Newspaper Page Text
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The Alpha retra SVee Pr<v» ind the
Augusta Ohrralcie are oroesng sword*.
Their Dtunuiacsu IbLidos are 4 mpe-ral
with Reid and silver, respectively.
The South Is today producing os
much coal, Iron ore and pt* trot as the
entire United States produced h 1870.
The annual eonvenfon of the ordina
ries of Georgia will meet In S vajuutb
and at Tjfroe the third TVednuday lu
May.
The Fiftydhlid oonsress, ov.r which
Speaker OrBtp presided, spent MO.OOO,-
000 less them the F&ywnMd con
gress, over which. Tom Bwd (resided.
r*
BB. u.k ifnahneafi
the \yeee:lt telegraph
THE BACON TELEGRAPH
PUBLISHED EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR
AND WEEKLY.
Office 569 Mulberry Street.
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH—Delivered
by cantors In the city, or mailed,
portage free, 60 cents a month; *1.76
for three months; *7 for one year;
every day except Sunday, $5.00*
THE TELEGRAPH—Trl-weekly, Mon
days, Wednesdays and Fridays, or
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays,
tihres months *1; six months, $2; one
year, *4.
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH—By
mall, one year, *2.00.
THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH—By
mall, one year, *1.
6UBSCRIPTIONS-Payable In advance.
Remit by postal order, check or reg
istered letter. Currency by mall at
risk of sender.
COMMUNICATIONS should be ad
dressed and all orders, checks, (limits,
etc., made payable to
THE TELEGRAPH.
Macon, Gs.
case upon the aignmeot they may be
able to make? Why. are they so tax-
ious >io couilol KMlt; Ml the pM-piC,
not by the utren^lh of tthn.r argument,
but 8ty appeals to am vqpMinrtl na
tional prejudice which has no relation
whatever to the ranks of the present
controversy? It Is bard ito risrt-pe the
conclusion that tire men and newspa
pers who are urging independent free
oo'.ndlge by the United States know that
their cause Is a wank one in the forum
of reason, and are willing that the
country shall suffer the oo*SK*joen«s
of a grievous mistaike rather than that
they themselvni (hull suffer a personal
defeat
A WEAK OAt’SE.
tXlhe question of whether or not the
mints of the t.'nUvd Stutes should he
opened to the froe coin-age of silver Is
engaging tho attention of our people
ml mi wit to the exclusion of every other
public question. In its essence, It Is
not a question of polPtlcs. It Is t ques
tion with which men who have taken
the time or lead opportunity to fully
Inform themselves are batter qualified
to (Deal tham the mass of ttse people. lu
other woods, It t« a scientific question.
Nrrcrthcft’Ss. It Is * question an the
solution of which the prosperity of the
court ry very Vingely depends, and
which must 4k> settled hy the vote* of
the people. If the people make a mis
take in answering it, the consequences
to .them will be disastrous. It Is a
question on which there Is a very rad.
leal difference of opinion. Perhaps the
people nre nearly equally d'V.ded upon
ft. Under these dtvtOTVtiawt-N, h seems
to us that the question should be dis
cussed purely on It* merits; that news
papers, whatever it-hrfr rlow, should
endeavor to bring ^irils only to the at-
tetffon of their readers, and arguments
based on those facts, tn order that the
verdict of the people may embody their
calm Judgment.
The Telegraph believes that tiu> free
coinage of sliver, under rood'
which would Insure the equal use of
gold as well as s tiver as primary mootty,
would lie of Immense benefit, not only
to the people of the United Htates. but
to those of the whole wortd, tin that tt
would udKm.te exenjuae nud rr.jke
trade freer. Bat while hoVHnfi this
ophfon, the Telegraph sees nothing but
hariii In free coinage by the United
States alone, for the reason. that tt
would result In giving Mils country a
different etamland of value from those
countries with which its oommeretal
traMaeCtons are largest, thus malting
exchanges difficult a.ad costtiy. While
hokVug itits opinion firmly and eodranr-
ortofi to establish its truth to the Inti
of its ability, the Telegraph txis been
careful not to appeal to prejudice with
the hope of thereby strength suing Its
oouse polltte-lly. It is sorry Ito see that
In opponents are oot equally consider
ate-sorry, heaiuae the otitnomo of the
dispute Is not merely the question of
whether the Telegraph or Its opponenlts
shall trlnmph In the dlacainr.ou, but
whtitoer tlie opinion of the American
people on s question of the utmost 1m
pomaoee shall be expressed Intelll
geotiy.
