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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • Page 15

Location:
Atlanta, Georgia
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ana tot departneat bs of a utloI very department ridg of the' resented of Ic tIUptrTl11O that mare then fa htlal finds ready If Mr. Har I. la change In tie i lbon to dtscordanc Sf ta1 but taken humor ao Jed to mea merit of the ne at It we Brooklyn taken cerioi he personal blnet. wnld vll 1 considered party com levelandi to so compose It lepartment 1th him aB4i iayti- the tuueetextetIn ireat public to effort to commen ould public dard of th PM 1 called Otaarttj eu beyond ttifM ltlcs. Tftowk W.

tic voters tafttej with MfjtfniggJ ch shodd tlsrMWW he teUemMJ democrat fi er Ti are iletsed step tU wJg rffs i rjsg fpestriictionin I OF TERROR. lie Sweeps Across tic State. isllPED OUT. Destroyed Odessa a. IMS ARE LOST ijtfy People Wore Serioualy Fatally Injured.

REMARKABLE ESCAPES tottj8 orm. Which First Struck unty Swept Aoroaa jij i Tlirougb to the a fcipMc Pioturs the I Deitruction in Its Path. KILLED. Daily Hawklni ero names unknown. fonr neJro white chlJd two uefro negro woman.

r. Andrew Tl re. jar It rrf sod the ittt Ute half hat out told. IT a complete list. March 4.

Special 8:30 o'clock GreenviUe cyclone that completely of the town. toTSs preceded by a brilliant that aroused the fears minutes the continuous were succeeded by an sound and almost in- lit ton swept over the Ill-fated of destruction. In accumulations of years foUWAnd3 of the earth. were' caught wide the strange to say there here from the cy. Messrs.

T. A. Atkln. H. a Hall N.

T. Caudle Drs. A. G. C.

A. Floyd W. T. W. A.

Black and wjtirere completely J. T. house Mrs. church and the ttM Kener W. L.

Pink- E. Splsey C. J. An- man and AtMn- Jtt laroofed and the gable blown out. Church the Masonic and the two-story on H.

W. Hifi were foundations and VIndicator that had tcts Of political boycotts for toecnmbed to the mighty H-dewnts. its building was 4 Wd and mashed into a 6 turns. were blown down. been received here cyclone entered the corner going dl- carrying desolation tydone sufferers are it 9 tofa having- been rendered tomelesj by the wind with clothing except the gar.

on their backs. They biting cold. Stnrva- lem in the face and by our neighboring suffering will re- Js held this evening to de. ef of the wortu. was appointed to and that corn- request The Coustitu- 9 following card of Gre nille the tindergnd of cycoe llM.

facil town le DOW a of her elegant homes i cottages arc de oywl re destitute penyil- tf her Churches UTU been icv- of every ije lind denozitinatlon rig the matter. A tlu uoitj- beture th members of taattcr before the members of and ask II for thrlete me rt to the pressing Dt of tha UDhsPpj pc ia who have been serioualy Mckift In Owsu- vU3. Let not time be lost but th ldan art promptly and liberally In the aw raaca that their donations zhail be faithfully and conaclontlously applied to the relief of real and pressing want. Money to be seat to- H. B.

Rlalock treasurer or to the Greenyilie bank R. D. Render. president Stgnd. I.

R. PARKEB D. STJUTTON IL. REKDKB THOS. A.

ATKINSON QLLi W. MQHEB H. W. HILL R. I.

SON B. S. PrVET H. H. R.

TROUPTOUHTYS VISITATION. A. Graphic DMerlpllon of Cyel Vl l- tntJon to the Nlelntty of LaGran. LaGrange Ga. March 4.

LaGrange had the heaviest ram and most Tin' lent wind tort4 ever experienced last night This morning early rumors became rife and startling la regard to a terrible cyclone In the lower part of Troop county. As the morning advanced the people commenced coming In from the country and their reports though meager. told a tale of de. vastation and woe. Not being abje to hear anything definite your correspondent by noon secured a double team and accompanied by Mr.

