Newspaper Page Text
The Bulloch Herald
Vol. I.
CULTIVATING SUGAR CANE
Department of Agriculture Sends
Letters to Ordinaries*
The question of the importance of
growing sugar cane has been discussed,
somewhat, in the leading papers of the
state in the last five weeks, and to pro¬
cure information on this subject thus
Department has sent oat circular letters
farmers who have grown cane. We
have found it almost impossible to ob
tain such information as we desire, and
yet, we have the names of several
ers of thii product who have made some
successful, as well as encouraging, re
•alts.
We only cite one instance as an ex
ample- we visited the farm of Captain
m T r a . ne8 U tv
’ ’
and found that be . bad , , la) 1>A
planted :u sugar cane.
Last year Captain James had 105 acres
and henade 400 gallons per acre, and
told hi 1 crop at an average of 25 cents
per galoa, which wonld be fiOO per
acre. The cost of manures was $6.00
per acu.
Suppse we divide the amount of pro
ductioi by one-half, then we receive
$50 pe acre, or fonr times as much from
cotton
We re not an alarmist, nor do we ad¬
vise th production of one crop over an¬
other, at the time has come when we
most istabiish markets for oar farm
prodntg.
The lumber and turpentine interest
have rken up the time and attention of
Sonthcn, Southeastern and South
westen Georgia for a number of years,
These adust ries have opened up a large
srea •! land which will naturally be
utiliad, and of course in the nature of
s
try . Ybat will we do with these lauds
it a qtst^on of vast importance. We
can cot aford to cultivate all of them in
cottob^or the demand is not enough to
affordthe farmer adequate prices to
make i,v»pfitable.
Undr these conditions we must look
to the using of such crops as will meet
with i decided demand to fill the de
mandof oar own wants.
Uuxnry. Right or Wrong.
Difussing the right or wrong of
luxur in The North American Review.
Profrsor F. Spencer Baldwin, a Boston
univrsity authority on economics,
coma to these conclusions-.
“ here are justifiable and there are
nnjatifiable luxuries. that
“n general it may be laid down
a lxury which contributes to the effi
eiecy of the individual in tbe widest
sene and which does not impose on so
cief for thm satisfaction of its demands
anunwhoKAoine and degrading form of
la lor is perfectly justifiable.
“This sanction of luxury is not to be
st etched to cover unlimited self in
dilgence. The part played by rational
sef sacrifice in the development of char¬
acter is not to be overlooked. Constant
sef indulgence is demoralizing.
“But in general a man has a right to
spend money for anything that enriches
and diversifies his life, and thus aids in
the developing and rounding out of his
personality, provided the labor that is
required for the production of tbe arti¬
cles in question be agreeable and innoc¬
uous.
“On the other hand, a luxury that de¬
moralizes the individual or calls for a
noxious form of labor is unjustifiable. ”
A Forget/nl Spouse.
Mrs. Bilkins—1 never saw such a for
getful man in my life aa you are. The
clock has stopped again.
Mr. Bilkins—That’s because yon for
got to wind it.
Mrs Bilkins—You know very well.
Mr. Bilkins. that 1 told you to remind
me to wind it. and you forget about it
—New York Weekly
in|ur*<i innocence.
“That, sir,” exclaimed the indignant
merchant, ‘‘is what I call a aratuitons
falsehood.”
“It’a nothing of the kind ' ” replied
tbe unscrupulous salesman “I get a
salary and a commission for telling that
falsehood.”—Washington Star
one Ear Better Than Two.
A well known nrofeasor assarts that
the smallest intervals of sound can be
better dMbnftMWith d.et.ugauhed with one ear than
trith both
Dec.
SMART AT SPELLING.'
I
A LESSON IN ORTHOGRAPHY THAT
.
WAS DEARLY BOUGHT.
How n Couple of Shrewd Sharpers
Won Thousands of Dollars by
Working the Dictionary For Game
Until They Were liron&ht to Grief.
