Newspaper Page Text
THE NEWS, Establish®J 1871
CLOTH T OPSAND
A HANDSOME LINE OF
Li' Eli Tcp ail laid Tnrned fas
Just arrived. We are daily receiving our new fall and winter stock of
MENS,’ LAMES’ and CHILDRENS’ BOOTS and SHOES,
Direct from manufacturers at SATISFACTORY PRICES.
BOWDOIN & LITTLE,
51 Hill Street, - - Sign of the Big Boot.
din Mill! & Variety Works
(Successor to B. P. Blanton.)
Merchamt Millers,
-Dealers in-
SHINGLES, ROUGH, DRESSED AND MATCHED
LUMBER, SASH AND BLINDS.
if (raiding, Brac kets & Ballister Work always in stock
GRIFFIN — - - GEORGIA.
“ We Are Next to You. ”
Get a move on you and go
KINARD BROS.
At the Old Post Office,
for thtc
: A v\ FINEST DRINKS
IN THE CITY.
—★—
And then, too they can
give you the
FINEST MEAL
to be found in the city, on
Short Notice.
LOOK: OTJT!
FOR OUR
Stock ★ of Shoes
We can now show you the largest stock of
Boots and Shoes in the City,
stituted 1,500 Low received Prices in this Shoes week, in Griffin? risk your Ask friends them who where in¬
you can buy the Best Shoes for the Least Money? and they
will all tell you for Neatness in Fit, Elegance in Quality,
and Economy in Price, always buy from the Old Shoe
House of R. F. STRICKLAND.
HOW’S THIS P
From September 1st., to October 1st,,—Posl
tively no longer—we will make you
ONE DOZEN CABINET PHOTOGRAPHS FOR $3
When Cash Accompanies Order.
M. D. MITCHELL & CO., photographers.
LET ALL THE PEOPLE REJOICE
For the time has come when you may throw awsy the old
and get a new pair of shoes that will exactly ruit you. We
row have, and expect to keep up, the largest and best stock
of Shoes that ever has been or ever will be in the city of
Griffin, Look through our mammoth, fine stock and be
suited.
MANLEY & FUTRAL.
22 Hill Street.
THE GRIFFIN SHOE STORE
is a new institution but it is the only place where I can^get
: : A first-class Shoe that Fits : :
as il made to Order at Prices that their Competitors cannot
duplicate. : ; : , :
: : I warn all my Jriends that tbe only
place to get their footwear is from the
fhrtffln Shoe Company
GltlFFIN GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 25. 1891.
" rm,Y
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
and Syrup refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is pleasant
to taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys,
the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels and colds, habitual head¬
cures
only constipation. remedy Syrup kind of Figs is the
or its ever pro¬
ceptable duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, healthy prepared agreeable only from the most
and substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for . -
sale in 50c
and 81 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any have reliable hand druggist who
may not it on will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO.
SAM FSAMCiSCO, CAL,
IOUI8VIUE, KY. MEW tOUC. M.t.
The Public Schools
Are the mainstay of our republic.
In them are being cultivated tbe
minds which are to be our future
lawmakers and leaders in every
walk in life. How essential it is
that these minds should be united to
strong healthy bodies. So many
children suffer from impurities and
poisons in the blood that It is a
wonder that they ever grow up to be
men and women. Many parents
cannot find words strong enough to
express their gratitude to Hood’s
children.__ Sarsaparilla Scrofula, foi its effect upon their
saltrhenm and
other diseases of the blood are effect¬
ually and permnnetly cured by this
excellent medicine, and the whole
being is given disease. strength to resfst at¬
tacks of
Mr. C. A. Thomas, Henry connty,
Ala., fays: “I suffered with Dys¬
pepsia for two or three years after
despairing of getting well. A few
bottles of Dr. Holt’s Dyspeptic Elixir
cured me perfectly. For sale by all
druggists.
The Effect of Warm day* and Ooo
Night*.
has A leading physician writes that he
noticed warm days and cool
nights always affects preventative the bowels,
and suggests some
remedy. Dr. Diggers’ Huckleberry
Cordial is the one.
A Parmer’* Physician.
J. T. Porter, DeKalb connty,
writes. Am remote from medical aid,
bat I have a physician ever with me
to check sudden attacks of the 1 tow¬
els in keeping Dr. Biggerjs Huckle¬
berry Cordial.
