Newspaper Page Text
SUBSCRIPTION SI.OO A YEAR.
Rjesrmon Sf fPcDonafd,
EDITORS - AND- PFBLISHERS.
FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1895.
Entered in the post-office at Jackson. <Ja., as
Second-class mail matter, but First-class read
ing matter in every respect.
Al>\ ERTIBING RATES—LocaI reading no
tices 5 cents jx-r line each insertion ; Obituaries
sl.ooeach. Full schedule sent on application.
REMITTANCES—ShouId lx- made by hank
draft, post office money order or registered
letter. Postal notes or currency not registered
will lx* sent at owner’s risk.
Published every Friday in the Year.
THANKS.
In our last issue we stated that
those who had not paid lip their sub
script ioti account by this issue of the
Akoijs, would be dropped from our
hooks. \\ e have given you fair notice
by marking in blue pencil as a re
minder of your indebtedness, and no
one can find fault with us for the ac
tion we now take. If you receive no
paper this week you may know the
cause. To those who have so kindly
come forward and paid their accounts,
we extend our most hearty thanks,
and will use our best endeavors to
merit their appreciation of our efforts
in giving them a live, newsy, up-to
date paper in every sense of the word.
We have been very lenient, in fact,
too much so, with our delinquent sub
scribers, and as they have shown no
disposition to settle arrearages, neces
sity demands that we drop from our
mailing list tlio.se who have been so
negligent as to pay no attent ion what
ever to our earnest appeals for a set
tlement of their accounts.
Mr. B. W. Wrenn, Passenger Traffic
Manager for the Plant system, is dis
tributing in Cuba, through his agents,
a Spanish edition of 10,000 copies of
the prospectus of t lie Cotton States
and International Exposition. He
writes that a special ship will sail for
Jamaica about the last of March.
NEGRO CHARITY.
During the late cold spell the peo
ple of Atlanta donated five thousand
dollars to the poor of that city. The
negroes got four thousand five hund
red dollars of that sum. There are
many wealthy negroes in the Gate
City and they gave the pitiful sum of
three dollars and fifty centsof the five
thousand dollars, or the four thousand
live hundred dollars which their race
got. Negroes are a charitable(?) peo
ple, and would doubtless do well in
Africa, where the butter tree and
bread are both spontaneous produc
tions.
THE NEW COURT HOUSE.
It is the advocation of the Jackson Argus
that rebuild a now court house. Its plea is
for this step, that the old one needs repairs and
besides Is inadequate as a court house for
Butts county.
If what the Argus says about the matter is
true, we perhaps need anew building, but this
is our emphatic statement: “Build no court
house.” The old one is as good as we can
afford at present. We can not have things as
we want them these days, and for us to talk of
building a court house when hundreds of peo
ple in the county are without a cent of money,
is something that should not for a moment be
considered.
The building of good dwellings should re
ceive the attention of a people before the erec
tion of houses for the holding of courts. Today
one is painfully struck by the dilapidated ap
pearance of farmers’ homes. Very seldom do
we see any appearance of progress in the
country, and a gloom seems to hang over the
entire land. Several years ago we could see
new buildings being erected in great numbers
and we were then constrained to say, “The
New South. But now all this is stopped—the
building of dwellings is stopped, we say—and
therefore let the building of court houses stop
also. If our old one needs repairs, let it be re
paired, but no more. And we wish to utter the
wailing cry of this broad land, stop so much
taxation—Flovilla Headlight.
By the above it will be seen that
through the colums of the Argus the
Flovilla ‘‘Footlight” has at last found
out that Butts county is agitating the
erection of anew court house, and it
proceeds to wail and gnash its teeth
to a froth in frantic appeals to upset
the project. Now there is hardly any
probability of our building anew
court house, at least for the present,
but if there was, its completion would
certainly be assured by the frantic
efforts of the “Footlights ’ to prevent
it. Here’s the consistency of its edi
tor : He goes on to state that times
are too hard for Butts county, which
now has SIO,OOO in the bank, and an
annual income of about $3,000, to
build a $15,000 court house; but in
his same issue he calls upon the “poor,
hungry, poverty-stricken farmers,”
who he says.are half naked, and
haven't a cent on earth, to come for
ward and rally round the pole, and
let’s build a $50,000 cotton factory out
here on my shoals, which is the best
place in paradise for such a scheme.