_r.£a=:— - - a
“ What do yoa mean _ paper or mn .
sic r inquired a smart young man who
poses as an authority on all topics.
“Music. Binging, of course/’ replied
the man in search of orthographical in
formation.
“C-h-o-i-r,” responded the smart
y° m) g man decisively.
“Q*tt*i*r-e, ’’ chimed in a red bearded
man wbo was bns y I°°Ling at some
books.
“You are referring to paper.** said
the smart young man, locking sadly at
the interrupter. “We were speaking
about music.*’
“I mean music, too.’* said the red
bearded man calmly: “q-u-i-r-e. losing
in concert.**
The smart young man's expression
changed from sadness to contempt
“You had better consult your diction
ary,” he said with a sneer.
“Never mind,” retorted the red
bearded man. “My way of spelling may
be a little old fashioned, but yon will
find it correct according to Webster.
You will also find it correct according
to the Century Dictionary, and if I am
not mistaken it is likewise given in the
Standard. Your way is all right too. ”
The smart young man gave a sniff of
scorn. “Josh Billings and yon should
have collaborated on a phonetic spelling
book. ”
“Look here." said the red bearded
man. “I’ll bet yon $3 that Webster’s
latest spells it ‘q-u-i-r-e. * "
The money was put up and Webster’s
international brought out. There it
W as, “q-u-i-r-e, to sing in concert.*’
“I didn’t mean a verb. ” said the
Bmart young man. glowing white
around the ears. “Where is the noun ?’
They found that. too. although it was
marked obsolete. Then the smart young
man wilted.
“I won’t take your money.” said the
red bearded man. handing back tbe
bills. ft 4 My name is Bell. George T.
Bell. I have bad educational advantages
which you probably never received, and
i spent several months learning the
different ways to spell that word. Sev¬
eral years ago I was on the secret serv¬
ice. My partner and I had been on tbe
trail of a pair of sharpers who had a
repertory of ‘con* games that would
have made the oidinary bnnko man look
sick. They were men of far more than
ordinary intelligence and had the man¬
ners of cultured men of the world. The
way we happened to get them waa a
pure accident.
“My partner and I were going down
from Bt. Louis on a Mississippi river
packet. There were about 20 of us in
the smoking room talking find trying to
pass tbe time comfortably. Just as a
lull came in the hnm of conversation a
young man seated ... at a table . ,, writing ...
some letters looked up with a troubled
air and said. ’Could any of you gentle
men tell me how to spell “choir?” I
am a little puzzled over it
• < « What kind of a one do yon mean?’
asked severaL
♦ ft * Choir, to sing in concert' chirped
the young man. wrinkling his brow as
if to recall the proper orthography.
ft ft t C-h-o-i-r. ’ said a scholarly looking
man with glasses on.
*ft * Q-u-i-r-e.’sang out a big, well fed
0 j d Iuan 0 ff in the corner.
\ “ ‘C-h-o-i-r, ’ repeated the first man
vvitli some emphasis. ‘I thought every
fool knew that.’
*« ‘That’s all right,' said the old man
off in tbe corner. ‘Money talks. I’ll bet
yoa $50 that Webster spells it
“q-u-i-r-e” too.’
“ ‘I’ll raise you 50.* said the first
man. who was a cotton buyer at Mem
phis.
“ ‘All right,’ said the big old man
cooll y Then the others joined in and
bet him to a standstill. They put up
about $500. Then they got tbe diction
ary. and, as just now. the man who bet
on ‘q-u-i-r-e’ won. the
“My partner and I waited till
money had changed hands, and then 1
8 aid. ‘Como on. Si.’
“I walked up to the young man and
‘Come with me; I want yon. I’ll
,how J 00 bcw t0 ®P«U cboir - Si c ° l *
Jarad .he big old man and wa lealtaed
^ 4oml yo!I Mw „ w t wo
trick, bnt they got fonr yean and a half
apiece. That is one spelling school l
have attended that uot every man goes
to. That game is one which will catch
nine educated men out of ten. You are
all right, but you may still have some¬
thing to learn.*
. Then the smart young man offered
the usual invitation in payment for the
information,—Washington Post
AN HONEST ARTIST.