The chief offender against the rule
which the Telegraph has laid down for
Its own conduct has been the Atlanta
Omerttutlon, wHIdi seems to have tost
s'ght of everything except Its desire to
w.n « partisan triumph. In tit* last
Issue tt practloilly brands every man
who differs with tit in opinion on tivo
outremp- question as s ’Tory," lu the
offensive sense in which shall word was
used duetag the Rinvdotlotmry war.
’Hist '* to ssy, tt charges that overy
man who believes 1hst tit would bo un
wise for the United Stotra to enter
upon the policy of free silver coinage
Indo’mlomfiy Is not an American In
sympathy, but an BngtUhnran. am.l
.woriting In Who interest of the British
government. In doing this, the
nation only borrow* the methods of the
Republican itoteetionlsts, with whom
It was once tn sympathy. It will tie
remembered What for year* the burden
of -A tit argument was that any reduc
tion of the tariff would be in the Inter-
rtit of Orest Britain, and was desired
only by those people In the United
Statm who preferred the fnterest*
Great Brittiln to those of the United
States. At tits last election s major
ity of the people of this country voted
against the Republican policy of pro
tection, and It follows, if there was any
good jewed for thtir omerrlon. tlhat
& majority of the people of the United
States ere not Americans In sympathy,
but Englishman!. TWs fact is enough
to reduce Co absurdity the Republican
claim. It 4s tnoonceivoftile shtat s mi
Jorlty of American* are not Americans
at elL
The ReptibMcaas who made this ns-
seetkm did not Mleve InttstnlUi. They
were merely eppesttag to that nsUoml
prejudice which they thought the
dmmgeet. The same effort ie now be-
log made to uae tbs prejudice againti
Oraat Britain In support of tbs free St-
v » cause. It to an erideuce of the
ood cat
A SERIOUS MISTAKE.
(Mr. W. E. Cadis, of the staff of the
Chicago Record, hats licen writing to
his paper from Georgia a. series of in
teresting letters. In one of these let
ters he expresses bis wurpriso at find
ing so many sound money men In this
Sta te. It scents to him “as it nearly
nil the business men of The state are
supporting the president's financial pol
icy and opposing the flreo coinage of
silver." In the same latter he quotes
tiio views of dipt. W. M. Hammond
of Thomasvllle, Ga., to 1b© effect that
there will .bedcvekipmenta In the next
x months that will bring (together
those of both parties (who agree on
sound money and protection, not only
here, but all over the country.”
That Georgia will be tor sound money
when the quod ion is thoroughly
threshed out sal h«r people fully un-
deiwtand Its merits, we have not the
least doubt, but Chpt. (Hammond falls
jn.to-,1 serious mistake when he a^sauiCs
that sound monqy and iprrtwrtion go
♦nort her They do not either In the
South or other parts of the country.
In the South the men and newspapers
who a few years ngo led In the at (tempt
to commit the Domocrsluio party to
the policy of protection are now lead
ing in the attempt to commit It to the
policy of unlimited tree coinage of oil
ror. The same (Mitts Is true at the
North and lu tlhe West The Chicago
newspaper which during the past has
been the champion of extreme protec
tionism—the Inter Ocean, we mean—Is
now the only Chicago newspaper, so
far as we know, which is advocating
Independent free oolnage. In the East
for savcml graced: km*. the peilttclans
Pemuytivania, without resard to
flirty, hove been protest''onlats first,
and Democrats, Whigs or Republicans
afterwards. This Is no less true aupv
llhan In the pist, and It Is therefore
najiuret than, among nil the Eastern
sen it ora, llwo only tirouM stand out its
champions of the free coinage Idea, and
those two the senators from Peimsyl
(vauln. They, and the men and news
papers in the South who ore working
iwlth them, see tin the effects of khe free
coinage of sSver some of a he same ef
fects that a high tariff brings about,
and for that reason they favor free
coinage. They want trade obstructed.
