Newspaper Page Text
AJNT> GEORGIA JOURNAL & MESSENGER.
\rp
ISBYi REID & REESE, Proprietors.
The Family Journal.—News—Politics—Literature—Agriculture—Domestic Affairs.
GEORGIA TELEGRAPH BUILDING
:U BLISHED 1826.
MACON, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1870;
YOL. LXIY.-NO. 32
| For the Telegraph and Messenger.
To ujtarim de Harlem,”
CSJVEES1XI, OA.
, , vmen these pages He before you
tears I abed to-night.
"tmth the wane tears I shed to-n
V.hat cruel verfW I implore you,
*wtdch my eoai t!lriri5La bacIt *0® affright.
c . that the shadow of my sorrow
> r S* T ®, ^ knocked impatient at your door;
fcl v0 a know—I think it left the morrow
‘ JjJJur-* 0 ® ’twill cross your path no more!
, j ja w weary of this pleading—
u for bread and getting but a stone;
5 *Uj 1 not listen to my interceding—
tan® 10 P r& y er deaf earB alone.
csUbscoM! God only knows how burning
jn me heart Uve memaries of the past;
<t the pale phantom of that dream returning,
- ; r mocks mo with “It could not last1”
a call me false! My fault was too sincerely
,iink love’s joy and matchless glory mine;
j pour out all my soul’s sweet incense, merely
indrd worshipped at a broken shrine.
Id! alas! if I had but the power
ngiin love’s echoes in my heart,
irtil its lonely depths this very hour,,
j every slumbering chord in rapture start!
nay not be! the strings are broke forever,
it once woke sweetest music at thy touch;
who in death’s corruption can discover
', [;rc , t ber ever loved in life so much.
, jou remember onco I told you sadly
■{or r looking through glass darkly’—see, oh see!"
5 M . you thrust the warning from you madly,
d m*ered back, “It must not, cannot be.”
itell! persist in your unjust reviling—
deali m: cold and heartless if you will—
I while with words your fancy thus beguiling
Uilyosr heart must hold one mem'ry still.
i hard-and yet I think that I can hear it,
least Til try—whatever grief may come;
daeea the mist and from your eyes will tear it,
then, at last, you'll know me as I am !
■ letter is the last that ever blotted
tears, shall leave m7 band to seek your sight;
I may your thoughts of me be all unspotted—
Wing, farewell! I hid you “Life’s goodnight.”
February IIIh, 1870. lotos.
|bt bequest.]
■on the Lnington (Ay.) Observer and Common'th.
A Bloodless Victory.
Appeal to the luring and a Tribute to tho Dead.
Away—away, tbpswulecup,
0 tempt me not. '*£ ain ,
Each eprriliD»S drop within it,
In rites to clfdless pain—
8aynot, ■■ fis only native wine,"
ve wine it be—
I cancot-^Ul not—Dare not drink,
Ithiibn’&harms forme.
Id early IWo I yielded,
AndqtfMcd the flowing bowl,
hot dra wing of tho galling chains,
Then “feng for my soul;
Inidf Jo effort to resist
k with boyish glee,
Asdtllugh remorse oft troubled me,
Iguxlfly bade it flee.
A! !er Jfeth a fair angelic one,
kljt tender love Td gained,
AppVrat died me with an earnest heart,
And of mv course complained;
An instrument by Heaven sent.
I heard her strong appeal—
Though only words or love she spoke,
Rey pierced my soul like steel.
Though I had heard the man of God
Implore—entreat, with tears,
So argnment that he could use,
E'er touched my heart like her’s;
Ifelt at ones the spell was broke,
And ’-pledged eternal hate,”
To every vile accursed thing,
"Tbit could intoxicate."
Ko warrior from tho Bloody field,
Cheered by the surging crowd,
E'er occupied position,
So nobly—grandly—proud;
I almost envied her her joy—
A mighty work she’d done,
Arrested—saved the youth sho loved—
A Bloodless victory won.
Too pure for earth—long years ago,
Tlie Master called her home,
t'jtmissively—yea—joyfully,
Bhe heard the summons—“Come.”
Though I shall hear that voice no more,
0, Heavenly Father, may
Tho blessed work sho wrought in me,
Grow stronger day by day.
Think God for woman’s influence—
Braiie to His holy name,
’Tuber’s to smooth life's thorny path—
Tbs erring to reclaim.
Q Mothers—sisters—fair ones—all,
fhrik* then when’er you can;
Tempt not—but use ths pow’r you have,
To rescuti fallen man.
“ The harvest now is fully ripe—
The laborers are few,”
Then enter in—there sure is work—
Enough for all to do;
* Jo ‘ a with the noble sons of men
TTbc8o banner is unfurled,
And never rest till Drunkenness,
h banished from tho world.
Pt rryviUe, Kentucky. <?. B. O.
is the sort of thing that happens in the
3 c * 2na fi street cars: A lady entered the car
?®*Ated herself jetween two gentlemen.
one of tho gentlemen glanced at the
fjjhd their eyes, met. For a second each
j*®dat the other. Then the gentleman ntter-
.”hy, Maud, where did yon come from?”
. udy answered—“From St. Louis—just ar-
■w-going to join ma at Pittsburg.” Further
Imitation ensued. “Frank, married yet?”
o, Maud; are yon?” “No, thank God.
? y° a stopped drinking?” “Haven’t
a drop since we separated, and never
Zr. “On, you’ve been true to your
^j* 8 ? “Yes, Maud, and can I now re-
i w* wor ds yon once forbade ?” “No, it
.Jr,, worth while; they are written on my
UtT, “Well, then, you’ll—?” Blush from
and faint “Yes.”
’Utlf ^ 6W Orleans Picayune says; “How the
of time brines Around his revenues.
