Newspaper Page Text
XT: Pilis
11. CL e*.t
reliable, Purely Vegetable.
f crtc? tu.'teles's, elegantly coated,
taa r 1 gtdute. purify, cleanse an !
1 In. RADWAY’S PILUS for the
Wt v > tv-orders of the stomach, bowels,
Writ ’bladder, nervous diseases, dizzi
___ >xo, costiveness, piles.
<* EtDAFUE,
FEM ILK COMPLAINTS.
BILIOI «SK«S,
KSTION.
» HYSI’F.PSI '•
* ON •■TIP AT ION
• , AND
ill Dinorder* of the Lit UR.
' rve the following symptoms. result Ing
• cf the dig* -live organs: «'oi»-
uii. inward piles, fullness of Wood in
i i.liry of the stomach, naasea,
•1.-'gust e." food, fullness of
• s < t the stomach, sour eructations.
* * #*r.Vn-x ■ -1: ntering of the heart, choking
•»r s-iffw-.-thc: sensations when in a lying
losturv, «liniii«ss of vision, dots cr wens «>•■-
fore the sic hi. fever and dull pain iu tne
head. d<tiei.-ncy of perspiration, yellow
oi th : k..i and ey« *. 1,1 th»‘
che*<. Hint*, ami bmilen llu-ne* of heat,
bumine in the
\ firw <*«»>•> of |;U»W.U J* I’iM-S u.ill
tree the svsi m of all the above named dis-
Or J»: T e cents a box. Sold by druggists,
or sent by mail. __ . . _
lADWAY A • ■ • lock box
36.’. N*v. York, for Book of Adcive.
MEB*’HANTS »»-. yu -B «‘ b .-s.j-neroi r:
if ... . k at ou” pri < -• K’ll-'.is
f.-r f.■*». ••• • freight to
nv - «|p prvt.- i you on these
i»r< by -t II .»>’ we near pm.
i,». •«. I'n ■'*! a*»d vinegar
St FREE HEAT!
•i ‘ The lax." Ih-it l.ishls »»m Itvom
| .1 El it
Z ' FALLS HEATER.
I _ i ve( hs iiUi2!iilii-*4F”it
lr .« -M• •« V ’ i* l ’ 4
~ !• .. : - •• ‘ ’drier-
V ’ ’ * • **!. ’ • *'».
..< - ■ ”i:i-;. ’d <•.< <►.
1? .’diis 80-tom >lb-s.
i iiiri i -r«»» »: ' ’
y« r . Holstein, of .»-*••» * • ie-ty. Kept His
M.-u.-v f-r »..»« Period.
Eights- brignt. r.-<k:;.a silver dohars i
*«n' ihr v.n upon the t:rt r <•< th<- re
. eivn.;. teii-T the Allan: •- Trust an I
..... i - .r.v I r .in. uad coiiuect-
• ■■• ra-
ing st ry
Eve • u-dl..r 5 > <c •! alnwst as n» w as if
it had • :i!y r" J tie- mint an hoar or two. |
The - I . ra. *e of was in the
-.’tiv «•: th- riai of each coin. ,
T:.« sid i an - brush as a new
Eneh d la - n.'.-« « :.;n :• 1 ".ilh the stnu
•iat» . I h l ! • ■ Pl fr h-‘king
f..r thirty ' J- •«> Iyth - thrift and eeon
. •ayi f « i>. k tv f-s-i. r. h’or ihir-
tv-fotir v« *i< Mr. eor'. H« l »—.a, vno lives
n ar ' pt t mon y ; >•-
i:e»\ <a-j it. am: «<a.y tins week «! h- resur- :
red it .snd restore it to ' i rti iimds of
comm. r«-.., ir, uai. it. although thiity-four
years old, it had bu: little cin-ulativn
Mr. Ho a. :n r. -Ivd th- m ney thirty
four y»:,r ag >, each ‘-.liar Irish, glossy
aai g..'ten,i ii _ just, from the iniut. It had
coined iut .* st - it tine- when he re- '
ctiv- l K. and la in-: 04 a very e.-<-t->nu tl
turn «<f tn....;, Mr. Hoastt-in put the nt«n«y
a•»;«.’ <n a safe place v h« re it would keep.
Sntiyi* r. ■I, .tie by siu< , the clgaty
d >i!c» wc ■ k-pt hi ■t- ii away thr .ugh all
of J» . : th- v..*t, and
■ v. ■
. u,. - av-> Mr. Holstein took up
‘ j, rl> -p* press d t-y the prev-td-
. t. , t j ; a m «tori’tg oldie 1-
i. > tin youti.ful looking
to AG .: t an ! pal l it to Mr. J. K.
it- •. . Mr. Hickey de-
• with ■ . A ..ata Trust and Batik-
king m my. together
. •• tl.e story connected with
- : -I i.gree of interest
.• > ■ ai. <ct what might
•i - Uik; t.i« if they had
ha > ■ »sf active man with a
if b- i.a-t .i it in Atlanta
s . . • :! t 1 .me tie would have l»- n !
. a. ’st -tie gentleman, an t tn- j
r . .t-- 1 tint I • mieh: have gat |
. : of .. . .c. : « i*ier by putting it luto i
r. . v.-’ h beg in to • IF- J
cul.vte 0.1.1. the mm-y wIS i n .|_ I
Mr. J A. y- ' ■ <. <•: the Atlanta Trust I
ar-i I’a •’ i; :• 1 a e.»! - ilution
t. tint out : >»w h would have acctnnu- ■
lated had tl f teen put cut nt Interest |
•itirl: : all ! thirty-four y> trs. The re- t
s lit -f Pis t;c;:ri;ig u.s-- astonishing.
it th' ■ t • ■ • :t IVs . t 7 <>• r
w. ..: -u .-i i t<« If the ■
!• a f< r it . • r-• tie • a ] ,
in? »- . . . . t ••. . < i: ;t in :
stead * it in this way Mr.
K..':- «. keep it s--*»r-ly ’in hU
j»»: s . »n. v.:? hh-di I until this w• k.
or i »• n wh a it w•- b-.!.|. a rv :y thir
ty- Air v. • .„ •? «*-|t in T. It. Nea says
ti. ■ . . great a. i’ was thirty-
f >'■ * y* r- . ..him' e sts « dy n'siut
half . - re* ! i. "aii 1 ail sorts of
b s ar much cheaper.
