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THE AMERICUS WEEKLY T1MES-REC0K DER: FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1891.,
THE TIMES-RECORDER.
Dally and Weekly.
The Ameiucus Recorder Established
The Americus Timm Established 1890.
Consolidated, AntiL, 1891.
SUBSCRIPTION :
Dailv.One Veai:, is
Daily, Onk Month,
Weekly,One Ykau, • - 1
Wekklv, Six Months,
For advertising rates address
Basoom Mvrick, Editor and .Manager,
THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Americus, Ga.
Americus, Ga., July 3, 1891.
The financial seesaw: high cool, low
prosperity, low cool, high prosperity.
No manufacturing industries can live
with coal over $2.20 per ton. Americus
is paying $4.CO. What are we going to
do about it? •
Ex-Senatou Inoai.i.s is to deliver th
Fourth of July oration at an alliance
mass meeting, and there will be hay
seed in his hair.
The railroads haul a car load of cotton
■500 miles for $50; yet they charge $00 to
75 to haul a car of coal 250 miles. Where
is tin: equity in such tariff rates?
Commissioner Router of the census
"bureau denies the report that he intends
to resign his position, llut he would
hardly deny that he wishes he had
never accepted it.
The Washington Post tells the Atlanta
Constitution that if it must have for its
■presidential candidate a man to match
Its views on finance, the best thing that
it can do is to come out at once for
J'cffer.
No interior city has grown up, or ever
will, apart from manufacturing indus- j
tries. Cheap fuel is essential to their
prosperity. Americus is paying $1 50 to
$2 60 per ton for coal; more than she
can pay and prosper.
The future of Americus depends upon
the growth of hor manufacturing enter
prises. Atlanta nover did anything in
that line until she got low freights ($1.00
to $1.25 per ton) on coal. Does Ainori-
purpose to bo throttled ?
It is stated that .Senator Gorman, of
Maryland, will take a hand in the Ohio
campaign, and his assistance assures the
success of the Democratic party and the
re-election of Governor Gray. As a
campaign manager Senator Gorman has
no superior.
Last year the rate on^joal from Btr-
mingham to Americus was $1.00 to $1.85
per ton; this year, those rates have been
nearly doubled. This means the ruin of
manufacturing enterprises in Southwest
Georgia. Do our people purpose to
submit to it ?
What say the Iron Works, the Furni
ture Factory, the S., A. & M. railroad,
the Ice Factory and numerous smaller
consumers, to paying $1.00 per ton for
coal within a day’s run of Americus,
and paying the railroads $2 50 to $3.50
per ton to bring it here?
Birmingham 1m crowing over the Incrois
ed freight on coal. It claim* that the
freight on * ton or coal from Birmingham to
Atlanta will buy It outright In the former
city.—Constitution*
That’s nothlng;the freight on a ton of
coal from Birmingham to Amoricus will
buy three tons of coal in Birmingham.
Mbs. Jen ness Milleu, the inaugura-
tor and)advocate of the divided skirt
Las come to grief. Her establishment is
New York is in the hands of the Sheriff,
which isovidence that there arc not yet
enough women In this country who favor
weariug breeches to support an estab
lishment for their manufac|pie. •
Mu. Pat Calhoun made a most pow
erful argument before the Legislative
Committeo to prove that the consolida
tion of railroad lines meant reduction of
operating expenses, and the lowering of
freights. His arguments prevented hos
tile railroad legislation, and inside a
year, his Terminal lines double the rates
on coal. Will Mr. Calhoun, please rise
and explain the raise?
The courts have decided that the gov-
# CMiment has collected more duties on hat
trimmings than the law provided for,
consequently there are some five million
dollars of duties that will have to be re
funded to the importers. The consumers
paid the excess of duties lnit not one red
cent of the money refunded will find its
\fay back into their pockets. This
shows how the tariff hem-firs tin* people.
publicans
o misdeeds
published a
nU U<
Some of the Pemisyiva
aro opening their eyes to
of Senator Quay, and liav
letter charging him with the defeat of
the Republican party in the last guber
natorial campaign, and touches him up
in ad ilie charges made against him last
ye?r. When they get through with Mr.
qtaay they should pay their respects to
Mr. Wdnamakcr,,ai.d give him a imiud
nth.
Y
THE OHIO CAMPAIGN.
The political campaign that is about
to open in Ohio promises to bo almost
as interesting as the memorable can
vass of Illinois by Lincoln and Douglass.