Now, if a county with already money
enough to build it, cannot erect anew
court house, how in the name of crea
tion are the “busted” farmers going
to fill the “Footliglit’s” shoals full of
cotton factories? “Consistency,
where is you at?”
The graud jury presentments came in
too late for publication this week, but
will appear in our next issue.
CAN’T TELL THE TBI'TH.
A preacher came at a newspaper
man in this way : “You editors dare
not tell the truth. If you did you
could not live ; your newspapers would
he a failure.” The editor replied:
“You are right. And the minister
who will at all times and under all
circumstances tell the whole truth
about the members of his church alive
or dead, will not occupy the pulpit
more than one Sunday, and then he
will find it necessary to leave town in
a hurry. The press and the pulpit go
hand in hand with the whitewash
brushes and pleasant words magnify
ing little virtues into big ones. The
pulpit, the pen and the grave stone
are the great saint-making trium
virate.” And the minister went away
very thoughtful, while the editor
turned to his work, and told about
the suprising beauty of the bride,
while, in fact, she was as homely as a
hedge row.
Very few people seem to rightly
appreciate the value of the columns
of a newspaper. Some people think
it nothing more than an editor’s duty
to mention favorably every little
change in their business—free of
course—forgetting the columns of a
newspaper are the editor’s stock in
trade—just as much so as a mer
chant’s bacon, flour, calico and shoes.
What would the merchant think if
the editor would say, “I would like to
have -a few yards of your goods; of
course I don’t expect to pay for it,
because I patronize your store.” He
would think the fellow an impudent
fool. Still, there is just as much rea
son in it as to expect to utilize the
columns of a newspaper to foster your
own business interest without pay.
And still other good men don’t think
it necessary to pay their subscriptions
—by no means in advance—hut often
wait six, twelve, eighteen and twenty
four months, and then very often get
ruffled when asked to pay it. Now,
we want to submit—how is the editor
with no capital going to manage to
run a paper without the cash in ad
vance. It may be a very small matter
to many people, hut it is a moment
ous question with the poor editor.
We don’t want to lose any subscri
bers, hut must insist that they pay in
advance if they want our paper.
When Washington was President—
As cold as an icicle!
lie never on the railroad went,
And never rode a bicycle.
He read by no electric lamp,
Nor heard about the Yellowstone,
He never licked a postage stamp,
And never Saw a telephone.
Now in these days it’s come to pass
All things art with such dashing done;
We’ve all these things—hut then, alas!
We seem to have no Washington.
—Pike County Journal.
That’s what’s the matter, Brother
Lee. We have no Washington nor
anything else that is of any benefit to
the people. Why we know men who
pretend to be honest even indorsing
stealing and saying a man who will
not steal the people’s money when
they have a chance is a fool. Great
God! what are we coming to? Is it
possible that a man can betray a trust
reposed in him and not be assassina
ted? We must have the referendum
and initiative idea in our government.
Isaiah T. Montgomery, chief com
missioner for the colored exhibit in
Mississippi, has added to his list of
ssaistants Rev. Samuel Elevins of
Monroe county.
The fourth or silver party is a little
too previous. Wait, gentlemen, until
the democratic party declines to
adopt a silver plank, and you will
have plenty of company.
There are now about five hundred
men employed on the grounds of the
Cotton States and International Ex
position. It is expected that most of
the buildings will be done by June 1.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION.
GEORGIA—Butts County.
\\ he'reas, J. H. Carmichael, administrator of
E. S. Wynn, represents to the court in his peti
tion, duly filed and entered on record, that he
has fully administered E. S. Wynn’s estate;
this is therefore to cite all persons concerned,
heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator should not be dis
charged from his administration and receive
letters of dismission, on the first Monday in
June next. This the 4th day of March, 1595.
J. F. CARMICHAEL,
marS-8m Ordinary.
