The weekly Augusta chronicle. (Augusta, Ga.) 1892-19??, April 26, 1893, Page 4, Image 4

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4 Tlie Aogsla Cironicle. Published Every Day in the Year. ESTABLISHED 1785. THE CHRONICLE will bo delivered by carrier or by mull at tlia following rate*: One Week » ® One Month „ ™ Six Months .J 9? One Year ’9 9“ Sunday Chronicle One Year ? ’ Weekly Chronicle One Year 1 w ADVERTISING RATES. Ordinary advertixernente, 10 cents P p r line; Special, 12 1-2 rent* per line; Ainnae meiita mid Auction Sales, 15 cents per line; Business Notices, 20 cents per line; Double Column Advertisements, and Ad vertisements requiring special positions, will bu charged 25 per cent, additional. Special copies sent free. Address all communications to THE CHRONICLE, AUGUSTA, GA. PATRICK WALSH. President. Mr. S. S. Vreeland Is the special adver tising agent of The Augusta Chronicle— Office, 1.7) Nassau street, New York. All advertising husinens In the Middle and New England States will be manag'd by him. It is now the Carolina suspensory law which engages intention. The Liberty bell bus startoil on its way to Chicago, crack and nil. , If reports be true, Athens' blind tigers have practically no blinds at all. Perhaps bichloride of gold might be effective in reclaiming the Ztiyder Zee. The appointment mill has been grind ing again and a few more hearts are made happy. The Naronie went down some time since, but the discussion keeps up with wonderful equipoise. There is groat danger that the foreign .lack Tars will be hall' seas over when they get ashore in New York. The cant-get-out-at-night does not agree with .Mr. Webster that union and liberty are one ami inseparable. , Perhaps LiliuokttlitiCs recently devel oped Mormon proclivities are after all , !v ;t bid for a husband. Who bids? The bicycle has caused a divorce In Boston. The husband's salary was $9 a week and he wanted to buy a wheel. There are 2(I,(HM) American periodical publications. But the spring poets and paper manufacturers are equal to the ■sit nation. The Chicago Tinies is authority for the statement that “this is an- age of legs.” Down this way people also have arms and even heads. The bronze monument to Christopher Columbus at Chicago was unveiled yes- ' terday. At least some of the sights will be ready for opening day. 'The President, still waits in vain for the homing doves to bring him an olive branch testimonial that the deluge of applications has abated. A Philadelphia man rushed into church and announced very vehemently that he was an angel. Arrangements are pond ing with the St. Peter of an insane asy lum. Some heretofore unpublished poems by Macaulay will soon be brought out by “The English Illustrated Magazine." They were written to his niece. Lady Kiutsford, Attorney General Olney’s tribute to Hie lamented Justice Lamar was a fine analysis of the distinguished statesman's character, and was presented in a mas terly manner. # This is Memorial Day and the seven vials of wrath which Republican South haters usually pour out will, like the seven years of Jacob’s labor, be in creased by yet seven more. , France has three dynamite factories which produce over 25,(XX).000 dyna nfte cartridges a year. It is evident that there is no probability of an ammu nition famine among the physical force party. The New York Sun publishes among its foreign notes the fact that “t’our leoii minor planets were discovered dur ing last month, bringing the total num ber of small planets known to 375." The is the foreiguest foreign note in the column. Is Tennessee raising Cyclops? A six toetl-yenr-old negro buy living at Milan was born with only one eye, there be |ing no 'trace of another. Il is body is covered with a growth of small hairs, I *** I resembling wool, giving him the ap pearance of a brute animal. In 1890 there was in the United States one failure to every 93 business concerns, while in Canada there was one failure to every 45. In 1891 there was one failure to every 82 in the United States, and one to every 42 in Canada. Tn 1892 the figures were one in 92 for the United States and one in 45 for Canada. The land of the free seems to be the home of stability. The next number of Harper's Weekly, published April 2(ith, will well maintain its usual standard of excellence and timeliness, containing, besides, a variety of other interesting matter, the follow ing special attractions: Illustrations of the naval rendezvous at Hampton Roads, with descriptive article by Lieut. J. D. J. Kelley. IT. S. N.; a portrait and sketch of Hon. .Tamos C. Carter, apropos of his service in connection with the Bering Sea Court of Arbitration; an illustration and sketch of the new Corcoran Art Gal lery in Washington; an article by W. H. Bishop on Bradley's "Columbus,” illus trated; a portrait and sketch of the Duke of Veragna; and a graphic descrip tion of the city of Lisbon, by Armand Dajot, profusely Illustrated. Cotton in