Newspaper Page Text
_ „ tk. »».
es than *1 fl non am » year.
-
.
The Imperial University in Tokio,
is fully equipped for all scien¬
tific work, and compares favorably
With Oxford or Heidelberg. Most of
th| professors are now Japanese—even
those who teaoh the English language.
(Cremation is making progress in the
United Kingdom. A crematorium is
being erected near a Glasgow (Scot
land) cemetery, where the cost of a
niche for deposit of an urn in perpet
uity will range from $10 upward.
(Kmpk interment of ashes in tbe ceme¬
tery wiU oost only $1.25 in addition to
the crematorium tees.
The New York Independent remarks:
We do not like to refer to people un¬
der designations which are unaccepta¬
ble to them and which carry the idea
of hostility or contempt. We most
confess to some surprise in being in¬
formed by a correspondent that the
Ghi'iese objeot to the word Chinaman
involving a slur upon them. All
we oan say is that the dictionaries have
discovered nothing invidious in the
word Chinaman any more than in tbe
word Englishman or Frenchman.
The New York Independent notes
that the States whioh show an in
enased percentage of illiteracy—the
increase is very slight—are in the
North and West They are Maine,
New Hampshire, Vermont, Michigan,
Montana, NovadA, New Jersey and
Wiseonsin. The influx of French
Canadians and others will help to ex¬
plain this increase. We have in all
6,324,702 illiterates in tbe United
States against 6,239,958 in 1880. This
is an actual increase; but tbe percent¬
ages for I860 and 1890 show a sub
s&antial decrease; and we trust that
another ten years will relieve us of
much of this burden of shame.
•• ' R.........-----
Tho rales for the transportation de¬
partment of a great railway make a
pamphlet of considerable size, and
sometimes run into the hundreds,
States the New York Sun. They cover
the oonduot of officials high and low,
embrace the signal code, regulations
is to right of way, as to sidings, as to
baggage, as to repairs, and a variety
of rules addressed to special depart¬
ments. An employe must be thor
onghly familiar with every rnlo that
hs may have to apply in the coarse of
duty, and the fitness of a man for his
work depends largely upon his ability
to apply the rules automatically, so to
speak, when an exigency arises. Per
! the man of genius in his line is
one that knows when rules must bo
disregarded and what new rale i» to
Im deduced in aid of a new situation.
The slaughter of deer in the Maine
Foods this season is said to bs almost
beyond belief. H. P. Dili, of Phil
Ups, a well-known sportsman and
ialaior, says: “The hnnting is
■ with dabs, boat-hooks, steam¬
M
ers, axss, jacks, dogs, and shotguns.
Occasionally a rifle is used. Deer are
cornered, hit over the head with what
to hand, run down by
* earners, wounded by bird-shot, sad
wry frequently with ballets sent by
i hit or miss aim, and then allowed to
|et away and die and become food
* w other wild beasts." It is a 00m
z. thiag, declares the New York
for a party to oome oat of the
mess with a doaen deer, boasting
tat they shot at and wounded half as
any more. Game, h is true, was nev
mora abundant, bat there is no
»bt that snob indiscriminate slaugh
r would, if oontinned, soon result in
of moose, deer and
iboa. An obstacle to legislation
htoprofit whieh looal traders make
of the annual patronage of ban*
Mr. Dill en gg e nt a ths following
■
of the present law:
the killing of oow moose at
Prohibit jack-hunting, or,
r then nil, shooting at night;
M for the violations, and im
fins for sack animal
M Ha further recommends
more
P*7 and & it
At the
that
ni
to
Their views may
“If tbe law is cut down in
in
3 E
«
.*«\ * ■■&?***- '
STATE NEWS ITEMS
CULLED FROM MANY SOURCES
BRIEFLY PARAGRAPHED.
Happenings of General Interest to
Georgia Readers.
Ysldoste will 90011 have a well pat
ronized and a J implete telephone ex
change.
Nearly all the farmers living in the
vicinity of Montezuma will plant
many acres in watermelons this year.
• • *
The committee on agriculture of
the North Carolina legislature have
favorably reported the bill making a
$20,000 appropriation for an exhibit
at the Atlanta exposition.
• • •
Secretary Lamont in a recent report
to congress says Georgia has 264,021
available fighting men. The secre¬
tary shonld have added that one fight¬
ing Georgian can whip six ordinary
men.— Exchange.
