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THE MACON TELEGRAPH
FAIR WEDXE9DAY. RAIN AT NIGHT OR TIll'RSDAYl FRESH NORTII TO EAST WINDS.
ESTABLISHED IN'
MACON. GA., WEDNESDAY MORNING-, DECEMBER 31, 1002
DAI1/Y—*7 .OO A YEAH
CASTRO SMASHES
THE REVOLUTIONISTS
While Engaged In Diplomatic Negotiations He Takes
Advantage of an Interval to Fight a Battle and
Win It—German Commander Threatens to Bom
bard Because of Interference With the Mails of
German Subjects by a Venezuelan Postmaster.
Cabinet in Washington Saying Nothing.
ItOlGIl ON’ STim.l
nr.\ i.HV turned down.
New Philippine
CARACAS. Venezuela, Monday, Dec.
M.—Barqui.-drrrto, capital of the state
of Lara, which for gome time past has
l>een In the possession of the Venezue
lan revolutionists, has been recaptured
'by government* forces. The town of
6an Carlos and Tlnapuillo have also
been reoccupled by the government.
The revolutionists at Barqulslmeto
Wore under the command of Gens. So-
lagnle and 1 Penaloza. They evacuated
the town after losing 112 men killed ana
825 woundrjd. There was hard fighting
In the st^tfl and suburbs of Barqulsl-
meto for two days. The government
forces weie commanded by Gen. Cef-
erlno Castillo.
It now fjansplres that President Cas
tro’s reef It visit to La Victoria was
not of a facial nature, as reported here,
but for i't purpose of conducting per
sonally, l’.\ telegraph, the operations of
his forcejfjit Barqulslmeto. The victory
for the Svernment appears to be 0
direct rc&t of the president’s Initia
tive. It hs been a most severe blow
for the reolutlonlsts.
GF.UIANY MAY BOMBARD.
LONDO-, Dec. 30.—A dispatch to the
Lally Mai from ‘Willemstad, Curacao,
dated ycs*rday, says:
“The petmaster at Maracaibo, Ven
ezuela, hslng detained correspondence
belonglngto German merchants, the
German rulser Falke threatens. In
conseque^e, to bombard, the town.
GOTfflROUail BLOCKADE.
CARACB, Dec. 20.—United States
Minister twen has received informa
tion thatr.he Dutch stenmer Prln®
Maurlts n entered certain Venezue
lan porti ockaded by the British fleet
and disc r ged her cargo there. Spe
cial peri ilon* for the Dtuch steamer
to do tl was obtained from Como-
dorc M01 nnerle of the British cruiser
Charybd The Italian cruiser Gio
vanni B °nn ordered the Prlns Mau
rlts aw; *'rom port, but Commodore
Mor.tgor 0 decided that she continue
to dlseh » her cargo.
In Cargs this Is considered to be a
dlscrlmitgpn against American steam
ers, and British commodore’s action
has beer iticlsed.
PLAGUE IN MEXICO.
Mnxnttnn—Very Fc
Dei
LAREDO, Tex., Dec. 30.—Confidence
Is being restored among the inhabitants
of the city and loss fear Is felt on ac
count of the supposed plague epidemic.
There has been a marked decrease in
the disease and few new cases are re-
porte 1. 'I h-- • ■ t■ t r ; ii«• t L-n
by the authorities to stamp out the epi
demic have given excellent results.
There have been a few deaths In ad
dition to those already reported.
HUMBERTS DECLINE
TO NAME LAWYERS
Court Dealannte* nn Attorney to De
fend Them—Famous Safe Now
Theatrleul Attraction.
PARIS, Dec. 30.—The Humberts con
tinue to absorb public attention here.
Minister of Justice Valle brought the
subject before the council of ministers
today, saying he had given 33.000 to the
Spanish police for assisting In the Ar
rest of the principals In the famous safe
frauds. This Is additional to the $5,000
reward offered for their capture, which
has not yet been paid, owing to con
flicting claims. It Is expected that the
*al Refused Recognition l»y the Tnm-
| many Hall Executive Committee.