Fit0.11 WASHINGTON.
Hungcn's Speech—Abases of the Franking;
Privilege—Whlttemoro—Georgia In tho
Senate—Infernal Kc venue in South Caro
lina.
' or » s nmo Dnngs around ms revengi
).], “ ore than forty years the people of New
cj», been importing their supplies of
New Orleans now manu-
JSJ*own ice by steam, and recently the
25* Tee Company received an order from
for fifty tons of ice. We shall be
‘■‘•■BagBoston next.”
Correspondence Telegraph and Messenger. |
Washington, Februaiy 2C, 1870.
, Mr. Mnngen’s speech, which wa3 not deliv
ered in the Honse on Saturday, bnt which ap
peared in the Globo of Sunday last, is racy
reading. It has since been expunged from the
record of Congressional proceedings; bnt this
has not prevented its perusal by hundreds who
wonld never have thought of looking at the
Glebe had not their attention been drawn to it
by the action of the Honse on Monday. Caban
belligerency is Mr. Mnngen’s text; and the
President, Secretary Fish and Senator Snm-
ner are not by any means neglected. Mr. Mun-
gen invariably refers to the former as onr
“gifted President,” bnt whether sarcastically
or with double meaning, the reader must judge.
Of Secretary Fish he says: “Onr Secretary of
State is floundering about like a fish out of
water, and between his desire to help the Span
iards and his fear of public opinion in the
United States, is doubtless waiting, like Micaw-
ber, for something to turn up; waiting for some
garbled statements of some of his own sgents,
or some hired pimp of Spain to help him ont of
the dilemma in which he and onr gifted Presi
dent are placed on the Cuban question.”
The allusions to Snmner are termed by the
Radical press as “nasty,” “foul,” “tooindecent
for repnblioation,” etc. The New England
Radical journals, at least, need not scrapie to
print Mir. Mnngen’s remarks. Can there be
anything too nasty or too indecent for their
reading ? Most persons will say not, after Mrs.
Stowe's nastiness has keen swallowed with such
relish. There was even a demand for more af
ter her first publication in the leading publica
tions of New England, at which all the world
cried shame. And why so squeamish now?
Simply because Mr. Snmner is dragged from
his pedestal, as false gods should be, and
stripped of his outward garb of manhood. I
qnote the following extract in relation to Mr.
Sumner; and let any one who can deny its
truthfulness:
"When we find persons destitute of physical
and moral manhood, what can we expect of
them? Some of the worst tyrants in history,
despots, leaders of factions, and religious zea
lots remorselessly crashed and bloodily perse
cuted their opponents, who, when opportunity
offered, often retaliated in kind. Yet in the
midst of their excesses, deeds of daring and
gleams of magnanimity and meroy threw occa
sional light on the sombre and sanguinary pic
ture. Some unknown band, it is recorded,even
strewed flowers upon Nero’s grave. But the
rule of unsexed men in the declining periods of
the Roman and Byzantine empires, through
effete princes, led to a more profound demoral-
• M IrnAnm 1TI_
ization than was ever before known. “The in
fluence of these things,” says a French writer,
“was more fatal than that of the most fanatical
or ascetic monks.” To the latter, indeed, were
hy their vows denied the joys of matrimony and
tho reelings w pmeumj. vr**. tj, B instinctive
aspiration was in their breasts, and premuaeu
from lavishing itself on the individual family it
sometimes touchingly expanded so as to com-
E rise in its benevolence the wide family of the
nman kind, and to produce a Las Casas or a
Fenelon. In their worst phase of character, the
misguided and atrocions zeal which lead them to
doom others to the stake induced these persecu
tors when persecuted in turn fearlessly to face it.
The ennnch not only had no experience of those
feelings, bnt he even had no conception. A
sad monstrosity of man's creation, he conld
not rise to the level of human sympathies. He
was inspired only by tho most groveling pas
sions, and envions of all virility, physical and
moral, worked out bi3 insidious poHcy by in
trigue and craft. Not his ever tho direct, plain
road, bnt the tortuous, slimy path, the devious
ways of deceit and perfidy. Not his the tiger
like spring of brnte force, the violence of mas
sacres and ostentations exeentions. Frigidly
vindictive he crawled perseveringly bnt surely
to his end, the life-long gratification of envy
and of misanthropic spite. His' was the in
genious calumny, the private denunciation, the
poisoned enp, the secret strangnlation, tho
noiseless immurements in the dnngeon’s depths
and the frightful torturings which solaced his
malignity and unforgiving spirit. His policy,
more cruel and more fatal than that of the vio
lence which inflicted bleeding gashe3, some
times to be cicatrized, npona generation, emas
culated nations after his own image, leaving
them and their posterity hopelessly degraded
and to become the prey of the barbarian.
Worse still, daring the centuries and down to
onr own time, this spirit and this nnsexed pol
icy has fonnd imitators. It was a policy con
genial to all cowardly despotisms.
There is only one instance in history, sacred
the remark, “It is enough that ho retires from
the house enshrouded in dishonor. The prece
dent having been established, the House cannot
do otherwise than continue the work, until it
has purged itself of all unworthy members.”
It is said Benj. F. Butler will go to Sonth Caro
lina and stamp Whittemore’s district to ensure
the latter’s re-election. Wonder how big a re
tainer Bntler received from Whittemore.
' I copy the Globe’s report of the House pro
ceedings yesterday in relation to Georgia:
BE ADMISSION OP GEOEGIA.
Mr. Bntler, of Massachusetts, from the Com
mittee on Reconstruction, reported a bill (H. R.
No. 1335) to admit the State of Georgia to rep
resentation in the the Congress of tho United
States; which was read a first and second time.
The question was upon ordering the bill to bo
engrossed and read a third time.