• • 0
There are now forty-two widows of
confederate soldiers in Hart connty,
entitled to pensions. The ordinary has
reoeived checks for the amounts for
these pensioners, and they are now
ready for distribution.
• * *
Suits against the Augusta Railway
Company, W. E. Moore and R. J.
Westinghonse Electric and Manufac¬
turing Company have been dropped.
These units were brought on alleged
violations of the patents hold by the
last named company.
Another telephone company is about
to be organized at Augusta. The tele¬
phones to be used are the Colombian
'phones, which work automatically. make
Each subscriber will be able to
his own connection. The new ’phones
will be pnt in very cheap.
The Association of Editors of the
Weekly Press of the State have de¬
termined to memoralize the legisla
latnre, asking that a law be passed
naming tbe judges of the superior
court of every connty as ths one to
pass upon the matter of the oonnty’s
printing. Every member of the asso¬
ciation will work for the paasage of
the bill.
A party of national guardsmen left
Jersy City, N. J., last Tuesday attached for
Savannah in a speoial oar to
the Florida expresa on the Pennsylva¬
nia railroad. The party includes the
state rifle team, which will compete
with Georgia’s oraok team on Wash¬
ington’s birthday. The southerners
were defeated by tbe New Jersey marks¬
men lsst September, at Sea Girt, at
the interstate rifle match. They want
another teat of marksmanship, and
invited the New Jersy men to pay
them a visit
Another contest oase has been set¬
tled by the house committee in session
at Atlanta and the final deoision was
in favor of the populist oontesteea.
Although the oommittee is strongly
demooratio, its aotions have demon¬
strated that in its consideration of the
various oases which have oome before
it, the question of politics has oommittee not en¬
tered. The members of the
have been actuated only by a desire
to arrive at exactly what they think is
the right, and it is a notable fact that
on no single question have party lines
been drawn.
The question of delay in the matter collec¬
of filing the bonds of the tax
tors and receivers in the forty ooun
ties, heretofore noted, and the proba¬
bility of oalliag speoial elections in
the verions oonnties has been sub¬
mitted by the governor to the attorney
general Alter a conference it haa
been decided to allow precedent in
such to govern in these. There¬
fore no snob office whoee incumbent
has been direliot in filing his bond
within the limit declared of forty days specified end
by law, will be vaoant e
speoial election ordered unless tbe oeae
is an exceedingly aggravated one.
Organisation has bean perfected Valdosta re¬
cently for three eoncerna in
involving a half million dollars of cap¬
ital. Probably the largest of them is
tbe Georgia and Florida Bound Tim
company, a charter for whieh waa
granted and tbe organisation perfect¬
ed. Tbe authorised capital stock of
the is $500,000, and over
$100,000 has already round paid tim¬ in.
The oompaay will deal in
bered lands, and will be a great factor
in developing a large area of undevel¬
oped land through this section. They few
bare within the last
weeks 271,000 of timber lands in
Georgia and Florida.
• •
interest felt in the
____from New York with
to the Central's destiny. H
' day that the
of the Central
or that ft
cause
a?- of bite
to
?
Southwestern be holding its money to
meet obligations which hang over it
threateningly?
Danger of Too Many Melons.
From all the information obtainable
it is feared that there is danger of too
many melons again this year. Qnite
a number of farmers in both Houston
and Crawford will increase the acreage
in melons this year over last. There
is also a number of others who will
plant liberally this year. It would be
wise in growers to plant some, but
not so many as to make them unpro¬
fitable to all. Unless there is qnite an
improvement in general conditions,
the laboring classes in the United
States will not be able to buy as many
melons as they did last year. Men out
of and employment if oannot buy bread now,
there is not a change before
melons get on the market we can’t see
where the buyers of melons are to
come from. Then again, if there
should be s fall crop of peaches it will
have the usual effect of depressing the
prioe of melons. It may pay to think
of these things and not plant too much
of either cotton or melons.
FRED DOUGLASS’ FUNERAL.
Religious Services Over His Remains
at Washington.
The fnneral services over the re¬
mains of Fred Douglass took place at
Washington Monday afternoon.
Before the removal from Cedar Hill,
Annacotia, Mr. Douglass’ late resi¬
dence, brief services for the immediate
relatives, consisting simply of a prayer
and the reading of the scriptures were
concluded. The Metropolitan church
had already been prepared for dead the re¬
ception of the body of tbe man
and was beautifully decorated with
flowers, fejns and palms.