TOR SALE.
House and Lot on 13th St.
Between Taylor and Solomon, right
on street car line. Half acre of land,
seven room Terms house, good barn, good
water. to snit. Also, one
half acre on corner of Taylor and
Twelfth stre ets, vacant lot. Address
Box 161, Griffin, Ga. d&w t f.
Dairy Farm For Sale.
124 Acres, one mile from Griffin.
Best place for Dairy Farm in Geor¬
gia. Such a business will pay, ant
be a nice investment for a youny
man. Price f20 per. acre. Wil.
carry $1000 of amount 5 years at fc
per. cent. Bona tor title. A good,
honest tenant place on place. be the Apply market. at
once or may off
W. E. H. Seabcby,
' Griffin, Ga.
A (Georgian in Texas.
G. R. Wallace, Sherman, Texas,
writes: Have been using Huckleber¬
ry Cordial for many years. We con
eider it the only safe and reliable
medicine for the bowels and children
teething.
Beecham’s Pills cures sick headache
Disastrous Vfrc ck on tho Pitts¬
burg and Western Railroad.
Two Men Are Killed and Sev¬
eral Others Injured.
A Freight Train Rons • Working
Train M Eld wood mud Cnuku Work¬
men to Death—Several Verson* Are
injured —Fall r*«lesl*n Hare S.I
Been Received.
Pittsburg, Pa., Sept. 24.—A wreck
has occurred on the Pittsburg and West¬
ern railroad at ElWood, about eight
miles from New Castle, in which two
men were killed outright and seven or
eight others injured, several, it is said,
fatally.
The full particulars have not been re¬
ceived, but it seems a freight train ran
into the working train on which fifteen
workmen and a number of cars were
completely wrecked and the workmen
crashed in the wreck. A wrecking
train carrying physicians ha*-gone to
the scene.
DEADLY COLLISION IN SPAIN.
An Express Train Collide* with a Coin-
Lined Good* and Paggexiffer Train.
Madrid, Sept. 24.—An express train
running between Burgos and San Se¬
bastian came into collision with a com¬
bined goods and passenger train. Seven
persons were killed outright and many
injured.
SHOT AND KILLED.
An Unknown White Xian Fait* Dead, the
Victim of a Shotgun.
Tennille, Ga., Sept. 24— Jake Davis,
a white citizen of Tennille, shot and in¬
stantly killed an unknown white man
at 11:20 o’clock p. m. Following are the
particulars:
Davis, hearing a noise out in bis lot,
secured his shotgun and slipped out to
the back gate. He then went quietly
up to the barnyard gate. He saw some
one trying to open his stable door. Da¬
vis called upon him tp stop, whereupon
the man ran.—Davis then fired upon
him. Davis immediately threw open
the gate and ran in, pushed the man
down and again commanded him to
stop, when the fellow called out:
"Stop, Cap; Til give up. Don’t shoot
me again."
Davis replied:
"D—n yon, I’ll shoot you agaiqr*-.
He leveled his gun and started
shoot him again, when Mr. Sam Pritch¬
ard, his (Davis’s) brother-in-law, ran up
and called upon him not to shoot again.
Davis gave himself up immediately af¬
ter the shooting. Public opinion is very
much divided in regard to tho shooting.
The dead man is about 18 years of age,
about 5 ft. 8 in. high, and a blonde,
dressed rather neatly, and evidently a
printer ink marks out of his a job, fingers. judging He from shot the
on was
through Davis takes the heart.
the matter quietly, and
thinks that he did right. Davis is a
" connect-
& Superin- T.
R. R.
_
Abundant Harvest*.
Constantinople, Sept. 24—Abund¬
ant harvests are reportod from most of
the Turkish provinces, especially from
those situated in Asia Min: r. It is es¬
timated that the revenue will exceed
that of any previous year by 500,000
Turkish pounds.
THE BASEBALL WORLD. *
National League.
At Cincinnati—
Cincinnati — 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0
Chicago.......0 At Pittsburg— 4 0 5 0 *— 9
Pittsburg.....0 0 0 3 8 1—12
Cleveland.....0 0 0 0 0 0— 3
At Boston—First OameF-
BostOTr.T7T.T-.8 0 0 2 1 0-5
Brooklyn......0 Second 0 0 0 1 0 — 1
Boston........1 game. 0 0
0 0 1 5 0— 9
Brooklyn......0 York—First 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 2
At York...S.2 New game—
New 0 2 0 0 0 0 3— 9
Philadelp hia. I 0 1 1 0 0 0 4— 7
Second game.
