Newspaper Page Text
ThijUt'W *7>ui>c- r i* w.
Tho newspaper l.iw says if nnv
poison orders hm paperdiseohtinutd,
lie must pay ull nmngcs, ortho pub
lisher umy continue to send it until
payment is made, nnd collect tho
whole amount. Also un uet on 10.
fraud can be insti uted against any
person, wlirtlier ho is responsible in
a financial view or not, who refuses
pay for his subsenption.
Any person who takes a paper
regularly fiotn the postoflioe —wheth-
er directo and lo his nnmo or allot h r s,
or whether lie Ims.subscibed or not
s responsible for the aaiount.
'lhe courts h >vo decided that re
fusing to take newspapers or period
icals from tho posh flico, or remov
ing an leaving th in uncalled for is
prinm facie evidence of internatiou
ai fraud.
Forty-three railroads bavo been
started in Arkansas in the last two
years.
The orunge packing business has
fnlly commenced at Tampa. F ori-
P“- ‘
SLousianna has set aside $20,000 to
supply h r crippled soldiers, with
wooden limbs.
The Oates cotton factory in Char
lotte wid begin operations with 2 000
spindles on tho Ist of January.
Th- re are quite a number of whito
lopers in California, roaming at large.
Sixteen oases have appeared ut St.
Majys’ Hospital asking treatment.
The ForlGuiuesTiibnnesays: “Our
fanners as u. general thing have
about succeeded in getting th ir
coton picked out, and have now time
to devote to sowing oats. Tho oat
crop is a sure one in this sect ion (not
withstanding it almost failed last sea
son) and a very profitable one. Be
sure and get the genuine rust proof
varieties for seed, and sow good land
and a lair yield nmy reasonably be
expected,
The Conyers Weekly is mad sure
enough. It says: “Never before
since our time in this world b>-gan,
have our people been so prosperous.
Everybody, white and black, seems
to have a little money, nnd they walk
around the sheriffs and bailiffs with
impunity. If our people will just go
Vo wok and It politics and
politicians g > to the devil, they
will soon be independent, hap
py and free. Wehave the best coun
try beneath tho blue heavens and all
we have to do to be thb foremost
pAople of tiu* globe 10 apsert our
manhood in the proper manner.”
Wiimitigton (N. C.) Star: “Geor
gia has many men of superior abii
ties, but men of wisdom in tht
State are scarce. It would bo diffi
cult to find in one State three abler
men than Toombs, Stephens and
Ilill, and it would be difficult to find
threo unsaler. Hero is ono of Mr.
Stephens’ recent utterances:
“ ‘The Democrats wore fighting
for no principle, but were making
merely a grand rush for the —hog
trough.’ ’’
How about tho wrio men of the
old North State ? nnd the rush for
tho hog trough there ?
Cutler Herat!: On Thursday
morning last a very siul and faial ac
cident occurred at the home of Mr
J W P Whatley, in this County, in
•which his little danghtor about thir
teen years of ago while siting by the
lire her clothing became ignited and
the little creature was soon envelop
ed in flames. Her father being ab
sent and no one in the room able to
lend her any assistance her cries for
help proved unavailing, and tpon
tbo return of the father found the
lifeless body of the poor girl burned
to a crisp upon the floor. The scene
is described to us as being lieart
ronding, and our sympathy is touch
ed from the fact that she had no
mother to protect her in the hour
ol distress, having inoro recently
passed from earth.
The Savannah News, in speaking
of a meeting of liquor dealers in that
city a few days ago, says: ‘‘TJesolu
tions were passed disapproving the
bill now pending before the Legisla
ture, which proposes to allow eaeli
malitia district to vote as to whether
liquor shall be sold in their respect
ivc districts, ami a committe was ap
pointed to draft suitable resolutions
to be presented to council on Wed
nesday night, asking them to express
official disapproval of the bill. The
committee were also instructed to
confer with our representatives on
the subject.”
IF. A. SINGLETON, Ed and Prop r.
VOL G.
WAITING FOR THE GRIST.
‘ It is strange,” said who sat next
to mo in the car, and with whom I
had struck quite an acquaintance,
“what an influence a look, a word,
or tho littloact ol a perfo l stran
ger.”
o *
“Yes,” said I ; “moro than any
of urMoalize.”
