Newspaper Page Text
4
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION. ATLANTA, GA.. TUESDAY APRIL 20 1856
BABY HUMORS
Infantile and Birth Humors
Speedily Cured by
Cuticura.
Cleansing the Skin ami Bealp of Birth
Bmnort, for allaying Itching, Burning and In-
imation. for curing the Bret symptom* of Eczema,
Psoriasis, Milk Crurt, Scald Head, BerofUl* and
other inherited skin and blood d lee mm, Cuticura,
the great Skin Cure, and Cuticura Soap, an exqnla-
ite Skin Dcautifler, externally, and Cuticura Resol
vent, the new Blood Puriflcr, internally, are infal
lible. Absolutely pure.
"TERRIBLY AFFLICTED."
Mr. and lit*. Everett Btebbin*, Belche rtonm
Maw., wfiter: “Our little boy was terribly afflicted
with Scrofula, Salt Rheum, and Erjrrinela* ever
S ure be mi born, and nothing we could give him
piped him, until we tried Cuticura Remedies,
which gradually cured him, until be la now a* fair
as any child.'*
“•too FORNOTHINO."
William Gordon. 87 Arlington Avenue, Charles-
town, Mam., writes: "Having paid about IWO to
ftm-clawi doctor* to cure my baby without suercas,
I tried the Cuticura Itemedle*. which completely
Cured, alter using three package*."
"FROM IIKAO TO FFFT."
Charles Kay re Hinkle. Jersey City Heights, N. J.
write*: "My *ou, a lad of twelve year*, was com
pletely cured of a terrible ca*e of Krsema by the
Cutfrmn Itemed lea. From the top of hi* head to
the ao)m of hi* feet was one mas* of scalst." Every
other remedy and phyaiclana had been tried In
vain.
"A LirnKBOV CUBED.**
Ka*h A Naah. Covington, Kf., write*: "One of
•nr ruMotncm bought your Outlcurn Itemed I ox for
hla little l>oy, who had a kind of humor In
head, *o that he waa a aolld arabof sore*. ID ....
entirely cured, and hi* father say* lie would not
begrudge I'M) for the good it haa done him."
Sold everywhere. I'rlcc: Cuticura, 60 rents;
Resolvent, 91.00; Soap. 25 cent*. Prepared by Pot
ter Drug and Chemical Co., Bouton, Maas.
Bend for "How to Cure Skin Disease*."
TJ A Y) V t*a« Cuticirre Soap, nn exquisitely
pA J) I perftimed Shin Heniitlllwr.
and liiiaiiiii
standing, walking, or tho sowing ma
chine, cured l»y the Cutlrura Anti-
Pain Plaster. Now, elegant, original
JgPAGE’S
■■LIQUID GLUE
1>MEHD3 EVERYTHING
.I Kj Wood. f^»*h*r. rarrr.Irorv.Olan
0t r AVuinna. ramltara. Bnc-sUrtc,
^AV.BtronK m Im, EollJ u » Heel.
^<\v^ Th * M'tal quantity sold du|*Mg
ATTACKS OF BILIOUSNESS
Are what many penplo are llablo to, which makes
them very sick, and if uot thrown oflT end in bil
ious fever. If symptoms appear, such as
Tollowneas of the Kyas, A Dull, ffaavy
Feeling# A Chilly Feeling nt Times,
Wttn 1'arhspa Pain In the
Hark, Head, Rones,
Feverishness, Etc.,
The patient should not delay a moment
great danger of being taken down with
ear. Bo not wait until the fever ha* sc
at there la
bilious fit*
sclsod upon
J with biliousness and disordered Liver
ad would frequently throw up bile. I procured a
rtUo of Ritntnons Liver Regulator and alter using
tout one.hall of It was completely cured. One of
my lady customers told me toe other day that
fimmoos Live- "— *“*“* * 1 *““ '
Mek headache.
. Olds, Druggist, Cedar Rapid*,
bilious, occasionally having a dumb cl
followed by fever, which prostrated mo
Itook Hlromons Liver Regulator, and fni
several months I have been as stout and
hearty aa any man could desire to be. I
•m thoroughly satisfied that It la all U la
recommended for bilious complaints, for
mine wm certainly a stubborn care. I bavo
heard many of my friends speak of It mid
i all the virtues
GLADSTONE
The Force Fight Raging Around
the Old Man.
TBE IBM UND HJBUMSE BIU
A Strong Fight Haile on Hom&
Rule,
The Land Bill Received with Little
Favor—The Chances of Defeat.
bkwakk or frauds.
Always ask your druggist for "Dr.
•mioniunm
BBMktflUMU i twit.
SAM JONES*
SERMONS.
ABUT! WAITEO.
grfesrss
■unwniri
• M-HOOUT*
Him* thl, pap.*.
»W. enrol.—n, o.
IT TO ■IIY.’W
muM-wky!l
TMFORMATION U WANTED IIY TUB UN-
L derrigued of the whereabouts ot Mary andAda-
skle Battalia and Louisa Taylor, slater*; Nannie
—an and tartlla Henry, nieces; and Edward
yand Battalle Payne, nephews, of Betti* M.
lie, late of Philadelphia, deceased.
