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NEWS, Established 1871.
.........................
ERYTHING NEEDED
-'TO—-
iiikl A House,
CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE
When we say Everything’ we mean Everything
—from a foundation post to the belfry of a church, every¬
thing inclusive
•as
Headquarters,
July Griffin, Ga.,
12, j
- T1,e volunteer soldiers have come and
gone, and my only headquarters from now
on will be at my old stand at the Engel Cor¬
ner, where I will continue to run
The
No 1. Grocery Store,
and supply all customers with the best goods
at the lowest price. Your custom solicited
the same as ever.
Yours truly,
J. A. STEWART
F YOU WANT ANYTHING
IN THE WAY OF
GROCERIES,
DO NOT FAIL TO CALL, ON U8.
We Aim to Please
And the satisfaction we have given to our large number of
customers since the Encampment opened shows that
We Hit the ,
We have evei ything that a soldier or citizen can want
in the eatable line and invite the patronage of all.
J. J. THORNTON & CO.
m
IP 15-BUSINESS)
'A C& t4 DULL
WITtt YOU ? ,
.Dullness.
•TRY* IT •
AND SEE YOUR STORE
VlTl?^T0MER5..B
i mu wi From 9 a. m.
THROUGH
EACH : DAY.
PUKE MINERAL WATER.
DRINKS-.M Bine Lick
luffalo Lithia Water
lot of the best perfumed Soaps at reduced price, a limited
and, supply your baths.
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, TUESDAY jMORNlNG, JULY 19,1892.1
JJtfPjrtRes
ON® ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
and Syrup refreshing of Pigs is taken; the it is pleasant
to taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys,
the sys
aches tem effectually, and fevers dispels and colds, head
cures habitual
constipation. only remedy of Syrup its kind of Pigs is th"
ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
its ceptable action to and the stomach, prompt in
effects, prepared truly only beneficial from the in its
most
healthy’, excellent and agreeable substances, its
many all and have qualities made it commend it
to the most
popular Syrup remedy of of Figs Figs known. is
iyrup fo for sale in 50c
and 81 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist 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 F/fi. SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. H.t
ALL ABOUT GRIFFIN.
Capital of the Garden Soot
of the World!
‘
>' • »? V
__
rW'^i It I F F I N is the
co n 11 1 y seat of
Spulding County,
Guorgia, ami is sit-
noted ted in in the cen¬
tre of tlie best por¬
tion of the great
ifest the Empire South, State of
where
all it* wonderful
and varied indue*
trice meet and are
carricd on with greatest success, and is tnns
able to offer inducements to all classes seek¬
ing a home and n profitable career. These
are the reasons for a growth that is increas¬
ing its population almost daily.
It has ample and sufficient railroad facil
ties; the second point in importance on the
Central railroad between the capital of the
seaport, 250 miles away : an independent
line to Chattanooga and|the West by way of
the Savannah, Griffin and North Alabama
Railroad; the principal railroad, city on the hundred Georgia
Midland and Gulf one
miles long, built largely through its own en¬
terprise and soon to be extended to Atlanta
and the systems of the Northeast, direct
connection with the great East Tennessee.
Virginia road and graded Georgia and railroad to system; l built—all an¬
other soon e
bringing in trade aud carrying out goods
and manufacturers.
That this is the very cream and flower of
the agricultural and horticultural portions
of the Htate is evidenced by the foot
that the State of- Georgia and the United
States unanimously chose it e* the site lor
the Experiment Station, against the strong
efforts of every other section. It lias two
crops that never la.il, being cotton, the most
important, crop in the South, and grapes,
which are giowing to surpass cotton in the
ivuinty. Griffin's record during the past half decade
proves it to be one of the most progressive
cities in the South.
It has bnilt twolarge cotton factories rep¬
resent!'ng #250,000 and shipping goods all
over the world.
It has put up twolarge iron andbrassfoun¬
dries, a fertiliser factory, a cotton seed oil
mill, a sash and blind factory, works, aplowfactory broom
an ice factory, bottling a
factory, a mattress factory, a wire fence
factory and various smaller enterprises. light plant by
It ban put in an electric
which the streets are brilliantly lighted.
It has completed an complete extensive protection system
of waterworks, giving furnishing
against Are, and water every
where.