‘ It was tiiesimple actor aatruu.
ger that changed the wohiocourse
of my lite.
••Jodeed! llow so?’’
“When 1 wan boy, my father
moved to the then Far West —
Ohio. It was before the days of
steam, and ho great mill thundered
on her river hanks, but occasional
)y there was a littlo grist-mill by
the sale of some small stream, and
hither, whenever the water was up,
tne whole neighbhrhood Hocked with
their sacks of corn. ‘Frist come,
first served.' Bonn times we had to
wad. two or three days f,r our turn.
1 generally was the ono sent from
oui house, for while I was too small
to be sf much account on the Hrm,
I was as good as a man to carry a
grist to mill. So I was not at all sur
prised on morning when my father
said, ‘Henry, you can get up old roan
and go to mill to-day.’
“Saunders’s mill was ten miles
away; but 1 bad made the trip so oft
en that it did not scorn far. I be
leive ono becomes more attached to
an old mill than any other building.
I can see just how it looked as it
stood inore under the sycamores,with
its huge wholl and rough clapboard
sides.
“When I arrived,! found thcNorth
Branch and Rocky Fork folks tiier e
ahead of me,and knew there was no
hope of my gutting homo that day;
but I was not at all sorry, for my bas
ket was wail filled with provision*,
and M'. Sanders aiwavs opened his
big barn for us to sloe p in; so ’t was
no unplesant time we had while wait
ing for our grist. This time there
was an addition that had been in th*
habit of gathering,from time to time,
in the old Saunders barn-—a voung
fellow about my own age, probably
a little older. His name was Char
ley Alien, and his father had bought
a farm over on thoßrnsh Creek road.
He was sociable and friendly, but I
instinctly felt that ho had ‘more man
ners’ than the rest of us, ‘The eve
ning was spent as usual, in relating
coarse jokes and playing cards. Al
though I was not aecnsomed to such
things at home, I had become so
to it that had long since coased to
shock mo, and indeed, I was fast be
-a vary interested spectator.
“ ‘Well, boys, it time for us fellers
to go to roost,’ said Jim Finley, one
ol the greatest roughs of the Rocky
Fork, as he threw dowi his pack of
cards and began to undress. We all
followed his example, although it was
not much undressing wo did to sleep
on the hay-mow but we were so busy,
with our own affairs that we did not
notice Charley Allen until Jim ex
claimed, ‘lledey! wo’vc got a par
son here; wo hev !’ Charley kneel
ing by the oats-bin, praying. The
silence was broken by the drowsy
Cattle below, and the twittering swal
lows overhead. More Ilian one
rough man wiped a tear from his eyes
as he went silent to his bed on the
hay. I had always been in the hab
it of praying at home, hut I never
thought of such a thing at Saunder’a
Mill. As I laid awake that night in
the old barn, thinking of Charley Al
len’s coungo, and what an effect it
had upon tiie men, I firmly resolved
that in the futro I would do right. I
little thought how soon my courage
would be tested. Just after dinner
I got my grist, and i-tarted for home.
When 1 arrived at Albright’s gate,
■ • -mSC.I*O
where I turned off to go homo,l found
BUENA VISTA, MARION )UNTY, GA., DECEMBER 1, 1*
tin old Mjniro waiting for mo, I saw
in a moment that something hud gone
Wrong. I budjnlwnys stood’ in th
greatest awe with the old gout'ciium
because ho was the rich man ol tho
ttoighbordood, andj now I k felt my
heurl beginning to beat very fust.
As soon ns 1 canto hear no said, ‘Did
you go througu this gate yesteruuy ?
1 could easily h ive denied it, as it
was beforo daylight when I went
through, tiud quite as olten went OK?
’other way. Charlie Allen kneeling
in tho barn came to my mind like a
Hash, and before 1 had time to listen
to tho temper 1 said, ‘Yes, sir, l
did.’
“ ‘Are ymi sure you shut and pin
nod the gate ?’ ho asked.
This questionslaguered me. I ro
tnembered distinctly that 1 did not.
I could puli the j>in out without get
ting off my horse, but I could not
put it back again; sol careless'y rode
a wav, and left ii open.
“ I —I —l’—
“ ‘Out with it; toll jnst what you
did !’
“ “I left it open,’ I said abrupt
ly.
“ ‘Weil you let the cattle in and
destroyed all my early potatoes—u
terrible piece of business!’