Georgia. In the March number of the Southern States, an illustrated monthly maga zine devoted to the South, the State of Georgia is be irtibjct of -the issue, arid among other articles is one entitled "Cotton in Georgia" by Mr. H. H. Hickman of Augusta, president of the Gnmitoville MiuruifjtoCuritijr Company. It. deals nnterluiniugly with the sub ject of cotton manufacture, and sots out the fact Unit the state has more than half a million spiudics and 12,000 looms, or one-fifth of the entire spinning and weav ing capacity of the Suthern states, and that Augusta and Columbus contain con that Auguste -awl Columbus contain considerably more than half of the in dustry of Georgia. But the most interesting and novel part of the article is the description of cotton culture from planting to harvest time. While reviewing the subject in a necessarily cursory way, it nevertheless treats it so simply and plainly that even the luim unfamiliar with farming can gi t an i'll .I 111 I lie way in which cotton is raised. It is an entertaining chapter on tile .-abject of cotton, and will be found in full in another column. The Value of Pine. Georgia pine Las come to be a very fasliioiuible wood for interior decoration in the buildin of today, and is constantly growing in popularity as building ma lerial. It has always been the main building staple in the South, but.' not until recent years has the beauty of the natural wood when oiled and polished come so prominently into public iavor. I',ill now it seems that the pine is to liave new commercial value from the finding of certain commissions and the report from official sources concerning it.s adaptability not only ns a building material, but for use in the construct ion of many implements for which oak, ash and hickory have heretofore been con sidered indispensable. The commission) of arboriculture of Harvard college was commissioned by the government a few years ago to con duet some careful experiments with a view to ascertain the comparative quali ties and behavior of rhe principal woods used in manufacturing, testing them under various kinds of strains with scientific apparatus capable of recording exact, results. The apparatus used for the purpose is located at Matertown ar senal. and cost. the government over $150,009. With this manhinery, spec! mens of wood thoroughly seasoned, from different parts of the trees, were tested with results which have been noted for the benefit of the public. Commenting upon this The Manchester (N. 11.1 Union says: The long leaf yel low pine, it was found, is the peer of any wood for general purposes, ami par ticularly for structures, machines, im plements, etc.. subject to great tranverse strain, and could, therefore, be substi tuted for oak aaid psh for many pur poses for which these woods have been specially employed on account of their supposed superiority in this respect. Ln the report of the chief of the division of the United States department of agri culture for 1891, it is stated, "that the long leaf pine is superior wherever strength and durability are required;” that "in textile strength it approaches and may surpass cast iron.” and that -in cross-breaking strength it rivals the oak. requiring 10.000 pounds per square Inch to break it., while in stiffness it is superior to the oak by from 50 to 100 per cent.” The Harvard college authori ty says further, that contrary to the general belief, “the tapping of the pine for turpentine was found, by a large number of tests made under direction of the division, not to weaken but. to strengthen the timber in cross-breaking, and to increase its stiffness.' These findings should give new value to Hue pine lands of the South, and the day may y.et come when the man who has considered himself "land-poor” and regarded his pine timber valuable only fore firewood ami rails sliall find himself made rich by what be believed almost a.n incumbrance on the ground. It used to be the case in the South that a tract of land was more or less valuable in proportion to the amount of "cleared land" it contained, and the acres which had the timber all cleared off were worth more than those which were covered with pines. Tt is possible that before a great while our people will look at this question in a different light. Sit Steady in the Boat. AVe publish this morning a communi cation signed "A Full Democrat," in which the writer goes on to tell the hard pull it is going to be to save the country unless the Democratic party keeps its pledges to the people, and how the party must hang together and stand by the platform whether President Cleveland does or not. The communication is on the line of what is appearing from day to day in many papers in Georgia and elsewhere, and we publish it as a text for a few remarks of our own, rather than because we feel that it tills a long felt want, or that there is any special demand that somebody should say just what it contains. Our advice to our