~lbKUTY 1HHURAKilt TRUST AND SAFI
UTCX)., Administrator, e. u a, PhUada, Pa
a,ap*7Q,ttayD,wky
Electric Belt Free
n nfj? ssr kf?mat?
Jantt—tue ihusat why
YORK —***°*W!«k and
fa»ll-wl
&BR£
Mid. Oulfll
fin. I’.O. \
’ill*:
1 inw
pwuralw.
>u, item.
GL1DST0NM IBliBDS DESTROY BUI
Tho English situation does not clear up
Tho opposition to giving Ireland home
rulo is growing stronger. The plan of pu
chasing the Irish farms does not commend
itself. It is more than probable that Mr.
Gladstone will be beaten and that Ireland will
have to fight atill further, and it may he more
desperately, for what the calls her reghta
London, April 12.—The liouso of com
mons was sgain densely crowdod this evening
as tho result of the extended
nouncement that Lord Randolph
Churchill would attack Mr. Gladstone's home
rule bill.
After a long consideration ho had come to
the conclusion that the scheme involved such
a complicated mass of contradictions, that if
anybody besides Mr. Gladstone had proposed
it, it never would have been taken seriously.
(Prolonged cheers). Ho had vainly
searched all the authorities, ancient aud mod
i, for n precedent for Mr. Gladstone's two
orders, which were to compose tho proposed
Irish parliament.
The premier, continued Mr. Churchill, la
bored on Thursday last, to show that tho fiscal
unity of tho united kingdom would not bo
affected by tho retention ou the hands of tho
British parliament of the power of collecting
tho customs and excise duties. Now, If this
were done what would become of that ancient
British right of taxation and representation
going together? [Cheers.]
the house. But why
eighty-six Irish members prevail over the
volrra of five hundred and eighty-four
other members? History showed the rise and
decline of the former Irish parties.
O'Connell’s party was formidable through
an even Imlance of whlgs and lories. Tho
parliament in which that party was powerful
was dissolved and O'Connell died, broken-
*ic artrd. Butt, in 1871), headed the party six-
y strong. The speaker saw Hat! before hie
rath, when the latter waa in deepest distress
over tho break up of his party. Parnell in
1880, led sixty votes. In six months his party
was divided, remaining so until the end of the
last parliament. 8o Parnell lies formidable to
day were in danger of disoniou to morrow-
danger that Parnell sought to avert by insist
ing on a pledge from his followers to vote in
certain ways. [Cries of diasent from tho Par-
nellites.]
In conclusion the speaker said that the effect
of the bill would be to free Ireland from the
supremacy of parliament and the sovereignty
of the government. He regretted it had not
been deemed consistent with tho customs of
the house to take a division on Mr. Gladstone's
motion for leave to introduce a bill, but the day
of division would speedily arrivo when tho
house would vote against proposals which were
il^pmtc, unconstitutional and misleading.
Mr. Bussell, attorney-general, In reply
taunted ford Churchill with infusing Inti his
speech prejudice and paeslon. It had been
argued that the present parliament had no
mandate from its constituencies for this hill,
lie ssked was there a mandate for this re
pressive policy toward Ireland. [ParuelUte
chests ] Aa to the exclusion of Irish mem
bers from the imperial parliament, the sud
den s(lection of the opponent* of tho bill
displayed for the presence of Irish members
would not deceivo the Irish people. The
Gladstone bill waa tho first genuine effort to
give law in Ireland moral support. Tho con
dition of Irelsnd was not duo to the perversity
of Irish character,that waa only the weak ex
cuse of Imberilo staretmon. Tho truth was tho
united parliament had hitherto failed in its
duty to Irelaud. The bill does not attack the
Imperial parliament or the crown. As to Ul
ster, the bill gave the Protestants and Catbo
lira the same rights. He was convinced that
the patriotism of Ulster—Orangemen and
Catholics—would go to tho common fund of
intelligence and energy which would
build un tho nation. The
English hsd tried to govern Ireland and
failed. It was nowtime for Ireland to try to
govern Itself. [Cheers].
London, April 13.—Sit
court, chancellor of the exchequer, tonight re
sumed debate on the Irish bill in the house of
commons, lie began hia speech by remarking
that those who condemned the government's
Irish measure Atiled to etate an acceptable al
ternative scheme. What was to be those
separate bodies in Great Britain and Ireland
which were to be the sutyect matter of federa
lion recommended. Lord Harrington
l i said he did not admit the
people as being the whole basis of the mis
chief. Would the Irish people have been sat
isfied with these identical laws if placed be
fore them in anative drees. LC'ries of'N>”J
There was the fearful agrarian problem,
wbieh had hitherto bsflled the efforts of ail
statesmen. The real basis of mischief was |
that the views of a majority of Irish people c
some of the chief principles of legislation wore j
different from those held in England sod Scot
land—from those carrent in every civilized
country. fParnellite cries of “No, no."] Tho
attitude or the Irish on the agrarian laws and
on questions of contract, held s sc red
in other countries. was a hostilo
attitude. Never had the
rent" manifesto found acceptance
account of religious belief, and also forbids it
to Impooe customs or excise duties. The queen
is given the same prerogative to summon, pro
rogue and dissolve the Irish legislature as she
has with respect to the imperial parli iment. To
her majesty also is reserved power to erect
fort*, nrrenals, magazines and dockyards. The
Irish legislature is permitted to impose taxes
to be | aid into the consolidated fund to defray
the expenses of the public servi e In Ireland,
subject to the provisions of the Irish land pur*
chafe hill, but is not to either raise or appro
priate revenues without the queen's recom
mendation, made through tho lord-lieutenant.
