The Atlanta constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1885-19??, November 24, 1885, Image 5

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THE WEEKLY t^NSTITUTrON. ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY NOYEMBElt 24, 1885—SIXTEEN PAGES. TALES OF TRAVEL SnrgirU tad Zta Peopla-Not Cowardly and S«- w .statu!. u Oltan Beprtioaud—a right Ut Life-Bow John v. aay Boatura* • Oaif of apiobM -Ochar ztrnt. From the Ban FrancUco Argonaut. Is tbe apring of J870 the Bulgarian atroci tie* horrified the civilizoi world. Cruahed, hopoleaa and helpless, the Bulgarian* made no effort in self defense: Suleiman Pasha swore to exterminate the Christians o! Ron znolia and leave their country a desert. The Rcumelians offered so reeistance f but, like their countrymen across the Balkans, sullen ly submitted. For this tame acquiescence, this want of spirit, historians have called the Bulgarians and 'Roumelians cowards and sheep, and for their subsequent guerilla war- •re against the Turks, in Rat Rm-nilU they bsvo called them wolves. Both terms are urjuit. Bulgarians, Roumanians and Rou noelivna are neither cowardly nor revenge- nil. An eastern statesman likens them to the Germans. He thinks their-weakness as a nation due not to codardico or lasinesi, but to their peculiar development of individu- ality, resulting from thtie sudden leap from slavery to freedom, ire ascribes their inca pacity of self-government to their want of political appren iceshfp In leas than a hun dred years the Bulgarians, whose very name and language had become almost extinct, rose ftom the most abject servitude to substantial Independence. They are industrious, frugal, persevering. The Bulgarian ttudont makes vp for lack of brilliancy by undying patienci •ad application. The Bulgarian school, es toblifhid from patriotic zeal, has done won dert in educating the masses. Obstinate and alow to adopt new ideas, the Bulgarian holds them fast when he gets them. His religion, for which he fought so desperately, is, like the religion of all enslaved nations, marked by superstition; bis virtue—for among the native Bulgarians crimes of violeooj a-o rare— ia marred by lying, stealing, and the ■mall rogueries characteristic of subject races. That he is a rogue should surprise no one. when it Is remembered tbat for five huudred jesra he was tbe bondman of Turkey, a?d for astiher hundred years was ground undorthe bed of the Patriarch; that he was taxed and excommunicated by bishops, who had some times been barbers end cooks; that his prop erty was confiscated under charges which ne river beard; that tbe Turkish pashas, with brawling retinue, would stop at hfa home, eat his food, carry off his daughters, and kill him if he objected; tbat on the highway he was often forced to carry a lazy Turk on his back for mile*. All this he bore with no hope of re- dreie—the Constantinople officials were in lesgue with the pasha*, and both found a cop- lenient slave in him. Though morally and mentally he deteri orated under this alevery, pbyiioally be im proved. The Roumaniers end Balgarians of the present day are among the haudsxnest races in Europe. For centuries the lights pashas’ harems have come* from the banks o ho Danube. At Patiau. a little town on thsf river ban*, every woman is beautiful as an hour!. Tourists make pilgrimages there to are them. Thoy are a noble type—placid, maviive Janos, with solemn black brows, heavy-lidded, velvet eyes, skins naturally olive, but artificially tinted, and profiles woithy to be stamped on Roman ooins. Peas ant girls wear thoir hair—of a dull, lusterless black—hanging down to their (set, sometimes twitted with beads and flowers, but generally unconfined, when it envelops them like e cloak. Standing about the village fountains of an evening, their massivo figures straight as arrows, their earthen jars poised on*their hi ads with one large, white arm raised to steady them, these handsome peasant girls, giggliDgand gossiping in the red afterglow, make a group Tor isouguereau. , The passion of tbe Roumanlan-Bulgarlan women is dress. To be dressed in clothes from Peris is to them the summer of earthly bliss, fashion is their goddoss, end even among the peasants she is exaoling. Each villtge has its particular ooslutns, and whoa a buxom belle enters e shop she mentions htr village, audit immediately shown the partic ular style of dress which is auppoied ts be thoroughly chio there. 8he shows a noble dis regard tor pomp and vanity, however, as ahe trudges home from market with the conven iently loose front of her white linen jacket filled with cabbages, turnips, eggs, and any other spoils of a shopping tour. But on her wedding day ahe is gorgeous—glittering with gists and amber beads, end covorod with really beautiful embroideries. The groom is like a brigand in the opera—he wears a rod hustar jacket, a green waistcoat (both a mass of embroidery), a red sash bristliog with sil ver-mounted revolvers and knivee; his white petticoats are tacked end stiffened till they ■tsnd out like a ballet dancer's, end hie shape ly Jrgs are covered with fawn-colored trowssra he * * *" A FIOHT FOR L1FS, John T. Slij Charges from Hie Darning House mud Scatters the Apaohes. The Darning, N. M , Tribune of November 12 give* an account of the Indian atrocities near tbat place. It says: On the Saturday preceding, a cavalry scout appeared at a rszch twenty miles from Doming with a bal let wound in his shoulder and reported an attack byalodtans. Same herdsmen started at once to give the alarm to the families of 8hy •nd Yeter, living near, but if ere Intercepted ARP IN FLORIDA. Xotnir's eofiottade-vae Deasptlve llauroad BoUeO ales-The