Among the floral pieces sent to the
cbnrch was a beautiful design pre¬
pared at the instance of the Haytien
government. As soon as the casket
was in plaoe before the altar, the
doors were thrown open and the peo¬
ple admitted to the church to pay their
last respects. A great crowd passed
in and out and while oolored persons
predominated among the waiting mul¬
titudes, there were hundreds of white
people. The people in front of the
church, for a square on either aide,
was fairly blocked with carriages.
Tbe fnneral sermon was then deliv¬
ered by Rev. Dr. Jennifer, of the
Metropolitan church. Speaking of
Douglass as his pastor, Dr. Jennifer
said:
“Mr. Donglass was a Christian. He
broke with the American ohnroh and
with the American Christian dogma
when he saw that it sanctioned and
sustained the enslavement and bond¬
age of a brother. He held Christ
above creed and above tbe church.
In thia soul conflict be blundered into
bewilderment, bat his deliverance
oame and he has often spoken to me
of the joys of bis sonl in God.”
Tributes to tbe memory of the dead
were paid by Rev. N. H. Stevenson, of
the Anaoostia Baptist ohnroh, and Dr.
J. K. Rankin, president of Howard
University. Mr. John Hutchins, of
Boston, an old friend of Donglass,
sang a hymn by speoial request and
was followed by Clement Hsytiens,
minister to the United States from
Hayti. Mrs.
Remarks were made by Snsan
B. Anthony, who also read a letter
from Elizabeth Cady Stanton, extoliug
his virtues. Mrs. Mary Wright Bew¬
ail, president of the woman’s oonncil,
also spoke. Tbe olosing prayer was
offered by the Rev. Anna Shaw.
Among those present at the services
were Jnitioe Harlan, of the supreme
oonrt, Senators Sherman and Hoar and
a number of members of the house.
There was also a large delegation from
the women’s connoil.
»
FLOUR COMBINE ROUTED.
rhe Crown Mills Seem to Have Whip¬
ped Oat the Would-Be Tract.
A San Francisoo special says: The
Union floor mills of Stockton pur¬
chased last year by the Sperry com¬
bine for $294,000, has closed down.
Of the thirteen mills owned by this
syndicate in various parts of the state,
only three are are now in operation. be doe
Ilia closing down is said to
to the strong opposition of the Crown
mills, for whieh that company vainly Had of¬
fered one million dollars. tbe
bid been acoepted, tbe floor trart
would have been in an oomplete con¬
trol aa the sugar trust. Instead a bit¬
ter fight has been waged in the oouree
of which prioee of floor has fallen from
$6.50 to $2.85 a barrel. The Grows
mills are acid to be backed by Balfour,
Guthrie A Company, Sehwabaeher
Brothers and ex- Mayor Grace of New
York.
Tbe war has been too hot far tbs
o*ai bine and all of the c l ose d down
mills have been dismantled.
with a large attendance
the t^d^tiM St" re
m classification grading,
from lari
year's A*
cf ;
of
el
_A til
Li ■r-- .ar-vst-.. J Anri
W0RK 0F CONGRESS
THE CLOSING DATS BRING HUS¬
TLE AND HURRY.
Brief Outlines of Proceedings of House
and Senate.
THE SENATE.
There were just sixteen senators
present when the 11 o’clock session of
the senate opened Thursday, and Mr.
Walcott, republican, of Colorado, sug¬
gested the absence of a quorum. Sena¬
tors were hurriedly summoned and
forty-responded, two more than the
necessary number. Mr. Irby, demo¬
crat, of South Carolina, presented South cre¬
dentials of B. R. Tillman from
Carolina, for the term beginning
March 4 next. Mr. Turpie, democrat,
of North Dakota, offered a resolution
from the committee on foreign rela¬
tions, expressing the high apprecia¬
tion of the senate as to the distin¬
guished honors accorded by the Mexi¬
can government on the occasion of
the obsequies of the United States
minister, Mr. Gray, and directing the
secretary of state to forward copies of
the resolution to the authorities of
Mexico. The resolution was agreed
to. The house joint resolution was
passed for the suspension of certain
features of the law authorizing the
transportation of goods through the
United States to the free zone of Mex¬
ico, so long as the Mexican free zone
law exists. The senate rejected the
motion of Mr. Gorman to reconsider
its action in adopting the conference
report amending the income tax, and
then took up the Indian appropriation
bill. Mr. Gorman’a purpose was to re¬
quire corporations to *make report of
all their high salaried officials.
