It thought was taken to tnis jail
was up to
time that colored men had murdered
tire woman to prevent her from being a
witness against Shadrnch Peters, col¬
ored, who is on trial for his life at
Smithfield.______
Returned After Fifty Years.
Hardin, FMKTNflgBPRa, Ky, Nov. 18-John who I
of Ottawa, Canada, ram
1116 rest <
l in some slave
-
■
Paid for Breadstuff* iu Transvaal,
South Africa,
Whe.ro a Drouth Has'Caused a
Scarcity of Food.
All Tar 1 Ok on Provisions Abolished end m
Bonn* Offered — The British Bast
African Company Selecting Good Fight¬
ers to Capo With the Wily Arab—Bou-
langtst Manifesto —Foreign.
London, Nov. 13. - Advice# from
South Africa report great distress in the
Transvaal resulting from drouth and
famine. The situation »s critical at
Johannesburg, where breadstuff's are
selling at famine paces. The Natal gov¬
ernment has offered a bonus of £1,000 to
the first fifty provision wagons starting
for Johannesburg.
The Pretoria government has abol¬
ished all tariffs on food and decided to
establish forage depots and to give a
bonus to wagons bringing In provisions.
Rain fell at the cad of OaSober, promis¬
ing to mitigiit • ' Less.
G.io.l , .'anted.
London Nov. ; iu,'o the news ar¬
rived of the b ano.rar.4 slid rnarvsh of Stanley
with Emin Pasha his party, and of
the lief reported expedition, disaster the British to Dr. East Peters’ African re¬
compauy all the best has available been rapidly send picking out up
men to to
protect its territories from raids by the
rebellious natives Capt Lngard, whose
name is well known in connection with
the Lake Nyassa trouble, and Mr.
for GeorgeS. Mombassa Mackenzie this week. and 130 men, left
in Judging securing from fighting the activity the displayed British
men,
East African company must anticipate
from that region indicates that all the
native elements are up in arms and are
for the moment brethren in a common
cause-to drive out I he now detested
foreigners. "" '
the part of
Oapk Wissnian’s attempt
the sphere of German influence by ex¬
terminating the people.
Haley BhimV Troubles.
London, Nov. 18 —Muley Hassan,
the Sultan of Morocco, must believe
that the faithful have fallen upon
troublous times. No sooner have the
its orew to proper
importance >iaggo, attempts by making interna¬
own an
tional affair over the robbing of his res¬
idence. It is well for Muley that the
mutual either jealousies of the infidels pre¬
vent of them from annexing his
coveted domains. Spain has given
Signor that her Crispi lenience unmistakable under warning
provocation owp be imitated by greater Italy.
must
A Drawback to Skip Building.
London, Nov. 18. —The British ship
builders are place ! in a serious position
by steel. the A rise farther in the advance price is feared, of iron and and
if this takes pique many firms will lose
money on the contracts now under way.
Unless there is a speedy fall in plates
and raw material the pre-eminence of
ously this great British industry will be seri¬
threatened, and the the question may
be solved as to whether American
>1 used from on Spain, the Clyde and of
comes the the rumor an
export sidered duty by that on product has created being con¬
sternation in the power trade. con¬
Waterloo In London,
London, Nov. Id—The new panorama
depicting be ready to the be Battle opened of the Waterloo public will the
to
16th of next month. The building,
situated in Ashley Place, Victoria street,
has been licensed for music and refresh¬
ments. Chevalier Theiseher is* the
artist entrusted with the work, and
judging from some photographs which
have the beep finished made it will elaborato present pictures one of
most and
yet exnibited in the circular panorama
form. On one part of the field is repre¬
sented the meeting between Wellington splen¬
and Blucher, and on another the
did but fruitless charge of the Old
Guard against the British squares.
The Salvation Army in India,
London, Nov. 18. - A very strong case
has been made out bv *—• the missionary
— ’ *’ ! ■> - “ ’ ation
..... ..... since
England, tha matter" generally has caused known consid- in
erable comment. assertion Tlie The that charges cha the really
amount to an whole
work hitherto attempted hy the Salva-
a propaganda. disturbing ' .influence upon existing
____
Trotting in Anstrl*.
Vienna, Nov. 13.— That truly Ameri¬
can sport, trotting, is now greatly in
vogue in Austria as it has long been in
Russia, and the habitue of courses in
the United States would have felt quite
track, at home and during the a attempted late row on mobbing a Vienna of
an American driver at Moscow concern¬
ing winners the old question the honesty between of gait losers of and the
as to
successful contestant_.
