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THKMACOK WMfcKLY TEiJGiUril: TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1886.-TWELVE PAGES,
THE INSIDE OF ATLANfA.
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS FOR MAIMED
CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS.
Atlanta, June 10.—Mr. W. H. Harrison, of the
Executive Department, ia arranging by enmities*
liat of the maimed Confederate eoldien who have
received the allowance granted them by the Legia-
lature to purchase wooden anna and leg*. These
have drawn the allowance to September, 1880, and
after that date will be entitled to draw swain upon
tnrking, through the Ordinary of their
respective counties, the proper application.
Blank applications will be sent the
various ordinaries in ample time, so as to avoid
trouble and expense to those applying. Those who
have heretofore applied but have since moved out
of the State will lose the benefit of the act, but
those who have moved into the State will be enti
tled to make application in the same manner as
the vest.
In looking over the names on the list I find the
following maimed Conft derates who have drawn
the allowance and the amounts credited to Bibb
and the adjoining counties:
Bibb—R. J. Anders n, private. Company
Twentieth Georgia, arm, $00; A. J. Braswell,
private, Company A, Twentieth Geordia, leg, f 75;
John Cribb, private. Company C, Forty-ninth
Georgia, leg. $100; Jas. P. Chapman, private, Cora
pany I, 8 xty first Georgia, leg, $75; Thomas Calls-
han, private, Company I, Ninth Georgia, leg, $100;
W. P. Cannon, private. Company P, Third Georgia,
arm, $40; W. M. Draw horn, private. Company D,
Thirtieth Georgia, arm. $60; Jas. B. Denton,
private, Company A, First Georgia, arm, $00: 8. E.
Eason, private. Company B, Seventeenth Georgia,
arm. $40; Charles Fcpkuer, private, Company C,
Third Alabama, leg, $100. Abner F. Gibson, private,
Third Alabama, arui, $80; Lloyd Harp, private.
Company C, 9th Kentucky, arm, $60; W. H. Hod-
nett, private, Compsny C, Twentysecood Georgia,
arm, $00; John W. Hunt, private, Fourteenth and
aid Fifty seventh Georgia, arm, $40; Thomas D.
Johnson, private. Company K, Fifty-ninth Georgia,
leg. $76; F. K. Knight, private, Ccinpany A, First
Confederate, arm, $00; Charles B. MassenWrg,
private. Company C, Eighth Georgia, arm, $$0; John
Vf. Martin, private. Company H, Sixth South Caro
lina, arm, $00; George C. Norris, private. Company
L Sixty-first Georgia, arm. $60; Joseph D. Proctor,
private. Company D, Forty-fifth Georgia, leg $100;
Jacob Rouse, private, Cointany.L, First Georgia,
leg. $100.
Houston—John A. Baker, private, Company H,
Thirteenth Geoigla, leg, $75; Hichard Brown, pri
vate, Company U, Forty fifth Georgia, leg, $1M);
W. M. Hayes, private. Company K, Twentieth
Georgia Cavalry, arm, $00; G W. Miller, private.
Company I. Sixty-first Georgia, leg, $10; J. Sol
private, Company C, Sixth Georgia, arm, $4'); W.
T. Sorrell, private, Company C, Sixth Georgia,
arm, $00.
Crawford-P. C. Bryce, private. Company F.
Fifty-seventh Georgia, leg, $100; W. B. Horn, pri
vate, Company F, Fifty-seventh Georgia, arm. (4
James Johnson, private. Com; any E, Sixth Geor-
g*a, arm, f GO; Robert 11. Knight, private, Company
K, Forty-filth Georgia, leg. $75.
Jonee—W. T. Alexander, private, Company E,
Thirty-second Ooorgia, leg, $75; V. B Clark, pri
vate, Company B, Twelfth Georgia, leg. $75; Mm.
T. Monts, private. Company D, Twenty-ninth
Georgia.
Twiggs—M*m. H. Boyle, private. Company A,
Arisons Battalion, leg, $100; Janice 8. Kent, private
Company 1, Twenty-sixth Georgia, arm. $60; J. R
Kelly, private. Company B, Fourteenth Georgia.
1«A $100; Reulien Manning, private. Company O,
Eighth Georgia, arm, $60; Wm. R. Mcthvin, private,
Company I, Sixth Georgia, ann, $00: H. T. head,
private, Company G, Forty-eighth Georgia,
$0). •
CAMPAIGN NOTICE AND COMMENT?,
Atlanta, June 19.—The elections held to-day In
the bunch of alleged Gordon o: unties rather stim
ulated political discussion here on the streets,
which had In n great measure died out since last
Tuesday. It was noticeable, however, that nobody
away from the Gordon headquarters seemed dis
posed to attach much weight to the result in Uieee
counties. The great boom that the Constitution
has prepared for to-morrow, In the event all the
counties are delivered to Oordon that they claim
to hold a lien on, has boon pretty thoroughly
punctured, and it will certainly fall
here, even if Ooraon gets all hla
Gee. A prominent Gordon politi lan
yastenLy evening, "Oordon will carry nine of the
counties that act/’ It Is intimated that in the Broad
street headquarters it was expected Gordon would
carry all the counties.
