Newspaper Page Text
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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION. ATLANTA, OJU TUESDAY MAY 18 1886.
SUCCESSFUL FARMERS.
SHOUT TALKS WITH FARMBRS ON
FARM TOPICS.
Bottom OON»nTtm»N—Your correspond,
cnt ban, ot your request, Interviewed Hr. An
drew Barden on hla menner of Termini,
which is u follows: He says bo eulUvatef
about S3 asms in corn, partly bottom end
partly upland, manures in the hill by patting
mboat half pint of compost manors made by
mixing aUble-lot manors with ootton seed,
—plows op til the last plowing, then
he uses a tweap and plows very shallow, pro-
duras shoot 80 bushels per sere. In the All,
after the corn la gathered, he sows the land in
eats, making about 85 bushels to the aero. He
cultivates about eight aaree In cotton, using
the same kind of manure aa in the oora, and
maims on an avenge sight hales of cotton.
After the ootton la pinked bo sows tho same
land in wheat, tnt breaking tbo land good
with small plows and then giving the said land
n broad casting of the same kind of manure,
and then sows bis wheat and harrows it in or
plows with very small plows. The neat sum
mer, after tho wheat la cut. he sows the land
in peas or plants them in rows and lives thorn
one plowing and hoeing; then, in the fall, ha
tarns the land, covering up pea vinas and all
•ther litter, preventing any crab grass tho fol
lowing year from being in the way of the cot
ton cultivation, and he believes that a full
matured crop of crab grass is very exhaustive
to land. His wheat crop off of tho eight
acres is about 100 bushels.
He continues to alternate wheat and cotton,
and oora and oata. He believes in raising as
many rattle as the surplus of feed of tho corn,
oats, etc., will supply with food, so that tbo
stork will make a basis for as much manure aa
bis farm may need. He also raises enough
sorghum for his family and tenants’ families to
use. He keens two horses to plow the afore
said laud, lie is an active, energetic termer.
Uohellovrs in hill aide dltehlug: be gives his
ditches about one inch fail in 10 feet, making
the upper aids of the ditches lower thin tho
lower side so aa to prevent the breaking over.
There are other farmers In this section, vis:
J. W. Bearden, who is quite successful; W. T.
ifrsrdtn is e capital wheat and cotton ralsor,
and many others dr ing wall on that lino.
Ookway, B.C. o. C.
Several guoeessful Farasere.
Kioto aa Constitution—In auswortoyour
letter asking me to give you tbo names of
■ome half doaau of our moat suoresaful Armors,
together with the details of their operations,
will com monos with Ur. lame Curry, whoso
posiofllro A Hilltown, Berleu county, yet he
Urea in Clinch. He runs a oomiderablo Arm,
partly to hired labor and partly by leaaiug
out his rands. Ho makes all his corn supply,
In Act, oil hla provisions, except wheat anil
tmeon, for bis hands, making a auffli iaucy of
bacon for his own Amily. He therefore plants
a diversified crop, his mono/ crop consisting
of both long and short staple cotton, but he
toll* me that hereafter he will plaot only tho
long as it pays much the bast. Us runs a wa
ter mill and not only griuda but glua for him
self and the public.
The neat la Mr. Morn Smith, whoso post-
OSes to tho same and who raises a diversified
crop, nuking hla own aupplias of everything,
swept wheat (lour. We can raise good wheat.
I hare relied 20 bnahela per aero, perfectly
dear nf nut, without fertiliser, but wo havo
no flouring mlU, and wo can raise syrup
anougk from aa sere in ona year to buy flour
for many. Mr. Smith's money crop la ootton.
Htotebnen are like tbo moat of Arm handa
here, principally white. Tbo tarpaoUno
Arms Offor>b work so that hands ona Idlo
whoa tkoy plsaas, which arritotho negro who
i* -tisfled with enough to eat sad a Aw
ointhra to wear, and thalatier. In great part,
consisting of Mgs and dirt But Aw negroes
work mare than ona third and many one-
Aults of their time, which will not suit the
farm, osnaoqusnUy they (t to tbo Jab work
around tho turpentine farm, where a great
part of their timo It spent in gambling and
ether vices. Bat 1 bare digramed from my
aUl .Mk but notmUeb, aa this slats of tho la
ker bu greatly affsotsd oar Arms.