New York........0 0 0 0 1— 1
Philadelphia.....0 1 1 1 0— 3
DAILY M ARKET RETORTS.
Naval Stares,
Savannah, Sept. 24.-Turpentine firm at
34c bid; rosin firm at $Uo@l-20.
Produce aud Provision*.
Niw Yobk, Sept. 24 .—Pork quiet and steady:
mess old $li'.00@10.75; new J 12.005*12.60; extra
prime $11.00(^1125. Middles steady; short clear
September 7.#n. Lard weak and dull; western
steam 7.05; city steam 6.78; options, October
7 JUt asked; December 7.13 asked; January 7X4.
Chicago Market,
Chicago, Sept. 24.
Wheat—Sept. «5«; Dec.. «7>4
Oom-Oct.. 4854. May 4lH-
Oats—Oct.. 2054. Ma>30&
Pork-Jan. 12.40 Oct.. 10.30.
Ribs—Jan.....;Oct. R.97.
Lard—Jan. 0.90: Oct., 6.07.
New Fork Cotton Futures,
New Yob*. Sept. 24.
Opening. Close.
September*.......... ........ H.83 S.41
........1% ........6.41 8.«3
Novemner............ 1 8.62
December............ 8.80 8 W
£h ar . y 9.12 9.24 9.45
9.45
Tone steady. Sale* j'o.toa Spot* quiet.
Middling 8*4
Liverpool Cottos Futures.
Lives coon. Sept. 14.
September and October......... Opening. Close. 4.41
October aud November.....4.41 December...4.45 *.4l 4.44
November December and and January......*■*« 4.V)
4.68
t.SI
May ES and h .S’AS:::::;:;;:::.t" JBBe................"... 8.M ...
feat very firm. Spot, 4K. Salas 19,000.
m.
MILLS TENDERED AN OVATION.
Tha Free Trade champion Dels a Rous¬
ing Reception at Springfield.
Sprinopield, o., Sept. 24—A grand
ovation was tendered Roger Q: Mills at
the city hall here, which was filled to
overflowing.
A large number of Republicans were
present, among whom was the ex-
speakcr of the house of representative*,
General J. Warren Keifer. A large
banner was strung across the balcony
with the words:
" for Spoaker of the House of Repre¬
sentatives, Hon. Roger Q. Mill*."
Hon. Jolm L. Zimmerman presided
over the meeting. Mr. Mills was »o
hoarse from his continued speaking in
the last few days that for a short time
it was almost impossible to hear him.
Mr. Mills almost entirely ignored tbe
free silver ques tion. He, however, gave
free silver u blow by saying there is but
one issue before tho people, "The ques¬
tion of taxation. ” He said last year’s
importations Tlio duty amounted to $ 130.000,000.
on the same amounted to
$320,000,000, making tho the total ooat
o Americans of $700,000,000. thus
thowing that tbe consumer paid this
tax.
He asserted that a high tariff made
low wages, and a low tariff vice versa;
tii.it the tariff throttled agriculture, and
was sowing the seeds of monarchy. He
said the poverty ot the Republicans’ ar¬
gument was shown in their efforts to
lower the price of sugar by taking the
tax off and lowering the price of tin by
putting ”1 it on.
look for a millennium, ” said he,
"when the porta of the United State*
are thrown open andJier flag* are seen
in every foreign port. Then agricul¬
ture increased will lie demand." quickened by reason of on
Attempt-to Shoot a Judge.
Taunton, Mass., Sept. 24-An at¬
tempt to shoot Judge William H. Cox
was foiled at hi* house here. William
E. Woodward was heavily fined by the
judge a few months ago for an assault
upon a neighbor, and threatening ven¬
geance. He hired a man in Providence,
who fortunately was picked out for the
job by Deputy Sheriff Corey, of whom
Woodward made a confidant. The plan
was to call the judge to his door at 10:80
Corey at night and Woodward put two bullets into him,
and being in a car¬
riage ---D- near ----— bv, ... , ready • to pick the mv man stintl up
when he had done the deed. The police
were informed of the affair, aud when
the men had fired two shots in the air
and ran for the carriage the officers
started after them and soon had Wood¬
ward in custody. W oodward had paid
tbe man $10 on account and had agreed
to pay him 890 more when he had fin¬
ished his work. Woodward, who is be¬
lieved to be insane, will be taken to
Fall River for trial in order to place
him outside of Judge Fox’s jurisdiction.