MARCH SHERIFF’S SALE.
GEO.KGIA —Hu ts County.
\\ ill be sold before the court house
door in Jackson, said county, on Aral
Taesday in March next, within legal sale
hours, for cash the following described
property, to-wit: Tea acres of land, sit
u&ted, lying and being in the 552nd Dis
trict G. A/., said county; said ten acres in
northwest corner of W. A. White's land,
and bounded as follows: On the north
by lands ot J. A. Dodson; e,ast and south
by lands of W. A White; west J. M. T.
Mayo. Levied on as the property of W,
A. White, by virtue .'<of two lax fas L
sued by the tax collector of jßutts county
in favor of said state and county, against
W* A. W hit®, tenant in possession, given
written notice. Levy made by Zach Hardy
L- C., 552nd District, said county, and
turned over to me to advert:**. This Feb
ruary 7, 1895. J. (). Beauchamp,
fbB-4t Sheriff Butts Cos.
BEATS CHEAP COTTON
Atlanta’s Commission Trade Of
fers Some Suggestions.
IT IS SUPPLIED BY OTHER STATES.
New York, Virginia, Ohio and Other
States Find a Market Here—Georgia
Might Well Supply It—Some Figure*
Showing the Advantage It Would Be to
the Farmers to Raise Garden Products.
“My firm,” said Mr. O. L. Stamps,
“does an annual business in produce of
$35 ,000. The bulk of it is shipped to us
from out of the state. Louisiana, Ala
bama, Tennessee, Virginia, Ohio, Mich
igan, Indiana and New York find a
splendid market among the commission
men of the city.
These states sell us with a profit the
produce of their soil. New York ships
to Atlanta thousands of barrels of Irish
potatoes, and receives a good price for
them. Tennessee also ships us large
quantities of potatoes. Cabbage comes
to ns at this season of the year from
New Orleans and around Mobile, Ala.
Early in the year we get cabbage
from Virginia, but the supply there is
always exhausted by this time. Later
in the spring Florida will ship large
quantities of cabbage to us. Nearly all
of our butter comes from east Tennes
see, as do our chickens and eggs. North
Georgia supplies the Atlanta market
with a fair per cent of the last two
items. Onions we get lrom New York,
in the main. Georgia pretty well sup
plies the market with sweet potatoes.”
“Lint & Lovelace, ” said Mr. Doolit
tle, their bookkeeper, “have a large
trade in the various articles of country
produce you have mentioned. The
amount, of course, varies during the
year, according to the season. I have
been figuring for two days on the busi
ness of about a year and a half, and
have here the figures of an average
month’s business. More than 75 per
cent of the produce comes from other
stater, than Georgia. Nearly all of the
butter and eggs we handle come from
east Tennessee. I calculate that in a
month we handle S4BO worth of chick
ens and S6OO worth of butter. Irish po
tatoes are shipped to us from the north
and east and we send away monthly at
least S9OO for that one item. We han
dle but little butter, but most of it
comes from Tennessee. I should say SBO
a month would be a good average. On
ions are an important item in our trade,
and they are shipped to us from New
York almost entirely. We handle sl,-
200 worth in a month. The money for
them goes to the east. The sweet pota
toes we handle wouldn’t exceed SIOO in
a month.”
Mr. T. A. Murray, of the Southern
Produce company, said that out of an
average week’s business of $350 nearly
90 per cent of the articles sold came
from outside the state. North Georgia
supplied some butter and eggs. Vir
ginia and New Orleans held the cab
bage market, and east Tennessee had a
corner on butter, except what was sold
by the north Georgia farmers.
“Warsaw, Tenn.,” said Mr. E. 11.
Stanley, one of the city’s best know:a
commission men, “furnishes many At
lanta merchants with butter and eggs
and chickens. This is a thriving town,
to judge from its daily shipments to the
commission men of Atlanta.”