Mr. Batlor, of Massachusetts. I desiro that
action shall be had on this bill now.
Mr. Bingham. I hope that this bill will he
printed, and that members will be allowed an
opportunity to examine it Georgia has already
been admitted to representation.
Mr. Bntler, of Massachusetts. I can relieve
the mind of the gentleman. This bill is in toti-
dem verbis the same as the bills which have be
come laws for the admission of Virginia and
Mississippi to representation in Congress; it is
in the exact words with those bills, except the
change of names.
Mr. Eldridge. Will the gentleman include
Massachusetts, and pat her upon the same foot
ing?
Mr. Bingham. Oh, don’t!
Mr. Bntler, of Massachusetts. I cannot.
Mr. Benjamin. Is not the gentleman willing
to let this bill go over until after the morning
hour?
Mr. Bntler, of Massachusetts. I will give
way for a morning hour if I do not thereby loso
my place.
Mr. Benjamin. The gentleman can report
from the Committee on Reconstruction at any
time.
The Speaker. If the gentleman yields now
for e. morning hour, at the end of that time the
Chair will be compelled to recognize the gen
tleman from California, (Mr. Sargent,) whose
motion to suspend the roles for the purpose of
going into Committee of the Whole on the In
dian appropriation bill inclndes the rale by
which the gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr.
Bntler) is authorized to repoit from his com
mittee at any time.
Mr. Wood. I desire to say to the gentleman
from Massachusetts (Mr. Bntler) that he cannot
possibly dispose of this bill at this time. Ab a
member of the Committee on Reconstruction, I
can say that this bill is very far from being the
nnanimons report of the committee, and it
is probable that one or two amendments or sub
stitutes may be offered by members of the
committee. This bill presents an entirely new
qnestion, one not comprehended in any recon
struction measure heretofore passed. I there
fore ask the gentleman to let this bill go over
until Monday next.
Mr. Bntler, of Massachusetts. I do not de
sire to block or obstruct the business of this
Honse. Bnt it is very important, for many
reasons, that this bill should be pnt upon its
passage os soon aB possible. In order not to
antagonize with the morning honr, if by unani
mous oonsentthis bill can come up immediately
after the morning hoar on Monday, I will be
content to let it go over until that time.
The Speaker. That the gentleman from Mas
sachusetts [Mr. Bntler] may not bo surprised,
the Chair will state that no general consent
conld take away the right of the House to sus
pend the rales after the expiration of tho morn
ing honr on Monday. The gentleman can havo
his bill printed and recommitted, and in that
way he will obtain more control over it than by
having it assigned to any particular day.
Mr. Bader, of Massachusetts. Very well; I
will move that this bill be printed and recom
mitted.
Mr. Beck. I desire to have a substitute for
this bill received and printed with this bill.
Mr. Butler, of Massachusetts. Certainly; I
will inclnde it in my motion to print.
The motion to print and recommit was then
agreed to.
Mr. Perry, Supervisor of Internal Revenue
for North Carolina, telegraphs to-day about a
raid by the revenue officials into Gaston county,
in which a number of little one-horse coffee-pot
distilleries were captnred and destroyed, and
a few poor manufacturers of contraband spirits
arrested and held to bail for defrauding the rev-
Mr. Perry does not state whether the re
ceipts of this ventnre were sufficient to counter
balance the horse hire and wages of his raiders.
It does seem as though the revenne officers in
the Sontharn country might find a more profita
ble occupation than that of despoiling a few
poor devils in the backwoods of a little whisky
of their own making. It is notorious that three-
fifths of these little stills destroyed are merely
family affairs, the product thereof being con
sumed in their immediate locality, and not one
time in a thousand ever finding a market or be
ing offered for sale. Yet tho war on these stills
profane, where an nnsexed person was a j j 8 wa g 61 j with United States troops and mounted
Christian; that is the fellow who went down
into the water with Philip. Again, the malig
nity of these nnsexed creatures is historic.
An investigation into the abase of the frank
ing privilege is in progress, and Congressmen
are becoming chary of their franks. It is not
impossible that this investigation will develop
facts quite as discreditable as the sale of cadet
ships. The trnth will come ont now, I suppose,
about franking tranks to tho Pacific coast, and
sending dirty linen hundreds of miles, through
the mails, to be washed. Not that I pin my
faith on sneh reports, which are enrrent enough,
as yon know; bnt it will be a comfort to have
them officially and authentically denied. Th^n
it is whispered that members have sent /ranks
home to their families and other persons when
they should not; and it is even noised abont
that members have been guilty of selling their
and armed revenne officials, and the Supervisors
manage to cover themselves all over with glory
in their reports to the Revenne Department
Somebody will find ont after a while that the
game is not worth tho powder.
Tho specials of the past week have posted
your readers as to the movements of Georgians
proper, and Georgians “so-called,” at the capi
tol, as well as to tho daily aspect of the situa
tion. The coming week is believed to bo big
with events of more than usual interest to Geor
gia. It is not improbable that she will be dis
cussed simultaneously in both houses.
In the Senate the Senatorial question has to
be decided. In the Honse the bill introduced
by Bntler, (referred to above), will bo fought
over. Bingham and others will oppose it, and,
perhaps, will nnito on the snbstitnto to be offer
ed by Mr. Beck, of Kentucky, which will be
franks; but that I do not beheve. This letter ... . _
’ , - . .. T . , much more liberal in its provisions—but I very
will reach yon under a frank; bnt I do not think «_*»_«.« -n -i
there is any impropriety in it An exception i Batler&Company will[prevail as they
must certainly be made in favor of matter for' dld “ ^ cases of Vlr » ma and Mississippi.
Virginia and Mississippi.
Senator Hill has returned home bnt Senator
Miller remains.