An observer of itoliUcal events and Constitution
methods said to me to-day: "If tbs vote*to-day
puts Oordon In the lead~tt the bunching of Oordou
counties proves successful, look out for a Constitu
tion Uhls to-morrow. It hss not besn able to pub
lish ons yet, bat it hss occupied much of its time in
' abusing ths ons prepared by the TaLKonarn. In
case Oordou gets a vote In the 1-ad to morrow it
will be wonderful if they do not come out in a flam
tag tabic.
THK TKLKOSArn'S TAHLK.
The TaLEuaarH'e table has been of value to those
who have rellod upon ths Constitution's report vf
the progress of the camoslgu.
In a knot of gentlemen this morning, whose pro
fessional work keeps them out of politics, one of
them acid: "I have been readlog only ths Consti
tution till a'fsw.dsys’.sgo, when I took up tho Tkl-
bouapb. Until that time I believed General Our
don waa in ths lead in the counties that have so far
acted.** Another gentlsman.dted two such casco
this morning that J>*d; corns, to his personal
knowledge.
It ie well enough to bring thcoo facts homo dally
to tho public.
cHKcamo NEWS.
Au interesting letter was received hire to-day
from a well-known gentleman In Dalton. It con
tained chaeriog news of the campaign in Whitfield
for Major Bacon, and concluded by saying: "The
•boom’ bee culminated and the outlook] ie encour
aging and improving; changes made now are i
from Gordon."
▲ prominent citlxen of Wilkinson county was
the city yesterday and said hla county would go for
Beeon aolidty—that nine out of ovary ten were for
him. Reports such as these preach here.svery day,
Editor Christopher, of tho Moutezeuma Record,
visited the Tucuum bureau this morning. He
is onthusiaatic as to Bacon's prospects, and says
than Is no doubt at all about Macon county.
BOTES.
The Oordon men hers are again Jubilant and ap
pear to think the fight ie settled. It ie quite evi
dent, however, that they don’t think so. They are
probably a little disappointed that they didn't bag
all the counties.
Tbs friends of Major Bacon in Monroe county
had better be on their guard and doubly vigilant.
A desperate effort will bo made from hero to carry
tho county for Gordon.
KAdoee fight may be looked for in Coweta? and
Troup. Gentlemen fr jm'thoee counties, on ^both
tides concede that they are.donbtful and the result
uncertain.
of the passenger coach turned the rails
down on the tide and that the passenger
and two coachta ran for two hundrtd yards in the
groove before the coupling gave way. The engine,
bspgAge. express car, and the second class cosob,
kept to the track, and were not injured in any way.
The coach and sleepers although not torn up, are
pretty badly bruised and scarred. A transfer was
necessary, and as soon as assistance could be re
ceived. it waa made. A passenger train came down
to the scene of the accident from Charlotte and car
ried all northern bound passengers, who had come
up from Atlanta on the north bound train to Char
lotte, while the train from Atlsnta turned back
with the passengers who were on their way South.
The sleepers and passenger ccach that were derailed,
contained a good list of passengers. Although all of
them sustained a good shaking up, only two of
them were Injured In any way. W. O. Wheeler, a
merchant of New Orleans, was painfully bruised
about the shoulders. He says that his shoulders
are ao much swollen that he cannot as yet deter
mine the extent of bis, injuries. He stated to
day that he Intended entering suit against the road
for $5000 damages. J. E. Wilkinson, of 289 road
way New York, one of the leading officers of Picker-
ton's detective agency, bad hie left knee Injured
■lightly. He treits the matter ligbt'y, and says
that no one on the train was hurt to amount to
anything.
This morning the north bound local freight of
fje Western and Atlantic left tho track about five
miles from Atlanta. Several of the freight cars
were pretty badly imashed up. None of the c ew
of the train was hurt in any way. The cause of the
accident is laid to an insufficiency of spikes in the
rails that were changed a few days ago when the
track gauge of the road was altered. Tho outward
bound passenger train of the Western and Atlantic,
which waa to have left here this morning, did not
get off until this afternoon on accornt of the
smash-up, and for the same reason an excursion
train, which was to have gone to Yining's Station,
was taken off, and tho excursionists compelled to
remain st home.
NO MORE POOL BELLING.
Prohibition Going into Eff'-ct-Meetlng of
the City Council.
Atlanta, June 7.—Ihe city council of Atlanta
mashed pool selling on baseball out of evUteuce
at its session this afternoon.
Councilman Garrett offered an ordinance which
makes it unlawful to purchase or sell llqaors, or to
rout a building for the sale of liquors, or to uso a
building for that purpose in the city of Atlan'a
after July 1st The ordinance also provides thst
the police judge shall have jurisdiction iu the pre
mises, aud makes thepnrehsaer as much of a crim
inal as the seller and the man who rents the house
amenable to the law as the man who uses his build
ing for the sale of liquor.
He said that Lis object tn presenting
the ordinance was to put Atlanta on rec
ord aa a city that will see to It that the btate prohi
bition laws shall be enforced.
Councilman Angler moved to ameud the ordi
nance by Inserting “patent medicines ’ where al
cohol waa used in their manufacture. The amend
moot waa vote 1 down.
Aldermeu Collier, Cooper and Angler opposed the
ordinance, giving as their reason that the Btate
was amply abl« to take care of itself, and that a de
fendant under the ordinance would be compelled
go to trial twice for the same offense.