Tho uaxt asms an my Hat to Mr. William
Hewt lt, whose peatofflee la also Hilltown. Ite,
like tho two Drat, raises hla awn suppllos, ami
cotton to rates money with, and he Alls mo
that hired labor had beoama to unreliable that
ha bad abandoned it and reduced his Arm ao
that ha could manage it with his own family,
and was making more money than whan he
alaatrd man and hired labor. Many of onr
farmers are doing the name and with tiro aarno
result.
..Mr. William K. 8mllh. whoaa postotUce la
ilorarrvUU, raises hla own provisions, and rice
amd rano tyrup as a money crop, raises hiaown
AiUllaara, having a oonsldorahlo stock of cat-
tto, mauurot his land with them and raising
hla own supplies, a few hundred bushels of
rice sod thirty or forty barrels of ayrup aa a
mossy crop, succeeds very wall.
Mr. Iaham Pattonou, of Wfrograss, operates
mush otter tho plan of Mr. Bmlth, raising his
■upplirn, bnt morn rice, lets trrnp aiul tome
longrotton. Three men use all white labor.
. of “>• Bridges brother.; one
tor. Bridges, the other I do not recollect.
Ths rpostaflloo to Hilltown. They took up
“ I 11 *" ,f Und 00 which othere had
failed and it was considered worthless, but by
thr judlrlaua use of Artilraara, turning under
■sons crops, operating on tho intense system
with dean culture, they are su,n eeding wall
° r r ®“ ,, »wv«t among their
nrighbora. They have act a worthy oiamnto
Coat M bating a good effect upou tbo plaulmg
otaumiintty and will not I* forgotten soon.
Hit' 1 ,# They
ttuho forty bushels of corn per aero wham
thtlr predecessors did not make five. You
“if ,h *» t » l “ lh,lt supplies.
lira tragy Strickland, of Mtlitown, (this is
her Metaffice bat she Uvea In Clinch l, ruui a
osoaJdemble farm, employing hired labor ami
?-«■« °“‘ , *"j»mi» to others, raises her own
roppJits end is doing wall, raising ootton as a
sooner map.
lam regarded as tho mod scientific and
UatAnaarlathscossty. I Arm mors on
tho lateast system, ratting my own supplies,
with syrup, corn end hay Ar tala, with some
long rotten. I raise from M to SO bushels of
crew per acre, a bale of son island ootton, 10 to
ICtairela of ayrup, four to reran hundred
tauhthofpotatoM, andfrom three to four
tuna of hay of rerioos kinds
Yaw truly,
Homtrvllle. Go. L. C. Mattox,
Massing to Alabama.
Kisrrnw. Ooi'wrrruTioN: One of.tho most
raoeemfui Armoce i. the county of Madison la
■ **• ° r Olnttevtilo bant,
Httog «• tha county line road htiTroa Kadi*
Isimaatone counties. Soma flfWn
Him *tu whiti.”??* ,,0 ®* hlu “plaoa—eighty
2PJ^?JJ?**A5\J^>jaldao. It was an
S X toom?l5if"bOTli , bi #f ** r
to Spare. Ha has alto raised a larga family of
children, and hat given them a good common
education. „ „
Tho great secret of Mr. Groom*’ euocost is
that be tdlos >way no time, always finding
plenty to occupy hit time on the farm, winter
end summer alike. He to not afraid to work
and has taught hla children tho asms valuable
If—on.
Then are hundreds of men in Madiaon
eounty that bad better proepecta than Mr.
(irooms, but they have boon wasted In Idle
ness and today they are at the mercy of tho
merchants. They complain of high-time
prices and bard times generally. Tho mere
chant cannot compel them to buy their goods
If priem are too high they ahoald buy lea and
work more, and endeavor to getoat of debt by
Onsnvrs
strict economy.
Cluttsvllle, Alt.
grato to mcrl^ArtUo'firfdl* k ,*C *** *° >l
waste 5g fatfaHu. Htifet fr S‘ b ^ n r ” n
dSir^KLii •' hu «►
S3 SSK end
traUhisroSTas cnTa^ishu i«»tX
Msd^of tin year, for ha Dover boyaentiaas
Mr. Urooua doeq, not owe a dollar la the
world and hit plenty to lira on and a surplus
A PLEA FOR THE ANARCHIST.
