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THE NEWS, EstaMfiSfta t«71.
BIG DRIVE
« -m,,
IS LADIES’ AND CHILDREN’S OXFORDS
„ the next fed days. Having bought« lineof the above goads at a
f price, will oVer tbetn 1)9 th ® Batae wa J » **horfc time. Our stuck o
,
I.)ES of every kind Is complete. We suit you both in style and price.
BOWDOIN ft LITTLE,
Hill Street, Sign of the Big Boot.
(Successor to B. P. Blanton.) ~
Merchant millers,
-Dealers in-
$JINGLES, ROUGH. DRESSED AND MATCHED
LUMBER. SASH AND BLINDS.
Moulding, Brackets & Ballister Work always in stock
-V
GRIFFIN GEORGIA.
H£ME.lfBER We smallest can make you anything i m the shape
of Picture from the Locket Photo ) up up to Life-size
portraits in please. Crayon, Oil or Water Colors, All work guar-
inteed to
M. D. MITCHELL &CO., Photographers
^Picture frames made to Order
f|-ave you waler woHcs in your house? If not, why not?
O-all and get oui prices, and we will do your work.
3-y keeping the price down we hold our trade. It is
fj-seless to say that that the prices place are too high, for
fl>-emember plumbing this is the to have it done, for we
f^-un the buaireooo. - _
g-y being in time you avoid the
f|-ush. It has already commenced. done is Again remember the
Q-nly place to have your work at
HENRY C. filfRR & BRO'S
SHORT ITEMS.
Iwgoriaut C.uersi New. DltpUehM la
Condensed Form.
The Southern Life, after the order of
is a new illustrated weekly
which has just made its appearance in
The tusk of a wild boar, tea inches
long, exhibition was found in Chun swamp, and is
on at K as tman , Ga. It is
sari that are still many wild boars la
this swamp.
The bill making tbs anniversary legiuholi- of
the birth of Jefferson Davis a
<Uy in Florida has become a law. After
the bill was passed, the legislature ad¬
journed sine die. ‘ .
At Williamsburg, W&nUXrf Ky., Sidney Lewis,
*» county, of Judge has been sentenced Harlan peni¬
tentiary to the
father for life for the sunder or his
m February last.
At Paris, Catulle Mendss fought a
duel with M. Humbert, editor of Gil
mas. The weanona were nistols, and
men, and
Wm. Stewart, received at the peniten-
J™T, eounty, at Columbus, three weeks Q., from Van Wert
year sentence for manslaughter, ago, on a seven- dead.
Sh is
u-art was in the last stages of con¬
sumption when received there.
Mrs. William Samples, living north
beautiful setof^T^h^I
A report from Knoxville, Term., says:
Judge Henry R. Gibson is not a candi¬
date for the Republican nomination for
congress/to succeed the late Jndge L. 0.
This leaves the contest to Rule
*ud Mr. Honk, son of the late congress¬
man.
Miss Elfle Brownell, the handsome 22-
year-old Brownell, daughter o i 'Squire G. W.
growneu, Bottom, W. a a woA.lt.hv wealthy Va.. fftrautv fanner a# of TVwkfIaa Douglas
ra-east short
while alone in her room. It is
^'®riby her relatives that it was so-
good r.„„f°^ thrir n , ftnd escape *^1 but one of her them made
wdv. The over
with murder. one who remained is charged
A shooting affray occurred at New Of-
^ Dupree Dupree, fired editor five shots of and The Oliphaat Daily States.
one.
Li. " sbot Waterville killed Wash., Jacob Von-
- i.m and his
Sv a<j two brothers,
re'limed, ^tot it is thought M the he has hone
jL - • m or committed smeidi
^‘•SuSd’o^t toa wS^T 1
The ooroec stone of the Oonfedcrate
Soldiers’ home was BBd at the Hermit¬
of age Frank Nashville, Cheatham Tenn., under the auspices Phoenix
Speeches bivouac and
Masonic lodge. wen made by
Congressman General Pickle, Washington, HanTs. F. Wilson Attorney
others. ana
. It has been discovered that Benito
Ferd anw ^ head cljtrk in the office of H.