( bn rcb prrperty in Ireland is to belong to
Irish people, subject to existing charges. The
executive government of Ireland is vested
r g<
in any other country in Europe. [ParneUite I the queen in the lord-lieutenant, who wl
«!■ nrr*«arff .”l I covern with the aid of such officers and coui
cries of "It waa necessary. 1
“That's just it,"continued the speaker. “The
Irish party are contending for a revolutionary
change in the laws of Ireland, which would
make those lawa different from those of every
other civilized country." [Cheers ]
The speaker then argued that the .
of an Irifb contingent in parliament would
again place English affairs at the mercy of
Irish members; that the new Dublin parlia
ment would speedily reduce the qoal-
Mention for the election of tho
first order, making the basis probably
a judicial rental. [Laughter.] Farther,
England would be res
tries for the conduct o
caused any breach of neutrality or by negloct
of its municipal laws inflicted damage on
countries, F * “ ’
bands while
penny towards the expenses of war. If an
'‘Alabama" escaped from Ireland or an Irish
man enlisted to succor a Boman Catholic coun
try in war, England would be responsible,
while the Irish executive over which the En
glish would have no control would alone be
to blame. Conspirators, nihilists snddyna-
_____ . U
govern with the aid of snch officers and conn
cits as the queen may appoint, and will give,
or withhold, tho queen's assent to inch bilh
the Irish legislature may pass.
The Irish Land Act.
London, .
pounded his
remmons this evening. There wm hardly any
excitement attending the event.
Mr. Gladstone rose in his place at 5:25 and
was greeted with cheers. When he began to
A., , . , ^
emphatic denial thet it was' his intention
ask the Scotch and English to ran any peca_.
iary risk on account of the landlords of Ire
land. Tho history of Ireland was one long
indictment against its land owners. Agrarian
crime had originated and increased under tho
absenteeism of landlords and the ruitiug of
rents, as their expenses while away from Ire
land increased. Oppression married to misery
hsd hideous progeny. Crime had bjen en
dowed with vitality to perpetuate itself and
handed down its miserable inheritance from
generation to generation. Eogland was not
of
miters might flock to Dublin. [Cries of “Oh, I clear of responsibility for the deeds
Oh," and cBmm 1 I Irish liinUnffii w»m Knwllih diuula Thn
It would
On behalf of the Irish loyalists,
he protested against their abandonment.
Countries humiliated by defeat had to see a
ortion of their subjects, relying on thoi
onor, handed over to their euemlcs, but for i.
nation In plenitude of power to hand over its
loyal adherents was an act never before
corded in the annals of history. [Cheers.]
In conclusion, bo denied that finnuoss could
he called coercion, and said there would lie no
repression if there was nocrime.Cavow nad said
that the disruption of bonds uniting the Brit
ish Islanders would be a hateful and criminal
enterprise. It would be hateful nnd criminal.
[Opposition cheers.] Tho responsibility for
weakening those ties rested with the premier
and his followers. Those resistlngthe break
up of the empire roust close up their ranks
and shoulder to shoulder resist the bill. [En
thusiastic cheers.]
Replying to Goschen Mr. Gladstone, refer
ring to what he has himself said lu reference
to the expressed wishes of Irish representa
tives, remind! d the honse that he had coupled
hit remarks as to tho necessity ef considering
there wishes with the condition that what
might be done should be consistent with the
integrity and safety of the empire.
In regard to Air. Goschon’s remarks c
renting America, Mr. Gladstone rnsid it i
tine that the northern states had carried
their point. 'But," he addnd, "when they
had the south at their feet, what did they do?
They gave every southern atato a measure of |
autonomy. [Loud i'arnellito cheers.] fljclm
measure we are about to ask for Ireland."
Tho bill, ho said, waa produced
uuder circumstances of great pros
tate, but lie contended that the time had coin*)
when it waa necessary for parliament to say
whether it would make a bold attempt to
iving E
famine of needful legislation and Ireland to a
continuance of social disease and internal dis*
cord. [Loud and prolonged cheers.]
London, April 14.—The second reading of I
Mr. Gladstone a homo rule bill In the house of
commons has been postponed until May 10,
Air. Gladstone has sent tho following reply
to a congratulatory cablegram received by him
last Holiday from the mayor of Boston:
Irish landlords were Euglish deeds. The land
act was intended to go into effect on the dsy on
which the home rule bill would becime oper
ative. It could not go on without tho opera
tion of the other, which would provide legis
lation in Ireland to appoint statutory
authority to deal th landol estates and a<
between the vender and .
would be made through tho issue of 190,000,
000 pounds of three per cent stock issued al
par. These low Irish consols might, with
the consent of tho treasury, be commuted for
stock of lower denominations. If the stock
could not be issued forthwith scrip of equal
values would be issued for tho same p nr
poee. Tho act was to givo landlords
option to sell out under its term. Its enact
ment was confined to agricultural holdings and
did not include mansions having woods. Stato
authorities acting between a peasant and land-
owner would purchase the land from tho
latter aud put the peasant in possession as ab
solute proprietor, subject to an annual rent
charge till tho total payments equaled the
purchase money.