The Rev. Dr. Miiburn, the blind
chaplain of the senate, opened the
session of the senate Friday with a
fervid and eloquent prayer extolling
the public and private virtues said, of
George Washington, who, he at
home and with his neighbors, and on
the broad stage of national life,showed
steadfast devotion to the interests of
his country, subordinating his private
wish and will to the good of the whole
people. Such a noble example might
well enter ths character of every
American boy and exalt our patriot¬
ism, making our national institutions
the safeguard of all social, religious
and private institutions. Mr. Quay,
republican, of Pennsylvania, present¬
ed a memorial from the manufact¬
urers’ club ox Philadelphia, strongly
nrging that the cause of financial dis¬
tress was the assault on the American
protective system, and indignantly
protesting against the course of the
president in borrowing money from a
foreign syndicate. The memorial closes
with an earnest appeal to senators and
members to so adjust tariff duties as to
overcome the distress of the treasury.
Two house bills were passed amend¬
ing tbe articles of regulation of the
navy. A spirited contest arose over
the construction of the bridge over
the Delaware river at Philadelphia.
It was finally agreed to take a vote on
the subject Saturday noon. Mr. Gor¬
man secured unanimous consent that
unobjeoted oases on tbe calendar
should be taken up at a nigh) session
Tuesday. The Indian appropriation
bill was then taken up.
The Indian appropriation bill was
passed in the senate late in Saturday’s
session, having occupied the attention
of the body for four full days, Its
consideration was interrupted at 8
o’clock p. m. by a motion to take up
and consider the pooling bill, but that
motion waa defeated by the very de¬
cisive vote of 24 for and 42 against.
After the bill Was thus shelved, for the
present at least, a somewhat angry dia
onssion upon it was started and was
kept up for nearly two hours, South with
Senators Bntler, democrat, of
Carolina; Gorman, democrat, of Mary¬
land; Chandler, repnbliosn, of New
Hampshire, and Wolcott, republican,
of Colorado, as the participants. At
l:30o’olookp. m. while the Indian bill
was under consideration a message waa
reoeived from the president, and as the
sheet of yellow tisane paper on which
lists of nominations appear was hand¬
ed around among the senators nearest
the principal it entranoe contained door, nomina¬ it waa
known that tbe
tion of Senator Ransom, of North Car¬
olina, as United States minister to
Mexioo. Senator Blackburn, as soon
as he looked at the list moved
that business. the senate s There proceed to exeo- ob¬
stive was <mo
jection ; the galleries were cleared and
the doors closed; and, within five
minutes the public was again admitted,
the nomination of Mr. Ransom having
been in the meantime instantly and
unanimously pending approved and confirmed. resumed.
The business was
After the passage of the Indian appro¬
priation bill, the sundry civil appro
prulion bill laid before the aen
the unfinished busi
- The session cl ose d with the de¬
livery of eulogies on the late Bepre
eentative Shaw, of Wisconsin, and the
senate, at 6:85 o’clock, adjourned un¬
til Monday at 11 o'clock.
anas bills were
tbe with the
of early and late to
Mr. Cockrell, chair
of
s of the need for night
civil and the
be on hand end ’the defie te
to, toe would Object to anything out¬
side of th* appropriation bilk. Mr.
Cockrell Mid this was the understand¬
ing. Mr. Manderson, republican, of Ne¬
braska, said there were too few sena¬
tors to make such an agreement. The
presiding officer construed this as an
objection and the request went over.
At this point several senate pages
struggled in with an enormous floral
horseshoe which was placed on the
desk of Mr. Ransom, nominated and
confirmed as minister to Mexico. The
proposed purchase by the govern¬
ment of the historic property of the
late James G. Blaine, on LaFayette tor
square, in order to avoid its use
theatre purposes, occasioned some
debate. Mr. Palmer, democrat, of
Illinois, said some of his Chi¬
cago constituents were inter¬
ested in the proposed theatre. He
opposed the government purchase,
saying there was no public require¬
ment for the property. Mr. Palmer
made a point of order against the
amendment. Mr. Gorman presented
a partial agreement of the conferees
on the District of Columbia appropri- the
ation bill. It was confirmed^ on
items of agreement, and a further
conference ordered. The sundry civil
bill was then taken up. The item for
tne examination of subsoil for the lot
for the new public building at San
Francisco was changed, to make it
mandatory on the secretary of war to
have two or more army engineers to
continue the investigation. The ap¬
propriation of $75,000 for a public
building at Annapolis, Md., was struck
out on motion of Mr. Gorman.
