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TELEGRAPH AKD HESSEK30
FRIDAY. MAY 12, 1882.
ipvtes gang are to go up the Angoata
sad Uteo flow* to Florida.
tWeet end Northwest have been vis-
awn storm* of rain and hiil.
q t i another vacant brass medal*
r fhfla to oome np and claim hia.
t has hauled off his gang
IS* Badly demoralized condition from the
Mb prosecutions in Strath Carolina.
shot ont from the light of the
teteK- The Poet-Appeal, the Carte raville
Jhe/Vm and the Gainesville Southron no
>iyi aiii with our mail.
tan and Howga'o still keep ont of
wmA at the courts, but "Royal Bob" In-
yMd^with his brassy faee and truculent
toRptebia always on hand.
MmOuwast, formerly of Georgia, has
■teBecmvicted of manslaughter by a Texas
war*. Gnat excitement was occasioned by
ffhiwaezpected verdict, and the editor of
ttatessl paper was fined for contempt of
i he commented on the con-
t«( the jury.
i& Elizabeth Cut Stanton saysahe
•no more for the constitution of the
M States than she does for the M MeIo-
of Mother Goose." And yet Betsey
totobea suffragist and stand with
id fa her hand.
Cm. Gobdon seems to have tired of the
■abut of accumulating wealth and
RPmb yearns for Senatorial honors. In
•Mat islet view he is quoted as follows:
T as not a candidate at present, but if
Rmmie urge ine to go to the Senate again,
Ukartsay what I may do.”
fflarKuapoxDAsrr sends us an aooount of
awweBngat Busbyville, Houston oounty,
Wn Saturday last. We regret to see
■C dfeoord in that section, for cf all the
i in the State the Democracy of
i county can least afford to bo di-
Ma. Alonzo Bill, assistant secretary of
Maaferior, wants a plaster in the shape
e# many thousand dollars, because the
BBMfegton Chronicle (Republican) said
■awa* a person it would do to watch.
> is not of that stripe he is the purest
i«f a dirty party and should get out at
a Poor dog Tray suffered from bad
Mend Grubb, of the Darien Gazette,
for an appropriation. Grubb is
i- Darien does a very large and impor-
frade, and her facilities for doing it
Bbe improved. The Georgia delega-
shoold make an effort in her behalf,
► especially at this time, as Represen-
Black is disabled. The people of
county deserve well of all Geor
M» toe they have staunchly stood, like a
«H of adamant, in the face of fearful
dSa against them in color and in politics.
Ikaay good may ccme of the tariff com-
■on, politics must be laid aside in the
i of its members. As the South is
interested in the solution of this
Vbl economic measure, President Arthur
w81 laU short of his fair duty if bo fails
*► give this section representation on
tta commission. In order to do
o» he will be compelled to select
■» gentleman of Democratic proclivities
aai associations, for though the people
ritaat him may for a purpose attempt to
aaffe him believe there is a Republican
rat the South, the foot stands that it
more or leas then * amnii ool
i of mongrel offioe seekers.
W* are in receipt of a card from Mrs.
fetes James, who indignantly denies that
■•aspreparing for publication any work
itheiifeacd doings of her late hus-
She declares that he never in life
her acquainted with any unlawful
■Men hia part, and ahe has no knowledge
•C any of tbe grave charges laid at hia
She coc eludes as follows: "I there-
> repeat, that any identification or con-
of my name with any book or
?®r article whatsoever, purporting
haaeeord the career of Jesse James, my
(tod hashesd, is wholly and entirely with-
'•* my permission, and I trust that the
will regerd me with more charity
to be deceived by any claims con-
I my name with the book."
Au. true friends of Ireland must receive
■A deep regret the details of the brutal
wider of Lord Cavendish and Mr. Burke,
‘•ame just as public opinion had forced
teitish government into conciliatory
1 and is indefensible on any
Irishmen in this country cannot
too groat tas!o to follow the extim-
of their brethren of Boston in con-
ibis outrage. Aocounts from
represent n feeling of groat in-
ou, which is but natural,
■»• tt is feared that martial
; y tow Bith allot its rigors will visit an un
people for the crime of a few out-
***■ Murder is not the weapon with
MWs Ireland may hope to redress her
mugs, nor can ahe retain the sympathy
iff ether people if she protects the men who
dona ter and her oause a great injury.
TfciT staunch and reliable Democratic
jpmraa), the Augusta Chronicle and Const i-
tMTiwiffif, speaks with no uncertain voice.
lnqie
Chronicle will not support Mr. Sicphens,
bmssver.ff he accepts s nomination from thy
•dependent perty which meets in Atlanta in
Jkaa The membcri of that party have but ono
(«irtt In view, and that to to destroy the organ-
| isadJOeiaocracy and turn the State over to the
•ieyoMtam party. Messrs. Longstreet, Atkins
i aadJhnow have no use for the Independents,
except ns instrumento to destroy the Integrity
nisi ^ rattuow the supremacy of the Democrat-
,* M;«rty In Georgia.
a Mr. Stephens accepts a nomination from
tot independents, Itisnotatall likely that the
party will trouble him with a nom
at Idea tlint a little
bo have no
tad nothing
for the Democracy of the
to auy
Caste.
Before the negroes of Georgia have got
ten well to work In the task they have al
lotted to themselves of overthrowing the
white people of the State, they are threat
ened with a serious distraction in their
ovni c&mp.
The spirit of caste, the strongest and
most dangerous to any race, threatens to
rear its ugly head. It is bound to come,
but we were scarcely prepared for its im
mediate appearance. There was evidence
of its outcropping in the late convention
in this city, and the matter now breaks
ont anew in a different locality. Sooner
or later the negro and the mulatto will
have each other by their respective
throats.
In the August* organ of the colored
people we find* letter on this snbject
from Edwin Belcher, who is almostwhite.
We make an extract which spealu'for it-
selfmuch more strongly than could any
comments from oar pen. Belcher says:
The second charge of Mr. Wright which I de
sire to notice wm that I would not speak to a
black man on the streets ol Augusta. I have
never yet refused to speak to any man in Au
gusta, block or white, whom I know, with, per
haps, one exception, and If I hav^t spoken
to Ur. Wright It has not been on sc^nt of hto
blockneM, hut for reams wholly dl
with Ms color u he well knows. This charge
may seem a very queer and ridiculous accusa
tlon to thoae unfamiliar with Mr. Wright's pe
culiarities, but It to notorious hero and I be
lieve in other portions of the State, that Ur.