The state would not force small occnpierj
become proprietors. In districts whore popu
lation was congested, the stato would have tho
power to decide whether tho expropriation of
too crowded land should be compulaor
body except immediate landlords wou
option to sell to an incumbrancer and then he
must sell by foreclosure and not at an option
for himself. The basis of prices would
depend on rental for a fixed period.
Twenty years' rental would be a normal
purchase; m exceptional cases twenty-two
years rental would roako a purchase.
cations for rale would uot bo received
March 31, 181)0. Ten millions of pounds of
Hock would be issued daring 1887, twenty
million pounds in 1888, tweuty millions in
1889.
The charge on Irish exchequer would be
two million pounds per annum, to meet which
it would be able tolevy for rent* amounting
two million five hundred thousand pounds
per annum, and this sum wonld be the first
charge on rents and the taxes raised by the
Irish government.
Air. Uladstono commended the scheme to the
strict, Jealous, carcfUl and unbiased
examination of Englishmen. Ho was
convinced it would be rocognizod
aa a fitting part of tho great musnlciou* effort
to sustain the plana of the British legislature
"I have received yourtelegram. I thank you for | for the welfare of what had long been, aud tho
•P*»k«h0|*d, would,T.r bounder clreum
VottlbllU? of gov.mtui Ireland by a minuted
■7item of remedial and reprealv. lerfilation.
Itwaitoth. administration of l.onl Hpoucer
Par, Pun Ouda lt.» uampl. bon.
eowpl*. omit, t omna ggOwdOb.
Sftsr.tsssiird “
Ham. tuu nar.tr. mart* .o»tt»
m
HOMES WITHOUT CAPITAL
■mpr aa- NMOO In two ■■
i«wda KhnlrnutMim ^tSara'ff'cuEri
FARM LOANS,
TO R0H THREE, rol’R
« dv. tmir at I per rent.
Oontlwlom light. Rato not oreronathM what
— "a p.JlaitoTojij.uoplymetrhant. Writ.for
rn^oimmav V ““‘ i&i0KV *
u. h. Hju.nl. [ j*
.Wane. )apMw2t
**K IVachure, urret.
Hpencer
that b. thought tb. government of Ireland
ought to bo restored.
lied the conaervatlve leaden anp
pollcp crept the condemnation
Mr. (Maditono'. Khomef Lord Ranloti
Churchill—Ym, they are again.! repMl
any .hap. or form. [Cheen.)
Continuing, Mr WillUm .aid tho fact
waa that there waa no alternative to the pl.n
of the government except the aeverret coer
cion. Helming to tho Mceaaion
of “.riatoente,” from tho mlnia-
try, ho mid, he waa not aorry for them, only
that it would be bad for the ariatoemry, for If
theatiatorrataof England ranged ttiemtelvre
with party aacendanry In Ireland, then the
democracy of England would aide with the
Irlab. [Liberal and rarncllite chceraminglod
with hirer* and rrlea of "ehamo.”]
Did they think It poredble to make a policy
of coercion like Cromwell’, out of the broken
fragment, of a shattered party. The policy of
coercion waa like strong dilok. Tho more
taken, the more wanted. 11. would not deny
that such agtlicy might bo popular. It ox
cited tho pride and passions of the people, but
* 'Cheers
.__.Tr
the* became alek of it at last, [droen.1
“Ktfcreure,” continued the speaker, '’hat.
keen made to the Irish In America. This
house cannot fbr a moment be Influence,! by
Ike ettion of dastardly aaaasalna Ilka Ford and
otkeim. lint th. Ilian nation in America is
aa numerous aa the Irish an at home. All
roaeraa the same instinct and the same sympa
thies. They have not he*n parties to the
action, of aamalna. [Heer. hear]. Theae
action, of the Murine rec.lv. th. universal
condemnation front th. peopl. of the United
Malta [Irish and liberal cheers]. Bat If
yon reject this bill, do yon believe, are yon
•ute, there will not b. sympathy with those
aoaralna and their schemes? [Hlase. and cries
of ”Oh, oh.”l
I believe there will be universal condemna
tion and disapprobation from right-thinking
people—Irish and Amarlcan—of snch treat-
meat of the Irish people. (IrishCheers.]
Mr. Jackson replying, said that Sir William
llarcoutt waa not the Rest minister who sag-
grated certain calamities euauing on a re*
jeetion of the bill. Parliament was being al-
mojt terrorised to pass the trill. They were
lold then was no power ot spirit ec consistent
l ”* Und with tho crista. Why
should llareoun. Mostly and other speaker,
make three constant reference to tha Irish h*
»»* «“>«" they desired not to deal
with th. hill on Its merits, bat to terrorise
parliament! [Chests.]
. Tb*preml« had spoken of the forelga garb
ia which tha laws van plared before tn. Irish
day, to t*ke action i
or government with regard to Ireland. 1 feci that
American opinion, allied aa It I* with regard and
afltetion for the old country, afford* her majoaty'*
government powerful moral support.
TO DENOUNCE ROME RULE.