Awkward Yount Mot Htr oa Board Mi Osrs With Bor Vina Baba- Bt, John’s Btvsr-Zaoidsnte. flames. They then made all haste to Dsming snd a force of militia, regular troops and citizens, forty in all, at once set out for the There is a daisy breeze and the waves dane. ...rr, w... .round ns. WJwt.roli.fiH. to by tho Indian, at .point wh.ro thoj could escape from tha can and find latitude and ■<e that the Yator building wu .lrendj in | Ion,Undo nnd freedom upon n room/ spacious steamer. W. lure on the St. John, now steam- Int; away for Sanford. Last night wo waited ranch.' On'approaching the place th.com- I .nd waited in Atlanta for the train that wat rb“« , d7adtoo i o^%r t rtrIilf i “Th. a p.r‘tj i S? du.at ipurand wrlr^nt siren. The.gent tbo road wore soon brought to n half bj tho *°’ d «• «>e train was only an hour behind, but barking ol n dog that had followed his master It wa. three. Bo told ur that wa would cor- out from town, nnd on going out of the road talnly reach Jaekaonrille at 7 thia morn, nnd a abort distance, they found Mr». Shy, wile ef I .., m,.• John T. Shy, nearly exhausted from fatigue I "• reached horn at 1 this oveuing. Thetraiu. and terror. She wee almoetwithout clothing, and in ht r cflort to hide from tbe party, which •he leered, were Indian!, had got her long hair so entangled in the brush that it wu a matter of difficulty to get her free. She- told ol the attack upon tha house, oi the wound ing of her boy and probable death of her husband. Captain A. B. Knowles, who bed accompanied the party in his buggy, offered to "take'her to town, but she ni j'im.tp take the buggy oa for her boy, tuu, she .said; would need it more than ahe, and wrapped In nn oyercoat, giren by one ot tho men, ehe mounted a horse nnd rode in accom panied by one man. The party that had taken tbe trail came into tne main road oh what is oalled the eecond divide, end here came upon a acene at horrible as unexpected. A.buckboard wat standing across the road, and qn cither aide of it LAY Tax DIAD BODIES of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Yuter. Mr. Yater "waa iyingnponhia face,just at he bad fallen from the buck board, with three wounda, two officials smiled 1 * smile when we told them what wee promised,'and they declared that not Cltngle iralh hid ever been on-time sinca-tho •chedule was published last May. That It waa generally two hours behind and frequently six Well, I don’t too any use in such deception. It may.pay in tha ahort run, but It won't pay.ln tho long run. Thoy arc doing n power of bua- Inest though. Tho cut wore crowded nnd tho sleeper too, I had to act up and bump around until wagot to Itacon nnd then I got nn upper berth for two dollars to Jacksonville. It was throe Irom Atlanta, and that ia too mnoh. I don't eoo why tho commission'don't regulate and reduce these sleeping cars. Tho journey was sot a pleasant one, for everything was out of joint, Our train had to giro war and be ewitebed off for every other train. Wa had to wait two hoars at Jeeup. Did you orsr aton at -JeeupT .1 reckon it Is a good piaoa to die A COM1NO MONBY KINO. klJV DUUkUUfilU, W1IU Vtiri-U WVUUUB, IHU I «WS*»|S| „a snvmvu I. am m (,00,1 pinuu wig as an through the body and one pi«t41 shot wound I in, for a man could leavo it with so little ra in tbe head at tho base oi tho left sar. wei probably killed instantly. What Mrs, Yater suffered may be imagined, bat will never be toid. As no shotgun wounds appsar upon the body, it is probable the Indu gret. Rather than live in Jeaup 1 would agroo to live—in vain. But Waycron is a nice place and seems to be on a boom. I like Wayorois. A nan's feelings depend very much on his surroundings. A mah is a kind of prisoner in a car, and fie feels it. Wo ware penned up tiro on a scat, end there were more women and children than thcro wore men uj."m »uu uuoy, is pruuauio vuo lauiuua sought to tako her alive, but the appearance of tne ground for thirty feet about the buck- board snowed she bad fought and struggled until tbe baffled devils became enraged and crushed her skull with their guns. Tne body waa completely stripped of clothing, except- ice.a.corset. • • 1 ... . The citizens ratched tho vicinity of the I The child cried all the time, an*S the fed it out ranch house. In two detachment, .om. time J oi n ipoon and wu dreadfully troubled, nnd I after dark. The first coming in tight of tho | could ace tho teara glisten in her eyes na aba Tterowae n good • looking young Mother with her flret child mndl wanted to htlpher mighty bad, for neither the nor her husband knew what to do with it nnd I thought that I did. •till smouldering ruins dismounted, and a few crawled np, cautiously watching for Indiana and searching iorSky and hit child. Boon tho other detachment arrived, nnd in lignat- tag each other gave evldenco of thoir proeenea t> Mr Sby, who was concealod In tho rooki high upon tho side of tho mountain, safe nnd unharmed. UR. BHT’a TSnatBLX FIOHT. It wa. about out o'olook in the afternoon, and Mr. John T. Sby, hie wife and olovon pair old soft had juat tented themselves at tho dinner tabio, when Mr. Shy’s attention was attracted by n noise outride of the house ns though something had atruok an empty box or n can, and turning hii eyes to tho win low ho beheld nn Indian, with his gun lot " " ready for ehooting, nnd right at the wii Mr. Sby yelled -Indians! Indians!" and dropping Irom hit chair, crawled across tho room for hi. Winchester, tuned to the window and fired, th. Indian firing at tho urn. timo, .0 that the two .hot. sounded almost together. In, mediately tha shots began to crash through tha plank, of th. bout, on nil .Idas, the In dian. firing at random, not