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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION, ATtiAjSTA 6A. TUESDAY OCTOBER 19 It 86
11
POLITICAL FIELD.
XHB MOVEMENT OP THE LEADERS
THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY.
Inn Omn’i oommunutlo utttrineei - Ktwlit
Nit York, October IS.—A matting la the
Interest of nforms in tariff was held here thle
afternoon to consult and decide as to the
judicious stops to be taken to secure the elec,
tlon of representatives to congress and the
United States senate, who will do their beet
to bring about a revision, by reducing taxer, of
tariff levies on American industries, and espo-
elaliy a repeal of duties on raw material.
Beeolutlons were adopted commending the
action of those representatives in congress
who voted for a consideration of the bill to
simplify and reduce the duties on impaste
reported by the committee on ways and
mr ans at the last session of congress and am.
powering the chair to appoint a committee,
whose duty it shall bo to take inch action as
they may deem expedient to carry ont the
objeete of the meeting and its principles.
Bon. A. 8. Hewitt was the neat speaker.
Be reviewed hie partln the free trade light
In congresr,and said the democratic party went
into power with a free trade plank in their
platform. Tho plank was violated through
the petty Jealousy of the democratic leaders.
The New York members were pledged to
tariff reform, but were milled. Be deprecated
.the. congressional wrangle of Randall and
Morrison, and to speak plainly, thaoght that
the speaker of tho house should "have taken
these men by the earl and ahaken their
heads together”. Tbo president, he laid,
ought to have used the power given to him by
thepnblir.
If the democratic party, now k> power, fall
to send some free trade measure to the senate
letthe responsibUy of defeat, if debated, rest
on them and turn them ont of power. The
mistake of revenue reforms hu been that you
have insisted that reforms should boxinat the
top rather than the bottom. With free raw
necessary to. this clip and tho whole oonntry,
and he was ready to die, if necessary, in the
cuNr Ho concluded:
“If yon have not revenue reform here, look
to the democratic party, not to republicans, to
bring it about.”
The congressman was loudly cheered at?the
conclusion of bis remarks.
Anion Fhalps Stokes and Orlando B. Pot
ter urged members to action, and pre
dicted that a continuance of the policy of pro
tection would enslave labor. Ha olaimed that
Henry Ooorgo'a Promises.
Now York, October 18.—Henry George ad
dressed a mass meeting of fruit-handlers to
night In a hall on Pearl street. .Tn his re
marks he raid nexro slavery had been abol
ished, bnt another and more oppressive sla-
r r has been allowed to exist.
sixty-flve per cent, of the negro Infants
bad died yearly as the Infanta of the city do
now it would have raised a great commotion.
They were better lodged and hotter fed than
children in tenements are now. Mr. George
reviewed the social problem, and promised
that if he was elected he would do all la bis
power to make tenements more habitable aad
enforce sanitary laws.
*• - Abe Hewitt Indorsed.
Naw York, October 12.—The oounty com
mittee of New York eonnty democracy to
night agreed to Indorse Abram 8. Hewitt for
mayor. ~
Tammany Hall and Sir, Hewitt.
Hxw Yonic, October 13—the committee
appointed by tho Tammany hall county con
vention waited npon Congressman Hewitt
thle afternoon.
The address of the Tammany committee was
made publlo tonight. It says:
At this moment onr city la the theater of a move
ment on the part Of some of our feltow-cltlsens,
which may teed to serious and deplorable results,
webave observed with great regret and Serious
disgust this attempt to create a political class In
this country, in a government ofand by tho
whole people, wo deplore tho attempt to erect a
K eminent of, or by a part of the people We 0*
e that a government by tradaa-aolooi
out of existence; the people of each state an!
municipality ought to have an opportunity
whenever desired of deciding when and
how this shall ha done, aad
until destroyed, tho mloon onght to be crip
pled by every reatralnt and dlaability which
lccal public sentiment will enforce, and made
to relmhuree, as much as possible, ot the pub
lic lose it canter. The republican anti saloon
conference does not attempt to apply ante,
uniform and arbitrary in detail, to 60,000,000
K opie, living nnder widely varying conditions.
allow a for the element of time as a factor In
Ibis, and as In every other great reform, and
gives I cope to those educating agencies
which are everywhere at work with
Piodigieua energy, and which am rapidly
biiaging all right minded men to ons conclu
sion. It la permissible to retch a common
point by many roada. Tbe saloon hu entered
politics with its own methods and weapons,
and tho republican party must deal with it.