J. H. Cotter set out for the course of that terror the cyclone. The first place visited was the plantation of Mr. William Hairston where it was reported that his son Mr.

James T. Hairston. WI. killed. The scene upon our art beggared description to those who have never seen the rk of a cyclone there can be no adequate description given.

Trees houses barns fences sheds in fact almost everything standing was blown down and torn to pieces. Young Mr. Hairston was not killed but was badly Injured and fears are still entertained ns to his recovery. Everything on thp place was swept away only one negro cabin was left. Two tunics and three cows were killed.

Following this was one house torn down The three longitudinal double lines in the above cut. originating at the great lakes and moving southward toward the gulf are tines Indicating the advancing edges or the area or high barometric pressure at the cold wave at the tins Indicated on each line. For In. stance the ft band line was the edge ox high barometric pressure. 30 Inches at 7 o'clock on Friday evening.

I At 7 o'clock yesterday morning title line naa I pIl88e eastward as Indicated above. and we storm center. as shown In the above Gift- gram rested In the southeastern part or the Indian territory. At 7 o'clock yester- i day morning the area of nigh pressure. had passed still further east at indicated by the most easterly longitudinal lutes the barometric pressure soil being so inches.

This threw the storm center la central on the Hudson place and two on Lords place five miles west of town. Turning in- to II. southwesterly direction here the worst damage commenced. The next places I went to were those of Judge F. IL Langley's Outright place.

Alex Harris's house a two-story structure and wife. Their house was rsWtChVpSplanUn. blown ten in one group. house ad five broken on this plantation. Passing from bore to the RIlIey place tllO tree.

filled with clothing etc Scattered over the geld are dead duct. ma turkeys and provisiona. a sight-as tun i tardy en Cullen ta dangerously wounded. The timber destruction terrible. It it lmpossibio to pass any roads at all to the Uidlq due south of LaGrange.

V' there are five houses down ud the following akeRWley badly bruised and. hurt la- and wife was blown out pf hU house a left yards in the patture. B3 vtoittTieS are la- terual. v- tf Silas his Injured. 3Tii twelve year lv Dtlle Thornton.

her daugter and granddaughter crippled badly fevcral head of cattle Wiled. From Here to the lLathtl place ouly a short distance. Mr. BaheU oneof Troop' best citizens and jaCnighly lie lives in slesent tottntlf residence with his wife anboth are quite old They were rtartled bribe giving way of the house which was ist lifted from over then almost entirely. oth were right badly Injured by falling tmbera.

Physicians were summoned fromtown who had them removed to the resieuce of S. P. Thornton in this city. Noting m1y re mains of the elegant county' home. Orchards and groves houses au' fence are all either swept away or ruted.

Just across the road is thttome of George Willis. which was treated like manner. Mr. Willis escaped unhurt kit his wife WM not so fortunate. She is billy injured.

Mr. Dick Willis wo lives near was only slightly touched. His kitchen and outhouses succumbed. Right in trout of Mr. Rachels Is an Immense ak which was token off seven or eight feet from the rround.

In the center of this stump is a tmdle of fodder which was blown is a crewe. It is wedged so tightly that you cait pull it out. A mile or so further Mr. Traylor Johnson's home. It is sitated back from the road and has a magificent grove to front.

What happened the can best be told in Mr. Johnson's ova words Just down below me across thecreek he said is the home of Mr. Jij Butts. When the wind became so higl I knew there was trouble brewing and Trent out on my porch to watch. Prett soon in the of lightning I cool see a terrible looking shaped clod approaching.

As it came nearer I saw it would miss my house I I looked tthard my neighbor's. The flashes wee. so constant that everything was veryptain. As I stood one flash revealed the iouse plainly the next one. DO house was tere.

It was done in a twinkling of an ey. My teams were' not convenient so I etc on foot over there. The creek was swollen so 1 had to swim it. When I reached tlw yard I found the flooring standing and Yr. an Mrs.