Wright favors the drawing of • new color
Upe which divide the blacks from the m ‘
toes. In our last State convention he could
scarcely be restrained from attacking ono of
the delegates to the national convention be
cause he wm too near white, and therefore, In
Mr. Wright's opinion, not a (It and proper rep
resentative of the colored element Upon
making hto advent In Augusta from the clastic
and cultured fleds of Randolph county, ru
mor hM it that he wm surprised and shocked,
in the elegant phraseology attributed to him.
that "mnlattoes should have such a swing in
Augusta societyend ho openly boasts of hto
purpose to break up an alleged “mulatto ring"
which controls the politics of this portion of
Georgia.
“f he passage by the House of Represent
atives of the tariff commission bill, by •
vote of 151 for to 83 sgtAst it, leaves
bat little doubt that it will become
law.
The discussion of this question In Con
gress, In political conventions and through
the press, has been constant almost for
half a century. Party necessity in some
instances, prejudice in others, and inter
est in others still, have influenced the ut
terances of men on both sides the ques
tion. It has been difficult for an ordinary
man, who desired to become informed, to
determine what to repudiate in the way
of theory and assumed fact, ss these bare
alternately been presented by protection
ist and free trader.
If no other good has been accomplished
by all the discussion that preceded the
adoption of this law authorizing a com'
mission, it seems at least that the country
and consequently Congress has been led
to regard this question as a purely eco
nomic one, and for this reason they have,
wisely no doubt, decided to apply to its
eolation the common sense idea of ob
taining practical and full information
upontbe snbject before taking action,
which when taken ilia to be hoped will
make a permanent settlement of the mat
ter.
As we understand this law, it provides
for the appointment of a civilian commis
sion of nine, who are charged with a dili
gent inquiry into all the fads connected
with the present tariff, and its effects upon
the industries and business of the country.
They are to report the same to Con
gress, witn such recommendations
rates of duties as in their judgment the
facto thus obtained shall indicate. Be
yond this they have no power or author
ity, and after such report is made it will
then devolve upon Congress either to mod
ify, adopt or reject the result of their
labors.
This action brings the country face to
face with a great issue; and upon the
performance of this commission, and the
course of Congress in reference to it
depends more in a business point ‘than
any qnestion that has for years engaged
public attention.
Whatever may have been the loose and
flippant methods indulged in former dis-
cesslons of all the interests involved, from
this time on this qnestion must be brought
down from the realm of fancy and sub
jected to the cold logic of facto. Theories
will not serve this commission in deter
mining questions, that are to largely in
fluence the business Interests of the coun
try by the legislation this measure
will ultimately bring forth. It is well
that they will not be reduced to depend
ence upon such evidences. The country
passed through a long period of approxi
mate free trade just prior to the war. It
will be a simple task to evolve from that
period the general conditions that always
determine the wisdom of any given policy
in pnblic or private affairs. This period
was followed by the adoption of the Mor
rill tariff which is now in force. The
same process will also determine what the
country has accomplished under a protec
tive system.
No matter what politicians may want
or advocate, the masse* are seeking for the
troth on all questions, the decision of
which will affect directly or indirectly
their interest. ‘With them there to neither
passion or prejudice as a controlling mo
tive in any of the transactions attending
the purchase and isle of houses or goods,
stock, lands or crops#
The benefit to be derived from one
couiae as compared with another, to the
problem for human judgment to deter
mine as often as transactions arise; and
the question always in business to on
what side interest lies.
This question to purely one of business.
The matter to he determined to" simply
whether the general interest of the coun
try to best promoted by a policy of protec
tion, or of free trade. We have tried
both, and the most satisfactory test as to
advantages under the different policies, is
to go to the statistics of the country for
results.
If, under tree trade,vtbe general prog-
ss and development of the country,
the advancement of its industries, both In
diversity and extent; tbo employment of
its labor in point of nombera^teadiness of
employment and wages paid, the
multiplication of farms and production
P« r acre, the price- of farm
products, the^retnnu to agriculture and
manufactures—If these were promoted,
more than under a protective system, then
by all means the country should abandon
protection and go back to free trade. It.
on the contrary, protection has produced
in all these particulars results more satis
factory than was the cue under free trade,
ben it would sa«m to be good policy to
and npsn the determination of these col
lateral items the solution of the whole
matter depends.
This to the line of Investigation, upon
which we desire the commission when ap
pointed to operate. It is to be presumed
that men of character and capacity will
be appointed. They shonld have discern
ment enough to understand the business
of the country, and the fair relationship
and adjustment of one interest to another.
What to required to lair distribution of
burdens and advantages. One interest
should not bo left exposed, or another un
duly protected. The two desiderata are
the employment of labor and such produc
tion as shall give the conntry the advan
tages of all the labor employed in pro
ducing its supplies in time of peace, and
making it independent in time of war.
The advantages arising from this policy
are distributed to and enjoyed by all.
That their labors will be arduous to
certain. That they will bo beset with'
extremists on both sides of the qnestion to
equally so. Their only hope for a suc
cessful termination of their labors to in
industrious application to the work In
hand, and an inflexible purpose to know
nothing save the'general welfare of the
whole country. Special interest will re
quire special attention, no doubt, but as
a general rale the ends to be accom
plished con bo attained by a comprehen
sive purpose to deal with the questions
presented with an eye single to the general
nr. Stephens.
The Atlanta Constitution of Sunday
publishes the following dispatch from Mr.
Stephens, by authority of that gentleman
In the first place, then, I want you distinctly
to understand that I am not a candidate (or
governor, noram I a candidate even (or nomi
nation to that office by any party In Georgia,
think all that to being now said upon that sub.
jectgrewontof a remark of mine that yon re
ported some time ago, that If the people of
Georgia really wished mo to serve them m gov
ernor, m numerous letters received by me Indi
cate, I knew no reason at that time, if my
health continued m good m It then was, which
would Justify me In refusing so to ssrve them,
though my own wishes and desires were, as
they had been repeatedly declared, to retire
from public life at the expiration of my present
Congressional term. This I now repeat By
this language, I do not mean to announce my
self ms candidate oc even an aspirant (ortho
governorship, bnt to express a simple willing
ness to serve m governor if the people in an
authoritative manner should express a wish
(or me to serve thim."
“Is there any authority for the statement that
yon will accept the nomination (or governor
by the mass meeting advertised to he held In
Atlanta on the first of Jane, and representing
what Is called the coalition party of Georgia?
