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WILL YOU HELP?
la the great contest which is to be fought between now and the next presidential election far
THE PEOPLE’S MONEY—’Ite Coinage of both Ml and Sllttr, without discrimination; which means
free coinage of both as opposed to the policy of contraction, which is being dictated by England,
which levies tribute on every product of the farm, on valuations of all kinds and on all compensation
labor. /
ThO Great Issue now * the double standard against the single standard—the use of both gold and
silver as standard money metals, against the organized effort to hold the currency of the country strictly
tc the gold basis.
THE ATLANTA circulation, ise.ooo.
WEEKLY CONSTITUTION
G&, Wf ’
published at ATLANTA, and having . s,
A CIRCULATION OP MORE THAN 156,000, chiefly among the farmers of the
Country, and going to more homes than any weekly newspaper published on the face of the earth k
Th6 Loading Champion Of tho People in this as well as in other great contests in which
they are engaged against the exactions of monopoly.
By special arrangement with The Constitution the paper publishing this announcement k prepared to make
A REMARKABLE CLUBBING OFFER, by which both thk paper and The Constitution
will be offered for one year at almost the price of a year’s subscription to one paper.
BOTH PAPERS FOR $ 1 . 7 5
............. .................................................
THE CONSTITUTION 18 THE BICCEST AND BEST WEEKLY
PAPER published in America, covering the news of the world, having correspondents in every city
in America, and public in the capitals It of is Europe, and reporting in full the details of debates in congress on
all questions of interest. , *
THE GREAT SOUTHERN WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, andas the exponent of southern
opinion and the purveyor of southern news it has no equal on thc ‘continent.
THE CONSTITUTION’S SPECIAL FEATURES
are such as are not to be found in any other paper in America.
TUB FARM AND FARMER'S DEPARTMENT,
THE WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT,
THE CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT,
arc all under able direction and are specially attractive to those to whom these departments are addressed.
Under the editorial managemement of Clark Howell, its special contributors are writers of such world-wide
reputation as Mark Twain, Bret Harte, Frank R. Stockton, Joel Chandler Harris, and hun¬
dreds of others, while it offers weekly service from such writers as Bill Arp, Sarye Plunkett,
Wallace that P. commends Reed, Frank it L. Stanton, fireside and Viboinia others, who Texas, give its literary Missouri features a peculiar Southern
flavor to every from to from to California. \
Do Not Delay, but send your name now. If you are already a subscriber to your home paper, and
want The Constitution only, communicate with The Constitution direct, and send One Dollar
one publishing year’s subscription The with Constitution, your guess in the prize contest. You can get your home paper, however,
thk, and for almost the price of one, and remember that all clubbing
subscriptions must be sent to thk paper and not to The Constitution.
THE CONSTITUTION I* among the few great newspapers publishing daily editions on the side
the people againet European Domination of our money system, and it heartily advocates:
1st. The Free Coinage of 8llver,
of Believing that the establishment of a single gold*staudard will wreck the prosperity of the great masses
subsidy. the people, though it may profit the few who have already grown rich by federal protection and federal
2 d. Tariff Reform*
Believing duties that by actual throwing oar ports of the open to the markets of the world and levying only enough import
to pay the expenses government, the people will be lietter served than by making
them pay double prices for protection’s sake.
3d. An Income Tax,
Believing that those who who have have little. much property should bear the burdens of government in the earns pro¬
to those ♦
OUR LONDON
London, Nov. 12 .—-It is
that the world is treated to such
exhibition of deplorable taste
that afforded by Emperor
of Germany in connection with
death of the czar. Although
ed early in the day that the
agony had commenced and
barely a few hours could elapse
fore the great autocrat drew his
breath, he nevertheless saw fit
attend that seme afternoon a
mental banquet at Stettin.
The* news of the demise
brought to him while at table and,
instead of withdrawing instantly,
as both courtesy and decency
manded, he found <othing
to do than to rise to his feet, com¬
municating the intelligence to
fellow guests and immediately
terward to deliver one of his en¬
thusiastic and impulsive speeches,
hailing the accession to the Rus¬
sian throne of the Grand Duke
Nicholas as a piece of good fortune
for Germany; lauding him to the
skies and finally asking every
present to. drink to the health
the new. czar with a hip, hip,
rah ! the regimental band
the national anthem.
What made ' the matter even
worse was that the regiment
whose mesa this extraordinary
ifestation of bad taste was made
was the very corps of which the
late czar was the honorary colonel
and in which his successor bolds a
commission. In tbe circumstances
the German monarch would get
nothing but his deserts were young
Czar Nicholas to sever all connec¬
tion with the German army.
^ Emperor ■■IMPV William’s conduct pm- I
aents a striking contrast with that
observed at every other cotirt of
Europe. President Casimir-Perier,
the chkf magistrate of France, im
- «
inediutely countermanded all the
entertainments and festivities, nay,
even the shooting parties that were
to have taken place during the
present month.
Emperor William’s condition is
once more creating great alarm
among his entourage and family.