Butts aol several servants huddle- under some i boo clothing and mnttressea Mrs. Butts was suffering intensely. lie injuries ar what I went home and go up a team THE MOVEMENT or THE STORM. Alabama at an early hour ylterday morn- lug- A strange feature or the sinn was tOe division of Us march when I reached a point about midway between Montgomery and Atlanta. It then took two tracts one moving northward above Atlanta through we northern part of South UrQU4 wxiere deflected to the east and posed into the Atlantic ocean at Wilmington U.

The spur which lelt the malntrack In Ala. bania and which created such kyoc In Ueor- gla passing through Troup Ounty Met wether county and near BartytiIe. WOTeG eastward with much less sevrtty after It reached middle Georgia and again Joined the main current of the a rm at wu. mlngton. N.

C. and moved tantwtril toward the ocean In a single tack. and brought them to my Base and had physicians sent for" None re seriously injured. My grove was torn II to pieces. Right ondown the road fret Mr.

Johnson's the following damagei were seen Not a single house is stanJl on the old Russell places. Mr. Bob Dens lost seven houses everything except Is residence. At W. N.

C. Jones's place 11 the houses axe gone. Here there wnt a splendid negro church building that wl swept away entirely not a vestige heln left. Some double log cabins dose tisthis church were torn up not one log left pea another. One negro cabin had an imanse oak tree clear through it.

When. thetree fell the house was full of people. Nue were injured at all. Mr. George Brewers hots was completely destroyed aot Ii vestie left.

This is as far as your respondent could go. owing to the intese cold and. heavy wind blowing. We tollowed the track of the monster about eiht miles and noted nothing but complete devstation and destruction. The loss falls heady on the fu- men and the poor negroes al a subscription will be made up here help those that have lost everything.

Iwas terrible to witness the suffering as went along. People here and there whit and black gathering up their bedding and cooking utensils and what provisions lhat could be found scattered over the hit. One prosperous fellow pointed out hi syrup barrel way down in the swamp half mile from his house the top burld and not a drop of sweetening in it. Near this was an LomcnBe pine tree ten up by tho roots and carried thirty feet rom where it hat stood. This shows the fry and extent of its damage.

It will long time before this section of TrouPJecoven fully. T. S. W. SIX KILLED AT ODSA.

A Startling Report That GtoM from the Little Tows In rltkth r. LaGrange Gt March Special Telephone advices' from pdegaa Meriwether county state that thre weifaoly prosperous town oti the Macon and Brans-- iA nread. PIKE' COUNTS YISZTATIOII. rrttl Destruction at fledmont Twa tilled UaartrotiadwI. memne GJU March 4.

Special. Prim a business view this has been a quiet day' In Barnesville. Now stud then you see a group on tone corner talking of the latest reports from the destructive cyclone that passed near here last night Otherwise the business oquare looks like a cold Sunday" Many of the citizens have gone to Piedmont to render what aid they can to the suffering of that little village where only three houses rue left standing and fifteen lying in ruins some with not one piece of timber upon another where destruction is almost complete One young lady Miss Daisy Hawkins wan killed instantly. Thirteen or fourteen other persons he lying seriously injured tome thought to be fatally. To see the destroyed village you only wonder that any of the inhabitants" es.

capeti alive. The dwelling house of Mr. C. Collier Will injured but little while his store jut in front was swept away with its contents and is a complete wreck. The barn and outhouses just to the rear" were blown down also.

In his house are eleven of his neighbors wounded and suffering with almost every conceivable form or shape of au injury. The storehouse of Captain Worth is the next standing house- where the remains of Miss Hawkins are and other seriously wounded of the Hawkins family. The residence of Mr. G. W.

Stocks was untouched and is being used as a hospital also. So complete was the destruction that it is stated that there was. not enough dry cloth in Peidmont this morning to bind the wounds of the suffering. Many were left with only the clothes they went to bed in last night where everything was blown away and drenched in rain. Through the Country.

One mile beyond Peidmont Dr. Harps residence outhouses and barns were blown down a compltt wreck. On his plantation one negro mm was killed and a negro woman seriously injurrtl. Dr. Harp is one of Pikes mqst substantial farmers.