oaring to take chance, bp!ore tho window. of tho house long enough to direct *n aim, at Shy was itching nil wlndosra at one., nnd .ending bull.! at every dusky form that eamo . sight. Mrs. Shy, terrorstricken and wildtird, ran from one room ts another, now on the floor, under a bed or up into tho loll. Tho firing lasted probably fifteen or twenty minute*, nnd thon suddenly ceased, proreed It to her botom. She is hero now on the boat ont ol tbo hot-dust and cladara and tha baby is all right. These panengor. era mixed—very much mixed. They are from til pert, of this great country nnd nr# docking to Florida. Bomo ol them are going to invest money, and lomo have already iuvostol, and some are invalid, end some era prospecting, etd evory day bring, n now crowd with In. nemo intent. Florida Is certainly on a boom. A. lor mo I hnvo no money to inveet and I nm not sick, but there i. n great trouble thst brings me here. I bar. two boys up thin riv.r working on n railroad from Orange City to Smyrna. They aro Tory dear to ui, nnd one ol them i. sick, very tick. H. wa. too young to drag n surveyor*. Chain through tho Florida swamps, and be is down with n lingering lever. Mia bone, had almost worn through hi. flesh before they let a. know it. When I got homo lut week I found n vacant ohnlr. My wife had beard of hsr boy nnd took tho rarlieit train. She has never traveled alone, but .he did not etop to think, (or her boy wu tick nnd ahe had not known it. Tho hot motherly tear, dropped from her eye. and nil ■be wanted to know wu how soon. Oh, how soon could .ho got to Sanford when ho bad bun moved to. Ob, thus bleuod mother.. I reed in account th. other day ot n poor widow S going Mon. irom Carolina to Taxes to nan. n ing boy, nnd such thing, almost ink that thia is n hard bird w wore better for a man that ho had born. iwentv minutes, ana men euauemv oeasea. ■ Yfcll, X had a telegrsnctelll _ and a votes on lbs oateld., In good English, I at one*, nnd 10 here am I, belptess, anxlsus seldi "Corns oat, John j wo no hurt you; wa and forlorn, trying to kill the tlms.nd hurry hooked up tha .Idu with an andtesa array of hooks end eyee, while, to template hUnppur. nice u a young blood, the bowl ol his pips towel, over bis bat, th. stem being .tuck dosen th. back ot hi. nock. H. is generally n lucky deg, for tha Bulgarian woman I. a gen tle eoul—warmhearted and kindly. Sts greets th. wnylnrar hospitably, giro, him n plte. before tb. In, end a .upper ot damper —•a expan.lv. dongb, which swells like c,rk inside him end make, his sloop n reign of terror. Rich Bulgarians and Roumanians at Soflj, Bukarest, and tha other targe cHiu, are grin- dee*. The women are handsome as ploturu. Large and la.y, they spud their days on dl- vsu, eating candies, smoking cigarette., and reading French novels, for all well educated Bulgarian, .peak French Ilk. Parisians. When they go out, th.y drive. Walking th.y abhor. A .tifl leather boot oa tho plump foot ef a Bulgarian bell* would onusher agony. Exertion bore, her; ebo is always languidly Isay and graceful, always gorgeously end gaudily dressed la the latest novelty from Paris, end always falling in nnd out of lore. To btr, divorce is a bagatelle. It .aldom cause, unpleasantness; everybody ram.in. on perfectly good terms with .vnybody also; it is nil n matter ot convenience; sbo and her husband don’t agree, that te all. After the divorce she marries some body else, nnd so on dn caps. Tho •heecssiv. member, of the dynasty ot hus band. are .11 friendly with each other and with her. When n Bulgarian boauty—let, ilbw, handsome nnd gorgeosu as n bird ot { aradlu—enters a ballroom, she bows to usbend No. 1, who is chatting to husband No. } in n eornsr; thon seeing husband No. 3 leaning on tha mantlepiec., aha blow, him n kiss, whispera n oofs nothing to No. 4, on whoa, arm th. leans, nnd nil th. time her dark, sleepy eye. sr* keeping n sharp lookout on th. door for tho .ntranc. ol tho prospective No. 6. A Roumanian grandee remarked one. of society at Bukarest: “Mar riage with na ratemblea n mazurka. In which cur ladic* Ink. n tarn firat with on. esvelter and then with another.” Another gnat diver sion of th* Bulgarian nnd Roumanian great lady, almoat ol more importance then her next change of partner., is b.r trip to Paris, fio give that up !• th. snbli.nMt of Mlf-sscri be*. Americana lov. P.ris, Rastinnandor.it, but Bulyutan. worship it. After b.r Slav in the gay capital, she comet back laden with Si.elolbM, and Hunt* them in the Iters of htr bosom friend, with refined cruelly. Htr tut.,' however, la itna- tirn-d eccentric Bay. n meant Dan- uhlan traveler: “Th. l.diM w« took on board her. ware .11 in magnificat tciteti of tfc. neweet French fashion; bat being of ns over smart description and pat oa In a slovenly meaner, gave tbs wsarars an up- sll-nigbtbb look anything but taking. Tha men were also dratted ia Fnnch fashion, and from their dark, tallow appearance and gen aril cast of fentnno showed clearly tbat their •ncre'.ora, tho Roman convicts, had largely Intermarried with the gypsies.” Ia foot, tha gentlemen in qnwtion, who introduced them- •elves as Roumanian price-., were In reality n ! penes of Oriental eon fidno. matt—.va riety of th* human species wUlch floarishM in Turkey sj elsewhere. good Indians; wn scouts.