They want to make It difficult and
ooritiy for ttij cit xen of the Unttad
Smites to exchange wha t his tabor pro
duces for the thing! wthkft he desires
tint are produced by the labor of for-
eignera
When the aitustiloo develops fuither.
the fact that free silver nod protection
go together, not prottotton and sound
money, w.til be patent to everybody,
and in the long run the Democratic par
ty WIN be rcoagnlaret ss the champion
of sound money Just ns It bat been In
the past.
GEORGIA NEWS
AND COMMENT.
The Augusta Evening NVafr favor*
Hon. Clark Howell far congr. w
To be without faults is to be vk non*
friends.
If the fun moon in April hot
bring a fneeae the puchea ure sffe.
(tin* i
Carroll Free Vress
straddling Is past
The
The pr<ii.ty TtUago of Coletr*, r wosts
of haring one of tho beat sebo.,Is>n the
sliafe.
Outhlbert, Eufaula mid iDawsnk nre
all represented at 4iho Albany <w«2tau-
qut this week.
RamesriHe want* a public Ibrary.
loves; the money la books aid not
brick and mortar.
Look out this week for a noth’- epis
tolary effusion from Tom Watsitt to
MOJ. Black.
Tho rnuslo of ,ahe Albany Cbnuauquu
Is tn charge of Mrs. Simmons, Hi noted
teacher and musician of the Iu&ula
Female College.
Tom Reed Is vending out Air Settle
of North Carolina as his agent o undo
the work of Governor iMeKInlei In the
South—so says the Chicago'HonUL
Waycroas Herald: Waycnoss wIU be
ftill of Baptist pretafarors in a fev days.
I-et them came; the e*ty neuds item In
her business.
The .H:linn-ton IMe-tvstgcc at* If a
freese In April should destroy i» fruit
crop tho Atftanta OoustltuUon vlll lay
the Maine at Air. Cleveland’s d-or.
'Mr. J. 8. Cohen, the Atiajitn,J>uma 1’s
Washington oorretiponrtent, is [mniiish-
lng a serlegtiif orttefea on the tnnufac-
tiures of the -South in the Joutial.
Uulon-Reojrder: A tide of shite Im
migration U turning to the S»»lh, nnrl
It may be Mtfetiy est imated thit It wilt
bo offset by nn equal cXodoss>negroes
for years to come.
This I# tho way the Warreqon Clip
per, tho Populist organ, sets It; In
every effort to quiet political,igitatlon
nnd allay bltterucas, iMt.
been the leader.
Within the last ten *
of Savannah have lu<
W per coot, and her
00 per cent. At
urease has been 600 per
years.
In ISin Georg a raised 38.078.000
more butbels of corn . than -★as pro
duced In the tin tee of Ma nK New
Hampshire, Vermont. Alas* husetta
Rhode Island. Owned toot, N( v York,
Now Jersey and Delaware corn lined.
Augusta News: The -Msec l Tele
graph iAvs that business W lu iroring.
That’s the kknlot tdk weH'ka to hear,
brother. Business tn Augusts Is also
tnueh bettet than It has been n some
\time.
ratr
OMil of iqp;
ttw adroeat
a qJvw
Prof. R. Ogden Donemus. of Belltvue
Atedlosl cotlsge. New York city, reports:
“I find that Dr. Price’s Cream Baking
Powder composed of pure materials
and compounded on correct actentutc
principles. Us yield of carbonic sold
gas Is greator than that of any other
powder."
THE BISMARCK DEMONSTRATION
The Bismarck dnmontiralloo In Get-
many seems to be about over, and Ger
mans and foreigners may now take ae
count of tt. It was In many respect*
very renmfrlde. We doubt if at any
fine or in any country any m«n hie
rroexred so many evidences of the <-n-
Ifaaatsstic admiration of Ms country-
men as how Bismarck on tMs oocasion.
Yet tt (a easy to believe that this item
nnstrutlon had In K comparatively Uttle
of the personal attachmert:. Indoid.
