Newspaper Page Text
WM ■ :&5& if
':■■'J- ■?
jn,
1
__ *
■
1 1
f \
f ■ ;*s
-
5* A
THE NEWS, Established 1871.
EVERYTHING NEEDED
-TO —
luilcl A Mouse,
CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE
Crib Him ai Variety Worts.
When we say Everything we mean Everything
■from a foundation post to the belfry of a church, every¬
•
thing inclusive
HEAD Q UAR
CAM? * NORTHEN!
■-
I have established a general store at Camp Northen,
accessible without coming to the city, where all
SOLDIERS
CAN BUY-
Groceries and Supplies
of all kinds at the very lowest prices. Will sell to every¬
body in an any quantities, or will make
CONTRACTS WITH COMPANIES
sor the whole week on the most advantageous terms. Be
sure to STEP ACROSS THE ROAD and see me,
Yorus to command, J. I A. I \ Otewart.
CST’Nir. 33.—I will continue to run city rfjr sr<$re ftTOriffin
with a full force and will supply the trade equally to
their advantage.
PLUMB RIGHT!
IF YOU GO TO
THOMPSON, JOHNSON & GO’S
to have vour Plumbing done, you will be sure to have it
done right. All estimates carefully made and as carefully
exectrtedby good workmen.
Rou’t You Know ?
Everybody should know that
THOMPSON, JOHNSON & GO.
Also do all kinds of Tin Work, Roofing, Repairing, Ac.,
at fair and reasonable prices. Be sure to see them before
giving out your work,
13s 5 *Lawn and Garden Hose and Tools, Sprinklers
and everything in the Hardware line.
CCE33 CAN BE ACHIEVED
In Any Business Du
Untimncf Industry,
Careful Economy,
AND
JudiGious Advertising.
J^-f^oad to Opulepee Ijes l\rjee-Deep yiprou^l?
prior’s IijK- ,
-A.R.C-A-XDE,
Bar, Billiards aid Restairant.
FIRST-CLASS.
ISON. Propr.
GIIIFFIN. GEORGIA.SUNDAY MORNING. JULY 10, 1892.
CWTO RNJOY8
Both the method and results %hen
and 3yrup refreshing of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys
aches tem effectually, and fevers dispels and colds, habitual head
cures
constipation. only remedy Syrup of Figs is tho
of its kind ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its ........meficial action to the stomach, prompt fn in
and truly bee its
effects, prepared only from the moat
healthy excellent and agreeable substances, its
to many all and have qualities made it commend it
the most
popular lular remedy remedy known. known. '
and Syrup $1 bottles of Figs by is all for sale in 60c
gists. Any reliable leading druggigt drug¬
who
may not have it-on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any,one who
wishes to try it Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
louismu. xr. new wax. n.i.
ALL ABOUT BRIFFIN.
Capital of the Garden Soot
of the World!
RIF FIN is the
count; seat of
Spulding Georgia, an<i County,
n.-teJ is sit-
in the cen-
« of the beet por-
. m of the great,
ipire State of
e Sooth, where
i-.l its wonderful
fid varied indue'
it* meet and are
carried on with greater e icctwe, and ie thug
able to offer inducements to all classes Beck¬
ing a home and a profitable career. These
are the reasons for a growth that isjncrcos-
ing ite population almost daily. railroad facil
it hag ample and sufficient
tieg; the gecond point in importance on the
Central St forty railroad mileg between distant, the and capital its principal of the
ate, independent
eeaport, 250 mile* away; an
tine to Chattanooga andfthe West by way of
the Savannah, Griffin and North Alabama
Railroad; the principal city on the hundred Georgia
'and and Gjilf rail--- mI, one
mileg long, built largely extended through ite Atlanta own en¬
terprise and goon to be to
and the eystema of the Northeast, direct
connection with the great East Tennessee.
