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^^E^NEWS. Established 1871.
ass Bros.
This Week.
OlIB PRICKS ON DRESS GOODS
WILL capture the trade.
The sale will Le extraordinary in values on high grade
< merchandise. this
Imported Patterns reduced very much in price
week.
/Ui classes of Dress Goods will go at cut prices.
Red ani White Flannels, Drew, Selby & Co’s Fine
Shot?, School Shoes for Children.
Mis? Snyder has just received her second scock of
Fine flillinery,
which will be ready for inspection to-morrow. Bring
your old hat along and let her make it new at little cost.
Come for Bargains and you shall not be disappointed.
BAS5 BROS.
OOXX16
TO SEE US FOB OFFICE SUPPLIES,
Staple Stationery of all kinds, new Inkstands, new Penholders, new Pen
racks. See the line of Pencils we are carrying.
SEE OUR-- Bibles!
New Teachers’
New Window Shades. New lot Art Material. The prettiest line of Picture
Moulding ever shown in Griffin
AT CUT PRICES!
DEANE & AMOSS.
J. H. HUFF’S BOOK STORE
Has ’the sale of these Celebrate:
Glasses in Griffin, Georgia. Pro*
the factory of
KELLAM only complete & optical MOORE piantin
the
tbs flonth ATLANTA. \TLANT‘ GA " *
BLAKELY & ELLIS,
Funeral Directors
AU grades cloth-covered, (Metallic and
wood Coffins and Caskets. Prompt and
•Will attention. Free Hearse. Carriages
sod all details attended to. Embalming
M reasonable Urns* Calls answered day
«*a«ht
I will be at the different precincts for
Stos* 6 coll ecting State and Coun-
t««es........ Oct. Oct. Nov.
poton....... 11 25 8
gne Creek. 13 20 9
Mk Zion... 13 27 10
14 28 11
15 29 12
18 30 13
19 Nov. 2 16
ao» 11 uuu me at xiasseiKus snoe
S?! *"0V6, from , the October time . except 1st, until dates December named
ww makes u en my ,XKlt 8 will be closed. The
, it my duty to close and issue
“V requires day and I will do as the
Tax Collector T. R. NUTT,
Spalding Co., Ga
ARRIVAL and departure
“ AU Passenger Knterln^
trains
Griffin.
CENTRAL RAILROAD.
• !§• it?-8-16 2*'»m.l a m (To Macon...9 50 a m
“ •* 6.28 p.m.
6.09 p.m.| “ 11 9.20p.m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
«? A hfnta, 8 49 a mTo Columbus, 6.51
8.09pm, a n>
1 “ “ 6.00 pm
•- o- * S. A. B. R
. Dail
r man, 9.86 r Except Sunday.
• A ra'A Griffin,
*•60 pm| r. i? 40 p m
« (t MO pm
DAILY market reports
Oettea r,l.m.
New Yobk, Nov. *0
OPEN CLOS1
January....... .......... 5 70 ... 5.80
February...... ...........5 74 ... 5 7»
March.......... ...........5-80 ... 8.71
APrd........... ...........6.85 ... 5.83
............ ...........5.89 ... 537
{«“•............ ...........5 93 ... 5.0!
...........5 W ... &.! !
August......... ... tt )
September..... ...........« 03 ... 6.u3
October........ ...........6.03 ... 5.97
November..... ...........5 63 ... 5.uS
December... ... 5.83
Spot cotton middling closed easy; gulf, middling 1-16 cents. uplands, Dales,
1 14-1* cents; 6
Oral a and Provision*.
Chicago, Not !*
OPKX CLOSS
Wh*at—N ovember....
WH*AT—December....
Wh«at—M ay..........
Whuav—J uly...........
Coax—November......
Cobs— December.......
OOHN-Mny Oats—N ovember...... .............. ■ tW®H
Oats—D ecember........
Oai»—May Pobk—N ovember...... ..........
Pork— i>ecei#ioer....... '.'.'.'.'.'.7 7.211
PottS—January ........ 27J, 8 17
Labd— N ovem ber......
Laud— December....... ‘.'.'.".‘4
L.AKD—January—.... 35
Kins—November....... '.'.'.'”.'.'4.2214
Ribs—D ecember........