New York Republicans.
New Yoik,October 15.—The republican city
convention met tonight Cbauncy If. Depew
wee received with enthuslaetlc greeting. After
urging tbe republicans to nominate good men
end reviewing tbo historical work of tho party,
be raid he eonld lay nothing but good of IIr.
Hewitt. Befcrrtog to the labor candidate, ha
•eld:
Citizen G
would be ai
as a government
In e government
fEnsra'tin
government which U founded on the content
■bu kupported by the loyalty ot the rich * *
poor* learned end unlearned, capital Is ...
Sorer. We believe that TOur candidacy will do-
*at the edbrt taetaatea distinctive eiass in the
community, and result In a return to the demo-
eraMePMtyof thorn who have been temptxl to
desert U by dangerous and misleading advice.
Hewitt tend Booaavelt Accept
Nxw You, October 16.—Both Hr. Hawttt
and Hr. Rcoscrclt bavo written formal letters ao-
ospMig the nomination for mayor, tendered them
by Tammany hall and the republican parties, re
spectively.
The Mayoralty of Maw York City.
Nxw You. October 13.—[Special.]—'Tho
uppermost toplotn this city la the candidacy
of Henry George, the socialist, for mayor. It
la a novelty In polities, and everybody ia talk
a about it It is going to make the moat ex-
ig election, with one exception, that we.
have had in tsn yerri. George ia gaining
strength evtry hour. The real srorktng man
lave notes yet shown np in great fores for
Hut. His support to fkr comes from men who
lava ret away from the old parties, from dorks
and club men who hare no party, and from
far more respectable and influential persons
than might be expected to gravitate toward a
socialistic candidate. In tbe fashionable elate
are to be found many men openly advocating
George * ateetlon.’ In every newspaper offloe
are from three to ten editor! and reporters
who will vote for him. In one large wholesale
dry good! home than are known to be fifteen
talesmen who are for him. ft la remembered
that these lame conditions preceded the tidal
wave for Cleveland in 1683 and were
manifest again in IBM. Those two
elecUons toned thousands of party mao
into Independent voters, and party lines are
Weaker In New York today than tine* the
war. The young mu .especially are strik
ingly independent.
Irving Hall to Go Atone.
Naw You, October 15.—ft waa semioffi
cially announced this morning that Irving hall
had decided to leave Tammany hall red the
county democracy to their fat* and sun a separata
ticket. Afi it the news of last night's convention
reached the earn of cx-Scnator Ecclevloa. ex-
Ben ator Cornell ud Robert B. Kooney. president
of tbe beard ot Aldermen, these gentlemen are
atld to have met and arranged a separate ticket,
with Henry George Indorsed for mayor. Hr.
Kooney Is slated for reelection. This may he
changed by a coalition with the republicans and
the committee of oea hundred,
A Timid Committeeman,
..PnraitFk 0 , October 12.—At a meeting of
the republieu iron manufacturers and buii*
seas men to make arrangements for the recto.
Hon of Jamss O. Biel** ^ October so'!T
Ghairmu B . F. Jones, ot the nitbnal repub.
Iku committee, declined to aerreae chair.
(UBoftbe rcc-^tlou committee, saying that
»uch a step would look as if the demoustra-
•1°“ waa chiefly for the purpose of booming
Mr. B’.aiae for the presidency in 1883. He
•aid Hr. Blaine was not coming hare for per.
■•2x1 aygrandiaemtnt, but to halp the repnb -
Bean party in Pennsylvania, and that it wss
■ tuition whether bo cared to pass througo
Anti-Saloon Republican*.
Chicago, October 13 —The national com
mittee of anti-saloon republicans has issued an
address declaring that tba evils of the liquor
traffic, aaembod lad la the American saloon
System, have reachsd a magnltuda and degre-
*f dettrncUveneia that threaten tho frauds,
tfeuef the government and soctety, aad that
the time hu com* whoa political parties aad
Jdvato citizens must taka aides for or agalaj-.
(ha liquor traffic. The igloos onght to ba put
Citizen Georgs ia a gentleman whose books I
have reed with treat pleasure. Oeortc’t Ideas are
impracticable endue nut for the benefit or the
work icemen.