T’r :.e i • !».... the art:.’! ’of iron. It
c« : • I- tl ; -I" <:. u.h as it did thir
ty- ir year- . Iu • ito sell 1 ugh iron
at s -r.* 4 .nd. v.b eu- u you may pur-
«1» -- P us s ! and ready lor use at
4 c* n-
Ihe I*oorevt 'lnn in the World
Ca •• r•. ? • 1| . ive by return mall,
it . • . I. if •. a prescrip-
’ for a speedy, per-
Eia.-sil a * private b ine eure for la»st
Ma - ' . klity. Atrophy. Night
la . V.» ••. • I will furnish the
ni i.» .r.e. f : . -. d. ch :.p r than .1 would
t tore. Add.«s G. 11.
V. ic -.t. I" x \1 Marshall. Mich.
1 Illi : % I l. or THREE.
RtMWoll Ha* It il ll’.her Mysteries I tian the
The arrow « * I- seems to be pointed
’ th • !.:;!•■ • -,.wn of Itoswell. Within the
ii I- if a ini! • In that !o-ai.t • three hap
h •::: have b.-en mtide desolate during
,s j. t t i ■.• years. Three of the most
pn>m n-nt cuiaens of th- place diaappear
»
Starves. Ti.e body of th- last man who
disapjo.m 1 was f<>.. i foully mutilated,
-r ti.e m- t horrible mur - r known iu
~.. • ‘grimin.-i annals of the state. The d.s
tlie oth r two is stgl
i .• lin <l—’p m>>. ry. WT.at became of
t will, p-rh .ps. never l-c known, but
•!eve!<-.-- tents have led the people of
tot to.v'i to b’-iieve that they were
tlih 1 f r la-ir money.
killing of For- st Crowley, with
not strange and inexplicable features,
the « •-•** **•’ other will-known men
Atlanta on the san: - mission and
heard of again was kept secret
*l. ’ Hue to their dis-
i*> might be obtained. All < .Torts
I" U ' » l „V anything al. .ut the missing
Sis* .’ith gi,j.ili-« and it is probable that no
r, 'i tell the talc.
our Th.’ir. «>n lived near Roswell,
of ihr l etra.jc.’e. ful pl :nter and one of
thr C«Hin n,v! * ia l ’ r,t section of the
_ •••. .irn-J the daught* r of Colonel
party 'Vot- |{ U -ker. the most popular
the r> p»* ! ea Milton « -uniy, and fur some
..... ~a •u'lh- eventful trip of Mr. Tnom
• “ * o (dsiita, they lived in utdn er upt
rd by
partv in"”' corning the young man de-
■* jj (Atlanta f< r the purpose o<
*/ mules. He nad just start-
rv* ’
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION-. ATLANTA. GA. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1894.
ed to plant and had been in correspond
ence with some parties in this city with a
view of buying more stock. That morn
ing his wife drove with him to the station.
It was the last she saw of him. Next day
he failed to come back. The next day
passed and the next, still he failed to re
turn. His friends became uneasy and
came to Atlanta, but no trace of the
missing man could be found. No one had
seen him. That he came to the city was
assured, because he conversed with the
conductor on the trip. What became of
him after he arrived could not be learned
and until now nothing has been heard from
him. This was the first citizen of Roswell
who came to Atlanta to buy live stock and
never came back.
Six months after Thomson left Mr. Rob
ert McGinnis, also a young married man,
came to this city to buy horses. He was
a man of acknowledged sobriety and hon
esty, and when the days passed and he
never returned home there was alarm id
his native village. He was last seen at
the stable of Miller 4t Brady by several
citiz. ns of Roswell, among whom was Mr.
Seaborn Crowley. No explanation could be
given of the sudden and mysterious d!s«:p
pearance of the two men. Circulars of
description nainink a reward were sent
to the police authorities of different cities,
hut no reply was received. Neither of the
men lias ever been heard of.
Thus is was that when Forrest Crowley
was lur’d away from Roswell upon the
pretense of a nude trade to an awful
death that all the strange coincidence’s
came out.
"I knew t!ie two men well,” said Mr.
Seaborn Crow! y yesterday a!ternooii. "My
son Furrest and McGinnis were great
friends and grew up together. Fitrrc-t
knew Thomson, too, and when he disap
peared w - ware aii vary much con •eriu-J.
It is certainly a queer and mysterious
thing. I !>.J,ve, us sure as 1 am standing
here, that I would haw tn ver b ard of
Forrest again or found ills i<ody unless 1
had .umc to Atlauiu the same uay with
him.”
No trial con be too e'.k t . tivc, no test
to» exacting, for ii<- a .-nimble qualities
of I»r. Prive’s I.akmg Powder.
OLU At.E A.Xti Ytll'TH.
General < h—ui, vi. Clay, Eighty-four
teals. Medx a « n j ui < iftivu.
Lexington, Ky., November 11.- (Special.)—
V Lit* ii.iii, the estate ot CieneriU Cassius M.
• lay, is the point to which all eyes are
iiirned today, and much .-pi, ulalii 1 is in
dulged in as to l’i<- eV.mis wLicti have tra: --
pired within the wails of that historical o >!
man ion within the past b.i ty - :.;iii In .11 a.
Nothing can he learned of tin iet>urt>.st mar
riage ol General Clay at. i p,< tt Mi--. 1
Ki< iiar-taon, the slight flit- n y.-r-obi
daughter of parent.-- ao.v dead. 8;i; ■ • the
g< neral mi I I. niy apj ar-<l in JlichmoiKl on
Satur.lay and . -cured a lie-ow to m„r:y
the git I not a woid word iii. Ix-eu heard
from Whitehall save that ;-•> cerer.-.miy lias
taken place, amt tl’e r< .. :<ii ti n w-n •ir li
ami the general an J ids , ;i» i bribe . r- shat
off from the world is th. i •a. o i i v.ai- .-»<•
has poste’l urim-d ph k-ts aroumt tut. os
lite, and the otslj means of gaining ad
mit tarn-- to Vi'liit-'jai l is to ;;lve .-oi’ti
tersign and pass the cordon of pickets.