Ribs—J anuary..
NavaI Star#*.
Savannah. Not. 30 —Taroentine firm At
9014: sales 1,970 casks: receipts 1,809 casks.
rs."D*”irr.risr fi 25: i. $1.40; K. $155; ^ M. *1 80; N. $3.30;
windowglass $3.45; waterwhite $2 85.
WimtisuTOK, N (l.Nov, stranied *>.—Rodn* $1.15; receipts eady;
•trained $1.10; Spirits good turpentine ttrm at 2 »H®-
457 barrels Tar tirm at $1.06;
» ; receipts 139 casks- firm re¬ at
ceipts 258 barrels Crude turpentine
$l.toa»l.90; reocipts 40 barrels.
Itch on human, mange on horses, dogs
and all stock, cured in 80 minutes by
Wool ford's Sanitary Lotion. This never
fails. Sold by J. N. Harris & Son, drug¬
gists, Griffin, Ga.
CASTOHIA.
msfks-
Have you property to trade?
Write Devenuy Bros., McKeesport,
L|h
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 21. 18H7.
HI STIRM f
Rumors of a Dictatorship Foi
the Little Republic.
BEN0B OUESTAS' BADI0AL STEW
the President Ad Interim Orders the Oe-
eapatlon ol All Strntegetlo PoinU hr tile
Troops —Cum, Plaeed In Position to
Prevent (lathering of Crowds—Muoh
Kxoltomeot at lloutevideo.
Montevideo, Uruguay, Nov. 80.—Th«
greatest excitement prevail* here, due
to the report that Senor Ouestas, the
president ad interim, has decided to de¬
clare himself dictator and dispense with
the legislature. Senor Ouestas, who
was formerly president of the senate
aud who assumed the presidency provi¬
sionally after the assassination of Presi¬
dent Borda on Aug. 25, last, disclaims
the purpose imputed to him. r ^k.
In spite of this denial, however, it it
believed the report of a dictatorship is
true.
Under the president's order, troops
have occupied all the etrategetio points
of the city and the excitement is in¬
tense Cannon have been run into po¬
sition overlooking the Plaza de Amas to
prevent the gathering of crowds there
aud troops are now on guard all over
the city.
In the meantime President Ouestas
has placed a strong guard arouud the
block in which is situated the home of
Senor Julio Merrera. Senor Merrera is
a prisoner. He is Seuor Ouestas’ prin¬
cipal opponent in the race for president
aud it is believed he it at the head of
the movement which has for its pur¬
pose the overthrow of Ouestas’ forces.
It is to prevent such a movement that
President Ouestas has taken radical
steps.
_
Conferees* at the Capital.
Washington, Nov. *0. — President
McKinley saw no visitors, not even aer¬
ators aud representatives, during the
forenoon, and was occupied all the time
with Attorney General McKenua aud
Assistant Secretary Day of the state de¬
partment. It was stated that while the
conference was unofficial, its nature
would not bt made pub.io at present,
but it was of no greao importance.
Free From
Rheumatism.
If the people generally knew the true
cause of Rheumatism, there would be
no such thing as liniments and lotions
for this painful and disabling disordered disease.
The fact is, Rheumatism is a
state of the blood—it can be reached,
therefore, only through the blood. Rheuma¬ But
all blood remedies cannot cure
tism, for it Is an obstinate disease, one
which requires a real blood remedy —
something more than a mere tonic.
Swift’s Specific is the only real blood
remedy and promptly goes to the very
bottom of even the most obstinate case.
Like all other blood diseases, the
doctors are totally unable to cure Rheu-
taatism. In fact, the only remedies
which they prescribe are potash and
mercury, and though temporary relief
may result, these remedies produce a
Stiffness of joints and only intensify the
disease. with Rheumatism Those who know have that had it experience become*
more severe each year.
The caae of Mrs. James Kell, of 6if
Ninth Street, S. E., Washington, D. C.,
should convince everyone that it is
useless to expect doctors to cure Rheu¬
matism. Under recent date she writes:
*'A few months ago I had an attack of
Sciatic Rheumatism in its worst form.