A motion to lay on the table waa lost by a vo'e of
yeaa H, nays 9.
Tha ordinance wM then refei red to the police
committee and the city attorney.
The ordinance prohibiting pool selling In Atlanta
on baseball games waa read the third time aud
passed. The ordinance gcea into effect July 1, arm
with prohibition.
A resolution waa th»n offered by Alderman Stock-
dell, and unanimously adopted, instructing the
Police Commission to direct the police force to
to it that prohibition waa rigidly enforced.
Several members of the council who are anti-
prohibition lata, it ia understood, voted for the re
solution rim ply to make prohibition as unpopular
aa it Is possible for it to be, and will make it a per
sonal matter to see that the law is rigidly enforced.
They asy that they want to give the
prohibitionists the full benefit of prohibition.
A resolution waa offured and reftrrod to the com
mittee on legislation looking to an application to
the LegMature for an amendment of the city char
ter ao as to allow an appesl from tho action of the
city assessors in assessing property.
GLADSTONE'S APPEAL.
Van GBAUD ODD MAN'S MANIFESTO
TO lllS CONSTITUENTS.
Shall Ir.-li.ml lie Governed by Coercion, <
Shall She lie Allowed to Monaco Her
Own Affairs— The Great .Jura
tion of the Hour.
London, Jnne 13.—Gladsone has issued
the following manifesto:
To the electors of Midlothian—Gentle
men: In consequence of the defeat of the
bill for the better government of Ireland,
the ministry advised and Her Majesty was
pleased to sanction the dissolution of Par
liament, for the decieion by the nation of
the gravest and likewise the nimplert issue
that ban been submitted to it for half a cen
tury. It is only a sense of the gravity of this
issue whch induces me, at a period
of life when nature cries aloud for
repose, to seek, after sittiDgin thirteen Par
liaments, a seat in a fourteenth, and with
this view to solicit for the filth time the
honor of your confidence.
At the last election I endeavored in my
addresses and speeches to impress upon
you the fact that a great crisis lisa arrived
in the affairs ot Ireland. Weak as the late
government was for ordinary purposes, it
bad great advantages for dealing wi'h that
crisis. A comprehensive measure proceeding
from that government would have received
warm aud extensive aupport from within
the Liberal party and would probably have
closed tho Irish controversy within the
present session, and have left the Parlia
ment of 1833 free to prosecute the now
stagnant work of ordinary legislation, with
multitude of questions it includes. My
earnest hope was to support the lastcakiuet
in such a course of.policy.
berg not Irish Now they approach ninety,
and aro entitled to say, “We are speaking
tho views of the Irish nation.”
It is impossible to deal with
this subject by half measures. They are
strong iu their numbers, strong in lirilish
support, which bionght 313 members to
vote for their country ; strongest of all in
the sense of being right.
But, gentlemen, we have done our part;
the rest remains for yon. Electors of the
country,may you be enabled to sec through
and cast away all delusion, refuse evil and
choose good.
I hove the honor to bo, gentlemen, your
faithful and grateful servant,
W. E. Gladstone.
BLOODY BELFAST.
ITS STREETS BUSSING WITH BLOOD
AND LOOTED LIQUORS.
SERIOUS RIOT AT SLIGO.
ItAILRO vD AITD6JSTS.
One on the Rle’.m-m.l aa«t Danville and An
other on the Western nndL Atlantic.-.
AVLasr*. June 1—Two ml nal eecldeeUar* r,-
pofted fcodey. The fint of than to eernr we. .At
Coarpaa*. oo U*. lh.-hut-iott ud Denvtltw ttsib<m-l
yesterday afternoon .bout X o'clock, ebon t«.
sad a pmept coach of the thru-", I
aoath tweet tic In loft tho track nhilo tenia, i
cam to a deep nt u Hue piece. The ooocho
*ed loft in that poafUen by the hnekls, of th
nt|lit| The run of the eertdent to attnbntel
’ to lee .I lending at the track, which had not V«
•peked. U o.... that the wheel*
110,000 OFFERED.
An Atlanta Man Who IS.ts on the Tele
graph's Accuracy.
Atlanta, June 9.—1 heard MV.rel gentlemen con
vanln* Lira on hiomUy. They were tllacuaslng
the canipalzn. One gentlemen, who Ie qulto rich
1:
'you neei not toll me nbet the TALX.inArn eeye,
fur It will not toll the truth eny more then the Con-
etitutlnn; I don't believe citier paper."
Bed another men of no email mean,. "Welt,
how many charge, bee the Tnumiurii brought
egetnet Oordon t"
"Ob, I don't haow, no tern than a thou,end nuj
how."
Well, air, f 10 apiece for each of the thenaand
charge la too tbonaand dollar*. I will hat
yon that money that the TtLeoupii will prove
every one of tto thousand or more charge, egnhut
Oordon."
■Oh, well, that Ie an tmpoaalbla hat,"
"All right. If It to I'U offer yon thia: I’ll bet yon
•100 that the Tu.no nam will prove eny etngle one
of thoae thousand charges that yon may pick oat.'
The conversation branched off to other point,
the campaign.
"Many Voter." Heard From.