His losses are very T. Beyond Dr. Harps lived a man by the name of Press- Icy. It is reported that he went to the door when the wind began to blow and The above map. which Is furnished by th weather bureau station In Atlanta anO prepared by M.

Park Merrill from telegraphic observations made during the cay give a fair Idea or the movement of the storm and clearly Indicates the division in Its track and the point in Alabama where a part started northward and passed Atlanta and II. part continued with trlinttuJ results In a direct easterly course playing taco havoc In Troop Mertwether and ke counties. It will be Interesting to observe la tne three storm centers above liven tile rllpla decrease In barometric pressure from zy s-lu Inches at 7 o'clock a. m. on March ad.

to 29 3-10 Inches at 7 o'clock a. m. on MarcO i 4th at the center of the storm area wOlen was at Wilmington. showing a. tall or Hall an Inch In twenty-four hours which accounts for the unusual velocity or tile storm.

no traces have been found of him since. The wake of the storm was from one- half to a mile wide and came within two miles of Bartiesville On the Thomaston road Mr. Andrew Riviera was instantly killed and his wife and daughter painfully injured. The house wa blown down and away so that there is hardly a thing left to mark where the house- stood. He was found in an orchard two hundred yards away.

He was an old man. a wounded confederate soldier and a Quiet and good citizen. Just beyond Mr. Rivieres in a thickly settled neighborhood nearly all the houses were torn to atoms and two negro children were killed. The storm so far us heard from here struck just beyond Peidmont in this county about ten miles away at o'clock.

came within two miles of Barnesville and thence on the edge of Monroe county throughthe neighborhood of the Owens Busies Tnonnonds and near For yth. In its wake is found much destruction suffering and destitution. AU along its course are found dwelling houses tenant douses barns stables etc. blown to the ground and in most places literally swept. away.

AU the doctors left here early this morning and are out among the suffering. A citizens' meeting was called today and a relief eommi appointed who have gone to work securing food and clothes for the unfortunate and aiding in every way they on th distressed. Drs. Thurmond and Pet-due cause in this evening from the scene of the storm. Each had been in a different direction working since day this morning.

They reported that they had set the limbs and dressed the wounds of twenty-three persons and other doctors have. been working along the wake. All along the line of the storm there Is I vast amount of distress. From many of the poor the last meal and the- only suit of elodlea were swept away and nothing left them but the drenched night robes In which they had retired the nlzbt before. The loss of property not to say anything of the suffering.

Is great and cannot be est mated. The citizens who have been out to see help the. unfortunate IiT' a moot gloomyaccount Douglas Thomas Davison Have Now on Sale Complete new line of Silk and Wool Dress Goods Including many exclusive novelties. New Wash Goods New Wfyite Goods New Laces and Embroideries New Spring Wraps. A complete new stock in all departments.

A popular line At popular prices. Mrs. Ilaskell is now in New York in the interest of our Dress Making Department and will be ready for orders onThursday March Qth. 89 and 91 Whitehall. Through to Broad.

Our people are doing what they can in the way of sending food clothing and bed clothing to the unfortunate who are left without food. clothing or a home. Many are left homeless without means to rebuild or furnish a home. The people in general should and will we trust help them in. every way they can.

The and red in PUt. The following are the names of persons injured in last nights cyclone In and near Piedmont Miss Daisy Hawkins killed. one unknown colored man killed. The following were injured broken limbs and so forth C. D.

Cline and wife E. Hawkins and wife XL R. Harper J. T. Lowe.

S. A. Moon wife and two children Professor Wallace and wife W. B. Whi4ley Smith and wife and child.

The ng colored people William Collier and wife Ben York and wife John Collier and family Julia Jenkins Gus Kendall and Ben Collier. Near nesville and in Monroe county Yr Andrew Uevier killed two negro children killed. Injured. Miss Lizzie RAlviere Mrs. Andrew Riviere.

Mrs. A. J. Moans Mrs. W.

E. Thornton J. W. Ross. The following colored were injured Young Elliott l-'anniet Elliott aol children Jim Hightower Fred Hightower F.