He Would Not Pnfnt a iie Been Fo*
a Napoleon.
There was no love lost between the
Emperor Louis Napoleou and his cousin,
Prince Napoleon, whom fhe Parisians
called “Plon Plon. ** The prince used to
make abusive speeches against the em
peror, which people were only too ready
to repeat to him. “Let him alone, *
Louis Napoleon would reply. “He is
too well known. No one would turn me
out to place him on the throne. “
The emperor was correct, for no one
said a good word about “Plon Plon. “
He was commonly believed to have
shown the white feather tu the Crimea
and never exposed himself where the
lead was falling. An English lady, who
in her young days mingled with French
society, tells in her “Foreign Courts
and Foreign Homes" a story ns discred
itable to Prince Napoleon as it is hon
orable to a French artist,
While the artist was painting the
historical picture of the battle of the
Alma, which the emperer had ordered,
Prince Napoleon called at the painter’s
studio to make known to him the facts,
On leaving he said he wished the prom
inent figure in the battle to be himself
mounted on his white charger. ‘ He sent
the horse to the artist so that he could
paint its exact portrait When the pic
ture was finished and invitations were
sent out for a “private view.** the
fsmm
the reason. The honest artist said the
bonse should remain W the,prince wish
ed. but no rider would be on it. “Tell
the prince I have never yet painted a
lie ” The hint was taken. The prince
ordered the horse to be rubbed out.
——-
They Were Not Relatives.
The author of “Twenty-fivejiears lugEvas ia
British Guiana” says that once
camping out with companions there.
and that some of them had not his ao
quaintance with the woods:
At last we turned into our hammocks,
and I was dropping off to sleep, when I
was roused by the most infernal bark
jug and roaring. Attracted by our fire
and singing, a troop of bowling ba
boons had come over the trees and were
making night hideous by their yells.
Shields who was not acquainted with
the brutes, shook my hammock violent¬
ly and whispered
“What on earth is that?”
Not very well knowing what I was
saying, i replied. -Tiger, "
“Are thev very near?”
"Very.” said I. aud. taking advan
tage of a loll in the cborne. I dropped
8 1
Poor Shields lay awake half tbe night,
expecting to be devoured by wild beasts.
He W as sleepy f and cross in the morn
. * . Rr d<r " „ q asbed ‘ bim if he bad
. . he bab
on8
{ wer@ fcaboon were th ?
‘ an awfnl noise thev make I Bnt
. . savin"
. >t bnow •’ ^j d Bridges on
- TmI)athetical y i v “I don’t belong to the
SDecieB ••
** a v '
_
Fresh Laid.
A lady who did not appear to be in a
very good temper bounced into a cer*
tain grocer’s shop the other afternoon,
„ “J 8 your father at home?” she asked
of the small boy behind tbe counter.
“No’m.” was the reply. “Anything
I can do for you ?”
The lady hesitated before remarking:
“I've called to complain about tbe
eggs I obtained from your father thia
morning. He told me they were fresh
laid, and”—
“Did be get’em from tbe window?”
asked the youthful salesman.
“Yea.”
“Then it’s all right, ‘aa—they’re
fresh laid.”
“But I aay they are not. ”
“You’ll excuse me. ’m,” said the
youngster, endeavoring to be polite:
“But 1 ought to know. They came in a
crate yesterday. I unpacked every one
on ' em an laid ’em there in the window
only tbiB morning. 80 I knows they’re
fre.b laid, aod that aettlea it "-Lea
gen ltn« .
THE LUCK OF A HOUSE
A SUPERSTITION WHICH SEEMS TO
BE BUILT ON FACT.
Person* Who Erect Costly Man*
■ions For Their Own lev Ever Live
to Oeenpy Them—if Not Death Then
Disaster Bari the Doors.
