The Atlanta constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1885-19??, November 15, 1887, Page 12, Image 12

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12 T| T] T| RADWAY’S U - •! READY J I 111 JIS RELIEF tn from one to twenty mlr.uh•- never fails tn relieve win with one thorough u| q •ligation. No matter now violent or exciudatlnr tin- pain. the Rheu matic. Bebriddvn, Infirm, crippled, Ntrv.nis, Ncu mlgie. or prostrated uith dir- <><• may Hiiffer, had tvar’s Ready Relief‘Will afford instant ease. It in rtaiitly relieves and soon cun •* Ehrumat ism, Neuralgia, Cough n, < .‘old*. Cold in the Head, Wore Thro»t, Anthma, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Sciatica, Head ache, I off animations, Toothache, < ongesttom, DI FFIC rLT I tit EAT I! I NG. Jtadv. ay’* Heady Relief is a Cure for every Puhi, '■•prains. itr«ii*<M, rains in the Back, Chest or Limbs. It was the lint and is the Only PAIN REMEDY That histcntly stops the most (•vnittiitbir pains, allayb inflammation, and cures CtriLieilionH.wlicthci of the Lungs, fitomaeh, Bowels, or Other glands or organs bv one application. INTERNALLY, a half to n in half a glass ol water will, in a feu minutes, cure* Ctwnps Spasm*. Hour Stomach, Nails ti. Vomiting. IJcuil burn, NervoUKDCB S<f *pl --nc -, hick H. l.r im, XMarrhtra, Colic, Flatulency and all iutciual pain*. Malaria in its Various Forms Cured ami Prevented. Then* fe not a remedial agent in the world that will cure Fever and Ague and nil other Malarious, and other fevos (ftide.lbx RsnwAV’s Ph.l*j ' ao quu-klv ; .s RAHWAY S READY RELIEF. 1: I: R. not only cures the patient seized with Malaria, but if jieopiv exjion-d to the Malm ini |.-oi-•o i will cveiy morion# take -0 to :<> drops Os Re tdy Re lief in water, and eat, say a cracker, before going out. tliev wifi prevent attacks. Eric so cvnta per bottle. S-Id by Drugc DR. RADWAY’S THE <II!EAT Hl.ooli I’l KIFJI’.R. For the Cute of AH Chronic Diseases, Chronic Rhcii.nafbr . t.liil'.u-C implnhits. ' :<■ , Glmele jit S veiling. Ilie l.ii ■ I*.', t'ougu, 1 me ■ Atteel .1.-, liieedm. <>; Il I Wigs l>ys|>cp'-bi. Wii .-t )lni Il i e Hwellin.;.. I Clevis. Hip I i • ense.G >i:t. Dropsy, Kirki 1.-nil Kheuui.Bronelnii-, Colls tub ion. I.ivi-l Comp'siillt, el. . HEALTH! BEAUTY! I’ure Blood makes sound flesh, Mrong bone and a cleat • .11. If yon would have your flesh firm, vo:ir IxHies . ir 't!r : join complexion fair, u- • BAD > • \RSAEARILLIAN resolvent. TUI ■ KIN after a lev. <hi me of the -Mt \ FAIL ILLI AN becomes elenr and beautiful, i’iui pies, Blotchc 1 , Black ami S..in 1., ups .»u. removed. Horos and VF • n cured. The w underfill cures : Iby the Sar’npa: iliiiin Kexilv. nt of Kidney, Bin Idel. (iviirian and fruiar Jjisens •!*: Its marvelou p in dtatolvi' «ne e and ( rtlculoußconcretion 1 , hr: < navel. < th e! uml di charm s from the < feni'al Elands it- p.\\< o.«r the KidiK'VS in establishing a honhhy‘••ccrollon of urine, curing Dinbetelnflammation or Irritation oft-lie Hiaddcr, Albuminous< r Brick Dust Deposits or Wirt * Hand, etc., ••-hd»! -hiru it* cliarnctvr a a GREAT (;oNSI I H T’ON \l. REMEDY Sold by all Druggists Qtr. dollar al ot tie. Kai I ray's I’ills, The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy For the ('lire of all di ■ >rd *r- of the Stohßeh, Liver. Rowel., Kidneys. Bladder, Nervoiu Dina •••«, Loss of 'Appvthe. Headache, < ■'•• iveijrs-, Indi; -tion. I’.il loumiust. Fever. Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, fcnd all derangemrntsof the Internal X’i-cera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals or dele tviiouM drugs. PERFECT DIGESTION Will be n- C >mplishe«l by taking R idtvny 1 i’.b. B\ - Bo doing SICK HEADACHE PYMpepsiu, Foul Stomach. Biliousness will bo avoid ed and the food that is eaten contributesih nourish ing properties for the bun|>orl of the natural waste of the body. **■ •< »ir ervo the following symptoms rcsultin;; from Dl’suixe of the Lipestive Organs: Coimilpation. Jnward I’ll s, Eufm •> of the BIoim! tn (fi rr< .1 I. Acidity of the Stomwh. Nausea, Heartburn, of Food. Fulness or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eru etations, sinking or l luti' riir* of the Heart. Choking or Suflbcating Sensations when In a lying iM«tur<'. Dimness of Vision, Dots or Wei 8 before the ight, J over and Dull Pain in the Head, Defn ieney of Perspiration, Yeilowne. -of the Skin an I Ey< s I’ain in the Hide. Chest. Ltuili-. and Sudden Flushes Os Heat, Burnhi; in the I -h. A few'l>"u sos R.AD\V A\ S PITA S will free the Bvstem of all the til»ove named disorders. PRb E25 CTH. l*.R B"X Sold I v all diuc •-1 s. R<md n letter stamp to DI;. RADWAY A; <.