“Nor#, whatever, though I should not be dls-
regardful o( such an expression of confidence
by any number of citizens ol the 8tate, and the
more so, coming from men not of my own po-
lit lea 1 association."
“If a convention of the Democratic party, so
lected under the common usages ol the party,
should nominate you for governor, would you
accept the nomination?”
. “I shonld take that certainly m such a dem
onstration of popular confidence and the will
of the people m would meet the contingency
under which I have stated mywllllngne
servo in that capacity to the best of my ability,
and I should accept the trust looking after the
rights and Interests of all classes without regard
to party organization, but with the object in
view of restoring harmony to the entire State,
building our waste places and restoring the old
commonwealth as far m possible to her former
proud position In the sisterhood of the States of
the Union."
Those friends who havo been writing
Mr. Stephens “numerous letters," as also
those who have personally approached
him upon the snbject, will now feel
liberty to urge him as a candidate for the
gubernatorial nomination, and will doubt
less do so, and be will then become to all
intents and purposes a candidate. We
do net care at this time to discuss this
point more fully, nor shall we attempt to
interpret anything that may appear Del
phic in the above utterances. The press
of the State has been generally heard
from. The conclusions to be gathered
from this source may, in oar judgment,
be fairly summoned np as follows, if these
agencies may be considered to represent
in an equal degree with the correspondents
of Mr. Stephens’ public sentiment upon
the snbject.
The coalitionist are eager and anxious
to have him for a leader, and to bide tbe!r
real weakness and designs behind the pres
tige of hto name and influence. Their Re
publican allies in the openly declared de
sign to overthrow the Bourbon Democ
racy, are anxious and willing to join in
the movement, and as the negro conven
tion by solemn resolution tamed over the
colored vote to its control, it may be re
lied upon to appertain. The springing
of this movement took the masses of the
Democracy by surprise. They had been
looking in a different direction for a gu
bernatorial candidate.
No such unanimity of sentiment and
action as is described by the correspon
dents of Mr. Stepheni has been develop
ed.
No difficulties, dangers, troubles or
schisms have been dlsclosed.as require or
demand any sacrifice of the expressed
wishes and desires of Mr. Stephens.
While he has been treated with the
kindness and respect due hto character
and position, the conclusion to almost
solid that he cannot hope for the support
of the Georg's Democracy, save as the reg
ularly selected candidate of that organiza
tion. Any attempt upon bis part to stand
for governor in aqy other way, to certain
to crystallize and precipItatA all of the
dangers ana troubles to which hto private
correspondents allude.
Cotfon Ntatemsnt
According to the New York Financial
Chronicle, the receipts of cotton at all the
ports, np to last Friday night, May 6th,
were 4,406,105 bales, against 6,380,883
bales In 1881, and 4,064,528 bales in 1880,
abowing a falling off as compared with
last year of 030,718 bales, and as compar
ed with 1880, of 198,368 bales.
The total receipts for tbo week ending
May 5tli, were 3f,423 bales, against 45,-
5S5halrs tlie same week In 1881, and
25,601 bales at the same date In 1880,
showings decrease as compared with
last year of 11,112 bales, and an in
crease as compared with 1880, of 8,762
bales.
Stocks in interior towns on last Friday
night were 143,327 bales, against 215,253
bales the same week in 1881.
The total visible supply of cottofi on
the night of May 5tb,was 2,784,038 bales,
against 2,057,801 bales In 1831, and 2,.
443,045 hales in 1880. Thceo figures indi
cate a decrease in the cotton in sight at
that date of 173,853 bales, as compared
with same date In 1881, and an increase
of340,003 bales, as compared with 1880,
Middling cotton sold in Liverpool on
last Friday for 6f, and at sarno date last
year it sold for 51.
continue tije protective system. lYscl! - J - n
» tl,Is ** there is of the questions
Dos Cssfenos and Billy Mahone, having
mixed their politics and toddies, are now
their tr.oney. Don or Bill will bo
swindled to a dead certainty.
Collapse at the Coalition.
The coalition which was formulated by
the two Markham House conferences
and the colored convention in this
city, has suddenly collapsed. The Re
publicans have taken the Federal patron
age, throwing a bone and a crust to Pledg
er and Pleasants, .Snfltli Clayton has
washed hto hands of the concern, Parson
Felton to looking after his farm truck,
and the other Colonels are perhaps ru
minating upon the instability of htunan
hopes. Col. Marcellus E, Thornton, the
acknowledged leader of what was sup
posed at one time to be a promising party,
has taken hold ot his journal, the P.-vi.,
and to making it fairly coruscate with the
flashes of hto great genius for politics
clothed in most masterful English. The
nervy strokes of his pencil may be de
tected in almost ever aragraph. He
goes right to the core of hto «uhjeet, and
makes a centre shot at every .. jrt. The
following declaration from him settles be
yond cavil or question that the coalition
to dtomtoaed£for thejearapaign, is dead be
yond the power or hope of resurrection
The Constitution and others have continu
ously made reference to "a coalition," and on'
deavored to convey tho impression that there
Isa coalition between the Independents and
the Liberals and the Republicans. This tho
PosUAppeal now and henceforth asserts it to
be absolutely false; that it does not know of
tho existence of "a coalition” in any particu
lar, and If there to, this journal does not sup
port it.
Upon the rains, however, the doughty
and polemic Colonel has erected what he
to pleased to term .a “Liberal" paily.
And he meansJt to be a liberal party in
the broadest acceptation of the term.
There to to be no complaint about plat
form, no dispute about principles, and
there to to be no patronage over which
rancorous quarrels may be instituted. It
is to be as open and free as the plan of
salvation. The only preliminary required
to that tho party who may join tho Colo
nel’s liberal party is the support of the
Colonel’s candidate lor governor, who to
an unmitigated Bourbon Democrat.
Hto langoago on this point to em
phatic, and to as clejr as emphatic. Hear
It:
We do say that any man, be he white or
black, may Join tho Liberal party and support
our candidate, and when he comes to the sup
port of our candidates we will not fly the
track and exclaim* as did tho Centtitutio*
that we will not support that candidate.
Free permission to given to blacks and
whites to come In the game, as Captain
Simon Suggs said at the camp-meeting,
“with nary pair.” And whoever comes
has this pledge and assurance that Col
Marcellas E. Thcrnton will stick. He
will not turn tail and desert hto candi
date when the white and black voters are
rallying to the standard.