Mr. Depew spoke of the neeemity of potting
young men forward and concluded by nomi
nating Theodore Booeeveltfor mayor.
Mr. Roosevelt was unanimously declared
the candidate of party for mayor.
Tho rest of tho ticket chosen wu as follows:
John Corcortn for president of tho board of
aldermen; Loula 8. Goeble, register; Edward
Mitchell, justice of tbo supreme coart; Gran
ville P. Hawse, for judge of superior court.
The convention ikon adjourned.
The County Democracy.
Nxw Yoxk. October 14.—Tbe county de
mocracy organisation tonight held Its county
convention. Tammany's nomination of Hon.
Abram 8. HawlU waa indorsed and the balanco
of the ticket wu filled out aa agreed npon
with Temmsny’e conference committee.
Ry tho termx of arrange
ment, Tammany taka* tho judge
of the superior court and register while the
“counties” get the justiee of the supremo
court and president of the board of aldermen,
living ball being entirely frozen out Tn*
eongressiona', assembly and aldermanic can
didates are yet to be all: —
many and tbo eonnty del
Tbe ticket nominated in aatoilosri; Justice
of supremo court, Edward Pattenon; judgo
snperior court, P. Henry Dugro; register,
James J. Slevin; president board of aldermen,
Henry R. Beckman. Tba theorise of Henry
George were hotly criticised and the appro-
piiato resolutions were adopted.
Mr. Itlalna In Philadelphia,
Phiudwhu, October 10.—[Bp
Ur. Blame reached hare at noon today, ud
went without demonstration to hia rooms. I
learn from a prominent Knight of Labor that
his coming is intended to torn 'a crisis in the
Pennsylvania campaign: about which the
public know* nothing. This knight, who if
familiar with the Inside developments of the
situation, tells me that were the election held
today, Beaver would be defeated. Hosaygtho
Knights of Labor hava one hundred thoueand
rubers who are votera in Pennsylvania.
B e majority orthaaa have already beoc
persuaded that the interest of the order
end of working men generally will be batter
advanced by Black's election. The stand of
tbo democracy against coal rail,
read discrimination hu drawn,
without much noising abroad, the support
of tba majority of lab ringmon. ButBlalna’a
reception ond speech here tonight promise to
go far toward turning tha tide in Beaver’s
favor; and y*t,mo» Important than even this,
to tba republican msnsgare, la tho effect of to
night’s demonstration on tha presidential
campaign of 1883. Pennsylvania la Blaine’a
native state, ud here he hu hia most power
ful popular support. Without Pennsylvania
ha cannot ba renominated. Tonight’s meet
ing hu been arranged eecretly, for the pur-
poee of firing Ihe first gun in that campaign.
Tba streets In the neighborhood of ]the Acad
emy of Hoeio have been crowded since dusk
by ebonling crowd! and brass buds
No inch popular demonstration bu been sun
kata sines 1884. Tha Pennsylvania railroad
company sold 20 000 excursion tickets, Chris
Hagee, of Hobburg, and tho repreuntoUve
organizers of tho atnlo an all hare.
Blaine spoke first ia the Academy for an
hoar, then In tho adjoining horticultural hall,
•ndt hen from the steps ortho Union Loan*
club. All of then buildings were ao crowded
tbo door had to 1
Colonel McClure of the Times uye: “Out
side of partisan fullng and prvjudloe, tha mass
ofthapseple will weleomo Blaine, and thus
honor tho state that hu given the republican
party Us brilliant magnetic leader einc* the
days of Harry Clay.”
Tho ohlaf points of Blaine's speech arc u
follows*
Tha speech itself wu devoid of ipaclol tig-
nflcance, except inch u the surroundings
gave it. Its tbrea chief points wen mad* on
tariff, tbo nnnlan of the stalwarts and tha in-
dependents In thle state, and prohibition. John
Stewart, tha former leader of tho Independ
ents’ revolt, spoke on their behalf. Bat there
vu by a notable omlarion, no speaker on be
half of the stalwarts. This to considered very
significant Blaine congratulated the party
on tha reunion of the stalwart! and Independ
ents. Ho said tho republican party wu in
favor of rabmittlng prohibition to tho people,
end for that reason wu a good enough prohi
bition party for anybody, ud wu, above all,
tba party of protection ud ao entitled to tho
•uffrsges of tbo laboring mu. Hr. Blelno
ted on tbe fact that tha negro to deprived
NEWS BY WIRE.