An instance has lecently occurred of
« well known man refusing for super
stitioos reasons to live in a beautiful
bonse he had built until some one else.
a perfect stranger, had occupied it for
some little time,
If ever there has been a superstition
that appears justified by solid fact and
precedent, it is that which prevails
about the building of a house. Few
who erect costly mansions for their
own use ever live to occupy them. An
ill fate seems to bar the doors of these
abodes upon which has been lavished so
much thought and money and hope.
Sometimes it is death and sometimes it
is ruin that overtakes the owner,
Bo widespread and mo powerful is this
strange superstition that one finds even
an intellectual man like Lord Salisbury
insisting on leaning to strangers for sev
eral months the beautiful home which
be has had erected for himself at Bean
lieu, on the Riviera, before he will con
sent to occupy it himself or to permit
any member of bis family to cross
threshold.
Lord Salisbury, however, has only to
round him in London to find ample
for the adoption of such ex
aud at first sight nnneees
precautions. The completion of
Revelstoke’s palace in Charles
coincided with the bankruptcy of
great firm of Baring Bros., of
be was the principal, and it baa
ever Bince an exquisite monu
to the futility of human hopes and
involving him in rain and com
pelling him to dispose of it to Mrs.
Mackay, of “Bonanza” fame,
Tbe Marquis de Santnrce, having
pnrehased the neighboring house from
Lady Granville, spent a fortune upon
the reconstruction and adornment of
the interior. But before the work was
completed he in turn was overtaken by
the terrible disaster which befell the
Anglo-bpamsh
of Murrieta, of which he was the
chief director, and he bad no alterna
*J ve bnt to 8611 tbe bonB0 to Mr W * W
“ s i? The r * downfall . „ of , Hudson, _ . the , railway
^ king, occurred at tbe same time as the
completion of the great house he was
bavlD K built for hmiself at e Albert
8 ate entrante to H y de P a /i' ^ b ‘ le
the 8alfle ,nanner Baron Albert Grant
witnessed . , the . piecemeal . , sale , of . the _
gor
genus palace he had erected at Kensmg
ton, but was never destined to occupy.
This is why there are. comparatively.
•> fr* »•» mmnom of a palat.al char
acter eltber ,n Loudon or tbe <*>nntiy.
adegnate meana
»" d m ■“** of el,llGr * * 7 ", or coo ? try
residence J prefer , as a rule to purchase
bome « tbat
ng new ones. j * y g
at all they, in general, cause t to take
the form of additions to or alterations
of edifices no longer new.
Even then the owners endeavor to
safeguard themselves from the possibil
ity of danger by letting their residences
the express ■ purpose, as they say in
Franc ®- of ‘‘wiping the dust from off
the plastered walls. ”
Nowhere is this superstition more
powerful than in Bavaria, where many
of the most picturesque spots, especial
ly in tbe mountainous districts, are
adorned with fairylike piikces. Noneof
them has been entirely completed, for
insanity and violent death overtook the
brilliant and accomplished- King Lnd
wig. who conceived their design, but
unfortunately perished before their
completion. of
Nor even have the builders many
of the splendid structures that adorn
the French metropolis been more fortu
uate. Thus M. Jules Grevy had scarce
ly completed the construction of hi*
lordly mansion in the Avenue d'lena
when the scandalous behavior of his
aou-in-law. Daniel Wilson, overwhelm
ed him with disgrace and compelled
bim to resign the presidency of there
public amid a perfect humcaneof pub
lie obloquy.
The Empress Eugenie a only aister,
the late Duchess of Alba, had not occu
pied the lovely palace erected for her
in the Champs Elysees more than a few
month, before A. was eelted with a
anddm lUiuan and di«l than in * man-
No. 45
ner so mysterious as to give rise to ru¬
mors of foul play. The building was
subsequently pulled down. *
Another equally unlucky house Is
that now owned by the widow of the
late Baron Hirsch. Situated at the cor¬
ner of the Rue de U Ely see and of the
Avenue Gabriel, it was erected by the
Due de Moueby. He had not occupied
the house more than a few weeks before
it was the scene of a daring burglary
that covered its noble owner with ridi
eule. Two months after, his daughter
died there so suddenly and under such
strange circumstances that the duchess
would uot consent to remain longer in
such an ill omened house.—London
Mail,
DOWN EAST CURIOSITY.