I find the opinion that the bayonet Senators will
be seated becoming quite general, though some
The Radical papers of this city are seveio on of Q Ja . s friends m more hopofnL
Whittemore, the carpet-bag member of Con- ■n
gross from Sonth Carolina, who made so dis-
the press, which surely is better entitled to
free transit than much that does go through tho
mails under the autograph of an M. C.
graceful an exit from the House of Representa
tives, on Thursday last. The Chronicle thinks
great credit is due the Radical party for itp ac
tion in the matter, and claims that its morality
is now established. Not so, however. Wbitte-
moro wonld have never been expelled, orforced
into resigning, if he conld possibly have been
retained. Necessity, not morality, caused his
retirement to private life. The Republican im
putes anything but honorable conduct to Mr.
Whittemore. It says; “He cheated justice by
resigning his place in the Honse of Representa
tives ; and it was to enable him to do this that
he wanted further time when on Wednesday he
appealed to the House for leniency. He resigned
because he saw that expulsion was inevitable,
and he hoped thereby to escape all punishment
for big crime. It is a satisfaction to know that
he did not escape, for the resolution of condem
nation and virtual censure was as severe os ex
pulsion conld possibly hove been. On the lat
ter qnestion there wonld have been at least a
few negative votes.”
The Republican oonaoles itself, however, with
Dalton.
Inspection of Fertilizers Again. On the Uses of a Big Cotton Crop.
Editors Telegraph and Messenger In my' Laubxns Hill, Ladbens Co., Ga.—
first communication I stated what were some of February 24, 1870.
the duties of Inspectors of Fertilizers; but be- j Editors Telegraph and Messenger :—I wish to
ing satisfied that those who were intended to be | drop yon a few hints to my planting friends
benefittedby the law passed for their protection, i through the columns of your vary popular and
do not generally understand the duties of an ! widely circulated paper. The war measures of
Inspector of Fertilizers, I will make some addi- j the late Southern Confederacy prohibiting the
tional statements. The law requires the Inspec-! growth of cotton within her limits, have proven
tor to inspect, analyze and brand all fertilizers ! conclusively to my mind, that the cotton crop
presented to him. The law makes no distinction j of the United States controls the price of the
between a good and a poor articlo as respects : staple in all the markets of the world. This
tbn requirement to be analyzed. Neither does j being the case, I think it would be well for the
it prohibit a poor articlo to be put on the mar- / cotton growors to have some general under-
ket. Bnt the protection consists in securing ths ' standing among themselves in reference to sup-
plantor or pnrohaser the means of distinguish- ! ply and demand, and some such concert of ac~
ing the good from the bad, tho trae from the
spurious fertilizer.
The Inspector is therefore required to give
the owner of the Fertilizer so inspected a cer-
tion that wonld insnre a good price, permanent
ly for all time to come.
It is not to bo expected that a full concert of
action can be had among the masses of men
tificato of his analysis, and any person using {having so many different minds, but when all
falsely such certificate, is subject to fine and
imprisonment.
In order to gain tho proper advantage by the
Inspector, tho planter should never purchase
any fertilizer without first sseing the certified
statement of tho Inspector’s nnalysis, and judge
for himself. It is contended that very few
planters are able to tell by the analysis anything
abont the value of the fertilizer. In many in
stances this is the misfortnne of the planter,
bnt it does not deprive him of the protection of
the law; for, in the majority of instances, he
could easily obtain the assisting inforaation of
some one who does know. By propereffort all
conld avail themselves of the means to jndgo
efficiently of the fitness of the fertilizets, by the
analysis of their components presented in the
certificate. |
There are many planters now in Georgia who
know little or nothing, scientifically, »f chemis
try, who can tell, with great accuraoy, from the
analysis, what kind of a fertilizer tiey need.
They have tried experiments with different
sorts of guanos npon their lands, until they
have fonnd ont what per cent, of ammonia,
soluble phosphate and sulphuric acid they
should contain in order to serve th< purpose.
What can be done by some, can be done by all.
This may appear to some persons as a matter of
8anvil moment; bnt, when they consider the
large amount of money which planters are in
vesting in fertilizers every year, and the large
amount of money lost by many in purchasing
fertilizers of no value, it will be seen to be a
matter of the greatest importance. Is it not
then an enterprise of great publio utility to pnt
the means within the hands of the planter, of
protecting himself from snch losses?
“Commission Merchant,” in his second com-
mnnication, still objects to the law as being im
perfect and impracticable; and yet he asserts
that he goes in for its improvement. The lat
ter position is an admission of the necessity of
a law of the kind under discussion, for the pro
tection of tho country. As for the objection of
imperfection in the existing law, I think it has
been amply shown that the law is good and plain
and strong enough as far as it goes; but what
is needed, is only some addition to make it still
moro efficient and protective, and not its aboli
tion, by which the gap will bo thrown down and
measnrably all protection will be destroyed.
Parties violating the law ought to be, can be,
and no doubt will be pnnished.
I contend that it is practicable. Dr. Means,
with the necessary Assistants, can inspect and
analyze, so far as any practical test is required,
all that passes through Savannah, and not pnt
tho owners to unnecessary expense or delay.—
He can do it in this way: When a cargo ar
rives, he is informed of it, goe3 to the vessel
and takes an average parcel of each kind of
gnano—then brands tho mass and lets it go
through the city—takes tho samples to the
Laboratory, analyzes them and gives the owner
n certificate of the same. I am informed that
Dr. Means has several Assistants, and nsnally is
'conducting qnite a nnmber of analyses at the j
are aiming at the same object, it is not unreas
onable to suppose that a large majority might be
fonnd who wonld be willing to act in concert
for the attainment of that object. “Tis trae,
and pity tis, tis trae,” that some men, more
selfish, more avaricious (and I might say more
unprincipled) than the rest, wonld seek advan
tages, and try to appropriate themselves more
than their share of the benefits resulting from
the co-operation of others. For instance, if
more attention was given to the production of
grain crops, and less to the production of cot
ton, thereby making provirions of all kinds
abundant and cheap in onr country, and at the
same time enhancing the valne of cotton, all
men would very readily see the most money in
cotton, and some would be selfish enough to try
to grasp the prize by planting overwhelming
crops of cotton for a few years, at the risk of
breaking down ths znarkot, and perhaps, entail
ing rain npon themselves, certainly, npon their
children, and npon the country at large, for it
is certain that the prosperity of the Sonth de
pends more npon tne price of cotton, than npon
that of all her other resources combined.