The pain was so intense that my ner¬
vous system was perfectly prostrated, helpless. and I The was
for a long time
attack was an unusually regarded severe one,
and my condition was as
being very attended dangerous. by of the most
*<I wa s one
able doctors of Washington City, who it
also a member of the faculty of the
leading college here. He told me to
continue his prescription and I would
get well. After having it refilled twelve
rimes and receiving not the least bene-
I declined to taki
H
cific) decided, ------- almost in despair, to give
I taking few bot¬
it a trial. After a
tles I was able to hobble around on
cratches, and very soon had no need
at all for them, for S.S.S. cured me
sound and well. All the distressing
pains have left me, my appetite has
returned, and I am health.” happy to be again
restored to perfect disppomts, for it" is made
S.S.S. never deep-rooted diseases which
to care these all
are beyond the reach of other reme¬
dies. It cares permanenty Rheumatism,
Catarrh, Cancer, Scrofula, Eczema, and
all other blood guaranteed diseases. It is the only
blood remedy
Purely Vegetable,
•go ft^ning no mercury, potash, arsenic
or other dangerous mineral. .
Books will be mailed free to any addieai
by the Swift Spedfl* Co., A tla n ta , 0*
-
....
PIERCE FI GHT O N ENGINE.
*•*»• Ml Wall*'Mas India I a D.ip.r-
ate Strn**l«- -Kur.u.r Killed.
Birmingham. A. a., Nov. 80.— On a
freight train dashing southward over
the Louisville and Nashvilite railroad at
the rate of 80 miles su boor one of the
most thrilliug encounter* ever recorded
occurred.
Two men, one black and erased by
drink, the other white aud conscious of
deadly peril, engaged in a life aud death
straggle tive, in the cab of the a flying locomo¬
which ended in death of the
negro aud the miraculous escape from
the tame fate by the white wail
When train No. 85, southbound, left
here Engineer JE. P. Bishop aud Fire¬
looomotive man Wiley Oruig, a negro, occupied the
cab. About 20 minutes later
the uegro was lying dead beside the
track, aud the engineer, bleeding from
a dozen knife wounds, was alone iu hit
ash.
Soon after the train’s departure, and
when 3 miles from the city, Bishop told
the fireman to stir up the fire. The ue¬
gro paid no attention t§ the order, aud
it was repeated. This time he uttered
au oath, and springing from bis seal
draw a revolver aud suddenly and with¬
out warning fired a ship bwlet point blank at
the engineer. The missed the
angiueer, who struok the revolver from
the negro’s hand just a* the latter was
about to fire a second sfiot. Oraig drew
au ugly kuife, and gawping the en¬
gineer by the shoulder, ' palled him from
the box and began to ettt him aoroea the
breast.
Finally, after a desperate struggle,
curing whioh the two pnen rolled over
aud over on the floor at. the cab, Bishop
managed to draw his pistol and fire.
The bullet (truck the ufero in the breast
and penetrated bis heart. Without a
groau hs fell back into the darkuees to
the ground aud Bishop was left alone
In his cab. . ,
The train at that time was near Ox-
moor. There it was halted by the
wounded engineer, who told the crew
of his thrilling euoouoter.
Bishop was given a preliminary hear¬
ing and discharged.
NEW RAIL WAY P ROJECTED.
thm People of DahtUU ftnd Violultjr An
Arottdflft —IM( lft*rb«otte.
Decatur. Ala., Nov. 80.—The people
of Danville and viciuitjr are in earnest
Over their hew railroad project There
Will be an immense gathering 10 miles
from Danville next Saturday. They
Will have an oldfaahioned picnio aud
barbecue. Speakers will be imported
from abroad to address tile assembled
multitude and there will be a rousing
good There time. will
also be dime some practi¬
cal railroad building. They will have
miners and prospectors aud ironworkers,
there. The miners will dig tilt coal and
Iron ont of the grouud aud the irou-
workers will smelt the ore in the pres¬
ence of the assembled thousands.
Never before were people so aroused
ever au Industrial mart. Scores of men
have voluntarily come forward aud
offered to donate laud for a right of
way. Oue man who owns two flue
farms has offered a deed to one-tenth of
his entire holdings.
GIRL BRID E INTE RVIEWED.
Why General Cmlu, Marvel I as Olay's
W ife Deserted Ulus.