Virginia and Georgia railroad system; an¬
other road graded and soon to l-e built—all
bringing in trade and carrying out goods
and manufacturers.
Tnat this is the very cream and flower of
the agricultural and horticultural portions
of the State is evidenced by the fact
that the State of Goorgia and the United
States unanimously chose it as the site for
the Experiment Station, against the
efforts of every other section. It lias two
erops that never fail, being cotton, the most
Important crop in the South, nnd grapes,
which n;e glowing to surpass cotton in the
county. dnring the past half decade
Griffin’s record
proves it to be one of tho most progressive
cities i u the South.
It bag built two large cotton factories rep¬
resent! ng #250,000 and shipping goods ail
over the world.
It has put up two large iron and brass foun¬
dries, a fertilizer factory. a cotton seed oil
mill, a sash and blind factory, aplawfactory broom
an ice factory, bottling works, a
factory, a mattress factory, a wire fence
factory and various smaller enterprises.
It has put in an electric light plant by
| which the streets are brilliantly lighted
It has completed an complete extensive protection system
of waterworks, and giving furnishing
against lire, water every
where.
It has laid several miles of street railroad
for convenient transportation over its large
er*hj largest
It has opened up the finest and
jTan/te quarry in the State, for building,
ballasting and macadamising purposes
It has secured a cotton compress w.th a
full capacity for its large and in. reaging re¬
ceipts of this Southern staple. of graded
lic It schools, has established with a system years curriculum, pub¬
a seven
second to none, and has just erects-1 one of
the largest and finest, school buildings in the
State in addition to the former commodious
structure.
It has organu»l two new banks, makinga
total of four, with combined reuourees of
half a million dollars.
It has built two handsome new churches,
making a total of ten. ^
It has built several handsome business
blocks and many beautiful residences, averaging the
building record of each year
#150,000. has ■-* around ite borders fruit
It attracted
growers from nearly every State in the Union
and Canada, until it is surrouuded on every
side bv orchards and vineyards, and has Ite-
come the largest sad best fruit section in the
8tate. a single ithebei ear load of its peachee netting
#1,280 in the height of the season.
It has doubled its wine making capacity,
making by >y both both French and German, methods
both by indivldi viduals and llr by a large wine
company r incori orporated from in 1891. cyclone*,
_____ _ n exempt noons
and epidemicv, and by reason of ite topo¬
graphy will never be subject 1,150 1,150 to feet them. above the
With an an altitude altitude of of
■ea level, its bealthfulness has attracted gen¬
eral attention.
It has jost secured the permanent mi hi ary
eocampm^nt of the St- e, adding about
#100,000 to its revenues very year.
With all these and o- t evidences of a
Hve and growing town, with a healthful and
pleasafit climate summer and whiter, a
hospitable and cultured people, product and a soil th>
capable of producing semi-tropic any Griffin of offers
temperate inducement or and zone, hearty welcome to
every a
new rltuen*.
The Physician of the Home
Is the mother or the wife, upon her
rests the safety and health of the
household. The wise ones, to relieve
sudden attacks of the bowels
use Dr, Eiggers’ Bucklaburry <
THE SILVER BILL
The House Committee
ported It for Action.
It Stands Exactly! as the Sen¬
ate Passed It
The Two Tariff Bills That Hawe
Passed the House—The Home¬
stead Trouble Blacuased
la the Senate. .
Washington, July 9.—In the senate
discussion of the Homestead riot, Mr.
Quay 8&id that, in discission of the day
before on the troubles at Homestead,
Pa., severe reflections had been made on
the Carnegie Iron and Steel Company.
He held in his hand a communication
from Mr. Frick, manager of the Carne¬
gie works, which, he thought, in fairness
to the company, should be printed in
The Record, and he asked that consent
be given to have it so printed.
Mr. the Feffer olerk’s objected, desk and and had Mr. rsad Quay the
sent to
Associated Press interview with Mr.