Atlanta corres pondent, and to all others who are wor ried about what is going to be the re sult if the party does not redeem its pledges, is to sit steady in the boat and see if there is any reason to believe that the present administration has any idea of not fulfilling the party pledges, before they go to borrowing trouble. Nobody has any right to say that Presi dent Cleveland does not intend to stand by the party’s pledges to the people, and it is only simple justice to wait until the policy of the administratidn TTTE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE, APRIL 18q3, is mauifestod, before b'Wailing what it may or may not do. Thißhabit of cross ing bridges before ihtW are reached Il very fatigu'ng, man who climbs all the real fem* iu his pathway does well enough wiAiut jumping im aginary barriers. > Onr Atlanta friend Bays in his private letter accompunyinyhis communication that he has "beef a Democrat from the days when AA»l>ster, Clay and Cal houn were senators, and has always, been with the fjill-bloodH.” AVc do not believe that a man who has stood np to the scratch this long, through some of tlie tight places through which the party has had to tight its way to victory in the past, is going to unnecessarily mutilate his linen nt th's late day. He is too old a rahlier tv be going off half cocked, and wu doul't not he is ready to hold his nshitig line still, for the present, and/wait for developments. In behulf/of party unity, and party success in toe future we say to all these nervous fJlows who are predicting all sorts of fi ndemocratic poF-ies for the present J lininistration, just dt steady in tile i/'.it and leave Air. Cleveland to do th/ steering. The parly has laid down fl/' chart for thA voyage and has placed Vin in coffmnnd' of the sliip of state, i It seems little enough to ask that the passengers shall maintain theft eqnilbrinin until the crew is all in plncj, and the sails set for the journey. Wla-n the .hip is well under way, and it Is shown that she is sailing out of he - due course it will be time enough to talk about possible disaster. For ourselves we believe President Cleve land w'll steer by the party's chart, and in the meantime we again suggest to tlie impatient, just to sit steady in the boat. The Individual Fanner. Tn a private letter to the editor of the Chronicle, in which Col. Redding direc tor of the Georgia Experiment Station, returns thanks for the use of our col umns in the little discussion over "Bul letin No. 2D" with Major Harry Ham mond of Beech Island, he makes some points on tlie question of reduced, cot ton acreage that are -so excellcjt, w 0 take the liberty of embodying tlii-m here. He says: Permit me to add that discussions of this character go to the very root, of the mutter of cotton production from the farmer's standiMiint. Il is not a i|u>“s)jon tion of co-operation to reduce area and thereby reduce production. That is ut terably impracticable in the present con stitution of human nature, and all past exocriens-e has proven it.. The argument should be addressed to flie individual farmer and he shouD bo convinced that it is to his owu ite dividual interest to reduce the cost of his cotton, regardless of what others may do. To accomplish this involves a reduction of area -a very large reduc tion. and n considerable decrease in the number of bales produced by the individ ual who adopts the system. If many adopt it, thi-i-o will be a corresponding' decrease in .the aggregate crop produc tion. 'l’his will result, in a higher mar ket price: of which nil Trill get the benefit; but those farmers who were in strumental in effecting this decrease will got a double benefit. They will have made less i-ctton. it is true, but at great ly loss cost per pound and wilt get the same price the others receive. A far mer would do greatly better to make ten bales of cotton at a cost of five cents per pound and sell it for eight fonts, tflmn to make tiwetv bales nt a cost t*f seven cents and sell it for eight cents. Tn the first case there is a profit of $150: in the last the profit is only $100.” The columns of the Chronicle are al ways open for the intelligent discussion of subjects that are interesting and in structive to the fiirmers, or »ny other class of our citiizens. where the parties to the discussion are men who write with the au thority of experts or of practical ex- perience. and tlie discussions are in good temper and have some useful end to serve. Such discussions ,ge|t at <the truth of mooted questions, and are of practical value to the farmers who fol low them. No matter is of graver im port to our section, which is so largely agricultural, and where cotton is the chief staple, than the best, method of cotton culture. As Director Redding says, the effort, to reduce the cotton acreage by common consent, or co-opera tion offers little hope of success. I* certainly has been faithfully preached by tlie Southern press, and