A Co., San Francisco real ee-
tate agents, disai disappeared there about a week
ago, and that is a shortage In his
aOoounte. The amount of his defalca¬
tion, it is said, will reach several thou¬
sand dollars. ‘
Hiss Anna Harper and Miss Denna
Hatmdchild, glovee of Indianapolis, wagered a
box of that they could climb to
the top of the smokestack of the cotton
mills, around which the scaffolding still
stood—190 feet in height. The feat was
a bat dangerous both successfully one, even for aa athlete,
accomplished it.
ten Archbishop the clergy Walsh, Dublin, has writ¬
to concerning the pope’s
latest things encyclical the archbishop letter. Among other
-says it is desira¬
ble to promote, besides ordinary trades
unions, bodies for the advancement of
the common interests of employes and
employed, m well aa of the general in¬
terests of commerce.
The raoe for the grand prise of Paris,
100,000 1888, francs distance for colts and and fillies “**
foaled in about one mile
and seven furlongs, was run and id wc won
by Edmond Blanc's Clamart, by Sanmn lumnr,
opt of Princess Catherine, same owners
Revernd ond, by H. Energy-Revense De Lamare’s was sec¬
by tigiland ana M. aellie, third. Clement,
John Hayes, of West Sixty-first street,
New York, saw snakes, monkeys with
wire tails and other queer creatures of
his fever fancy, and, according to the
policeman who arrested him when he
landed, jumped from afire-story window
and escaped unhurt. Justice Murray
remarked wind and that committed Hayes him wasn’t Bellevue without
to
hospital.
to Alqert death at Bright, Norfolk, colored, Va., was while di
to stop his runaway team on the w]
of the Chesapeake wharf and Ohio railr
He was on the when the team
started to run. He grabbed the reins,
stumbled, and was thrown against a log
of wood, oauaed which, his striking death before him in be the ab¬
domen, could
be carried po a physician.
A cable message is said to have been
received at St. Louis from Home, held an¬ hi
nouncing the bedy city that Archbishop at the consistory ~ *
Paul, by Minn., had bean'
to” the pope for the vacant
cardmalote, and that he would accord¬
ingly be declared a cardinal of the Ro¬
man Catholic December church at the consistory
to be held fat next
It is stated that the pride the paid for
Traveller newspaper by to $117,000. Boston
mittee of one hundred,
managing editor of the paper will
Rev. James Dunn, D. D. Be will be
assisted by z Rev. A. A. Miner and L. T.
*" -A
me to the
— - •
■
GRIFFIN GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE !>. lSdl.
Tfij
The Remains of a Man, Woman
and Child
Found Head Foremost in a
■ u * Ditch. . . . *
*M Umw, «f * Dark and Hidden
Crime —G»na Uttad Near Grows Poln*.
Indiana—Aa Only Foxilble Ctaa—Not a
Vestige of a Gar Beat on the Unfortu¬
nate Trio.
I»A Posts, Ind., June 8.— In excavat¬
ing for « well near Crown Point, Lake
connty, the workmen came upon the do-
composed remains qf a man, a woman
and a child about 8 yean of age. De¬
composition had removed any possible
identification. C '
The skulls of the three victims had
beep crashed in with some blunt haskru-
meat. The murder is enveloped in ti*
greatest mystery. It is thought, how¬
ever, they were emigrants on their way
West.
The bodies had been damped head
foremost in m (jpickly. constructed ditch.
The only possible clew to the dark
deed is thfc mysterious disappearance of
two j woodcutters, who had * a hnt in a
stretch of timber land near by. The
bodies were close together, and not a
vestige of a g;umen remained to conceal
choir nakedness.
Other bodies have been found in the
immediate vicinity.
THE TRAMPS TOOK POSSESSION.