A great meeting waa held in the opera bonne
night for tho purpose of denouncing Mr.
ladatono’fl Irish home rale achome. Tho
meet tug was held by a call of tho Loyal Patri
otic union. The approaches to tho opera house
wrro besieged by crowds of nooplo and tho
roadways were blocked hours Woro the tiino
anuounccd for the beginning of tho proceed
ing*. Upwards of 400 prominent orangemon
from Belfast and Liverpool came to Londou
to attend tho meeting. The utmost
enthuaiaam provailed among tho crowd.
Thousands were unable to enter tho opera
houae. Tho stage waa decorated with anion
Jacks and armorial ahielda, with the union
crown on the center.
Lord Harrington, 1
Randolph Churchill wore
thualaatic cheering*. Home ono in the audience
railed for cheen for the qnecn ai
for Parnell and Glautone. Tho
•ant, “Rule, Britan no,” and listened l m
of letters from; tho [dnko of Argyll and tho
carl of Derby, In which the writer* de
nounced the home rale bill, saying It wonld
be unworkable, and would involvo the king
dom In serious danger.
Earl Cowper, who presided, laid that they
woro fhee to face with a great national calam
ity. Ho waa, therefore, glad to ae<
aronnd him representatives of all parties wil
ling to unite to avert the danger. From hia
own experience aa viceroy of Ireland, he
could lately say that home rule was not de
sired by tho great body of tho Irish peoplo.
The pneata bad largely gone over to the nation
alists because they would join any bod j who
wonld drive every other religion out of Ire
land. [Cheer*.]
Mr. ltyland, (liberal) who seconded Lord
Hartlngiou’s motion, was loudly
cheered. He charged that the
Irish parly waa connected with
the skirmishers whoso deeds had made hu
manity shudder.
Isord Salisbury on rising waa greeted with
stances far happier than heretofore, an Inte
gral part of her mitJeaty’s dominion.
Following Gladstone Mr. Chamberlain road
the letter which he sent to Mr. Gladstone ten
dering hia regignation aa a member of tho
cabinet. Jn tbo letter Mr. Chamberlain state*
that Gladstone's policy would
throw a heavy burden on Great Britain, en
tailing an enormom addition to the national
debt and probably an immediate increase of
taxation, not to aecnro the union of the king
dom but to purchase separation. Mr. Cham
berlain then went on to say that the land pro
posals, although they had been modified since
bo had left tho cabinet, wonld still impose
great burden on Great Britain, without sulll
cirnt security for tho loans advanced. The
bill waa calculated nat so much to benefit
tenants as sop for tho landlords. The gov
ernment was putting on Ireland a burdou
which no Irish member could declare to bo a
fair price to give for landlords’ rights
[Cheer*]. The Iriah people wonld regard the
bargain aa one imposed by a f oreign country,
and wonld bo justified in taking the first
opportunity to repudiate it. If the bargain
should be r ‘
forced?
While refusing to assist deserving crofters in
Scotland and postponing tho claims of Eng
lish laborers could the government consistent
ly grant large sums for the benefit of the Irish
peasantry. [Cheers.]
THE BARTLETT CASE.
A Verdict of Acquittal for th* Dead Man'
wire.
London. April 17.—'Tho Bartlett poisoning
asa waa given to the iary today. In closing
the ease for the crown, Attorney General Bus
sell contended that from all the evidence that
had been adduced, U waa clearly impossible
for Mr. Bartlett to have committed suicide, as
alleged by the defense, and that there c.rnld
be no doubt that ha was killed by chloroform
administered by some other person, and that
thia other person waa the prisoner, Mrs. Ade
laide Bartlett, who had been maintaining re
lation* with the Rev. Mr. Dyson, and who
waa inspired to remove her husband
because he was regaining his health. Air.
i the slngt *
enthusiastic applause, which wa* several times | Russell dwelt upon the singular aspect of af-
renewed. He moved that a petition embody- I fairs which had existed ia the family, and
log the sentiments of the meeting be presented I showed how distasteful the deceased had be-
to parliament. They were dealing, he said, I cone to the prisoner, by contrast with Hyaon.
with a * 1 *— —
question unmcMurcably bo-
party difference. They I
n fronted with the greatest
danger that had ever menaced the empire.
He joined in enlogicing the premier's powers,
and said that if eloquence so great and experi
ence io consnmate had failed to produce a I
home rale measure, he was convinced that
such a measure conld not be produced at all. >
[Cheers.]
In conclusion, Lord Salisbury said:
Tog land would find that *
* of prestige. It would r
The judge, summing up, told the jury that
Air. Dyson had taken advantage of the has-
band'* maudlin nonsense to supplant him in
the affections of bU wife, and advised that no
rt of tha clergyman's testimony, although
had been a witness for the crown, conld
be accepted aa reliable. The Jury was oat
a short time, and rendered a verdict of
acquittal. _
SHOT BY A PRIEST.
ment of the colonic*, and weaken Knglan Fa Influ- ,
*. nc j L hro Vl th 5S t !**• wor,J * .Tbo capitulation do- I tho bishop
tired by Mr. Gladstone wonld bring dlsaxtcrs to I
The Cathedral In Madrid the Scan# of
lltoody Tragedy.
Madrid, April 18.—This morning, while
* “ of Mm'
ii Mh—iuii uiuruiuK, nuuu
adrid *was ascending the steps
^hioStoilinSSuh Ifldtog toth. .ntrone. of th.csthodrsl h.