That was fought on the slavery issue,
and was regarded as having a more im
portant bearing on national than on
stale politics. In Ohio the contest will
be over a national issue, namely, tariff
for protection vs. tariff for revenue, the
respective champions being the republi
can and democratic nominees for Gov
ernor. Even within the state the
national bearings of the election are
likely to bo of leading interest. Both
the republican candidate and the pros
pective democratic candidate have
planted themselves squarely on the tar
iff issue and propose to fight it out on
that line. Governor Campbell accepts
in advance of his nomination, the gaunt
let thrown down by Major McKinley,
according to the following statement of
his reported in the New York Times:
I b -lieve that I triiall b-i re elec el; I am as
sanqulm of that a< a man can be of any
event which Is to oc*nr five months In the
future and whf di is subject to many 1 liter-
.ver.ii grlianijes in the curreut of affairs.* I
base my predictions purely upon the general
dissatisfaction with tin* federal administra
tion and with toe financial and commercial
condition of the country; but more especial
ly upon ihe direct llj{ht we wp| n> «ke upon
Major McKin’cy as the author end exponent
oftlie so-called McKinley bill. \Vh le the
silver question, the state administration,
and other matters will he talked ol at the
outset of :he campaign upm. th« stump, yet
Ireforetim speaking campaign is two weeks
o'd allot tier matt rs will pr-bahly ho lost
s ght of save an J exc ept ibat Major McKin
ley i< the prophet of higher tail (fa- d the au
thor of the hill which b ars his name. Upon
this ih the is me we will ga»u In every county
in th * st ite, with the possible exc ptlon of a
few counties where the larger cities are
situated. The rural population of Ohio is
Just waking up to the enormities of the Mc
Kinley theory of protection, and 1 am sure
wo shall make large gains in all of the farm
ing counties.
The weakness of the Democrats in the
larger cities, which is admitted by Gov.
Campbell, is accountable for on two
grounds. The cities where manufacto
ries abound are the beneficiaries of pro
tection. And in Cincinnati there is a
strong faction of the Democrats, repre
senting a corrupt ring which Campbell
broko up, that is bitterly opposed to
him and that may be relied upon to work
against him. As to candidates, the re
publicans have some advantage, because
there is no opposition to their candidate
on personal grounds. Yet the cause of
the opposition to Campbell ip Cincinnati
may add to his strength in the rural dis
tricts.
It was predicted that the third party
or farmers’alliance would play an im
portant part in the Ohio election, but ac
cording to present indications the farm
ers will be left free to vote as they
choose. .Scarcely more than cute in
eight of Ohio’s voters belongs to the al
liance, and the organization could not
be brought to unite on either candidate.
As Campbell is strongest among the
farmers, it is well that they have put a
candidate of their own In the litdd.
Tito Ohio campaign borrows extra im
portance from its important bearing on
the presidential nomination. Neither
Democrats nor Republicans are fully sat
isfied with the candidates they now have
in the field. Either of the contestants
for the governorship of Ohio would be
an eligiblo candidate for president, and
whichever provfcs successful will bo very
sure of a nomination by his party for
the first or second place on its ticket.
The political fate of Cleveland and Hill,
and of Harrison and Blaino aro closely
interwoven with Ohio politics, which
will be watched with keen interest all
over the Union.
A .JOURNAL’S MISSION.
Some people, who have very crude
ideas of journalism, as well as f an ex
ceedingly small modicum of brains,
seem to imagine that a newspaper is re
sponsible for the sentiments expressed
or implied in the news it publishes, or
for tfie editorial sentiments of other
papers which are reproduced purely as
a matter of information to the public.
Such publications may or may not
represent the views of the journal which
reproduces them; and the sole proper
criterion is what the paper itself says
editorially.
A good newspaper publishes every
thing—both sides of all questions of
public interest—merely as news; then in
its editorial columns it takes position
on one side or the other; and must he
judged accordingly.
The special occasion for this state
ment of a fact which ©very intelligent
man should know', arises from the editor
of The Times-Recobder being taken to
task recently by a strong anti-Cleveland
man for trying, as he expressed it, “to
rain Cleveland dow'ti the throats of the
people.”
The Times-Recobder favors the cx-
President only as the strongest and most
available man, and the choice of the De
mocracy. If he isn’t that, The Times-
Recoburb favors some body else who is.
With the exception of the Constitu-
HILL OR CLEVELAND?