After getting along this far, the Colonel
seems to be struck with a suspicion that
he has perhaps gone a little too fast and
far, and that he has sat down somewhat
too hard upon the coalition. It occurs to
him that the thing can not be successfully
ran without a coalition of some sort. So
he adds:
Since wo come to think of It, there does ap
pear something very much like “a coalition'
In these latter days, when nearly every person
In the State to rallying to the standard of the
great commoner. The independents and lib
erals are going to support him with a vim.
This to a direct and palpable admission
that there to a “coalition" with a “vim”
between the independents and liberals,
the first being represented by Parson
Felton and five colonels and the latter by
Col. Marcellos E. Thornton. And still
the thing lacks an air of completeness to
bto eye. Farrow and Longstreet and the
black brigade are in the wilderness. So
the Colonel melts hto severity and resorts
totally. He says:
The Republicans ought to come to hto sup
port, and we hope they will. They cannot
elect a man of their own. The colored people
can and shonld rapport him, becauso he hM
always been a friend to their race, individually
and collectively.
Col. Thornton, by common consent the
Republican leader, tells them plainly that
they cannot elect a man, even with Far
row’s eighty thousand negro votes, and
they had best come at once to tho support
of an organized Bourbon Democrat for
governor. He to very frank with hto color
ed friends. He admits thst they are now
wrestling with a foe harder to handle and
more dangerous than tho Bourbon De
mocracy, and that In view of this fact he
had seriously considered the postpone
ment of hto June convention, bat says:
It to very probable that the Jane mass meet
ing would have been postponed on account of
the prevalence of small-pox in Atlanta, hid it
not been considered that the charge would
then be made that It wm postponed on ac
count of weakness There Jj, however, no
weakness, and the mao meeting on the 1st of
Jnne to be held In Atlanta will not be post
ponefi on account of the small-pox or any other
account. There will be a sufficient number
present to ratify and indorse Ur. Stephens'
candidacy, and that to all that to hoped for.
There is small-pox bnt no wcaknes, but
small-pox and weakness combinod cannot
prevent a sufficient number from rallying
to ratify and indorse tbo candidacy of ah
organized Bourbon Democrat.
After an inspection of the programme of
the astute leader of Georgia politics our
readers may come to agree with us that
the'coalition has collapsed, and that no
brain save that of Col. Marcellas E.
Thornton can suggest tho subtle alchemy,
no hand bold enough save his, to mix lib
eral independents, negroes, small-pox and
colonels so that they may again coalesce
in a solid and compact political element.
The Kenstree Affair.
The Augusta Chronicle and Constitu
tionalist ot yestorday publishes tho fol
lowing special dispatch from Athens:
Dr. JTH. Campbell and Dr. B. C. Benedict,
who havo to-day returned from a visit to Brooks
county, where they were delegated by legal au
thority to exhume the body of Walter Koun
tree, assert that tho bullet which killed the
young man was fired by his brother (Bartow)
If the physicians named can make sat
isfactory proof of tho correctness or this
opinion, it will relieve tho imprisoned
negroes of tho charge of murder,
and reduce tho offense, for which
they may be indicted and tried. It will
not, however, relieve the case of any of
the horror which attaches to it, but will
call for the sympathy of all in behalf of
Bartow Rountree, who was engaged In
the defense and protection of his brother.
The mail of last night failed to bring
ns the Athena Banner, which will doubt
less contain fuller particulars of this
phase of a most melancholy affair.
Th* Supreme Court has decided that
“Betty and the Baby" can have all the
money raised for them; that Sergeant Ma
son is in the penitentiary by right, and
that Jadge Advocate Swairn is an unmiti-
Tbe 5®w Portfolio,
The House has done weli lp passing a
bill making the Commissioner of Agricul
ture a cabinet officer. It is but just and
proper that the only department devoted
to the material interests of all of the peo
ple, should be enlarged and strengthened,
and should be dignified by having a cabi
net officer at its head. The provision re,
quirlng such officer to bo a practical agri
culturist to a wise one. No President
will have the fare to appoint another
LeDuc, and even the accomplished
theorist Dr. Lorlng will have to
retire, tor bis farming lore to of the kind
that made Horace Greeley, Beecher and
Evarts rediculous In the eyes of men at
tached to tho soil. It will be refreshing,
too, to have a man in the cabinet who is
not a professional politician, and who will
he busied in something besides a partisan
eflort to prolong the life of the admin
istration of which he may be a part. The
Senate shonld concur in the action ot the
House without delay.
Blunar from Sorghum.
Many of our readers will remember
what a factor sorghum was during the
late war. It contributed a large portion
of the ’■short and long sweetening" used
by our people, for in many instances a
coarso sugar was made from It more by
accident than skill, and it also famished
acboap, villainous, but very powerful
whisky or brandy, which was capable of
the highest stimulation. Sorghum went
from the front to the rear upon the advent
of peace and cotton at fifty cebts per
pound, and has since that time- received
bnt limited attention at the bands of our
farmers. Bnt the men of science have
been at work on aorghnm and the results
so far obtained are simply wonderful.
The experiments made within the last
year have not yet been pnbllihed by the
government, bnt Professor Sllllman,
chairman of the commission having the
subject in charge, has written a letter to
Dr. T. G. Richardson, ol New Orleans,
setting forth tho main results. We find
the document in a late number of the
New Orleans Democrat, and feel that we
can not do our readers and the
farmers of Georgia a greater benefit
than to furnish them with an intelligent
synopsis of its most important and inter
esting points. It has been demonstrated
that our planters can secure a crop from
the seed of say half a dozen sorts of sor
ghum, which will fully mature in periods
of from three months to six months from
date of sowing, and which produce from
one to two hogsheads of good “C” sugar,
polarizing 96 per cont., and which cannot
be told from the best ribbon or other cane
sugar of the same grade. This they can
do with no other treatment than they now
employ in working the old stands of cane,
and with a longer working period the
juices will reach at least 10 deg. B-, equal
to 1,065 specific gravity, and will polarize
good 12 per cent, to 10 per cent., which
to, if we are correctly informed, fully as
well as tho Louisiana planters now do.
This Jolce they can defecate with lime
and treat with snlpbur fumes or sblphu-
rous acid, and reduce in vacuum pans as
usual, or in open trains.