Chicago, May 1L—It baa bean ascertained
that of the Polish and BohsmUn rioters who
regaled thamselras with liquid refreshments
when they sacked tbs dreg store at Center
avenue and Eighteenth street, last Wednes
day, eight died, end at least four more are
known to bo beyond hope of recoveiy. The
police have been too much occupied with
other matters to bunt up thoss who were re
ported III, but a physician haa boon found
who hu attended some of the victims. Ha
■aid It wu undoubtedly tree that the men
bad been poisoned by drinking the contents of
bottles in tbo wrecked dreg store. The
staff taken wu moetly wine of cslchicnm,
which greatly resembles sherry wins and hu
a strong email of alcohol. He aaid: "It la a
virulent poison, and la almost certain death If
taken Into the stomach in any quantity over a
■poonAI. I have treated tour, and have now
In my care three who are onffering from an
overdose of the tincture of paregoric, no
doubt taken ut tho samo time as tho oolchloum
and under the supposition that It wu liquor of
some kind.’’
The doctor gave the names of four who
bad died under his own notice and Aar treat
ed by another physician. All are of tho un
pronounceable Bohemian or Polish orthogra
phy.
t me ago, May 14.—Tbo mulatto wlfo of tho
hiding Anarchist 1'irsons.wbo wu herself one
of Ihe moot violent Sfeakera In tbo city, ad
dressed tbo following letter to the Daily News:
rnicAco, May 13,ISM. -To tbe Editor: I beg the
K lvlieue of sarins a word to the public through
n columns of tbe bally Nes s. I ask, in common
Iklrnes*. tbe suipouslon of public Judgment u to
K d anarchists now imprisoned or under
n, will tbe people wait until our side
bu bail Us opportunity to bo beard In the court of
general opinion? The howl hu gone up from tbs
pulpit and prate non u of old: “Crucify! Cru
cify!” hul even an anarchist ought not to be con
demned end executed without shearing. Is there
not danger that In the excitement ot lira hour
good people will forget to Inquire whether the
anarchists have really ever violated any of tbe laws
ot tbe city, state or nation? I do not understand that
anyone baa charged that the meeting at Hay Mar
ket square which Hie police attempted to disperse
wu an unlawful uarmblagr, nr th el the altendaoh
ware engaged In any riotous aota whan Interrupted.
If It be so, were not the police Instead of the art-
atcblats, the law breakers? Leer R. reasons.
A man named Louis Lingg wu arrested to-
night, while in biding, at *0 Ambrose street.
The police unreservedly declare he to the man
who threw the death-dullng bomb into their
nnki a week ego Tuesday. Before that time
Lingg lived in Cljbrurne avenue, but up to
this evening bed not boon aeon unco tho mas-
sac re. Ilia capture wu mads on information
furnished by ono of the Arbeltor Zeltnng'a
employes. The police uy there la no
ahadow of doubt of tbs man's guilt,
and tbe events of tonight throw aome
creditability on their statement. It is thonght
tho arrest is one of the most important yet
made. Lingg Is aaid to havo boon in the em
ploy of Spies and bu bean since Mav Uth,
‘■the mining man." At tho police station he
wu put through a rigorous examination lut
ing three hours. At last ha mado a state
ment, the extent of which the
police refuse to disclose, and detect!vu in
large numbers were hurriedly dispatched to
Clyboiirno avenue for persona Implicated by
his confession. It is undontood that tho
police made no promises to Lingg, but gained
their Information by other means, just what
they re Aim to My#
CHICAGO, .May It.—The verdict in tho case
of Oflloor Sheehan is similar to thou returned
in tho preceding inquest upon tho victims of
tbs llaymarkot riot, and holds Spies, Fiolilen
and Schwab, and also l*enons, If he can be
arrested, to the grand Jury, up
on tho charge of being accessory
to the murder. In the case of Officer Flavin
the verdict differs from tho others. It finds
that death wu caused dlrectl/Ytom the effects
of a bomb instead of pistol shots, and adds to
the list of thou previously bold accessory to
murdar, the names of Adolph Fisher -and
Antoine Hershberger.
Chicago, May IS.—Louis Lingg, the an-
arehlst who wu urrariod lost night and whom
the polios aaurt to be the man they havo boon
looking for u tho man who throw the liomb in
llaymarkot square to a young muscular Gor
man. Be wu found in a small cottage oocn
pled by a man named Louis Klins. Ono offi
cor gained admission by stratagem while an
other remained oatoble. Lingg wu not oanght
unawares. Hla suspicion* were arouud and
when tba officer uw he might u
well make known hii errand, Lingg
presented a heavy Colt’s revolver at nte head.