It has laid several miles of street railroad
for convenient transportation oyer its large
area.
granite It It has has opened opened in up up the the the State, finest finest for and and building largest larges ®g.
quarry anif macadamizing
ballasting purpose* w.th
It ha* secured a cotton compress »
full capacity for its-large aud im reusing re¬
ceipts of this Southern staple. of graded pub¬
It has established a system
lic schools, with a seven years curriculum,
second to none, and has just erected one of
the largest and finest school buddings in the
State in addition to the former commodious
structure.
It has organized two combined new banks, makings
total of four, with ronoureos of
half u million dollars.
It has built two handsome new churches,
making a total of ten.
It bos built several handsome busine**
blocks and many beautiful residences, the
building record ol each ye*r averaging
$150,000. It has attracted around its borders fruit
growersfrom nearly every State in the Union
aud Canada, until it is surrounded on every
side hr orchards and vineyards, and has !>e-
come the largest and beet fruit Section in th*
State, asingle car load of its peaches netting
$1,280 in the height of the season.
It has doubled its wine making capacity,
makingby both French and German, methods
both by individuals and by a large wine
company incorporated from in 1891. cyclones,
It has been exempt flood*
and epidemics, will and be subject by reason of them. itc topo¬
graphy With an^kltitude never of 1,150 to feet above ’ the
sea level, itshealthful ness ho* attracted gen¬
eral attention.
it has just secured the permanent military
encampment of the State, adding about
#100,000 to it* revenues -very year.
With oil these and other evidence* of a
Bve and growing tolrn, with a healtlUul and
pleasant climate summer and winter, a
capable hospitable of producing and cultured people, product and of a soil tht
semi-tropic any Griffin
temperate or zone, offer*
every inducement aud a hearty welcome to
new citizens. J>
'
For Sale or Rent.
Two new dwellings corner of 8th
aad Poplar Sts “ '
OB» fa
water
STILL UNEASY.
The Situation at homestead Is
Not Pleasant.
>pi Mil if 'r I') lii
Serious Preparations for Trou¬
ble Are Beini Made.
Heavy Shipments Ammunition
Have Already |rived, and
Still More Are ipected,
Smuggling W< rkmeu.
Homestead, Pa., July 18.—While UR
military are not expecting a riot, they
are making serious preparations toi
trouble. A large additional amount; oi
ammunition has been ordered from the
Frankfort arsenal.
There are 3,500,000 rounds of ball car¬
tridges here, and at least 50,000 addi¬
tional are. expected.
According to the militia officers, be¬
tween fifteen and twenty workmen were
smuggled in the mill during the the
night. ----*4--
A MIDSUMMER STORM.
It Flay, Havoc —f ’ with Veaiels
Great on
Lake Ontario.
Oswego, Jujy 18.—About 8 o’clock
Friday night one of the worst stormt
that ever visited the lake broke on lak<
Ontarion and created a stampede among
the vessels that were out. The storm
grew worse until about 3 o’clock in tht
morning when it had k4 become a regular
gala V *•;
The schooner Lady Macdonald ol
Kingston, was blown ashore near Fair-
haven and will be a total loss. The tug
Chieftain, with four coal barges, un¬
dertook to make Oswego for shelter.
The tow parted and all the barges went
ashore a short distance east of the har¬
bor. An unknown vessel is also reported
ashore five miles down the lake.
The tow of five barges belonging to
the tug Wilson broke away from bet
fifteen miles up the lake. The tug Proc-
tor lost her tow at 2 o'clock in the morn¬
ing nicked off Charlotte. and towed The barge Fairhnveh, Lyon was but
up to
the Milk is missing. The tug Booth,
with four coal-laden bound for
Montreal, left here at o’clock in the
afternoon. from them, and Nothing it ft *ed been the heard
iB tow and
all hands are lost.
Two Hawk Clerk. Who Skipped.
Nashville, July 18.—Lester H. Gale
and W. E. Turner, the two gay young
bank clerks who skipped out from here
on about the night of belonging Saturday, July 2, with
$11,000 to the Capita)
City Savings bank, have been captured.
A close inquiry inquiry into the iwuso of the
absence of Chief Hadley Pack led to
the discovery that Gale and Turner
both had been captured somewhere on
the Texas frontier, and that Captain
Clack had left to bring them back to
Nashville.
The Day of Adjournment.
