Newspaper Page Text
A PROSPEROUS CITY.
The Trade issue of the Charleston
News and Courier shows, by the con
vincing proof of figures, that that city
is prospering in a remarkable degree.
This prosperity shows itself in all
branches of business, and is based upon
a solid basis of legitimate trade and
manufacture. Looking over the array
of statistics, the News and Courier has
good reason to be proud of the result,
and it is right when it says that at no
time in the history of the city was the
future as rich in reasonable hope as it
is to-day.
In the staples, the business of the
last year leaves no room for complaint.
Cotton, 629,187 bales. Rice, 53,871
tierces. Spirits of turpentine, 51,386
casks. Rosin, 231,417 barrels. Crude
phosphate, 108,183 tons. Lumber,
18,610,857 feet. These are the receipts
of the year, the increase in cotton and
crude phosphate being the most note
worthy. The value of the staples re
ceived at Charleston is estimated at
$36,216,000, and the whole trade of the
city amounts to no less than $71,211,-
000. An analysis of the business
proves it to be worth even more than
that amount, expressed in money,
would indicate.
Commenting on the fact that trade
in raw products alone will not support
a large city, as the margin of net profit
is too small, the News and Courier gives
expression to, and illustration of, a fact
well worth consideration by other com
munities who wish to avail themselves
of the best means for promoting com
mercial prosperity; it says :
“In manufactures, on the other hand,
the gains are heavy, and are diffused
throughout the community instead of
being concentrated in few hands as is
the case where business in raw products
is relied on. It is an outside estimate
to say that Charleston’s profit on the
cotton received here last year amount
ed to SBOO,OOO. Taking S4O as the
price of a bale of cotton, and assuming
that each bale can be spun into SBO
worth of yarns, it will be seen that the
manufacture of 100,000 bales of cotton
(less than one-sixth of the in
Charleston would yield a profit of four
million dollars, which amount would
go out in wages to thousands of opera
tives and in dividends or interest on
capital. What is true of cotton is true
of iron, of timber, of jute, and of crude
phosphates. Charleston is not near
the time when a hundred thousand
bales of cotton can be manufactured
here in the year; but a beginning has
been made in the direction of manu
facturing, the factories of different
kinds have had no backsets, and some
of them have enlarged their capacity.
The value of the local manufactures in
Charleston for the year 1880--1 is at
least seven million dollars. And this
is doubtless thrice as much as the profit
derived by all parties from the trans
portation, manipulation and sale of the
staples, valued at over thirty-six mil
lions. It is not surprising, then, that
additional companies should have been
organized, and that the present year
will witness cheering additions to the
sum of our local manufactures.”
The most important branch of
Charleston’s manufacturing business is
the preparation of commercial fertili
zers. The extent and profitableness of
this business is wonderful. Here are
the items: Last year 287,133 tons of
phosphate rock were shipped, or ma
nipulated in Charleston. The cost of
mining and washing, including the
royalty on the marine phosphate, did
not exceed three dollars a ton. This
includes probably half a million dol
lars paid to laborers and others. Tak
ing $7 a ton as the average selling
price, the companies and individuals
engaged in phosphate mining have
made $4 a ton, or $1,148,532. This is
not the end. The phosphate, when
ground and manipulated, sells readily
at S2O per ton and over, and the facto
ries in and around Charleston manu
factured during the year at least 100,-
000 tons of fertilizers, the basis of which
was South Carolina phosphate rock.
Well may it be said that the phosphate
deposits are a mine of wealth. Already
the total yield is two million tons,
valued at $12,000,000, and the supply
is practically inexhaustible.
Alluding to the various railroad
combinations in which the city is in
terested, and concluding its review, the
News and Courier says: “Sagacious
observers are satisfied that the com
binations most dreaded heretofore will
not be hostile, and that Charleston
should find much that is encouraging,
and see nothing that is alarming, in
the railroad situation. The vigor
with which the work on the national
jetties has been pushed forward
strengthens Charleston’s position. In
eighteen months or less the jetties can
be finished, if the requisite appropria
tions be made. This port will then
have no equal on the South Atlantic
Coast, and nothing can prevent it from
becoming a great commercial centre.
“With merely such railroad connec
tions as Charleston now has and can
rely on, the city will live and flourish.
There is warrant for looking forward
to changes in the course of trade that
will cause Charleston to leap forward.