Frick. By this means it became part of
the proceedings of the senate and was
entitled to publication in The Record.
Mr. Quay said, however, that he would
telegraph for a statement on the part of
the workingmen.
In order to counteract the effect of
Frick's statement, Mr. Peffersent to the
clerk’s desk and had read a communi¬
cation Poet, published iu the of F. Washington
over the signature 8. Smith,
giving the the labor side of the question in
matter of wages. —--•*£=--
Th« House Bills Passed.
The tin plate bill, as passed by the
house, provides that on and after Octo¬
ber 1,1893, the duty oa tin plates, terne-
plates and taggers’ tin shall be 1 cent
per ber pound, ana that on and temeplates after Octo¬
1, 1894, tin plates, and
taggers’tin shall be admitted free of
duty. bar and It further shall provides that block,
free list, pig and tin be the retained usual on the
contains rebate
on drawback provisions in the interact
of The oar lead foreign trade. passed by
ore bill, also the
house, provides that ores containing
silver and lead in which tbs value of
silver contents shall be greater than the
sample"assay value of lead contents according of to
at a port entry,
shall be considered silver ores, and as
such Bhall be exempt from duty.
The interest of the house still centers
in silver. The coinage committee have
favorably reported the senate bill with¬
out amendment. - -
Mr. Bland gave notice that he would
ask consideration at an early day.
Mr. Tracy asked permission that tbs
views of the minority be filed.
Both sides now admit that if the vote
comes it will go exceedingly close. Both
claim small majorities.
Colton Mills Embarrassed.
Columbus, Ga., July 9. —On applica¬
tion of the Bibb Manufacturing compa¬
ny, J. Kyle & Co., Chattanooga Na¬
tional bank of Columbus, and George P.
Swift, an orler was issued by Judge
Martin, plac og the Paragon mills in
the hands of a receiver. James P. Kyle,
present secretary of the company, was
appointed temporary receiver. There
are five mortgages against 'the mills
amounting to over #66.000, and the total
liabilities are said to be #120,000. The
Paragon mills were built in 1888. They
have on hand #20,000 of manufactured
goods. It will be continued in operation
by the temporary receiver.
The White Voters Will Control.
Jackson, Miss., July 9.—The regis¬
tration of voters under the new consti¬
tution closed in several Friday. counties Formerly of Mississippi the
majority was this county about negro
in woe four
to one over the whites. The returns
from nme polling precincts, including
the city, where the negroes formerly
had nearly 300 voters in a single ward,
show a total registration of eighty
whites to forty-seven negroes. Here¬
after the whites of the state will control
its destiny.
_
DAILY M ARKET REPORTS.
Naval IWWr ~
Savannah. July Turpentine firm at
Kyk rosin firm at $1.05
Wilmington July Turpentine quiet
at *7; rosin steady; strained 85: good strained
Wc; tar firm at #1.40; crudo turpentine
steady; hard #1.00; yellow dip #1.85; virgin
$1.85.__
Prodace and Provisions.
New York. July ».—Pork quiet and steady;
mesa, old *11.01011 75; new #11.00; prime ex¬
tra #U.itt£l&50. Middles dull; abort clear
UU. Lard, western steam 7-Ar. city steam,
SA0; options. July. TJO bid; September 7.32;
October ’M bid.
Chicago, July Cash quotations were as
follows: Mesa pork #U^®U.»H. Lard 7J».
Short riba loose 7A037A.'V4 Dry salt shoul¬
ders boxed R8O0S.7S. Short dear aides boxed
#7.S0©7.8i.
Cincinnati, July 9.—Pork quiet; saw
#11.75. Lard leae active; current make. 8.80.
Bulk meats quiet;, short riba 7MH4ffi7.7A Ba¬
con easy; short clear 8.75&M7K.
Chicago Market.
On ic ago, July t.
Wheat-Sept. TWfc July 77M.