Tins- vid) ties ar )>v> t on the alert. Toe
relatives of Gon ral Clay are < xi.t-eu-d to
raise a big row and attempt to prevent tne
marriage if it lias not y> t i>een sob-niniz >l.
but those who know th • old general ami i:is
stubborn character aver that aii the sol
liers in the Vnit“d States army can"; br-ak
off the match. ’I nos- iu from th unit y
surruunduig V. dteaall stale that the gen
eral Las become v< ry erraiie or late and is
in constant fear that h- will !»• kilkd, an t
n onl-r to preven; the sujiposed enemies
from surprising him hi- has pa l; ;■•<! his
entire estate, and Whitehall tonight is an
obi fortress, in order tv tear the girl
brtde irom tin- arms of th obi soldier those
who oppose tin- marriage must rir.-t pass
tin ••vntvu > 1 pi. k ts. and t ien me- . the
men • di't. ..a 'i lh<- geneiul
on-’- pi-.>v’ ti his exjs rtne- in killing S im
u-l M. isrouti with twelve strokes in almost
a half minute’s time, li t;mic..-tood thtu
the •-••■m-ral * ngag-I <Munt\ Ju t 11
liuilll. of Mam-im .-vuiit; , to per •nn the
c-remony on Saturdi . but Judge <.'.ietiatdl
<<?n!d m>t it-avt it;. Itn >nu. ami .1 i.- ;m
--?>*sstble to k irn waeth.-r Hie general has
el marrb I Jj-s It. -Mid-..* <-• 1. t. No
one has vi.-ii-.d the 11.- - sine i’liday aud
•t is reniuV’-l Hom society «.n I tn- ou--. -
world as c mqdvteli a- if i* v.en* lo< alv*.l on ,
i h island in mM-ocean. lion. Cassius M. i
Clay, Jr., a tamii.iat-- for the demoerati
nomination for : »>v*•* ti« • ol A atu- i;y am;
:.r« ; blent of tl;<- last constitutional conven
tion, is a son of General Clay. IL- is at his
farm in Bourbon county, :-mt it i.-, not
known what steps he will t:.ke to prevent
the marriage.
Über.* He First Met the Girl.
It sc.in; that G.uer-i Clay, whose heart 1
has seemed tuine>i to stone since the k- s :
of ids wife years ago, first tnet the girl he
a.is proeuri •• ali ■.n- t tj marry mar \ all y
View a few hours olt. r the death ot h r
mother. Mis. K.vharuson v.us kill
ed iu a niilr. ad ae> idem m ar
Valley View ..u i Gem-:al • Clay,
who was al the station, was a witn’exs to
th- intense grief of th- girl who was made
at: orptmn by th- ac< . lent. Th< t. ars ot j
the child ii-tti-m*-i th- heart of tbn’erai ■
Cl.;y in u W;.,> it. t aii th< <-<»queties ,r.;d
of "!i- • II- s ill Ai I: oh *i:i 1 t.i.lel
to a<- otnpl's 1 oming a s<—re ,r more of
v-a.s, and .-.o'l the :ner ■ strip ol a girl
awaken- <i in th !».•-;*: t e*f ;he t.i.l war
horse si pa-su»a .vhii-h a .- had 1 niy niel
li.-. i, and yister ay when i, ay.a-<M ia
Iti -.uiu.u , his lev- ' Miss Ita-ha Json
had 1 ,*uvi-nat< I the veteran o* four score
am; four ' ars :i: such away that !-■ de
lay. ■! that he *i.. I. !ik I’vnce de Leon,
found the spring of youth- General Ciay
has provided tor and -ilucat- i Alias Rich
ardson and at hix de th she v.iil be one
ui the riches: young widows in the bio
gras-. Both of the Richar-.lxon boys guv
their cons-nl to the marriage and the only
obstacle in th- way wilt be the opposition
of General Cray’s family, who object en ac
count of the difference in ages of the
bride an i g. •out.
Miss Richardson is : a: I to love the gen
eral and take oi: uv< r him pr isy much as
if he were .1 youth of twenty instead of a
man olt enough to b.- her father three
turn « over.
The clos friends of the yenerai in his
younger days luv-ir "he union and u -< tare
tii.it his marii. ge tv the gir’, who 1 said to
l« u mod-1 in the way ot beauty and
womanly virtues, v. Hi bring happiness into
his th'-linlng yt-i.r- . No on - should object.
Genend Clay was Lincoln’s minister to
Ru.-': :a ami is now . ly-fi.ur years of age.
FOREST I tltlis’ix tHKAYSAS.
Twenty-Five Miles Aren H’.uiivd. lint
No Settli-ments Suffer.
Memphis. T-nm. Nov-m •er 11. in the past
twenty-tour hours tm vast fires in the Ar
kansas fori-Ms Lavi- done no damage ex
cept to timlM-r, although they still rage with
unabated fury. Twenty-live miles between
Marion and Jones’s landing have been
burned out and now the tires are headed
toward ’lie river and were only four miles
distant from the xater at night.
Reports from the burnt district today
make .t certain that no s-ttu im.-nts have
been invaded, the- tires b-.-ing eonaneii to
lie- timl er. They navel slowiy a- the woo l
Is ail hard, am! in uiaoy placi-s the emmtry
is marsh} ami damp. There are reports
of life lost, but tlie.e are vague, and are
not seriously entertained. The long drought
am! the consequent iL-yne ■ i.f tm- wood 1
has resulted i at* unusual number of lires
in towns in this sect! in.
At Ripley, ’!’• tin., yesterday, the people
gathered and prayed for lain. At Nut Bush,
Tenn., ;> nigre-; - , atti-niptcd to kdi a lattie
sn.ti-e bj burning a pn- of wood over h.m.
A couiiagratio’i started ami hai. a dozen
plantations were sw.tit c! vvtiythlng. Be
tween Covington ano Dyersburg tires are
raging tonight. T. b graph and teb phone
wires .ne burned away, ami the particulars
are meager.
Smart ’V-»ed am! Belladonna, combined
with th- <dh-r ingr— Item- csr-.i in the best
l»>rous plasteis. m;-k Crete." b. \\ . and
P. Baelau he Piasters b. t in the' mark
et. ITice % cents.
STILL FIGHTING.
run japaxesk aa in vjcroitiES
DVJiING THE i'AST WEEK.
Fightinc Near I’oi-t Arthur—They Capture
of Klncliow— (.'hin:* piling for Peace.
The Ciiiueao Demorulizud by Japs.
Yokohama, November 5. —Advices received
here from the front show that there has
been heavy lighting in the country just
north of Port Arthur. The dispatches re
ceived are brief and silent on some impor
tant points.