)ec. 30.—At NEW YORK. Dec. 30.—William S.
gllng cases Devery was refused recognition by th*
before United States Commissioner j executive committee of Tammany Hall
Amlcrson, the case against Supervisor I tonight. Who the person Is that lias
of Elections Benjamin Butler was contested Devery’s scat Is a matter of
taken up. It developed during the 1 conjecture. Leader Murphy, who was
hearing that about 100 cases of liquors . at Tammany Hall after the meet-
hnd been broght from St. Thomas hi ing. said:
San Juan on the steamer Uncus In , “The name of the contestant will not
November of 1901. Some of these boxes he given out at this point In the mat-
bore the names of Capt. Yates Stirling. ter. The matter will go to the coin-
then commandant of the naval station mlttee on credentials Immediately. No-
hore, Benjamin Butler, Dr. Charles 11 body knows who the contestant is and
T. Lowndes, u. S. N., Quartermaster j the name will not be made public until
Joseph T. Crabbs and T
William A. Merritt. U. S. N.. other
9 marked for the Country Clul
o still others were marked for th
;cen. An employe of the naval sta
tlon testified that he stored these good
according to the bills of the St. Thome
chants, which were given him. an
that they wore sent out the next da
on army wagons.
TELEGRAPHERS
WERE MERE BOYS
Coroner’s Yerilict in the
Grand Trunk Casualty.
BLAME IS NOW FIXED
Company Held Kcnp
ting Inexperience
Charge of Station*
nut Orders Were
d Youth* In
Where Import-
to Re Received.
Train Dinnnteller Kerr Seems to
Have lleen Exonerated by the Jnry
Which Inveatiunted the Case.
The general committee elected these
on !: 1N: Piv«i,D-Mt. .1. S.»rg.-unt < 'rum .
vice-presidents. John T. Oakley and
John B. Hasslocher; recording secre
tary. p. A. Whitney; reading secretary,
Thomas F. Smith, corresponding, sec-
ry, GttStavu* A. Rodgers; trens-
*, John McQuude; sergeant-at-arms,
John V. McCIoskey..
SDLTAN LOSES
WATER SUPPLY
niDNIGHT CEREMONY
ON THE “HOLY HILL”
Testimony of Witnesses Who Attended the Laying
of the Cornerstone of the School for Revival of the
Lost Mysteries of Antiquity at Point Loma.
Pretender Cuts the Mains
That Furnish the Capital.
SITUATION IS CRITICAL
Appears That 111m Majesty of Moroc
co Will Be Forced to Surrender In
Three Days—Knglnnd and France
Notify Spain That They Will Not
Interfere—Missionaries Ordered to
Get to the Coust Under Cover of
Friendly Guns,
SAN DIEGO, Cal., Dec. 30.—The dep
osition of Mrs. George F. Mohn of Loa
Angeles, which was Introduced yester
day, wns made before the court today
when the Tlngloy-Tlmes libel suit was
resumed. The only fact admitted v/us
a statement by the deponent that un
der the rules promulgated by Mrs.
Ttngley the itieals at tlio institution
Wert eaten in silence.
The defense noxt Introduced th® dep
osition of Mrs. Miriam G. Egbert of
Los Angeles, who was present at tho
cornerstone laying at Point Loma. De
ponent said that Mrs. Tingley abso
lutely controlled the finances of the In
stitution. Mrs. Egbert testified to tho
pledge imposed upon admission to
membership In the Universal Brother
hood to defend Catherine A. Tingley to
the limit of Ufe, limb, wealth and In
fluence. ‘ Tho deponent was present,at
I he ceremony of tho laying of the Cor
nerstone of the school for the revival
of the Lost Mysteries of Antiquity.