Bismarck to not a man to gain the ef
fect Ions of vast nurafaors of men. The
very qualities which made him useful
to his country In so eminent a degree
were qualities which made kt inevitable
tbti personally be ftnuVi tv unpopular
with s large proportion of hla country
men. The explanation of tbs demon
stration tin his honor lies in the tingle
fact ttsit It eras through him the king
cberlahrd tap ration of the German
people for national unity was achieved.
The German Liberal and Socialist may
bate the political policy which Bs-
marek rapt era tits and -which be rath-
lesaly rotor red while be bad the power
to do so, hut they see Germans fast,
and though they may life their polit
ical enemy, thqy aura* refrain from
honoring the asra who made Germany
one and powerful. The German Cler
ical la In a position not very differeot
tt ary seem ho him that Bismarck,
when chancellor, proved himself a ty
rant In his ttreatmeil. of the Oatfcolh
ctkurch, bat in Bismarck out of power
he sees only the founder uf the German
empire. It fk pfatn now that the re ch-
stag, in refuting to puss s resolution
tbsoktng Blstuarek for ids public ser
vices, dd not reflect the feeling of the
German people, tts refusal to poor the
resolution no doubt added greatly to
the fervor and extent of the national
il-mc-nskragloo to his hraor.
APRIL 4, 1895.
i
The Butler Herald says tba when
bird times strikes (be average c'.tlxon
-he first th'ng be does la to stof h a pa
per; the next to tak- bis chi Ur n from
school, and the next to quit pajjfng the
preacher.
'Mr. Joseph BoM’sor of the NrJv York
World and h'.s party have lef Jekyl
Island awl gone hack to Nns York.
Mr. Pul I Iter’s eyesight ft* aln*> t gone
and hn has to bo led to and fre n h!
carriage.
GreenOboro Herald: If we Jiv ze our
friends in Greene eounty by th num
ber who receive and read the
they are -plorttful. Judged by
who help au-tuin it by poylnk ibetr
subsorlptloo, we see not quite i)
utar.
Aetauta Otnmereial: There
olded trade reaction all over
try and the condttoas are
for new activity tn -all the ro
commerce, sd of which presages
of good value* sqd deckled bi
provement.
yietr
ri*
;■ ■ -
.1 . !
m r
the antics of Old Boreas and (the Frost
King about this time Inst year, we-
would my spring Is here.
Savannah 1'ress: Governor McKin
ley’s visit to 8av*utuh ten swaketx-d
quite a spirit of ctMhusluMm among sev
eral prominent white Republicans, who
see In tbs ch ef executive of the buck
eye state a loaslhle prcsUhint. and tlicy
are Stirring tbiemisolvc* for the fonna-
tlon of a protectiem oluli, formed ex-
ohwlvuly of white*, with a view of
oontroH ng the national pip of Geor
gia's first oougr«»lmiiaa dlstirlct.
Augusta News: Do you advertise?
To the. vast majority of poopSe this
question It one of little Import and
one tbit doe* not Interest ih-an lu the
slightest degree; hut to the imvehaots,
business men and nawqpapefa it is a
matter tho; is worthy of d ap consider
ation. To the merchant* mid business
men we confess th-ir kt Is one Unit Ibis
b vn asked ,tHou*inds of times before,
hut with each asktug i-w impvcneo
duet not decrease In the taint. It In a
matter of more moment to them now
■ tern It ever tins bafu.
VETERANS ORGANIZE.
Governor McKinley, during
to Saivunnah. st-n isl that proteotl-
a vital principle of this goi
To this the Savannah rn-ss mak(
tret and says: "Protection,
from being a vital principle, to
gt-r.ras expedient."
Florida t* not alone in h?r
tunes from the from. TheH.
came* thut northern and middle! Call
fomla has suffered a *weire coldL-nip.
and that the apricot crap Is rutuisl mid
prunes, atimossls, grape* and patches
or- badly Injured. It seems that this
winter has beep an exceptionally! hunl
one almost everywhere. t
One good thing about Dr.
Baking Powder la that contents
cans are always full weight It _
th* test of the ocsles as well as every
other.