Wilmot and Gus Day. This la a li treated by physicians from here contains all that I am certain of. Several are very serious of not fatally injured many more slightly hurt. MORE DEATHS REPORTED At Molen Odrxm and WOQdbUTy There Wit the Greeted Destruction. Coluxthi4 Qit.

March 4. pedal. News of the destruction done by the cyclone in counties north of here has created a good deal of excitement here. In addition to the details from Greenville news reached here of a terrible fatality at Odessa. Six persons are reported killed.

Near Woodbury two negroes and one white child are reported killed. Many are reported seriously wounded. A heavy snow fellj there this morning. At Molena Pike county five lives are reported lost though the only name given is that of a white woman. Mrs.

Felt. Four negroes were killed. ATLANTA WIND-SWEPT. A. Talk with Director UorrlU of the Weather Bureau Atlanta was certainly wind swept yesterday.

It was blowing greafc guns tor once whatever that is. Just after midnight Ii stiff gale came along and settled down to business right here in Iultou county. As daylight pagan to put in au appearance the gale cngat it second wind so to speak and it just ripped and tore ground at a terrible raw lorty wiles an hour. lull it was holding something back and did not let itself out until or o'clock. Things were getting shaky by that time and plenty of people regretted that they had not furnished their homes with a cyclone pit along with the other brie Atlanta passed through the storm or rather the gale passed through Atlanta- without serious damage touch better luck than some sections of tine state had.

It was a general windstorm extending over a large area. of the south and ia places tornadoes were developed which swept away1 houses by the score and demolished eutir ylliagea causing many deaths. In Ueoria tornado or cyclone as it is more commonly spoken of struck serene from LaGrange toward Greenville and on to rnesville and thence northeast. The Toatelt violence wai ate Greenville in Meriwether county. This place is reported to demolished tad OTtrahclti- Zeus were injured.

This tornado developed niziutihe time tiut the. thunderstorm ww accompanied hi- thunder and vivid lightning and was a forerunner of the general tot which came soon after. The Constitutions special dispatches tell We story of Ills storm and the damage done. Greet interest was felt in the fate of the towns when it became Down here that th had suffered. Telegraph wires were down and tangled all up so was slow work getting the particulars.

Some Georgians Were not sorry thd they did not go to the inauguration wh they thought of the bad weather that was probably afflicting the capital They im agined applicants for federal office feeling that they ought to march in the parade and cursing the snow. Then the Atlantians who remained at home congratulated each other on their good horse sense. No pn ident would have hamFmuch of a pat-ads in this city yesterday and in Washington the southerners must have found it bitter weather. A slight snow foil here. wETIe there it was quite a- fall.

There was too- high a wind for snow to continue lonfc here and the ground did not get covered. The thermometer dropped rapidly. About 9 o'clock the wind lifted the roof off the elevator shaft in The Constitution building. A piece crashed down on the livery stable adjoining and into can" Jy and fruit shop knot by B. Hill.

Th prontietor was thing In the shop. He rushed out in a nutty. III" place was wrecked. No serious casualties occurred in the city. The wind krot up and it wee fortunate there WM no fire.

At nzbt the' bells rang three times within a half hOur. but the calla did not turn out to be fat batttfireg. Au lnteiwlewwth 1ret WorrflL The severe local storms reported ill Georgia- Alabama and Mississippi said Mr. Park Merrill were secondary developments of an extended storm area which was located in Texas OQ Friday morning. At that time it was of very moderate energy as indicated by a pressure of 298 inches at its center.

Its subsequent path shown on the in map. By 7 o'clock p. m. it had advanced eastward to a position between Montgomery and Atlanta said at the same time the pressure at the center had fallen to 96 inches. Its track was then to the north and later to the northeast to the coast at Wilmington N.

C. The path lay to the north of Atlanta. which point was passed at 11:30 o'clock p. ox. Friday evening as shown by the tracing of the government barograph.