Ou.cntmtM nook!slew Uwlih.tarere-.xnlurion; I -»*. shot with urcvolverby. prlost standin.
our friends with shsmr, contusion snd dupslr.
[Chwre.1
TRK TEXT or THE BOMB BULB BILL.
Londom, April 15.—Tho homo of commons
• . . . -, r 0Udi
tier bovs
of Irelsnd. tbo official text of tho i
today Is mads public.
It dchara tho propoood Irish parliament from
legislating concerning tho statna, dignity or
succession of the crown, from posslog Ian af
fecting peace or war. the army or nary, milt- I
tia or volunteers, or the dofsnoo of tho re.Iru
and from taking any action concerning tho
foreign or colonial relations of tho empire.
Among other subjects placed '
power of tho Irish government .
arc dignities, titles and honors, prises and .
booties of war, aad offenses against the law of
nations; treason nnd alionagn, navigation.copy.
right, p-tuts, mails, telegraphs, coinage,
wri.hu and measnrre.
Tha hill further nrohlhils Ireland front
doing anything to wtabltsh or endow nr re-
llgiw or to diuarb or oonfer any privileges on
at th. top of th. eteM, th. ball entering hi.
abdomen. This was followed by another .hot
from th. seme sonree, which wounded tho
bishop in tho side, whereupon the wounded
man foil on tho steps. The priest then de
scended tbo steps, snd fired still another shot,
which took effect in tha bishop’s thigh. The
priest was then seised, potting a stop to his
mnideioni work, and his victim waa borne In
an unconscious condition to a private cham
ber in the cathedral, whure the last sacra
ments for the dying wss administered to him.
Being palm Sunday the cathedral waa [more
then usually crowded by worshippers, and
whin tho fearful work of the priest was real
ised, a furious mob followed tho carriage in
which ho was convoyed to prison by the gen
darmes, whoso presence alone prevented
lynching of tho wooid-bo murderer. Tho mo
tive for the crime was revenge.
The priest who shot the bishop hid fruit
ier,ly applied to the bishop to be reinstated.
Queen Christiana baa inquired aa to the bish
op's condition. The pope has telegraphed his
BAHAMA’S DELIGHTS.
A Weird, Sensuous, Dreamful Land for Luj
People.
Correspondence Chicago News.
For tbe traveler, the acientht, the invalid,
the dreamer, tbe outcast or the outlaw, the
Bahama islands are the ultima Thule. Life la
sustained with scarcely au effort. It ia a re
gion of prodigal proviaion, of thyme and balm,
of liflB in cnulees lullaby. All thia la the vis
ion of toilers. Its realization to any people
begets equalor. Tbe population of the entire
islsnds. whose capital and governor general
tie at Nassau, New Providence, is nondescript,
with English, Spanish and negro commingling,
and comprise such a people si might be
likened to lazzaronl unconsciously possessing
heaven; and in coming to know and think of
it all, it la ono of those intel
lectual evidences that almost com
pel* the rejection of any sort of fntnre state in
which activity and progression are not pos
sible. There is actually a sense of rest in
these latitudes so intense as to be oppressive.
Something in the very air compels sleep that
can be likened only to a rest which brings no
renewal of that elation and vigor wo in the
colder eiimatea kuow, and I doubt not that this
carries on from physical to mental effects, and
dims intellectual and spiritual alertness sadly.
Bat to know it and to experience it—aud leave
it—arc delicious; though it all leaves with it
an undertone of sadness, because ono so mnch
longs to change the unchangeable law of com
pensation, and give this sweet clime to the
driven, jaded men and women of our hardier,
more virile peoples, and compel these half-
awake existences to live and labor where the
awful friction of things would straighten the
form, put light behind the eyea, and polish the
perception until recognizable.
But all about you it is weird, charming,
sensuous, narcotic, dreamful. It is to you
like old wine tbat lulls and soothes, but does
not fire tho blood aud braiu. Tho sea has
changed from its bard, cold steely bine, and
Is now opaliue. almost milky white, bat trans
lucent. Tho horizou tbat. abreast of the
dreary, dangerous headlines of the north,
sccmid shutdown upon near and quick and
hardly as dreary a sky, is uow far aud far
away, and tho wuters and sky meet lov
ingly. Tho sky, too, that was so close and
forbidding 500 leagues behind, now seems in
finitely fur above yon, aud has a floecincss
and softness which opens to the
in.aginati< n undreamed-of (lights toward
litavcu. The stars, which in the winter zinc
prodded at yevr like flushes from a flint, bore
in the old and loved constellations, pulso and
glow w ith a passionate fervor. And even the
winds that come from whatever quarter, bring
a half-caught recognition of invisible pres
ences—something akin to hint, suggestion,
dalliance—and touch you in loving pulsations
that lull tbe senses tenderly. Hero might the
olden Sirens have dwelt and sung, and charm
ed and dettroyed, and wiser than Ulysses he
who resisted the spell. Indeed, tho legend
goes (hat here was tho original paradise.