Whether this happens or no, Charles
ton will advance. The corner has been
turned, and good times will grow bet
ter as the years roll on.”
—William E. Holmes, the student
assistant in the faculty of Atlanta Bap
tist Seminary, was ordained to the min
istry in Augusta, September 2d. He
is. an unpretending but intelligent and
worthy young man.
Ex
Secular Editorials—Literature— ' Domestic and Foreign Intelligence.
LITERARY NOTES AND COM
MENTS.
—There is hardly a literary man in
America whose writings have been
more widely read than those of Dr. J.
G. Holland, nor one whose name is
better known among the people. It is
said that nearly 600,000 copies of hie
books have been sold, to say nothing of
the enormous sale each month of
Scribner's Monthly, over which he
presides as Editor in-chief. The
Century Co., publishers of Scribner's
(to be known as “ The Century Maga
zine" after October), will soon issue a
portrait of Dr. Holland, which is said
to be a remarkably fine likeness; it is
the photograph of a life-size crayon
drawing of the head and shoulders,
recently made by Wyatt Eaton, and
will be about the size of the original
picture. It is to be offered in connection
with subscriptions to The Century
Magazine.
—The possession of the manuscript of
the first poem which Mr. Whittier ever
published leads the Portland (Me.)
Transcript to recall the young poet’s
sensations when he first saw his pro
duction in . print. He was working
one day with his uncle repairing a
stone fence when the postman- in pass
ing tossed to him a copy of the journal
to which many weeks before he had
sent his poem. Tremblingly young
Whittier opened the paper, to find the
verses at the top of the first column.
He was so 1 delighted and bewildered
that he stood lookipg at it for a long
time, and is sure he did not read a
word. At length his uncle called him
back to his senses by bidding him .:eep
at work.
—Replying to the statement made
that the sale of Jefferson Davis’ book
is slower in the South than in the
North and West, Appleton & Co., the
publishers, write to the New York
Evening Post: “The sale of Mr. Davis’
‘Rise and Fall of the Confederate Gov
ernment’ has been remarkably large in
the South, and much better there than
in the North. Twenty thousand sets
were delivered in the Southern States
within twelve weeks from the day of
its publication; and although the hot
weather has temporarily somewhat
checked it, we have a large number of
subscriptions for delivery early in the
the autumn, so that eventually the sale
will greatly exceed the number men
tioned. When it is remembered that
the work is published in two large
octavo volumes at the price of s.' 0, it
will be seen that the sale, even to this
period, has been very great; in fact,we
believe it to be wholly unprecedented.”
—Mrs.Mary E.Bryan’s “Wild Work”
has been issued from the press of the
Appletons. It is uniform in style with
“Manch”—Mrs.Bryan’s very successful
novel of last year.
—“I wish that Tennyson had not writ
ten‘Maud,’” says R. H. Stoddard, in
the North American, “or if he must
write it, I wish that he had not pub
lished it. It is, in a certain sense,
such a study as he undertook in ‘The
Lover’s Tale’—a study of overmaster
ing passion, which in this instance is
steeped through and through with bit
terness and with morbidness. ‘Locks
ley Hall’ showed us what he could do
in this direction, and surely ‘Locksley
Hall’ was enough. That he was
eighteen years over ‘Maud’ proves
tenacity of purpose, but not wisdom of
intention; if he had been eighteen
hundred years over it he could never
have made it a good poem. I wish it
could be blotted out of his writings—
wish it so heartily that I would even
give up the ‘Garden Song,’ which is the
only noble thing in it. We do not
want a nineteenth century Hamlet,
and if we did, it is not to Tennyson
that we should look as his creator. I
also wish—for while I am about it I
may as well free my mind as not—l
also wish that Tennyson had not writ
ten ‘Queen Mary’ and ‘Harold.’ They
do not detract from his reputation,
except with the unthinking, for good
work at one time is not destroyed by
bad work at another time, but they
add nothing to it.”
—A writer in The Chicago Dial relates
thejollowing anecdote of Bayard Tay
lor : “Speaking of Taylor’s reading his
own poetry reminds me of an anecdote
that he told me about Tennyson,whose
style of reciting verse he imitated to
my hearty delight. While he and "his
wife were visiting Tennyson, some
years ago, at the Isle of Wight, in con
versing about the Laureate’s poems,
Taylor said that he could never read
aloud the scene of the parting of Guin
evere and Arthur in the ‘ldyls of. the
King’ without breaking down. “I can,”
said Tennyson confidently; “let me
show you.” And there in the sacred
upper room of his house, before his
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1881.
wife and guests, he began. As he
went on with his deep, sonorous voice,
chanting like an old British bard and
was getting fairly into the pathetic part,
Taylor said, “as I glanced around, Mrs.