“ ‘l’m very sory, I’d’*-
Talking won’t help matters now;
but remember, boy sorrow don’t
make potatoes —sorrow ilou’t make
potatoes’
“I 1 it very sorry about the mat
ter, for I was real v sorry that the
old gentleman had lost his potatoes,
and then I expected to be severely
reprimanded at home; but I soon
found that they knew nothing tf tho
matter, arul alter several days had
passed, I Oegan to rest quite easy.
Alas for human hojros! ono rainy
afternoon I saw the squire riding
down tho lane. I ran off to tho barn,
ashamed to face him, and afraid to
meet my father. They sat on the
porch and talked for r. long time. At
last my curiosty overcame ray fear,
and I stole back to the house, and
went into mother’s room to see if I
could hear what they were talking of
‘Why, the boy could be spared wed
enough, but tie don’t know nothing
about the business,’said my father.
There is one tiling he docs know,’
said the squire, 'he knows how to
ted tho truth.’ He then related the
circumstances whiehlso much dread
ed to have my father to hear. After
he had gone, my father called me to
him, aud told me that the squire was
going to start a store in the village,
and wanted a boy to help, and that I
could go if I wanted to. I went,and
remained in the vilage store until it
blosomod out into a city store; and
people say that I got my start in life
when I entered Albright’s store, but
I will always maintain ih .t I got it
while waiting for tho grist.—Sunday
School Times.
St. Louis, November 22. — The
large works of the St. Louis smelting
company at Cheltenham, nine miles
from hero, wore destroyed by fire
early thi3 morning. The fire origina
ted through a broken cupola which
scattered about the molten metal. —
The buildings were all frame and
communicated with each other.—-
They burned very rapidly. The ma
chinery was not badlv damaged.—
John Williams, the engineer, at
tempted to return to the buildings
for his coat, but stumbled into a
stream of molten metal, and before
ho could bo rescued was literal'y
roasted alive. In endeavoring to
pull him from the burning mass
both his arms were jerked/rom their
sockets. His body presented a hor
rible appearance when taken from
the ruins. The buildings were in
sured for sio,ooo, and were probably
worth with their contents SIOO,OOO.
The work of rebuilding will be be
gun at dice.
y\. DEMOOnATIC IF.A. JNu. .Xal-T 3STE W3P APVdB,
Joseph end Cleopatra’s Needle in
History and Scripture..
On Sunday tho 14th uit., Rev. J.
Stafford Holmes, of the Baptist
church, preach at to his congregation
In Nov York, from the following
t -xt : !
“Am: I’luraoh called Jos- ph’a
name /iphnath Pa.meah; and he gave
him to fcife Aseimth, t.ie daughter of
pr.eat of On.” U.m. xi t
th-qfii"' — : ve?ac.’
The occasion v. as the more inUr
eating for the reason that tho huge
moaolltii known as C copatru’s Nee
dle, recently landed in Now York
from Egypt, was lying in the street
m front ol tliu cuutch,and in review
ing the history of Joseph nnd of his
connection with “the priest of On,”
Ins father-in-law, and of it’s culling,
the preacher said, that “Heliopolis
was removed from the temple and
from its its priosthool and that the
priesthood was the most learned
of the land. The Temple of the Sun,
even in ruins centuries old, is seen
to have been a grand bull ling. “Tho
obelisk,” lie said, “sshich lies yonder
at the foot of our hi Is was one of
two erected by Tliothines 111, at the
entrance of the Temple of On, And
is it not a wonderful historic coin
cidence that on the Very Sunday that
our school is engaged in the study of
Joseph’s life theiojshoukl be lying at
our door, 5,000 miles away from the
qunrry where tho stone was cut and
3,000 years after it was first erected,
one of the obeiiks which stood at the
door of the temple where Potiphar
was high priest—the stone on which
the eyes of Joseph have looked. It
is not enough to say that for 'some
reason the Khedive of one of the
oldest nations gave this st-oie to tne
young Republic and that a great cap
italist was pleased to garnish the mon
ey with wh-Le's fa bring ft here, or
that Commander,Gorringo, with sin
gular ability, brought this great,
bulky stone over water and land.—
No, the hand of God is in it. It has
come in the current of history and
of commerce —current of God’s
direction as fnracb as-tho fcoarse of
the sun itself in the heavens. It is
true that commercial necessity led
the children of Israel into Egypt, but
God’s purposes wore subserved by
that necessity. ‘Westward the course
of empire takes its way’ is true com
mercially and historically and the
coming of this great memorial stone
to our shore shows the current of Hie
world’s progress as clearly as a piece
of driftwood shows the currents of
the sea or the directions of the tide.