with little effect on the mass of farmers, and there seems to be wisdom on the point that Col. Redding makes, that the argument must be carried home to the individual farmer, and he must be convinced that it is to his interest without reference to wtiat couirse other farmers shall pursue. By winning them over as individuals, they will be won as a class after awhile. We oommend the careful re-reading of the points made iu Col. Redding’s let ter quoted above. State Banks. The Democratic party is committed to' the repeal of the 10 per cent, tax on the bills of state banks. This tax is for prohibition and not for revenue, and there are those who believe that the act. is unconstitutional. It. is alpwst certain that. Congress will repeal it. Under a proper system of state bank ing it is confidently believed that the financial problem will be in a fairway of solution. Real estate is not a con vertible security for money, and for this reason banks do not like to be weighted down with it. Under the national bank net. partially for the reason stated, realty was prohibited for loans. This was an unjust discrimina tion against the Southern farmer who had an embarrassment of riches in land. The law did not operate near so oppres sively in the East and West where they had loan and trust companies with an abundance of money to loan on realty. There is no section of the country where state banks would do so much good as in the South. There is no rea son why the states could not be safely entrusted with their regulation. The banks could b<» authorized to do busi ness on a deposit of state and muni cipal I Hind h and other good securitiee. It is absurd to assert that tlie state could not be safely entrusted with this business. For twenty-five years, under the na tional banking act, tlie South has been impoverished and will continue to be until the' system of free banking is restored to the states. AA’e have no money centres iu the South. They are all in the North, were the finances are controlled and where the currency flows as naturally as night follows day. AVbat we need is a banking system with a state currency that will con stantly come back to us—a system that will have some elasticity aboirt it—a system that will not arbitrarily pro scribe as worthless the most plentiful security that our people own. The South needs a system of banking tliut will aid in building up our farming interests and in developing our mineral resources and manufnetnring industries. Under judicious laws, tlie states are entirely competent to manage thw’r own banks. This is one of their constitu tional rights, and the general govern ment will no longer tie permitted to usurp a prerogative that belongs to the states. The Democratic party is com mitted to *the repeal of the act and it will not take any step backward. No one litis any right to question its good faith. As certain as Congress meets, so certain will the 10 per cent, tax on the issues of state banks be repealed. Kicking the Market. Cotton seems to have no friends. The bears are kicking the market, and spin ners are living from band to mouth. The big strike in Manchester, Mie large visible supply and tlie reports of in creased acreage have resulted in reduc ing the price of cotton. 'Die South is not responsible for all of the causes that have contributed to bring aliout the. demoralizat on in the market, but the strike and the surplus ami the bears and the indisposition of spinners to buy would all have been overcome were it not for the impres sion thut lias been industriously created of tlie largely increased acreage over last year. It suits the interests of cer tain parties to depress the market and to keep forcing down the price. Admitting an increased acreage of 20 per cent., there is no good reason for the present low price of cotton. Then, too, there are dangers to be encountered by a crop just planted that render it impossible for the wisest and most ex perienced to tell tlie result. At present prices, cotton seems to be the cheapest article in the world. Cotton Manufacturing Pays. It is only a question of time when the mills will come to the cotton fields from New England. The success of manufac turing in the South makes this a certain ty. The mills in Augusta and elsewhere ih Georgia an dacross tlie river in Caro lina lire no longer an experiment. They have passed through the uncertainties of experimentation with untried labor and Hie inexperience of the executive de partment upon the right conduct of which so niin li depend-*. With our salubrious climate, cheap water power ami raw material at first, cost, we feel that the future of cotton manufacturing in the South is assured. Wonderful Success. The Chronicle notes with pleasure the success of tin- Graniteville .Manufiu’tur ing Company under the able manage ment of 11. H. Hickman, Esq., presi dent and treasurer. The net earnings of the company for thq year ended March 1 were $107,- 020.21. A ten