Mrs. Egbert said that during tho mid
night laying of the cornerstone on tho
‘holy .hill” most of the participants
stood “with lingers cm lips while tin*
tnd whistled around us. It was very
cold."
prosecution of the Humberts will not December 2G 1D02 That
begin for several days. The prisoners |V, '
have so far declined to name their law- , 3 wrong
th**lr law
nd the court has designated Mal-
tre Chonu to appear In their behalf.
The - Humbert safe, which was allegea
to contain $20,000,000. has been removed
to the Montmartre theatre,where it will
be the chief attraction.
NORTHERN SECURITIES COMPANY.
I 11 WAITS ON CASTRO.
WASF-.ITON. Dec. 30.—President
Castro’s ; wer to the nines' proposal
to arblti ' the Venezuelan troubles
has not.*, n received. In fact. Secre
tary Hrj-nad nothing of Importance
on the N ezuelan situation to com-
municat. the cabinet. There are,
however n ider discussion such ques
tions aa Vl Re relating to the beat
jmlnatlng the blockade and
touching the personnel
t lesion, which It is expected
. 1 Washington to lay down
‘*ne arbitration scheme.
© Dp
Month.
NEW YORK. Dec. 30.—The board of
directors of the Northern Securities
Company today re-elected its former
officials and executive committee. The
quarterly dividends on Great Northern
preferred and Northern Securities stock
will be acted upon next month.
SOI Til EH \ Ml,OC1 TIONISTS.
Mr*. Chilton of Oxford, Mima.. In
Elected President of Association.
ATLANTA, Dec. 30.—The Southern
Association of F.locutlonlsts today
elected 'Officers ns follows: President.
Mrs. William Calvin Chilton of Ox
ford, Mlts.; vice-president, Dr. W. II.
McGlauflln of Atlanta: recording sec
retary, Dr. A. E. Booth, of the South-
ern Normal University of T.-mmss--* ;
corresponding secretary. Booth Lowry,
of the Blue Mountain Female College
of Mississippi; treasurer, Dr. F. J.
Stowe, of Cumberland University, Ten
nessee.
The association will meet In Atlanta
again next year.
WYOMING, Ont.. Dec. 30.—The coro
ner’s Jury which has been Investigat
ing the wreck at Wanstead last Fri
day night, in which twenty-eight lives
were lost, brought In a verdict shortly
before midnight tonight. The verdict
is as follows:
“We .find* that Arthur W. Ricketts
as killed in the collision at Wanstead
said collision
orders being
given to No. 5 at Watford. Responsi
bility for the issuance of wrong orders
wo are not agreed upon as between Op
erator Carson and Dispatcher Kerr.
That after No. 5 had left Watford by
the issuance of wrong orders we con
sider that the accident could have been
averted by the operator at Wyoming or
Kings Court Junction had the com
pany had more experienced operators
at those points (one being hut a boy
of 1G), at each of which places the dis
patcher having had ample time to do
it. endeavored to get the opposite
train® stopped."
MADRID. Dec. 30.—A dispatch from
Tangier, Morocco, today announced
that the rebels hud cut the aqueduct
which supplied Fez with water, und
added that the city was now practically
without water. It was further usserted
that unless the Kabyleh tribesmen
from the south came to the succor of
Fez the place must surrender within
three days.
The hostility against the sultan Is
spreading In Fez. Tho Moors are ex
hibiting photogruphs of him arrayed in
ridiculous gurb. The sultan yesterday
assembled the nobles of tho besieged
town at the palace and exhorted them
not to despair, assuring the chiefs that
the Imperial troops ultimately will
triumph.
Oreut Britain and France have no
tified Spain that they have na Inten
tion of taking any udvuntuge of the
situation in Morocco nnd that they
desire the maintenance of the status
quo, even in the event of the sultan
being dethroned and his place taken by
the pretender. These communications
h.-’-e roassured the Spanish govern-
tnont, which is rims i«*IW*vod of tears
of International complications.