Tell me not of her railroads, her factories,
her salt works, her tobacco, her lumber, her
turpentine, her fisheries, her orange groves, her
rice, her sugar, and hor minerals—these all
sink into insignificance when compared with
her great staple in conducing to the general
prosperity. ,
We see, then, that “Cotton is King,” bat he
will not bear to be crowded, lest he might be
“weighed in the bGances and fonnd wanting,”
and distribute poverty, instead of riches. Then
all of ns wonld be fonnd with empty pockets,
begging the crumbs that fall from the rich
manufacturer’s table. This may not be alto
gether a picture of the imagination; and now
while we havo the game in onr own hands, it is
of the utmost importance that we should all
endeavor to keep it there by a judicious system
of planting.
And if I might be permitted to suggest a sys
tem, I wonld say let every planter have two-
thirds of his land planted in provision crops,
and apply two-thirds of his fertilizers to those
crops, and one-third of his land and one-third
of his fertilizers to the production of cotton.
Such a system I think wonld never over stock
the markets, and wonld always insure a good
demand and remunerative price, so long as the
commercial affairs of the world stand as they
do now. If I am not mistaken, it has been as
certained that a crop of two millions bales in
the United States, null sell for more money than
a crop of four millions.
If, then, money is the object aimed at, I ask,
in the name of common sense, why waste time
and labor and capital in the effort to make a
four million crop, when the half of that crop
will command the most money. And, besides
the time, labor and capital saved in making the
smaller crop of cotton, conld be most profitably
employed in raising an abundance of grain, rais
ing young stock for the farm, meat for the la
borer, luxuries for the table, eto., or in making
comfortable buildings and other improvements
npon onr farms, or in collecting manure for the
next crop; or if we conld find nothing else to
do, it wonld pay as well for all hands to go a
fishing, bait or no bait.
My idea is this, if we make less money by
continually working and poshing for a big crop
of cotton, and exhaust everything else in the
efiort to make it, it wonld be acting wisely to
abandon snch a practice at once, and exert onr
skill and energies in that way which makes the
most money and best secures onr independence,
and, at the same time, surrounds ns with most
of the comforts and conveniences of life. To
my mind this appears so plain that the wonder
same timo, and that he does inspect and analyze me j a> w ky a u others do not see as I do.
the principal part of fertilizers that pass through j I have been indneed to moke these sngges-
Savannah. Some parties, who want to keep j tions by seeing such extensive and expensive
* ' I ihn nnvf nvnn rtf AAfinn onri 1 f
predict a collapse
occasionally to get them through without their ' kot before the next crop can be gathered and
being analyzed. Bnt those parties are liable to J sold. If it does happen, somebody will be
, , , . . .. . . . T v hurt. It costs fifteen cents to make cotton. I
be prosecuted, fined and imprisoned, and I have haY0 heard of one planter fa our State who haa
no doubt some of them will bo severely dealt bought $35,000 worth of fertilizers, and all of
in. :a a °i j ...a aaUa« rru; n
with.
Bnt tho planter can control this business very
easily, by refusing to purchase a single ton with-
ont first seeing the Inspector’s analysis; then
tho party who runs tho blockade wonld find no
sale for his fertilizer.
‘Planter and Commission Merchant” admits
the law needs an improvement. He will bo a
it tcTbe used on his next crop of cotton. This
is making 'a stupendous effort to inorease the
crop, and if it is not “running the thing in the
ground” it is certainly putting a good deal of
the thing in the gronnd.
I hope that the fertilizing mania may pass off
without hnrting anybody. I had rather see
every pound of fertilizers used npon provision
crops, and make what cotton we can on the
natural land. We have made it in that way, and
public benefactor if he will give a praotical j can do it yet, and get more money for what we
statement of what those improvements should ‘ do make. ‘
be. . Let ns hear from him, and let him not de- j ^ am through. If these hints do no good, it
cline to do his country a benefit if it is in his would be useless for me to throw ont any more,
power. • Meechant AND Planteb. and whether any one may profit by them or not,
* I shall at least have the satisfaction of believing
[FOB THE TELEGBAPH AND JIESSENGEB.] i ^ at * {eyr bla “?
t., . „ of safety, enough to keep any one from losing
What Is to Become of It ? I tra( £ if ^ ohoQB6 & trave! it.
Is there a plethora of money in the pockets :
of certain Southern people ? Ts there more •
currency in Atlanta than can bo judiciously .
invested? Are there no objects of charity in
this stricken region? By whatotherhypothe
sis can we account for a proposition that ap
peared in the Constitution, some time since,
Oh, cotton sinner! stop and think,
Before yon further go;
Your coarse may take you to tho brink
ad 1
Of penury and woe.
“Coining events cast their shadows before."
Fabmeb.
Cotton and Gold.
A Plague of JIioe.—We arc familiar, in this
conntry, with the plagne of grasshoppers, army
worms, and other noxions animals, bnt have
happily been spared from the devastations
caused by mice in large bodies, snoh as have
not nnfreqnently ravished portions of Europe.