It appears that Field Marshal Oyama di
vided his forces. While one division was
landed on the east coast of the peninsular,
north of Talienwan, another division was
detached with orders to effect u landing
near Kim-how and to proceed thence and
join tiie main body of the army. This op
eration was a complete success. The Japa
nese encountered no Chinese warships and
the transports reached Kaveniko and dis
embarked their troops, guns, horses and
munitions stfely.
Kinchow, which is a walled town, and
' which was believed to be held by a large
i garrison, wa.- immediately attacked. The
, utter defenses were carried by the Japanese
j after a few hours’ lighting. The Chinese
; made little further resistance ami the Jap-t
--m i- were soon masters of the place.
In tli. meantime, the Japanese fleet,
wiiich hud cimiytd the transports, opened
; a heavy lire < n Tulienwati ami Kayenko.
1 Tiie llrtng scarcely teased for many hours.
‘ Ci ver-d by the lite from tiie ships, the land
i force nttacke i an i captured Talienwan In
i a brilliant fashion.
1 The dispntchi s state that the losses were
heavy, 'liny also mention that an impor
tant naval i ngag'ment occurred Saturday,
out gives no I-tails.
Suing f«»r Pence.
London, November s.—The Daily News
has infoi-.nation tin t China !s suing for
peace iu fact, has instructed her envoys in
ti trope to submit to the pow-.-rs the terms
whit.ii .die is willing to offer, it is a forma!
renew;:! or repetition, on a larger scale, of
the overtures 'nade to the British govtam
metit a month ago. The News expresses
again i:- - approval of Ijonl Rosebery’s ef
fort for j.nnt intel ventioii ami speaks regret
fully o: the n-lucta:: i of th- powers to see
tin matter in the same light.
"No European government,” it st-vs. “can
d< -,t ■ t » : < that disastrous conflict pro
longed. Even the I at. -<t .States, despite the
At- nr> doctrine, must lie eopt-erued for the
regulars;.. - an I security ol their trad*' witli
Jap-an. Soon* r or later—anil l>etter sooner
.1: it later—thi-ro must be an international
i .- eitb-:m ut. It will be dfftii ult to contend
that inti—fi—n • will I- premature now.”
< - 'ili:ii Tired «»f 11.
London, Nov -mber r>.-The Central News
'-ays: "There is reason to believe that the
C! in. ’ have i-solv-d to formally ask tne
;> a<; v.t - !m\ int’-re.-ts at stake to stop
tb " war. Tiie i'hinese n iiuster is said to
have c* tnmunieati d the reqa-st to the tor
. 1 thi aft irnoon. This
•. n:.),-. lie started for ’’artt to seek inter
. ews with Al. Hanotaux, minister of for-
< ; I aff-'.ir ~ and President Casimir-Pcrb-r.
N-ilher for. >gn oiiiee, th- admiralty, the
Chim-re legation, m r the Japanese lega
tion 1 < lt< a’ - ., anything to confirm tiie pub
lished repot 1 of the liombardment and cap
ture of Tallin-Wan and Kabuyone.
The Graphic lias tins dispatch from Rome:
’’Ac ording to a telegram from Peking,
Cl.ra. is dispe-ed to conclude peace upon
tin- ba: 1 of 11 a krtowh--; reiiiint of Corea’s
independence and the payment of an in
demnity to l»e liked by the powers. The
powers who ate willing to support ’his ar
rangentent ar*- r- |ue-te l to intervene.”
I Uli < itHii • i»tl( !»••<! .
London, Nuvemb-r A dispatch to The
Times from Tien-T.-ir> says that I'ung-
V, .log-i'it'ng w s burned by th<‘ t’hlnese.
The <t. Mtse o th- road to Mol-k-ien ”
cvtlaps-d. G> <ler.ll Sung, with the rem
nant 1 f his army, is iu t’-- Alathkmiittg
>;tss, be.ween i’ung-Wang-Ciihtg and Lia
oy:tnoy. \< iutt r itas set in. Snow ha. - fall
en in Ala i -huria.
The it .1 adds that the Japanese
cb .■ rly 1” --.-led ; landing al j'itzwo, Kln
e!t< w, v. :iile in; .Ing .1 demonstration
ag. inst the <.pp. . . e coast of baa:.g-'l ting.
Tm-j cu the telegraph, thus preventing
tiie nev.n an r-a-.-hing the Chinese admi
ral. A Chinese lleet, consisting ot fourteen
w.a - . hip- and a torpedo flotilla, after
wards .-tart I to eat.o k fa. Japanese, but
■aas recalled. Il is b-l.- veu that the gov-
< r.-im- iit re: -rving the fleet lor more
iiiipu. lant service.
l ia: e Kung, tiie emperor’s uncle, who
was recently appointe-1 presim-nt of the
T.-uttg Li an.i chief of the admiral
tv. has n.*v. breu appointed dictator, indi
catit.g further centralization of author
ity. The Alanchu princes favor reform,
wiiile tiie Japan-se opiM>se them. Tmee
ui>g.j;:i d Ja-i.u: ><• were recently caught
at Klin-Wan with maps ana plans of Chi
nese defenses upon them. The Japanese
en. red 1 tng-V. ang-t 'irng on October 31st.
A Shanghai dispatch to The 'limes says
th:-1 Lt iiung <.'hang will take command
ot tin- iirst Cnim-se army.
<\>y Lutai, of Nankin, becomes vice
-1 y of Tien-T n. The viceroy of Wu-
L’n.ing has •11 appointed to a similar po
ol. .. tn N.»t,K.'.. Judge Huyuff and Ma
jor vot. llui:m-keii 11.:v- i 0 -11 ordered to
t.ii .- a n- w army on German lii.es as the
nucleus of a grand army of China.
< ii. < a ;t "lippliaitt
n N »\< i. , r A dispatch to The
Tii.-i from Tieti-T:.in s.iys that the repre
sentatives of ail the powers were as
«:< mbl 4 or Satur-iny last by the Tsung Li
Van;, n to It-ar the Chinese government's
statemeiit respecting tiie critical situation
of affairs-.
P.-i-e Kung, president of the Tsung Li
Y:tmei>, t!i- dispatch adds, calmly avowed
the impoc-nee of China to withstand the
Jap;-.:: ■ attack amt appealed to the powers
to in' rvene, saying that China was will
ing to abandon Iter sovereignty over Con-a
and to ; y a war indemnity. The min
isters appi .1. d the frankness of thia con
fession an 1 premised to report China’s
ap,l it to theT r-:q <.,-Uve governments
v. uh a view to the r- storation of peace in
order to avert tne dangers threatening all
interests.