WAS POLICEMAN
KILLED BY NEOROES?
nnrknlile Story That Comes‘from
ririn la—Possibly u Vendetta—En-
‘loping the Affair In Mystery.
ether m
of the c
will me
th^ line
great;anitarium
1 !N0W IN ASHES
l< ''" of the Property of th*
"th )y Adventists at llattl«
-A spe
Creek.
CHARLOTTE. N. C., Dec. 3'
dal to the Observer from Durha
says:
“News reached here tonight that the re
main* of John Rogerr, a policeman, who
disappeared from hla home at Virginia,
on the Norfolk and Western road some
eight weeks ago, were found near that
station on Saturday by a party of hunters.
The body was so badly decomposed that of th<
recognition was only possible by the
watch and clo'.hes of the deceased. The
story told tonight Is that about elgnt
I weeks ago a negro was killed In Virginia
Mrs. Emily PennI
who had twice be
1 the deposition of
4g of Los Angeles,
en at Point Loma.
rstoiuc laying and
3. Hta<? described th©
ry long and
at the
once at the con;
cornerstone laying
very fatiguing.
“Wo stopped a great many time®,
turning (o the east, and placing our
fingers to our lips," ah* said.
Deponent added that there were old
and young people In the procession.
Several fainted on the way nnd were
taken from the rank®. Tho member®
of the cabinet wore robes.
Mrs. Penning told of having bee«
made to sit on the floor for hours with
out any support. Tho long meditations.
Mrs. Penning said, were nllent sittings,
In which most of those who purtld-
pated hold their linger® upon their lip®.
This deposition was followed by that
of It. F. 11 lllikcr of Ani.cD-
tired buslne
nu
vho
llliil
testimc
Miss Matilda Krntzer of San Diego,
called by tho defense, told of attending
meeting® of the Daughter® of the Rls-
hlch, like tho other®, sjho
of cheeso cloth
vlth the
In Gr
1 nd
She Bald tho costume of the
craftsmen, wa® bare from the knee®
down and that the feet were shod with
Bundnls.
( are
DETRO itch.. Dec. 30.—A Tri
bune spec virom Battle Creek, Mich.,
gays: i»t
In the destruction tonight of
the big b— g occupied by the Re
view und llHd Publishing Company,
the Seven g \.y Adventist colony Is
brought Vjjfb face with a second
hea.yy !o^ afire within & year, the
Adtentlstlm ittarlum having been
burned do, n iiy last February. To
night's 1<*: p&timated by officials of
the P.cvi •* i Herald Company at
$350, '.".. ranee amounting to
found In the early morning,
and with the Hading or tiu- bo i> '-in -
John Rogers disappeared. It was gen
erally supposed that Rogers killed him.
bank, and It
that this ha
1 take
a ter members of his family received
latlng that Rogers had gone to ^
Asheville, and would not write again,
but for them not to be uneaay. This pre
vented uneasiness on the part of the fam
ily until th«j dead body was found b)
hunters. The supposition 1® that Rogers
killed the negro, drew hfs money and
WYOMING, Ont., Dec. 30.—The In
quest Into tho cause of the denth of the
victims of the Friday night’® wreck on
the Grand Trunk railway at Wanstoad,
was continued today.
Jams® A. Smith, a hrakeman on the
freight train, was the flrat witness. He
said that when hi® train arrived at
Wanstead, snow had blocked the lever
of the switch, and about two minute®
were lost. At the time of tho collision
th** switch* was open, bht the freight
wa® Htlll on the main line. The train
wa® delayed at Wyoming about eight
minutes, taking water. The semaphoi^
he asserted, was not displaced. Ho saw 1
the “stop” signals given by the rear
nmn, and had they been continued tho
train would have been stopped. He saw
the express lights fifteen seconds be
fore the crash.
James Troyer, the night operator at
King’® Court Junction, the next wit
ness. said the first call he heard from
London wa® to stop No. 5, the express
train, but it had Just gone by. He put
up the semnphoro Immediately.
Troyer said he was 16 years old. He
was In charge .it King’s Court for the
first time on the night of the accident.