THE HOUSE.
The house, Thursday, by a vote of
114 to 152 refused to concur in the
senate amendment to the diplomatic
and consular appropriation bill, ap¬
propriating $500,000 for the Haw¬
aiian cable. *
Four large American flags fluttered
from tbe dome of the American capi
tol Friday in honor of Washington’s
birthday. Tho house wore a holiday
aspect. When the speaker called the
house to order today at 11 o’clock,
less than fifty members were present.
On motion of Mr. Bynum tbe senate’s
joint resolution was adopted, exteud
ing to Mexico the thanks of congress
for the high honors paid to Isaac P.
Gray, the late United States minister
to that country. The speaker an¬
nounced the following appointments:
Visitors to the military academy—
Messrs. Wheeler, of Alabama; Wash¬
ington, of Tennessee; and Milliken,
of Maine. Visitors to the naval
.academy—Messrs. Sayres, of Texas;
Tate, of Georgia; and Hull, of Iowa.
The honce then went into committee
of the whole and resumed the consid¬
eration of the general deficiency ap¬
propriation bill. When the para¬
graphs relating to the eleventh
census was reached, Mr. Hep¬
burn, republican, of Iowa, wanted to
know when tbe reports of the last cen¬
sus were to be published. Five years
had elapsed, he said, and yet but two
of the twenty-six volumes had reached
the public. Mr. Breckinridge, in
charge of the bill, replied that all tbe
material would be in the hands of the
printer by March 1, and the volumes
would be published thereafter as rap¬
idly as possible. Mr. Livingston,
democrat, of Georgia, moved to strike
out the appropriation of $120,000 for
United States marshals’ fees. It pre¬
cipitated some discussion. Mr. Boat
ner criticised the appropriation on the
ground that no specified lists of these
fees has been furnished. M/. Came¬
ron, republican, of Illinois, defended
the appropriations. A large portion
of the sum was to pay deputy marshals
sworn in at Chicago at the occasion of
the riot there a year ago. The
amount of these fees could only be es¬
timated for, be said, as vonohers
not transmitted to the department
justice until they were paid.
After the transaction of some
cellaneons business, the house at Sat¬
urday’s session proceeded, in commit¬
tee of the whole, to farther consider
the general deficiency appropriation
bill for the onrrent year. The
items brought before the
were several amendments
extra pay for oertain employes.
annnal controversy over these
payments was resumed. Protests
made against the practice by Messrs.
Dockery, Sayers and Dingley,
nearly every proposition to pay
tain named employes additional
to their salaries was agreed to, as
as Mr. Traoy’s amendment to pay
employes a month’s extra salary.
this the motion was amended so as
include members’ clerks.
completing the consideration of
general deficiency bill, the honse
voted the rest of the session to the
livery of enlogies upon the late
tor Z. B. Vanoe, of North Carolina.
Fully thirty members crowded into
the arena in front of the
chair when the honse met Monday, al
pressing for unanimous consent U
consider bills of local import. Than
were several considered and passed be
fore the “regular order” was
manded. The senate amendments
the Indian appropriation bill
non-eon cur red in, and the bill
•ant to the conference. Colombia Tueeday
set aside for District of
iness, and the honse went into
tee and the consideration
the deficiency appropriation bilL
pending dmenF waa to P*7 *
600 to Charles Morgan, O. B.
sad the Southern Ste a mshi p
for extra compensation as mail
tractors before the war. Mr. Dockery,
democrat, of Missouri, raised
point of order against the
The ooaunittee roes temporarily
agree to a partial conference report on
the District of Colombia appropriation
bill, and send it to a farther smfe.
the
The
amount of tbe awards made by *v.
Bering sea tribunal of arbitration
against the United States, precipitated
a long debate. Mr. Breckinridge,
democrat, explained of Kentucky, in charge of
the bill, the decision of the
Paris tribunal against the unjust amp
illegal seizures in Bering sea. Twenty
vessels flying the British flag, engaged
in a lawful trade, had been seized and
some cases their masters had suffered
The United States had
to tbe rule of damages, Great
having obtained judgment.
only question is as to the assesa
ment of the damages of Great Britain
Sir Julian Paunceforte, has
$500,000, and Secretary
has agreed to $425,000.