Valley View, Ky., Nov. 20.— Gen-
Cassius Marcellos Olay’s girl wife, who
was Dora Iiiohardsou, was interviewed
m the plank cabiu of her brother, Olell
Richardson, who works iu the sawmills
here.
When asked why she left palatial
White Hall for the lowly cabiu, she said:
"I was lonesome. 1 had no yonug
company until the general went to Om-
oiuuatl last mouth aud stayed two
months, Nannie haring bis eyes treated. Then
Biggerstaff. about my age, came
and stayed with me until the general
got back. I have been away from him
for weeks, but have gone to see him
five times since then. I will iiot go
back until I get my visit out. ”
She denied that she had said that she
did not love General Olay any mors.
A Ikvard tor mm lunula.
Montgomery, Ala., Nov. 20 — Abont
two weeks ago Mr. Wade Ohildre* one
of the best citizens of Covington, a gen¬
tleman of high character aud respected
of all the good people, was asssssiuated
about 8 p.m. while sitting in his own
room and reading the Bible. He Is not
supposed to have had au enemy aud no
cause can be assigned for his murder. effects
The solicitor has made diligent
to asoertaiu the assassin aud failed.
The family has offered a reward of $850
and the governor has ordered a like re¬
ward to be paid by the state for the ar¬
rest aud conviction of the assassin.
Ceaaty Oflelali Are Iwumlml,
Montgomery, Ala., Nov. 80.— Appli¬
cation was made to the governor by the
sheriff, probate judge aud other county
officers to respite the senteuoe of Sam
Fielda Fields was convicted of mur¬
der in the Henry circuit court aud sen¬
tenced to be hanged on Friday, Deo. A
Jim Glover was also convicted of mur¬
der in tbe same court and sentenced to
be hanged on Friday, Deo. JO. Tbe
oflloialt desire both executions to take
place on the same day “to save cost aud
trouble incident to two separate execu¬
tions.” The governor has grouted the
request. "
_ _
Postal Crooks Ars N.bbs.l,
Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 80.— Poet-
offioc Inspector Warren of the Chatta¬
nooga division has succeeded in break¬
ing up aud arresting a big gang of pos¬
tal crooks in North Alabama. During
the past week be has arrested not less
than 15 men, all on the charge Their of using
the maiis to defraud. field of
operation seems to have been the region
around Attalla, Weaver’s station aud
Union Grove. *
Otssral Weyler Clears Himself.
Madrid, Nov. 80.—The captain gen¬
eral of Gallacia has telegraphed the gov¬
ernment here saying that in the inter¬
view which be had with General Wey-
ler, the former captain general of Cuba,
the Utter oompleteiy exculpated himself
of the statements attributed to him upon
tbe occasion of his leaving Havana aud
affirmed hi* devotion and adhesion to
SIGNOR lliDl IS SICK
Great Operatic Composer May
Expire of Grief.
HIS WIFE'S DEATH KILLIH0 HIM
h Vr«*»trete<4 That Cetel Ke-ult« Weald
Omm No Surprise—(Ivor K stag. Seven
Yoon Old—IWg»n «!*• Blair ot MmK
Whoa m Store Hoy—rhe A*.her of II
Trovotore.
Rom*, Nov. 80.—8ig. Verdi, the cele¬
brated composer, is so prostrated by the
death of his wife that it ia feared he
Will die.
Giuseppe Verdi wae born in Ranoola,
la the dneby of Parma, in 1810. Hie
oiusxrPE VERDI.
father waa au innkeeper. As a child
Verdi wae wont to follow abont the
street# of his native village every organ
grinder who happened along. The lit¬
tle fellow seemed to drink iu inspiration
from the seldom accurate and alrnoet
always disoordaut barrel organa
At the age of 7 Verdi begged his par¬
ents to have him taught music, aud
they acceded to the extent ot baying
for him an old spinet. This quaint in¬
strument is still preserved iu the villa
&L Agata.
An Orffuntst «t BifiNn,
At 11 years of age Verdi's first dream
of ambition was realized, for he was
named organist at Le Boneole, with the
large pay of fid franca (afterwards raised
to 40) a year. Iu the meantime he had
been sent to school at Busseto, where
an honest cobbler boarded him for the
nmnifloent sum of fi cents per diem.