Hfall: -Mon, u.rre-ry Fob
- 'in hts tnki-n out an oocUlcnt 1-•!Icy
iiu.l n-w •- ... -k.iig -ii vi -, f.j; au -tt'- r
ra.lr* j-t ais ,.t-.. 1
Eitontrsi Metiengw: The otheJ day
an Btittirlou me~*i.tut received u bill
of B>od« from New Yotk. The frfgfct
charge* from New Yortt to M
were between *8 and $9; from Mi^hen
to Eitonton the frelgf* etmrges
between *7 and <8. It cost the
chant nearly as mwti from
Eaton on. over tbo MktRc G-.irgiikrad
Attiantlc road, a distance of e graeen
mile*, as It did from New York; to
Mwrien. over ether routes, a diantoee
of some cue thousand miles. I
Editor Heroin* of d* Oalriona Ouur-
ter grown poeglc: Tbe patch and par
trees ore row In frill Moom and the lat
ter ntmow in ftdl (ref; th* huds of
other trees are bursting; the gram Is
potting forth; downers are blooming;
garden auas Is growing; wa'- rmeUr-
and Pirn are being pi in ed; tho b ims-
man baa Ukl away bis gun; th- ror
fisherman H overhauling his tackle;it
first picnic party has ventured fafi
.f .t w f-r a recoil-,r ...u
Gen. Gordon Ask* that the Old Sdillera
Form New Oampsi
Headquarters United Confederate
Veteran*, New Orleans, La., March 26th,
1SS5.—The following l» Gen. J. B. Gor
don's address to the United Confederate)
Veteiana, and to all tthe ex-soldters and
sailors of the late Confederate State*
of America. It wa* published sknulta-
neously all over the south, on the 6th
day of September, lti)l. with the view
of calling -die attention o fveterans In
every southern state to the importance
uf forming camps without delay, and
of appealing to them to Join the benev
olent, social and historical organiza
tion of United Confederate Veterans.
Any (totedks or Information desired,
copies of constitution or blank* wanted,
will he promptly furnished by applying
to Gen. George Moorman, adjutant gen
eral and chief of staff. New Orleans, La.
Correspondence solicited.
GEN. GORDON'S ADDRESS.
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 3, 188*.
To the Kx-Sollders and Saltan of the
Confederate States of America:
The convention of delegates from the
different states which assembled in
New Orleans, June 10, 1889, effected a
general organization known as the
United Confederate Veteran*. It to de
signed as an awoclatlon of all bodies
uf ex-Confederate veterans and sailors
throughout the Union. The convention
adopted a Constitution and did me the
great honor of electing me genera! which
position I -accept will peculiar grati
fication. Preliminary to trie l»aue of
any orders I wish to call general at
tention to the
OBJECTS OF THE ASSOCIATION,
and to enlist In their accomplishment
the active oo-operatlon of not
only ever survivor of southern
armies, but abaci that large con
tingent of sons of veterans *bo,
too young to un («-.„! ved the
baptism of fire, have neeverthelere re
ceived with you tbe baptism of suffer
ing and sacrifice.
The find article of tbe constitution of
the association declares: "The object
and purpose of this organisation wilt
be strictly social, literary, historical,
and benevolent. It will endeavor to
unite In a general federation all asso
ciations of die Confederate veterans,
sollders and sailors now In existence
or hereafter to be formed; to gather
authentic data for an impartial history
of the war between the (Kates; to I-re
serve the rellaa or meenentoes of the
same; to cherish the ties of friendship
triad should exist (among th* men who
bare shared common dungem, common
suffering and privations; to care for
tbe dtiakbfied oral extend * helping
hand to the needy; to protect the widow
and orphan and to rooks <ojm1 presti-ve
(the record of the service* of every
member, a* for as possible, of these
i of our cararadra who have preceded us
! |n rurally."
The toot (article provides that neither
dtocussion of political or rellgoo* sub-
: 1 is (1 . Uf political action khall be
1 permitted in the ocgnntoadoa and any
association violating that provision
•frail forfeit tits membership-
GOOD OBJECTS.