*’ Ur. Shy made no reply, nnd nn occasional shot now struck through tbo bouse, .bowing th. Indian, war. either anving their ammunition or arranging another plan of notion. Tb. houses of Shy nnd Yator wero .mail • uu juriuru, wciu iuv muo tuu uuu v f he houn along. A man can think nnd think nnd brood over tronblo until ht 1. unfit for anything, nnd so it it better to write and talk nnd look out upon nnlnra, nnd then tenet to n wise and n kind Frnvidano* who doath nil thing, wall. A f.w day. ago everything was niocaful and every prospect bright M box bouse., built just eight feet .part, the in- I Pioc.ful ana .very pro.pent orignt in oar tentlon having been to connect th. two bra I nouishold, end now wo are nil broken up, dte- porch, but tb. porch bed not boon built. Ye- I solved and scattered. No men know, what a ur’.housewns attbtetime unoccupied, tbo I d.y may bring forth. For eight bleuod y.er. lemily having gon. to Doming. When tho there b»» not been n irlof or n p.ln In onr lull come In the firing, Shy heard tho Indian, fondly. Nothing worth mont oning, nnd now break into Ynter's home, and presently know tbeofoud braDurst all oft auddsn. Thetbsy from the noit. they wer. ransacking the plaoo I* only 17 nnd hi. never given us any osra or •nd th.n tho terrible discovery came to him .nxloly—n blessed boy who loves ns and want ofT to tanka some money,nnd tho first bound* sent it homa to help hit sisters. But it Is all right end I havo tn abiding discovery that they jiad .it Hi. vo rxx nom, and that in n few minutes his house, too,would bo in flames, and h* nnd his family would have to taka their ohancoa on the outsldo. Ha waited until tha flttnu began to teak through and boy down from th* loft, directed thorn to • --~ r •-— v:. .',p: 12 keep close to him, and opening tho door made 1 there, and this I. one of them. But still how hope nnd faith that ha will pull through tha crisis. It la nohody’a business bat oura nnd I don’t know why I nm penning it harm Thar, aro .omo thing, that belong away down in tho deep recetee. ol ths hoert that bad better stay n dash for n hug. rock just below tho bouse. A. ho retched th. rock, five Indians (prang Irom behind it and fired, h. firing at the asms time •• fait •• he could work hi. Winchester. Th. Indian, fled ts tb. eov.r of n gulch twonty feet nwny. “You got on., pt; I ..w him drop,” raid Sby’. little boy, a. ho ran niter his mothir, who fled up tho guloh whan the Indian, .prang up from tha rook. Dit- covering that this rook wa. no protection, ho made far another higher np, ana there again •11 mat by Indians, who, like th* other., fired and ran to th. .halter of the waterway below. A. Shy geinod thia ehelter be hetrd tb. boy ceil out, "Ob, papa, I’m shot,” and looking in the direction uw the liltlo follow fallen well up on tn. aid. of th. mountain, nnd called to him to oravl d swn into tho rocks in th* gnlcb, which tho boy did. From that timo Mr. Bhy knew nothing of the wberesbouta of his wife and child. The Indian, remained with him until can a man help telling lomabody nnd reselling out for sympathy. This is th* river, th. only river that ran. north that I know of. It is n boiullfal stream and i. lut becoming n great artery of com- inorce. A few year, ago there war. but two bent, to monopolies tha basins.., and now there are fourteen tbat ply the water, of tho St. John. I am on the U. B. Plant now nnd somehow I wu glnd that it wu her day, lor I (eel mors at home under that name and ban- Mr. Plant it one ol Georgia's noblest iocs, and I nm glad to know that Ms ventures have all bean n sacoes*. He In another Illus tration of whnt the on* man power can do. Well, I do hop. your peopl. will b. otlm and serene over your election. Too many hard words havo been said already—word* that will burn long niter tb. election is ovor. There are three great thing., nnd tb. greatest of all is charity, nnd f four sons of your good p»plt hnvt forgotten it. I wu down in An niston lut wtvu nnd hurd n good men talk nearly dark, .very now end then springing nlstcn lut week and heard . good man talk into eight end firing n volley into at. fort, I about prohibition therm H. sold h. did.nt end he returning tho lira u fut u h. could I know whit it would do for Atlanta but it bad work the tun. From his position he could see only In on. direction, nnd knew not whsu tb. enemy left him. The Indians .vid sally test nil track of the wile nnd boy lor thoy mad. no attempt to get to thorn, or it is likely they did not du. TO TAXI TSI CBAXCCS of Shy’s rifi. on th.opan ground over whioh they would have had to puo to reach them. Therew.ro twelve Aniche. in light at ono timo, and how with all th. .hooting ths fam ily escaped 1. .Imply miraculous. Frtm where tb. boy wu lying he cnitd look down the valley end uw in. Indians when th.y mounted their horses nnd rods out of Ut. valley. Soma lime after th. little follow, hemming very cold, crawled up to the fire of tbo house to warm binuall, and was there it.n by bin mother trom her hiding place. She fearing Indians war. .tilt about, mode her woy to him on htr hands and kaoti, and dragged him mm. litUo woy back into tho rocke, and thsa at tempted to c.rry him, but finding .ht could not ebo took off her ikirla, wrapped him in them—tor he wa very cold—hid him tew in the rook., and charging him not to .peak, no matter what ho heard, etsrted icrou th. mountain, for Iteming. She passed within n ebort distance of tho bodiei of th. Voters’, 1 . bnt ont ol tho road, tad travelled on until I “ t him hnvt it, bat mat by tho parly frtm town. | my and bn knows it, Tb* Laird party were In th* vicinity of Ur. Bhy lor som* timo btfora ho bmom. satisfied they wer* friends nnd ha attracted their at fention. Some ono called oat: -1. that you, Shy? ’ H» Anewuad,"Yee;" then, "Ar. you hurt?” Ho told: “No; but I’m afraid my wife and bo; ar* dead.” Than n child's voice called out ft im tho rooks almost under the feet of the > .to,“No, pi, I’m not deal," aid thst wu tb* first that wu known of his where* bents. Th* boy wu abot one inah above the groat worked wondera