HAPPBNIN08OFTHB WEEK BRIEF-
LY CHRONICLED.
Aa Attempt to inutiBiu eFrint-A Deaf and
Bomb Bey Literally Cooked to a KotBath-A
Wife Murderer Heated-Fat Bran to
Viffct John L, Bulllran, Etc,
Prrrsnuxo, Pa., October 11.—Intense excite-
nut prevails among tha Polish rcsidootoof
South Side over an alleged attempt to assassi
nate Bov. Fathar Htokasriis who presldMover
tho little Polish church at tho head of Fif
teenth street. It occurred about eleven o'clock
yesterday, while the priest etood before the
altar. Han had been said ud the father hod
just turned to addreu tho congregation, when
“crash” came a ballet through a window on
tha aonth tide of tho church, and flattened it
self against tho solid wall on the opposite
aide. For a minute confusion reign-
ed * in the church. Women
screamed, a choir boys ahouted, and mu; of
the members of tho congregation either press
ed foiward.’to ao* if Father Utokowita wu in
jured or rushed out of tho building to find
horn whore tho bullet cam*. The priest
showed great ooolnrae, notwithstanding tho
fact that the mtosllejmust have passed within
six inches of hie body. If it had been fired a
mmnte sooner It sronld have passed throogh
him. Ho turned, ud, with a gesture, craved
his flock to their scab; but not all of them, for
by this time upwards of a hundred hedkwarm-
ed out into the street ud into tho yard of tho
pariah building.
COOKED IN A PATH*
Count nee, 0., October 11.—Frank T. Ham
ilton, aged uven, of Wnynubnrg, Stark conn*
ty, u inmate of the Ohio Institute for tho
deaf end dumb, died n horrible death yesterday,
after three day*’ buffering. Thursday morn
ing Henry Goodfilliar, an attendant, fonnd
the boy in u unclean condition and took him
to the bath. Taming on tha water ho left tha
partially Imbecile boy In tha tub, ud u soon
utbe cold water In tho faucet had run out
the scalding inter came running in and sur
rounded the boy to tho waist. Ho wu aosble
to scesk or help himself, and when tho at
tendant returned the lad wu In a faint and
exhausted condition. On being lifted from
tbe tab nearly tha whole of tho akin fell from
the lower part of htobody. Tho boy remained
in the^rcateet agony nntil yesterday, wheo
■YAM AND SULLIVAN,
Chicago, October 11,—Paddy Ryan hu
tignad article! to fight John L. Sullivan eight
round! w.th small gloves at San Francisco
within sixty days. The fight will ba for
' * ’ thirty-five per cut of the gato
dUtl
of hta vote in tba aonth.
■Idered a good effort.
Ms speech to con-
Nashville's Political Demonstration.
Nashville, Tenn., October 17.—[Special.]—
Tha Taylor brothers speak hero tomorrow night,
end there Is reasonable prospect that there will be
In the city Ihe largest crowd ever seen here. Peo
ple have been coming In all day hr every sort of
conveyance, end every train tonight wu loaded,
Six or seven hundred people cam* In on the even
ing trains slue, and extra coachaa will be re
quired oc all tha NiehvUto hound trains tomor
row. Preparations for a grand psrade of the (to-
mocney an about completed ud It promisee to
he the largest turnout on record. The townie
noisy ud loll at llto tonight
Nominations tn Congress.
5th district, Hssaachuse tt*. E. Hayden,
Mddk
*5 district Humchosetto, B. Hone, democrat.
Id district, Kentucky, Dr. W. G. Hunter, demo-
"S' district, LooitUni, B. Mas, colored, repot)*
“mo.
ttth district, New York, George Wut, repub-
«h district, Massachusetts, H. C, Lodge, repub-
lifts.
teth district. New York, J. K. Ketchum, repub-
* Tth district, New Jeney, A Haamenchleg, re
publican.
Md district, Connecticut E. C. Lewis, repub
lic id.
slit district New York, y G. Sawyer, republican.
Vth district, Missouri J itsstfrt. republican.
t2d district New York, 1. If. Farnnhar.
9th district Massachusetts, Dr. £. 0. Barnett,
di rnoerst.
Tih district, Penneylruis, E. Belterwalte, den
im.
isth district Pennsylvania, r. Bound, repot-
to district, Arkansas, H. H. B. Holman, repub-
11th district. New York, W. Lonnsberry, demo-
CT snb district New York, H. Delane, republican.