The Color Line Drawn.
Baltimore, Sept. 24—When the ath¬
letes representing the Philadelphia Y.
M. C. A. club arrived here to take part
iu the Atlantic association games they
stopped at Brawner’s hotel for dinner.
After registering they proceeded to the
dining room, but when Morris, the col¬
ored crock sprinter, was about to enter,
Mr. Brawner protested. A. war of words
followed, which ended in the entire
Imperial, party withdrawing. where all They went to the
were accommo¬
dated, the colored man taking his place
at the table with his white brethren.
Wonderful Freak of'Nature.
Austin, Minn., Sept. 24.—A cow be¬
longing to Samuel Dreuser, living on
the outskirts of the city, gave birth to
a wonder. One-luilf of the body re¬
sembles a calf and the other half a bear.
The tail resembles the appondage of a
and the bead is inclined to be on
human order. The eyes are fiery
black aud vicious looking, and one large
horn about three inches protrude# from
the foreheod. The freak has five legs,
three in front and two behind, and all
can be used with the greatest case.
Expelled from Conference.
Paekeesbubo, W. Va., Sept. 24.—At
the session of the Methodist church
south, the report of the
on the case of the Rev. W.
Patterson was adopted without de¬
or question. It decided tliut Mr.
had been guilty of falsehood
and ot obtaiuing and he money’ under 4 false
was exp died from
church. His home is iu Greenup,
Ky., and aiuceJiis fittspension
has been a locomotive engineer.
Jordan-lleasiej- Feed Settled.
Louisville, Sept. 24 —The Jorelan-
Beasley feud, near Harrodsburg, which
a week ago caused the sheriff to ask for
troop#, has been settled for the present
by the surrender of three of the Beas¬
Owen, W iliiam and John, who
were implicated only as accessories to
-der of Jordan and tbe escape to
Kansas of James aud "Old Jack” Beas¬
ley. „ The men who surrendered were
on bond.
Infant Looks Lost in a Cigar Box.
Lima, O., Sept, 24—There is a re¬
infaut at the residence of
Davis. It was born last Bun-
and only weighs, by actual test, a
and a half. The babe is perfect¬
formed, and is so small It that it lookt
in a cigar box. is alive and ap¬
in the best of health, and the
physician is of the opinion that
will live._______
Coir neiiies it.
ClaekoBueo, W. Va.,Sept. 24—Gen¬
Nathan Goff denies tbe statement
that be had been informally
an associate United States
through the influence of Hon.
B. Elkins, and pronounce* the
dispatch false.
-- A --
A Oltf la AShe*,
Minneapolis, Bept. 24.—A special to
Journal from Bradley, 8 . D., says
whole business portion of that city
in ashes. Nine stores, one church,
bote 1 and a residence burned. Loss,
I THE SUN. E»UMi*fa«4 1877.
Highesi of nil ia Leavening Power.—U. S. fVt Report, Aug. 17 , 18 %
■ V
ABSOLUTE!* PURE
For Sal# in Griffin by. H. BLAKELY.
RUSSIAN WOE.
Destitution Is Hi arias Working
People r,___. iu . the ., Face. ,,
The Scarcity of Food Is Grow-
ing Worse.
Local Administrative Resile* Necessarily
Suspend Taxation—Tlte Masses of the
l’«®I»ls In Some foils at That Conatry
are Relying entirely Upon tho Govern¬
ment for Support.
St, Peters bcko, Sep t. 24—Report#
from Turn buff and the adjoining pro¬
vinces announce that the Zemstvos
have provided for the resowing of the
land and to furnish supplies of grain
until January next. After that dote
there will be the greatest difficulty to
insure food for the people. As the col¬
lection of taxes is impossible, the sup¬
plies of the local administrative bodies
have necessarily been suspended.
The scarcity of oats and hay is com¬
pelling the farmers to sell their live
stock at moderate price.!. After a re¬
lent county fair iu a district the skele¬
tons of forty horses were fouud by the
roadside. The animals had been killed
for their skins.