Xweaty-Three Mm Board a Throu ( h
Freight and a Battle Follow* 1 _
Columbus, Ind., June 8.—Twenty-
three tramps boarded the through freight
train for Louisville at Beit crossing, Itr-
dianapoiis. The conductor and three
brakemen tried to drive them off, but
the tramps took possession and ordered
the train men to proceed. At Franklin
messages were sent to headquarters re¬
garding the situation. The polioe force
met the train at the depot here shortly
before daylight. Eleven of the men bad
entered a box car for the purpose of rob¬
locked bery, and it. the brakemen had closed and
The betin.Cc of the gang left
the train to avoid arrest before reacting
here. The officers and train men began
firing opening the them. car, when the tramps began
on Twenty dr thirty shots
suited, finally, in the capture Egg^TPitched nine
or
persons, seriously two nslyinjni escaping. injured. Fortunately no
one was
Many Charitable Bequests.
Omaha, June 8.—Byron Reed, a pio¬
neer settler, and the wealthiest land
owner in the city, being rated tit $2,000,-
000, has died, aged 82. In his will he
leaves a valuable piece of land upon
which lection to of erect coins a pnblio.library. also left the His city, col¬
are to
and he makes numerous charitable be¬
quests, amounting in all to over $100,-
wO. In early life Mr. Reed was a tele¬
graph operator. He was afterwards con¬
nected with the United States assay office.
THE BASEBALL WORLD.
National League.
Phila..O At Philadelphia— 10001000 0 0 1-8
Pitts..0 00000200 0 0 0—2
Brooklyn......0 At Brooklyn— 0 0 0 3 2
1
Chicago.......0 0 0 0 1 0 0
At Boston-
Boston........0 2 1 0 0 0 0
Cleveland.....0 8 1 0 0 0 0
At New York-
New York.....0 1 1 0 0 0 2
Cincinnati.....0 0 0 0 0 0 0
American Association.
At LoulsvUle— 0
Louisville., dd2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Baltimore.....2 0 0 0 1 0
At St. Louis—
St. Louis...9 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-11
Boston.....8 1110 3 10 ft-10
At Columbus— 1
Columbus.................0 0 3 0 8— ft
Athletics..................2 Cincinnati 0 0 I'd- TV
Cincinnati.r...O At 0
4 1112 2 S~ia
Washington...0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-1
DAILY MARKET REPORTS.
Naval Stores.
Savakxab, June 8.—Turpentine firm, SSMl
rosiu firm, |LX).
_
Ties and Bagging.
Atlanta, June S.—Arrow ties, $1.43, Bag¬
ging-1*, «toc; 1R*. 7tos; 8*. SJ4c; ftdlb,«.
Prodses, -——--
N*w York, June 8.—Flour—City mills ex¬
tra; $5.H®L45; Minnesota extra, 84.3&3A.85; su¬
perfine, I3.35at.g6; fine, tSASaLOO.
WhoMt—No. 2 Rod Win tor, $1.12^ cosh; Mar,
$l.om; June, 91<M.
Corn—No. S mixed, 80 q cash.; May, 80)*; June,
TOMc.
Oats—No. 2 mixed, 62^c cash; May.SSH.
Chicago Market.
Chicago, June 8.
WHEAT—May, lOOX^lOO; July, 9SM a»TJ*.
. COHN—May, 504®^. Jnly,
OATS—May, i*M**H; Jnly,
POEK-May, U.«V»U.10; July, 10ASftl0.«*.
It IBS—May, «.00@3.05; July, iM'^R.07.
LARD—May, «.a'^«.42; July, 6 JiTan, 37 .
New Tork Cotton Future*.
New Yon*, Jnn* g
Ope a. Close.
4t,rll....................... ... St*
Jaime.. M-ty ...................... II
J .. r* •
ulj*i
sfeideiiiber............... r'S
N o vk/iubcr... *»« t «#»»»#• *»»•. • .^'ti H •
D«cti tuber..................... r.:6
kebnw.............i........».U Jai.uur/...................... S.i*
Ml
Mdrob. * .1
Liverpool Cotton Futures.