Ifth district Pennsylvania, B. P. Setts, repob-
mh district Kamchusetts, H. Joyner, demo-
°t*lh district, New York, T.fl. flood, republican.
•ix ty-five and t
receipt
iipf Se
BROXa THIS RECORD,
ErBiNGEtELD, Mass., October 12.—Wm. R.
Rowe, of Lynn, broke all tba bicycle records
from six to twuty one miles in a ride against
time this afternoon on Hompdon park track.
He oovtrod 21 mile* and 140 yards In one
hour.
A DARGXROUI CAVB'IN,
Shenandoah, Pa_ October 13.—Early tl
morning a girl named Henrusoey, residing
Wut Coal street went into tha basement of
tha house, opened a door ud found herself
standing on tho brink or a cava In, about
eighteen feet in diameter and one hundred
fret deep. The whole bottom of the basement
ACROSS THE WATER,
Sana, October 11.—Returna from eighty of
tho etghty-ilx electoral districts show that
seventy are in favor ol tbe govern m ont
Rustchuk gave 1,010 votes for the government
ud thirty-nine for its opponents.
A crowd of fully 5,000 persona mot General
Kaulban on hia arrival at Shumla. The
spokesmen told him that the people had frill-
confidence in tho government. After-
ward tho crowd assembled near
the window where General Kanlbars was
seated ud hooted at him. Twelve Zankovista,
who were going to pay their respects to tho'
general, appealed to officers to dtopene the'
crowd, bnt they refused to do ao.
8ofia, October 15.—The aobruie hu been
summoned to meet on tho 27th Instant ot Tir-
novn. Nino suspected officer* have resigned
their position* tn the army. Several others
have been transferred to Roumelian regiments.
General Kanlbare to expected to arrive hero
tomorrow. Tho Rum ton consulate hu sum
moned Montenegrins and Macedonians to ai-
lemhlo ud nut th
General Kanlbars.
Mr. Gladstone 111.
London, October 12.—Hr. Gladstone to un
able to leave his bed roam, Ha to suffering
from Aver, ud his condition to believed to
bo worse than to publicly admitted.
Hr. Beadier In London.
London, October 16.—Rev. Henry Ward
Beecher delivered an address today In Rev.
Dr. Parkers’ city temple, on “Polplt Work.”
He dwelt npon the eta nowipepere rendered
to tho preacher, A number or questions were
uked Mr. Beecher as to hie idea of the doc.
trine of retribution udhto answers earned
Intense excitement, several divines rising to
their Act and lottfily protesting against hie
views. Mr. Beecher retorted that uy mtn
believing in retribution who married, eats red
society or smiled wu ■ monster. He prefer
red working through feu springing from love
rather than through foer of tho bubarlo doc
trine of retribution.
Cholera In Cores.
San Francisco. October Id.—Private ad-
vices received in this city state that oholers to'
•till raging in Corea. No idea can so formed
of tho ORtut of tho acourge. it hu more
than dscimatsd tho capital, where out of a
1, tbe death rate rules ot
population of 800,000,1
tho frighlAfcu^H
rthto
had fallen into tho workings of Oakdale col
liery. The house to still studtog, hi
ate entertained, not only for lta safety but Ar
the safety olethar build Inga in tho neighbor
hood. People an terribly excited.
A WIVE MURDERER HAHGXD.
Kontickllo, 111, October 14— At one
o’clock this morning about 800 disguised men
overpowered the sheriff, broke in Jell ud took
therefrom Henry WOilman, a wife murderer,
ud banged him .to a null shade tree near
the Jail Aftar hanging him they then ahot him
cloven times to make sure of their
A BARK ROBBERY.
Airland, WU, October 11.—Two men en
tered Wilmarth’a honk ot thin place about ton
o’clock this morning ud compelled Mr. WU-
mirth to uter tha raulL at tha mauls of
thslr revolvers. While ho wu In tho v
th* rohben secured (4,000 in cash from aa
life ud made their escape.
,STRIKING AGAINST PORK.
Chicago, HI., October 15.—The situation at
thaatock yards wu farther eomplL-Ated this
boofbut
r work.
morning by tho refuse! of 1,200 beef batchers
employed by Armour to go to work. This
long-threatened strike of the beef botchers
wu decided on at a muting last night.