Washington, July IS.—The ways and
means committee of the house adopted
a resolution providing for the Anal ad¬
journment will be on called the 25th. The resolution
soeo up, and, in the pres¬
ent temper of the house, there is little
doubt but that it will pass.
The senate is equally anxious to bring
the session to a dose, so that nothing
short of an emergency is likely ' to cause
any extension by the senate of the t date
fixed in the resolution.
Belief for the Sufferers.
Chicago, July 18.—At a meeting of
the executive committee of the St.
John’s relief association, the report of
the committee to solicit fnnds from the
board of trade and banks was read.
Nearly $6,000 have been eesured in the
two work. days Four the committee dollars had been at
thousand was given
by already the board visited of trade. $10,000. Tbo nine banks
gave
—- jg Negro Batter’s Big Theft.
New York, Jnly 18.— Carlos Wig-
gnra, the negro bntler who stole dia¬
monds and other jewelry worth $30,000
from Mrs. Rosa Ritta Paul, and who
was arrested in this city upon his arri¬
val from Minneapolis, was held in $10,-
000 bail to await extradition papers
ftom __.____________ guilt, Mionoaptdk; but said he The preferred mao admitted be
i to
nished la this state.
A fzlio Report.
London, July 18.—A society paper re¬
ports that Lady Simpson, who was pre¬
sented at the May drawing room, and
whose presentation has been officially
cancelled La by the Right Hon. Earl of
thorn, the Lord Chamberlain, is an
American. The paper adds that Mrs.
Strutt, who presented her, is also an
American. The report is untrue. Both
the women are English.
A Haloids in Arkansas.
Little Rock, July 18.—Miss Emma
J. Miller, of Memphis, committed sui¬
cide here by drowning herself in the
Arkansas river. Deceased bad been an
invalid for over a year and was here
visiting her nephew. Mitt Miller was
48 years of age and was in good in cir¬
cumstance*. The body was recovered
and shipped , to Memphis tor burial.
Am Appeal to for AM),
New York, July 17,-Tfae Central
Labor Union has received an appeal for
financial aid from the Homestead iron
and steel workers. It was referred to
the affiliated unions for immediate
action. The Central Labor Federation
has appointed a special committee to
collect funds in aid 1 oft of the Homestead
iron workers.
A Foreign Expedition.
Sr. Petersburg, July \a—An expe¬
dition under the command of 0 i
Sedoff has started for Pamir. This is
the country from which Captaiu Young-
GEN. STEVENSON IN NEW YORK-
The Distinguished N.,ti
with a If early Reception.
New York, July 18.—Hon. A. E.
Stephenson, Democratic vice presiden¬
tial candidate, arrived in this city over
the Central Hudson railroad. The trip
from Chicago was one of little ostenta¬
tion, as General Stevenson did not de¬
sire to make auy public speeches previ¬
ous to receiving official notification of
his nomination. At the points stopped
at the vice presidential candidate was
received by crowds of Democrats. When
Syracuse was reached, thecrowd was so
demonstrative that General Stephenson
was compelled to leave the train and
shake hands with his cheering admirers
on the depot platform. A citizen wel
corned him to the state in a typical
speech, and closed his address he by looked assur¬
ing General Stephenson that
liko a thoroughbred Democrat. Great
laughter General followed this remark, thanked but
Stephenson merely the ■
citizens of Syracuse for their reception,
and refrained from any extended speech.
BASE BALL RECORD.
The following are the games played
by the Southern aud National Leagues.
Southern League.
At Mobile—First game—Mobile, 6;
New Orleans, 7.
Second game—Mobile 4; New Or¬
leans, 8.
At #• Atlanta—Atlanta, 1; Chattanoo¬
ga,
Memphis, At Montgomery 0. — Montgomery, 14;
At Macon- -Macon, 4; Birmingham, 6.
Standing of tire Team.,
Won. Iiost. Played.Pr Ct
1 Chattanooga., 48 27 75 641
2 8 Montgomery.... Birmingham____39 .39 47 47 29 35 76 74 ' 018 580
4 Mobile , ........88 .38 87 75 596
5 New Orleans. .32 38 76 452
Atlanta...... .33 43 75 4+0
8 Macon........ Memphis., t., .31 88 73 79 436
.81 43 44S
National League.