U -,;u-oou June#
Oyen.
April o.pril—.....................«-«, and May...
Juue May and nd Jane... July................. "’"is
iitigustand su.) and August.......,,,...
SeptemlMr......
1 iwembpr and Vehruary January.
Jannan Fsbroar) and March..
and
THE SOUTH'S PROSPERITY.
»n» i ud tut rui *»# I’regress
of * VV.rA. 1
Cbuttanooua, June ft—'ft*.* steady
and healthful adranw-ment which has
characterised southern dvMopment
still oontianes, and the average number
of new industries originating ti tring the
week has been well raaiftMhed. Spe¬
cially noticeable is tbs lumber number of new
plants engaged in the business
and in woodworking.
The Tradesman, Chattanoqpt. Tenn.,
in its weekly review for the? week end¬
ing Jane 6, reports 58 new industries, It
aew buildings, 7 new railroads, t dum¬
sp&K2S»%i!F my my and and 1 1 electric electric, street street ear car line. line. Among
rifled brick works onn. j vtt-
brick at Lkw ille, Ky.;
works at Griffin, Ga., Ith $50,000
capital; Prosperity, Dwnnw.Jl.. canning 8."C.; factories at >urens and
" g Fl 1 k
a _ .
capital $300,000, at AtL IanIL compress. 1 Ga., m and
-
one at Sbennan, Tex.; development
lumbia, wanpaniee have been chartered ' at Co¬ Co-
H. O., Galveston. Tex., and
ital; an electric light and po#er compa-
ny at Knoxvfflfi, at Grimiteville, Tenn.; 8. C.; mar bln works
Garden, W. coal nnues at Elk
quanies at Isbeii, >a..' N. and Jellfcd, Tenn.;
ville, Ky, the latter C., ont at Louis¬
000,000; cotton seed capitalised oil and at $1,-
companies Wheeling, fertilizer
at W.-Vs., Bon-
Pgper yk.; ajsiwdor factor)- ... with $800,000 __ ___
italat Farmviile, Va, and steel cap-
at Pittsburg, Tenn.. works
with $100,000 capi¬
tal. A plant for making stoves boa
been organized at Louisrille, Ky„
and caTrttalized at $100,000: a $50,-
000 cotton miH at McCall, 8, C., and a
gingham Charlotto, mill with $125,000 capital at
N. N. G. G. Hi x teen woodworking
plants tre reported, including a furnf
tore factory at Gurley, Ala., and two
at New Decatur, Ala., each' with $80,-
000 capital; lumber companies at Dallas
and Houston, onston, ~ Tex.,Palatka, - - - Fla., Talla-
poosa Tallapoosa Ga., , and .. _ "" Tateville, ________ ~ f Ky. _ capital _ Thf ____
company has $250,(XK)
the one at Tateville $100,000, and that at
Palatka $75,000.
Saw mills are to be built at Camden,
Ark., H. C., ConellySprings, N.G. GreeuviUe,
and Piotona, Miss., saw ana
sWngle mills at Troy, Ala., and Nichol¬
son, Atlanta, Miss., and spoke and stave factories
at Ga., and Gurley, Ala.
Railroad charters have been obtained
at Charlotte Harbor, Fla., Jackson and
and Johnson City, Tenn., and Mont¬
gomery and Birmingham, Ala.; a dum¬
my line is to be built at Christianburg,
lanta, Va., and an electric street road at At¬
Ga.
Two Have Bled of Hydrophobia and An¬
other Cannot Survive.
Kansas City, Mo. , June 8. —Some two
weeks ago a mad dog bit a steer in a
herd of cattle belonging to Vaudorberg
Bros., living in the western portion of
Atchison county, Kan. The steer was
soon afflicted with hydrophobia, which
spread to other members of the herd.