In tbeso islands nature’s hand is forever
wide open. Here tho pineapple, citron, melon,
guave, custard apple, yam, bread fruit, sweet
potato, maun nee, star apple, zapoU, mango,
pomegranate, banana, orange, lemon, cjcoauut
and a hundred other vegetables and frail
spring unasked from a surpassing and prodigal
productiveness. Tho forests teem with the
coccanut tree, a hundred feet to its strange
pinnate leaves, the cell*or silk cotton tree,the
black mangrove, almond, mahogany, ebony,
lignum vita?, lance, and tho royal palm, whii
A THOUSAND COLUMNS.
Antl the Half Conld Not Be Told.
If you ere well cleaner d externally with the va
rlons advertised soaps, and If your heart and mind
be pure tben yon are ready to enjoy life provided
yonr blood is pore, If It Is not then do notdelay to
take B. B. B., and yonr blood will then also bo
pure and healthy. Thousands of oar fellow citi
zens wiU.testify ot If s cleansing qualities. We could
fill a volume with tbe most wonderfhl testimonials
but Botanic Blood Balm, B. B. B., Is too well
known ;n this country to require much further tes
timony. -
From the Quaker City.
Philadelphia, Jane 1,1885.
My daughter, Lydia Ann, has been affected with
a running sore under her chin, which has proven
very stubborn.
She haa used four bottles of a B. B, and Iain
glad to say that all ulcers hare healed. She is en
joying good health and a fine appetite. 1 attribute
her cure to the a B. B.—Botanic Blood Balm.
Trios. A. Picks rr,
No, 401N. 48th St., Philadelphia.
HORROR OF HORBORSM
the glowing coral vine, tho tuberose, the
okco rose, and rosea of every hne and size, the
alligator pear, tbe night-blooming cereus, and
a myriad shrubs, ferns and flowers delight the
eye and gladden with perennial color and odor,
and that forever without the bidding of wish
or touch of labor. Tbe luxuriance of land is
also equalled by the prodigality of sea lifo and
foun, as varied, beautiful and wonderful. No
shores are so enchanting, no waters so win
some, and no daptha of ocean hold sack mazes
of mystery and delight. The fish alone are
remarkable in variety. Among them are the
black fish, the porpoise, which aoems to tumble
alout in all waters; tbe shark, that deadly foe
of the sailor; the dolphin, which is in endless
panuit of the delicate flying fish
through the air because it is cb
Lecauso it enjoys it. which same dolphin ia
never cooked aboard a vessel unless a silver
half dollar ia put in tbe aazno pot, for If the
half dollar blackens then tho dolphin is fall of
f ioison, fre m having sucked copper from ship
lottoms; the wbipray, like the flounder, and
with a tall like a coachman’s whip, sometimes
ten feet long; tbo jew fish, which is to these
waters as tbe halibut of our northeast coast;
the jellow tailed snapper, gigantic turtles, the
catfish, tbe groups, striped suanpor, bonito,
Spanish mackerel, angel fish, pork fish, hound
fish and sucking fish. Then there is that
dread mystery to seamen, tbo Portu
guese man of war, that strange forma
ticn of marine lifo like a mass of
jelly, with its ventral fin exteuded I a every
direction, riding the heaviest seas like a bint,
and which sea-folk say ia a deadly poison to
the touch; tbe star-fish, sea-urchins, the hum
ming-bird flab, the phosphorescent jelly-fish
or glow-woim of tbe ocean, and other wonder
ful und startlingly-colored mites of these wa
ter*; besides tiny esvet and grottoes of white
coral, where tbo sponges, like dark forests,
forever swaying with the eudlcss motion of
tides, and where nestle and hide sea-fans, the
rainbow-fish, conches containing priceless
ptarlft, and such delicate elfs of the
ocean aa wo of tbo land can only
imagine through f*iry lore or the
witchety of dreams. Oue ot the most Inter
esting forms of marine life you will meet here
ia the floating gulf-weed, aa it ia called, though
it is a different species than tbat found along
the rocks and beacbea of our American shores.
After crossing that inscrutable mystery, the
ulf stream, and reaching the horse latitudes
t* appearance is quite frequent, and you will
see it Heating about here and there like num
berless puce-colored mantles drifting upon the
water. Ou a ncartTapproach to the Bahamas its
appearance ia more frcqncnt, and hero yon will
como upon it, as wo did, iu patches acres
in extent, while connthss ccafowl hover above
it. circle about it, and rest aud plume their
wings or feet upon it. It is said to bo always
found in vast reaches between the Bahamas
and Bermudas, and this gull weed or mistle
toe of tho ocean, aa all other things of tho sea,
has its legend, which ia that its origin was to
mark the location of a lost continent which,
upon a time, man instant here sank into the
fathomless depths below.
A FAMILY JEWEL. Dr. David Kennedy, the
famoua physician and surgeon, of Rondout, X. Y.,
basrentusacopt of his new Medical treatise, a
work of great merit, apart from many elegant life
Illustrations of rare beamy. It should be read
and kept In every home. In addition to the
valuable medical lemons, there are two articles
from the widely-known author. CoL R. 7. C. Jud-
son, (Ned Buntline,) which add to tho interest of
the work. The price of thl* book la 25 cent*, but
any one encloting four 2-cent sumps and mention
ing The Atlanta Constitution will reeeivt a copy
free by matL *
mills right In town.
s sawed oat by steam saw
How to Make Money While Doing Good.