Tennyson was in tears, my wife was
Vainly attempting to repress her emo
tion, a great lump came into my throat,
my own eyes filled, Mr. Tennyson’s
voice was becoming more and more
tremulous and husky, till finally he
choked with feeling and broke down
utterly. “I thought 1 could do it,”
was the only explanation of his fail
ure.
—With much force and point the Sun
day- School Times says: “There is no
department of newspaper work which
is more trying, than book reviewing;
nor is there any department in which
a more serious, and often unwelcome,
reponsibility rests on an editor. Books
multiply. In every line, there are
books of all grades competing for pub
lic favor. In noticing these books, an
editor’s first duty is toward his readers.
It is for him to indicate, to the extent
of his ability, just what each book is
worth to a purchaser who has but lim
ited means, and who wants to use to
the best advantage his money in buy
ing, and hie time in reading, selections
out of the multitude of books in the
market. In discharging this duty to
wards his readers, an editor is liable to
give offense to both authors and pub
lishers. This is obvious, and an editor
must act always in view of it. In the
long run, his reputation must depend
on the ability, the fairness, and the
fearlessness, with which his duty to his
readers is performed.”
—Miss Frances E.Willard is contribu
ting a series of brief, gracefully written
articles on “The Literary Men and
Women of the South,” to the New
York Independent. A growing inter
est in the work and the individuality of
the Literary Guild of the South is ob
servable among their brethren of the
pen in the North. “The best that the
South can do,” as Dr. Holland ex
presses it in Scribners, finds apprecia
tive admirers there. We are glad of
this fact. There should be no sectional
ism in literature. No boundary save
the circumference of the world should
circumscribe the genuine work of tal
ent and of genius.
—With deep regret and pain we an
nounce the death of Sidney Lanier,
Esq. After a lingering illness and
much suffering, surrounded by his
loved ones, his spirit passed to God at
Asheville, N. C., last Thursday. He
leaves a wife and four children to
mourn an irreparable loss.
Thus has passed away a rare and
radiant genius, a most lovable man, an
artist-soul,a master in prose and verse.
A noble man, a true poet —what more
than this is needed to write his epitaph?
Dead in his prime, yet a full harvest of
fame he had gathered. From the me
ridian of his life he ascended to im
mortality. Peace to his mortal dust —
to his soul glory everlasting.
The discoveries of modern science
are truly marvelous. The Electro
phone, is the name of a new kind of
telephone, recently patented with
which remarkable interesting experi
ments have been made at Calais, in
France and Dover, in England, between
which places conversation was kept up
through the sea. A Paris correspondent
says : Not only were the words whis
pered into the apparatus at Calais dis
tinctly heard at Dover, and of course
vice versa, but the listener at one end
was perfectly well able to distinguish
by the mere tones of the voice the per
son who was speaking at the other end.
It should be observed that while the
hnman voice was being transmitted
through one wire the other were em
ployed for the transmission of tele
graphic messages. Moreover, experi
ments were connected between the
hours of 10 and 4—that is, in the busi
est part of the day, when the wires are
in unceasing operation. The voice of
the speaker was distinctly heard as
soon as the wires were joined to the
apparatus and conversations were car
ried on without interruption in the
presence of competent specialists. The
experiments with the same apparatus
were then continued with the same re
sults, and in the midst of the confusion
produced by the simultaneous working
of several machines at the London ter
minal station the voice of the speaker
was heard as plainly as though he had
been in the same room. There can no
longer be any doubt that it is perfectly
practicable to converse across, or rath
er under the sea, by means of any sub
marine cable. The inventer maintains
it is just as easy to talk across the At
lantic as from one room to the other,
NOTES.
Irish Nihilists recently attempted to
blow up the Infantry Barracks at
Castlebar.
The Apache Indians are murdering
settlers and prospectors in Arizona.
Many bodies have been found. Troops
are hastening to the Territory. A gen
eral Indian war is apprehended.
It was intensely hot last week all
over the United States. At Little Sil
ver, N. J., the thermometer recorded
108 degrees in the shaije. In New
York City and Baltimore the ther
mometer noted 100 degrees. Numbers
of people were prostrated by the heat,
and many deaths occurred.