There l. ere three of the Vanderberg
brothers, and each one of them waa bit¬
ten by one or another of the afflicted
animals. They did not know the terri¬
ble nature of the disease with which
their cattle were afflicted, and paid no
until particular attention brothers to their injuries
one of the became vio¬
lently ill with hydrophobia. He died in
—Another excruciating agony.
of the brothers lias since
died, and the third waa brought to this
city cific by a surgeon and of the Missouri Pa¬
corps corps and placed placed in the Missouri
Pacific hospital. He has all the terrible
symptoms believed that of hydrophobia, medical skill and will it is avail not
him anything. Physicians say he can
only survive a day or two.
Wlttnut Moral Authority,
Paris, June 8. —The Chilian legation
has received an official note issued at
Santiago by the so-called delegation
congress, representing that the revolu¬
tion is without moral authority; that
the insurgents of Jarapaca lack author¬
ity, and have means with which to make
expedition Chili, that into the populous part of
and the army of the govern¬
ment numbers 80,000 soUliere tmd 10,000
gendarmes, well revolutionary equipped and discip¬
lined, while the army con¬
sists of only 5,000 demoralised men.
The constitutional congress, the- nete
adds, has approved economic laws fur-
nishing the gorenr.nent with ample re¬
sources.
Ore A* Good A* George,
Hilton. Ga. June 8. —Quite a sensa¬
tion was created during * protracted
meeting the other day. The minister
preached a special sermon to young men,
commenting at some length on the char¬
acter of George Washington, and re¬
quested himself Washington's any one present who thought
One equal The to stand up.
him young what man arose. did he base pastor hto askod
upon said claims.
"Sir," the young man, " 1 I —■ am —■« rail-
road agent at Hilton station. ” A burst
laughter , greeted this
of remarkable
statement.
Virginia Historical Society X’
Officer#.
Richmond, June 8. —The executive
committee of the Virginia Historical so¬
ciety, at the meeting held at the
moreland dub, elected the following of¬
ficers : President, Hon. William Wirt
Henry; vice president, Him. A. H. H.
Stuart, deceased; first vice president,
Him. J. L, McCurry; second vice presi¬
dent, Col. Archer committee; Anderson, Robert member of
the executive M.
Hughee A and Dr. member* Bennett Wood Green.
number of new were chosen,
and many gifts of historical value were
received.
A Claw Day Cutwa,
Crawfordsville, Ind., Jane 8.—
senior class of the Oawfordeville
school inaugurated the custom of bold-
ing the class evening day exercise*. fifteen Th# feature
waa little tots,
under 8 yean, who represented
members at the junior claee. The
i LITTLE THUN
with Pistol Crested a Sen¬
sation
Several Western Brethren Are
“In It.”
*»■»• Kxoitoment lu (he
Bloek In et. Fan]— .;)«< Margaret B.
Oltuion Receives a Voi’.i y of Shots and
Words from Mr*. Oeorge S. Croeeoa.
Tfco Two Preachers.
Br. Paul, June 8.—There was a sen¬
sation in the Ma nnheim er block when a
little woman reshi^ffom the elevator
on the second floor into the school of
embroidery of Miss Margaret R. Gibson
and began firing at the latter. At the
same time abe cried:
"Yon Ton won’t won’t steal steal any any other oth woman’s
husband as you have mine. ”
Occupants of the offices in the neigh-
borhood >rhooa ran r into the room and seised
the woman just as she dropped her re¬
volver and swooned atyay. bhe proved
to be Mrs. George S. Oresson, of 127
Nina avenue. Miss Gilwou was not hit.
“Mrs. Cresson charges her husuand—
George of the Omaha T. Creeson, aesistaut engineer
fond of the society railwity—with being too
of Miss Gibaom
The Brethren Are “In It.”
Springfield, His., June 8.—In th© U.
S. district court the Rev. Jerry Holmes,
of Stonefort, Saline county, was tried
and convicted of counterfeiting and
sentenced to three years in the peniten¬
tiary. The Rev. George Vansil, of Dn-
oh— quesno, plaaded guilty to the same
urge, and was sentenced to one yeai
in the penitentiary. The two preacher
counterfeiters are the strange back-
woods pair whose arrwt a fortnight ago
caused so much comment.