Cleveland, At Washington 6. —Washington, 4;
At Baltimore—Baltimore, 5; Cincin¬
nati, 16 .
At Philadelphia - Philadelphia, 3;
Louisville, 8.
At Louisville—Louisville, 8; Phila¬
delphia Brooklyn—Brooklyn. a
At 9; Chicago 3.
At New York-New York, 13; Pitts¬
burg, A
At Boston—Boston, 8: 8t. Louis, 8.
Charged Wtth Killing a L'httiaman.
San Francisco, Jnly 18. — Illinois
Wise was arrested charged with having
murdered a Chinaman in the bark W.
£L Diamond, while the vessels was ly¬
ing in Honolulu. He made a statement
before tk>mitibirierie?N.Sawyer. sayin
that he witnessed the, killing of tl
Chinaman; that it was done by a night
watchman named Paul and auother
Chinaman. The murder was commit¬
ted for money. Wise stated that he as¬
sisted to throw the body of the China¬
man overboard; also his effects. His
statement told was purely voluntary He
bow the Chinaman who was killed
came aboard the vessel. The Chinaman
had been smuggled aboard by Wise to
be brought to this city and landed.
Paul, the night watchman, is now in
the custody of the Honolulu autboritiee.
Yellow Fever on a Steamer.
New York, July 18.—The steamer
Enchantress, Captain Hammond from
Santos and quarantine Pernambuco, has been de¬
tained at here, for examina¬
tion and disinfection. During the voy¬
age from Santos to Pernambuco, Cap¬
tain Hammond and Parser A. E. Foster
died, were stricken and with bnried yellow at fever. Imme¬ They
were sea.
diately following the death Wamsley, of Ham¬
mond and Foster, Steward
the second and third engineers, Pottin-
ger and Parks, were stricken with the
disease, and all but the latter died.
Parks was taken to the Pernambuco
hospital, this recovered, and continued on
to city.
A Mas* of Moving Earth.
Golden, Col., July 18.—A mass of
earth 300 feet wide is sliding down the
side of the Diablo Mountain, east of this
plaice, house, carrying orchard and with garden, it an eight-room and tlie
tracks of tbe Colorado Centrail Rail¬
road. The slide is caused by water from
the Churches irrigating ditch penetrat¬
ing the earth below. The ditches ies will
doubtless go, leaving several thousand
acres of farm and garden lands without
irrigation. Efforts are being made to
save the railroad, bnt it will doubtless
go into Clear Creek, os the track moved
two feet yesterday. The loss will be
heavy, especially to fanners.
The Democratic Notification.
Washington, July 18.—When tbe
Democratic nominees for president and
vice president are formerly notified of
the action of the Chicago convention, by
tne committee each will appointed substantial for that pur¬
pose, receive a re¬
membrance of the event. This remem¬
brance will be a copy of the Democratic
platform, parchment, handsomely bound engrossed in white on
are pure
buckskin. Tbe preparation of these
copies has been under the supervirion of
tbe notification committee. Several
members of the committee are now in
Washingtqp.
Attacked by Negroes.
Piqca, 0., July 18.—Camp McKinley,
near here, was thrown into intense ex¬
citement by the attempt of • mob of
negroes to get to and create a disturb¬
ance. Their ■ avowed a purpose was to at¬
tack the negro meu attached to the
state militia. These of the negroes
were arrested and put into the guard¬
house. When the attack was made
•oores of men snatched their guns, and
for a time it looked as if there would be
serious trouble. under An attempt made. to lynch
the men arrest was
New York, July 18.—Tbe Cunarder
Aurania beat tbe Alaska of tbe Guion
line, fiflaii* from Ertonw Queenstown, The Alaska two hours left and
her
dock at Queenstown July 10. forty-five
minutes ahead of the Aurania, and
reached her pier to this city one hour
and a half behind her opponent. The
HHb
•
/
THE SUN. EBtablitfwt 1877.
Highest of all ia Leavening Power.—TJ. & fWi Report, Aug. If: i&8$»
17,
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Solti in this city by B. B. BLAKELY.
They Give €p the Fight and
Leavp.
Those Who Have Been Arrest¬
ed Are Sullen.
The Military Has Been Reinforced
and Arrests Continue—non¬
union Men Have Been
Put In Two Mines '
Spokane Falls, Wash., July 18.— The
Review special from Wallace, Io., says:
The investment of the military Is being
made stronger, and arrests continue.