The officer caught tho barrel and a struggle
for Its possession followed. A second officer
heard tho nolao and bunt Into tho house.
Lingg fought like a wild boast, cur-
ting and screaming with rage. It
took both ofilrtn to aubdno him,
One bolding the revolver and preventing
II* rise, while the other choked Lingg into
helpiaaauou. Tho weapon wu taken from
him. Ho wu handcuffed and dragged to the
cutest polios station.whenoe tho patrol wagon
took bin: to out Chicago avenue station.
“I wouldn't core what they did with me if
I had ouly killed three two officort,’’ ho uid,
as he wsa being taken to a roll. ”1 tried to
shoot them, ana I am sorry I didn’t succeed.”
Chicago, May IS.—In an interview today,
tho wife of tho mining anarchist, Faraona,
said:
"Thcpapara don't know that that* has been
a rtotganlsation of tbo socialists by which all
tbo month the men are exempted from any
rtive work. Snecchmakera. like myself and
.’arsons, and Ficidsn, would never have
tuown anything about any vloleuoe if any
bad been intended that Tuesday night. Each
croup hu ;lta duties, and they are not mixed.
1 know that then am between two and throe
thousand bomb* in the city, and If tbe time
had come to use them there
would not have bun a atop at the throwing
of one of them. That wu an individual mat
ter, and
ho was
haro taken np tbs cry
tbo law will not Jnatifr tho cry. The time
to coming when men will have machinery
brought to sack a state of perfection that
they will only work two or three hours e
day, and then only to promote hulth. The
wealthy men may bn allied span to give np
di is«a, s net wu on isaivmaai mat-
I the one who did It probably thought
i doing right. The pram and pulpit
ikon up tbs cry “Crucify him!” but
advantage.’
Interrogated about bombs, Mrs. Faraona
Jd:
“I know then era between two thousand
and three thousand bomba in this city, end If
itbocomu asreemry they oould ho used, bnt
I do not btitovn tin ntrsmity will arias be
cause tho public have boosts* awakened to the
fact that Ora people most rule and the capital
ists will gin in without bofidshad. Individ
uate, however, a
vlctieM of duty.'
CrCcn sent to M. Kick A Bra*. Ar ary roods end
- »rt*u will sacelra prompt ationttoa. They havo
the largest stock and most complete mall order da-
parunniln iteuuth,. They, guarantee to dnpll-
rataany blUof good* Bum New York. Express
fieltkt prepaid ou all orders over lit Send roar
radon to M. KlchA liras.,M endMWhitehall
meet, Atlanta, tie.
free by Dr. Dias's
!e Flujsftee flnt day's
Treatise and *3 trial
bottle toe* to Fit oaaca. Band to Dr. Dine,
KU Arab Bt, Philadelphia, Pa.
FITS: AUFit*stopped ft**
Great Herr* rae*oror. X* —
NEWS BY WIRE.
An Aaarentst Arretted— Jaaps Overt see* with s
Child utHUAnu-Korrar sod Skew Kiuad-
Po) xxsmous Cee riots vial led br Oovernor
west - Overcome bp Ou. ate.
Chicago, Hey 11.—Bav. Dr. H. R. Thomti
to quoted today a* raying that about a year
ago a club on the west aide, coi *
wealthy and influential gen
Spies, Parsons and Bchwab to a eoniorsuoo.
“They were Invited by card, and precau.
Won* were token that nothing of tbs affair
should got into the nowapapai*. They came,
and wa argued the question folly with them.
They wan well posted, and at timu mads very
violent assertions, gates raid that in
snarchiat wu very dlflbrsnt from an Irish
dynamiter. He laughed u ha desert bod tho
attempt mado on too British house of parlia
ment. Ho uid that If the asuilaats had
known their butinau they would havo placed
batter bomb* then, but not that alone; they
would have placed them where tbe hall wu
crowded with people. We havo nothing per
•call against you, be uid, roftrriog to s gen
tleman present, but ws want your property.
We do uot believe la tbe distribution of
property u a means of reform
but in the destruction of liA, we need prop
erty.”