for Anniston. Stid ha: “The year before wo voted whisky out we mtd* twenty thouand dollar* at our bar, nnd .vary Saturday evening nnd night nnd Sunday the men were wutmg their wages there, and thrnr children nveded shoes, nnd stockings, and blanket., nnd tb.ir wire, were ltd sad ctroltn, and th. money w* made at that bar did me do good and I /.It conscience smitten ail the time, and ao we talked It nil orsr nnd concluded to vote it ont, nnd I took tha field and talked to th* men, and got on boxes and made them spoeebu nnd they ■11 agreed that whisky and bur were na good and must go, nnd we voted it ont, and now our thoastnd laborers, white and black.are caving money nnd have got it in benk, and they send their children to school nnd to church, nnd lhay nil wear good clothss, and their wive. nr. happy, and their children hold up their heads, and wo hero built thorn churches and school boniM,nnd fixed np their cotl.ga homes, ana so Anniston now is not whit Anniston wu th.n. Bat.till/’uld he, ”wo who went to ladalg. ouruirM nnd .re able to do it, her. oar wine, and our bser when wo want it. A poor man eon no more ■Herd to hnvo whisky th.n he ean afford t. have fin. carpet., and curtains, and n carriage and hones. When he gets nbi. to hsv. w:ne, it is th. poor man’, on.- , It is th.lsbsring man’s wont enemy, end they hsv. rated It out of Anni.ton of their own accord. Bo let it go. But il Atlanta wants it nnd think, .h. can af ford it, why, let her hup it, that*, all. Lit every community attend to their own basi nets.” I write this much on that subject because I •aw n paragraph In Tm Coxatitctio* that raid Anniston wu sorry ah. hod voted pro hibition. Bill Atr. Banal Dccldt. ud AfiL Ennbodv should rend the tug. ndverttsmnmt ucro sciatic notch of lb. pMvb, .poteiagnp. Vtmbodj .■brm'Q 'y*a_tn^lAra« a«Tasii»».ni wards etd ont it the groin. Ciotsin Knowles tnpmnte^MUaurwrt of*utip«pir. *1^. otter brought tb. U tl. tallow to town In Us baggy, i.Vu "r.l “e, s"d“ould Suxioi Ivauiaaeol end by me ruing the family war. nnltel again by ever} resder of Tnx Ooavtitviio*. How A Rebel Soldier Boy Made His Way In Haw York. Jdstflre yearn ago there wu revolution among tho reliroAdi ol the south. Frag monte ol raids woe bought, rehabilitated and welded into eys- tem» u If by angle. Stocks that went begging at ten or twenty cent, .udfienly soared np toper, .ndjlhen doubling for .tut dlssler flights, took breath at two hunored and tumbled! Greet fortunes were made In that feverish period -end lost It wu tne ton ot n espper lor n hua< died thousand- and many mon tossed who had to borrow tho copper. The stock, climbed Irregu larly, for olten and anon tbe vetoront ol Wall slrift would conspire to tap the "Southern Ian- clcr,” u they were colled, and shako ont tha southern lamb.. Just u n dock wu getting well up with mush, some observant bur would butt It tideways to a "•lump,” and In this low ground ot ..now the tambi wandered disconsolate. Brtond the flurry ot speculation, largely per. tenet In Its character, tho general results ot tho movyment ware Important to tha public. Dis jointed roads were brought together, broken link, wero built, local and contrary administration! were luted, through schnlnln were arranged for solid trains, old rails were supplanted with steel rickety rond,bede were ballasted,and sleeping cars boudoir can, haul can, end buffet can were edited 10 the Improved equipment. Nearly 4,030 mile, ot new road, were built, and forty lour bourn from New York to New Orleans without change ot eating houses, summed up theprogrosa th njaoagcnient and equipment. There Is undoubted proof that another great movement tn southern railroad! Is about to beglo. Tho ft cent sharp and sustained advance In loath- cm mllrud lecuritie. Is the but evidence ol whst Is niffy going ou bentnd tho soonc. Near let me give yon • pointer! Next time the retimed map ot the tenth it. re con.bncted von wilt retd a new asm. between tbe line. Whose? Lctusso.1 About fire ;c«rs ego I wrote a skotoh ot n young confederate boy who went to New York, bsrelv twenty years old, with his parol. In ona pookat and ouo hand red dollar. In tbo other, Thst was •11 hf luta. The testimony ot his courago nnd do- rotten, and the price ol n inlt ol clotboi and n month', hoam I I wont on to thoir how that rebel boy, In tbo taco Ot Judleo .gainst southerners, fought his way lotbtrfraut, winning In a few years .princely fortune, and better than that, the oonUdenoa end respect of tho lint commercial .community In Amcfte*. hide* I wrote that ikotoh th. paroled rebel, who wenkout Irom aa East Tenueaeo village to eon- qusrjhls future, has Increased his fortune, thrown out largo lines, made new alliances, obserrod shrewdly, snd rowed wisely. IfHlve. easily and husbands this,'strength. In the ifunmcr, with MijOuug family ha reels at his bkjndred thousand dollar villa atiNowport. The cotton botue la which ho Is n . partner, does tbe largnt business, its connections considered, ol any cotton Hem per- h.pa In tbe world. Dt. perrons! forlano It astd to bsbctwoenslx and eight millions, though he Is barely forty years ol age. Hid name Is John H. Inman. That Is tho name yon will eoma to know •enhons«holdword when yon study the now nilicad map ol th. tenth. I.