Comrades, no argsunent Is needed to
secure for those objects your
enthusiastic endorsement. They have
burdened your thought* for many
yeans, you have ctierlsiied them
!s sorrow, poverty and humtH-uton,
In the face of misconstruction you
have held them In your hearts with the
strength uf religious convictions. No
mlsjudgmento con defeat your peaceful
purposes foruhe future. Your a*p I ra
tions leave bSt*b lifted by the mere force
and urgency ol surrounding conditions
to a plane far aboge bile paltry con
sideration of partisan triumphs. The
honor of the American republic, the
just powers of trie federal government,
the equal rights of states, the integrity
of the constitutional union, live sanc
tions of law and tbe enforcement of
order have no class of defenders more
true and devoted than the ex-ooldlers
of the south and their worthy dtarend-
tints. But you realize the great truth
that a people without the memories
of heroic suffering and sacrifices are
A PpOPLE WITHOUT A HISTORY.
To cherish such memories and recall
euoti a pant, whether crowned with suc-
ci-s or consecrated In defeat, to to
Idealize principle and strengthen char
acter, Intensify lova of country and
convert d-ifeut and disaster Into pillars
of tiipport tor future manhood an noble
womanhood. Whether the southern
.people under their changed conditions
may ever hope to witness snootier clv-
lllzatloi which shall equal that which
began wltn their Washington xrol end-
e-1 with their Lee. It !* certainly true
that devotion to their glorious past to
not only tlsi surest guarantes of future
progress and the holiest bond of unity,
but to also trie strongest claim they can
present to the confidence and -epect of
the other sections of the Union.
NON-POLITICAL.
In conclulon I beg to repeat. In sub
stance at least, a few thoughts recently
expressed bv me to die fimto ut-gar-l-
Mtitlar which apply with equal force
to this general brotherhood.
It Is political In no sense except so
far as the word "political” is a syno
nym of the wVird "patriotic." It to a
brotherhood over whlnh the genius of
phllamrophy and -patriotism, of truth
and of Justice will preside; of philan
thropy, because It will succor the dis
abled, help trie needy, strengthen the
weak and cheer the disconsolate; of pa-
trolttom. because It will cherish the
past glories of the death Confederacy
and transmute them Into living Inspira
tions for future service to the living
republic; of truth, because It will seek
to gather and preserve a* witnesses
for history the unimpeachable facts
which shall doom falsehood to die that
truth may live; of Justice, becausu it
will cultivate national as well M south
ern fraternity and will condemn narrow
mlndednesa and prejudice and passion,
and cultivate that broader, higher, no
bler sentiment which would write on
the grave ct every noldter who fell on
either side: ‘Here lie* an American
hero, a martyr to the right as his con
science conceived It.”
general organisation.
I rejoice that a gei&ral awsnliatlon
too lone ncilect«d ihn« h##n .it lut per-
fected. It to a brotherhood which ell
honorable tnea must approve and which
heaven Itself will blrae. I call upon
you therefore to organise In every stale
and community where ex-Confederaies
toy reside and rally to the support of
“ifr e?d peaceful objects of the
United Confederate Veterans, and move
forward until by the power of organi
zation and persistent effort your benefi
cent and Christian purpose.) ere fully
accomplished.
J. B. GORDON.
General Commanding.
SOLMIHHItN 1NDLWR1B8.
Report of (be 8:tosi!oa For tbe Week
Ending April 1, 1809.
Reports to (be Trademnan, Ohztte-
t>o0i, TV-nn., from sU over toe titoutte
for toe week coding April 1. nr* to th*
rtkit (the Ttriow tornkctm of iat>
dtwtrjr (Komiaamr In toe South ere to
netir* operation. There u no ilsueue
In the previously reported Interred In
the (Wtablishment of new o-ewa miq«,
Ttiv? Tradosmao’s ll»’ for «h* pifi «,
lnoludes u cotxoo min -wrt s tUM
capital at Ruuklnghini, N. C., owt|
$100,000 ctiplt.il ut lajkMt*. S ll
«uo -wtiih eoO.uuC C141IUI si M-ftt
ough, Ga., owl utUetv) a.: Aleut
City, Ala., and CafttnavlUe. Ol.