This result follows with the early An*
her cane, which matures in about ninety
days. It makes fully 9 per cent„ of
“available sugar” (after deducting abont
1J per centaof glucose and 8 per cent, of
solids not sugar), and has produced over
wide areas of the West ten to twenty tons
of canes per acre, yielding 140 gallons of
juice per ton, and of woll-gralned sugars
from 80 to 100 pounds per ton of stalks
and from 20 to 25 gallons of syrup of
excellent quality, weighing from 11 to 11}
pounds per gallon. This may be consid
ered tho loading variety of the early ma
turing sorts of sorghum. The yield of
seed to from 20 to 30 bushels per acre, an
excellent grain for stock or bogs, worth
in tho North from 60 cents to 75 cents per
bushel.
It will make abont two thousand
pounds per acre of good V sugar, and this
particular variety promises to become
perennial in tbe climate of the South.
Col. Henry B. Richards, of LaGrange,
Fayette county, Texas, says of it:
I have tested tt now for two years, and am
convinced that the stnbblee will stand colder
weather and more of it than thoae of the ribbon
cane. Uy cane from tost year’s stubbles hM
huger stalks, to taller, and la every respect
ahead ot the earliest seed cane at this time.
There are othor varieties maturing in
from 150 to 170 days from seeding, and re
quiring about 60 days’ working. They are
the “Honduras," “Honey Top," “Texas
Cane," “Mammoth,” etc. These will
produce from two to three thousand
pounds of sugar per acre. As high up as
Kansas daring the last year thirty-seven
and a half tons of Honduras cane were
matured on one acre. The South has the
soil and dimato for the production of
the sorghum to Its fullest sugar-making
capacity. Our lato frosts will enable
planters to pal it in the ground
late and at a time when not
pressed with other work, or they can by
reason of long seasons make it an early
crop.
Now that tbe necessity of a diversity of
crops is forcing Itself upon tbe attention
of our planters, it will be wise In them to
not only make their own supplies of syrup
and sugar, bat to make each a crop out of
which more money may be realized at
less labor than out of cotton. Tbe season
to not too far advanced to experiment
during the present crop year, and lor tho
benefit of those who may havo tbe enter
prise to attempt it wo add the formula for
cultivation as laid down by Frofessor
Sellimau:
1. Tho plant should be thoroujthly ripe be
fore rolling commences, its ripe condition Is
known by the seed being fatty hard and tho
upper leaves beginning to wilt. If rotted be
fore this time tho juice, m appears by thou
sands of analyses, containsIrss sugar and more
glucose than at maturity, and of course the
amount of sugar available to considerably di
mlnUbed.
•2. Tbe canes should bo rotted m soon after
cutting as possible—all in the same day if possi
ble. It Is not important to remove the leaves;
by some evidence tho removal of tho leaves ap
pears to be an Injury. 'But tho top must bo re
moved, of courec. as well to save tho seed as to
avoid Injury to thejulcc
3. Tho Julco shows by its density just what tt
is worth. It should run from 8 degrees to 12
degrees B, say from 1,000 to 1,030 specific grav
ity, averaging about 1,005, or 10 degrees B. And
tt should be handled without delay, m tt is
more prone than Cuba cano juice to chemical
changes. Bnt tho same rules lor acidity, the
same treatment by Umo and by sulphur will be
found available os at present with yourS>l*n-
tos.
4. For the matter ol culture tt is sufficient to
say that any soil that will raise a good crop of
corn will do well for sorghum, which Is best
drilled In with a common drilling machine In
rows 3)4 to 4 feot apart, tho plants to bo thinned
A Chance for the Georgia Coalition
ists,
All hope of tbe miserable coalition do
ing anything in Georgia having been aban
doned, the unhappy stragglers from the
late combination may be able to make a
strike in Chicago. A letter from the
latter city to the Louisville Courier-Jour
nal says:
“A great what is It convention Is to beheld
In this city aoont the 7th of Jane. The matter
Is not made public here yet, but your corres
pondent has secured fnformation showing that
an important movement Is on foot toseenre
delegates from every part of the United States
from different branches, or cub-associations, of
tho Farmers' Alliance, the Knights of Labor,
the anti-monopolists, the Greenback party, the
Irish-American Land League, the Nationalists,
the Socialistic party, and all kindred organiza
tions, for a great convention here for the pur
pose of an efibrt to effect political amalgama
tion and unification, with a view to actively
participating in tho political events preceding
the nexfPresldantlal election. Leaders in the
movement are very earnest and enthusiastic,
and believe that they can thus concentrate suf
ficient strength to secure the balance of power
politically In this conntry.
Tmcbugologist of the Jeannette expedi
tion found the festive mosquito in tbe near
neighborhood of the north pole.
Seeqhint Mison having been disposed of
the clerk will please sound the case of Bill
Jones, and the hat may be started on its
ronnds.
The coalition party has reaohed the ex
tremity where it would regard a position in
a small-pox ward a grateful mark of dto-
Unction*
The eloquent Calkins desiresthe govern
ment to send anothor expedition to Arctio
regions. Let tho procession move, with
Calkins in command.
. .. . . . i out to about 4 inches apart In the row. During
gated ass. It to refreshing to know that the early weeks of growth sorghum Is delicate
the Supreme Court has not lost all respect | and require* a little more care than corn. But
for law. j once under way it require ; no extra care.
Mna. Scoyiu,e. Guitean’s sister, has be
come creaky, and her brother John has
hidden her eway from liar husband.
Abthub deserves oredit for doing a part
of hto duty towards Fitz John Porter. He
is the only President who has had tho man*
liness to do that much.
Oub thanks are due the gentlemen con
nected with the Wheeler & Wilton sewing
machine office for a very tasteful and
much appreciated remembrance.
Ah exchange asks. What will be done
with tho officer who permitted Howgate to
essape? He will be promoted, and have a
brass medal hung about hto neek.
The Cincinnati tewentydonr-honr roller
skating oontest, go-as-you-please, olosod
with the following soon: N. L. Clark,
218 miles; Pyle, 207; Helices, 172; Btivere,
158.
The Peruvian business has not panned
out much. Blaine was doing a title red-
hot diplomacy. “Guano Joke" was trying
to steal, and Grant, Blair and Boutwell ap
pear to have been assisting him.
Ex-Gov. Btjleock
working for n position
mission.
in Washington
the '.firiiT com-
Oua old-time friend, Hugh King,
editor of the Tuskegee Hail, to a candi
date for Secretary of State in Alabama. If
the Democratic party wants a gentleman
whose ability and integrity would reflect
honor nponthe office, and one who de
serves grateful recognition at the hands of
hto people, Hugh King is the man.