In Michigan there are miles of blaz
ing forests. Whole families have been
burned to death, and many villages are
reported to have been destroyed by the
forest fires.
During the hottest day of last week,
when the mercury was at one hundred
degrees and more, North and South,
and people dying from the heat by
scores, dispatches from Deadwood, Da
eotah Territory, were received announc
ing heavy snow storms in the Black
Hills. Snow lay five inches deep on a
level at Deadwood, and at points in
Wyoming, Montana, Wisconsin and
Michigan, the thermometer marked as
low as fifty-three degrees. The weather
record of this year is strange indeed.
The Russian government is at
last taking active steps to suppress
vigorously any further outrages on the
Jews. Germany is doing the same
thing, and it is to be hoped that the
revived barbarism of the Middle Ages
will be effectually exterminated.
The village of Reichenbach, in the
Bernese Oberland, Switzerland, has
been almost destroyed by a fall of
stone.
Seventy-nine slaves were liberated
during the month of August by the
officer for the abolition of the slave
trade in Egypt.
Prof. King has made a balloon one
hundred feet high and two hundred
feet in diameter, with which he pro
poses to undertake a voyage across the
Atlantic ocean.
The troubles of the Khedive of Egypt
with his ministers and mutinous troops
are so complicated that an occupation
of the country by the European powers
is imminent. Such a step will add fuel
to the smouldering war-fires of the Old
World.
The French army of occupation in
Tunis is seriously threatened by the
Arabs and other native tribes. Large
reinforcements are being forwarded
from France.
It is stated that diplomatic relations
between the German government and
the Vatican are to be re-established.
Another train was stopped by
twelve masked men in Missouri and
robbed. The daring robbery occurred
on the Chicago and Alton Railroad,
near Kansas City.
In the Methodist Ecumenical Con
ference, in session at London, a majori
ty of the speakers decidedly favored
the maintenance of the present system
of itinerant preachers. Mr. Warren,
an American delegate, in consequence
of the facts adduced relative to the
spiritual destitution in London, sug
gested that there should be a traveling
evangelical ministry throughout the
world. Dr. Peck also testified to the
value of itineracy in America. There
was a similar expression of opinion in
favor of a system of lay preaching, the
Hon. J. M. White, an American dele
gate, especially pointing out its adap
tability to the needs of the working
people.
Lord Derby takes a very cheerful
view of England’s condition. He does
not believe that English agriculture is
to be destroyed by American compe
tition. England has unbounded
resources.
A Congress of Socialists is to con
vene at Berne, in Switzerland, on the
23d of October.
Destructive forest fires have occurred
in Algiers. Over six hundred dwel
lings were destroyed in one day in a
single province, and sixty-three per
sons burned to death.
The feeling between Italy and
France is becoming more and more
threatening. The French annexation
of Tunis and the Marseilles riots are
causes of this belligerent feeling. The
London Morning Post publishes the
following significant dispatch:
“We understand that after the
Italian military maneuvers Signoi
Firrero, minister of war, will proceed to
inspect the fortson the French frontier.
French officers have arrived in Pied
mont for the purchase of horses fo'
! the army. Several Italian papers urge
the government to prohibit their ex
portation.”
It may be imagined that, in the
meantime, Prince Bismarck is watch
ing the gathering cloud with grin;
satisfaction.
An engagement has been signed at
New York by E. W. Cole, president of
the East Tennessee, Virginia and Geor
gia system of railroads, and C. P.
Huntington, which secures for Cole’s
system 1,400 miles of road—a connec
tion with Cincinnati and West Vir
ginia, via Knoxville and the Knoxville
and Ohio division of the East Ten
nessee, Virginia and Georgia railroad,
and over the Kentucky Central rail
road. The work of connection is ex
pected to be completed by next July.
The forest fires now raging in Penn
sylvania cover many thousand acres.
The Pomeranians are a thick-skulled
set, they fail to perceive that their
barbarous treatment of the Jews in
their province is a disgrace to civiliza
sion and the German name. We hope
the military authorities will make
short work of the rioters hereafter.
The Berlin correspondent of the
London lime} says: “The issue of the
Nihilist newspaper, the Will of the Peo
ple, is convincing proof that during the
summer the Nihilists quietly carry on
a propaganda in the interior, and only
recommence their activity in the win
ter. There seems, therefore, no doubt
that the coming winter will bring
more plots and panics, in spite of the
success of the authorities in arresting
them and in unearthing secret
presses.”