Tba order for beef ud sheep Milan to
strike this morning wu confined to tho Ar-
eitabltehment. This to taken u Indiest-
tho Knights of Labor is
Armour. That
operate either it*
ig departments Util morn
lawman continued to arrive during tho
forenoon, ud thin afternoon it wu reported
that Armour had fifteen hundred men en
gaged.
Twenty, two packinghouse firms at yards
this afternoon Issued a card to tho public, In
which thay say:
union. »ml th at Armi
title for tbo present W
oariclrem IndfrldoaM/^l
I “AUstsumenlsud rumor* that A|
are Handing In tba way of. or In any HMHP
goring u saleable solution of the question at
AOo.u*
sympathy with the lea-hour
eyitem.”
A morning paper prints u Interview with
-Slegata Barry, of the Knight* of Labor, re
garding the ordering out of Armour’s beef
mu, in which Mr. Barry e*y«: “Wa hare
formally declared war on the big park specu
lator, and It will besrar to the knife. Isbell
get to Richmond now before tho convention
ljourugud yon may depend upon It, Ad
our’a meet* throughout United Statu will
months. Wa will fight u aggressive battle,
ud Armour, withhliimillions, srill either bs
brought to terms or bo relegated to tbe position
of a retired, if not bankrupt porkpuekar, Aa
Aruthamenara concerned woahnll taka
care of them.”
Boycotting tho Flnkartou.
Chicago, October 13.—Hr. Barry, of tbo
arbitration committee appointed by tho
Knights of Labor to adjust labor troubles in
*—*- ‘ r- “The man hare thair
tha stockyard*, 1
minds utontho
eight-hour rale and will
•greo to nothing alu. We made a proposition
Ithta morning to tho packers that thay adopt
the eight-hour ntto and tha men will agree to
work til tho overtime necessary. If I find
■rings are ul sometimes suipact they are.
bd that peckers are pitying a waiting game,
I will take more energetic meuorea atones
bd on my return to Blehmond shall toll tha
myretn
knights than that Armour’s beef ie not as
good u It ued to be and w* will ace how tbe
E inions of two million mu will offset
1 trade.” Pinkerton’s mu hare com
listed their culinary apparatus and srill nov
Ira entirely in Wuhingtm Botcher's Bona’
packing house. They cannot hoy anything
outside, as, except at tha Transit hoot*, there
fl a rigid boycott against them.
A nor, blit* Arrested.
Chicago, October 12 —Forty ornate wero
made yesterday by Captain Bchaiek and bli
officers in thair endeavors*to captors tho mta
who mobbed th*anarchist tafonner.Goodfrtoad
Waller Bur day night Four of the area wero
Idmtiged by Waller, and bald without ball.
Among them to tha nun whom Waller stabbed
He I* only ilightly woonded. Several night*
last weak partial of moa vtritad the raeidmci
of Major Cola, In tba suharto with tha ovidaot
iatvation of maltreating and torrerialog him
relf and Amfiy, ud, possibly, aseaseintting
him. Major Ool* wis one of th* jurors la th*
aaarehtatcaie,
jhtful averago of a thousand per day
About u many Coreans aa there are peoplo In
the itata of California hare bean swept away,
already, ud It to bard to say where tho plague
will atop. Corea to described aa “an appall
ing pest spot” Never wu there a more
frightful record of tho ravage* of disease on
mankind. Tha story of tbo plague of Lon
don to beggared by wbat to now golog on In
8ecooL They are beginning to giva over tho
task of buryidg their dead, and tho city to
thnatenod with positive extinction.
Prairies on lire,
Sherman, Tex., October 14.—Late advices
from tho Indian territory atato that tha moat
extensive had destructive fine ever known In
that territory ar* sweeping over (he prairie*.
Millions of acres of rich grazing Undh which
a Aw days ago wan covered srlth a luxurious
growth of gnu, are now barren wutea. The
area humid over extendi from Vlnita on the
north to Muskogee on tho south, and on either
■Id* of tha Htosourl, Kansas ud T*xu rail
road as far as tha eve can sec. Largs num-
ban of eattle hare been burned to duth, nod
immense quantities of hay, bated and loose,
which wu to hare bun used Ar fodder dur
ing th* winter, hu bun destroyed, and cat
tlemen will b* obliged to drive their herds
elnwhar* to uvo them from starvation,
A GREAT COTTON FIRH.