Atlasta, Jnno 11.—A rant deal of goaelp and
dlecaaalon of tbo cam pa Urn Unde tto way to tho
T elec turn bureau. Much of Ihla to from gontle-
men who do not dee Ire to bo quoted
la the newapapera hut a grant
deal of It cornea from memorable
Democratic landmarks, for jlopwK end pro tow.
pqMim have not been heard from yet, but “Many
Voter,." which to tollable Democratic authority,
■eat In the following tbla morning, which Ie fur-
warded yon aa a good specimen:
A rKUTtEEST qCEaTloE.
finder the heed of ‘Tho True Ueroes." tho Amort-
can rultlrator very truly eeye:
“We are glad to vee that In Ihe pragrammea of the
military reuulono of tn* coming Bummer.he -eu-
luted men' era having good pierce ewinned them.
It la the sergeant, end corporal, mid private, woo
merit th.*hlghe t honors, not ih. commanding
generals that mad. the soldiers. Only In battle
picture, at. vtctortM son by a tnaml riding at
furtou, atwd tn advance of bis lino Into tho rank,
of tho enemy. In real hetltoe th. msjor gen.nl
can do little for the lighting men ease to dlrrct
them to go Into the slaughter. Ooly In th. confer
ring of honor, and reward, la It iho commending
general that doe. ell."
Now, wonld It not be a good plan for the people
of Deoryle who In the past voted against tn* empty
eleeve ot Col. Oco. N. taster end of Copt. W. T.
Newman, and Ih* empty trouser* leg of (ton W.
Walker »t d Col. “Tele" Kmlth. to bold np a little
their mad hurrah for Qeneral Oordon? I, b. ('
only .outer thst ha. nm for offlea and failed to
no in la sled or olactedf Wo hardly tb'ok an.
Many VoTEns,
A Sorrowful Journey,
Atlseta. Juno W —About a week ago Mr. J.
T. Phelps. a wealthy wholesale dealer aod Importer
of piece good., of BalUmovo. left homo, ecvooi-
panic 1 by hlv wife aud danghter, to visit the f,
llyof Mr. fid. Peters, of Hite city. On th. way
Atlanta Ur*. Fn.lpo became sick, atiteken w
some brain affection, and when th
Uy re*, had Atlanta it was
th*
wrioi
w mid probably prove fatal. Ia*t night th. la,
died at th. mltenc. of Mr. Patera, an.|ul1
tho body, encased tn .handsome casket. waa pL
hi th. esprwM cor of to. air Luto, and tho
raavtd and distressed fsdter and daughter I
tbau scute on th. trsla fur the tad trie heme,
was s sorrowful termination if what had I
ttetpotoc as a ylvwsrt visit, falter and daughter
iwcei.ed wane vymialhy from many good p
ef Atlanta.
Terrible Scenes nr Thursday Night anil
P'rhlay Morales-Firing by the Po
lice— Invincible M- b—.Men ami
Women Having Drunk.
such a course ot>policy. «
On tho 2Gth of last January th" opposite
lolicy of coercion was declared to have
>een the choice of the government, the
Earl of Carnarvon alone refusing to share
it The Irish question waa thus placed
the foreground, to the exclusion of every
other. The hour, as all felt, was come,
and the only point remaining to determine
was the manner in which it wus to he dealt
with. In my judgment, the proposal of
coercion was not justified by the facto, and
was doomed to certain ttud disgraceful
failure. Some method of governing Ire
land other than coerei in ought, us I
thought, to he sought for and to be fouud.
Therefore, I viewed with regret the fall of
the late cabinet, and when summoned by
Her Majesty to form a new one, I under
took it on the basis of an anti-coercion pol
icy, with the fullest explanations
those whose aid I sought,
colleagues, when I proposed to
examine whether it might not be possible
to grant Ireland a domestic legislature and
maintain the honor and consolidate the
unity of the empire. A government was
formed and the work was at once put iu
hand.
You will now, gentlemen, understand
how end why it is that the affairs of Ire
land, and not tor the first time, have thrust
aside every other atihjcct and ad
journed our hopes of useful
and progressive legislation. As a
question of tho first necessities of social
order, it forces itself into the van. The
late cabinet, though right in giving it Unit
place, were, os wq thought, wrong in their
manner of treating it. It wap an absolute
duty, on taking the government, if we did'
not*adopt their method*, lo propoie another.
Thus, g.-ntlemen, it is that Ihis great and
simple issue haa come uuon you aud ilo-
mauds your decision. Will you govern Ire
land by coercion or Will yon let Ireland
maaage her own affairs?
To debate in this address this and that
detail of the lately defeated bill wonld only
he to disguise this issue, snd would he ns
futile as to discuss the holting, stumbling,
ever-shiiting and ever-vanishing projects of
an intermediate c ass which havo proceeded
from seceding Liberals. Thereuretwoolenr,
positive snd intelligible pi rns before the
world. There is the plan of the government
and there ie the plan of Lord
Salisbury. Oar plan is that Ireland
should, nmler well conside ed conditions,
transact her own affair*. His plan is to
ask Parlisment to renew repressive laws
and enforce them res .lately for twenty
years, bv the end of which time he assure*
us that Ireland will be fit to accept any gov
ernment in the way of local government,
on the repeal ot the coercion laws, yon may
wish to give her.
t leave thia Tory project to speak for it
self, in its nnadorntd simplicity, and I
turn to the proposed policy of the govern
ment. Onropponento, gentlemen, whether
Toriee or seceders, have assumed the name
of Uuioniata. I deny them the title to it.