Destitution is also staring iu the face
a largo number of people who have
lxjen employed upon public works, as
work upon the latter must stop when
the frosts set in.
Tlic mui.se,-: of the people rely entirely
upon This being the government the to help them.
state of affairs in the
piefent uiU<i weather the gloomy pros-
jiects hold out by the coming winter can
be readily imagined.
At an extraordinary meeting ot the
authorities of the government of Sira-
toff, just held, it was decided to peti¬
tion the imperial government to pro¬
hibit the exportation of oats and millet
as well as that ot rye.
SIXTY WERE DROWNED.
A Steamship Crew Deserting the Captain
WO* the Cause.
London, Sept. 24.—A Dutch journal¬
ist, who is ono ot the survivors ot the
steamship Taormina, which recently
sunk after collision off Cape Colonna,
on the coast of Greece, by the Greek
steamship Tliessalia, has written alet-.
ter iu which h# makes serious charges
against tho Italian officers. He says
that the Taormina's crew, led by the
first officer, basely deserted the captain
and that they clambered like rats on
board the Thtwsnli*. O.ilr a haudfull
of Bailors, tiie journalist adds, remained
loyal, and they were unable to lower
the Taormina’s boats, which wore filled
with miscellaneous article.) and so se¬
curely that it fixed and impossible sheltered launch from the them. sea
was to
could Continuing, he says that the passengers
not find any life-belts, lifr-rafts,
or and life-saving attributes apparatus the of any kind,
great loss of life,
about sixty drowned, to these defects.
In concluding, the Taormina survivor
comments company to strongly which upon the-snnken tho well steamer known
ly belonged, equipped for sending a steamer so bad-
of to sea with a large number
passengers ou board.
A Dele on Luke Huron.
Duluth, Minn.,Sept. 24—The steam¬
er Japan has arrived here and reports
that last Saturday w’aeu in a gale on
Lake Hnroa. aschoo ner su ddenly bore
in sight just ahead, and before anything
could WUiU he uc done UU.IU was WU5 RiruuA struck by uy the UHf Japan’s UUJIHU S
bow. Neither vessel m-»s damagedsuT-r
ficient to tA iMititn cause any utif delay. ilultiw The '.. Japan’s
stem was bent over a foot or more to¬
ward the starboard side, aud the steel
plates The water were was broken kept opeu from at going the riveting. into the
hold by the bulk head. She will go di¬
rect to Buffalo with a full cargo, anl
then go into dry dock. No cue m*uik
to have been to blame, as it was impos¬
sible to see far ahead at the time of tbe
collision on account of u driving storm
of sleet and rain.
A Woman Shouts at Another.
Spbikofield, Mo., Sept. 24—Mrs. Ed
P. Camp went to the honse of Mrs.
Laura Meyer, in the eastern part of this
city, and calling her opt fired two shots
at her from a small pistol, but neither
of them took effect. The shooting, it is
said, was earned by jealousy ou account
0 / report* that Mr*. Camp’s husband
was too intimate with Mrs. Meyer. No
arrests have been mado. The lady who
did the shooting is the wife of Dr. W.
P. Camp, a member of the local board
of pension examiners. The affair is
the talk of the town.
Tramps Fight to % Ometciy.
Mount Vebsos, Ind., Sept. 24—A
crowd ot tramps quartered in the Tem¬
pleton graveyard, one mile north of
town, secured a keg of beer and after
Making Igbt, In which it engaged of in them a free-for-all shot.
one was
The wounded mau was taken to the
connty infirmary, where he will die
being shot in the abdomen. He refused
to talk, and officers are investigating
tbe affair. He gave the name of Joseph
J. Jauis, home nowhere.
AN EX-GOVERNOR SUICIDES.
Albert P. Moorebons* ot Missouri, Cut*
ills Throat with a rocket Hutto.
Sept. 24.—E2-Gover»or
p ' Moorehonsa waaituA suicide
fit hia his residence residence at at 0 0 o’clock o’clock 1 a. m. 8 ev-
eral weeks ago the governor was vio¬
lently overheated while driving cattle
and has been in a very nervous condi-
tion since. At time# he has been de-
lirious nnd very much depressed. He
was taken out for a drive by a friend,
but became to much excited that he
was brought home and a physician was
called. He became quieter during the
night and la the morning was sleeping
quietly. They Two watchers were in another
room. heard a gurgling noise ia
the governor’s room and on entering
found him lying on tbe floor, blood
spurting gash in from hia left throat. He had cot
a the side of his throat
about four inches long. The weapon
was still a held common in his pocket knife which he
right hand. He had
folded up his coat and ve#t and placed
them under his head.