FREDERICK DOUGLASS DEAD.
He Was the Foremost Leader Among
Colored Men.
A Washington Douglass, the special foremost says: Fred-’
er i c fc leader of
the negro race in the world and one
0 f the most picturesque characters in
Amerioan history, died Wednesday *j - I*
night at his home in the suburb of
Anacostia. His death was sudden and
unexpected, as he had been in appa.
rent good health up to the day of his
death.
Frederick Douglass was born in
Tockahoe, near Easton, Talbot county,
Maryland, February, 1817. His mother
was a negro slave and his father a
white man. He was a slave on the
plantation of Colonel Edward Loyd
until at the age of ten he was Bent to
Baltimore to live with a relative of his
master.
He learned to read and write from
one of his master’s relatives^ to whom
he was lent when about nine years of
age. His master later allowed him to
hire his own time for three dollars s
week, and he was employed in a ship
yard, and in accordance with a reso¬
lution long entertained, fled from Bal¬
timore and from slavery, September
3, 1838. He made his way to New
York, thence to New Bedford, Mass.,
where he married and lived for two or
three years, supporting himself by day
labor on the wharves and in various
workshops. While there he changed
his name from Loyd to Douglass.
He was aided in his efforts in self
education by William Loyd Garrison.
In the summer of 1841, he attended
an anti-slavery convention at Nan
tncket, and made a speech which was
so well received that he was offered
the agenoy of the Massachusetts Anti
Slavery Society. In this capacity he
traveled and lectured through the New
England states for four years. Large
audiences werejattractedjby slavery and his his graphic
descriptions of elo¬
quent appeals.
In 1845 he went to Europe and lec¬
tured on slavery to enthusiastic audi¬
ences in nearly all the large towns of
England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales.
In 1846 his friends in England con¬
tributed $750 to have him manumitted
in due form of law. He remained
two years in Great Britain and in 1847
began at Roohester, N. Y., the publi¬
cation of “Frederick Douglass’ Pa¬
per,” which title was changed to “The
North Star,” a weekly journal, which
he contributed to for some years. His
supposed implication in tbe John
Brown raid in 1859 led Governor Wise,
of Virginia, to make a requisition
for his arrest upon the governor of
Michigan, where he then was, and in
conseqnenoe of this Donglass went to
England, and remained six or eight
months. He then returned to Rooh¬
ester and continued the publication of
his paper.
When the civil war began in 1861,
he urged upon President Lincoln the
employment of oolored troops and the
proclamation of emancipation. In
1863, when permission was given to
employ such troops, he assisted in en¬
listing men to fill oolored regiments,
especially the 54th and 55th Massa¬
chusetts.
His Career as a Lecturer.
After the abolition of slavery, he
discontinued his paper and applied deliv¬
himself to the preparation and
ery of lectures before lyoenms. In
September, 1870, he beoame editor of
the New National Era, in Washing¬
ton, which was oontinned by his sons,
Lewis and Frederick. In 1871 he wuj
appointed assistant secretary to the
commission to Santo Domingo;
pointed on his return him President of the Grant territorial .mf
one
oonncil of the District of Columbia.
large In 1872 for the he was state sppointed of New York, elector ana aJT
waa appointed to carry tbe oleetorefl',
vote to Washington. In 1870 he
sppointed United States marshal foi
the Distriot of Colombia, which offiei
he retained nntii 1881, after which hi
beoame recorder of deeds in the did
triot, from which offioe he
by President Cleveland in 1886. revisited
In the antnmn of 188$ he
England to inform his friends of whefl
progress hs had made as a fugitive
slave of tbe African race in the Dei tea
States, the winter with the the intention of spending!
on continent end the
following summer in the United States,
His published works an entitled,
“Narrative of my Experience in TimeJ Sla¬
very,” Boston, 1844: “Life and
of Frederick Douglass,” Hartford, i
1881; “My Bondage and My Fre e
dom,” Rochester, 1865.
X.
THE LOAN REFUSED.
North Carolina's Legtslatare
BUI Appropriating glO^OOO.
A Raleigh special says: Tbe ;
dent and mem ben of tbe'
Monumental _
number Association, other together with
a of ladies. tbe
lobbies of
bffl Saturday to
on to lend
•16.000 with which to
bate
bill tailed to * ss