«t us see what h. baa been doing In the put ycerortwol Inthoilscof stocks In the put tew months he hu cleared n round halt million dot- ten. He took In open market at eighty conts, •nd tha nm. bond, are now ulllng at f 1.03. This purchuo wu baaed on hi. knowledge ot tha south and special knowledgso! tho Georgia I’aolflo properly end the territory through which II mas. Our rtadcra hire not forgotten tbe pinto ol May, JM4, when old homes wen toppling on rvery side, and hunks rloiiog thoir doors or c til ing ftPihelr loans. Thlage looked sqntlly. Toe jgto 0/ laterrst famned In nun amt a hsgge TFdsr, and money was nerd to got at auy price. In tbe mitlet of ihlacrlsji John Inuran elbowed Ms way through the panicky musu ol the cotton exchange, and In • clear voice announced that h. wu rudy to lend tl.oce 0X1 or any part ol Itnt six per cent per annum. Tho effect at this etetement wt. magical, confidence wu restored, and tho price of cotton advanced Immediately. In November lut, wbon tbo "boors" who crowd the prlc. ol ootton down until th. bulk of it I. ont of U» former', hand.,bedfonmdItto.5 gfn New York, boro. •Hied that it was selling below tta value, and that tb. planter, would lo« busily It It wu k.pt at !U abnormally low figure until they had marketed their crop. Ho organism In two dty. n party to buy 300,000 halm ol cotton on tbo New York ox- cbsngs. They succeeded In loading np nt less than ten oants,nnd so quietly that tho "abort." did not realise what wu befntfidono. A • tbe allutlon was disclosed, tb. pvtoarou from DO Stotts In las. than tlx week.. Th. Inman syndicate held M tbit figure until February or Much, when they went cat gradually with a clean profit ol two mil. Ilandoltara. Th. planter, of the tenth nvad HO,- 000 C(0 by tbl. snststnrd advance. AtthooloMollhladoal,Hr.Inman retired tor Ms rummer vacation, nnd cotton htl settled back to tea oat. tv July. II h. bu .rev mid. mate- uk. In cotton bl. but friend, do not know It. lu consequence bo has n following with which h« can handle enormous block, when.ver he la will ing tony lb. word. Thus aro SOHO ol tb. exploits with which be hu been fllttlug btmull lor tho greater work tb.t III..hew). Ibeu tboInrutmeut.Intowalobbo b«slrd hi. friend., and with which ha bu Justified their confidence. voice la Influential In all tbe oounolla ot whloh ho lib pait- With a private fortune of several million., rap- Idly Increulnf-an enormous and profitable trail. ncs^.slngnlsrly clear heed and unerring judg. mont-alrankncis that challenges confidence and* crystal Integrity that oommands it-youth, health, Tlgor and enthuslum, there Is hardly a limit to be set to hie work for tho next ten yearn •Mr Inmtn'e confidence In the loath is pmetl- otl, ltd ho hu done mnoh already to develop her resources. Hfa following In tha tenth fa taiga and earnest and mads np of luders In every community. He can bring to every entorprlu ha engages In an amount ot local capital and gooa will that no other man could command. He ts recognised through tbo south aa tha fora. ’ most southerner in New York, and Mr heads will be upheld and hts plana abetted whenever ha make* plain what ha wants. Hr. Clyde and hla friends have already Invested •bout twenty million Idollare In the south. Mr. Clyde hu always held that a grest trunk llna pro. Jacted to tho aoutbwut from New York would be come os valuable a. the great trunk iluu to tha west It bu bean hfa dream to make inch a Hue. He began by patching together tbe abort end dls- Jointed lines reulilng ont from Alexandria and finally solidified everything between tbat point and Atlanta. The next nap wii to bnlld from Atlanta to Blrmlngoam. Tho next will batobulld from. Birmingham to Oolumbna, Mlu. That will not bo long delayed. Tbo south is tbo field for tho next few yanre. The rich bat undeveloped wrath, with Its exhaust- less resources, bnt fairly umpled, will command capital and tabor. It la fortnnata for bar that such man u thou basttly sketched tbova will lead tha movamaut for her Industrial promotion. It is more than fortunate that ku own eons, upholding her name •nd her tama In America's metropolis, hare rqnlppcd themselvca to lead tha fight for her camniciulal Independence. A QUESTION ABOUT Browns Iron Bitters A NS WE BED. ennappm WB« no utuck. THE LYNCHERS FREE. Tha Ftobnblo sad ot tha Onlbraath WONDERFUL CURES. G. A, tl. In Christian Advocate, Nov. lith. Ed. Bonny South :-Htnce writing tbo or.loll tot tto Bunny South, “A Wonderful Revelation,” which appeared In this paper April tat I bar* received letters from parlteaall over the south and In soma of the wettera states, making tnqnlrias concerning Dr. W. J. Tucker, ol Atlanta, Qs„ and roarvcloua core, bund rede who know mo oan lea. illy to tbo absolute tenth of everything sold In lie artlrto above mentfbncd. Thtiama tralao true ol the omen, u I have tbs moil abundant meant of knowing. Dr Tnckar Is ono or tne most 8 November 17.-t8poctat.]-Tho I 'itejvg’woMd' J?'?n mnre d Man'he! > lo act d?*ntm* trial ot thirty or forty otUiana of Edgefield county I on l.ly with any one - Thou who ar-disposed to Jodgo J. H. Hudson presiding. Tho attorney * ‘ gauaral ol the state, the solicitor and Bagano airy will oonduet the prosecution, nnd Congress' man M. 0. Butler, UcutentutGovernor Sheppard and Major W.T. Gory will manage tha dofeuio. Dndrr the law ol Bcuth Carolina each ono ot the difvudanU la cntlUad to twonty peremptory ohal- Irnaei. 