In intention, indeed, we ere ell unionists,
alike; but the union they refuse to
modify is in its present shape
paper union, obtained by force and
trend, snd never sanctioned or accepted
by the Irish nation. They are not unionists,
but paper unionists. We have less nniou
between Great Britain and Irelaud now
than we had under the settlement of 1782.
Enfranchised Ireland, gentlemen, asks,
through her lawful representatives, for a
revival of her domestic legislature—not, on
the face of it, an innovating, but a re
storative proposal. She urges, with
truth, that the centralization of parlia
ment has been a division of the people,
bnt A recognized the fact that union,
lawlessly ss it was obtained, cannot and
ought not to be repealed. She is con
tent to receive her legislature in a form
divested of prerogatives which might have
impaired her imperial interests, anal better
adapted than the settlement of 1782
to secure to her regular control
of her own affairs. She hss
not repelled, but has welcomed,
the stipulations for the protection of tne
minority. To such provisions we have
given, and shall give, careful hied. But I
trait Scotland will condemn the attempts
so singularly made to impart into the con
troversy the venomous element of religious
bigotry. Let her take warning by the de
plorable riots in Ballast, and other places
in the north.
Among Ihe benefits, gentlemen, I antici
pate from your acceptance of our policy
an these: The consolidation of the united
empire snd a gnat addition to its
strength; the stoppage of the heavy, con
stant and demorahziog waste of the public
treasure; the abatement and gradual ex
tinction of ignoble feuds in -Ireland, and
that development of her resources wbic i
experience shows to be a natural conse
quence of free and orderly government; the
redemption of the honur of Great
Britain from the stigma fastened upon
her almost from time immemorial in re
spect to Ireland by the judgment of the
s hole civilized world; and, lastly, the res
toration of Parliament to its dignity and
efficiency, and the regular progress of the
business of the conntry.
Well, gentlemen, the first question I now
put to yon is, how shall Ireland be gov
erned? There is another question behind
it and iuvolv-d in it: How are England
and Scotland to be eove-med? Yoa know
ho v, for ihe last siz years especially, the
affair* of England and* Scotland have been
impeded, snd your imperial Parliament
discredited ami disabled. All this happen
while th* Nationalist* ware but a ami
minority of ths Irish members, without
support from sc much as a handful of mcra-
Catholic* Attack and Wreck Protcptenta 1
floufte'n— Uliqitn*eil by tho Military.
Slico, June 13.—The residence of a lead
ing Orangeman was burned last night by a
mob. Tho military charged and shot some
of the rioters. Extra police have been
drafted. The town baB been quiet to day.
The rioting was originated by Catholics,
who wi ro angry because somebody bad de
stroyed the rails surrounding the* Bishop's
palace. They gathered in thousands and
attacked the houses of Protestants
and molested snd hooted many per
song. The windows of every bouse
in which it was known that
protestant dwelt were smashed. Tbo Coun
ty Club house, the Constitutional Club, the
Methodist manse, the residence of the Con
gregational minister and several chapels
were attacked and wrecked. The Orange
men made no attempt to retali
ate. Tho mayor, a Nationalist, and
several Catholic magistrates penetrated to
the front of the mob and tried to appease
the note's, bnt without avail. The not act
was then rend and the soldiers were ordered
to clear the streets with their bayonets. A
general stampede ensued, during which six
teen rioters were arrested.
Lauk Hill, June 13.—The house belong
ing to Matthew Smith, an Eulisbman, and
a large manufacturer of boots, was de
stroyed by tire to-day. The fire waa started
by incendiaries with paraffine, the key
holes having been previously stuffed by
the miscrennts. The family, including
five children, were nearly burned to death
before tbey could be rescued.
Mr. Davis, crown solicitor, fired a re
volver and dispireod the crowd that was
tryii g to wreck his residence. Largo mili
tary and police reinforcements haveairived,
and the town is now quiet.
PRIVATE TOM SB*Y
Belfast, June 11.—An associated press
reporter who wag detailed to remain on the
scene of the riot, at 5 o'clock this moruiog
reported us follows: I remained among
the rioters all night. The greatest damage
done in the way of wrecking snd looting
was done along Shankbill snd York roads.
Fighting in both tfaoronghfares was des
perate aud co-'liuti tl". The mob was wm-
E osed of ruffims. Bayonets and police
ad no terror for them, aud in many cases
I saw the mob iu great numbers press np
egaiust the bayonets of tho police aud
drive them back. The only instances
in which the police drove the mob
at all to tsr as I observed,
are those where the officers in
compact lines tired at cb-se range rapid
volleys of buckshot. These the rioiers could
not stand against, and they were driven
hack, but even under such firing the
rioters would drop to the pavement and
rush upon tbo police while they were
reloading. Fighting of this kind at such
close range as to be practically hand to
band, was continued until 2 a. at., when
twilight began to dawn, and so many dis
appeared as to leave the mob of insutficiei-t
strength to longer cope with armed police,
who succeeded in dispersing them.