per* cent dividend, which is $(>0,000 ‘on the eaptital stock, was paid, and $42,000 were expended for uew machinery, and $0.01)0 for other im provements. This is a wonderful showing for the Graniteville and Vauclu.se mills of the Graniteville Manufacturing Company. President Hickman is not only a good financier buit an experienced mill presi dent. A’auclnse was built at am expense of $3G1,513.2*t out of the profits of the Graniteville mill. The original capital was SOOO,OOO. The total surplus March Ist, 1893, is represented by $084,034.17. This fine showing should put some of our Northern spinners to thinking of the great advantages the South has for profi table investment in cotton mills. It. is no longer a question of theory. The facts and the figures speak for them selves. The Augusta Exposition. The Georgia State Fair at the Augusta Exposition is the way it reads. The premium list of the Georgia State Fair and the Augusta Exposition is in the hands of the printer. Ten thousand copies will be distributed. Our mer chants should avail themselves of this opportunity to advertise their business. The Georgia State Fair at the Augusta Exposition is the way it reads. There will be no other exposition in the South this yeay. Hence the oppor tunity to make a grand success of the State Fair ami the Augusta Exposition. Tffe one and only condition necessary to smx-ess is for the business men of onr city to come forward and by word and act maintain the enterprise., No it's or amis about it. Let us de teriuiae to make the Exposition a suc cess and there will be no such word as fail. The United States Census makes Augusta the most progressive city in the South. She stands first among her sisters for industrial development in the last decade. The Georgia State Fajr at the Augusta Exposition will adver tise Georgia and South Carolb-a, X b “t Babutt. Bbbt Fbmobob. »*»“■• a* m 7 Bur JVM m.TNioo-..- BmOMOtt. LiiDneiieu Babt J,ce». Babt Basto Babt Sbbuhm. Babt Oabdbbb These twelve beautiful babies have been cured of the most torturing and dis figuring of skin, scalp and blood diseases, with loss of hair, by the Ci.TICURA REME DIES after the best physicians and all other remedies had failed, 'lhe story of their sufferings is almost too painful for recital. The days of torture and nights of agony from itching and burning ecz.ema3, and other skin, scalp and blood diseases. Add to this the terrible disfigurement, and life seemed, in most cases, scarcely worth the living. But these cures are but examples of hundreds made daily by the Cuticura Remedies. They may be heard of in every town, village and cross-roads. Grateful mothers proclaim them everywhere. In short, Cuticura works wonders, and its cures are among the most marvellous ot this or any age of medicine. Io know that a single application of the Cuticura Remedies will, in the great majority of cases, afford instant relief, permit rest and sleep, and point to a permanent and economical (because most speedy) cure, and not to use them without a moment’s delay, is to fail in your duty. Cures made in infancy and childhood arc speedy, and permanent Sold everywhere. Price, CimcvßA', 50c.; SoAr, ajc.; Rksolvznt, st. Prepared by Pottrnr Dave and Chemical Corporation, Boston. " All about the Skin, Scale and H..;r ” mailed free. Must Seek Another Forum. The Chronicle lias received a communi cation from Alabama relative to the publication in a Selma paper of a propo sition from two ministers, one of them from Augusta, and inviting us to com ment on the same. The publication in volves a question of doctrinal belief, and we never discuss such questions our selves or allow others to discuss them in our columns. Thut is not what we conceive to he the mission of a daily newspaper. Such discussions should be •arried on in the pnlpil and in religious papers. It is not the province of the daily -newspaper to criticise any man s religious belief, and we must respectfully decline to do so ourselves or to open our columns to anybody else for such profit less discussions. Rapid Transit. It will not be long before the time from Augusta to New York will be reduced to twenty hours. The trip is now made over the Richmond und Danville iu twenty-sous hours. There is no fault to find with the sched ule except as to the hour of leaving Au gusta, 12:30 p. m. This is not in the interest of our city. While roads prima rily are not run for the benefit of cities, there is no doubt of their being import ant factors in building up communities. We could name several cities that have greatly prospered because important railroads worked iu tiieir interest. But we started out to notice the rapid transit, between Augusta and New York. The distance is a little over eight hun dred miles. It could be made in twenty hours, but if the train left Augusta at 8 a. m. the present service would be all that could be desired. The distance from New York to Chi cago is about one thousand miles. Com mencing