Trior to his appointment ho had passed
an examination, which lasted twenty
minute®. He wa* not familiar with the
telegraph call for King’s Court, and
wns In tho office for some tlmo before
ho heard the dispatcher cnll him.
Careon. the Watford station agent,
was recalled, nnd reiterated the state
ment® made yesterday. A number of
copies of orders were put on exhibition
nnd were submitted as evidence. All
icelled orders had been an-
mitloc] by MDdlnc a Mcond order. Car- LOUIHIVIU.K, Ky.. Dec. JO.—A bold
^o'7r^«m^ , V.nc y el2d t by r 1h? W by a ..me robber to
patcher simply saying: "Bust It.’’ “°* < * U D tba New Orleuns-Clnctnnatl
Carson said that nil paper® and books ! northbound exprees of the Louisville
In the Watfdrd office had been taken ‘ and Nashville railroad as the train was
possession of by the assistant superln- j entering tiouth Louisville at 2;SQ o’clock
tendent. leaving him without means of 1 thlH m ,,. n | ni , Tho
Kubstantlating his claim in regard to j , 8 rnorn,n 8^ Th e hlghwuymnn secured
this method of cancelling orders. j but * ,ll ' e boot y ft nd is believed to have
been shot by the
FOREIGNERS MUST SKIP..
TANGIER, Morocco, Dec. 30.—For
eigner® in the Interior of Morocco have
been advised to mako for the coast,
provision® are scarce nnd communku-
tl'-ns are almost closed. The pretendi
himself Is reported to bo twenty miles
from Fez.
AMERICAN MlftfHOVAHIEM IN FF.RII.
KANSAS CITY. Doc. 30.—Eight ml®
elonarles who are working In Morocco
under tli«* direction of the Gospel Ml®
slonary Vnlon, whoso headquarter*
ill Kansas City, are said to be In peril
At Fez nre stationed Georgo C. Reed of
Kansas City*, formerly of Nebraska,
secretary of the Morocco mission, and
Mrs. Wvlllvcr of Minnesota. Marie Ca
rey of Emporia, Kan., Irene Ward, Av-
oca., Ia., and Nollle Alson of Alabama.
Another party now at Maqulnez is
composed of F. C. Enyart of Kansas
City and Victor Swanson of Nebraska.
This town Is forty miles west of Fez.
Mr. Fisher believes that Chrlstlun
missionaries would be slain If captured
by the fanatical rebels.
LONE ROBBER STOPS
AN L. & N. EXPRESS
SAXONS ARE LOSING
RESPECT FOR THRONE
Scandal Created by Flight of the Crown Princess
Causes King George to Name Special Commission
to Try Suit for Divorce—Her Father Thinks Her a
Lunatic.
BERLIN, Dec. 30.—King George of .
Saxony hns ordered the preparation of
a full official account of the elopement
of tho Crown Princess Louise nnd tho
circumstances leudlng It up to it for
the Saxon people, among whom thq
most fantastic stories arc In circula
tion, to tho detriment of the state, es
pecially with reference to the future
king.
The scandal Is undermining, accord
ing to some opinions, the people’s loy
alty and respect for tho throne. The
dynasty being Catholic and the people
Protestant, the affair Is being utilized
for sectarian controversy. The king’s
statement, doubtless, will follow tho
lino Indicated In the Intimations, sup
plied to tho newspaper® having court
Icunlngs, published today, ufTlrmlm;
that tho crown princes®’ sole reason for
eloping was her relations with Profe®-
BOr Giron, and that documentary pro d®
have been found that the elopement
lmd long been In preparation. Tho
stories of 111 treatment on the part of
her husband, of oppressive*'court
monial und of her fettered exlstonc
elapsed us inventions.