Right After the Prancher*.
Minneapolis, June 8.—In recent ser¬
mons several ministers have inveighed
against the large number of immoral
places allowed to exist in this city by
the authorities. The grand jury, during
its session, summoned the minis,ere be¬
fore it, and in its report just made the
jnry "Your says:
in saying grand that they jury have no hesitation
regret that ministers
of the gospel should so far lower their
and dignity through aa to the urotir.im from their pulpite
the existence of evils public and press of this city
ditions immoral con¬
of affairs that smell to heaven,
based only upon hereeay mid rumor. ”
He Wa* Caught Napping,”
Hunter, Tsr of the Seventh Presbyterian
church, publicly proclaimed that the sa¬
loon keepers were openly and notorious¬
ly violating the law.
an aiso cautu uerore ine grand jury, to
test stify end against gentleman the offenders. The rev¬
cren< and id wh&e while he he persisted persisted was caught napping,
in in asserting asserting that that
the law was constantly violated, he was
unable to fhrnish any facts.
The Mayor’* Letter Received.
Washington, June 8.— President Har¬
rison received the letter of the mayor of
Philadelphia transmitting the resolu¬
tions of the council about instituting an
inveftigatton by the government into
the affairs of the Keystone National
bank.
No action will be taken by the presi¬
dent until the return of Secretary Fos¬
ter from New York, who is expected
here early. Comptroller Lacey declines
to tion say to anything hto statement for publication of days in addi¬
some ago,
except that he has not been requited to
appear before the council and has given
very facility bank's affairs. for obtaining information
n the
8tnnmcr Normal in Atlanta.
Atlanta, June 8.—The Normal school
was opened at Browning hall in the
girls’ high school building. There was
a full attendance of the teachers of At¬
teachers lanta, and a large number The work of visiting of
ganizing were the present. school commenced, or¬
was
, Superintendent Jennie ___ Armstrong ____________ - Slaton elected presiding. presiding. secretary Miss ___
was
and Professor B. C. Davis was chosen
chairman pro tem., to act in the absence
of the regular chairman.
A General SU otlng.
Salt Lake City, Utah, June 8.—In a
fit of jealousy, caused by suspicious con¬
duct on the part of his wife, Sam Day, a
restaurant John keeper, shot her alleged par¬
amour, of the Rio Grande Kirby, V night yordruaster
.*.tem; hie own
child aged 5 years, and after firing a
shot at his wife turned the pistol on
himself and committed suicide. Kirby
will die, the ball having gone through
both lungs.
Arrnt.il for Mall Robbery.
Waldo* Aik., June 8.—Ex-Mayor J.
P. Johnson. J, T. Faulkner ^Ond
Waller, most prominent citizens in town,
were arrested by United States Mail In-
apector McClure, charged with robbing
the mails at McNeil, March 16. It
also intimated that tie se men were con
nected with the recent ..fe ro bbery.
Now Trying Ike K Irka poos.
Guthrie, O. T., June 8. -The
kee commtonion, composed of Ex-Gov-
ernof David H; Jerome of Mu
Judge Alfred M. Wil <«i of
and Hon. 'Warm. G. Heyre of
have gone from Axi;.,urho, in tho
ita reservation, to WilLrion, in
Kickapoo Kickapoo Indians country, to to eat with
for th» ir 250.b , .‘0
of land lying fifty xnfl a sontinve^r >
here.
struck in a Bay fct :ck.
Charleston, W.Va., June 8.
the heavy storm, two sons of
Southall, living near Stoats mills, J.-uA
eon county, t<x>k refuge under a
stack. minutes They when had the been stack others 1 but
was stn.
One of the.boy- vnus
" the other
*;_■
-tew r=— ------ ■ »""
SUN, Established
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of IS is bnkha-g. X IWi
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in
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ABSOLUTELY PURE f.j 1
»t t In CrtATIw ty >. it. B la Italy.
CAMPBELL IN NEW YORK.