Killed by a Flash Powder Explosion.
Philadelphia, Nov. 18.—While Mr.
Bhinedollar, Joseph Wiley, chemist, assisted by Rudolph Charles
a and
Lippman, pouring an employe, of ‘a were large engaged in ■
the contents a large bottle 1
flash powder down a sink Wallace iu tl
ioal works of Wiley & !
the three stuff exploded *and fatally instantly
men, ■ H
iam Kiddie. The Thomas
was seriously hurt
A Kentucky Belle*# Mistake.
Lotrsville. Kv., Ni
to the n | was Monday of the
Good i on com-
i refused to
ONLY THE GOVERNOR
Do the Dnu jc.vtts Elect of Their State
T. -Xai l« fawn.
Chicago, Nov. 13. —A Tribune special
from Des Moines, Iowa, says: Returns
come in slowly, but the full vote has
been received from eighty-four counties
and candidate they give far Pdyner, lieutenant tha Republican
governor, a
total of 14.).*4 AA uu.l for Bestow, Demo¬
crat, l<8,8 )3. The remaining am esti¬
mated to give Poyuer a slight majority.
As he lu» the smallest vote on tne
ticket, it is curtain that all the others,
including intendent of supremo instruction, court judge, and railroad super¬
com j.isssonor are eleetel hy majorities
ranging Thu official from 2,000 count to Moudiy i.OOu. shows that
a Democrat is elected to Mm legislature
by due majority, thus making the house
a tie, fifty each, and and the senate will
stand: Republicans, 98; Democrats, 89;
a'Kepublicou ballot majority of six on joint
Tho High-License Plan It.
A Tribune special from Waterloo,
Iowa, says: Now that the Democrats
have elected their ticket they find
themselves already with an elephant on
their ban Is in the shape of lire high-
license plank. A prominent Demoorat
attorney from Dub.ique was in the city
Mon lay, and stated that the Dttbu pie
saloon keepers are beginning to protest
against the high lioeme proposed by
the muon platform. prefer tho He said present that prohibitory they would
law to the one conto.nplated by the
license to be incorporated plank which in Mr. the Boies platform required
as
the prior of his consenting to aocept the
nomination.
Another Dnbuque man scud that be¬
fore saloon election, when it was feared that
the keepers would vote the Re¬
publican if they did ticket, they they would were notified be dosed that
immediately. so They observed the up
warn¬
ing, but are now kioking vigorously
promises. against the fulfillment of the platform
______
C0TT0N CROP R EPORT8.
Indications of Better Yield Than Last
Year, in Spite of Adverse Conditions.
Washington, Nov. 13.—The Novem¬
ber cotton returns of the department of
agriculture show a remarkable variation
in condition in different localities. In
North Carolina and Virginia the season
has been very short and excessively wet
and seriously injured by long continued
rains in reports tho season injury of blossoming. the by Ten¬
nessee to orop wet
weather, look of cultivation and early
frosts during the post month. In three
states the crop is much worse than that
of last year.
Elsewhere the crop is comparatively
late, especially from South Carolina to
Alabama, In lowlands with large growth of weed.
the east early of Mississippi frosts have while injured the
crops
portion of the n
large been frost. area, there has
no
The weather for picking has been re¬
markably, out assuring all that the is gathering with¬
waste of opened in excel¬
lent condition. The fiber is grading
comparatively Notwithstanding high. the
tions arising from abnormal rough distribu¬ condi¬
tion of moisture, affecting cultivation,
growth yield and frnitage, by the indications rtf
are 8 per acre cent higher county than correspondents last
So much per ill depends year.
s on future killing
frosts and sonny weather for opening
and gathering, that the result oaunofc
be known very closely until after
Christmas.
There has not been severe general
though loss by the caterpillar and bofl worm,
tho damage in some localities
has been Borious.
_
PHILADE LPHIA ANA RCHISTS
Prevented From Holding a Mooting By
tho Police,
Philadelphia, Nov. 18.— A number
of Anarchists assembled in front of Odd
Fellows’ hall Monday night, where ar¬
rangements had been made to hold a
meeting of to the celebrate banging the second the anni¬
versary of Chicago
Anarchists, but the janitor refused to
open the hall saying that tbe police had
directed him not to. Simon Bauer
created a disturbance and was arrested-
He was heavily armed,
Quiet Meeting In Now York.