“I believe Parlous to Ira the worst one of tho
lot. I believo ho ought to lie hanged,,’ aaid
Dr. Thomas. Dr. Thomu and other members
of bis olub will very llkaiy be aubpo-naed by
the state attorney in the prosecution of the
•octaliata now in prison. The utterances of
bchwab, bpiea and Parsons upon tho ocouion
referred, it is thought, oetabliah premedita
tion.
an ANAKcniwr abumtbd.
New Yonk. ltoy II.—John Most, tho an
archist and (agitator, wu arrested tonight at
the house of Mrs. Fisher, No. 10b Allen street.
Inspector Byrnes and Anrof his men nude tbe
arrest. Most endeavored to elude the officers
by crawling under the bed of one of tbo female
Inmates of the house with whom ho is uid to
have been n long time Intimate. The detec.
tlvea secured the anarchist a few hours after
locating him. When tbe “apoatie of anarchy”
wu pulled by the heel* from iindar the bed,
he presented a sorry spectacle. Ills “bullet
bead and puffy jowls.” ao uid one of tbe offi
cer*. “were covered with dust and dirt.”
He became himself, however, end in a short
timo waved hie arm aloft ana shouted a de
mand for liberty for tho people. Ho wu
handcuffed and taken to police headquarters,
where he wu locked up. Ho looked the
picture of dejection. Moat, sidoe ho went
lug, baa spent mach of bis time in Nowsrk,
N. J., end on tho Jeny city height. Most wu
found by tracking n man who rails him white
l«por for bia anarchist paper. In the hoiiao
where Most wu erreeted wu found a Win
chester reputing rifle with a bayonet end
hooka npon dynamite, bomba end kindred
toiiica.
New Yoik, May 18.—Herr Most spent part
of last night in a cell at police headquarters,
bitterly denouncing the police Ar his arrest.
He called for brandy reputedly, but it wu
not (iron him. Thfa morning ho stormed be
cause be had to wipe his face after washing on
a common towel and ut prison Are. Most
wu taken to a photograph gallery and pictur
ed. A copy of It will bo uni to the police of
all tbo largo oltlu, u is dono with
bad criminals. Later Moat wu
taken to court and arraigned under
tho Indictment, bio lawyer requested time to
examine tbe document. Ho would, however,
plnd not guilty, with the right to withdraw
tha plu aba future day and demur to the lu
ted to the tombs without bail.
jOMrs ovxanuAan.
Boston, May 11.—Dr. F. N. l'almcr, a prom
inent homeopathic physician, aged W. took pass
age in the steamer John Brooke lor Portland yes-
doctor took tbo child in his arms, leape i over-
leant and teth were drowned. By an attack of
•inplcxy two years ago the doctor’s mommy- was
slightly impaired, but ho lied never shown signs
o!mental derangement.
MUXhAY AND SHAW Ktl.l.kt).
Nogalks, Ariz, May 12.—A courier who hu
just arrived from Barnett's ranch, twanty-Uve
miles aouth of this place, brings now* of tho
killing of Charles Murray and Thomu Shaw
on Monday. Gcronlmo’s entire band la sup
posed to be in that vicinity. Two hundred
troops are in data pursuit. Both Murray and
Shaw were prominent at - •
from Nogales, when tho
Cruz valley two weeks ago.
POl.YOAMUH CONVICTS.
Balt Lakh City, May U.—Governor West
went to tho penitentiary yesterday to talk
with tha polygamous convict* there. He
uked If they would lit willing to promise
obedience to tho laws if ha would uu his in
fluence to havo clemency eztended to them.
Ho
K stle Lorenzo Snow uid ho would not.
d no confidence in J udgs Zone or United
States Attorney Dickson, whatever. He
might have in Governor Wut. The Gov
ernor uid ho had po right to talk that way
Tbe official* had no malice, but wore nil
kindness. They were doing thoir
duty, and would Join him in uklug clemency
of the president for them if they would oub-
nitt to tho laws and nrgo othors to do ao.
Snow said he did not blame Judge Zano and
Alton ey Dickson any more than ha did thou
who persecuted Christ and the early Chris
tians, but “w'e are following the command of
God aud cannot givo away to tho law of
man."
Governor Wut considers that this leaves not
a leg for tho Mormons to stand npon in their
claim of persecution; that President Cleveland
would probably hare listened to ncommon-
datlone for clemency, but that the Mormons
Wave no opportunity for Ite czerciae.
ovitncouk nv gas.