Quite recently certain parts of Hangary have
been terribly afflicted in this manner, to so
great an extent, indeed, that in a single district
the entire crop of sixty thousand acres of grain
was completely oon6nmed. In another district
ten thousand acres were destroyed in two weeks,
not a grain, nor blade of straw, nor root being
loft—entire fields having been cleared, accord
ing to the statement, “are bare as a floor.”
Every attempt made to reduce the hordes of
these animals failed. Ditches were dug and
filled with water; but they soon became choked
up with the dead bodies, the nnmber destroyed
being counted by hundreds of thousands, and
yet without any appreciable impression being
made npon the supply. The country was filled
with immense numbers of hawks, eagles, owls,
and other predaceous birds, together with
foxes, weasels, wildcats, etc.; but the devasta
tion still continues, and there is no telling where
it will end.
Mb. Bbight’s health creates deep anxiety in
ISoglftsd.
Tho New York World, in an editorial article
to raise funds for defraying the expenses of commenting on the low rate of gold on Thnis-
Anna Dickinson and others of her stripe, on; day, says: “The most important cause of the
... ~ . i reduction is one with which the government
an expedition to the capital Oi our State, with j jj 3( j no thing to do, as it has no control over
the object of ventilating tho doctrines of the j the weather and the seasons. The decline in
new school ? Shades of our fathers! Do not, 1 gold has resulted from several causes, of which
,»d will «*irmptions of tho Goths Mow £
each other O succession sufficiently rapid ■ chase of foreign commodities, and cotton being
without our inviting and paying for them ? Is as good for this purpose as gold itself, an abnn-
it possible that the originctor of this idea is a
native of the South ? merce. According tothomostrecentestimates,
‘ # _ tho cotton crop of tho last year does not fall
The old fashioned married state is in danger short of three million bales; and as the price is
of passing away, and there is a chance that double, this crop is equal in value to six million
it will, i» .few secretion,, bo nocbet.d ttith ft
the things that were. Witness tho facility payment of duties at the Gnstomhoose. The
with which divorces are obtained in certain supply is in excess of the demand, and, as a
sections, the progress of the ideas advanced Son^rop toS o^mted in
by these men m women s clothes, and females another manner. It has carried into the Sonth
in male apparel, eto. Some new relation will j large sums of money, of which only a prat has
be devised-for men and women will continue
to live together—hut tho old} holy estate oi • The planters reserve out ot their prooeed3 tho
matrimony will be gone, and God grant that money they will need for tillage, wages and
the substitute may be better than tho original, familyexpensesuntilthe next crop is brought
. . .. . . ... , , ... to market; and the deficiency of banns in that
but it is hardly possible, and perhaps nothing gcotion causes much of this money to be locked
new will be devised after all, as there already. up in private safes and desks, thus withdrawing
exist certain terms of association between tho j£/ ron ? circulation and practically diminishing
,, . , ,, .. ., _ r v. l ... the volume of the currency. The effeot is, so
sexes that probably suit the new lights better far as it goes, to lessen the disparity between
than any thing that can be invented. the valne ot gold and the valne of greenbacks.”
POYNTZ.
The Freight Blockade.
KoThronRh Shipments Sonth for the Past
Two Days—Condition of Affairs at Chat
tanooga.
From the Kashville Manner.
The doors of the Chattanooga depot re
mained closed Thursday and yesterday to all
shippers offering through freight—that is, to
points south of Chattanooga. Some hope is
entertained that the blockade will be raised
to-day, but we have heard no official intima-
tian on the subject In the meantime, busi
ness is at a complete standstill, and our grain
trade, particularly, is seriously crippled by the
delay. Orders from the South are being re
ceived on as liberal a scale as ever, but, of
course, dealers cannot fill them at present
There is some complaint that the Nashville
and Chattanooga road is receiving corn from
the Cairo packets in preference to local ship
ments, but the steady accumulation of such
freight on the wharf appears to bo sufficient
to refute this idea. The real trouble is, we
understand, the difficulty experienced by the
Nashville and Chattanooga Hoad in gettin
back its cars from Chattanooga and beyon
that point Owing to the altogether unprece
dented activity in freights at present, the de
lays would be even more serious were it not
for the fact that the Nashville and Chatta
nooga road, in order to avoid another block
ade at Chattanooga, has permitted its cars to
go considerably south of there. Although'
this plan is attended with considerable incon
venience and loss of time in the return of the
cars, it certainly appears to be preferable to
having whole trains standing loaded on the
track at Chattanooga, awaiting their turn to
go forward, as was the case when the block
ade was first declared there sometime hack. #
It was intimated yesterday that a system is
to be adopted by which nearly one-third more
freight maybe stowed in the Chattanooga
depot. This, we hear, can be accomplished
by excluding the drays from the building and
filling up freight in the central space now
used as a roadway. The drays_ could unload
at the doors without material inconvenienoe.
The Chattanooga. Times of yesterday says
with regard to the situation there:
“Col. Bryant was sent here some ten days
ago to dear away the blockade, and he has
succeeded very well. He described himself
as striotly a railroad man, and professes to
know neither religion nor politics in his rail
road management. Mainly through his efforts
we believe the blockade has been been entirdy
removed, and all the cars received from the
other roads are sent forward daily.”
From the Times we.also obtain the follow
ing comparison of freights over the Western
ana Atlantic railroad under the old (Hulburt)
and the new (Blodgett) administrations:
Old Rates. New Rates. Inorease.
Corn (bush.)..,
Oats
Potatoes (bbL).