'ft «■ From.-n minister believed in taking
a b a ling part in the prop'sed interven
tion.
Pa- ii- in New Chwnn*.
L< • ;.k>n Nuvemb- r S. The Central News
C imp iny Ims thi.; dirpatch from Shanghai;
"The panic in N< w Chwang and through
out AL-nchuriti continue -. Numerous coun
try people ate arriving at New Chwang
ami two-tnirds of the stores have been
closed.
"Ch. ng <'hi Tung arrived in Nankin last
evening with the remains of the viceroy of
Liang Chiang. A war levy c* $3 a head
r is I' en imposed in Hankow. The people
probably will re list it.”
FLEEING FOB THEIR LIVES.
CliincMC Soliliern I Hi rly Demoralized
Over the Advance of (be Jnpx.
London, November 9.—A special to the
Central News from Chee-Foo. dated Novem
ber litn. reports hundreds of Chinese arriv
ing there from Manchuria, wnience they are
fleeing, frightened at the approach of the
Japanese. The I’hme.o troops and such
v< : sets of the Chinese lleet as are eoojieil up
at Port Arthur have been ordered to attack
the Jufxiiiese wherever they meet them.
It is report-d that Port Arthur is still in
vested by the Japam- 'e and that two of the
forts tm-re have been captured by them.
The Chinese soldiers are deserting from
New Cbwang, fearing an attack by the Jap
anese.
Retreated to the Mountains.
Shanghai, November 9.—Tne Chinese army
of the north has retreated to the mountains,
where the soldiers are reported to he starv
ing and suffering severely from cold ami ex
posure. The Japanese army is reported to
1 be i-ii mped at Feng Whang Cheng. Thi*
Japanese are pursuing about 15,000 Chinese,
: mostly raw recruits.
i Port Arthur is to make a deter-
mined stand against the Japs. Admiral Sir
E. R. Freemantle, in command of the Brit
ish fleet, considers that Fort Arthur will
probably be the scene of the last engage
ment between the Chinese and Japanese.
HOW KIN-CHOW FELL.
The Chineae Made Feeble Rcsietnnce
and Were Easily Routed.
London, November 11.—The Central News
correspondent in Tokio says:
“A special steamer lias arrived at Hwang
Chu with dispatches as to the course of
the war in Corea. Kin-Chow was taken by
the Japanese on November 4th. The gar
rison consisted of some 1,200 infantry ami
artillery. The batteries were badly served
during the defense.
"The iirst division of tiie Japanese army
advanced to attack with spirit on th morn
ing of the -Ith. The resistance of the Chi
nese was feeble. The tire from the guns
was weak and ill directed, and the outly
ing fort works were cleared quickly. A
panic then took possession of the troops in
the interior works. They abandoned their
guns, standards and stores, and fled in
disorder, tin* infantry even casting aside
their small arms in their haste. Tiie de
fense was so weak that only a few Japanese
were wounded and but twenty or thirty
wen killed and uounded. It is believed that
many of the garrison fled on the morning
of the 3d, when they became convinced
that the battle was on han-1.
"After the victory, the iirst division
joined the second division in investing T.t
lii ti-Wan. In the evening of the next day,
November sth, tire was opened on the
Chinese position. On the 6th the works
were carried with a rush. The garrison of
3,000 men hardly waited to resist tiie. at
tack. They fired a few shots am! then fled
toward Port Arthur, strewing the road with
their lirearms, swords, drums and stand
ards. In the confusion of their flight tho
Chinese lost some iifty men killed and
wounded. The Japanese loss was two kill
ed and ten wounded.
To Sui-ri-nder Fort Arthur.
London, November 11.—The Che - I’oo cor
respondent <jf Tiie Times says: “Taoti
Kung, with several military ieadeis, aban
doned For; Arthur on the Gth. Thi - . h-di
cutes an intention to surrender. Tltere
Was an ample force, adequately armed, at
Talien-Wan ami Port Arthur to make an
effective t • sistanee, but there was no di
rection. Everywhere one finis chaos. The
Chi Yung squadron of ships was at Taku
on the 6th embarking stores and ammuni
tion.”
“The Japanese fleet cleared for action,
steamed into a hay at Talien-Wan on the
afternoon of the 6th, but it was too late
to assist th'< land loree which was then
celebrating its vh-tory. From Talien-Wan
tin- firs. a:i*l see »nd divisions started for
Port Arthur, which they w-.-te confident of
i-apt.iring within a week. Admiral It >s’s
dispatch to the mikado concerning the
fleet’:- part in the operations at Talien-Wan
conflrnts the accounts seat by tit- land com
mander.”
The Central News correspondent in Chee-
Foo telegraph.-.:
"The last steamer brings new.-: of the cap
ture of Talien-Wan by the Japan* Gen
eral Cyatna m.tde the attack from the rear.
Nineteen warships :ri 1 six - torpedo boats
were prepared to assist him, but the Chi
nese, who hail expfeted the main assault
from the sea, did .tot wait. Tiie • hardly
resisted th • Japanese. They abandoned
everything and retreated in disorder. Eu
ropean officers here think that Port Arthur
wf! be captured by the 15th. There is some
doubt that the Chinese fleet is at Port
Arthur. It certainly : not at Wei-hai-
Wei."
A Proposition of Fe:iee.
Tokio. Novemlw-r 11.—United St;-:. Al n
isti-r Dunn has comtnunieuted to the min
istry the substance of .11 .inpor: >:it 1 iphor
cablegram prot“>-i. ion re>:e:v- d rom Sc,-,
ret.'iry Groham ut AA'a- hiii- ton. It uggesis
that if Japan will join I'hina in nsinesting
ti e president ot the United Si;;t-.- to act
:v n.'t-diator 1; the . h will
I.". ;cl-<- i*'. go 1 1 " het-.: in i’ll' paeity.