All along the lines there is suddenly,
as if by arranged plan, a movement
against the nomination of ex President
Cleveland in 1892. It i i too general and
too significant to be overlooked, and it
seems indeed as if it was done by pre
arrangement.
The news from New' York is that Hill
is’a candidate for the nomination and
that he means to get it. It is known
positively that he is in the light. Ilis
friends are at work and now they do not
hesitate to claim that their man holds
under his control New* York. New Jer
sey and Indiana, and that those states
will send Hill delegates if Hill so elects.
It cannot he stated with any certainty
yet, whether the Southern Alliancemen
are goiu * to take up Governor Hill; but
this much seems sure, that they are
going against Ex-President Cleveland, if
the whispered rumors emanating from
certain prominent Alliancemen in Geor
gia are significant of the drift of senti
ment in the order at large.
This much may he regarded as certain
the Alliancemen will go solidly just as
their leaders may lead off; and unless
there is a systematic effort being by Al
liance leaders'to keep the public in the
dark as to their true intentions, enough
has cropped out to indicate that when
the national convention assembles, it
w'ill be anti-Cleveland by just the raa-
tion, every Democratic paper on The ‘ jorlty that Alliancemen can make it.
EXIT BACCARAT.
Gordon-C’umming having been duly
disgraced and the priucc of Wales duly
whitewashed, British justice is satisfied
and the baccarat scandal takes its place
with all other nine-day wonders.
But while it lasted what a panorama
it was! A Scottish laird with a rent-
roll of a quarter of a million convicted
of a five-dollar swindle; a parvenu fam
ily entertaining the heir apparent and
watching one of the royal circle to sec
that he did not cheat his prince; the
ptince himself unpacking his own pri
vate g lining outfit and anting croupier
Irdf dozen other dignitaries conspiring
to joncyai a dime and a dishonor; a
spiteful sultana binding the whole affair
in the courts—and such a tribunal! My
Lord the Chi eC-Justice as soft as velvet
to the future head of the church and ob
sequious jurymen who scarcely dared
breathe in the presence of the blood
royal.
It was a fine show while it Listen.
Times-JIecobdkb exchange list from
Boston to New Orleans, seems to believe
that Mr. Cleveland is the coming man.
If the press of the country don’t repre
sent correctly the sentiment of the peo
ple, how shall it be ascertained ?
When, therefore The Times-Recok-
ernor Hill might probably carry
New York, though this is doubtful, but
even if he should, his election would be
impossible, unless the solid Alliance
vote of the Western as well as the South
ern States should rally to him and over
come the deficiency ol the non-alliance
deb publishes news extracts and politi- states, which would go Republican.
cal comments from its contemporaries
which seem to advocate Mr. Cleveland,
it does not follow that ho is being
“rammed down the throats of the peo
ple” by Tiie Times-Recobder; if any
“ramming” is being done, the people
themselves are doing it. .
The Times-Recobder has published
eulogies and compliments from Demo
cratic papers upon the most noted
Amorican of the day, James G.Blaine. Is
Mr. Blaine being “rammed down the
throats of the people” by The Times*
Recorder?
With the exception of a few men who
don’t want to hear but one side of a
question, and that side their own, the
readers of The Timks-Recordeb want
all the news, and upon so interesting a
question as to who shall be the next
President, this paper proposes to pub
lish tjic essence of all nows and comment
beat ing upon the candtdacy.of all men of-
both parties. It will then editorially
advocate tlie nomination of the best and
most available man who is acceptable to
a majority of the Democracy.
At present the Democrats are at vari
ance on the silver question, the tariff
question, the sub-treasury bill question,
the civil sorvlce question, and numerous
others. No man that can bo named will
please all factions; but for the safety
and peace of the country, wo must se
lect the man to whom the smallest min
ority objects and elect him if we can.
Successful politics aro nothing at last,
but successful compromises, and there
aro very few who will not have to yield
some part in their political creed in tho
interests of unity and harmony in tho
ranks of tho great army in which they
aro fighting for good government and the
prosperity of the Republic.
If the Western Alliancemen should go
off into % third party and not help out
the solid South on the Democratic nomi
nee, the election would be thrown into
the House, which being overwhelmingly
Democratic, would elect the President,
and he would undoubtedly be Grover
Cleveland, as the majority of the Demo
crats of the next House are known to be
Cleveland men.