11 tills right la Instated upon tha Jurj laud will be exhausted a dona times. Could erica the momentoni nature ot the Impondlng trial, it Is surprising how Uttlo excitement there Is In Edgefield tonight. Tha reputetlonlol the scrosad, and tha high- standing of the lawyers employed on both atdea, the peculiar clrcnmatenou environing tho eansa, combine to render It ono ot tha moat Important over adjudicated by a criminal tribunal tn South Csrollra. The prominence and wealth ot tho oooniod wilt prevent thoir oonvlotlon, even If an nuansworably I that be will not hazard 1 Iona, I «t. aimed at tho oxpei . _ irncy sod yean ot toll, by smug nnwarrauteff encour agement, or an unoandtd diagnosis. Nearly all tacoaring Me ptitanu have bean andar the treatment ol a number ol different pbyiloltns. It ogo'ol tho finest medical edncrtlona, graduate of one ot tbs moat n , collegia ol tho cllyot New Yurie _. nveral years prol.eaor In ana of the southern medical college*, which •ova up for tbs solo pur " By to tha h )• Dr. Tucker’a ambition, with tbs old ot Provi dence. to ratio tbe mon obillnata and hopeless earn from the grasp ot disease, to addition to ... — ' vhav ng t dfcal - —jo for oldaatotour etc*, which po-uten b* entirely te'lhobe Surng'olW.mtet?d‘ t afaS l y“"y. slclsns employ the doctor to trial Ibolr most oil. flcult casts for them, and ha has to my certain knowledge, at tbo present time, ten physicians Item distant stalls, staying lu tha city under his protcsalonsl care. our or txi jaws or death Boms two montba ago, Ur. Jamas Osborn, 'of MlltcdgavUte, Ga., wrote to Dr. Tnckar concern ing hla own critical cflhdltton. grid Mr. Osborn r “I have arrived at tha pan when onr home phy- si claim can do notblng mors lor raa and ktioug cue ihtU Im ntffa out by the oroMSUtloua I an do notblng more tor ma mi they FDOirilU), B. £?0«XiaAbS-T« *hS?i Blocs tha tremendous movements ol 'M and 'gl Hr. Inman baa ncdcratood tha poastbUltlaa ol soulLarn ratlioada, and haagreduoLy turned hla attention that way. A personal loan ol n third ol a mlllltn to the Gcorglh Pacific at a critical )nnot- uic carried that road through, and ha afterwards made an offer forth* entire lisncol Its bonds. Tblsroit of thing drew Mm towards railroad, rtc., acd now — He Is ci nctrnid as director, with tho mtnsg*. mint of more miles ol railroad la th*tenth than any other man. The three greet system!of the south are the Louisville and Nashville, tbo East TcLPnsccud tha Richmond nnd Danville. Ua Is director In the Drat nnd last of these systems, ol tbo NashvUlr, Chattanooga nnd 8 Loafs, and athar reads making tbo total mlleag* ol over 7,0(0 miles, Bnt fnrtbar. Tbe Naw York World ol n late data s*yc tbat at tha annual maatlhf ot tha Bait Tcnnrmea stockholders It was discovered that tha Itoblnion parly, which oppress General Thomaal had secured clear control ol the road, snd tha (Icctlcn ol cfilctn waa thereupon adjoumad on a technicality. Tha World further says that tt wu the knowledge ot an assured change In that rood that ltd to tho swltt nnd sorprlAlng advance In the ircnrlllca ol that road. It Is generally believed In New York that John Inman to heavily Interested in th* new dent In East Tennsmee, and that, working In tha back ground, be hu really angtatered the RoMnion movement and will ba a leading director In tbo newboard. It Is known that ha hu bean lateral ted In the build fog of n Una aerom Ilia But Tan neiica valley to connect tha Richmond and Dan ville and Louisville nnd Nubvlllo system!, thst their Interest, might ha made mutual sad that both systems wen' friendly to this schema. It may be tbat getting control ot tha Cut Tannanaa the only portion dliturbiog element, l« tha •Lories way to the same result. Now sea when this woold pot him. A director la tha Urea great railroad aystaouol tha south ha would ha charged with n vote* U tha management of over U ,0(0 mttea ot railroad, roatrelllac Ure transportation bwslaam at tta rath. He la already director tn banks and Insamnea companies to New York city repracawllnn la thtfr capital arddtftalta era pn.OiO.OOO.end Ms Cuibrcath case waa called this morning nt 10 o'clock, tho court room being pookad with apaota- tore, wltneraes, lawyers, defendants and others. Attorney General Hlles moved that Uu thirty ono men agntnst whom tho grand Jury nnd found a liuo bill, bo arraigned. Benator BnUer, ol conn tel lor defendants, desired to inbuilt uvaratmo. tlcna.before tho prisoners wan formally arraign. to. Major W. T. Gary read n long pepor alleging frrcgnlariUao in tho drawing, aummonlng and cm i»ntiling ol th* Jnrore. and ho aakad that, he- ctuieol tho inforuyUUceJu the indictment, It sh.'Uid be quashed Tho court desired to bear Irom tbo state'* alter- rjs wimc ituucriug a ueclrioe. - '' " Attorney General tailca ukod tor timo, testing that be and Ms nnoctatec desired to confer and mret lu proper ehepo tbo objections urgod by tho las yen for tho dclonee. Jugsfirm., 8.O., November 20.—(BpoolaM—Lut nliht Judge Hndroucdcldcd to grant ball to tho thirty-onedefecdsnteIn thoOulbrcath lynching care in Ure inn ol yotco each. By midnight tvciy ono ofjllre prisoners succeeded In securing n bendrman, and all were reliasadfromJiU. Then waa great rejoicing tn tha village, and unlimited quantities ot bad wblaky wu gusslad by the ax- uliant lyncbara and theta friends, (omo ol tha good, staid old olttacna of the county an grtovad about tbo turn Iba cua bu taken, hoped tbat tha accnsad would bars been foroad to stand their trial, nnd not p’o believed tbat at taut n dosau of them would bo convicted. The largs majority olpaoplohrra are glad that tha raw It over and tha man aro tarred out of prison. Tho ganera opinion la that tha oua will navar ba triad, Jodga Hudson wu avtin to presiding at Ure trial, and no other judge In tboatato would willingly alb The lawyers for tba preelection express their dm termination to bring tba man to trial at tha next term ol conrt, bnt In this they wtU not tnecood. Judge Hudson to ono ol Ure moat learned, careful and conscientious jadgea in South Carolina, end It la not right to rananra him for performing what hedumed hla duty. AgoodclUienof Edgefield raid to yonr coma- pondrnt today: “If tha lyncbara think they have •Iianed they are tadly mistaken, Bevsral oi thorn will hit tbe dust before another court convanoa for the Ou bnatbs art not thopteple to tat tela afislr drop.” It would not sorpriao anybody lor mon blood- abed to rcault from tto relctae ot Ure nocoaod murderers. THRBI MBN KILLED. 