*<>., No. 82 Warren nt roc!. New York. lulonnfttion worth thousands will be sent to you. To THE PUBLIC. —He auro and ask fbr RAD WAY'>. and ace that the mime “RADWAY" is on what you buy. novb»w*2f»toew Ist top col 1?p If you have abused your Stomach by eating or drinking too much, or of the wrong kind of food or liquid, you will suffer because your Stomach is angry. Now beware of all temporary expedients. TRY that never-failing, safe Remedy, j) r * * MNudrikke Pill}. For Sale t»y all Druggiftta Price, 25 ett per box; 8 box hr for 65 cU.. or m at by maU, UMtaga fr«M», t >n receipt of price. Dr J 11. Sch»uck th Sun, rpilad * i HCUSEWVEbT FARMERS, STUDENTS fM <*IANDAU. OTHERS SHOULD USE I t 4 MAt BETH & COS Aafemf / CHIMNEYS L 1 IF \OU DON’T WANT to 8 iWFvmE 1 A! * NOY ED by Constant V f BREAKING OF CHIMNEYS. BEST CHIMNET RIDE. I A..v -‘"l ForßaleS»»r»wber*« ITADE ON UY S# fiEiSMftCBETH 3C(I f ’« "T-HOlyoke sr kin «y *'e uw nearly iSOO! tbrw fcsul»oi*ui»nwffvn.tit hundred light* every even ♦brateJ PpLKITOT •» J iudgn-.cnt H thxt w< weald . .th r pay a dcl’.ev adottn Jhr then? than fifty. .-nu.4' • t.n any < ther Chtn>. »»T»ts have ever u.cd. ' H'l ER. Steward. SECHETS H,n '■‘ vt!:s ■■.■.’af;;! •fl'!., elliuitoU; Uv •*» •’ » V«»«n«e «'’nw W >* ftwrti •2?***' ****' a >k* Mt, eWen. ix MATIUMONIAI PAPER. " 4 of latu* Bfd >vntl*n.eo waMtef cvrrrepon.t* tt>. • ly . '.m >He<erm..k K0.X.1 h‘ w ... | DlttuV.” . -Jr Uh.K. .ait'’’* 1 * c ’ f ”*• I*-'- “*• £U*ml U», K < t * tWMliot 1. *| M k 4, m, pAh«laf« Phrv i Cl!* z*“~' 'KfXTII nn.l BtlMtO f.tr t . A Toung .Mm A*r 1 rtdir* "1P v J<L J !. w /. .! !I R * \ v ’ • Che>inul >• . Fbila- uclpii ft Pa. Name thiN pu Mustang Liniment MEXICAN MVSTANU UNIWFVr. avpilrd vbmr OtLo.y U death tv Swluuvr. Wind uulL* a but e Ba. *ji : THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15.1887. GEORGIA AND OHIO. ; Methods and Profits of Farming in the Two States. GREEN GRASS AND SCENTED HAY Amertccs, Ga., November 11.—[Special.]— La«t summer, after a visit t<> Ohio, I publish i ©d in the Americus Recorder a short article giving some comparative figures as to the pro fit of farming in Georgia and Ohio, which ar ticle was extensively’ and excited such favorable comment that I thought a series of . articles, giving more extended comparisons, 1 might be productive of some good, both north and south; and when to this thought was added your rc<|U('st that such articles should be prepared for The Constitution, I saw an ’ opportunity for reaching many more farmers, both north and south, that could not be re- , stated. Being a native of Ohio and having spent eight years on a farm in that state, I have had ample opportunity for acquainting myself with the methods of farming in that section ; while a residence of six year : in • nithwest Georgia, the richest agri- ultural section of our state, has familiarized we with the methods pursued by our farmers. tn writing them articles 1 have a double purpose in view—to s'now our farmers, if I < an, how they may improve their methods and increa o their profits, and to (all the attention of northern farmers to the many advantages jio.-iscssed by Georgia in soil and climate, and to show them that even with our poor methods farming in Georgia, as an investyient, is more profitable than in the most highly cultivated fields of the north. Being mere familiar with its soft, elimato and methods of farming, my < «>mpari <ms, so far asto-orgia is concerned, will be drawn from southwest Georgia, ami Sumli r county in particular. About the first <jv.es :on which an Ohio : farmer asks wh< n he get; in! > Georgia is; ‘•Can you raise grass And the almost invariable answer by the Georgia farmer is “No.” Standing in the midst of a cotton-field, ‘ where it w.c a debatable qm- -tion as to which i was the highest, the grass or the cotton, with . the chanecs a little in favor of the grass, both the question and the answi r aw ludicrous. 