SAM JONES ON “THE C ENTUItY.**
Sam Sones was in Kansas City last
week, and a reporter of tho Kansas City
Star managed to way!ay him and get a
very interesting interview
11cose and original divine. Among
things Mr. Jones said, in answer to the
question: “What do you think of F.
Hopkinson SmlMt’s recent story that ap
peared in the Century, ‘Colonel Carter,
of Cartersville’? ”
THE LOTTERY CONTEST IN LOUISIANA
Though the vote which is to finally
decide the fate of the Louisiana lottery
is not to he taken in that state uutil next
April, tho campaign has already begun
there, and an indication of the bitterness
of tho contest is found in the fact that
party lines are already disregarded, and
they will bo entirely lost sight of as the
campaign progresses The voters will
range themselves in “lottery” or “anti
lottery” factious, and no scheme of
bribery or corruption will be left untried
by the unscrupulous managers of the
gigantic monopoly which has for years
disgraced Louisiana, to perpetuate itself.
It is estimated that a corruption fuud of
not loss than a million dollars will be
used by the desperate lottery people,
who are fighting for their lives, and
the virtue of the better classes of tho
voters of the state will bo tested as
never before. The contest will be
watched with anxiety outside the limits
of tho state, where popular sentiment
against this gigantic evil has become
thoroughly aroused.
Congressman Yoder, who is one of
the clearest-headed Democrats in Ohio,
says that despite the statements of the
Republican leaders to tho contrary, Mc
Kinley Is as good as defeated right now,
and that the Republicans are beginning
to realize that they made a mistake in
nominating him for his high tax views,
because the farmers have studied his
tariff hill aud aro opposed to it, for the
THE STREET RAILWAY
The suggestions contained in yester
day’s Times-Recobder relative to the
street railway, met with almost univer
sal approval, with the exception of a
few whose opposition is the best evi
dence of the merits of the scheme pro
posed; and who have “axes to grii^” on
other lines
About the only material objection
made to The Times-Recobder'8 out
line was the too high valuation placed
upon the property for purposes of an
option, and as a basis for interest
charges, the figures $30,003 being re
garded by many of our best posted meu
as double the actual value of the line.
Their estimate is based upon tho sell
ing value of the 35 pound rails, which
have recently been sold in large quanti
ties by the S., A. & M railroad at $1,-
500 per mile; and the cost of the trolley
wire, say $500 per mile; which in the
aggregate falls several thousand dollar
short of $15,000.,
Indeed several gentlemen favor the
removal of the line altogether, so that
Americus can take a clean start upon an
honest, square basis that don’t have the
smell of humbug and jobbery about it.
Gentlemen expressed their belief that
the line can be duplicated new for $15,-
(XX), and that the present outfit is high
priced at $10,000
In view of the weight of these opin
ions, The Times-Recobder believes
that the estimate of $1,500 as interest on
the $30,000 valuation should be reduced
one-lialf, so that the interest charge
should be put $750.
The estimate of $30 per day for ex
penses is considered by well informed
gentlemen as rather high also, and a re
duction of $3 to $5 per day might safely
he made in this estimate of running ex
penses.
Out of the agitation of this question
some good will surely result, and The
Times-Recoiideu urges our business
men to give it thought, and give their
thought expression.
IMPROVED FINANCE.
The financial condition of the leading
European banks is so much improved
since this time last year as to encourage
tho belief that a very easy money mar
ket may prevail over there aud be re
fiected on this side of the Atlantic.
The Bank of England has .$32,000,000
more of specie in its vaults on tho 18th
of June, 1891. than on the 19th of June,
1890; the Bank of France had $2,000,000
more of specie of both kinds, although
the amount of silver was practically
the same; the Imperial Bank of Ger
many had $10,00i),000 more of both
kinds, although it showed a falling off
in silver of no less than $23,000,000;
and the three banks taken together had
$44,000,000 more of a metallic reserve
than they had in the corresponding
week of 1890. The Bank of England in
particular makes a good showing for
the year. Its reserve has advanced in
tho twelve months from $07,352,170 to
$97,172,980—au increase of almost
$30,000,000.
It was also a very wholesome indica
tion that tho Bank of England several
weeks ago reduced tho rate of discount
from 4 to 3 per cent.
The depression caused by the Argen
tine troubles and tho consequent em
barrassment of Baring Bros, sooms to
have entirely passed away.
The Bank of England is usually the
barometer of the financial world and its
improved condition augurs better times
generally.