“My firm,” said Mr. Petty, of Petty
Brothers, did a business last year of
$35,000. Nearly the whole of it was in
articles of country produce. We get
butter from east Tennessee, from Chi
cago and from the mountain counties of
Georgia. Yes, the Chicago butter is
fairly good if we get it in time. It is
creamery butter. We ship Irish pota
toes from New York. Cabbage comes
from Mobile, Ala., Louisiana and Vir
ginia. Onions are shipped to us from
Ohio. Georgia supplies us with tur
nips and sweet potatoes.”
Practically the same story is told by
all of the commission men, Of course
the aggregate amount of their monthly
sales differ in amount, but their sales
represent the same percentage of de
mand for the products mentioned. They
are articles found upon every table. The
demand for them, of course, comes from
the people through the retail grocery
men, whom the wholesale commission
men supply. These representative firms
quoted give some idea of the volume of
business done by the commission trade
of the city. As can be seen, thousands
of dollars pass through its channels
weekly. The bulk of the money goes
out of the state.
If there is any practical suggestion in
this commercial side light it is this,
that here a fine opportunity is offered to
the productive class of Georgians.
Here is a ready, anxious, profitable
market for articles of produce that ev
ery Georgia farm cau produce abun
dantly and successfully. It is a splen
did field right at the doors of Georgia
farmers, and in this era of 5-cent and 4-
cent cotton it is especially enticing.
cotton.
I asked Mr. O. L. Stamps why Geor
gia conld not furnish the commission
market of Atlanta with the articles
spoken of.
“I know of no reason,” said he, “ex
oept that the farmers are rooted and
grounded in the cotton idea. They
have had it so long that they can’t get
rid of it. It’s an old tradition. Why,
there’s much more money in raising
these articles that we have been talk
ing of, for which a ready market can
be found all the year round than in
raising cotton at even a better price
than 5 cents a pound.
ONIONS.
“To illustrate: I know a farmer who
lives less than 20 miles from Atlanta
who determined to plant an acre in on
ions instead of in cotton. The result
amazed him. It is a fact that many of
the commission men here know to be
true that he sold in one year SSOO worth
of onions off that acre. If anything,
the labor of cultivation was less. The
cost of getting the sets was probably a
little greater than the cost of cotton
seed, but look at the result. It is a
good acre of land that will produce a
bale of cotton. It is the exception. A
bale of cotton isn’t worth more than
SBO. This man with the very best re
sults in cotton would have received $470
lpss profit on his one acre if he had put
it in cotton. The onions can be plant-
Id close together in rows, and the rows
SCIATICA CURED.
Wm. Priee, Luttsville. Mo., writes: “I was
afflicted with Sciatic Rheumatism, and had
lost the use of one arm and one leg for nine
years. I went to Hot Springs, and also tried
different doctors, but found no cure until I
tried Botanic Blood Balm. It made me sound
and well. lam well known in this commu
nity.” See advertisement elsewhere.
Thompson Bros, sell 27 pounds
N. 0. Brown Sugar for sl, and
25 pounds White Sugar for sl.
may be put close together. But that’s
just one item. Cabbage could be rais
ed here, too. There’s no better country
than Georgia for Irish potatoes, and
the huge pile of money that goes out
of the state every year for Irish pota
toes could be saved if the farmers would
plant potatoes for the market.
BUTTER MAKING.
“East Tennessee has every advant
age over Gt u-gia as a butter producing
country because of the attention and
care they give to the preparation of
butter. If we get a consignment of
Georgia butter, it is made up of a dozen
colors of butter—-some white, some pale
yellow, some deep yellow. A Tenues
tee shipment of butter is one color, and
for the reason that the Tennessee man
has a process of melting it all together.
What is the cost of shipping butter
from Tennessee ? “Well, it comes by
express, and I should say that the ex
press toll and the cost of canning would
amount to about 2 cents a pound.”
Mr. J. F. Petty believes in Georgia as
a producing state, and says it could
supply the market here if the farmers
would only turn their energy and at
tention to it.
“I have an uuole,” said he, “who
lives just over the line of Fulton, in
Cobb county. Last year he planted a
quarter of an acre of ordinary farm
land in onions. I bought from him my
self S4B worth of onions.”