The many visitors to the city of New Or*
cans daring the past winter months, have fre-1
quently, both in their letters home and their
recounting the incidents of their travels dwelt
open the celebrated Charity Hospital, which
has been a refuge for many years to the sick
and injured, and which is sustained by the
Louisiana flute Lottery, about which, and iu
Monthly Grand Distributions of Fortunes, any
one can learn more on an application to M. A.
Dauphin, New Orleans, La. Here is a rare
case where a person may make much money
by doing good to strangers.
Catarrh and Bronchitis Cured.
A clergyman, offer yean of mftrtng from that
loathsome disease, catarrh, and vainly trying every
known remedy, at last found a prescription which
completely cared and saved him from death. Any
sufferer from this drredffil dtreats rending a reLf
A Young Lady’s Letter.
F. AIa., July 2, 1884.
Dear Ujicle:—Tbere is a lady living here, Mrs.
, who has had catarrh for many, many year*.
I have known she bad it for 15 or 20 years, and my
father once doctored her, as she was then a tenant
on our place. For tbe last 2% years she has been
bedridden, the catarrh, or cancer, (the numerous
physicians have never decided which), during her
2 x / t years in tbe bed, hsd eaten all the roof of her
mouth out. Sbe waa so offensive no oue could stay
In the room; ftho could not eutauytblng, but could
swallow roup if it was strained. She gave up to
die, and camcfo near perishing all tboughtshe
would die. Ilcr sou bought tbe B. B. B., Uotanlo
Blood Balm, and she used several bottles which
effected an entire cure. Sbe is now well and
hearty. I have not exaggerated onj particle.
Come, see for yourself, and look at her hood and
mouth. She Is a truthful woman, taP.s very little,
but ihc ran tell yon of many horror* of th 3 disease.
Come aud eco her.
A Vlad Fix.
Thousand* of men and women all over our conn-
try are silently mlrcrable, while the outaldo world
think you have no cause to grieve. But, Ah! We
pronounce no anathemas against any other reme
dy, but we assert that one single bottle of 3. B. B.
will do more in the cure of any case of blood poison
tbsn twelve bottles of any other. Our book is freo
and it tells tbe tale. Addrc**,
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga.
Quick Remedy*
It Is the peer of any blood purifier ever befbro
known. One single bottle of B. B. B. tests ita effi
cacy In every cose. It iucreoses the appetite, aids
digestion, acts powerfully upon the skin and all
the glands. Its action Is more like magic, and all
penons afflicted should seud for our 32 pago book,
free, filled with onparullclad home testimony,
proving it to be a world’s wonder—far in advanco
of anything ever before known. Large bottles fl
or six for 15. Sold everywhere. Address.
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Go.
Hook of Wonders Free.
By addressing Blood Bslm Co., Atlanta, Goorgia,
any one can secure free one of the prettiest and
most valuable 32 page hooka now out. It tells
all about tbe blood, its diseases and romodlea—
fccrofula. Ulcers, Rheumatism, Kidney Affection*
Skin Bnmors, etc., etc. Drop a postal for It a,
“THE EVANGELIST."
THE REV. SAM JUNES PAPER.
By special combination with tbe publisher* of
The Evangelist, Rev. 8am Jones’s paper, which
contains tho
OFFICIAL REPORTS OF HI4 SERMONS,
and is the best religious paper published. We
offer The Constitution and "The Evangelist" to
one subscriber for 81.60. This Is a great offc*r.
To old subscriber* we will rend Tho Evangelist
one year for 60 cents, or in clubs of live for 82.00,
Thia offer la open only for one month.
The last number of Tbe Evangcllrt haa six-page
description of Rev. S«m Jones's crusado against
sin In Chicago and the remarkable scenes being
enacted there. For &0cents (or 40 cents In clubs of
five) you take a year’s trip with the great cvangol-
1st all over the country.
BRICK
AMO
TILE
MACHINERY
■REST II THE WORLD.
wnd for circular A price*,
1 J.W. f tmflsJji ff 8oa.
MW. tVIDnxUy.Qj
w
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C rience and reference* Address P O. 31, Atlan-
Ga Name thia paper. aprO— wklra
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apefl—wky!3t
WOMAN’S FRIEND—Dr. Prttzy’s Ladles* Pill*
never fail. 8cnd 10 cent* and try one box. * Ad
dress ItROU DRUG CO., CuviKOTOK, Kv. Xarao
thl* paper. marJfl— wky6t wky e O w
Always H&fi» an.i at*»«* sure. (Adies* toilet
*lll»<Moii£')ly) and l.j.11, , l>. -r<-psU PllU prfc*.
tmui by m»!u MOVSSU&
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method of teaching ever devised. Send 4 cm.
wanted. Name thl* paper.
ltru»dway, Jf.Y. Agent*
HOOSIER SURER TILE HILL
D 1
Us
Cured l
EAFNESSV£!?ThP , Vra
twenty-right years. Treated by most tha
noted specialists of the day with no Irnefit.
himself in three months, and slnoe then
hundreds of others by same proeww, A plain.
J A succewfhl home treatment. Addrca*T«
128 East Mth street York City. _
. ms^-dren tne tha sal wky
Mentot* »««• renee
^SEVILLE fiUUOY ACttCY. 141 C
aprt-dly trim