It h
hilt* that t;
itury, whl »
script Ion li
K-P ‘»’d’«
Hi. has In
smith. Th
.Ion t unfit bu
>teJ It* |.Hq
four years to talking
I l have revolted to .*i
ta'ks against my pen.
r have
tu tin
A number of lumber mills in the state
have shut down recently,, and in all
v from the°be!- rcason t,iat while it is pretended by the | probability more will shut down within
i. Among other Uwptiblicaiw that the hill accomplished the next few weeks. Most of the mills
an incieaso in tho price of wool, the fact j that have shut down are the smaller
of the matter is that wool sells for three j mills on the Georgia Southern & Florida
cents a pound less than it did before the I railroad, which are remote from Savan-
new tariff act was passed by Congress, nah and also from the Savannah, Florida
The farmers also think that if it is a Lfc Western railway, the great lumber
good thing to remove the duty on sugar, I system. The yellow pine industry has
l* j it would he a still better thing to remove j Ihhmi particularly affected by the dis-
t j it on a great many other necessaries ol I tressed financial condition of South
p | life. T';e Democrats a/e determined to | America. For several years South
q [make an earnest and thorough campaign | America lias taken about 200,000,(XX) feet
CONTESTED ELECTION CASES
Remembering how large a portion <*
the time of the fifty first congress
consumed in wrangles over contest!!
seats, and how much its decisions ^
tributed to the inflaming of sectif
animosity, it is gratifying to know
there will be but very few such cases l*
fore the next congress, perhaps
more than one-fourth as many as * er
before the last. Some eighteen
twenty contests were made in the 1*
congress, the majority of the contestant
being republicans. If there were
republican majority in congress
probable that a far greater number
seats would be contested. There
evidently no such desire among d ei J
cratie candidates to seize upon offices
defiance of the expressed will of maj jr j
ties.
Testimony in but five contested case*
has thus far been sent to the clerk ol
the house Thomas S. Grovey, d enu
erat, of the 20th Pennsylvania district
contests the seat to which a republicai
claims to have been elected by a majori-
ty of 520. Another Pennsylvania
erat, Alexander It. Craig, of the 24;
district, will try titles with Ids 0 pp>
nent, who claims P23 majority.
Of the three other contestants one is
New York republican, H. T. Noyes
the 28th district, and two are southern
negroes. Miller, of the troublesome
South Carolina district, claims a seat
cause of alleged irregularities in
printing of ballots. McDuffie, of
4th Alabama district, claims that he had
a majority, although the returns show
that the democratic candidate received
4,000 more votes. The republican vote
was divided between a black and
white candidate and both were defeated.
Probably none of the cases will give the
country any serious concern.
A STATEMAN’S VIEW.
Senator Carlile is always sensible
when lie talks.. He iff a wise and very
strongman—a statesman. In a recent
interview he said no one could predict
now who would be the democratic
nominee for the presidency. lie
the hand of Hill at work, aud says
A greut drill v ill d* pend upon the action
of New York. Her delegation will of course,
be very potent in the convention, and II
cornea instructed for a New York t
delegates trom other status will cither take
him or go outside of the state for a canli-
date. Tuere are many who think that the
party has gone t > New York fonts c
date ofien enough, but the vote of that
lias always been n*-cessa r y to elect the
inee, and may continue to be necessary here-
aftir.
He does not believe that the third par
ty will have much controlling influence
next year. Its success, if anywhere,
must be in the republican northwest.
He does not think Mr. Cleveland’s silver
letter will necessarily injure his pta
pects. It made him friends and he lost
friends by it. Mr. Carlisle does not fail
o spy that in his opinion it would
exceedingly bad policy to permit the
silver question to become tho paramount
one in tho campaign of 1*92. It Is
question upon which there are honest
differences of opinion in the party, while
there are other questions of equal ot
greater importance upon which we are
thoroughly united.”
We take these to be timely and wise
utterances. The third party may
possibly of more consequence than the
able Kentuckian row thinks. But he
surely wise and prudent when he depre
cates the folly of making the light in
1892 upon the “free silver coinage” in
the face of widespread divlson in the
democratic party on that subject.
] and to
Mcy^ill ..i ewrycr«.ss.ri.ad :
and to l»?t t Iu* funnels km.i
j thought about it when ho
j would not open a muiket
; battel ot flour or a bushel <
»f lie
Ward
Brooklyn <
irk Sun ou
iff religio
A nitoYZF. statue
Beecher was nnveilc.