Tho crown princes®’ own account of
th'* immediate cause of her flight from
Salzburg, written to an Intimate friend,
presumably the Prlnc<*Hs Thar ••■so of Bn*
vuria, was teltgraphod from Munich
this morning. It nays hor father, tin*
grand duke of Tuscany, intended to Im
prison his daughter either In a lunatlo
unylum or In an Italian convent. Ho
had already consulted tho court physi
cian and several medical authorities In
Vienna, with the old-. t of obtaining
certificate® warranting him In shutting
her Up. Iler father, the crown prtn-
cop:i adds, ha® given her no time for
deliberation. H»* demanded, first, that
iilm bf taken under guard to Dresden
to> apologize to the crown prlnc®, apd
that she then choose between confine
ment In a convent or In a madhouse.
DRESDEN, Saxony. Deo. 80.—King
(feorgt* has appointed a special court of
seven Judges to try th® suit for dlvorc®
which th** erown prince has dooldad to
liiHtliut® against the crown prlncoss.
.Simula
• Condnc
ad Tlio
r»f u Si.
Ith W1
Carson could not
the exact
1 received a can-
Ung order In tho form of “bust It."
t said that for six weeks prior to the
night of the accident ho alone had’ been
The* firejietJiooverid at 7:30 p. m.,
when onlyMA\ty-ftve of the 37G em-
ployei work. One of the
twenty-nvc c< not been accounted for
at a late tonight, but the others
got out b^uv of fire escapes, the
staliway fwl j* book room, In which
they were oijng, being already In
names warning came
totnt forrr ,oking clouds of smoko.
AV hen the y ( >*epartment arrived tho
only thing 4 mould he done was t
tempted to get out of the country, but
that he was run down by the tti>
well-known young lady in this commu- .
nlty. The whole matter Is wrapped In
mystery. This story Is told by prominent
citizens living in that section. It Is
Impossible to verify It tonight on account
of there being no telegraph or telephone
connections there."
'doing the work previously done by two
* men.
George Hicks, Carson’s assistant at
WASHINGTON. Dec. JO.—The n
try of agriculture has Issued lh<
establishing a quarantine
Sect January 1, bat It is not operativ
against the ether state® until Februa
ry 1. Except in this respect, the provi
sions of the order are* Identical with
that in previous years. The proscribed
territory indu Arkansas, Tenr/^*«.
Virginia and . I -r.it. h } outh of them.
WatTord, told the Jury that he had
seen orders cancelled by marking them
“busted,-" but was not suro that such
orders as he had seen had been marked
“o. k."
The coroner gave the evidence to the
Jury at 8 o'clock.
CABINET TAKES NO ACTION.
WASHINGTON. Dec. 80.—Today's
meeting of the cabinet was brief, the
passion consuming less than an hour.
Fecretary Hay had lltt!e
conductor, - J, D.
Keene. Keene wus going through the
sleeper. In which -were the porter, the
Pullman, conductor and one passenger,
J. E. *Moore. A masked man sprang
from a dark corner and commanded
him to throw up his hands. Keene in
stead grappled with the Inttuder. A
bullet from the robber’s pistol stunned
him and the highwayman pulled' the
signal cord. While the train was slow
ing down *he robbed the Pullman con
ductor and Mr. Moore, securing $25
from the latter. As the train ’stopped
the robber left the car. Conductor
Keene meanwhile had recovered his
senses, and, having secured a Win
chester, left the train In pursuit of his
assailant. He fired several
I the latter ■
r uti
DEMOCRACY AND
THE PRESIDENCY
Senator Clay of Georgia Favors Parker of New York
or Gorman of Maryland for Nominees—If Demo
crats Lose Next Race They Will Be in Crippled
Condition.
FIFTEEN FIRMS.
of
Ire Pnts Then
Wharton, Tex.
WHARTON. Tex.. Dec. 80.—Kir.
day destroyed a block of frnnie
brick business houses, causing u
Htlmated at 960,000. Fifteen firms
put out of business.