His ear malady has again assumed
a very aggravating form and is
causing him intolerable agony,
which prevents his sleeping at
night. It is everywhere admitted
that the recent political crisis re¬
sulting in the fall of Count Caprivi
and Count Eulenberg would never
have taken place had the emperor
acted with calmness and modera¬
tion, the affair having been prima¬
rily due to his extraordinary irrita¬
bility and impatience.
He is, moreover, developing
many of the traits of eccentricity
which immediately preceded the
placing under restraint of the late
King Louis of Bavaria on the score
of insanity. Thus, he rises in the
middle of the night and spends
hours trying on various uniforms in
front of huge mirrors. This was a
favorite diversion of King Louis.
Then, too, he has copied the latter
by having a carriage built which is
lighted in the most profuse manner
with electric lights, so that it looks
like a meteor when dashing through
the streets at night.
When it is remembered that his
ear malady is incurable and that in
the -course of time the cancerous
and decomposing process steadily
progressing onwnrd is bound to
reach the brain, just as it did id the
case of his similarlv afflicted grand
uncle, King Frederick William IV.,
who died insane, it will be admit
ted th%t ^ , {Mmi]y , t PoU .
, as well as Germans of every
class and degree, have grounds for
* •crioo* alarm and apprehension.
j Of course there is no truth what
| | soever in the statement contained
in the J-ondon World to the effect
that Queen Victoria has sent kind
messages of congratulations to
Lord Conneijmra on his approach¬
ing marriage to Mrs. Coleman.
The Queen holds particularly strict
views on the subject of morality,
and it was she above everyone else
who insisted on his resignation of
the lucrative office of governor of
Madras when the divorce court had
decided that the charges brought
against him by his unfortunate
wife were true. ,
There have been few more shock
ing divorce cases of late years than
that of Lord and Lady Connemara,
and even the most cynical man
about-town in l^ondon Yum could not
but condemn and a cold
der toward “Bobby Bourke” Lord
Connemara. •,
The bride-elect, who can scarce
ly be credited with a superabundant
amount of delicacy and whose im
bition to become a peeress must
render her totally blind to every
consideration of self-respect, enjoys
an income of about $ 100,000 a year,
a charge on her first husband’s es¬
tate, besides which she has a con¬
siderable sum of ready money, the
proceeds of a lot of stocks and
bonds which after Mr. Coleman’s
death she had found east aside
with a number of valueless papers
in an old deal-box in the garret! of
her bouse in Grosveaor square.
Lord Carnarvon, qrboee engage¬
ment to Miss WomtfWell has just
been announced, k well known in
tbe U. S., where he spent con¬
siderable time under the name of
Lord Porte Hester p e ev i oue to his
father’s death. About 37
old, he is heir of tbe famous earl of
Chesterfield and has in hk
smb nearly all the papers and cor¬
respondence of that celebrated peer.
_ Cash
Two Thousand Dollars in Prizes
To those who take advantage of this clubbing offer The Constitution will distribute Two
Dollars id CASH PRI2ES, by the lblipwing plan: We have placed in a seated et>
in the State, keeping legal of the Treasurer of like the State of Georgia, and locked in the great vaults
the a tender note, which all federal paper currency is numbered, each note of
denomination issued by the government having its own number. The number on this particular Bote
oompoeed of eight figures, and on the arrangement of these figures at they 1 8D0ear Oil the
depends the distribution of the two thousand dollare in prizes offered
The following the number figures of the compose note: \ C 9 Jl "W" A 4 ■■W"# m 9 O
j
though of course they are not given hero in the order in which they appear on the note.
To those who iu sending with their subscriptions a rearrangement of these figures so as to give the number as it
k on the note, we will distribute prizes as follows:
SSI OOO ^ CASH to the person who.givea the number of the note,
SSOO TN CASH to the person who, not giving the exact number, comes nearest doing so .
$250 TN CASH to the person jvho comes second nearest.
g|QQ IN CASH to the person who comes third nearest.
850 IN CASH to the perron who conics fourth nearest.
" IJ “' T ” '
$30 TN CASH to the person who comes fifth nearest. ■
0 | Q IN CASH to the pers on who comes sixth nearest
$ f O TN CASH to the person who comevscventh nearest
85 TN CASH to the person coming eighth nearest
85 IN CASH to the p erson coming ninth nearest
Jgg IN ASH to t he persou coming tenth nearest
IN CASH to the persop comin g eleventh nearest.
85 TN CA SH to the person coming twelfth nearest.
85 TN CASH to the person coming thirteenth nearest
85 ^ CASH to the person c orning fourteenth nearest.
$5 TN CASH to the person coming fifteenth nearest
Each of those prizes wilM>e delivered in cash, subject to the following conditions: ( 1 st). Each guess must
accompany a clubbing subscription to the paper publishing this announce ment and The Constitutional
the above announced clubbing rate, which must be in cash. (2d). All clubbing subscriptions must be
sent through tne paper making this publication and not to The Constitution. (3d). This offer k to be
closed on the first of May, 1895, and guesses received with subscriptions after that time will mot be
counted in tho distribution of these prizes. (4th). Should there be any ties in the guesses, the prize*
will lie divided. (5th). Every new or renewal subscription to cither of the tiro papers will be entitled t &
a guess with every subscription.