There is reason to belive that divine
Plato looked on this stone, for he
was a student at Heliopolis. It is
barely possible that even Christ has
looked ou it, for near by the temple
where it stood runs the caravan road
by which Joseph and Mary traveled
into Egypt. Let us h>pe that this
great stone once eonsocratcd to the
glory of the natural sun may stand
among us a witnesss to the gioriy of
the Son cf Righteousness.”
Dr. Talmadge, in a discourse on
debt, said:
“Debt induced Lord Bacon to take
bribes; it broke Walter Scott’s heart;
it drove Burns to drinking. Perhaps
some of you don't know that Lord
Byron’s mother died in a tit of rage
produced by reading an npholster’s
bill. Oh, the curse of debt —the
curse of debt! If Igo into a gro
cery store and buy sugar and meats
without any visible means of paying
for them I’m more dishonest than if
I go in quietly and carry away a ham
under my coat, in the one cose I rob
the grocer not only of bis sugar ami
meat, but also of a measure of his
time. In the other case I t dee none
of his time, I simply help myself. In
other words, a sneak- thief is not as
bad as one who contracts debts he
Cannot pay, [.Applan.-o.J Aud yet
in till our cities aro lumilies who
move every May day in order to got
out of the neighborhood of certain
butchers, bakers nnd apothecaries
aud iutoghc neighborhood of others.
“If onybody in this audience finds
liiat my picture fits his case, I don’t
mind telling him that he ought not to
be in this churoh —he ought to be in
the pen toutiary 1 (Awful silence.)
Detestable .'-cicaln;, they cheat the
grocer out ot the green apt les Hint,
make them sick, they rob tho doct <
that utt:ads them and the underl ik
er who furnishes: them with an outfit
when they pay the final debt to na
ture—the only (l bt they over do pay.
Young man, young man, don't get
into debt, for God’s sake don’t get
into debt. I’ve had a little experi
ence in that Way.”
Streaking cf the value of the Bible,
Mr. Tahnjdge said:
“If yon want to destroy a young
man in double-quick order, tako
away his IE bits A steamer 1,500
miles at sou with broken rudder and
Caking fifty gal tons a minute—
(laughter)—is not in a worse condi
tion tnaii a young man without his
Bible. Infidelity is splitting up the
iife boats and tearing down the fire
escapes. Do you want to know my
opinion of the infidel who seeks to
rob young men of their Bibles?
Well, then, think of the meanest
thing you ever beard of and find
yourself at the foot of a flight of
stairs 100 miles long. Go down these
lairs and find a 1 aider 1.000 miles
long. I) seomi the ladder and look
from the edge of a precipice down
into a chasm iwice as deep as the dis
tance from China and then you’d find
the level of his detestab'o indescrib
able meanness.” After this what
mprewouhl Mr. Talmadgc say ?
HUMOROUS C
A great singer—The tea-kettle.
The debtor’s tree —Tire will-owo.
Tlia astronomer’s paetimo-Shooting
stars.
Is a clothing store a coterie,a pan
try or a vestry?
Wocilci' in what sort of a vahiele
the man rode wno was driven frant
ic ?
A Philadelphia man who detected
a piece of b irk in bis sausage visited
the butcher’s to know what had be
come of the rest of the dog.
An editor out west w.3 in prison
for libelling a justice,'of t!iepoace,ancl
when he departed the jailor asked
him to give the prison a puff.
“There Are No Birds in Last Year
Nest" is the titlo of a song Proba
bly not. if it were equally sure that
there are no rats in last year’s rat
holes, the pulie mind would be more
at rest.— Philadelphia Times.
During one month this summer'
the Philadelphia mint coined SGQO,
000,and how they all gut pastes with
out our seeing one of them is what
astonishes us.—Burlington Hawk-
Eye.
Whisky is about the only enemy"
man has succeeded in loving.
TIIE DANGEROUS HARE.
Someone was telling a story of a
lion hunt ia Offenbach’s presence—
a story in which, evidently, pi took
but little interest.