Union New York, Nov. la.—The Cooper
hall was crowded Monday even¬
ing, the meeting being in honor of the
ing hanged Chicago perfectly Anarchists, peaceful, though The meet¬
was tiie
speakers indulged in violent senti-
ments.
Noted Knlglit of Labor Dead,
New York, Nov. i 8. —William A.
H«ran, oircle who was well known in the in¬
ner of District Assembly 49,
Knights Baltimore," of Labor, died Monday as “Billy night Brown, Horan of
was once a formidable candidate against
of Powderly the Knights for general Labor. master He wo
of
the radical element wjtp him
urar. ________
the knights.
He went everywhere where workingmen
with wore engaged their employers, in local contests or trouble
_
Taken From Lynchers to Lynchburg,
Lexington, Va, Monday Nov. 13.—At the
ooroner’s veloped that inquest James Miller deliberately it was de¬
blew out the brains of Mrs. Walker, the
wife of Dr. Z. J. Walker, during tike
affray in the Browiisburg magistrate’s
office on Friday. The people are wild
with indignation, from violence and they to save the taken pris¬
oners were to
Lynchburg;_ *
Chicago Fat Mtqek Show.
Chicago, Nor. 13.—The great fat stoek
building. show opened There Monday is about at tike exposition
350 entrees
against 180 last year. The show’s strong
points is in sheep and hogs, with fine
cattle as a ride attraction. There will
be afternoon and evening exhibitions in
the ring.
___
Masked Murderers.
Wheeling. W. Va., Nov. 13.—A re¬
port of masked reached here broke Monday into that a
men the
of Paris Blumenfield, on Hart
Lincoln county, Saturday nigh
S 1 £ d tiri& , ^ Mdhi ' wife '"
Mysterious 1 )1 s xph s Ur oueee.
Wichita, Kan., Nov. 13.—Ono of the
leading property owners and business
menoF tike city, T. R. Stone, mysteri-
10 o'clock.
n«iais
Bron^ht Into th« Onirt Boom by
tho ProHPniiioH.
Their Appearanca Creates a
Buzz of Excitement.
The Prlwners, Kxropt Regg*. Skew a*
Much Curiosity m the Speetaters—Mrs.
Cuukllu Identifier Kush Fieee of Cloth-
lag oud Each Inatrumont h Dr. Cro¬
nin’s—Other Testimony.
Chicago, Nov. t J. - Michael Walsh,
gasfltter, followed Klahru in giving tes¬
timony in the Cronin trial Monday.
Walsh and Burke roomed to¬
gether in Joliet, a short distance from
this city, from May 0 to Msy 18, and it
was attempted to prove by the three witness
that Burke during his stay was
comparatively poor if not in needy later oir-
cumstaneea, whilo a week or so
the susneot was found
with with bought money for Europe, in bis and pocket, able counsel a ticket to
defend him in the subsequent extradi¬
tion trailing, .re*** however, and the witness
una'
so calcitrant that Mr. Forrest did not
care to cross-examine, even to the ex-
Gamp 966, recalled and Kau&Mot testified
_was
uroma msapgoaranoa^ ueggs, m
Morris end'Dennis Ward, Morris said, in reply
doctor to a suggestion in all made likelihood by dead; that “You the
was
don’t know what you are talking about
You are not in the inner rirele;’ we
are." Th# witness previous to that
time had never heard of an “inner
circle” in the Clan-na-GaeL
Dr. John F. Williams was called to
terious oast suspicion contract upon with O’Sullivan’s Dr. Cronin. mys¬ He
testified that he had been O'Sullivan’s
physioian for a period of two or three
bill years, had and during amounted that time the iee man's
not toover $5 a year.
Maurice Morris was recalled and cor¬
roborated the testimony given by r
O’Bryne in regard to the "inner cirole ’
conversation held with Begga.
The Tell Tale Relies Brought It.
Mike Gilbert, a sewer cleaner, testi-
field day, to and finding then Cronin’s the clothes effects and last intra- Fri¬
ments of the murdered physician were
brought into the court loom. Thera
i a buzz of excitement from the spec-
>rs’ benches as the tell tale relics
down. The prisoners, save Beggs, who
scarcely looked at them, evinced as
muoh curiosity os the spectators.
Identified by Mrs. Conklin.
Chief of Police Hubbard read the
card and several prescriptions of the
doctor’s found in the pocketbook which
bore the doctor’s name. Corroborative
evidence Frederick was Meyer, given by Michael Schuettler, Reese,
Lieuts. Koch and Frener. Capt. The clothes
were held up for the inspection of the
jury. Than Mrs. Conklin took the
stand, and identified each piece of
clothing and each instrument as hav¬
ing been worn and earned by tho (loo¬
ter when he left his home on his fatal
ride. She recollected each article per¬
fectly, and self tbe ovident truth that of her the testimony defense
was so
waived cross-examination.