A imi’ar pr< position ha bei n : en - < >
China. The eai>l< cr im wa rei -'\ Iby Alin
i:aer Dunn on l-’riday an! wits pre- tied to
a t-peci:*! mi-'lng cf the ministry. An
aiisv.- r lia.; tot > •■> l> -•: - -i*‘. Tl.<- yoposi
tion presents a grave question to 'lie min
i. tr; . Thm are ii.a-'.•! on on-- hand by the
po] *;lar .sentiment i > ecnt!i.:ie tite war and
~r-as!t a. <*n th-- o:l,-»r hand Euro
pe.tn powers .ire thr- : ’■ >1: ■ mtervene.
As between the-c r-'titt:. .ng iallui-n --s thu
ministry linth; great ditii- ifty in r< .o-hhig
a. decision on ttie .America:: propositioi*.
but the prospe. t i-: that it will b'- aeeop ed.
it is learned that four days :,-.o t'rance
made it proposition to tie United State- to
intervene.
Be sere and name your brand. D ii’t ask
far baking pov ler simj 'v, ask f* r Dr.
Price’s-, or write your ord*;.
Fi er /e in Tr xa«.
Da lar, Te\., November 11.-The cotton
crop is end I. The thermometer wan .it
degrees at daylight this morning. Your < or
■ spotidi-ni rod*- twenty miles tln-.-ig’i the
fields today. Thet are black, ihe stai’.-.s tire
i.ead, hulls, blooms, squar-s and all. Not
one pound more can be made this year.
Halt the patches have been picked clean,
the other half will yl--Id :t littl more possi
bly. An eighth of the an mut already
pl-Red and ginned is either marked <i or ly
in., at th-- ginhouse. A” no rain of any
consequenc has fallen iu three months, the
platiti-rs are wtl! up with picking. The?' ;s
no reason L> prevent their mt-tooting every
bale within the n*xt -ix weeks. Sorm may |
held it on account of low prices and the
h-jpe tiiat later ir. the season they may get
au ai.van -e. They are unanimous upon one
point—not to plant more than half the pres
ent area next year Hundreds have deter
mined to plant none <*t all ter tiie good and
sufficient reason that it does not pay. It is
now at least 2 cents below the actual cost
of production on leased or rented land; ,
and 1 cent below where a man owns the
ground.
"Wheat, corn, cats and prairie hay pay
better than cotton at 3 l _- and ! cents per
pound. Fortunately for the Texas cotton
planter, tiie homestead laws of the state
will not allow him to incur other than debts
of honor. He, therefore, owes little or
nothin;'. He has made one of the flnest co.
n-ul crops ever grown, ami, therefore, his
looses on cotton will not trouble him, other
t.han the :i-fl. -lion that l.e h - ;.: worked this
year on that crop for nothing.
Tip- testimonials published on behalf of
Hood’s Sarviparilli are as reliable and as
worthy your eonilde; -e as If they came from
your best nail moat trusted neighbor. They
atate simple farts.
MANY FARMERS VII iJMI'/.RD.
Didn't Get Their Pay for Hutter Sent
to Philmlelphia.
Philadelphia, November 6. -Tiie Pre -s to
morrow will say: In April 1 ir.t M. M.
Browning and a young man tvaose name is
not known, opened a store for 1 lie sale of
butter at iff Margarettu strict, in this
city. Browning watched the business here
and sent the young man to the west to
negotiate with the farmers for the sale
of the product. He returned to this city
with a number of names on his list, an 1
consignments of butter thereafter arrived
from the west to be paid for upon delivery.
Three weeks ago Browning suddenly left
town and last Tuesday the young man fol
lowed. after closing the shop. Since their
disappearance information has been re
ceived from farmers in northern Illinois
and southern Wisconsin, particularly Jef
ferson county, to the effect that Browning
had failed to pay for consignments aggre
gating over $25,000 in value. Steps have
been taken to capture the fugitives. It is
thought that other victims in the west
are yet to be heard from.
A Defeated Cnndidute Dying.
Huron, S. D., November 11.—Reports
from Redfield tonight say that Judge Isaac
Ho we, defeated populist candidate for gov
ernor, is gradually failing. His physicians
have, abandoned all hope of his recovery
and death is expected at any moment. The
defeat of himself and the populist ti diet,
together with ove.rexertion in the cam
paign. are assigned as the direct cause of
his illness. . . ..
THE FUNERAL TRAIN.
PASSAGE OF THE PROCESSION OF
THE HEAD CZAR.
The Prince and Princess of Wales /Accompa
ny the I'arfy—Arrival of the Train at
Moscow—Guarded by L’oasacks.
St. Petersburg. November s.—The prince
and princess of Wales will accompany the
imperial party on the way to St. Peters
burg. It is likely that the body will bo
taken to Sebastopol instead cf < alessa and
there be transferred to the Moscow tram.
Moscow tvlll be reached probably on the
llth and St. Petersburg on the 13th. The
imperial family will accompany it from
the beginning to the end of the journey.
The intention of exposing the body in Li
vadia yesterday was abandoned because
the process of embalming it had not been
linished. it is said to have been necessary
to summon more embalmers frem Moscoav
and Gharkoff. When ready, Hie body w;il
be placed in the chapel at lavadia.
There arc rumors of a police cider to
close the yodka shops in towns along the
route of the funeral t. .in, and its enforce
ment is said to have caused si rious trou
ble " i sever: ! districts. The truth of th so
minors cannot be ascertain; 1 L
The goldsmiths ot St. Petersburs and
Moscow are receiving innum-ral'le - rders
for gold and silver memorial ciowns am!
crosses. General VannoAvski, mii:!.- ** r of
war, and an officer under the late csar at
th<- capture of Kustcliuk. ha.' ordereil a sli
ver crown twi nty-ioar inch- s in uiat.w ter.
The inscription is to is-. "To tiie < hi< ! ot
the army oi" Rustchuic, from the chief • i
his st .iff.” Vannowski has obtained per
mission to place his crown on the emiK-ror’s
coffin.
Guarded by Cossacks.
Ltvadia, November ".—Th 1 massive, gild
ed coilin containing the 1 ema.ns of
Alexander HI war. removed to the By;: n
tine church j'esterday evening, iherc th ■
body of the lute czar will lie in state untd
tomorrow. A guard of honor with draped
colon; is stationed m fr ut of the c'mrch.
At 6 o’ll.ck in the evening, a littl- late,
the Ccssaclts, who had been acting as the
imperial iiody guard, took up their positions
along the cypress-strewn route from the
palace, all carrying lighted torches, making
a weird scene.