In a paper before the American
Society of Civil Engineers, Mr. C.
Shaler Smith gives the results of many
years’ observations of wind pressure
and its effects. He has personally vis
ited the tracks of destructive storms as
soon as possible after their occurence,
for the purpose of determining the
maximum force and width of the path
of the storm in every instance. The
most violent storm in ,his records was
at East St. Louis, in 1871, when the
wind overturned a locomotive, the
maximum force developed in so doing
being estimated at no less than ninety
three pounds per square foot. At St.
Charles, Mo., in 1877, a jail was des
troyed, the wind force required being
eighty-four and three-tenths pounds
per square foot. At Marshfield, Mo.,
in 1880, a brick mansion was leveled,
the force required being fifty-eight
pounds per square foot. Below these
extraordinary pressures there were sun
dry cases of trains blown off the rails,
and bridges, etc., blown down by gales
of wind of from twenty-four pounds to
thirty-one pounds per square foot.
Mr. Smith observes that in all hie
examples he has taken the minimum
force required to do the observed dam
age, and has considered this as the
maximum force of the wind, although,
of course, it may have been much
higher. Some of the hurricanes were
very destructive, the one at Marshfield
having cut down everything along a
path forty-six miles long and one
thousand eight hundred feet wide, kil
ling two hundred and fifty people.—lt
would be interesting to know what
the maximum force of the wind was
during the recent terrible hurricane on
the Georgia coast, especially at Tybee.
It was certainly as destructive as the
memorable cyclone that overwhelmed
Marshfield.
Dispatches from St. Petersburg!!
state that recent arrests have been
made including an official of the gen
eral staff, who is accused of advising
revolutionists of the precautions which
the government is taking. Although
the prisons are filled with persons ac
cused of political crimes, very few are
brought to trial.
A new plan in the construction of
steamships has been discovered, by
which it is claimed that vessels will be
able to glide over the waters at the rate
of forty miles an hour. This would
enable a steamef to go from New York
to Liverpool in about three days.
Bev. J. M. Stansberry, pastor of
Tunnel Hill church, writes: “Dele
gates attending the Middle Cherokee
Association, on the 22d inst., will pur
chase excursion tickets at the office
t hey start from at two and a half cents
per mile, each way. This is in accor
dance with an order of B. W. Wrenn,
Esq., General Passenger Agent of the
W. & A. R. R.”
—/Talbotton Register: Dr. Campbell.
of Columbus, arrived in town last Fri
day and has preached several excellent
d scourses at the Baptist church. He
in rendering valuable and appreciated
services to a protracted meeting now
in progress.
GEORGIA NEWS.
—Pean and grapes are fine in Oglethorpe
county.
—Lands are advancing in price in Henry
county.
—Oglethorpe county will make a good
corn crop.
The grape crop of Randolph county is
very large.
—The Quitman cotton factory has received
its new machinery.
—A spring mattress factory will soon be
established in Columbus.
—The American Public Health Association
will meet in Savannah in November.
—A “Hackman's Union,” to regulate
hack-fare, has been organised in Macon.
—Barlow county will make only one
fourth of a crop of both corn and cotton.
—Thousands of tons of fine hay have been
saved in Oglethorpe county this year.
i’he crops of Monroe county will be bet
ter than an average. A better corn crop
than last year.
—Prayer-meetings were held generally
throughout the State last week for the recov
ery of the President.
—The water-works at Macon are now
completed, and the water has been turned
into the reservoirs.
—Augusta has now in operation 175,000
spindles in her cotton mills, representing an
investment of $5,000,000.
—Columbus Times: “There is more sick
ness in Stewart county than there has been
at any other time during the summer.”
—The Augusta Chronicle says: “ The
steamer Katie reports that the river is lower
than it has been for the last twenty years."
—The Franklin News says there is not a
liquor shop in Heard county, the last one
having closed for the want of patronage.
—Senator Hill has had another surgical
operation performed on his tongue. The
disease is cancer. The case is a serious one.
—There is a movement among the farmers
in Houston county to fix the maximum
price for picking cotton at forty cents per
uundred.
—According to the tax receiver’s digest for
1881, the taxable property of Cobb county
foots up $3,317,541, an increaseovei last year
of $242,826.
l'he Columbus Steamboat Company has
increased its capital stock to $50,000, and
resolved to put a new boat on the river
within fifteen days.