Coal
Stock
Baoon (100 lbs),
. 10
11
01
. 12
11
—
. 07
08
01
. 22
68
46
. 35
48
13
.25 00
.15 00
48 00
23 00
16 56
1 56
.20 00
35 00
15 00
.15 00
18 00
3 00
.40 00
60 00
20 00
. 42
52J
10J
These rates, it is complained.by the Times,
show a very marked discrimination against
East Tennessee in favor of the West. The
great cause of complaint, however, at Chatta
nooga, is the refusal of the Western and At
lantic railroad to make a through tariff from
that point to Augusta, Macon and other South
ern cities. The only through rates the road is
now giving are to N( —
and
few York via Charleston
In a distance of eleven blooks on Broadway,
A petrified sea-serpent bae been fonnd in In- New York, there ore sixty-three stores and
diana, 180 feet beneath the snrfaoe. offices to let. . . . .
The Western Freight Blockade.
Commenting npon the unfortunate situation
of affairs, the Nashville Banner of Sunday has
the following:
The reason of the freight blockade, which
has existed to the southeast of Nashville, is very
plain when certain facts are understood. The
Sonth last year ongaged entensively in the cul
tivation of cotton to the exclusion of grain, and
it is the flow of com and wheat and baoon into
the cotton-growing States from the Northwest
that causes, with an exoessof merchandise, a
blockade on many of the roads, not only in this
bnt other States. If we understand the facts
in the case there has been in reality no blockade
on the Nashville and Chattanooga railroad.
The company has an abundance of cars and
conld move promptly to Chattanooga every
ounce of freight that is offering. The difficulty
lies at the other end of the line.
The Western and Atlantic Road, from Chat
tanooga to Atlanta, has ponring over it an im
mense business. The four hundred cars owned
by the road are fonnd a long way inadeqnate to
the emergency. The East Tennessee Road,
the Memphis and Charleston and tho Selma
routes are all delivering large quantities of
freight for this road, and it is not singular that
the line should be blockaded. The Western
and Atlantic road has a sufficiency of power to
move all the freight bnt a deficiency of cars.—
So long as the. Chattanooga Road could allow
itecars to pass through Chattanooga without
transferring freight things went smoothly, but
when two weeks ago, so many of the cars of
this road were sonth of the eastern terminns,
that the road began to suffer for lack of trans
portation, the Superintendent returned to the
tedious system of transferring freight at Chat
tanooga, getting through only abont fifteen or
twenty car loads.
The only trouble is with the Western and At
lantic Road, which cannot receive the immense
quantity of freight offering. All the difficulty
lies there. The road is doubtless doing the best
it can with the facilities which it possesses. The
Chattanooga Railroad has an immense freight
house at Chattanooga, which will probably hold
500 car loads. This might be piled fufi, but
merchants and dealers here prefer to wait until
they can get through receipts. The consequence
is that the depot here in Nashville is filled to
overflowing with through freight. There is no
blockade as to local stations, and the merchants
of Nashrille feel the difficulty very little. It
falls heavily upon the produce and grain dealers.
There are probably 10,000 saoks of com in
Nashville to-day, awaiting shipment Sonth—150
sacks making a car load. The Lonisville and
Nashville Railroad now has 254 cars sonth of
Nashville, which we believe does not inolnde
the Green Line cars, which ran through with
out transfer of freight. This freight blockade
is no new thing; it has been existing ever since
navigation opened in the fall, and large ship
ments of grain for the Southeast began to pour
into Nashville from the Cumberland. The Wes-
tean and Atlantic Road is getting new ears con
stantly, bnt the accnmalation of transportation
is a matter of time, and the difficulty of freight
blockades to the south of Nashville will doubt
less continue until the first of April, when the
roads will be able to handle with ease all the
freight offering.
As we stated at the outstart, it is the large
quantities of grain and provisions demanded at
the southeast which'causes the difficulty with
the railroads. If the Sonth devotes its labor to
the raising of cotton to the exclusion of other
products, the railroads will be compelled to
provide themselves with increased facilities for
transportation in tho future, otherwise there
will be serious impediments to trade and com
merce generally.
The blockade has not only involved senous
loss to shippers on account of the long delays,
bnt has also caused a material inorease of rates.
Tho railroads of the South seem, by unanimous
consent, to havo taken advantage of the present
rush of business, to raise their freight tariff np
on almost everything. We oannot take up a
Southern exchange without finding an article
giving their local railroads pretty sir >ng cen
sure for their policy in regard to freights.
The Editor of the Times Attacked by
Three Men and Two H ome*—Fire
Blondes Three of the DJirepqt»<
ble Party Arrested and Taken to
the Armory. ii( , . - ifA mk
The simple circumstance was that Wilbur F.
Storey, Esq., editor of the Chicago Times, was
assaulted near his own house, on Wabash av»*
nne, abont 5:15 o’clock on yesterday eveain^
as he was proceeding to his dinner in company
with his wife. The assault was made by five per
sons—three of whom were men and two women
—with a rear guard of men and women who sat
in a carriage. Three of the assaulting parties
are known to have been one Henderson, who
styles himself manager of the Lydia Thompson
troupe, Lydia Thompson herself and Pauline
Markham, who were arrested and taken to the
armory. The other two persons of the assault
ing party are not actually known, they having
made their escape, but they are supposed ana
said to be a clerk at a prominent hotel in thin
city, and a man formerly connected with some
Chicago newspaper, who has recently attached
himself in some capacity to the tronpe which
has been giving entertainments at the opera-
house for the past week and more.
The details of the assault were these: About
5 o’clock, JIrs. Storey called at her husband’s
office, and they walked together toward their
home, which is situated on Wabash avenue,
between Peck and Eldridge courts. Reaching
the comer of Peck court, Mr. Story notioed, on
the opposite side of the street, a man and wo
man, who, seeing him, turned and walked back
as far as the carriages (two of them,) which
stood two or three doors north of Mr. Storey’s
residence, when another woman and two mea
stepped ont npon the sidewalk. As Mr. Storey
came np to the party of five, one of the men
approached him, and asked:
“Is this Mr. Storey?"