Cora—Sept. 48?fc July 49J4-
Oau—July, 31)4; Sept. *<-
Pork—Sept. 11.74 July. 1U*.
Ribs—Sept. 7J& July, 7.Wu
Lank-Sept. 7.0, July, ttt
Xew York Cotton Futures.
N*w York. July 9 —Following Is the open¬
ing and closing quotations:
rSZZZi reoriuw/ ................................LWajn ...........................*"*• w ‘ 1 *
IdftTCb. *,I«sV5jPd«Oi *
April • »• »•♦••«*••*••»•••»
Bcpt^nibor. *.*«••«••••>•••• • * %• • • •• • * • «• ^
f . »*■•-*.*» •••••« • • •44»«****r 6m
• r» . i'tri •>'*'-« .•»••• >W* Me
Tone steady' Middlings quiet at 7 5- W. Bales
WJ0O0.
User pool Cotton Futures.
Liverpool. July 8-Following is the open¬
ing and closing quotations:
January and February.
July ajm August,
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
■ •»*
•.«* -
w :
FOR BETTER ROADS-
Important Mootings In tho Interests of
Public Highways.
Atlanta, July 8.—The Georgia road
congress will meet in Atlanta on the
first Wednesday in August.
The officers lire: President, Hon. W.
J. Northen; secretary, W. G. Wliidby;
vice presidents—first district, EL P.
Smart; second district, O. A. Blurry;
third district, G. W. Jordan, Jr.; fourth
district, W. J. Weeks; fifth district,
Dr. J. W. Nelms; sixth district, Hon.
W. A. Huff; seventh district, J. O.
Waddell; eight district, Professor C.
M. Strahan; ninth district, J. W. Rob¬
ertson; tenth district, O. H. P..Beall;
eleventh district, A. T. Putnam.
The Highway Improvement associa¬
tion meets at the same time.
The Southern Interstate Road con¬
gress will meet in October either in
Nashville, Memphis or New Orleans,
The {dace is not yet settled upon. Ef¬
fort* are being made to invite delegates
from every state in the union to the
next congress.
The basis of representation in the
Georgia road congress is doable the
number of representatives in the lower
branch vice presidents of the general assembly. the The
ple in are stirring up peo¬
their respective districts.
Cat Price* an Iron.
Washington, July 9.—The following
Is from the New York Times: "Presi¬
dent B. G. Clark, of the Thomas Iron
company, has announced a reduction of
$1 in pig the iron price of Nos. 1 and respectively, 2 X north¬
ern adhering to #15 and #14 No.
plain and to previous brands. prices on For 3
certain gray forge Pennsylvania furnaces some
time
have been selling from 50 to 80 cents
under bis quotations of #15 und #16,
cansing the loss of considerable tonnage
and general dissatisfaction among those
who had contracted for supplies. The
cat is in the nature of a movement to
meet this action, and also to stamp out
weak competition, as it places prices
below the profit margin mark tor all
but the strongest financial concerns.
Small Salaries to French Officials.
Paris, July 9.—The knowledge of
the fact that Grenier, the clerk of the
navy department, who was recently ar¬
rested for selling official documents to
Captain the Borup, legation the military in this attache city, had of
American
been francs receiving and a salary had not of been only 360
a year pro¬
moted in six years, and changed the
public The feeling in regard feeling to his offenses. keenly
minister of Marine,
the danger from such a system as that
nnder which Grenier struggled, row
has introduced in the department a sys¬
tem providing for promotion' by senior¬
ity.
law Shaw Tania tip.
Grkbnville, & Q. July 9.—Dave
Shaw, the Lanrins enmity negro who
had each a terrible experience with a
mob in that eoanty on the night of May
37th last, and who was supposed to be
dead, suddenly appeared iu this city
Thursday office afternoon. of C. He went direct to
the F. Dull, who has been
bis attorney for several years, and while
there related his story to several persons.