Wednesday,, and the N
incntmg upon the uhs<
organizations on the occasion says:
‘•Why was tins ? If he was a man
worthy of the honor of a public statue,
why were not the great religious organ
izations of tho country n ; «>e
* Plom
jijiose the iniquity of timMcKi
it ew ry cross-roads in tin* star
, u hat Iff.tit
said that
for a si tig
>f p n k.
i tin
if lttmb
It is not t
Hill a>
Alabama is not mo anxi
the Atluula Constitution heard about j
reuently. Its canvass of about half the j
Alabama newspaper men at the meeting
o; tho I’ress Association in Anniston,
After a laborious search through all
the politicians of the state of Virginia,
the Richmond Dispatch mattaged to find
only thirteen who are opposed f.) the re-
nomination of Cleveland for {'resident,
and they are all probably followers of
developed tho fact that twenty-one were j John S. Barbour,
for Cleveland, three for Gray, two for disgruntled becau
Carlisle and two for Hill. Tho New 11«» conduct the for
Yoik governor ha*, therefore, about j Cleveland to
seven pet cent, of the Alabama editors j Cleveland’s oppon
itt hia favor, while Cleveland has seven* jeclious to hint on
ty-liyo. per cent. A' tbama can be safely ‘ P*ound if the truth
counted for CSeveland next je-ir, if tho ' Nv^s.
The will of Gen. Albert I'ike, the l»t«
grand commander of the Scottish Hit®
Masons, southern jurisdiction, ha* been
filed for probate, and is stated to bo as
follows: lie leaves all his personal
property to tho order, and directs that if
any of his children attempts to break
the *vill they shall forfeit all that is de-
vised to themselves. The fee. to which
ho was entitled In tho famous Choctaw
award he leaves [to his two sons ant
daughter, and all his real estate in
kansas to his son, Y’von I*iko. H*
moneys in the treasury of the Lnit
annum. During last year it States, arising from the sale umi*?r p
np-liftieili of that amount, cess of ccmflsciiUon of liU
.v * - Little Rock, ho wills to the i nw
ui4i«> s financial allairs are in a .states, “that it may have an honest title
condition, aud there is no money thereto, and no longer hold them as tn
proceeds of plundering under the J or J
of law; and also the indebtedness ot
United States to mo for four hor
by me iu the military service
United States iu Mexico.”
to buy with. The worst of it is that
there does not appear to be any prospect
of improvement The lumber which has
been taken by South America is now
thrown upon the not them market, caus
ing a glut, tit the market, and cfonse-
q'lently a weak demand and low prices.
—Savannah News.
who is one of those
so he was not allowed
titer administration of
suit himself. All of j
Oil's 1.IISB Ili. il real ole
same :
of
pretty inm'li il
AI l
1 1110 pros
lulu llio pi
Ik tlicro is anything in a name *
Paul ought to be a very moral town,
itappoars that the prevailing senli" 11
Dkmoi n.vric newspapers which are anioug the citizons favors theatrical P‘
waning war on Cleveland ag.inst 11111, or \ r » rm »ncc» on Sunday. A eoinmiUre^
Hill against Cleveland, arc doing the 1 1 “ lics 1,M bcca t, '- v,u " l °
party seiious injury. Hath of these gen*! P r,, l ,, l etrtrs of theaters to cease 1>.«
t lemon are g .,,,1 demon,-at* and either of j "» ««•» «'»* ll " t witll0ut •“f' ’ L
then, would m ike a „! president take a very large committeo to col
I of trying to create a wrangle tie- j ,!lem « ,f the :>IT " r uf tllclr way '
the inline,lute friends and sup-j Puksipent Hawkins of the S; "‘* 3
1 ill these two leading deni .crats, | „ lll( Americus * Montgomery rail**?'
d democratic new spaper-s should j lnCi ,. s ,|,,t the July, po*'"
Inste
!>"' o'
date
the de
, III.
.entation, ai
id tho Merc
flits Tiu*tiu*l
iL.-i in >
tv/uU M
ii m ieiV
I’d V
b*7. Y«*ll* i
*n.;'r in \\
riev adlEl jistc:vd in ihnl city.
j should fi.tvj been i
j encouragement.
r; lin'd, Y.nk, Wlfirmu
jsticuts, c>st of
• hby
aifi ]’ievident | , j,f| v ‘ h | ; ,j
it • trouble.-.
r, and all i