That tells the whole story. The im¬
prisoned miners are sullen, and seem
dazed by the suddenness with which
the uou-union men were restored to
Banker Hiii and Sullivan's.
Colonel Garlin went to Mullane Sat¬
urday, but the rioters, hearing of the
approach of the troops, managed for the
most part to made, get away. Only a few justice ar¬
rests were among them a
of the peace, Frazer and Postmaster
Marsh, both sympathizers It with the
cause of non-union. is thought that
Marsh is arrested more as s witness
than a culprit. Both are newspaper
men. Frazer edited a weekly paper in
the mines, and Marsh was at one time
on a Chicago paper.
The troops that went up to Burke met
with more success. Captain Bnbb sta¬
tioned his men from the depot to the
mouth of the mines, and when the mi¬
ner* were arrested they were marched
straight dent away strikers to the train. It Is evi¬
that the are conquered fer
the present. What they may attemirt
when the military is withdrawn, is au¬
other question.
A Count Bring* Suit.
New York, Jnly 18.—Count Arthur
Dillon, of the Dacby of Luxemburg, has
brought an action in the supreme court
growing out of the Commercial Cable
company. Dillon says he interested
Jobu W. Mackay and James Gordon
the Bennett in the suit enterprise, alleged and he brings
present which the on au agree¬
issue ment by coonvuny was to
1000 shares of p*iW rred stock,
with an assured dividend of 13 per cent.
He, Mackey and Bennett were to get
among them 800 of the shares In equal
proportions. The plaintiff
states that the capital of
the company has been increased, first
to #6,000.000 and then to $10,000,000,
and he wunts his shares of the preferred
stock, which Dillon claims have never
been issued originally, aud be farther
wants of the tbe proportionate increased capitalization. increase by
reason
Mr*. Harrison's Health.
Washington, Jnly 18.—Private Sec¬
retary Halford was shown a Washing¬
ton dispatch in a Philadelphia paper to
the effect that Mrs. Harrison is dying
of "quick consuption," and that bar
friends have abandoned hop* of her re¬
covery. He said that the report was
cruel and contradictory to all informa¬
tion received from the attending physi¬
cian, and otliers who are now with Mrs.
Harrison. The president received re¬
ceived reports from Loon Lake every
day, from his Dr. Gardner and and the relatives
with wife, they were all of a
favorable character. The president will
join Mrs. Harrison in the mountains
soon after tbe adjournment of oougrese.
Guilty - uf C orr o p iF fi MiH c **.
Paris, July 18. -M. Daniel Wilson,
amt-in-law of the late M. Gravy, whose
implication in tbe traffic in decorations
when M. Grevy was president, caused
such a scandal as to lead to the forced
resignation of President Grevy, was a
short time since elected mayor of Loco-
hese, the communes in which his es¬
tates are situated. Charges were made
that he had wed illegal means to secure
his election, and he was placed on trial.
Saturday he was found guilty aud fined
1,000 francs for corrupt practices.
Still a Democratic Street.
Alexandria, July 18.—Hie Louisiana
Democrat, the oldest Democratic paper
in the parish, and the second oldest in
tbe state, has changed hands, Messrs.
Bloseart and Rocha! soiling out the en¬
tire plant to Messrs. Mobley and Ring-
Tbe name of the paper will remain the
same, an also its politics.
Fall From e Bossy.
Mansfield, O., July 16.—While re¬
turning home from the Barnum show
Ed Metcalf, a yonng man'living at Mc-
Zena, Ashland County, was thrown from
his buggy and bis neck broken. Tbe
two yonng ladies who were with
carried his lifeless body to a neighboring taken
farmhouse, and the remains. were
home from there.
Not fterloiuty Stek.
Washington, July 18.—A cablegram
has been received at the Mexican lega¬
tion in this city denying tbe report that
Finance Minister Romero ia dangerous-
tile City of Mexico. The table¬
CLEVELAND ON SONGS.
The Might Sort of Music an Important
Campaign Atljnoet. . j jj*
Louisville, July i&— A11 lovers of
music know Will 8. Hays, the author of
"Molly Darling" aud other melodies.