The same increase in intensity- continued during the latter portion. of its course and the Saturday morning weather man showed a orearara of inches at Wilmington. Coincident with the progress of th storm there was a rapid rise of pressure in its rear. This rise of pressure has been also accompanied by a. sharp fall of temperature.

In the northwest. temperatures of zero and below were reported both Friday and Saturday morning. The advance eastward of this area. of clear and cold weather is shown by the location of the line of nominal pressure. 30 inches on the accompanying maps at the hours of I o'clock a.

to. and 7 o'clock p. to. Friday and 7 o'clock a. Saturday.

At the latter hour a difference of one inch in pressure existed between Wilmington N. C. and Nashville. Teun As the movement of the atmosphere it governed by differences of urea-sure the natural. result of this rapid rise of pressure in the west and equally rapid fall within the storm area.

has been to develop heavy gales throughout the states est of the Mississippi and wroth of thq Unessee. During Friday night winds of from forty to fifty miles an hour were registered at all points on the. Gulf rout from Galveston to Pensacola. On the Atlantic coast similar gales had commenced at the Saturday morning report. It will observed that the local storms reported Saturday occurred nnar the.

track of the storm center as outlln on the map Considerable electrical di tuttance has accompanied this storm and fends some probability to the supposition that these local storms were true tornadoes. As yet. howeyer dat is wanting to dde whether it or" not. They may Ta been siMily fcetTy tool ban oaana ganmttfifS 1" Wrl anacro 111 oar lIe Reder. il JNiCRED.

II jared at. be oIS Jfffr bed 1m4 ia QQtISeS as the. th" St It wtte. hom e83 or ex pt Eibdon the or them I r. tTefl untold ering i 3 relief ttee erers of ia behalf herer it 6 e1Uzen.

GrrtMi1e tarcti. i' tbaDlatter. TeeU i I the otthelr 1n tcr I to wlntaofJhe hi i oeh andJlwul1y tA1 1111 MoU 1 to to' Slgn D. 6T rION nF DEn Os. HWHILL TROUP COUNTY'S the Cycien.

ViaI- aw mO ston count bein 1l corresp ndent noon. rror hil50n there en sheds-In OI rI feat el left 1e or 1 al ove i longitU 11nal i tt. I on I' I was moved five feet from the chimney. Hi barn which had I. cellar to it was torn all to pieces and the mules in it were skinned considerably.

Fodder gnauO cottot 15 and corn were blown all over the hillside. Mr. Clarence Ferren owns the next place and it is occupied by Sam IIend rson blown into kindling wood and both werE badly injured. From her on. the path of the cyclone was plain beIng from 200 yards to a quarter of a mile wide.

Across the railroad from this place Is another of Judge Lousier'S plantations which fared badly. This is what is known as the Pups plantation. Your houses re Judge Longlei had a large new and improved barn Cu this place in which were eight mules and several COWS. The barn wll torn all to pieces two mules killed outright. six la- jurel nn.

one COW killed. Sheds were tot I down awl wagons and buggies broken up. Or1 ro occupied bY' a roan his I I if children was 1l t1 up Imu I the oVCUpaLt blown out Into the fMd. The I baby oily twenty-seven d4 Ott ll blow I fifty et from the foundation. and fall found several hours later at the storm had Jllill covered with bo aro.

not jur i at 8ereltll lllllbs ala reported this' are with. bed4ii'- on Such Ic seen. Place whichil Qu this aUd injured Jake Rklley tsrnally. DurreU Hardy d. Burrell hif' 1 1i11 ft tb ture HiJJnJuneaMet11 Dow 141P.