The procession of white r. bed cl* rgy then
emerged from the church and formed in li:. ■
across the patii. The it*:"s tiegan tolling
and soon afterwards the sound o! childrea
singing hymns was heard in the distance.
Then through the darkne.-s the glar- of the
torches carried by the guarc , mareiting
on either side of th.- coffin, could be per
ceived
Th- pro;- sion enter-l th- church path,
head-d by sailors <-airynig lan’erns m-1
banners, and followed by the choir ci-.i !r .1
dress<-i in whit ? surplices. They wer- fol
lowed by the clergy and th* n came the
coffin, surround' 1 by the imperia! crown
and borne !*y Uossaeks.
Behind the coffin were the czar and the
czariii"., wh- .vas Icepl.- veiled; the <iran;l
Duke Sergius and A'ia iimir. the qu*- -1 of
Greece an t Pr.f.-ss Alix cf Hesse-Darm
stadt. the princes of Wales anti the duch
ess of fe':i:ce-Cobu;g an ! Gotha, the en Idren
belonging to th- imperii! and royal tami
l.vs ;-nd the high court and military of
ficers.
The Cossacks placed the coffin in front of
the church as th- military ban 1 played
“How Great ami Glorious is G.-d anti Zion. ’
all present standing with uncovered heads.
After the hymn, tiie coffin w as borne into
the church and laid on the l> er. each corner
of which was an obelisk c-veted with red
doth and siim:u;tnte<l l " t-atm
When the mourners w< arrange 1 around
the bier, the bi-ii p. 1 Sims r-p 4 c.-b-br ite-l
in ir.--, ;'fter whicii th. part;-' ) 'l the church
and returned to th- p . in carriages.
in Unn.-iiiiitf.
Moscow. Nov. mlir r 11.—Ti.e impel - '.u pa: ■
ty, with th- body of Aiextri'le - . - IE. arrived
here tod:.;y in typi-al Al •-i>- .we ather. The
sky was dtiil, tne the*. - :: met r w two
degrees Ldov, the fr<" zing point, and a
north win ! Llew litfuliy throughout .
Although ilmtisa: •■. .c- Im v all night
putting the diy in m ".si-ring for the Lit ■
czar, the street • at daybreak k.• !■•••! if
some great festival was to be c. lvl rated.
But fi r the heavy fold.- o’ i ;" k v.iiidi
hung high and low on. :t!l v. ill. . :i 1- in
wou d have thought that the e-ow d- - . throng
ing every corner and open «p-i - ha.l ccme
to ceiebrute a national 1: 44:.., r.iih' r lit '•
to lament the death of a pow-rful m march.
Such ceaseless, universal activity ami su-h
enormous numbers of 1 ■ •istints, tourists
and soldiers nad not been seen here s.nee
the coronation of Alexander Hi, more titan
ten years ago.
The Arrival of the Fiiiirrol Train.
The train with the body arrivid at 10.40
o'clock. Czar Nicholas 11 was salute - ; as
soon as he alighted by the Grand Duke
Sergius, tho metropolitan of Moscow an 1
Kolomana, the higher cl-, rgy. th? ■ om
man lant and civil governor, members of
the court, officials of the court, the chi; £
ndbility to the third-class, the mayor,
many generals and ether ohe-ers. All stood
bareheaded. The pro« - e--sion was tb-r.
forme! in gretips as had :■ -n arian.gei.
anil the —1 net" 1 s eitrr.e l ■!* * • -;ita • * the
dais in the tcm.o’-Hry dtajd n ar the sta
ip n. Four of them r • • 1 • the ; ■
•he metropolis n rea l -. sh- ; < .- .t i ■ .
The four generals who had rcmoveii k.,
pall bore :!;•■ e.itlin siow’y to th? t’ur.c.al
car in the slat ion yard.
There was a cause, th- n ti.rt - gtm
from the Kremlin gave the sign - ;’ t- it :.l!
the 186 group; - to b>- to-med in th ■ co. *.in,
fail into ti.e fifteen dtvi; ions •>»" the pro
fession. Three more guns and the divisions
took th -ir plat • st in the line, an I at
lolling of 1,000 bells the head of the Lute
column moved off slowly toward the
Red gate
Inrovered anil Silent.
The windows and Avalks from the station
to the Kremlin were thronged with silent,
reverent crowds. Nobody spoke al eve a
whisper, and not a voice, it is beli-rvel,
was heard above the tread of the passing
column.
The metropolitan and higher clergy await
e | tiie body a.t the door of the etithe Ira!
of the -Archangel Mich ■.*.!. 'i! •' wail.id
before it to th- great e;-;ms<m •! *is. m: . r
the gold mid silver canopy ir. tiie mid tie es
the building- Generals of the army j i;o ' 4
the coffin on the dais 1 tiu removed the t-aii.
Th-? n? mbers < f the imperial family gaiher
e:l betw-en the gorgeous pillars :>-t the loot
ot the coffin and listened in silence, broken
only by sobs, to the reading of the .solemn
mass for the dead. The service closed with
.11 ucic.
Tne general public was admitted late in
the afternoon. The peasants, in their
strange and varied costumes, .-l.h stand
in lon>’. lines in a dozen streets, awaiting
palivnlly. silently a:.d teverentlj their turns
to show - tiie:: - .affection lor th- ‘ little fath
,!••• ’P.-C p: CC--SSIOII roui.d the will
continue without pause until the body be re
moved, as there are tens of thousands pa
tkt tly’ waiting - for the opportunity to • li
ter cathcd 1 at. At !> o’elu< k this evening
it is snowing, but the watching and waiting
goes on as if under n_ blll £ £ k Y-
Cnuclis »«<1 C-d<is- Those who ate suffering
fiom Coughs, Co’ds, Sore Throat, it -.. should try
Brown’s Bronchial Tkochks. Sold only iu
boxes.
GHOI’KKO’S I’l’.l ITION.
The Knssinn General Desires to See the
Convicts Itelcaseii.
Moscow, November 9.—A second funeral
train accompanie t the one bearing tne holy
of the czar as far as this city. Emperor
Nicholas II accompanied the body only as
far as Sebastopol, where he boarded the
Russian cruiser Oriel, en route for St.
Petersburg.
General Gourko’s Petition.
London, November 9.—The Dally News
correspondent in Vienna confirms the re
port that General Gourko, mill ary gov
ernor of Warsaw, has received a petition
for the release of the Kilinslci convicts.