He had been in hiding since that night
and has been in various places in this
state and Georgia, staying with friends
in each {dace.
Character of the Cholere Plsfss. *W
London, July #.—A dispatch from
Paris to The Lancet, authoritatively the
British medical journal, says: "Already
150 deaths proves the character of the
cholera epidemic here. The official coun¬
cil of hygiene make a mistake in con¬
cealing the facte and resorting to the
feeble stratagem of secrecy. *
The Lancet adds that there is no dis¬
guising the great extent of the epidemic
which is prevailing in twenty-four com-
munra and the suddenness of deaths.
The Lancet concludes, " it is cholera, not
cholerine. ”
Aaoiher Strike to Colombo*.
Columbus, a, July 9.—^Trouble be¬
tween the Consolidated Street Railway
oompahy and its several hondred em¬
ployes is imminent. The motormen and
conductors have been demanding an in¬
crease of wages for several weeks. The
company decided to inaugurate a new
scale of salaries, making a very small
increase, and basing employe. it upon The the length
of service of eaoh plan is
not at all satisfactory to the men, and
several of their leaders state that they
will not submit to it
Miners Kilted to Pennsylvania.
Wilkesbabbe, July 9.—By a fall of
coal iu the South Wiikesbarre shift of
the Lehigh and Wiikesbarre Coal com-
pau y^ three men were_ instantly killed.
are: John Williams, aged 26,
civil engineer, University; a recent McCafferty, graduate of aged Le¬
high John
21, Thomas of Philadelphia, Jones, aged a civil engineer; barman. and
45, a tun
Several men were slightly hart
Plre to • California Town.
Sacramento, July 9.—A telephone
message from Elk Grove, thirteen miles
from bare, to The Record Union, at a
late hoar at night announced that the
town was od fire. The Toronto depot Hotel,
livery stable and railroad been wen
burned. Communication has cut
railroad train left for the scene.
mnete«B-Year-Old Batter.
Liberty, Ind., July 9.—Nineteen
years ago Evan Free, a farmer who three
yean before had moved from Cincin¬
nati, was lowering three crocks erf batter
in his well, when the rope broke and
they were precipiated to the bottom of
the water. Thursday when the well was
cleansed, the vessels were found. The
butter was solid as ice, and as sweet and
rich in taste as new batter.
Rosdursssss Army Officers.
Mobile, July t.— Gen. PaWoNuila,
Commander in. Chief of the Hoodurane-
aa army, who is visiting the United
States, and whose son. Col. Lernardo
Nuila, is at tbs head of the present rev¬
olution in Honduras, left here for New
York. The General is accompanied by
’
ef the revolutionists.
^
,
THE SUN. Established 1877.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.- -U. S. Gov’t Report, Aug. if, t8tp
Kn -
j&s&s§m Po 1
absolutely pure
Sold in thin city by B. R. BLAKELY,
Miles of Railroad Track Are
Swept Away. /
Creeks and Rivers Are Over¬
flowing the Crops.
Oeneral and Persistent Rain*
Throughout North Mississippi
and Louisiana—The April
Floods Repeated.
New Orleans, July U.—The Pica¬
yune's Meridian, Miss., special says;
The 90-foot bridge across the Okiti-
becka creek, on the Alabama and Vicks¬
burg railroad, five miles from Meridian,
has been swept away by a freshet, to¬
gether with several milea of track. Un¬
der the most favorable circumstances,
the road could not be rendered passable
in less than three or four days. The
Northeastern bridge, over Sandy creek,
is very shaky, and will likely go before
many hours.
The Alabama and Southern railroad
have a washout north of the city.
The Mobile and Ohio have serious
washouts both north and smith of here
and"no trains are running. The creeks
and rivers are overflowing and crop*
are falling being destroyed. A heavy rain is
now,
A Times-Democrat West Point special
say*: It has been Monday
raining here since
morning, than has been and rainfall known has been greater
in this county for
years, the being nearly fourteen inches in
past two days.