4d 1 d- t. 9) iiioi1l r. kj I' m. ii ji itJ iI iri pjK De eThornton da 3 d- daughter-crippled het1aof. Ytnahe a bone of cl na Osf.

fa an idenre an both qui ofth at fanln 1-- aped Ir. I eak ghteet rove thecr k. ome th re 8Oon. 8 tb very' 1aln. useo e.

str OO ya un er so matlre STO M. IVIH 1 DE 0 JS J4J1. e. 0 I I uont omery I It 1 sevti 1 Indag1n I Wm I I I mj ed. I onl1ownthe lUIl8get I Da 8 OOls 8 tu.

thill up-not I I ne Geor ho not I yourorfespondent hea 1 I st was ible I. d1ngond I hi his lwU h3dtooJ. dama a longtime OD tbi wck Ylsq TI lla' Sw D1ecI1IaaT W01 l4ecL 1 Fro n' dayln BarnemIlNow nn en oup corn fr bUs IIQ are I where I wklna I were was bein Countr I I inj url Hi los es yond li ed th I the Iearl dlrt. ct like tbr tromU 14th pa Ilfull1 was hou Ib I re Pi idmopt Away' and through the w1reri suff ring. tng lief ttr 11 ha th tho een diK cIa JtreIS.

whichthey ni6h. fOle. lasso 1ferin Dd mlOt lp 1U1f 1l- 1 I t1l" rf ft. i I mfjr' iiJO i i tt0 i i 1R' Jit I Incl ding NewW4ite i Dead nam Wall ce I i l- rs IDOt lit Grea Special lo deta Ja ear fell ner es IUeaUo ft1anta grea 1lt bUj ued ri dayll its ound testy tha no alo le some' eneral Iat1 south. in a en Tilla man G1t n1il1e fl en W8I4 1fr 1lnda.

pla la UTtt eA were rJiAdodeTd' dOOut th 1f tt 7 iffr orerurner generalrorm ate thty fel ph Ge rgians when le Al ned re on sell C. 0 itienfwocld Washn. on me dr buil on lin ry tl" R. The II I bad fires. etctr veri accompany nJC ton tl evenin CODr 2tUfinches the I 1' Jie I I mOMllnf' 0 nom Ilal Pris-e4 dlffer ce Ire mre mnes ee.

Dd. anhOtl1' regi ered om pl men rep rtM th tJinJ map. et clricnl dUo- II nd 1Om8proba1il tT. thatthue locallfonDlwere bet data iJ1fantiDC. 6kWhether this so notlI ef 11aribeeD heY71ocaLpt Ji 1 QoaUaOI1DD Ilf' iff 4' at oX LII ahL this Ietf the ter ot tJ t17 tar1.

unusual i I ration ot th bt trol 6f ft period ot Ui conte this re tba a er7 few Ut a r1t Lu tbe ly once og the I until ow1 Zor wh Ie ve w1a tLc and from th would Teb Lii which th at thI tiE1I. A Mr. ofnortbr Ticated tn straUon Ii ng tj dltloa of Iii the probflft are thai tb. sttn treairy leau Qu d18rcgar as a styjkj tratton ths that ot odwiched e1and r8t I4 ititrattoi1 ps- ty of Iti moy ecord W111 of ormr th bOsluegs drp grat natjonpj anhi Is mak1ing lit now saj- th4 In thea ce of a2ib troibe abea4 the pep ID ost dIVIne 1apttj ty and aeter a cbang 1 t-Iy nevte5aryc vtag with Ltz rapidly xb 4fl th YT tIcn of new waa already Ic pluoder wa vea1th of the and the net Proportboatey a steady of the Iaborbg ig dowyt the aioz1 9 republ wg. at a tewyears tial expresslfo nd r-ead etbe In HarrIndI a lathe iL fted and thM bone Ie MId an4 neasir4i frt eerlonal7.

I pare contflTt prZI a WOU th Te7 3 whateTtrtht1- eat IntttCtM 17 Itth conalderatIo cominenable td would omt titiM the i2tIt hi eTeadl thi s. the LffOW Tbo5hOO In the e. his teii CU Iris tb3fUt 315 11 democTUt11G jayot fleer nuder a I wrOflt. 10 for tICt hli ainoog thC locea tth ble I-ed to matei ither' ttoruey geiitrrl4 ii not haT the dIztlnJU Tella conient aa ttS lawyere In th bCU nd Mr CulberIoU held financial nd wanted Ce Wean on th tInI general. SO heth' to a corne an Ut old ow' wba tlD i' unravel the perigeIIn rout ble he dOe3 not met eYe7 well avert money qnest hIS y.