Mr. Hays recently wrote a Cleveland
aud Stevenson campaign song and sent
a copy of it, with a letter, to Cleveland.
Ia his reply Mr. Cleveland writes aa
follows #NP
Gkav Gaulish, July 18,-Will a Hay*:
Dkar Sm—I received a copy of the song
you have written to be used a* you *ay for
an encourager 1 ” during the approaching
campaign. influence of believe and with music you, the that light the
stuigs of
•ought ought not to be overlooked a* an
Important paign, aud adjunct far to I the able political judge cam¬
so as am to
this last pro bunion of your* must
serve thing a good I purpose certain, in the that composition direction. Of of
one am
this song by yon is a sure demonstration
that the composer is actuated by a sort of
spirit tions. and enthusiasm which win el*©- IS
Vary truly your*, GroVkr Cleveland.
r ■> .
--- i -
A DISTINGUISHED SUICIDE-
Dr. Reuben SI. Searoy, Late ot the Uni¬
versity of Virginia, Meet* Hlmretf.
Birmingham, Ala., July 18.—At Tus¬
caloosa Dr. Reuben M. Searcy, a prom¬
inent young pnysician, committed sui¬
cide by blowing out bis brains with a-
pistol. He was a member of one of the
in the i
note, which was found nea
body: lancholy, "W!i«n I a man becomes suffers
as do, life a burden
and it ia time forhnn to r go. R. M.
Searcy, Tuscaloosa, July 16. Hie men¬
tal depression is supposed to have been
caused by **>*.• ovorstudy. t. ,.. 1 , r
1 S*JP« . —- —-___'
SHORT IN HIS ACCOUNTS.
B. If. SIcLau*. of the CfclekMM Hmtloo,
1* So Charged end Indicted.
Paris, Tex., July 18,—A sensation is
reported from tbe Chickasaw Nation.
EL H. McLane is national permit col¬
lector, and the date arriving for his an¬
nual settlement, be did not come 16 •
time, and au investigation showed a
shortage Lane in his account removed of by 3,295. Mo-
was at oneo Governor
Byrd, and Grove C. Chase appointed to
take charge of the office. The Perkins
county Lane and grand jury at arrested, once indicted bat Mo-
be was gave
bond.
National Immigration Statistic*.
Washington, July 1&—The chief of
the bureau of statistics reports that the
total number of immigrants arrived at
ports of the United States from the
principal Dominion foreign of countries, Canada except from
the and Mexico,
daring the month ended Jane 30,1802,
and the six and twelve mouths ended
the same date, as compared with the
same periods of tbe preceding year were
as follows: Month ended June 30 1892. —
73,120; same period in 1881, 68,3)7. Six
months ended June 80. 1893, 353,961;
same period in 1891, 325,307. Twelve
months ended Jane 30, 1892, 619,320;
same period for 1891, 555,496.
- .....—............- 4
Tbe Mountain la Darks***.
Catania. July 18.—The volcanic man¬
ifestations at Mount Etna continue with
unabated vigor.
smoke and ashes, which are hovering
over tbe burning mountain, everythingT*» have grown
so dense ns to cover the
vicinity with a mantle of darkness and
I the craters are now invisible. The
large craters of boiling are still lava ejecting immense
masses streams which
are steadily creeping growing with wider, terrible and as
steadily by foot, persist¬
ency, root upon certain of the
villages lying on the mountain slopes.
A galoot n, G. Dua & Co.
New York, July 18.—Judge Shipman
of the United States circuit court hare,
has handed down an opinion denying
the motion tor a new trial made by EL
G. Don & Co. of this city, in the case of
a bank mercantile of Birmingham, Ala., Don against
the agency of m Co.
The suit was to recover losses sustained
by the bank through a report received
from the agency as to the standing of
W. A. KitU of Oswego. The bank gave
Kitts credit on Don’s report. Tbe court
bolds that tbe agency is responsible tar
tbe result of the report of its agent.
The Vi«lou*ne** of o
Paris, Tex., July 18.—A
cident occurred near
County. EL his plow
mounted mute
house. The mule thf6W
him off. His foot
he was rriLly dragged
3TCS*“^ au d horribly 1 mi
shook
tried to get it away trow t
severely bitten on tbe arn
li #L>A*r, .r th* '
Raleigh, July 1
line Mo
ject is the
meat itii in tbe <
of]