The rain has been general throughout
April north flood, Mississippi. A repetition is looked of for. the
or even worse,
The rain has not ceased all day, and Is
still look rfbtning down in torrents. The out¬
is very gloomy.
A Times Democrat Vicksburg, Miss.,
special General says:
and persistent rains are re¬
ported the Yasoo throughout and Mississippi north Louisiana, delta, and
with
great injury to the croi«.
<>«t OB a Strike.
Indianapolis, July 9.—Fifty labor¬
ers employed by the Premier Steel
works went out on a strike demanding
$1.00, where now they receive #1.85.
Manager and Coen, who is in Chicago, was
notified, be instructed that nothing
be dime until his return. The steel
workers are still oat, but they report
ing that with wi they have Manager an amicable Coen, by under*tand- which
no
radical measures will be token before
his return, and until President Wielie
of the national organisation, gamsation, is is able able to to
leave the greater difficulties at Pittburg
and come here. By Union reason of this ami
cable feeling the of steel workers
has given permission that the day men
may return to work pending a final set¬
tlement, and tome of them have taken
advantage of the permit. The tonnage
men are not affected b by MM this arrauge-
ment.
Procsedlnf Against the Plnkorloos.
Chicago, July 9. —The Trades and
Labor Assembly of the city has retain¬
ed an attorney, and will proceed against
tbs management of the Pinkertons for
raising illegal companies of men. The
proceedings thus feared far have that been kept se¬
cret, for it was a premature
tl# publication scheme. of Steps the have plan would taken defeat
been to
prevent, the by Chicago legal measures, the sending
from headquarters of the
Pinkertons any organised body of men
to the scene of the Pennsylvania labor
troubles. The report that a large num¬
ber would be sent Friday resulted in the
placing at the various stations commit¬
tees of the assembly to make sure that
of military regulating
formation bodies.
MovOTBBnte •( (itscrsl SKtsstoo.
Chicago, July 9. —After consultation
with Congressman Springer, General
Black and other leading Democrats,
Adlsl E. Stevenson, Democratic nomi¬
nee for vice president, decided to meet
the committee in New York July 3ft
Mr. Stevenson will leave July 1& His
law partner. Mr. W. a Owing, and Mr.
W. O. Gandy him. and other understood friends will
accompany It is that
a determined effort will be made to
have the national committee open up a
branch fight is headquarters, be made and that a big
to to capture the elec¬
toral vote of Illinois.
Classing tbe MeKtoler BUL
Sr. Loys, Mo., July 9.-Tbs follow¬
ing resolution was unanimously adopted
by the convention of Democrats here to
nominate Judges of tbe Supreme Court;
Resolved, That we heartily sympathise
with with tbe the workingmen highly protected in their Caraegies, present fight aud
ask if bullets and coffins is the kind of pro¬
tection they got under the McKinley Law.
British Vessel Setae* fee to*nil*i.
Ban Diego, Cal., July 9.—Tbe Brit¬
ish steam schooner Ellas Edwards was
seised by customs officers off Point
Loma and brought to this port.
smuggling«
MURDERERS CAUGHT.
A Mystery Unravelled by Atlanta Detect¬
ive*— Ur. Sloaue the Victim.
Atlanta, July 9.-Chief hief of of Detect-
ives Wright. Detective* Loo n e y, Cason
and Green and Sheriff N. A. Grass have
just unravelled tbs mystery connected
with the murder of Dr. A. N. Sloans,
one of the most cruel ever perpetrated
in Georgia, which occurred in McDon¬
ough several months ago. Dr. Sloans
was found by his bedside with a fright¬
ful wound in his side, and died in a few
minutes after being placed on his bed.