New York. May 14—A. B. Swaney, poat-
n-iuter at Hwsncjr, tircen county, Tcnncueo. who
There Shall tie no Alps.
When Napoleon talked of invadiug Italy one
of his officers, uid: “But, sire, remember tho
Alpe.” To an ordinary man tlieso wenlil havo
seemed simply insurmountable, hut Napoleon
responded eagerly: “There shall be no Alpn.”
So tho Amoua Simplon pass wu made. Dis
cus, like n mountain, standi in tha way of
Amo, Artane and honor to many who by Dr.
Pierea’a “Golden Medical Discovery” might
ho healed and ao the mountain would
disappear. It is apecilo for all blood,
ohronie lung aud liver dlsoasos, such
u consumption (which is scrofula of the
longs), pimples, blotches eruptions, tamers
•wallings, Avar-sows and kindred complaints
A philanthropic young woman li Boston hu
opened a bathing eaiabllshmtnl Ar dogs.
Slit ROUEN CUULSTINON, Physician to
lier Majesty the Usasea ot Mogbsnd, speaking
of the Oecn plant, mga: "Tha properties of this
wonderful plant are tba most teanukable of any
known to the medical wot id. From repeated nor-
tonal trials, 1 am convinced that Its use is highly
beneficial snd tonic.” To build up a broken-down
system, use tho Liebig Co’s Cbca Bui Tonic, to
ed and recommended or the foremost phr-l-
s of Europe and Americe. Orerwrasuhi sat
Tha most ahaeut-mlnded of men is the professor
who. when he hears himself knocking the ashes
out of his pipe, wltl callout, “ComeIn.’—New
York Telegram.
A Good Man.
lews. —. and J. k- Bcoc
toue?A!eiander hu toett their patent a
- to yeara.. daring whlch tlm*
Siigt
tSStoirmgpatcUar
LABOR TROUBLES.
Chicago, May 11 .—Nearly all of tha striking
employes of Rothschild’* Sons’ furniture fac
tory retained to work Saturday, but yesterday
notified the firm that they would not again re-
turatowetk until tha aodalistie agitator o<
their union, Stahlnar.ht, wu roloued from ar-
rut. David Botbacbild, as a member of tbs
furniture manufacturers’ union, has boon
especially active in aeeuring the merest of tho
man. Saturday evening brought all other
members cf the union down upon Rothschild's
men. and by threats of tho usual anarchical
kind, compelled them to again itrike,
Robert Kaufman, manager of the ooncern,
hu now notified tho men that they have all
been discharged permanently, and that tha
factory will remain closed until they would
return for ton hours pay for ton hours' work.
HU patience wu completely exhausted, and
under no consideration would tho firm have
any further communication with them looking
to any sort of compromize. TbU action leaves
all tho fUrnltnre worker* in tho city locked
out, without any proapoct of getting back with
out unconditionally aumnderiug.
Rxadixg, Pa.,Tfsy 12.—The cigar maker*
presented to their employers a new schedule
of wages which woold havo advanced the cost
of cigars *1.50 to *2.50 per thousand. The
employers aecerlngiy sicced shops Indefinitely,
throwing out of employment 800 ponons.
throwing out of emphnrmi
The manufacturers had
ponons.
numerous orders
ahead, but at price* which would havo moult
ed in iou if compelled to pay tho advance
uked for by the employes.
Indianai'OMh, Ind., May 12,—Tho switch
men's strike at this point is a Allure, and Is ao
conceded by a naml>er of strikers. The night
men have been at work all day trying to get
tbe day handa to join thorn, bnt so far only
the Wabash men have como out. The men In
the other yards remained at thoir post*.
( lEVXI.ANH, O., May 12-—Tho proprietors
of the Biversido Iron company, at Btubenville,
yesterday, refused tha request of thoir furnace
employes, for a nine hours day with ten
hours pay. They banked tho furnaces and
announced that work would be indefinitely
succeeded. The weakly pay roll amounts to
$1 f'O.
Chicago, May 13.—An extensive lockout of
striking tailors in this city wu inaugurated
by the association of clothing manufacturers
and wholeuie dealers today. This means that
20,000 to 25,000 sewing people, men and wo
men, will be denied work.
A large mooting of the association of
manufacturers wu held lut night and all
members including thirty-one Anns pledged
thtiuselves to give ont no more work until tho
strikers recede from their present position. It
sd by the employers that the demands
is claimed I
sent an advance of from twenty to thirty-fivo
per cent.