CUAUACTKR OF TUB tlOB.
My obseivatinn shows that the mob of
last night was composed of the very scum
of Belfast. I saw members of it throwing
stones weighing fifteen or twenty pounds.
I even saw fiends hurling rocks as gallant
firemen who were imperilling their lives ill
attempts to save dwellings from burningby
incendiary fires and helpless inmates from
horrible deaths. If anything else were
wauling to prove tho chura-ter of the mob
it would tie furuishtd by iloz-ns of ruffians
saw during ihe night sneaking
ixtend. McCloakey and fam-l-
number of his Catholic n'i,-hb„' M
rescued from the fury of themTi
Orangeman, who took them to vn V
and there gave them gaf« retage. **
LATKB.
London, .Jane 11.—The rovornra
placed the dintiicto terrorized bv
in the province ot Uthter, uuLr ! 1
liw. 0
Fact* mill Fleur?*
02Z&&JBi£L£tiiEf 1
Bfc iur Kara ot I.ouUUua, aud Jub.l a v .**'
ginU. when $205.5jo «*, actuated £ rl,cf
"“bd. ‘t icket No. 711,241 dre» th, s,.""
pnie. which waa sold in fraction. .“L?
each; oiie-flftu waa held ha W. Hunt £•**
collected throjsh City National n,’ n k“
Ale ; another Bfth collected I»ns.rt w2,%
& Co.’s Bank »f Ban Frauciavo Cri.
Harry Johnston, collected tbron K h tW 1
Stedweil, Esq., triin master 0. 0 C It*
Cleu Uud, O.; another to John 01»on
Fourth atreet. New York city, cj&S'J
Adame Express Company; and
tos-ey. West Kuoaburu. Vl. mliected
Notional Park Hank at New Fork ci,. ,? 1
he rep-at-d on Tuesday, July I3th.
Ilea tb-reof can lie lied on applicant
Dauphin, New Orleans, La.
Nominated tar Governor of Alabama by the
State Democratic Convention.
Montoomekt, Ala., June 11—The Demr-.
cratio convention to-day nominated Hon.
Tom Seay, of Greensboro, for Governor of
Alabama. The nomination was made on
the thirtieth ballot, the convention having
been in session two days. The contest was
heated from the outset, and enthusiasm
ran nt tever heat. The excitemeut wus
(re iter than on any other similar occasion
n this State since the war. McKleroy
withdrew yesterday, but Dawson and Clay
ton remained and refused to withdraw to
the lost.
The nomination of Tom Seay over two
strong mou, who have grown old in poli
tics, tnaiks an event that has no par
allel in Alabama's history. It is a glonons
triumph for one ami an honorable defeat
for three. Seay is a young man, still un
der forty, and younger by twenty yearn
than either Dawson or Clayton.
Seay entered tho convention with a small
er vote than either of hisopponeuto, e cepl
McKL roy. He gained gradually but surely
aud wus finally nominated in a straight
contest over the two remaining opponents,
line by one connty delegations went over to
Hear. On the thirtieth ballet tho fight was
won, and then the nomination was made
unanimous.
A committee waa sent for Mr. Seay, and
on hla arrival he accepted ths high honor in
gracefnl speech.
Mr. Hray was a private in theCcnfederate
He is a prominent lawyer aud
I
away frim bnning buildings laden
down ni h loot. It is impossible
describe tbo state of terror under which re
spect .hie Catholic people are now li iog in
cousi qui nce of the prevalent anarchy and
bigitrj. The bravest of them hardly dare
to venture out of doors in da} light 1 know
that scor- s ot people were shot during last
night's riot. 1 saw ten taken to the hos
pital this morning. It is feared that every
fuueral of a victim of the riot may pro
voke a fresh outbreak. Law-abiding citi
zens demand of tho government tbo up-
po'ntment of a special commission to en
quire the cause of the whole disaster.
TKS LIVES FOB ONE.
The rioting last night was less disastrous
than on Wednesday. After their daj’s
labor had emled, thousands of workingmen
gathered in the vicinity of Bower’s Hill
police barracks. Tbey execrated the po ice
and ctied out:
“We will have ten lives for every one of
the murdered girls.”
The connty police were then with
drawn, and some well known local
constables were sent to reui-on with tho
moti. The latter demanded tbo withdrawal
of the troops. Archdeacon Lever and sere-
nil Presbyterian clergy implored the mob
to dispone. Their nddresses were useless.
Even while tho clergymen were spo.ikiug,
the noters kept up d-sultury stouo throw
ing at the police. One stunt- struck adiiino
in the face and hurt him severely. Captain
Lost range, resident magistrate, who was
present, was strnek by a biick on the
bead. When the pri nebers cease-!, tbo mob
surged up to the gate of the barracks and
defied the police to come anil take a fight.
Things went on this way until about 10
o'cb c-k, when two troops of dragoons gal
loped up. They Were followed by 2lX) in
fantry. Thera m-n being under arms, tbe
nu b was for a moment powerless with sur-
p rise, and dispersed,
AT A PIST‘ IL'.S Pol ST.