for be at be prOPO arid 1kI It e. lie rininatlob tlilX tU1 and ctiether the tent he tI1 nade an hInelt rail dSI to iLlcl that. tbaraCteZI 1111 11rtakt0g to pedOT cllrreflL7 With fr. cwrellld tiC Ltnd. ionie but in It pr0thu7 1 eIl I 1dnce a mate etll1g It.

eaIy tte' tho IIUeCUOU UI a lii th 0 liIII an in hO MeteI fa tic CouIN ihe wQm qLIt1CU. 33IfiCt' 0. ii imp)1 which ethCd he It the cureOCl ptO lbsa icr taiIeI for LeIUO3 wlce zprdaedCIC nI of tae WO greve hi J1eTtfTt Iio1 afOa in ppOthtflI1I Mr. CII rijetnwhiII h' hal dpnioratI foi' II the leT1II 12 1Wv 4 1iC P1 rq aemDCTat1 bIIl akeu 1ootbet Irit of bOIde1I aid I entItle hI' 11 IFiWEPT i dpestrt1ctioil iii jcloaes hrack. i th 1PEU QOllry utthd.

ous LO fjgppj 3aI ifl e8ot1 County. SIL 4bPb-1C of It latyHawkIflIanegro SOflL A A i- o' cA5 gout 30 i fourths us ifr Ion irerngh iiitrange iere ehee ill 4insiow. re wrecked. of MrU Wimbish Wlnslow ttMKenerWL eSa 4 Freeman of then 1aa p9bto 4fonaw. vS itucj umbed eezent lt I mae truinL httis 1LUthwest It blti jh dot fld bitin IOi1 5 z.

ot 4 lafferers to te iti2iI Georgtijn lf th th 3tte to make an oppeal c1 tter tovi wliue IthLt pj or wboiy tIe. lSrrIf0 which paosei U3ht ld The 1. no lEly hom 9 tiL ar tIii11 h1oir bniin eliiit7 eaniot relley. 1Il ba upon Insnn con Pcnnptliig3 Cf Clq0 tt pit7 snd generosity. It Stheboeome of our fel.

cik7 that ve appeal. 1.t per anuaoturers ot snaerI fUtiers our n. jOIflwhoreallre the claI- to peat die- IRi yIwot any fault Okeofamyste- taUy appeai to the Same n4 to brIg theft YeiearI1eab eipIm. bfo their chtrches beto the1i Chrrrhes wants ofthe peot1e auranca ae rst krk th icee Hit a sea1 OCC1III Henderson lO were and Or net a ite Iite clii days was a feet alter passed scie boards litjured eta1 which is Su Wiirld. hi anti E11IniUTi3 A 1IiigWl1' I I jt' 5.e erat era iost highly re- startledhyllie resl nee re- fences happe ed uzt flaSh sasit ai CLvEC1ht.i itUWCLP1i orIFI EMOr8 qao I jR1b cv 1tIELD cMernw t' 0- cKaV4) oo OUlS LE 0 C1fteLor1cG 0 1sc1c t4pfJ cwr71 0 4 Q' I' ce.NYJ4- tIss rc8 PEXSCQI.

on down andi hem au 1 beddingand Mrtsther L.4speciaL advice dessa were only three housesIeftSten a ij ptosi killed. 1 authentic. Odessa is I orm baring e1ckriflroad TITtIbIS Two 1ay Wounded. 4 viewthls hubaen ow ute SOnLIa no es- I5 jo 110 ac- Forsyth. doctn cotnmltte hadeon greatand ma OO3O11nt.

5- I. I ex lusive I Apopulare Pike. manyzoore pleu cy- tor- spok rnesville at been several. thatth wag ov AtIantaItwz 1 im- otheron pt 1on own canmiy' fo de- be i 1end de. have i(4 5 1IItZ b1II Tam.

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About The Atlanta Constitution Archive

Pages Available:
4,101,800
Years Available:
1868-2024