“Bali!” ho said, at last, with a
yawn; “the lion is a much overrated
beast. Even ihu timid hare can, on
ocea ion, bo formidable to man.’’
•‘Ob, come, now 1” said every one.
“Yes 1 mean what I say, ’ replied
Offenbach; “when one lias eaten too
much of him.”
On a homewerd bound Charleston
car a jolly looking Irishman was sa
luted with the remark: “Tim ycr
house was blown awav.” “Deed,thin
it isn’t he answered, “for I have tlm
kuy iu my pocket.
ANNUAL SUnsCIUPT/ON, $2 00
induced to tan \\\
“1 never tried to chow tobacco but
once; ’ remarked tho Rev. Mr Bod
wcd. “I ahull never forgot the fir—
rum-finree.”
1 "Toll un about it,” remarked n
y.aing lady, who, a few moments be
fore, Lad buen baptized by the rev
erend gentleman.
“I Was a. Very small I / at H
t ; m -, nml t-:<H a -great favorite ot
I’aim I, a colored man, owned by mv
father. I used to go out to Dari’s
cabin at night rtnd listen to Im-;ghost
stories until 1 was afraid to cross the
yard to the big house, as the negroes
termed our residence-. One night,
when the wind scattered tho snow
flakes around tiie old cabin, and
while several large sweet potatoes
roasted in the fire, i sat with old Dan
iel. No ono who has been raised
among colored people cun forget the
comfort of sitting around the cabin
fire. The old spinning-wheel, the
hamper baskets in the corner, the
red bedsteads, and tho dug-out cra
dle, a 1 come brick and dely theinl'n
ences of glowing fu'ure ami soft
rugs. Dan.was strikinglyqcommuui
caiivc on tho night m question, We
had killed hogs t int day, and the
truth is, old Dan had been drinking.
“Tom,” remarked the old man,
•‘yor don’t chew lerb.eker, does
ycr ?”
“No, so.”
“Dat’s a pity. A boy who doesn’t
chew terbacker never will be a man,
I’d bet yer can’t spit ober dat back
log. Try hit.”
“I fried and failed signally.”
“Dar now. Doan yer know da! a
boy what .can’t spit will jK-ver be a
man ? Ilubeu’ yer noticed how a
man can spit ?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Wall, wqCb’q’t yer like ter place
youvsejjMgtaj'd, and tern ter spit
“Yes',
“Wall, heah, tako dis,” and he
cut a piece of tobacco from a large
twist.
“Smack dat in yer motif, an’ chaw
while de taiers is roastin’.’’
“I obeyed, and in a few moment:
could spit, iiko n man.
“Cum down on hit, savage,” hs 1
said. “Hit hard. Watch mo,” and
he chewed vigorously. The fire grew
excessively warm, i looted around,
and the hamper basin to scemad to be
tumbling over each other.
“Doan spit hit out. Hit savage.
Chew hard. Do victory is in sight.
Is yer sick ?’’
“No, sir; but —but—. I had eat
en a hearty supper, but within t.hreo
minutes from the time I threw out
the tobacco,l;was as empty as one of
the hamper baskets, and as limber
as the spinning wheel band, Dan
spread a blanket on the floor, and,
as I doz and off to sleep, I heard him
blowing the ashes from the potatoes.
I never have taken another chew.” —
Little Itock Gazette.
Hew to wsc Oil Stoms,
Instead of oil, which thickens and
makes the stones dirty, a mixture of
glycerine and alcohol is used by ma
ny. The proportions of the mixture
vary according to the instrument op
erated upon. An aiticie with a large
surlnce, a razor, for instance, sliap
ens best with a limpid liquid, ns
three parts of glycerine to one part
of alcohols iFor a graving tool, the
cutting surface of which is very
small, ns is also the pressure exercis
ed on the stone in sharpening, it is
necessary to employ glycerine almost
pure with but two or three drops o
alcohol.
The real name of Powhatan’s
daughter was Matoaka. Their tribe
had a supersition that any person
whose real name was unknown could
not be injured by an enemy. They
therefore told the English that Ma
• t
toako’s name was Pocahontas.