Con. MsBccnnus E. Thobhtoe still cries
ont against the bulldozing Democracy.
Yet he has had an imported editor in the
State for the past four or five months and
he has been knocked down bnt once,
and then by a gentleman of liberal tenden
cies. Anybody knows that one deter
mined and industrious bulldozer could
have put in better work than that
It will be remembered that Arthur asked
Congress to pass some stringent legisla
tion by which he was to be permitted to
use the United States army as a posse
comitatus as against citizens. Tho Senate
very promptly ana properly refused the
request It now turns out that Arthur de
sired to use the army, which to needed to
protect settlers against the bloody Apaches
and other tribes, to back np a lot of thiev
ing and murdering depnty United States
marshals, such fellows afifcwarm about up
per Georgia. Aa Arthur could not get the
army he let fly the only thing he had abut,
viz.: a proclamation. Of this, a late dis
patch says:
President Arthur's “Cow Boy" proclamation
la bitterly denounced in' Dakota and Arizona
m unjust and insulting to the people of Cochise
county m well m the entire territory. The
Tucson Afar asserts that a band of United
States depnty marshal! were guilty of outright
murder. When the sheriff attempted to arrest
them they lnterpo^d their official positions,
and resisted the execution of tho law. This is
what callfwl out tho procl&xn&tloii.
There la ono thing a few of the Georgia dally
papers do that is not done by dally papers In
any other State. And that to, purchasing cor-
respondents in every town and village to write
np local news, at the enormous price of a "free
copy of the paper one year 1" It la a very small
business. It strikes at tho very life of the local
paper, and Is therefore unprofessional m well
M unkind.—MUedgcriUe Recorder.
The above complaint, we make bold to
6ay, to not well laid. It the custom al
luded to appertains to a few Georgia dal
lies alone, it to an evidence of enterprise
which their readers and patrons will
doubtless charge up to their credit. Many
of the Northern and Western papers glean
their entire territory for local news by tel
egraph, and we would adopt the same
methods if telegraphic tolls in this section
were placed at a figure that would justify
the outlay. Aa it to, we are compelled to
utilize the Intelligent correspond
ent. Hto compensation to •
matter that concerns him more than
other people, and If be is satisfied there
the matter may properly rest. But we
cannot see that this business to small or
unprofessional. There can he nothing
little or unprofessional in the conductors
of a public journal making every effort to
give to Its readers the freshest, news ofgre
day. This Is the very life of a daily jour
nal. “Time and tide wait for no man" to
true if it to trite, and a Journal that waits
a week to get news which It may obtain
in a tew hoars will soon find its way to
the rear, in the sharp competition for
public favor. We cannot afford to
wait for days in order to get news of
interost from the columns ol onrest^gmed
contemporary, tho Milledgeville Re
corder, even though it may strike at the
life of that paper. The newspaper of the
day is a business enterprise, and to bo
successfully managed must be controlled
by the rules which govern all other kinds
of business. The weekly journals in
Georgia have taken to themselves the ad
vertising from tho county officials in their
own counties and in some cues adjoining
counties. This source of revenue was
onco tapped by tbe dailies. If with this
advantage and the further one of time to
make up a good paper the provincial press
must lose its life, it may be a practical
illustration cf the “survival of tbe fittest.”
We take leave of the subject with tho
observation which it gives us pleasure to
record, that neither onr Milledgeville
contemporary, or any of our weekly ex
changes seem to be in a declining condi
tion.
As a class, they are robust, healthy,
fresh and even saucy ; in fact, they are ■
far ahead of the weeklies which come to
us from auv other State, and we are
proud of the lact.
PERSONAL..
—It is alleged that the venerable Cora
Pearl !* abont to come out as a circus rider.
—George W. Cable, tbe novelist, is su
perintendent of a Presbyterian Sunday-school
in New Orleans.
—It hai just been learned that Darwin
left an autobiography. It will be published as
soon aa arrangements can be made.
—It is reported that Pauline Lucca baa
been engaged tor an operatic season in this
country, beginning next fall.
—Mahone had tbe honor of casting the
decisive vote against tho eligibility of ex-Con-
federates to hold offices in the regular army. -
—The Cincinnati Gazette reports that
most of the Cincinnatians think It la Billy Em
erson, the song and dance man, who to dead.
—The Marquis de Chambrun and wife
aro about to visit Yorktown. Madame de
Chambrun la tho granddaughter Of Lafayette.
—Frank Stringfellow, onco a Rebel spy,
to now the rector of an Episcopal church at
Farmvttlc, Va. lie is said to have killed more
than a hnndrcd Federal soldiers during tho
war.
—Blair, the New Hampshire Senator,
to a lobbyist who has been trying for years to
have his tail caught somewhere, and finally
baa succeeded.
—The New York Star thinks Minister
Lowell to abont os scaly a fish as the historic
codfish In the Massachusetts State house he re
cently alluded to.
—The voice of Mrs. Elizabeth Cady
Stanton to about to bo hashed throughout tho
land. 8he sails for Europe In a few days, to be
gone two years.
—Dr. Hans von Bulow to again about
to attempt the part of Benedick, the married
man. He has lately bocomo engaged to Frau*
letn Schauzcr, an actress at the Mcinlneen
Court Theatre.
—A Washington letter to the New York
How the CowSsoyr Deceive.
Territorial Entcrprite.
Gen. Sherman's reception at Tombstone,
Arizona, was unique but interesting. A cow-
boyish Individual rode up to hie currUge and
asked if Gen. Sherman was Uiere. Being
swered In the affirmative, he pulled u
and fired two shots In rapid succession,
was a signal for a volley, and for a few i
the air vibrated with the sharo report of pistol
shot*, bursting of anvils and Chinese rockets.
\€i
Gen. Grant's Losses,
® Gath.
Meeting a business acquaintance ot Gen.
Grant on my return to New York, I a«ked him
if Grant's financial condition was improving.
“I think not,” he replied. “I think that Grant
and all hi* sons iiavo been losers by their spec
ulations. From what I hear, 1 doubt if Buck
Grant (otherwise Ulysses, Jr.) now possewea
any more money than what her father gave hts
wilo. For a little while thing* were !>oomitig
with him, bat Grant and his sons and all their
Driven teSnictde by Haste.
Salt Lake Tribune.