Be Talk* About Ike CampaJga la Sia
RIM* a»4 Other TblBga.
New York, June 8. —Goveriaor Csm;>-
bell has arrived In this city, having been
summoned from Oolnmbns by the illness
of hto wife, who has been spending some
time in the east. He anticipates the
liveliest kind of campaign in his state,
and predicts that the tariff will figure
as the improving element. ^ ‘
"No, I don’t know who will be the
senator to succeed Sherman, * said he.
"If we carry the legislature, the farmers
will have such a following within old
party lines without that their it will advice belinpoatiible and to
caucus consent.
John H. Thomas might possibly satisfy win
that element. If the Republicans
Senator Sherman Sheri may meet with ojipo-
sition. him. The but it .. will be difficult to
- — 01 Ohio campaign this fall will
be far-reaching in its results. Now, if
Major whirl, McKinley should go through with
a It to not improbable that he
would at once be taken up as a presi¬
dential quantify. I think hfe party to
in just the right condition of mind to
dump Mr, Harrison, but it seems hardly
likely inated.” that Mr. Blaine can again be nom¬
8HAKEN BY AN EARTHQUAKE,
Several Fcnon* Killed and Many Madly
Injured. ,
Rohe, Jane 8,— The cities of Verona
and Mantua were shaken by a^i earth¬
quake. Many houses were damaged.
An invalid lady was so badly frightened
by the shock she died.
Lombardy, Venetia and part of Tus-
jany were visited by repeated shocks.
The worst shocks occurred about 2 o'clock
in the morning. Shocks were also felt
tn Venice and Milan.
The centre of disturbance was at Ve¬
rona. A subterranean notoe was heard
like the roar of or til lory, which was fol¬
lowed by three strong shocks. The in¬
habitants rushed into the streets in
terror. At Mareeuigo three venom
were killed, and chininc^s. and at Badia, Cslavena,
Bouses ' * ’' *-
A DUtant Shock.
New Brunswick, N. J., June 8.—A
distinct shock of earthquake, from
southeast to northwest, accompanied by
a morning. rambling noise, was felt here in the
_
SHERMAN’S SNUB.
CoiuMareble Talk Over the Affair la
Clnelanatt.
Cincinnati, June 8. —There to consid¬
erable gossip here over a snub which
John Sherman’s friends received at the
Richland county Republican conven¬
tion. An effort was made to pass reso¬
lutions indorsing Senator Sherman for
re-election. Though toe convention was
held in Sherman’s own county and hto
tion of Sherman.
The Sherman men squirmed, but were
afraid to make a fight.
first because They of hto n
the party ini
paign, and the bre<
stoutly ever since.
MURDER IN KNOXVILLE.
A Playful Rla» Set a Drnnkan Man la a
Passion.
Knoxville, Tenn., June8.—A murder
wm committed in this city shortly after
8 o’clock in tile evening. John and Jim
Richards were sitting on the fmorfat
front of Dave Farmer’s house. Farmer
wm out walking with Me family and
was under the Influence of liquor. When
Farmer and hto famOv arrived ________
Jim playfully slapped Mm. Farmer
flew into a passion and one word led on
to another. Farmer took hto nmbr
and attempted to strike Jim. The
ter, however, had pulled a board OB the
fence and hit Fanner across the batik
with it, and while he was
from the effects of the blow. $ vuu «*
a large cinder at him, which struck
behind the left ear, killing him instant¬
ly. and have The Richards’s been immediately captured. Had
not yet
J- .Vv
■a.
aft AltWytti Deavoistretloa.
Paris, June 8.— The anarchist* at¬
tempted to make a demonstration in
front of the Mont Martre botilica. Two
hundred men carrying banners and nu¬
merous wreaths aaaemblsd near the ba¬
silica for the purpose of laying votive
wreaths on the spot where the Vsrlfn
communists were shot in 1911. The po¬
lice seise stopped the wreaths. the panders The ensuing and tried to
tumult
a armed the crowd of worshipers ^ within
the* basilica, and * the ** service*
i until were sus-
The penned ended polio* until succeeded quiet quiet outside outside wm wm restored. restored.
in dispersing the
anarchist*, six of whom were arrested.