Rich: crr/rrlnt^^/M
At tlio special request recently
made l>y u>ne of ont ftriwmSK, the
writer trill again give pffflio bints*
bnaod npon fxifaonnl obwrvntiow ami
practical e.tpor'tcrrce, up cm the best
method of cultivating What lu known
nn whito or nphtnd fico.
This cereal ia rapidly superseding
tho cotton crop ip tbc sontberft and
•< Kiic istern | ortionfl of the Stall',
and ha- boon and, moustrnted to be hr
more profitable than the fleecy fltttplin
On high land it retires no more at j
tention than corn, and etterit putt
bun, wll yield tnico ns RiuCh pet
acre, and sell in tho rough of or nh -
pounded statu for ■ jwr cent, fru.fo
in market.
NO. 13
One of the easiest end most rmii
erativc methods of Cultivation is ae
follows:
Alter broadcasting with cotton
-cod, commercial fertilizers or farm
yard manure, in October tn' ItoVeiu
bcr. it pntciicb’e, thoroughly break
up unJ, if convenient, harrow the
i eriacn of the soil and sew in ru.-t
proof oats, Care should be taken/
howeYer, that the "lands” made in
plowing should not be more than
three feet apart.
The oats will grow off, and by
shading the earth, effectually keep
down the weeds and grass in early
spring. Not waiting to bar Tost the
crop, bat cowmen cm;' about the 15th
> f April, with an ordinary scooter
plow, o.srn the "laud/ 1 or water fur
and then with the narrowest
shovel to bo obiainod, run once more
on each side of the open furrow, fill
ing it up, making thereof a slight
ridge, not over a foot in width,
Now the ground is ready for plant
ing; and tho seed, at the rate of one
bushel per acre, should be dropped
iu hills eighteen inches asunder,
about thirty grains to the hiil, and
lightly covered with the foot, or an
ordinary board,
it wih germinate in seren or eight
days, and, protected by tho standing
grain from birds and grass, continue
to thrive until tho oats are taken off
m the latter part of May, or the first
of June.
The after cultivation consists in
b eaking out the “middles” with a
scooter r narrow turning plow, and
cleaning the lulls of rico when need
ful, by the passage of a hoe between
them.
Two additional plowings, and one
hoeing, will usually culiioe to make
the crop.
By pursuing the above course, not
infrequently thirty bushels of o&ts
and the same qnsntity of rough rrsa
may be ueide of
one year
When not sowed in oats, break Tip
and .turn in all weeds nd grass :n
tho fall, (and the land is fal
low, c.r in February or M*ith if
nlanied tbc pr-.vioue year) amt after
careful harrowing, lay off in rows 2|
•Vet apart and sow as directed above,
■lifer the spring has fairly opened,—
Afterwards, cultivate with plow and
hoe as usual, \V hen the heads turn
down and oiffy a few grains remain
gi-oen next to the stalk, is the
proper time for harvesting. Hov
er attempt to use the cradle and
scythe, as they knock the rice
down and occasion great loss..—
The implement employed in cut
ting is the ordinary hand sickle.
The riso should bo laid after it
is mowed for one or two days (ac
cording as the Weather may be) on
the stubble t > dry. When the
straw is cured it is ready to be
bound in sheaves and either hous
ed or securely stacked.
The ordinary cleaning process ill
the absence of threshing, spread
out the sheaves upon a plank floor
or yard with impacted 'clay, with
ordinary flail sticks. When by
this means the grain has been sep
arated from tiie straw and winnow
ed from a rough ecaffeld, ten or
fifteen feet in hoight, all the light
fragments of straw and false rice,
called “tag,” being borne away by
the least wind.
It in now ready to bo measured,
sacked and shipped to market,
there to be pounded and barrell
ed up for exportation.
It has been lemons Ira ted in
practice, time and again, that or
dinary sandy pine iand that will
not produce over seven or eight
bushels per acre of corn, planted
side by side in the same field with
corn and white rice, will yield fif
teen bushels of the latter.
The rice sells readily at from
SI.OO to $1.30 per bushel. On
fair uplands'that will make a’bale
of cotton t<f two acres, forty bush'
el* of rice'in not considered an ex*
iraordinary production to the sin
gle aero.
Wo shall be pleased to eiF rd
our turner friends any informa
tion they may desire respecting"
the cultivation of rice, which is by
far the most profitable crop that
can be raised in middle and low
's.' Georgia.—Telegraph and llos->
t eager. ’ ‘