Pay before yesterday some wretch tied a tin
kettle to the tail of John Fallon's dog. 7 ho
dog started ott with the kettle about 3 o'clock
in the afternoon, and after running up to Bark
City and down to Farmington, came t*ck In
the evening without the kettio and very much
fatigued. The guests at tho Clift House extend
ed their consolation to tho dog, who was mani
festly In need of sympathy. Everything went
well with the dog until about 9 o clock, when
a lady from Juab was requested to play "The
Irish Patrol" on the piano. She played Ihe
faint, weird music of the opening l ar>. when
the dog began to prick up hto ears. The girl
strolled by degree* into the heavier staccato
passages which Indicate the near approach of
the advance guard, and with a yelp of terror
he rose up and went through tho window, tak
ing sash,pantaand all, under the plauxthlo im-
presbion that tho tin kettio was again advanc
ing upon him from the rear. The dog ran Into
the Jordan and suicided by drowning.
conferred the drarees on Mosgan. who
queutiy exposed the Mason secrets.
—James Russell Lowell Is, as an au
thor, Intolerant of antetrraDh-hunteis. He
d . rop * • Uu 5? a enclosed by collectors Into hia
stamp-box and tosses their letters Into hto waste-
gaper basket—which to an excellent place for
—Mr. Pinchback tells hto colored col
leagues of Louisiana that they had
where * % — —*
, Ireland,
sat of Ed-
ihue who, with hto brother, gave Us
where else.
—The New York Sun thinks Davis
sffisgsas"j* sflwiasa
State* Senate, and It sees no reason to think hit
votes would not be cast with a strict regard te
the homogeneity of Us constituent*
—Richard Burke, ot
In whose veins runs blood akin to .
mund Burke, wm married in San
laatwaek toon
city. This was
James Donohue
gaslight to San Francisco.
—Gen. Grant and family will, for the
summer, occupy a cottage on the farm of his
ai»i&?ffiMKS.asrsiSsa
Salem, Westchester county. The farm com
prises abont two hundred acres of land, upon
which great improvements are being made.
-Ex-Governor Hendicks has written a
letter to a friend In Washington In which he
predicts the nomination and election to Con-
gwssof Mr. William E. Engllih, a son Of Hon.
william H English, from tho Indianapolis dis
trict Mr. Hendricks adds that tho greatest in-
terest in political results is appearing, and that
the Democrats ol Indiana “aro hopeful—almost
confident”
—Proctor Knott, it was thought, would
retire from Congress atth* close of his present
term and enter the race for governor of Ken-
... determination and will bo
Tke dtotrioi to good for
about 5,000 Democratic majority.
—Bishop Green, of Mississippi, who
hai been preaiding over a council of the Epis
copal Church at Vicksburg, to eighty-four years
old and hM been a preacher for sixty-two years.
He to now and hM been for thirteen years past
the chancellor of tho university of (he South
and Is tho sole survivor of the ten Southern
bishops who foundid that Institution in 1S60.
Hto mental faculties are still remarkably vigo
rous and active for one of hto age.
Inactivity ot tbe Pnblic Boot-Toe.
Springfield Republican.
The strangest thing to that of all the men
whom Shiphcrd buttonholed,not one seemed to
SKr*§^°£C»^2fi! morUU * eWm '
Colonel IugentoirV Gloomy Future.
Harrisburg Patriot.
The temperature to very low nowadays when
Washington has not a prospective duel to talk
about. Colonel Ingersolf will give tho lie
direct to the wrong man some day, and than
he will bo given an opportunity of making a
^ersoatd investigation of the question he to so
Two Backets of Gold Dost for Drinks.
Virginia dig Chronicle,
The Tictoritqdes of s prospector's life are
well exemplified in* the career of Maj. W.
Downle, the founder of DownlevlUe, who has
set out for Wood river. The Major hM been
Immensely wealthy several times. At times In
the tludi days of Sierra county It hM taken two
buckctsful of gold dust to pay his liquor bills
after a single night's spree. Now he is pen
niless and hM gone to the new gold fieldsof
Idaho.
gracious i’^H
slept with the money under my pillow, and
the next morning when I got ready to start for
the bank the money was gone. Some burglars
lhad token ittiuringthenigiit. An fcoarufto
-"Jardthe bank burst. Did you ever in or ot
vucbaplece of good luck?” “Luckl Why,
yon Um-paat coin all the same," "Yea, mb
I don't you ase (bay oaaght (te bmaiaia, and, on
condition of my not prosecuting them, they re
turned mo fifty cents on tho dollar. Tho bonk
panned out only twenty-two. There's no use
talking, Hannah, between savings banks and
| robbers, I’ll take my chances with the burg.or* .
every time-"
Senator Blair ulstnrbcd In Mind,
Washington special to the Tints.
made for himself in theChlU-Fera business
to not pleasant nor satisfactory to him. Sena
tor Eaton, of Connecticut, to hero an interested
looker-on. It to understood he will go before
the committee this week to tell what he knows
about 8hipherd and hto guano scheme.
A Colored Cbnreh fn New York.
If. r. Sun.
St Phillip’s church to the only Episcopal
church for colored people In New York. ItU
_ tsels ‘
street, just below the Tombs, It wm burned In
1821, and rebuilt the following year. The sort*
ety removed to the presentbnlld!=c to 1857.
The Mulberry Street chuich to one of those
brood, stcepleless structures common In the
church archlture of lower New York. It to
built of brick. A small section of the front wall
to depressed, and two-picccd stano pillars rap-
lijiSiSSSS
for. The ch
copalian. The
The society Includes some of*tSe* wealthiest
colored people of the city and neighborhood.
Ono of the moneyed member* was Peter Bay,
who died recently. He was for many years
a superintendent with Lortllard. Another
member of wealth wm David Rosell,
who also died recently. The
comes from all quartets, some of the most in
fluential and zealous members being from
Brooklyn and New Jersey. Among the prom
inent supporter* and members of the church
may be mentioned Dr. P. A. White, Jeremiah
Bowers, Charles G. Bowser, William If. Smith,
Brown, the Rev. John Petorson, who to the
assistant minister, and Aaron F. Potter. Mr.
Thomas has charge ot the waiters in all of Mr.
Hilton’s hotel*, and to a man of means. -Mr.
GuignontoaHaytian, and a wealthy druggist
of Wllliamsbuigb. The church Is an inde
pendent organization and self-sustaining. The
best pews rent for S2S a year. A tingle collec
tion amounted to <350. One of the
gave 11,000 to pay for the rcconstru '
chaucd. The society owns the
which the church stands and the
nine lots fn Thirtieth street,
and Seventh avenues.