—A singular exhibit at the Atlanta Expo
sition will be by a North Carolina firm of
over two thousand specimens of the medici
nal herbs which grow in that State.
—The Atlanta Constitution has changed
its form to an eight page paper and put on a
new dress. This is characteristic of the en
terprise of that excellent journal.
—A survey is being made of the line of
the Marietta and North Georgia railroad as
far as Canton, with a view of straightening
some of the sharp curves and lessening some
of the heaviest grades.
—All the cars and rolling stock of the Ma
con and Brunswick railroad are being let
tered E. T., V. & G. —meaning East Tennes
see, Virginia and Georgia railroad, and the
locomotives are being numbered.
—An Oglethorpe county farmer recalls the
fact that tne year 1828 was the exact coun
terpart of the present one, so far as regards
crops, but that one of the largest ones ever
known was raised the next year.
—Although the General Assembly did not
vote $20,000 to the Cotton Exposition, Geor
gia will be fully and propeily represented.
The Agricultural Department, the Augusta
and Columbus cotton factories, and the rail
roads, will make fine exhibits.
Dalton Citizen: "We will have lean
pork the coming year. Owing to the failure
o f the corn crop it will not pay to keep hogs
through the winter, and they will be killed
early in the fall before they are fattened."
—Mr. Butler Martin, of Carroll county,
has a patch of cotton so heavily fruited “that
it is all falling on the ground, and to keep it
from rotting he has decided to stake it and
tie the cotton up. The patch is planted in
hills three feet apart."
—There are forty-one fire insurance com
panies now doing business in Georgia, sev
enteen of them foreign. The premiums re
ceived by these companies during the year,
ending April 1, 1881, amounted to $975,014,
and the losses paid $380,448.
—The Marietta Journal says: “Some of
our more sensible farmers, notably the larger
and more thrifty ones, have discovered their
mistake, and will hereafter sow down their
lands in wheat, oats, clover and the grasses,
and increase their herds of cattle, sheep,
hogs and horses.”
—The authorities of the East Tennessee,
Virginia and Georgia railroad contemplate
reducing the passenger fare on their entire
lines from Bristol to Meridian, Miss., to the
uniform rate of three cent* per mile. The
change will probably go into effect next
month.
- Macon Telegraph and Messenger: "There
are now five vacant scholarships in Mercer
University, to be filled by the City Council,
and a probability that three more will exist.
Applications for the scholarships, which are
free, must be made in writing to the Coun
cil, and the applicant must be over fourteen
years of age.”
—lt is said that an organization has been
made among the house servants of Atlanta,
for the purpose of caliing a general strike
just as the Cotton Exposition opens. The
same persons that engineered the washer
woman’s strike are said to have the new
movement in hand. The pleasures of house
keeping in Atlanta have never been fully
realized by our rural population.
—Augusta Chronicle: “Gen. Alexander
says traffic prospects are exceptionally good
in all Southern States. He is not afraid of
the drought. A falling off in the grain
crop will be compensated for elsewhere. He
thinks the cotton and tobacco crops are ex
traordinarily good; the grain crop will be
short, but not to a serious extent—very little
below that of last year.”
—The ladies of the Women’s Silk Culture
Association are busily preparing an exhibit
tor the Atlanta display, which shall repre
sent the results of their labor and show the
possibility of producing first-class material
in this country. Eine specimens of home
raised cocoons, quantities of floss and worked
silk and some completed fabrics will be
sent. Reeling is now in progress at the As
sociation’s rooms in Philadelphia.
—The Savannah News says the loss of life
among the colored people on the rice plans
tations on the South Carolina shore, and the
islands along the river, will probably never
be known, out there is sufficient data to
place it between one hundred and fifty and
two hundred. Besides the bodies upon
vhich inquests have been held, many have
been found and buried by their friends with
out a legal investigation, because they were
offensive, and it was necessary to inter them
at once.
—The Western and Atlantic railroad has
secured 1,000 feet of srace at the Interna
ti >nal Cotton Exposition, lobe held in At
luuta beginning the sth of October next, for
e exhibition of minerals and other pro
i icts along their line and in the adjacent
unties. Mr. H. B. Lee, the General Agent
f r the road has appointed Mr. H. C. Garri
n as agent for the counties of Murray,
ibert and Fannin, to procure specimens
lur the exhibition.