Court then adjourned.
* Tuesday's Session.
Clerk J. P. Hatfield, of Revell & Com¬
pany, was the first witness called Tues¬
day morning. He was not in the court
room, Lougenecker and while offered waiting for evidence him, Judge
in the
specimens of hair taken from the
and from Dr. Cronin’s head, which had
been compared by chemical and micro¬
scopic cal The experts chips and of wood found and to cotton be identi¬ from
which the blood stains were taken for
testing were also submitted They were
admitted in evidence over the objection
of Mr. Forrest.
There was then a wrangle as to who
should be the custodian of these
mens. Mr. Forrest demanded that they
be left with the clerk of tbe court,
tiie state’s attorney insisted that they
be left in tho possession of Capt.
Sohuettier. Fiuaily tiie court ordered
the specimens to be sealed up and placed
in the Oare of the olerk.
Mr. Hatfield then took the stand and
identified tbe frame work of the
found in the Lakevi&w sewer, contain¬
frame ing Dr. of Cromu's satchel clothes, identical as with being that tiie
a
sold “J. B. Simonds" February 19.
Mrs. Pauline Hoertel who lives on
Raqine avenue near the Carlson cottage
was then called Mrs, Hoertel
that she saw a man resembling Dr.
nin enter the Carlson cottage on
evening of May 4.
Heard a 8»rug jl > in the Cottage.
Mrs. Hoertol's story was that she
passing the Carlson cottage between
and 8 o’clock on the evening al of May
when she saw two men m in in a buggy
np to the oottage. One of the men
out and went up the step*. He knocked,
the door was opened and he went in.
The man was big and broad
and carried something like a satchel.
might have been a surgeon's case.
horse that drew the buggy was white.
When tbe man entered the door of
cottage it was dosed immediately
witness heard sounds as though
blows were being dealt; there was
noise of a great struggle
stopped and heard some one cry
“Olx, my God.” if Three were a few
noises as some one wgs struggling,
and then all was stilL .
Georgia Black* In Connell.
Atlanta, Go., Nov. 18.—A largely
tended state convention of oolored
to discuss tiie relations of tiie race#
drees to the white people
robbed, declaring led that that about about the the odored a and ' outraged, .
a
probably be adopted.
Phjrste for
Washington, Nov. 18.—The
report of „ General
the sec y cl tee navy
$79,780 e * p ^ irvisi 0 V
teeMune date this'
. -*
*****
in Ohio
Bonner 1
3 roar-old i
‘“liTjohnwm, iSwiwnJite^y
...
a
is ]
STtfy’i
“iteriisl. ______
Austria
can’t be opened, t
posed to be i
The keep*
that reach the
are rent there I
Tho Pan- Amu __
Philadelphia Honda 1*
one mind that this i
that they would like 1
m tboaU ’ ■ * '
day. Two of 1
Roberts, drowned. aged ,
... Thee
Tuesday, Nov. 1 _
glare A gigantic poo l, in w)
manufacturers ir *
concerned, it
possible, The fort „ . ___
supreme court of
and Joseph Nfcdly, eo
to bo hanged for 1
HwuyBooth, a j
head dT.
Wabash college v
has been very F
having given f
yearn
in the ]
of a twenty-year a
aged wife. At St.:
suicided because of 1
wife, who died five ye
Sscfst&TjF Rusk ifi tiwi
b©r of tho ciibiaot
cratic in his tastes
current of hostility
aristocratic i_____.
Rusk are about a* (
habits ns two men
rumored, they Kpe very
each other At cabinet
sympathy i
The claim of one
a share in the $1,000,000 HU
great grandfather, Col. i
_i tiYMWb thn mifwHfm w *
marriage of CoL Fisuht ’
li“, w save urn ui 0 Ad
customs was legal or n
with tee Indian woman far j
knowledged her as Ms wife J
decision was teat the :
j&rs*
J. Wade
Monday treed and in T a 1
trial has
Tbe Benjamin Delaud bad 1
was editor, v*y , L __
the men, in which
dead. The court re!
of what occurred
meeting, and it 1
lass was the at
impossible to <
Bloomington
Batten and Wil
law, reled living for at I
some t
on a team of
Kerr.
•