Tiie correspondent adds that more Catho-
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
•DR/
IMANS
P©WBIR
MOST PERFECT MADE.
A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Fre»
trom Ammonia, Alum or any other auuiterant.
40 YEATS THE STANDARD.
lie pr:-sis in Russian Poland have been
xMTcstcti or sii^p-■ fiJh’-d tor rvfti: **-* svear
to the Amon;< them, he
says, are the bishops of Lublin and Sando
mirt:. The I’nn e.-s 0! He?.-?, is said
to have interned: 1 for some of the priests
release I yesterday.
The Daily News corn spr.n-«ent in Paris
says: "•While servic-s were ir. proi-ress >n
Protestant and Jewish pl >ces »’£ -corsiiip
th? CatlmFc rhm. hes 1 alom from :!*-
universal mourning. Uaiuit-. i! Richards s
silent disregard of the popular w a ‘>r .1
requi-m mass in the cathedral of Notre
Dame prompted u.-ati ns i f a *aca o.
patri »tism. The Catholics then threatened
to ...-a the govt rnrii-iit to con vert .he Arc
de Triomphe into .1 chapel and to invite the
Russian popes to say mass at an .impromp
tu altar beneath it.
"Cai-Jiral Richards has now announced
a servi.- to be held at tho cathedral ol
Notre Dame on the llth. He "n tnseif will
officiati and will ff r praj rs >r itu. six
tnd Fran e, bu not for the czar. Al
thimeh the public thinks the cardinal has
yielded, the exception shows that really
h- has not.”
Tonight 1 arlinal Richards ordered praj
ers throughout the diocese.
A Warsaw dispatch says that General
Gourko has explicitly that the
oath of ullegmn -s must l*e taken in the
Russian la.gua--.
Diagnosis of the < zar's Case-
St. !’• ’< •’ »erg, Novemlier 9.—The diag
nosis o!" th- cas- of the late czar by the
live doctors attending him. Drs. Leyden.
Zacharin. Hirsh, I’epnff and Wedjeminoff,
was oilb-i .by published here this morning.
It taffies throughout with the various inter
view.-; with I’rofessor Levdtn and adds that
an autopsy by five Bus uan anatomists
shows that his majesty’s death was due
to paralysis cf the heart, const- tuent upon
degenerate museles; byoj trophy of the
heart and granular atrophy ot the kidneys.
Three cents of the cheap I ..king powders
are required to go as far as one of Dr.
Price's.
ELECTIONS KESTRK I'ED TRADE,
Hut Settlement of Political <lue«»tioit»
1 nereascs Contiileacc.
New York. November —Bradstreet’s to
morrow wili say:
■■lnter>st in the elections this week nat
urally ten 1-d to restrict the volume of
trad.-, particularly south, where it inter
fered with an rcantile collections. But
within a lew 'lays tne influence of more
seasonable weather v.t st and noithwest.
togeth' r with the ci ipharis vvtta which
politi. ;;i question;; have apparently been
s.ttl-ii. have «nc:t;t -i tb i-entideiice ot
man- me.ehants and rmt.iufa.’turers in a
, ;—p •, : '.•• .! r i: ca ra. -of iniprove-
nt< nt in geir • 1 trade •; t: >■ near future.
PhiiaJ.-i. :.i i Pittsburg markets eon-
I : ii ;j i;i * rep r*’ e, iiiovtiik nto oi nicr
( ndi being mo erale in volume; col
iectio:-': not ; lory, but prospects
fair'y bright. Demand for .umber and
leather 1 * - ms an exception, being more
active. B;.ltii .t : rts . less satisfactoiy
neiit the re having
int-rr'.’.-'t-. 1 —usintss more than at large
,tern cities. The • " u of shoes
appa., active a. that of any other
staple, busin < in <th r lines, except holi
day goods, being qua I.
"Charleston luml -nten report a fair
business, out in other lines there is no
change. Simii ir con-iiuons prevail at Mem
phis but a Nashville there is more activ
ity in g-nerol lines, r.otat ly in receipts of
Calif-mia cannei goods. The only mater.a!
eheit of 11.- eleit-on . ..eiu-m-f.t on business
is ds-i.ived i.oil- L ns. There is a seasonable
activity in general lines at Atlanta. At
Chattanooga an l Birnt'nghain, rather more
activity is observed in business circles,
v ! : 1- c-cffi-cti'-ois were fairly satisfactory.
Whiles th and t tai! houses at Jacksonville
report trade fairly satisfactory ier tile sea
son. but at S-tv ’.nah there is no special
change, exce: that -'• tions are satis
factory. Augusta ; rep rt is similar, ex
<4 t < ,t will ; 3:«* yb w. At
I’i’.t lI.S ’ • < A? t <hvK to
; ; ; p.-t’-'i
sc' :11 .' ’“u ■calvrote:/::. '< • dull >•; all
Ibt- _
■ - ■ «
... . agetl I.' ■ : •-
tl - •! t iroi'S t: • ui ■ " ’ -re. returne I
tie • from New her,, city on- week ago,
knowing that l.e It !' ’ sn.all-
.I. !c slopped in
Pittsburg and thi.; city on his way home.
Bund.*.." Iw a’- ’■ 1 “ , ; 4 Deertleli.,
an v si*k. ireaking
•eiti:'. - was estai lishe-1 u:aii * iay :i.:4 over
• j opi • v.ei • . xpo. e.i » ti.e contagion.
The people are wii with . sexten:-nt. Haz
zard 1- a faith <" ri. and did not want a
doctor.
Our Clubbing Offers
Sunny South and Weekly Constitu
tion $2.00
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Constitution ... 2.00
Southern Cultivator and Dixie
Farmer and Weekly Constitution 1.25
Southern Farm and Weekly Con
stitution 1.25
Home and Farm and Weekly Con
stitution 1.00
Ladies’ Home Companion and
Standard Cook Cook and
Weekly Constitution |.OO
Address, THE GGNSHTUTiOH. Atlanta. Ga.
OUR PREMIUMS
If you are thinking about buying *
Sewing Machine,
Suite of Furniture,
Gun,
Stove,
Watch,
Organ,
Razar and Strop,
Knife or
Scissors.
Write to The f'onr.titafion for Puustrvted
Otnlogue. We c.w save you money. Ailofoui
Prentiituiß are gti:»ra:iti»ed to be just as rep
resented.
THE COWSTETUTtON,
ATLANTA. OA.