1 And yet the question and the answer are both < natural. 'l’he Ohio farmer has m n-m; domed to 1 tlm meadow of his -tato. wherein clover and timothy ar- earelully culthalud for Lay and pasturage. I he absence of these grass fields in Georgia I prompts his question. The. Georgia farmer understands him. Ho also understands grass to mean clover and 1 timothy, from which i- made the liny 1m buys from northern markets. 'The ‘’crab” grass and “erow-lo >t,” which surrounds him,he con siders only as a noxious weed, that threatens the ruin of his eotiod crop, lie has been ac enshumul to fight them ear!;, ar. I late, as the most deadly foes to his prosperity, ami ho can sec, no g««o<i in them. So deadly is his hatred <>l| this grassy foe, Lo will not even allow a sprig of it to grow in his door yard, which dazzles the <\ve v.ith its whitesand. As the Georgian hales grass, >0 did the Ohio farmer’s agi stors, hate trees. Having to hew their farms out of the forest . they so hated the Hight of a t ree tiial they v ouhl not allow one to stand within sight of the house, and their treeless yard . v ere as uninviting a- the nrassless yards of the Georgian. Tho Ohioan of today plants t r«‘( M in his door yard and in his liiddn, and the farmer of smithwest Georgia is beginning to realize the value of grass, and it will be but a few years when the clover fields of Sumter county w ill rh al in beauty and Ira- I grnnee those of Ohio. Six years ago the sight of a load of hay on the streets of Amorims was of siifti«*i<mt rarity j to attract general attention. And such hay as it was! A few dozen armfuls of old dead crab grass pulled up bj the roots, the dirt scarcely • shak» 11 oil o! it. Ihe whole load wouldn't weigh a hundred pounds, and there ua n’t , enough nom i diment in it to make a meal fo a calf. Now there is scarcely a day passes that .von cannot see upon the .-.treet''one or more loads of hay. And il is hay! Green, soft, sweet- HmcHing and nutritions, it was only yvitii the bloom ami Ibo dew on. when its stems were tilled to the full with sweet juices and its leaves wore their brightest hue of gi. en. Ami this same crab grass nay is better than any timothy that ever grew in Ohio, for which our farmers used to pay thirty dollars per ton. \\ hat lm> brought about this change? Well, ciuitiniions pr» .ichin 4 through the col umns of the Recorder, aided by tliv spur of necessity. It was no sudden conversion, and by no moans a whole ale one even yet. But ! the seed is sown and the crop G growing. Is hay.rais.ug pimitabh in Georgia? I will give you the figures, and you can make your o\vn d« <tm lions. About the first lot of hay made in Sumter county for the market was made by an enter prising young farmer throe \< us ago. 1 had talked to him many times about making hay , and one day he came into my otli< e and told me that he had a rich bottom field Ironi which he had cut oft’ a tine crop of oats The crab grass had followed until it st -d thigh high all over the field as thick as hairs on njdog’s back. He wanted to know how to make hay of it. 1 gave him the neeevary direeti«»ns, and heard no more ot him or the ha\ until the next January, when I was pa cing in front of a provision store and i.\ attention was at tracted to some bale- of p i.i n marly line hay. I'pon inquiry 1 found (hat it was m. do by my enterprising young farmer, and that be had sold seven humbl'd dollars worth of it, at txw'iity dollars pm* ton. Now. I don’t know how many acres there were in that field, but 1 do know that that seven hundred dollars was all clear profit, except no: to ox ' cd fitly dol lars for expense of < utting nn.l laing. Hut 1 can give y<»u some < h»scr figures than that. ThG last season a young farmer living near Americus had an old field of live acres, upon which the crab grass « „m.