Signor Barezzi, a wlue and liquor
m s e c h a |i f o f w b o a r Ve r di ’s father had
been in the habit of buying the email
storec needed in his humble inn, took
the greatest interest in young Verdi,
lent allowing him to praotioe on his excel¬ of
the piano aud It giving him the ran
house. was he, too, who not only
obtained one of the four purses of the
Monte di Pieta when Verdi went to
study at Milan, bat beoame responsible
for the expeuse of hie board aud hit les¬
son* a generosity whioh was honorably
repaid as soon as the young man was
able to earn his own living. Eventually
be became the father-iu-aw of the
yonng composer, who had fallen iu love
with the handsome Marguerite, Barez-
zi’s eldest daughter. Tbe marriage
took place in Nov. 1886, aud in 1839. on tbe
evening of 17, “Obert* Conte dt
San Bouifacio.” his first opera, was
represented with such success at La
Soala that Mereili, the then impresario,
made a contract with the composer to
write three more operas for the same
theater. Oue ot these waa to be an
opera bouffe.
But, alas, while at work at it terrible
misfortune befell rhe man hitherto to
happy aud so fortunate. In the short
spaoe ot two mouths his two children
aud beloved wife were takeu from him,
and he was alone in the world. * It is
scarcely to be wondered at if, under
such circumstances, the “Gismo de
Regnou,” as it was called, failed to
please, and disgusted with himself, and
even with his act, in snoh a season of
grief and despair, the yoang maestro
insisted upon giving np his contract
and ceasing to write. For some time
he persisted in bit resol ntion.
Libretto Voreed Upon Mins.
One evening, however, he met Me-
relii, who asked him to accompany him
to the theater. On tbe way thither the
manager complained that Nicoiai had
refused to compose au opera to a libretto
of Solera's (Solera wrote the libretto
of Verdi’s first opera.) “Snoh a splen¬
did work I Snoh dramatic situations I
Splendid!” said Mereili “Aud, what
ia worse, I don’t know where to find an¬
other,” he added. While the librarian
of (he theater was looking for the
“Proecritto” Mereili came across the
work of which he had been speaking,
and eaidi “Take it and read it. Yon
bring it back me.” ^
can to
He crammed it into Verdi’s pocket,
poshed the door him in out hie of face bis while office and locked
“Set it music!” The libretto crying ont,
to being
thus forced upon him, Verdi was
obliged to oarry it home, and once there,
as though amid its pages lingered a
spell mightier than his reluctance, first
one verse or scene attracted him, then
another and another, till fluaUy“Na-
bocoo” was completed. The success of
this work in 1842 was emphatic, and
was followed by “Otello,” which bears
mark* of poetic conception, of profouud
study, of a mind ever open to receive
fresh artistic impressions, and of a vigor
to embody them marvelous in a man of
hie year* Signorina Gniseppiua Strep-
poni, who created the part of Abigails,
eventually Verdi’s became his second wife.
best known opera's are “Neb-
•chadnezzar,” “Ernaui,” “Attiia,”
“Macbeth,” “Riggolatto,” “II Trov-
atore. ” “La Travlata.” "Otello.” “Gio¬
vanni d’ Arco.” “Aida” and “Una Bailo
in Maschera.”
U Greer Map Be CaeealeA.
Cincinnati. Nov. <0.— Ed Greer, the
second of the assailants tried for as¬
saulting Mrs. Gleason, the one who
took her to tbe place where she was as¬
saulted, testified that his former con¬
fession waa all false, and then broke
down under arose examination and ad¬
mitted hie pr esent testimony was false.
He also told a fallow prisoner to testify
in hie behalf. That prisoner on the
stand made that fact known and told a
damaging story. The arguments in the
•see have begun. Greer t* regarded
Ukaly to b* bung.
—....... - ------------------- -
THE SUN,
THE LARG E LON DON FIRE.
Lomm mt From r«« t m M*tf MU-
IU» IktlUrt—M« On* KIM«4.
London, Nov. 80.— A number of fir*
engines are still playing upon the smoul¬
dering mint, which mark the scene of
the great conflagration uear the general
postoffioea. Wall* are felling in every
direction. It is impossible to accurately
estimate the damage dona, but it is
stated that it will reach 910,000,000.