One Instance In Which It Was Not
Satisfied.
It tabes a down east man to ask ques¬
tions, but once in awhile one of tbeis
finds his match. Jonathan overtook •
gentleman who was traveling on horse
back, notwithstanding the fact that lit
ba< * oDe * e 8 His cl, fiosity wa*
^^w^tow be chinch to meet with
c m jgf or tnne
“Been in the armv y ‘ I eness?” wa*
aDZ : 0 ni inonirv •
travaLT *
returned
“Fit a duel p'baua V'
“Never fought a duel, sir ’’
“Horse tbrowed you off. 1 guess. o»
of tbat aort
,, No notbi of t h e bind **
Jonathan tried various dodees bnt
„ tQ no pffftct At }afit a ] rooP t out ol
patience, he determined on a direct in¬
quiry aa to the nature of the accident
ky which the gentleman bad come U
lose his leg.
“I will tel* yon,” said the traveler,
“on condition that yon will promise
not to ask another qnestiou. ’*
me
“Agreed, agreed 1“ exclaimed tbs
eager listener joyfully.
“Well, .sir.” remarked the gentle¬
man, “it was bit off!”
“Bit off 1 ” cried Jonathan. “Waal, I
declare; I’d just like to know, powerful
well, what on arth bit it off 1”—Chris¬
tian Endeavor World.
a Famished Cat’s Prudence,
At Osage City Mrs. C A Stodard
wa8 cleaning n p her garret when by
jn eang the family cat got into an
0 ]^ trank filled with clothing and was
B j, at tight and fast. Just 30 days
j ater j^ ts Stcdard was in the garret
a g„j n an( j heard the cat’s feeble cry
f rora the trunk. When the lid was lift
ed. the cat had just strength enough fc«
climb oat. H had torn the clothing in
tfae trnnk aU to piece8 in ita c i awill g
aJJ( j jj a( j g nawe( j the sides nearly
through in several places. But perhaps
tbe most singular circumstance wai
found in tbe manner in which the cal
took care of itself after securing liberty,
Mr8 Stodard 8et befote it a bi difih of
milk and a big dish of water. It wonld
lap a little of each and then lie down
fur a few minutes, when again it would
partake sparingly of the milk and wa¬
ter, and thia proceding it continued
through the whole afternoon. If that
cat bad been a human, doubtless it
would have swallowed all that was
placed before it at one gulp.—Kan sat
City Journal.
The woman who speaks her minu
freely on all occasions had been telling
the sad eyed stranger to whom she hail
been introduced what she thought of
Mormonism. Her remarks were elo
qnent and acrimonious. She had a flow
0 f language which never failed and was
fortified with facts which could not be
refuted. He listened patiently till she
bad finished aud then said meekly,
“Yeg, madam; I’m n Mormon myself.’
“j don - t care,” she exclaimed.
though her face reddened a little. “A
ma n ought to be satisfied with marry
j ng one wom an to wait on him and b
browbeaten by him.” .
“j don > t browbeat anybody.” he re¬
gponded reproach fully.
“it doesn’t make any different
whether you do or not. No man has
any business to marry two wives. ”
“I agree with yon perfectly, madam.”
“Ha 1 You admit it.”
“Yes’m: no man ought to have two
wivea If he takes more than one, he
ought to stick to odd numbers and have
three, five or seven. Itobviateatheae
c^ity of a man’s mixing in. In case
of a family dispute it provides for a
deciding vote and prevents a deadlock.*’
—Washington Star.
The first British recognition of Besse¬
mer’s work came from the Institute of
Civil Engineers, which awarded him a
gold Telford medal for a paper on his
Heel process read before it in IMS.