“This merely illustrates what the
Georgia farmers can do in this direc
tion. ’’
“There is hardly an article sold by
the commission men of tlieoity,” said
one of the best known commission men
in Atlanta, “that the Georgia farmers
could not furnish us. Farmers from
other states ship us the articles and
make a great profit off of them, and if
they can do it, why certainly, in these
days of cheap cotton, the farmers of
Georgia can do as well. ’ ’
IRISH POTATOES.
“As fine Irish potatoes as can be
grown anywhere can be grown in Geor
gia soil. Magniflcant cabbage can be
grown here, and you would little think
it, but oelery, as good as we get from
Michigan, can be produced in Georgia.
All it requires is plenty of water. Our
Georgia track farmers could produce it
profitably.
“The butter, chickens, eggs, onions
and other articles for which thousands
of dollars go out of Atlanta to other
states every week, should be produced
right around Atlanta.
“Why, if I had a farm, situated con
venient to a shipping point, I would not
think of putting my land in cotton. I
Would runr Ihe northern and eastern
farmers ouc of the Atlanta market and
get some ot the benefit of it myself.
There are not only some 80 or 40 com
mission houses in Atlanta which are
doing a thriving business, but there are
in Atlanta four or five brokers who
represent big producers in the west,
north and east and sell to the commis
sion men. These brokers get a good
profit on all their sales, the commission
man gets a good profit, then add to that
the cost of snipping and the profit to
the producer and the article is neces
sarily somewhat expensive before it
gets to the consumer. There’s profit
all along the line. Georgia farmers
who are located convenient to a market
should adopt this suggestion this year,
and instead of pinning their faith to
cotton try this. A good, ready and
profitable market can be found all the
year round.”
RAISING FOR MARKET.
The Georgia farmers who sell their
products to the commission men are
very few. The few who do sell their
products do not make a business of rais
ing for the market, but finding that
they have more than is needed for home
consumption they dispose of the sur
plus. Within a short radius of the city
there are a number of thriving and
prosperous truck farms, but they never
deal with the commission men. They
have their own delivery wagons and sell
direct to the consume:. In. nearly every
instance they have 4 drived. There is a
progressive farmer near Moore’s mills,
11 miles from .Atlanta, who, three
years ago, gave r p the planting of cot
ton for truck farming and made more
in one year from the latter than he did
in three from cotton. He now has a
paying line of customers in the city.
ROOTS OF CORN.
Question 3. —Please tell me to what
depth the roots of corn penetrate, and
to what depth should one plow to pro
duce the best crops?
Answer B.—This a very far reaching
question, aiid covers an area which we
cannot go over in a paragraph. As to
to the first, corn roots have been known
to descend to the depth of nine feet.
This, of course, was under most favor
able conditions, but the fact is authen
tic. The answer to the second clause of
your question is that the depth of plow
ing should vary according to the qual
ity of the land and the distance of the
subsoil from the surf ace. It is bad pol
icy to turn up large quantities of clay,
and therefore all characters of land
cannot be plowed alike; but where the
soil is opened and pulverized to the
depth of 10 or 12 inches the crop
stands 10 chances to one against injury
from drought. We have in mind a
piece of very ordinary land in our own
county, the breaking of which was
done last spring with a one horse plow,
followed by a subsoiler. It was ma
nured heavily, and the yield was 438
bushels on 10 acres of land. Wherever
we see the twisted, yellow leaves of
corn during a drought, the condition is
due more to shallow plowing than to
dry weather. The beneficial effects of
deep preparation are never more plain
ly marked than on a crop of corn dur
ing a drought. I saw daily during the
past summer a field of corn which fully
illustrated the wisdom of deep plow
ing; side by side were the rows, one
green and vigorous, the others twisted
and yellow; the first, deeply plowed at
the outset, the second merely broken on
the surface, according to our usual short
sighted system.
supplemental crops.
Question 4.—Farmers are advised to
supplement their cotton crop with other
paying crops. Will you mention some
that southern farmers can engage in
profitably? I don’t mean castor beans
or hops or anything else with which we
are unacquainted, but something that
we know suits our soil and will sell
well?