DIPHTHERIA* ON TIIAINHS
of the Iloyn lfn
Dlrd of the
WASHINGTON. Dec. 30.—A die pal ch
received at the navy department tod ly
from Capt. Wise stationed at Key
West, reports an outbreak of dlphth;*
rla on board the United States training
ship Buffalo, which arrived today it
Pensacola. Two of the boys died of the
disease, Guy Charles Pattlson, ng*l
18 years, of Silver Creek, New York,
nnd Robert Emmett Carney, of Kanka
kee, III. There were a half dozen diph
theria patients aboard the Buffalo, but
Capt. Wise added that all were im
proving^
ALCOHOL IS NOT
SAME AS WHISKY
ATLANTA, D«o. SO,—Senator Clay
va« ly the* city for a few hours today.
l< will l“;ive for Washington the lat-
••r part of tho week and ha* promised
T<
ell
go
vlth hln
Now York In February und attend tho
annual banquet to bo given In that
city by the Georgia Society of Now
York city.
H**nator Clay In speaking of national
politic® said:
“Tho Democracy has a hard fight on
its humlb, with tho senate und hous •
Doth Republican, und u large majority
against us la tho aer.uti-, no sensible
man can claim It will bo un easy tusk
to win in tho next national election.
However with tho people united und a.
platform that will command the sup
port of the business Interests of thn
country we are not without hope o'
'We
must have
it the VOtei
Indiana, C
to elsct
•xt
Cnmpt
(gists of Coin
Not to Psy tli
Wright Infor
That They Ar
sent to the cabinet on the Venezuelan bcllev
question or upon other matter® relat-
lng to foreign affairs. It Is understood .
to be the hope and expectation of the I ‘ man j n * ^
president and his advisors that, upon national c
the receipt of President Castro's repljf | athletli
to the arbitration proposition, th*
lies will agree to raise the bloc
established by them over Venezuelan I U, *J'**
porta. Su-h action. In the view of this} The statements of C
gover ment. v.ould place tht questional nf !d Pullman Conduct<
In controversy In excellent shape for I Positive that but one
1 In the robbery.
r and after one of them the ! druggists by a letter Just receivec l.y i»x C( j governor. Then,
ittered a.cry of pain. Keene [Collector Andrews from Comptroller-Gen- a ,), fl ij,juration, ho <
his shot went true, ersl Wright, In which hs Is instn® r, l no* l {<■■■
I-
u de
true.
»r Keene was removed to a [ to
Hla wound, however, is not j Hr
He is said to be the strongest n,
oulsvillc, and was at one time ar
champion In several amateur ; Ui
lasses. !
:e of the robber whom Keene I JJ
he shot had been found up to | q-|
®lng under
asked them
wMsky Beer
vluctor
ne | this
ult of the
WA.-m:
i .n N VJ.
following <
DuBols;
si rdeiu'kh iu:hi*itei>.
' MONTOOI!i-:UY ,\ . Ive. v> (j,
rice,the con- vid Lee, Andre" II* .. trd rind Hurt'
oof hole! to . Bates, colored, sentenced to be bangi
r>r or Mali- ;/iext Friday, wet*- to.Liy respited unti! i:» .7 AIL
'• r -v *riuar>’ 21 by Go\- ri.-- J-lks. 1 rown >ri ar.c
ifBrtvS |?!ir Ait citizens of Autauga county. In) dim'
J" ( ';^. r ur 7 »slng the t -pile, charged that th- torr->T>ondli
. . '0ire negroes were i: mb • of - b - : , • * d * x- -u*
orFlCBlR.
The Amer-
>day elected the
Rident. W. E. B.
is. Kelly Miller.
Ing alcohol
s. The tax i
the drug st<
. l ‘“V
t ry.
Lebi
the rob!
Jurctio
but
he train at
ley put him ,
and did not i
| “If the L
: (whilmlngly
' tiona! elect:
{ rlously crlj
fulntm W
r * ticket, mad
i ‘ will mn a i
t-lociu [ which had conspired 1
r. i hit*. n-
i houses an
1
Iri:r»k‘*. W li. Hi