A Kentuckian Threatens to Kill , C1 .
cauae She Will Not Mart, Ulii, r
Toledo, Jnne 8 — A. IL Hardy s ,
society man, whose father is
Kentuckian, and who is n grand™-
Confederate General llurdy, was r«t
committed to the workhouse for »a ^
on Miss Ella Deviaux while 6hew«,,
st a leading hotel. Yonng Hardy U
home in Lebanon, Ky., a few yean m
became one of the most popular yonM
in Cincinnati. He was tntrodnwd tol
Deveuux, of Cleveland, and they,J
came firm fiiends. But Hardy solid
level of a professional gambler. '
His relations disowned him and
friendship was broken. Yesterday he,
ot a leading hotel in this city, when'
Deveaux wusatopping. Forcing an it 1
into her room, he told her that it i|
not leave the hotel with him and,
him tit once he would kill her. Hi
choked her and drew a revolver on h>
was hurried to the police sto'ion k
porters nt the hot> 1 and a palietnw
was colb d in to prevent trouble.
Miss Deveaux is a handsome jonni
well connected, and is about ‘
over the affair.
The Itosaitalts Henmlj,
BO 1AD 11.19 ia s sovereign r-n;-:li: r i
cf the blood. It has no equal for the tun
cut disorders. Head this:
1 wonld like to bear testimony to tha
Rosedalie, hysaylug that a-ime eight ]«
wo* total!) i-nisiratod. sail i-nnM ii-t n„ r-
our family phyeti-Un. Let sftsr tskma
linsa-'etts I became entirely rsatumitobJ
now weigh l'i'i llis , but when 1 fir*: :.i
tnedktne I weighed only 131. 1 ,-b—r: li
mend It lo all. snd especially to 111 -, if '
nervous debility. Mss A. a 1
Belli
Louisiumi State
"We do hereby certify that w* m ,
rangemeau for all the Monthly andq
luge of Thu Louisiana Husta Lottery (
In person manege end control the Di
aelvee, snd that th* seme ere con<i«tr4 «
eaty, fairness, and In good faith tovari S
and we authorlxe the Company louoti.it
with fae-aimlllee of onr signature* stuck
advertisements."
army,
planter, lie is a people’s muu raiLer limn
a politician. He wus not nominated by
political wettings, bnt by s people's love j * The run a »’ujK soon, however, breamu
» id trust and confidence. His opponent
were all pnre snd nble mm, but the great
tiesrt nf the people was fixed on Private
Tom Se»y.
Alabama could not select a man better
fitted to preside over her destiuus snd sf ■
fair a of borne government.
Til K mKSXXT STATE UFFICEBH HEXUUINATtl).
The cunv ntiun made rapid work with
the rest of its nominations. All the
| detent nfflcials were ra-nominated --
X C. Lsngdon, secretory of state; T. N.
McClellan, attorney general; F. It (Smith,
treasurer; 8 P. Palmer, superintendent of
education; M.C.Barke,sndit,)r,and the pres
ent Supremo Bench—O. IV. Stone, chief
justice, and David Clopton snd II. K.
Somerville, associates. The contest be
tween Chief Justice Stone end J. T. Heflin
was close. There was no opposition to the
associated justices.
Resolution* were (doited endorsi'g
President Cleveland's administration, after
which the convention adjourned sine die.
PRANKS OF DU It Naval TUB3.
The Brooklyn Runs tuiu Ihe Ysntle Out
ou the Open Sea by Daylight,
From the New York Sun.
According to folks who were there, the
K< rth Atlantic Squadron had an nnbsppy
time getting into this port to help along
the Decoration Day ceremonies. The
squsdroB got here four days late, and the
cause of the delay is now being investigated
by the Navy Department The explanation
of the delay is thst on the morning of ths
22d of May the guubost Brooklyn ran into
the Yantic.
At 9:1S o'clock thst morning, when the
squadron was 100 miles off the Jers-y coast
coming np to Sew York, Rear Admiral
Joneti, on board the flagship Tennessee, or
dered tne war ship* to sail eu echelon. Ten
minutes later he s'gmdled the order.
“Line abreast.” In changing her coarse
the Brooklyn strnek the Yantic on Ihe star
board quarter and carried away her mixzen
topmast aod the Brooklyn lest her flying
j*
Jouett decided that be would remain out of
port until the ship* could be repaired. The
Brooklyn famished the Yantic with s miz-
zen topmast, the Tennessee came to the
rescue with a t'gallantiuast, snd the Brook
lyn got from her own supplies sails and
spars.
In the meantime the steering gear of the
Galena became tired and wonldn't work,
bnt after two daya' delay the deet w.s filed
np, and Admiral Jouett ordered it to moke
for this po L Comm toiler Green waa in
command of the Yantic. Captain Matthews
waa in command of the Brooklyn, and
Captain Boyd aailed the fiigabtp. Ihe
folks who were there raid lest night the
Brooklyn was to blame f >r the accident.
PROHIBITION EXi-ITrMEST.