. Answer 4. —We have had several
questions on this line, and for reply
would refer our to the
commissioner’s regular “talk” for this
month, and also to. the facts given in
another column from ex-Governor Nor
then and several different commission
merchants of Atlanta.
To Build ( p
Tour System and restore
Tour Strength
luvigorate your Liver and
Fur if y l our Blood
Strengthen your Nerves and
Give An Appetite
Take that Excellent Medicine,
p. P. P.
Abbott’s East Indian Corn Paint cures
all Corns, Warts and Bunions.
On Everything at the Yellow Store,
Everything in Dry Goods, Notions, Ha,ts, Clothing,
Shoes, Boots, Hardware, at and below cost.
I want money and if prices will get it I will be there.
4,000 Eolk, all sizes, as law as 6c. per Dozen!
Plows, 3 l-2c per pound. Loaded Shells, 30c per box. *
j Pat. Back-bands. 15c each. Shot, $1.25 per sack.
j Bark Collars, 25c. Hame Strings, 5c each. j*
j Plow Stocks, 75c. Guns, 25 per cent, below cost.
cy—Ty *> K? -^P~ c S } ~ c ir~ c S r K 3 ~ x Ci J ~ x V~ c^ J "'S’ sfe
Remember that I will keep a full supply of Fancy
Groceries, such as Sweet Potatoes, Irish Potatoes,
Turnips, Cabbage, Pigs Feet, Mackerel, Pickles,
Sausage, Figs, Dates, Prunes, Lemons, Oranges,
Apples, Onions, Candies, Canned Goods, etc.
Sweet Potatoes and Turnips Wanted!
will Sell Warn h lit Box al tel.
I will Sell Drugs and Medicines as Cheap as any House in Jayson.
Of course I have a great many goods which I can’t mention in this space, but come and see me
Dont listen at what others who are interested in selling their own stuff tell you, but come and see
for yourself. You need not buy $lO worth of goods to get a life size picture from me. You cein get
these pictures by paying me cost for them. Don’t forget that 1 keep up my Drug business. Paints,
Oils and Glass. A big lot of School Books just received. Yours truly,
J. W. CRUM. - Jackson, Georgia
JACKSON’S \
NEW CARRIAGE FACTORY,
(Opposite the Jail.)
CEOBGIA.
Is now opeh and ready for business. We use only the best o>
material and hire skilled mechanics to do the work. We also givi
special attention to
HORSE SHOEING A SPECIALTY
EEPAIE WOEK
of all kinds, and solicit your pationage in this line Our prices
ir r "•e-™* ?, ors ® Sh °eing, etc., will be cheaper than ever
offered before Mr. Doc Tkaxton, a blacksmith with vears of ex
perience, wih be m charge of this department, and satisfaction is
guaranteed or money refunded. Now is the time to have your
BUGGIES BUILT OVER
at comparatively small cost. We are fixed for work of all kinds
;'. l, Ch f®r UUy sol . lclt your patronage. We are in business to do
work at living prices. “Live and let live’’is our motto. This is
no investment, but we are here for the purpose of saving custom!
ers the money they have heretofore been paying for 'nlh once l
work. Bring your work to us and we will treat you right
Very Truly,
JACKSON BUGGY CO.,
(Opposite Jail.) JACKSON, (JA.
FOR THE
SCHOOLROOM %
If it’s anything needed in a school*
room we have it. We are Head
quarters for Blackboards, Desks and
Seats, Crayons and Erasers, Maps
and Globes, Inks and Information.
What we tell you, ; o i can depend
on. Everything we sell you is
guaranteed. We do business on
the ‘‘money-back" plan, and we
do more business than any other
houx in onr line. We want every
body interested in school work to
have our catalogue, so we can do
still more business. Catalogues free,
AAA
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nosls. A home treatment can be gn ejv
of cases. Send for Symptom Blank
No. 4for Women; No. 3 for Skin Dirf. f
spondence answered promptly. Busim
ffdential. Entire treatment sent free a. .
tlon. Refer to our patients, banks ana
Address or call on . Q
DR. HATHAWAY & , uM "
22 i-2 Sooth Broad Street, ATLA*