S. M. Inman A Go —Tha Oats City’s Leading
Iluence and stud.
dal center. They are fonnd u active pramo-
tors and managers of great industries, and at
the head of largs mercantile concerns, and by
their effort* the btuineu of the dty hu grown
fro at t avenge retail trade to a valuable whole
sale patronage. Every department of trade is
now wdl represented by reliable Jobbing
houses—home* that are a credit to the com
mercial enterprise of the dty, ond that are
contlnndly adding to lta li
Ingu a wholesale market
The manufactures lad
have not been allowau to pom unnoticed, u
there ere located here several extensive and
wall managed munActuring concern* that
are of incalculable benefit to the dty In u
Industrial sense, and constant additions are
being mads to thair ranks. Indeed, it can bo
truly said that tha mareutilo ud manufact
uring Interests of tbto lire ud buy dty an
in splendid condition—ud nil owing to tho
Indomitable pluck, thorough energy ud Intel
ligent enterprise of her buetneu men, for it li
their dibits that built up the msgatleut At
tests of today, ud of none can thto bo more
truly laid than of tho Ur* ud progressiva
firm of
A M. INMAN A CO.,
which Is the leading ud moat widely known
commercial concern In tbo state of Georgia, II
net In th* utlro aonth.
Menu. & K. Inman ft do. are largely en
gaged u ootton merchants, ud are unques
tionably tho moat extensive interior ootton
dedere in tbo world. They handle annually
860,000 balre. 170,000 bale* being handled by
tbe Atiuta house, ud 80,000 by tbetr bona*
to Houston, Tex., which to operated
firm name ot lumu ft Go. It will
therefore, from thaae dguraa that it raqulrei
ao argument toprore that tha firm of 8. H.
Inmu ft Co., of Atiuta, are tho baavtoitln-
terlor dealers la cotton in this or uy other
country.
a H. Inman ft Co. get their supply of the
staple from all lections at tha cotton producing
•talcs. Thay ar* not cotton Acton, bnt buy-
ore, ud buy from th* planter*, country mer
chants ud cotton hudtora generally, with
whom they have the moat Avonbl* arrange
ments for enpplylng their demud. They Mil
their cotton to domestic muuCecturers, Now
England end Canadian eplnners. and to lead
lag exporters for shipment to foreign coon-
trier, whose ord era they are aver ready to aup-
t,7 fh. house of 8. H. Inman ft Co. euloya a
distinguished reputation in the Amerlcu oot
ton market, and la not unknown in the Euro-
peu cotton market. It has been a powerful
ud important factor in developing the cot
ton Interests of thto section of the country,
ud baa mode Atlanta whet It to today aa a
THE ANCnOBXA SAFE.
8t. Johns, N. F., October 11.—The steamer
Anohoxla, Captain Small, left Glasgow on tho
18th of September, bound for Now Yotk, She
had700aoutoon board, Including passengers
and craw. On September 22d, four days later,
• strong gale sprang up ud a heavy toe struck
tbo ship ud in the lurch which tho mado tbo
shaft of tho propeller wa* broken. At the time
of tho accident tho chip was in latitude 50°
ud ID* north, ud longitude 39° west. She
was reckoned to b* about 1,800 mile* wut of
Ireland. Thn ahock occasioned by the bretk*
tog of tbo shaft threw th* ship on her tide
ud strewed glassware ud other ar
ticles -over the deck. Huy of tho
pauengen ware -frightened, but on tho
ofllccn assuring them - that there was
no duger of sinking, a panic wu averted and
order restored. Salto were set ud the chip
became somewhat steadier, but the rudder
gear being ueleia, she drifted about at the
mercy of the eravee from the 22d of Septem
ber to Wednesday, October 6th, efforts being
made dally to repair the broken abaft. 00
October 6th th* engineore effeeted temporary
repairs, ud tho ship wu ouoemore got under
control, bnt soon afterwards thn ehaft broke
ignis, this time boyond nil proepect of repair.