lirg-memu of units are r-pifid,
Newitou, Ala., nwi TV-ad'-siiuiV-, N
Shlptneufs of Southern Iron to Si
orn awl tiVedttrei point* are tner«
'IMio furuace* ore lu fuK oporatib
stookis of pig Iron do no. 1 until—
The output of lumber t* InwejagJ
K.nn- parts of the Sooth, buitin
crease Is Dot general, nor (lo
(fratHte Id favor of mmufacnim I
Aatieng the K1 Important nti t
dutr.e* castoUtoed or hkeorpontdl
ring the week rhe Ttudesunn atoafl
port* the Buffalo Oaal -ind Coke Ol
piny of FalrnrouDt. W. Va.. era
$.100,000; a ouatou costtpress at Pdl
Tr-X , to call $1.10,tWO, unri a 1'^
no tape to* it Dublin, Oufuin
Tampa, Ha., costing $130,000, sDdfl
Nkuional Stir.iw H er Conv;uny «f •
ta, Ga.. with $30,000 capiMl.
A $30,000 toltiiono tartar} win
tablshul at Orinndo, Fla., otri r
with $10,000 capital at Ook.nfl
Tradesman aim reports «
ton mill at Greer Depot, 8. Cr
Idea (fiery at Brunmrick. Ga., ■
works ait Oba-ttkinooga. Toon., aitir
lting faotory at Alierdren. Wjj
Tex., nnd 8l*tervllle, W. Va. Be‘
plant* w.'U tie .latubltiroi a' —
ton, Ala., Atihuitu, Ga.. \ - -t-cr.-S,■
Brlqol, Toon.. Kaufman, Tt-tiT
Chirlot.toevllle Vs., flosiring Bill
Holland tt--. M sa.nwl Alexaalrii.l|
an ice f.ititory at Cullman. AuJ
itracWnc shops at Kir-xrlne, Ito
and Houston, Tex. C eil ro , n *|’T
be op'D -d Dear IliW-nvitl -. hf
Plt.-riiurg, TV-nn„ San Aatetttei
naul Sutton, W. Va. .MasoplJ
rompaDleishive boon ctein'-r-<i*to
pn, Ftii.. nnd Ooftveston. Tex.. tuT
at Greentiioro, Ala., and F-nfito
Fla., n ebon factory ot Proitt
Ga., and woodworking plarca «
M ils, TVnn., Knuftnan, tfU'
Th -miuvlllc, N. C.
Among now building* of out
the Trad.wman report* tiu* n -*>
at LMitte Rook, Ark., South 1™
Teno.. and Heu*non, Tex., totil
Aitlanto. Ga., nnd Chettanoogte to
an ofltice building alt Odnflg
nqrt n school building at Mt. nto
Tex.
REPUBLICANS WIN-
Detroit, Mich, April L-' T J 1 L
been the quietest election *W? “
trolt and Michigan for ye* 1 * "
city not enough Interest was 1
fested to bring out more t«*
the registered vote. Report* t r
state show that ewn lea* lr te ' —
tnanlfrated and that the
will not average more thas
of the registered vote. John »•
Ian, Republlca nand civic f«r
candldate for Detroit p*UceJ
baa a plurality and l*i« cie^
claimed by 4,000 majority. J
B. Moore of Lapeer U
of the supreme court by a-
Jority. as are also the ts-v
can candidate* for .regent* <* „
verslty, Roger W. UuU-'™'*’
Charles H. Heckler ■
A MERCHANT’S BUtU^Sj
Lrochtfiinr. April
Cheatham, a merchant.or “JLjg
commuted auickie t>yn\fht *>J
dote ot laudanum. He left * l !J
Inic that ht* flaradaJ
more thrfb bejcould ^ear. He
wife and Krent children. _
Georgia x a £o«l <Uu ** 1 r:, ^ ia j5
profpcaa the fieatfi l*- 4
«f 1st* year*. Sbm tt IW bgj
la th* Union east at *»**■
having warty 00.000 *1** K JT,
territory- to 1880 Urn
of proparity wws k
It had tnereereai (o tByjj |
rctltural kinds, live •*** 1 J
mphrawots Iwtressrtl •» T l*5