YF msaimi Ml* #tflAIAVI<PIIVIfltl (1N ST I 11 TI (J N
If | hcjLrtn advocates an
oIUlv ChTt* tr 'TWFZ' X XX Cr r'If»PR\ UXCXvXj’Xv , v> r'V x
Until there k enough of it in circulation to do the ligitimate business of the country.
If you wish to help in shaping legislation to these ends, GIVE THE CONSTITUTION YOUR ASSIST¬
ANCE, lend it a helping band in the fight, and remember that by so doing you will help yourself, heljf
your neighbors, and help your country!
AS A NEWSPAPER:
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION has no equal iu America! Its news reports COVSr the world,
and its correspondents and agents are to be found in almost every baliwick in toe Southern and Western
States.
AS A MAGAZINE:
It prints more such matter as k ordinarily found in the great magazines of the country than can be gotten
even from the best of them.
AS AN EDUCATOR: It k a school house within itself, and a year’s reading of THE CONSTITU¬
TION k a liberal education to any one.
AS A FRIEND AND COMPANION : It brings cheer and comfort to the firodde every week,’
k eagerly sought by the children, contains valuable information for the mother, end k tS IDCyclA*'
padia Of instruction for every member of the household.
But little is known of him or re
lated of him in London, save of his
strange intimacy with the swarthy
young Indian prince, Victor Dhu
leep Singh, son of that maharajah
of the Punjaub who wi s t! e origi
nal proprietor of that huge Koh-i
Noor diamond that now figures
among England’s crown jewels.
Young Dhuleep Singh, who
holds a commission in an English
dragoon regiment, and young Lord
Carnarvon haV^b^r^ inseperable
for the last two years, the Indian
living entirely with the British
peer and accompanying him every¬
where.
A few months ago Lord Carnar¬
von was reported to be afflicted
“^er and to have undergone
• very dangerous and serious opera
tiob necessary to preserve his life.
Miss Wombwell is a daughter of
^ lllt popular sportsman, Sir George
Wombwell of Crimean fame. He
took part in the historic charge of
the light brigade at Baiaklava and
was one of the few who managed
to escape with hk life. • Made
prisoner by the Russians during a
melee a shell burst in the midst of
bk captors and he seized the op¬
portunity to knock one of them
from hk horse with a tremendous
blow of bis fist, to jump on the nag’s
back and to gallop to tbe Englkh
lines with tbe remnants of tbe
brigade. •
Miss Wombwell k an extremely
pretty girl, with clear complexion
and fair hair, rather over-dressed,
and has been seen about London a
good deal in .the company of her
aunt, the countess of Jersey, and of
the Rothecbilds,being usually found
at tbe opera in die box of Alfred
Rothschilds, the bachelor member
of the bouse, aod who was report¬
ed at one time to ha on the point of
marrying her. - La Bov.
OUR THANKSGIVING PICTURE
'
Every luberriber to Tks Times will re
cel vu absolutely free of cost and at a large
one Friday to us a Hue Thanksgiving water eoior pti-ture day tiiu tlvst
utter us
thanks offering to our suhsiri Iters. The
original ot this picture cost thousands of
dollars and we gi ve it free to our readers.
Tile picture has been reproduced from a
prime picture painted by one of the t most
successful artists in water colors—water
colors, by the way, are the present fad in
pictures, and tlic reproductions The are ns size per¬ is
fect as the original, a most.
12 3-4*17 1-2 inches mid la called "Which is
the sweeter?” It is really hard to decide
which is tlie sweeter, the stately, haired rich pink
tinted her ruses blue or the dress. golden The picture iieauty would ill
be cheap ijuaint Si if Umgliy from dealer. Tell
at a
your friends of our offer.
Warwick
■ sy i M
Sr
HHfoi
Bicycles
THE LEADER IN BICY¬
CLE CONSTRUCTION
The Warwick
Is the wheelman’s favorite. It
represents his ideas. It ia tbe
strongest of • tbe light wheels
and lightest of the strong
wheels. Every rider wants it
when ONCE HE SEES IT
Tbe ’94 models are rigid,hand
some light running and liber
all Ly guaranteed. fail
Don’t to ask to see them
You will be reasonably sure to
purchase. The goods which
Catalogue please are already free. half sold.
*
Warwick Cycle Mamfai Ct ■i'£
■
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v. -; ~_
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< ,- v ’ .' Amr'n,84., Augusta». m
, Bump» of THE ATLANTA ODBSTI'PUTIOK
n mkd package; nit) umbig 3 kg) under note. which
will be what“. to lay keeping until!“ Int 01’ my. 1896.
when it. will be opened w my pm Ind 1| cu-tilcuo
given of the number of Jawm‘imuu/ tho notofl . ‘
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Terre Haute, IndUtnapo^’
CHICAGO,
Milwaukee, St. ParV
«m mx raerrst* Tua
NORTH AND ftOffTHV
5. L ROGERS ; .v
Southern Passenger Agent,
Chattanooga, Txxn.
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