The city detectives have been working
on the case several weeks. A few days
•go they arrested in Atlanta a negro
the preacher named of Methodist Ben Bivins, church lie Mc¬ was
lie pastor pastoi a in
working Donough. dew, From and him they obtained a
Sheriff Grass arrest¬
ed Henry Harrison and Jim Shafer,
two of the deacons of the church, on
the charge of being accomplices.
After hard work, the detectives suc¬
ceeded in securing a confession of the
crime from one of the negroes. He said
that Bivins took bis wife to church the
night of the murder. He left her there,
and, with Harrison and Shafer, his dea¬
cons, went to Dr. Sloans’* house. Biv¬
ins carried the shotgun and did the kill¬
ing. They returned to the church, and
Bivins went around to take up the col¬
lection. While he was doing this the
congregation Little David. sang ft "Play on Your Harp,
” is pretty certain that
many members of 'the congregation
knew of tbe murder. I# is thought by
the detectives that the murder was a
conspiracy on the part of the members
of the church.
-■ :
_, j . u _____..Si,, (in
BASE BALL «$c0rtD.i
The following are the
by the Southern and National
Southern Lssgss.
At Macon—Macon. 1; Atlanta, 2.
At Chattanooga—Chattanooga, 3. 6; Bir¬
mingham, Memphis—Memphis, Mobile,
At •; A
Nation at Lesgu*.
At Chicago—Chicago, 7; Washing
ton, 8.
At Cincinnati—First Baltimore, gams—Cincin¬
nati. 2; A
Second game- Cincinnati, 13; Balti¬
more, 5. \
At Lon is viUo—Louisville, 2; Boston 6.
At Pittsburg—Pittsburg 4; Philadel¬
phia, 8. Cleveland—First game—Cleve¬
At
land, 2; Brooklyn, 3.
Second game—Cleveland, 7; Brook¬
lyn, 10. '
_
Arbitration Proposed.
New York, Jnly 9.-The World
suggests that the labor troubles at
Homestead be referred for settlement to
a board of three arbitrators as follows:
m Governor Pattison of McKinley ~ Pennsylvania, f of Ohio, and and Governor Terence
V. Powderiy Pennsylvania. rania,
of
World urges that when blood wa
at Carnegie’s works arbitration 1
SH2 settlement'of the AK3? difficulty.
Neither side can surrender without
yielding all. Both nan and should ac¬
cept fair arb
---
A Wi to Murderer.
Chattanooga, Teno., July 9.—The
meet diabolical crime in the annals of
the county goes on record. Henry Price,
to cover the murder fired tbe house.
When the Woman’s body was discovered
in the morning her legs had been burn¬
ed from the _body and the head horned
toa crisp. < Price had frequently threat-
I to kill bis wife, and sufficient evi¬
dence him. has The already negroes ■PHRR9PIPHR1> been here secured very to much hang hang
are
excited, and’ threats of lynching are
freely indulged in.
A U*ht over Polities.
Birmingham, July 9.— At Covin, a
small town on the Georgia Pacific Rail¬
road a man named Tar water and B. F.
Richards, watchman on the i
came involved in an anil
sion on the tariff. The j.
campaign; Kolb and Jones i
into the quarrel. The discussion ___
in Richards drawing a long, ugly knife,
and advancing upon Tarwater. who shot
him through the head, killing him. This
is the campaign. fourth tragedy so far m toe pres¬
ent •. - - ^ •
Kali road Changes to Canada.
Ottawa, Jaly 9.—It is stated that
an agreement between the Grand Trunk
railway and tbe old St. Lawrence and
Ottawa railway, whereby the former
company company assume assume control control and and become
owners of the latter’s line, at present
worked by the Canadian Pacific rail¬
way, has been signed. The rumor has
high authority, and in
mat rejoicing is manifested in
Grand Trank coming into Ottawa
Augusta, Ga., July 9.—Mr.
ant McCarthern, while walking kingupJoora
street, at midnight, was
stomach by an unknown
M in ambush.
have an idee who did 1
Negro
Aurora, July
by«