A consultation was held by tho officers ud
theexHtpoeltionof tho ship ueertelsed. It
waa found that ahowu eighty miles off th*
comI of Now found Usd*
As provision* were running short, tho first
officer ud aeven others volunteered to launch
• boat and maho Ar thn coast. The dret offi
cer waa lnitructed to secure the services of a
steamer, if tho boat reached 8L Johns. Fri
day, th* ship made a little headway, and tho
expected steamer did not com* on that day,
nor tha following night. On Saturday at
noon, however, tha glad cry of “lud” rug
throogh the ship. Another volonteer crow
were quickly enlisted, consisting, thto time,
wholly of passengers who polled toward the
shore. Both boots reached tho land safely
but theetcamer, which was amt to tho An-
chnrla’a relief, did not find nor, and the litter
had nearly reached poit before iho wu seen
ud taken in tow by another vessel. There
were two death! ud two blrtba on board dur-
toMbevojajA^
JAMESPYIE’S
PeamM
Best Compound
WASHING and OLE ANINO
Df HARD OB IOIT, HOI OB COLD WAT1S
WUOaut JffarwsM MJUUUO or OAJT9A
8AVE82»^J^
auria-dlylhur ttaan why* a w Mm
NERVITA.j
MBShroo.. ^
fweei
oporp
Name this paper.
*»7
PORTABLE MILLS
Hum this paper. JuO-tua Urn rat wkf
ton to.
The house wu founded in 1867, when the
cotton btuineu main Its infancy here, hot
they started to With a conactontlou determi
nation to puah the business to a auooesiful
issue—ud thay did it. Their first yaarto trano-
actions amounted to about 16,(00 bales: now U
reaches 250,869 bale*—a magnificent showing.
ffi|cy were tha prime movers to the erection
■the Altonta ootton compress and warehouse,
[which bus storage capacity of asm* thirty
Ithouund bales at oao time, tin which they are
torgaly istarutad. Thay took th* tolattatory
•tap in every move calculated to advance tha
cotton Interest* of this section, and they hen
now the proud satis Act Ion of knowing that
thair effort* brought forth good Malta. Taay
give employment to about six hundred indi
viduate to vaiieu capacities, thereby msAeri-
ailnbeaefitiag tha workltg dorse*.
Th* hens* of 8. H. lomu ft Co. to certainly
In greet commercial concern, end on* that hu
don* a greet deal for the commercial and in
dustrial Jatenslt of Atiuta. Ur. 8. H. In
man, the head of the firm, Isom of AtlsoU’s
meet veined citiaean. He is one of th* most
(nteiprielng erd progressive bnsineumen of
like city, ud teku u active part In arery un
dertaking that hu a tendency toadvaac* bar
interests sad extend her true and Influence.
Ha is president of tha Manufacturers' atsocto-
lion here, which to anew omateatton, gotta*
up for th* e pedal parpoe* of promoting manu
facturing ladntnu to tha gate dty. Witts
ush a msn at the bead ol affairs, it to little
(reader that the beau of SL K. Inman ft Co
should be each a gnu eueeeu—acradttto tha
dty aad u honor to ito founders.
The Cheapest Furniture House
In Georgia.”
aajgaggi
__—Aim tor nmiUhluf 0 'matin bourn!*
TOjfggT
UNITARIAN CHRISTIANITY. 1
~Wq| __
Halo, Jainei Freeman Clarkd tad other*, alio
loaned to person* willing to to paj pottage upon
wkyfit
1TSPP*
Mum UU* paper, f«blft-ly wed frl urn w kf
Mhetr*__.
wrlttplJM.
ootft>wkj4!
Southern Medical Colleges
ATLANTA, OA.
IRON ROOFING
W.G.HYNDMAN&CO
—r.--re f tale, the
ertjr, towlt: On® tract, oonaUUncof
befog fire hnadred tcret, more oe
t of unimproved Und, poatala*
~d or lea;tl*o dower of
Bold am r
Terms on day of aala. TW^Heptemb^uoth^SM,
oet 8-why 4t
Admmlnlriralor;
Isae-dfr eon taaa thn whr
Hsation this paper.
Name thla paper.
rejeoedl . ,
arraea Wia4r 4
.fESSeVlo.
.■tffeftTL.
eomblotd. Aflll
liireqfNUtfi
Ubreal Discount
to Club*.
.. rn iiiiiui..,
UNtVCaaAL QRAVtTY
LEVEL ca
gy ■. Breed 6L,
ATLANTA. QA. .
*ep7—wkjfoi
KEYSTONE WRINGERS AT LOWEST WHOLESmLs PtOSOi
MSBtS Bedaiotftfceu■■•**« Addnm V. F. AUAJia do cxh.Eric. I a.