Shot <m Ike Ckareb RUp*.
Birmingham, Ala., June 8.—At
country church near Warrior a
congregation wm engaged in
when they were suddenly startled bv
loud reports at two pistols on
Hall Hambrick and
Jett naa Bad a dispute about a
handle, and at church Sunday
fatally _— namDnci
wounded by two shot*, on*
which struck him in the breast. In
uproar that followed Jett eecaped.
-, ?
Macdonald, the
of Canada, No lore.
Signs of General Sorrow Seen
Everywhere. ^ t- -
Ottawa, Ontario, a City of
____
_
FIa*a Flying at Half Maot-^tbo Load-
«r*s Bo main# Embalmed-Tho BoaaU-
Ikl Rosa Colored Casket—Lady Maa-
donald'* Grief.
Ottawa, June 8,-Ottawa to a city of
mourning. Everywhere an
of the general sorrow felt at the loss the
John nation Macdonald, has sustained in of the her death ■I greatest <
one
•one, who sfttHy at
10:15 o’clock Saturday evening. Flags
are flying at half most from the____
went and other public buildings and
also many private bouses, some of which
«• draped with crape. The United
States flag is floating at halt mast over
the United State* consulate.
The remains of the dead ha* been eu-
balmed. The embalmer says Or John’s
body fvulw to tffi less IdSffiffi emaciated OMoarJoioJ Atom--------- than was ____
ally supposed. The casket tn which the
remains will be Interred was made in
West Meriden, Conn. It to of
•teel and to painted a bee
color. . The massive handles
•olid bars of oxydtoed silver and_
along both tides of the coffin. On
>
oxtnfi coHKet u a make a
yet inscription been an the silver
ftjiyfl_____ There
wm a
will leave for
. „
THE UNITED 8TATE8,
la Taking Hi* Bate and Gan*. Mads a
Badlffitrere.
IquiquE, via Galveston, June $
There is great excitement here over 1
decision of the American admiral to
take the Itata without allowing the die-
ch&rtce ot her anas And Ammonitlon.
The pres* ia very bitter, and oonaidar*
cradle thatch* United State*,, the reoogntoed
the grave dictator. error
The Einacional. in an
We e know know we we I_____ have 1
the of allother people of civilired America, also of I
nations, b
of the United States g
the weaker power in
The article concludes:
"Let Americans take our *•*-
guns, Sailed but let them reflect t
in the hearts of thn.
„
sentiments <ff having been
their hopes ana of having 1
' ‘ nobleness of mind and 1
e
e sentiments of the
ashington.”
■ rr’. W--:
CONVICT ED Of EX TORTION.
A Master Workman Arraigned la ten Otr-
•nit Court at Rochester
anreSU.^^2= Rochesteb,
of Trades Assembly 2%i, Uni
ing Cutters, Trimmers and
North America,order I
first of
Walter S. Westbrook, New Yu
rotary of National Assembly!'
A. Wright, Philadelphia, m
Kid Rochester George local. T^bein, 1
sfit -
i./ ■■
National Cash RagUter Victory.
PmcAJDELFHU, June 8.— Jndgre Ateh-
eeon and Bntler of the United States
circuit court of Philadelphia, rendered c
decision in favor of the % . ional Cash
Register company, of Da, „ i, O., in ite
suit against the Am riot . , h Regfater
company, wm brought y, ot of by Phmv.e^h Ph t>>,» Nat.-< ia »■*•! This suit
tor infringement ---UftdtoMH|fi|mHi of it* *w. r - and 1
—1--
of the National company,
decision to of much and imp
cash register world, ton t
tocy for the National company.
Negro Thrasked *S Ike
Atlanta, June 8.—Charlie
this city, gave a
a sound
street, for
mouth while the ohinMil
near the tide-walk,
ton. The negro basked
case, where he conni ^
and received the Inn .
_