American insurance companies wifi lose
heavily.
The last flames disappeared by 11 a
m., but as this massage is forwarded
water ia still being poured upon tbe
red hot msst ee of raiOA Tbe burned
district is surrouuded by enormous
crowds of people aud the railroads are
running excursion trains from the
noun Iu try.
spite of the magnitude of the dis¬
aster. only two firemen were elightly
injured daring flame* tbe work of extiuRuisl.-
iug the Abont 800 firms a; i
seeking for new office* Tbe estimates
of the amount of damage done range
from # 10 , 000.000 to $60,000,000, but ao-
<• . j t., -l. best ouiniou the loss ia
about eio.ovO.uOO. The official report
says tbe cause of tbe fire ia uukuown.
A large number of warehouses from
five to eix stories high have been burned
and are partly fallen, the whole cover¬
ing an area of 800x150 yard#, bounded
by Nichols square. Edmunds Place,
Jewin Orescent, Australian avenue,
Paul's alley and Red Oroee street,
TURKEY 1 3 CALL ED DOWN.
Mast rap aa ont irm it n,. insists
Mse»nstrneMns Her Navy.
Constantinople, Nov. 80.— The offl-
oiale of the Russian embassy sent a sec-
ond note to the Turkish minister point¬
ing out that iu times of difficulty Rus¬
sia abstained from urging the payment
of the debt dne her by Turkey; but now
that tbe government of Turkey has de¬
cided upon fresh armaments, which are
not warranted by the preeeut situation,
Russia demauds a portion of the arrears
on the same grounds that Austria urged
the paymeut of elaimt of tbe Oriental
railroad, an Austrian corporation, for
transportation of Turkish troops during
the recent war with Greece.
In consequence of this communica¬
tion, the porte has informed the Prus¬
sian oharge d’affaires that nothing has
been decided upon concerning arma¬
ments, at tbe same time bestowing upon
that official the grand cordon of the
Osmanli order.
It ia believed that the Turkish gov¬
ernment will now drop ite plan for the
reorganisation of the navy, although
the officials of the German ambaesy
have been instructed to support the
efforts of the German firms to recon¬
struct tbe fleet aud supply the Turkish
govern mens with the neoeasary arm*
ammunition aud uniform*
'to "
CONVICTS BE LEASED.
The State, However, Will Ceetroi the
Guard* h 4 Phpplelaaa.
Atlanta, Nov. 80.—The Journal has
interviews with 88 members of the
bouse and 84 members of tbe senate on
the oonviot question, and the concensus
•f these views does muoh to clarify tbe
nebulous condition of tbe public mind
on this aubjeol
From these interviews this muoh ol
tbe legislative result seems certain:
There will be a five year lease of the
ablebodied oonviot* with state oontrol
of guards and physician* the lessees to
feed, clothe aud shelter them uudet
state regulations aud inspection.
There will be a farm fur tbe women,
the boya and tbe aged aud infirm
convict*
This form is designated in a large pro
portion penitentiary of the after replies five ea a nucleus fur a
year* bnt that
legislatures question will probably decide. be iaft for future
to
Th 'here will be no reformatory school,
but moral restraints may be prescribed
for yoang co a riots on the ttrm.
There wilt hardly be any state inspec¬
tion of misdemeanor convict*
The felons will not be worked on pnb*
lie roads.
The interviews are based on replies to
questions covering the various points
considered iu the discussion, but ouiy
those which are iu sufficient preponder¬
ance to indicate results ars mentioned
in this forecast
CPU PER L OSES HIS CASE.
Deosoeraile Sultlul l*e*tma«i«r Slake*
May r.r a Bepablieaa,
Atlanta, Nov. 80. — Major J. M.
Oouper lost his fight in the United
States court for the place of assistant
postmaster. The fight wae won by Ma¬
jor Smyth, not because the civil service
laws did Judges not protect Newman Major Oouper, but
because and Pardee
decided that a court of equity has no
right to interfere in matters of that
kind, and stated that inch questions
aud dispates must be decided by tbe
civil service commission at Waehing-
tOlL
This means, of conrs* that the in¬
junction for which Major Oouper wae
fighting, have will not be granted and he will
authorities to step out until the the Washington If
pass upon matter.
civil service decide# he is right in his
claims he will be reinstated and take up
his old duties again.