Governor Morehouse was horn in
Delaware county, 0., July 10, 1885, aud
come to Missouri in 18W. He was a
lawyer and has always taken a promi¬
nent part iu Missouri politics. He was
elected lieutenont governor ou the Dem¬
ocratic ticket in 1884 with John 8 .
<J«ith Marmaduke of the as latter, governor, and upon the
took succeeded him and
the oath as governor of tbe state
in 1887. His wife and two children are
in Be. Joseph and have not yet been in¬
formed of his death.
Received the Death Sentence.
Columbus, Ind., Sept. 34.-William
Packet and his two sons, Ambrose and
Tobe, who killed Henry Hall in n pub¬
lic highway in the mountains of Fstell
connty, Ky., on the day of the but
presidential election, and escaped to the
hills of an isolated portion ol Brown
county, seven miles west of this dty,
where they were arrested in April last,
barefooted and almost naked, aud taken
back to Irvine, Ky., ware tried there
last week. The old man, who is bent
almost doable with age, was sentenced
to be hanged Dec. 4 at the
of the lane running up Sweet Lick
branch, opposite the springs, tho same
spot where tbe old man and hi# boys
beat Hall into a jelly with a club. ______
brose and Tobe were sentenced to im¬
prisonment for life. Two other Packet
boys, and jailed Leroy and EHhu, were arrested
as accomplice*, and tbe
whole batch of them, father and tout
An Aged Ledy Choked to Death.
_
pie of Troup county are much excited
over tbe murder of Mm Prather, an
aged white lady who Jive# ten mile#
from LaGrange. Her husband, Mr.
Ben Prather, is a successful farmer and
has plenty around him. He has no con¬
fidence in bank}, and it is thought by
many that that he he Jiaa has money money hidden bidden away away
house. He left homo in tho morn-
ing feeble with wi-------,----- wife a entirely load of cottos, leaving ^ his „„
alone. He had sold
his cotton and was settling np his ac¬
counts bearing when the startling a neighbor came in town
news that his wife
had been choked to death. Coroner
Candle and Sheriff Henderson went im¬
mediately accompanied to by the scene of the murder,
Suspicion a number of indignant
citizens. rests a vn on am a negro MVg*
who we* to have palled fodder for Mr.
Prather, and knew that he was not at
home.
_
Dwindled to a Smell-Fry Kmlwuler.
Baltimoek, Sept. 24.—This time last
year H. Webster Crowl, then a respect¬
ed citizen, member of the city council,
president of an electric railroad and
projector of several enterprises,
dtmly uaoiaa/ disappeared. When VT UUU the 112*9 urn
shock was oyer it appeared that he had
overdrawn Hia his nPoAUnta accounts at at tka the Franklin ..Lll.
bank by $100,000. The bank did not
fail, but had to be reorganised tuid a
new cashier appointed. His failure in¬
volved his father-in-law badly, and a
number of law suits oa account of the
failure are still pending. Crowl came
back to town, but of course could not
make his way. At last, reduced to
straits, he has turned up in Roanoke.
Va. From a capitalist and speculator
in bnodreds of thonsauds of Hollars he
has degenerated, so it i* charged, iuto a
small-fry embezzler. Hu is chatged
with having obtained $150 from a coun¬
tryman under false pretenses.
Fitzgerald Will Recover.
I Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 24—Owing to
th# prevalence of many contradictory
rumors concerning tbe illness of Pres¬
ident Fitzgerald of tbe Irish national
league of America, his physicians have
made the following sta.i-ment. Mr.
Fitzgerald will recover. A.l dangerous
symptoms hsve passed. He h en¬
tirely talks intelligently conscious, and re. ornizes end
with his triends who
are however, permitted to visit him. He is still,
in a very feeble state of health
from the results of cerebral congestion.
A moody |
San Francocd, Sept 24.—Shm Quen¬
tin was the teens of a bloody murder.
Just as tbe convicts were being seated
tor supper. Henry Baker, a San Fran¬
cisco crook serving fifteen-----
mute, Jaiura uwj,
knife into his neck,
few mina