Nkw Yoxk, May I I.—Special telegrams to
Bndstreet’a indicate that the Industrial agita
tion in favor of fewer hours of work dally hu
largely disappeared elsewhere than in Chicago.
At'New York It hu boon a practical failure,
while at Chicago the attitude of the manufact
ures in several leading linea in locking out
some 47,000 employes who demanded a
•hotter working day promise* to arrest the
progreu of tho movoment. Sup
plementary reports to Bradatreet’s
•how that within about t*0
weeks there have boon strikes at tha leading
industrial centres to secure fewer doily hoars
of labor, aggregating 200,000 omployu: that
150,000 have secured concessions without
strik
000 i
indicate* that over 100,000omployu are work
ing fewer hours per day than one month ago,
a small proportion of total number claiming to
bo interested.
Chicago, May 15.—Central station detectives
havo made it impossible for Panona, the fugi
tive anarchist, to ahow himself in any city of
consequence in tho country, without being
arrested, and now they are engaged in supply-
lug minor discrepancies in evidence, which
will go to prove the ohief conspirators. Yes
terday a now leueo of the bonding. No. 107
Fifth avenue, in cleaning up tho late
’ ’ I, A ’
quarters of tha anarchlsta, found some docu
ments which make ioterestlng reading. Thou
paper* were found on a desk file in the-spirt-
meats formerly occupied by Parsons, and hid
doubtless been overlooked oy the soclallita in
their unwilling haste to vacate the premises.
One of tbo communications had evidently
been tieed by Parsons In his paper, tho !A!arm,
and it concluded with the exclamation" Vivo la
Cemmnrr.” Tho writer, James A. Stricklaod,
of Durham, N.C., had lint signed his name,
but afterwards scratched it oat and substi
tuted. "Don’t publish the name, but sign It
‘Knight of Labor.’ ” He requested that hla
communication he published and incloaai 75
cents for ten copies of tho Alarm to be sent to
B. Golagar. poatofflee hog 277, Durham, N. C.,
and u "many free copies u yon possibly caa
Ar agitation—fifty if possible,” On a scrap of
paper written on a letter heed of a Cleveland,
Ohio, firm of mubls cutters, la the following:
Comrade Parsons: Providing we send tha follow
cr bouncing boy, weight
and signed Fred Smith,"
r 1 for tho amount we aond
mate ami state’ by what expreu company,
The remainder of this interesting rnUsive
wsa torn off, bnt “number ono” evidently
meant dynamite or other explosive, u on tho
file wu also found a bill from tho Aotna pow
der company tor ono hundred feet of triple
force Are and a lot of cartridge*, made ont in
the name of “Guh.” A number of other or
ders for revolutionary handbooks and other
dynamite and other publications from various
parte of the country wore among the papers.
nil COTTON
CONSTITUTION 0F71GB,
: ATustTA.Hayit.lMi
New York—Cotton continues quiet, land flumes
Ar some time put has undergone very little fluc
tuation. flpota, middling!! IMG.
Net receipt! today s.-vd bales, against 1,360 bale
last year; exports e.tat bales; 9,133 last year bales;
■tack 611,7*3 balm; last yew 4*0,931 balsa.
Below we give the opening and closing quotations
■ hew TORE, May It- Tbo tallowing Is tbo
ootaparativ* ootton atetament (or tho week ending
today:
Net receipts stall Daltad Btataa porta 37,*43
lame time last year 9.231
S|m|lfijMMI^^M——....... 27.731
A aisaai
Ishowing an tucreasc ii.c w
HportA for tbo week flBH8nH'-7.t’3
Fame time last year
ehoaringan Increase..
Tout export* to date....
■ no time last year.....
l-l.ow;-'Cl"
Ik at all United aji
Saw.'time last year.
Showing an IuJ
Block a: interior I
t.r.:c bo: rear,
showing au Increase.
I l-k at Liverpool -
£*r.-o tunc lass year.
■ rioac.' a decrease..
: . ssC.am
time tut v' -vr.
oroottoo stag the iworld la ISSA JIK bales, of
LUl.ite bates an American, agaltut 7,m.901 bate*
umis.tts. crop in «i<m g.3ia.m biio.
pmoTOioKa, cttJLpf. wo,
CONSTITUTION OFFTC2
Aslaittab Mat r>. vm
fSSSSKSffSSmmay:
OMBtac.