Mr. E. F. Blodgett has taken charge
of tbe office of assistant postmaster.
The S eeee J Trial mt Mania Thera.
New Yore, Nov. 80.— District Attor¬
ney Youngs ot Queens county said that
everything is in readiness tat the re¬
sumption on Monday of the trial ot
Martin Thorn, (ha alleged murderer of
William Guldansupp* As at the pre¬
vious trial. District Attorney Oloott Of
New York will co-operate with District
Attorney Youngs in conducting i ie
prosecution. will Harrogate A. N. Weller
also assist Mr. Young* It ia re¬
ported that William F. Howe has en¬
gaged Noble former District Attorney Daniel
to help him defend Thorn.
j jzgtwa i a aa T
Oae Death Oeears at MaMla.
Mobile. Nov. 80.— One new case:
Raphael Demmes, Marin* near Govern¬
ment. Death: Harry Howard, a negro,
city hospital. Recoveries: Lucv Child*
W. Walter GfiMs CX Urqubart, Harvey June* &
i the lee* pure,
t*B**ft
-1
;8S
- -
si 1
tenu swim sowese so., mm ram.
—
EVERYTHING SERE!
MANY PEOPLE ARE VACCINATEL
AND FEELING BETTER.
School* Will be Ran the Same aa t'saal To-
Morrow, Bat Every PnpU Mast
Hare Been Vaecinated.
People got their second wind;
terday after the suin’Inox scare <
the vigorous action of the board of
health produced a feeling of greater
security. At the meeting of the
board and trustees yesterday it waa
decided to disinfect the school rooms
yesterday and to-day and continue
the schools the sane as usual to-
morrow.
The contract for a peat house to be
erected on the corner of the
farm nearest to town was let to I
Cunningham for 9435, for which be
is to put up three building* of two
rooms each, one for white*, another
for colored and the third tor an of¬
fice and cook room. Work waa be¬
gun at onoe, to continue all day I
day and it ia expected to be com¬
pleted by to-night, and all patients
will lie removed there as fast aa
found. .
Dr. Nunnally decided not to ac¬
cept the position ot pest ho
sician and it was therefore i
by Dr. Collier, the city pi
ability who is showing admirable ne
in the present
All the actions of the h
health are being sustained
people, and the city is already
congratulated on the character
the appointees and the ea
which they have carried us
an apparent crisis. Trade wa
large yesterday, but about as
usual this fall, people ~
as many
in from the country.
About 1200 vaccine points were
used up to five o’clock yesterday,
and a large number more were re¬
ceived on the afternoon train.
Everybody is accepting the situation
as becomes citizens of the plucky
town of Griffin and little will be
thought about it the coming week.
The size of Griffin is such that
contagious diseases can be handled
much easier than in place* the size
of Altanta, where smallpox is now
prevailing to a much greater extant
than is told by the newspapers,
which have endeavored to suppress
the facts in the case. The loose way
in which it is managed there is the
cause of the few cases now in Griffin,
having been communicated from
East Point.
Neither are We alone in this mat¬
ter in this section, as the smallpox
in Thomaston compelled the harried
adjournment of Upson superior
court. Other places in the State
also have the disease, but it is not
making headway anywhere.
Barnesville, Woodbury and a
mmher of other little villages are
reported as having quarantined
igflinst Griffin, but we would never
have known it if not told of it, as
nobody gets off at those places.
Diseases often lurk in the blood bo-
fore they openly manifest themselves.
Therefore keep the blood pure with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Death of a Child.
A telegram received by M. L.
Connor yesterday stated that little
Laura Beil Phillips, tbe two year
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D.
Phillips, died Friday night at Dub¬
lin. The many friends of the family
will regret to learn of little Laura
Bell’s death. The funeral will take
place at the residence of Mr. Connor
at 10 o’clock this morning.
RED
ROUGH
HANDS
Itching, scaly, bleeding palms, shape!*** bleckh I
and painful Soger ends, pimple*,
oily, notfcy shin,dry, thin, end felting heir,
log, scaly scalps, oil yield quickly to worm i “
with Corirpa* Soar, and
with Conceit* (a