A Mab of Negro Aalto Attempt to Break
Onirrix. Jane 12.—Tb* i»robft*ir!*m qnoticn to
day kae been warm, ax. 4 there baa mo a great
deal of Mcttrmmt ou ihm itrari. Ibto evading
IU*. W. F. nirktold was • peeking to a crowd ou
trill atrret, **Uri* lL« eofcsrad as tlx tstfsbtJ ky
falling* tktnking ttcrab to hrtak np the auntsg.
bnt tto attempt faikd. Their d«tc >ci!raUoa km
earned mbj changes nf utto to ft* ycoka.
itoimtl aud murotd to tbo acme, warmly
ob' triuR Ibe HoldtetH. Tbo Uttar bud tukeu
We, the undersigned Banka sad I
nay all Prizes drawn tn The L•■tof
ts rine which tuny be present*! at 0
J. H. OGLESBY. PrwMrnt UcWxn* 5 at ton]
of the Htn-etH around the Ear- J. W. JOLBRETjl, rre*U*«t 8l*t«.wtor
rucks uud cordoned them effectLely. Tbe A- BAUiWIS. PrexUent \
luoli, rtuli/tiitf the tuiprcgDuViluy of tbe
police pottiiiou, departed ia Mectioim, eurs-
lbR tbe IN>pc, debuuuciitR boom rule, uud
uiuKiug •'Omu^e Lily" uud "Kule Uritun-
Dlu." While ud tbU wiw y«»ing ou at Dow-
tr’h Hill barraekH the mob hud taken
roh.st>HioN or youk ktukkt.
They tir.st concctitruted iu front of u wine
store kept by a Catholic nuuied McKenn*.
The butldiriR wuh «tiz d uud wrecked, uud
all of MolC tiiuVu Mtock of wiue emptied
into the Htreet. Tbe m*«b tbeu proceeded to
McCloakey*u tuvirn. The police had taken
warning and koL there tiro. A. tl<bt took
pUce. It wiui waged with desperation on
both fideu. Tbe police ttred twenty-six
rouudu of bockhbot at tbe rloteru, but the
mob drove them away, and Hiuu»hed Me*
Clehkey'a tavern, diatribujug tbe
liquors to all who would driuk or
curry tbe liquor aw ay. Ke7end riotem were
wounded in this tight and were hft helple.w
iu the a.net by their cjrnrmU*, who,
incorporated in IMS for 11 j
tore for Educational and Cberiubto p
a capital or $l,(Xw,uoo-4o which a r
over $150,000 baa vinca been added.
By an overwhelming popular vo*
was tuarin a part of tha present BUW 1
adopted December 2d, k. D., 1879.
Tbe only lottery aver voted on ui «
the people of any Bute.
It neverecalee or postpones.
Its Grsnit Single Xuinhcr L
place Monthly, tin! the Utnorau
fngs regularly every three m«»i»
Semi-Annually as heretofore.
March. 188*. _
Jt SPLENDID OrWkTtntlTl TO
SEVENTH It It AND DBAWINOCUW 1 »
ACADEMY OF MUSIC. NEW (>BlAC«-»
JUiY lath lSW"~194ttl JtnnUilj l***"
CAPITAL PRIZE f‘ s
TIOKITS Onlv tft. 8l»r" '
CAPITAL PRIM. *75,
100,000 Tickets at Five MUrri
bons in Piflhs ia Frof
LIST OF PBI2DL
1 CAPITAL PRIZE
MADDENED WITH LKJUOB,
rnahed to tho work of wreck aud pillage.
A unub-r of tavern* were deatroved uud
ail their * took a ot wine, whisky and 1°
bter tl.rowa out to tbo enwd, who 90
drunk it ruvenoitaly and carried it away
in jug*. In tbe latter work score*
of women aud cbil IrenJ were engaged *11
tbe time the rioting litutad.
Toward* midnight the mob, after having
wrecked and looted all tbe tavern* iu the
vicinity, returned to McClcskey’* and net
it on tire. The glare Attracted the po
lice, who reformed And marched down
there to put out tbe tire
And save tbe town from conflagration They
hari*to ficht for every foot of ground. W ten
the flame* flan d high the Night of nni
formed othceiK ncattered among the ta^b,
each o(fleer fighting on hi* own account, or m. A. DAtJFBltt*
.. lhe Mm ® , dl £? l , ion » eve, .y niHn Washington, »• G*
2 PHIZES or $4000
9,000
LOW)
500
100
torn) do ss -
Ar»to.Ss.T«.*/«?“
» Approximation Pillea ef
_j « " I*"”'
1IM7 Prise*. smounUns *»..••v"",
ApplL-attoea for rale* to *
only to the uffirr of the comrayj
for further tnformatlim write j
address. POSTAL .VuTtS. f
New York Exchange tn enllnarr*'
ty express (at oueipeoMl. * “
N.wf
ft ft™' ft Tuft"
~ rasa. z'SF-JtiSrte
and carried on their battle with buckshot, tors to .
This eventually nattered the mob and the NKW ORLEANS NATIo*t*_
firs nt MeCTtaker vs outed before it conlil MajiSwadaaUw
“TALBOTJ
EiijjinoH. 1^°'
Siiav and
Griat
AND MACHINE!!!’ '
‘lions" Cotton
, SIMPLEST, FAFEST ml MOiT DURABLE. All Mocliine y !
Do not biy without flrst its n; m, «r wiring for onr piicatonic^
yon Want. A. dr ,,,
TALBOTT & SONS, M»com»
J. C. WFAVER, Mmatrer.