A Woman's Romance, In A Nutshell'
■ Hcwm introduced to her at a bill; she
danced with him and forgot him.
She met him again at a reception, was rein
troduced and remembered she had seen him
before. Where? She knew not Yet for some
moments hto arm had been around her slender
waist*
At the reception she talked with him, and
found him dull. She looked at him. He
might be called'handaome, but was awkward.
When be sat down, he was prone to sprawl.
He Mood with hto head forward and stumbled
ungracefully in hto walk. Sh ‘
annoyance, left him and went
serratory with a man
She found him one
friend. Site converse
cntlfntcrest. 11c rati
and hU feet were painfull;
dainfully turned her ahe
Presently she row logo one
kerchief. He bent lightly ft
tt up almost before tt touch' ,
an intimate friend of the house 1 _ .
see her home. He arranged her cloak with
eager deference, and site smil’d. He trampled
on her skirt oa sho passed out of the door, and
"to frowned.
They arrived abhor gate; he pushed St open,
took off his hat and almost ran away.
Cue day she was coining home from a shop
ping expedition with a small parcel in her
Mini, bowed awkwardly, blushed, and asked
if he might take her parcel. He did not say
much, but listened in adoring silence. When
ie left ehe loughed and said he wa* lntolera-
ly stupid, but not a bore.
Pretty soon he began to coll often, and at
tended her to the theatre and opera when she
would permit him. He wa always near her,
and anxiotw to be of servie He wa* manly,
and among men tcfavorite. Tie rale we'd, but
danced indifferently. The (her girls laughed
at him. but he did not heed it. 8he danced
perfectly, was talkative, daring, impulsive.
She snubbed him, and shook him off for
more accomplished men.
Ho finally said he loved her. She laughed,
raid "Impossible.’' tormented him, refused
more eligible suitors, and finally nuirried him
nud adored him for oil time.
Of such to the nature of woman.
* M»b law Am«nc Sparrow).
Otctusbore {Kg.) Messenger.
A Citizen related to us yosterdar an Interest
ing incident concerning the Engifah *parrowa,
which of late years have becorao mo numerous
in this city. A few days ago he noticed In one
of the trees In bis yard a number of the birds
butily engaged In building a nest, evidently on
the co-oj-erative plan. Soon anothor sparrow
Ot the same kind, but evidently not of their
clique—probably an idler or drone—eftme
along, and from an adjaBent bough stood a ml
watched the modus opereudi of the ncst-bulld-
lng. Itmay be thr.t he ventured a suggestion
or made «ome slurring remark, lor at once tho
wholo number set upon him and whipped 1dm
to soundly that he deemed tt prudent to leave.
The gentleman thought no more of tt until yes
terday, when hto attention was called to a bird
■upended in midair stthaNteatouM tt*
neck from tttoftwmo bough. The former Inci
dent wm recalled; and now the question arissc
Is there mob law among birds, and wm thU
one a victim? Ho mayhave ham.-ed himself
accidentally, bnt this to not probably
Burglars And Saving* Banks.
San Francisco Pott.
‘The fact to," said old Mrs. Phipps who is
down to Frisco on a visit, “the fact!*, my dear
Mrs. Skidmore, I had tho narrowest escape
from being mined the other day you ever
heard otF "Oh, how nice," said Mr*. 8., pour
ing out another cup. “How wm tt?” 'Why,
you know I sold our house and lot last month,
and had the money all ready to deposit in the
savings hank next rnqmlng, winch was the
HI next morning* t*
renr day of its failure." “Good i
lent with the
Tbe Kate’s Desire.
.Yric Haven Register.
Down at Daps Ood last summer Cfc
_ Down at tape coa last summer cnauncey M.
Depew heard ofa rough sklpperon ft whaling
voyage who, when obstinate, cou:i sec m>th-
one day: "Thar
echos;” and thecap-
s blow:; and I don’t
SS;
: mate yells
ing. The mate shouted out one day:
she blows and tharshe breeches;" and the enp-
tolnMjs: "I don'tsecno blows and IdouH
see no breeches." Pretty m
out: “Thar she blows and 1
the captain said: “I don’t ace no bl
don’t see no breeches." Again the r
ont: “Thar she blows and thar ahe l
the captain odd: “Rato, if you think t
blows and thar she breeches, you can take the
boat and go for her." The mate took tMe boat
and brought alongside a whale which tried out
eighty barrels of oil, and the <
“Mate, you have done well, and *
tioned to theojoncr; you will boo
and perhaps wwareed.” The mate
“Captain Jones, I don’t want no mention, and
I don't want no compliment, and Idon’t want
no reward; alll want Is eosoaon civility, and
that of the d—deal, commonest kind."
_ " A belle Late.
fTall Street Few.
Whentheoll excitement was at Its height
hundreds of Ohio farmers drilled wells In
search of the llqnid fortnno. and In a very few
cases the farmer came out ahead ofexixiiises
Onjof the prarert farms in Medina edSty was
"metLhlt** Salih, who kept the even
tenor of his way and looked upon the excite-
ment as ungodly. One night some ot the hoys
emptied a barrel of oil into a spring on the cl-
and then finally asked him if he
“ ; down. The farm wm
ly.bnt t th.^,i^^Sfer“ UnSOd -
"Well. I don’t want to say Tin sorry," ho
ralmly replied, "but I'll admit thru it the Lord
bandn t beena lectio late In answering my
mlght hayegone to York .-'(ate on a
Bernhardt’s Bridal.
Paris 1 Vasp.
tounamg.
JJIUnffyottr own business." she raid angrily.
cnL
t know r*
want a fad-
hl mai«r ^to^l^i'n
gone to New York an* mekkin trip toAigeril
How you sumx>s<» T i»jin t*-.n v*
The^Ud^n toE^. 1 She wanted a father
* - her little girl* had
to have one If tt took
an4 mrins " llt
Nanette said: "Mon Dieu, madamc. I con
AjJCgywIsWsSfP'avc a r»dcr or the
Sara toft her 1
see," tha raid:
JSfSSi '
which is _
Kfitc." tbo
^‘Sulcbone?
cities, cont
gain*. I-o\
of S2.9 per cent!
iltttbnnr of at 8 per cent ag&int sj.9 nor
NffJ e i)rirons mak« r
against one of V> per coat. '
where business is i
a gain of !
—Rx-Govemcr
proposes to sj^end a nullioa
vineyard iu that State. "
*