May Ist the trip will be made iu eighteen hours. The New York Central runs a train from New York to Buffalo, four hun dred and eighty miles, in ten hours. Speaking of rapid transit, the fast train on the Georgia railroad is one of tlie best and most reliable in the coun try. It has been running for about eight years between Atlanta and Augusta, and has never missed half a dozen times in that many years. It is as regular as clock work, and gets tliere on schedule time. The distance is one hundred and seventy one miles, and the time is five hours— a very excellent record for the Georgia railroad. It is not improbable in the very near future that Augusta will be again on the through line of travel between New Orleans and (New York. When that time comes there will be not only rapid transit but rapid development for Au gusta. Events are uwv shaping them selves for the benefit of our commerce and manufactures, und incidentally for the benefit of our agriculture. The Denmark Mob. After arresting nearly a score of sus pected negroes, and being at the point of lynching several inmoi'ent persons, the mob at Denmark vented its wraith and wreaked vengeance lust night on John Peterson. It was hoped by the law abiding and conservative people in Caro lina and here, that the narrow escape wihieh the angry mob at Denmark had from lynching several entirely innocent persons, would make them see the danger of their course, and lead them to leave the courts to satisfactorily determine the guilt of the prisoner, and execute him legally. It is a matter of grave doubt whether innocent persons are not frequently butchered by lynchers, and haring been so positive of the guilt of others who were proven innocent, it would seem that the people of Denmark would have re frained from such a possibility. Mobs are never excusable or justifiable, even when they act on the sudden passion and in dignation of the moment, but. when there has l)eei) time for coaler judgment to as sert itself, such lawlessness is especially to be condemned. We admit that the '‘rime was a heinous one, richly deserving death, but with the prisoner in the hands of the la-w, und all the machinery of the courts in. the possession of people who have outraged the laws, there is no excuse for a lynching. The prisoner could have been givert a fair trial by a properly constituted court, and there was no pos sible chance of his escape if proven guilty. If he could not be proven guilty he ought not to be punished. Our people must down these lawless lynchings, and uphold the dignity of the courts and tue majesty of the law. CURRENT COMMENT. An Ohio paper tells of a Mr. Newman “who was run over by the cars and had. two of his legs cut off." If that man loses another leg or two, first thing he knows lie will be going around on crutches. This sort of a thing could only happen to an Ohio man.—Philadelphia Press. Whatever fault Italians may have to find with their government and its methode of administration, they are extremely loyal in their attachment to their charm ing Queen and to her royal husband, whose sturdy honesty, democratic tastes and un disguised preference for the humbler At* classes of his subjects have earned for him. ■ the popular title of “the King of the Mar-< mots.”—New York Tribune. < Everybody goes to Saratoga to drinlyr the waters. Bnt that doesn’t explain vrhif tho bartenders there are paid S2OO a mon to and hard to get at that.—Philadelphia Press. ..Mr. Gladstone’s Parliamentary asso ciates are pointing out the fact that he is mellowing with time, and that he has developed a fine humor since lie reached extreme old age. One critic remarks <st him that he has probably made more jokes during the past year than in the whole preceding half century of his po litieal life. Well! hasn't be every reason to be gpod natured and to see things in a. roseate light? Ho rejoices in strength, and he is right.—New York Journal. The legislature sometimes expends $l5O worth of time on a $5 question, but it does not come out of tlie pockets of the mem bers. if it did, why—well, lets change the subject.—Galveston News. I i y < This unrivalled Southern remedy is war ranted not to contain a single particle of Mercury or any injurious mineral sub stance, but is PURELY VEGETABLE. It will Cure All Diseases Caused by De rangement of the Liver, Kidneys and Stomach. < If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have frequent headache, mouth tastes badly, poor appetite and tongue coated, you are suffering from Torpid Liver or “Bilious ness,” and nothing will cure yon so speed ily and permanently as Simmons Liver Regulator. At any time you feel your system needs cleansing, toning, regulating without violent purging, or stimula ting without intoxicating, use SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR, Demand the Genuine, which hds our Z Trade-Mark in Red, on front Wrapper. J. 11. 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