0 you,,although I tear i have '. I am In a terrible condition, my I not retain the simplest food, except rats. Ittoa mystery how Jllraat all, idly dir cased, my hurt amt Lldncya P ■ . ,, dared. In ooneoquenc# ot this. I am tin treatment *nd Mr Oibnrn b«Mn to Improve, nnd dcuplto ihn vrrfllctof tho physicians who bml — ‘rttUnfblra, tbodMpalr of hu !r!«nd« and -- - m mUftivlngi, be U how on tbo blf U road Colonel W. J. Spculn. a prominent attornevof Atlnula, Oa., r$j$: ’ Dr. Tucker iimcured mo of a chronfodlMaiu of 17 jroar**HMn<iliif, Hfter miny nbjftlclanRhad failed, and tome hm pronouucjd mo incurablt. 1 cannot my, or do, tjo much for Dr. Tucker for wbat he baa dona for mo lam pmonally acquainted with Mr. Gamp, of thli WryuTcma Kiit yoar'an aooouut of whlcU^wai"^ Klvenlii IboHuuny Boutb of March II." A HEMiKKAIU.aCAlK. UiivO-J. Youiif. 25 Weat Alex«nder ttraeto ”—” ,* , H may aceni ktr«ux4 iinw,ot J lbimedio*rtdvlMj t ret’’iSh u tho 0*10. I tried alt the prominent physicians In this rlir to no pnrpaso. I wu snflerlng Irom aensral debility and rentals prostration. I war — Mm. Htsusworoon bo nndmtood mr cue tad I iSSSSHp™ fieri tea'll'can niiver repay Mr. John Prole, Vtskvllt*. Texts, reports highly •hltifaetoty matte from Dr Tackari iraatmant of his caw, and tee soma may said ot Ur. U D. Bporgom of Enrsl Bhtdt. Tsill, flrtt of thsi* cos: a bad ben given npby the home physicians •s Incurable, and weroaucosaafMly treated by Dr. “ irSei— — — Tecs CV With out hla rrer awing them, rn,Hyman wu Induced to try Dr. Tncscr ny 1. r. Klndiay, ol Rural Bbodo. T*xu, wboss wife ot tbo fleeter cured two yean ago, ol a supposed Incura ble fib •fit*. A ORATRrPL ATLANTA LADV. Mrs. 1.0. McCoy, cl Atlanta, Ga., atyi: "lean tnitMolly lay test Dr. Tucker hu worktd a mir acle In my csso. My dimontty wu twotold-tu. morenttronbtaand gnat narrousflebUUy and ho hu cured me I bar* a confidence In Ms ability which nothing can shako He has also done woq. ‘ rarer my husband who bid heart disease with teh two ol Mo family have Olrd. ht. Taclsr hunopecruaphyslclsnandl speak from ex- S ilence u well u from an encoded ni.icrrjil.ia hlssnooruwlte others, friends have keen carte by Dr. Tucker's iklL.- ticttmcnt, and losono opportunity tn speak ot him Id tea highest terms of prats* Dr Tuetrer •tossy* Mils* pollonl - r — 1 — Ills a part ol hi* patient's uneoaudsd mind Icao* in him. Its aavcrd(criv«*npaUaul.bnl always gives hla honest and undid opinion Dr. Tucker wttl visit patients at a dlstan » whan desired to dn in, hut most ol Ms patients are iSvsBatriirmcauffffs ^Th# Soetor*mu l ie°sdd,creed or cohinUsd *t Nn. p, Marletit street, Atlanta, Us, In entire confi dence free ol chares owing ebibiw: Loan* dsoretw... .pacts Increase. fihi.k In man l. not to ba admired, bat what to nicer than n woman's check. A Ts:rib’s Tragedy la Edgefield County, Booth Caroline, Enoanri.n, B. 0., November U.-lBpeotat.l—A meet horrible tragedy occurred eight mile, from her* today. Edward Freutay, a highly re spectable termer, over eighty year, old, end Jhts tw. tens, Charles and Edwud, tea formtr twenty.firt) and tel tatter ttlity.fir. years ol age, were killed by . msn n.med R. T. Jons., Old Mr. Preutay snd Jones dispute, yesterday, about tain rente duo th. form.r tram th. tatter .nd Mm. hat words passed. Today Pressley sod his two mu ward tewing grain la n field neu tbo homutetd, when Jonas, trm'il with • Shotgun,ratered th* plun Without lutlmstlng hta murderous purpose, ho shot th. youngost tea deed .nd teen attacked tb# other with n tong sfcup knife, Th. second victim wu backed to pteeia, bring dtannboweled and having hit fagn- lu Vila revered. Tb. old msn.lMbta nnd ps'.ted, powerless to n!d bis sons, Tbo murderer ten turned upon him nd Midi "Dsmn yon, 1 bellsn I will hlU yon, too." . Simultaneous with this threat bo I. voted blf «<£««•. ,«reFo | nte'.^ip*ntooi.n wrokly gun snd pulled trfggsr. Tb. third victim 1.11 I r*Pvr, and nunearly SLOACO sabscribtes. dead, pierced by • dosu buckshot. Tbo alayor ten fiod, urdn negro named Brook, who wit- ncaMd the tragedy, gave tbo Star*. John Premly tbe only nrvlvot ot the tamUy, with uvomt notebbora oxamlnad the prostrate fora, sod found all Uni. dead. Tb. mw. cam. to thia vlllag. rapidly, and n paitywu preparing to go In March ol tbo murderer. This after soon tha coronet w< h t to tea acna of tea kllllag to hold an (.quest. About th* soma Ua. Jonu cam. Into town with man on MaihonldM nnd gave him self vp to tt# abwtfi. ■ II. was placed la n cell Yonr correspondent vlrlbd hut nd ndosvored . to tadoce him remake o-taumnt, bnt a Uwyae present sd Cbetrfolneea ta an excellent wetting qnsllty. It hu bin callte lire bright waathet ot th* hurt. Tb. Tsnth’. Csmpxnlnn Will b. rnt Ire. to Jtautry lit, tMd, end . taU ysu'i rntecrtptlon Irom that date, to'Jaansiy> IH toril who a*nd tt 7a now lov n yonrt nfi pored npop. iaasfa sen Irom Grom a, aid tiarrtad a (ton t-dtanintet - th* nuhaihiL Thera ll avo frow Gcorfii. iMwinwi |r%« vaaaaaiar of old Mr. Fnmley.sba msa he sajr. There It (rut tx'.iuanlorrr tbo afislr. Invalid Readers Will find tbat on* dollar axnndad for Dr. Psrk.r’S great medical srork. th. “Beteso. .f Lite,” will b. of mon w.lao to thorn than tea Ibonund dollar, .xpended for propri.ttrr medlctnu, ritetrlc .pplianero, .to. Th.bojk contain, over on. hundred nnd twenty fivo Invnlnnbl. rrescriptlnne for nit dissoMlYbit human flub tah.lrre. Bro sdrertU.mcnt- IRON CUD NOTES, nrlTH MOKTSASB OLADO, AMS WAIYSM TT nil homastend -fight, and cam pita ns, nai ih.tu>lsh*intUw.M.. PRONOdgOgD BUT MOTS ”• ta«y..re ronte^