“Yes, sir,” was the reply.
“My name is Henderson,” said the man, who
then Btepped back, and the woman, known as
Lydia Thompson,advancedbriskly and struck at
lir. Storey with a riding whip. The objeot ap
parently was that he should be whipped by ■
woman, evidently determining that this should
not be done be rushed towards the woman and
endeavored to take the whip away. At this
Henderson and another one of the men fell up
on Mr. Storey, who quickly threw them off. The
Thompson again stepped np to use the whip,
and Mr. Storey again tried to B8ize hold of
her, when Henderson struck him a severe blow
on the temple with the loaded end of a sort of
cowhide, which had a stunning effect for tho
moment. Mr. Storey recovered himself, sprang
toward Henderson, and wrenched his loaded
whip from him, turning to give his attention to
the third man who had approached. In the
meantime, Henderson drew his revolver, at tho
same time making a retreat.
At this, the attacking party desisted, qnite a
crowd having gathered abont, and Mr. E. 8.
Alexander poshed the men and women toward
one of the carriages. At this jnnotnre a polioe-
man came np, and was told to take charge of
the disrepntable party making the assault. One
of the carriages, however, had already driven
off; the other, containing Thompson, Mark
ham, and Henderson, was taken in charge and
driven to the armory, where the trio were locked
attorney
other law matters. No one making any com
plaint except the policeman, the party waa held
on the charge of disorderly conduct simply, in
bail of $100 each, to appear on Saturday morn
ing at 9 o’clock.—Chicago Times, 26 th.
Mr. Webster’s Death.
It wes past midnight, when, awaking front
one of the slumbers that he had at intervals, bn
seemed not to know whether he had not already
passed from his earthly existence. He made •
strong effort to ascertain what the consaione-
ness that he could still perceive actually wail,
and then nttered those well known words, “£
still live!” as if he had satisfied himself of tin
fact that he was striving to know. They wen
his last coherent utterance. A good deal later
he said something in which the word “poetry”
was distinctly heard. His son immediately re
peated to him one of the stanzas of Gray’s Ele
gy. He heard it and smiled. After this respi
ration became more difficult, and at length it
went on with perceptible intervals.
All was now hashed within the chamber, and
tons who stood, waiting, there were bnt throe
sounds in nature, the sighing of the antnmn
wind in the trees, the slow ticking of the cloek
in the hall below, and the deep breathing of onr
dying friend. Momenta that seemed honn
flowed on. Still the measured beat of time fell
painfully distinct npon onr ears; still the gentle
moaning of the wind mingled with the only
soandthat arose within the room; for there
were no sobs of women, no movements of men.
So grand, and yet so calm and simple, had been
his approach to the moment when we must
know that he was with us no more, that he
had lifted ns into a composure, which, bnt for
his great example, we conld not.bave felt. At
twenty-three minnutes before three o’clock hie
breathing ceased; the features settled into %
superb repose, and Dr. Jeffries, who still held
the pnlse, after waiting a few seconds, gently
laid down the arm, and, amid a breathless si
lence, pronounced the single word, “dead.’*
The eyes were then closed, the remains were
removed from the position in which death came,
and all bat those who had been appointed to
wait and watch, slowly and mournfully walked
away.—Geo. T. Curtis.
Fires at Sea.
There is a universal association of horror
with the ory of fire npon a ship at sea; and yet
that is the place where a fire should be manage
able, because a great foroe may be immediatety
concentrated upon the point of danger. Som
years ago, a California steamer left the Isthmus
for- New York. On the afternoon of the day ot
sailing the captain called the passengers to the
deck and made them a sensible little spee^. He
reminded them that they were a great multitude
npon a ship, and that, as they knew, fire wee
one of the possible penis to which they were
exposed, bnt that a little care wonld deprive the!
chance of its sting. Ha then proposed that a suf
ficient body of the passengers should agree to
aot in concert with the crew, incase of necessity
He called for a certain number of men to han
dle axes, who, at an alarm, were to put them
selves at once under the orders of the ship’*
carpenter, whom he introduced. Others were
to act as guards to prevent the frantic rush
ing of passengers, and were to be armed for
the purpose and to obey certain officers whom
he named; others wero to protect the boats;
others were to repair to certain points and serve
the hose. And so a sufficient number of the
passengers were simply organized, and made to
understand precisely what they were to do
shonld an alarm bo raised. Suddenly the next
day an alarm was given ; and snch was the self
possession, produced by the oonsoiounneaa of
intelligent and powerful organization, that
every man went quietly to his post; there wan
no panio whatever, and the passengers learned
to their great satisfaction, that the cry had bee*
raise merely to test the efficiency of the organi
zation. There were some grumblers npon the
ship, who said that it was too bad in the captain
to excite by snch a plain appeal and system the
imagination of the passengers. Bat became
some men choose to be OBtriches there is no
reason why others shonld not prefer to remeia
men. A lightning rod upon a honse is a oon-
stant reminder of the danger of the thnnderbott.
Is it, therefore, “too bad'” to protect the hone ?
Tins French Atlantic Telegraph Company, at
their last meeting, declared a dividend of If
per cent, for five months.
The qnestion is mooted as to whether the
cadets, whose positions were obtained by par-
aisr ' " J " ‘ ‘*’*
chase, can bo dismissed; and it Is reported I
the Attorney General has decided that they MS-
not, but, however that be, the law clearly em
powers the President to make the removahl ta
his discretion.
Sevebsl severe shocks at earthquake have )
" ‘tad of Has
centiy occurred on ths Island of Hsmrii. The
summit at the volcano of Hfeyetoe issfcroeied
In smoke, iedtoating that the crater fit
active.