—-ZTvX
TO r
WHAT.
^ TO To
- • TO _**1 TO • TO. * TO
ST SO J 35
GOVERNMENT TESTS.
The Royal Baking Powder Declared Superior
to all Others.
The fact that Royal Baking Powder is, in all respects,
the best baking powder offered to the public has been
established beyond question.
Prof. H. A. Mott, when employed by the U. S. Govern*
ment to analyse the various baking powders of the
to determine which was the best and most economical, after
an extended investigation, reported in favor of the Royal,
and it was adopted for government use.
Pro! Mott has continued his examinations of fsalHng
powders sold at the present day, and now affirms it as his
deliberate jndgment, arrived at after most thorough research
and a careful examination of the principal brands of the
market, that the Royal is undoubtedly the purest and most
reliable baking powder offered to the public. Prof. Mott, In
his recent report, says:
“The Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure, for l
have so fonnd it in many tests made both for that company
and the U. 8. Government.
>-t “I will go still farther and state that, because of the
facilities that company have for obtaining perfectly pure
cream of tartar, and for other reasons dependent upon the
proper proportions of thejsame, end the method of pmp.
■ration, the Royal Sa$og Powder is undoubtedly t|e
purest and ta&t reliable baking psw&pr offered to
D*. aapiY a. mc '
CUBE
»tad room til ttw troaMro to£
hum**
la flit base of so many iirro that taro to wtarowt
mike onr great boast. Ou pilla can It while
other* do not.
Carter's LHtla Ltecr Pma an verynaaflaafi
vary cut to taka* Om or two offis mates flora
nf, are Iirtcilr ragmbl. and 4o nol grireo.
piraw, kalky tktir gratia Ktlon nljara alfwko
cm I3,tn. lovlalaaauaau: lv« lorgL flolfl
ky flnggitia friSTWhcra, or Mat by maiL
CABTBtt MEDICINE CO.,
Hew York City.
Mention this must. * .
fkkfl—flly tat tow thu wky nn rev *• t> nol
Ji Ft HUUIIIg UL UUI)
WHOLESALE
FRUITS & PRODUCE,
24 Alabama St., Atlanta, Ga.
' Write tar otenclls. ’ 1 track,
llompt, buiincM-like attention to all consign-
ment^an fegm»4SwL%\Sjgro
New Catalogue
CONTAINING 1000 ILLUSTRATIONS
—or—
Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry
SENT FREE to any address.
J. P. STEVENS,
JEWELER.
17 WHITEHALL STaUT, ATLANTA, OA,
Mention tills paper- nor 17 wky ly Up
pheb TnraiH
IHPOTEHT HEK.
Aedttattfiotawf Ceeroif cerr—Mebmtr.
weekJKMg nervous proatreuoue pretaatoro eeeUae <■
NEHYITJL.*
A trial uckago qi ractipt ot twtire caste portagw
BrMaeagteaMHsfiethUcapar. _
T a h,
Mkyoi
••OLD RELIABLE” MILBURN WAOOfl
PPED FREE
DO sVorfeHa ? d
J. O. ALLISON, Galveston, Tax**, tor tall
particular!. Name Util paper- febD—wkyly
WE WANT SALESMEN
ERSSSl
it “beat* the
YYOMAN’H FRIEND—Dr. Pritzyl LadteW tPlIla
norer tati^.Scnd J^ccnu ‘rjOM^w*.^
thlz paper.
• mil. erna iu ccnia mu iry uug w*
BKOU DRUG CO., CoVlNoTOS. Kv. ta
ixpor, merP—wkyflt wky toy
| IJ ^^swwueuiCHGnSf'
jH
.T*'** —
9
marin-wkvl*
k IVALCA1L* FOBSIBBION FOB KVMIY M AN
I. engaged In butiuom la ono of Tho Oontitto-
pt'olrowjadnote kooka. Th*_
Ctotrif. Wa «and a£^*ofl00. nouw upog
rem % ^^«Mnutei«HMom.tA A4dy
SHARP GINS.™
rtoaaot 31ood. VajUy
» all otter methods. Huudradc of omu
• H.Gnaa*7lH FTOfibtad ttrott,
“The Cheapest Furniture House
in Georgia."
Too will