‘ up after the i oats were cut off. ami oft of these five m res be cut and cured liltecn ton .of a- pretty hay a * over went into a bam, and it did not cost him one cent, for anotheryonng farmer made il for him for the use of his mower ami rake. ID* can get 5*15 per ton for that hav now . and bv January he can get S‘.M. Tim e hundred dol lars clear profit off ol five acres, to say nothing of the o«ts, is what 1 call a ei« ,‘y fair profit on land that the owner yvuukl be glad to sell for S3O per acre. It is fair to say that both of the above men tioned fields wove rich tn soil and had been well cultivated, but the extra yield ot oats more than paid for tlm extra fertilization and care. So much for what Georgia can do and has done in raising hay. Now. let us compare it with Ohio’s HH-oid. renumbering that Ohio is a great grass and bay state. Last Juno I visited Ohio, my native state, and of all that 1 saw there was only one tiling that made me envious, and that was the green glass which gn u so luxuriantly and covered tin' level fields. At that season the red clover was in bloom, and 1 defy even the most ardent grass-hating cott»»n planter to look over a twenty-acre tield, the rich dark green foliage enlivened with the purplish-red blooms, with out a feeling of admiration . and this aftmira- | tion would tn' heightened by the group ot sleek, fat cattle, resting under the shade of a tree and lazily chewing their cuds, a per fect picture of peace and plenty. C'oxe by is a field of timothy, its plumed heads enveloped in a misty bloom and grace fully bending before the broeze. \\ hen the mower enters those field* and leaves in its xv ako long linos o( green billows, to be rolled i over and oa er by tlio rake into winrows of ; sweet -scent ed hay. then' arises the most doli i cate and exhilarating of all norfuim s *1 he ’ iKM't and paints r have long made meadow and , luy-muking the theme ol their ng and canvass, and I eanti ’t hope to add to the beauty of their graplac de*er:ption. i But th< re i-a practical as well a< poetical ’ Ride to this v iew. ami it is of this I piopose to . write. It is th!-, green ra< .tin sc beautiful mead ows.that have given to Uhiu farms a world wide reputation ami made Ohio fanners rich, and it is little wonder then, that Ohio farmers reganl green grass tv* necessary to ancceMdul farming. But Ohio farms wer© not ulw.ivs 1 ' vc aeen the time when they were a Mustang Liniment M’XU’AN MUSTANG Livm;n? ctr- ■» a” sl'u • < I at H Mvmcm aud Ca ctli. Outward ircatiuvaU j barren of verdu© as a Georgia cotton field’ in | November. After the early settlers of Ohio had exhausted the virgin soil bv constant croj»ping, shallow cultivation ana failure to return anything to the soil (as Georgia farmers are doing;, their successor* found that it was necessary to do something to restore the fer tility of the land or abandon their occupation. Many fields had been turned out as unprofitable for cultivation. These fields grew up in grass and weeds, and as the country settled up they were taken in and found to nave in a large degree recovered ' their fertility. This naturally suggested the 1 idea (»f glassing lands, but as the grass grew thinly and slowly upon the land when turned ; out, an cifort was made to stimulate the I growth by cultivation. After many’ experi -1 moots and failures it was found that deep plowing, careful preparation of the ground, heavy fertilization of the ground and a mix ture of clover with the grass produce the best results. With good crops of grass came good 1 stock, which was fount! to be more profitabio than exclusive grain raising, because it re . turned to the land ail the more valuable fer | tilizing material, and did not require so much hard labor. It was also found that the plowing of grass undei gave new strength ami fertility to the soil that no amount of commercial fertilizers could do. AH this was not found out and accomplished in a day or a year. 11 took years of patient expe riment, and there were then as many agricult , ural croakers and doubling Thomases in Ohio as there are in Georgia now. Nor is it play to raise grass in Ohio today, as I shall i»roceed to show. When it is desired to put a field down in grass, the ground is deeply broken up with a two-hor->c plow in the fall, after which a har row is run over it one or more times until the soil is thoroughly pulverized and leveled, the roder sometimes following the harrovt, and the harrow’the roller. The seed is sown later on, sometimes in the late fall and sometimes on the snow, being carried down into the ground by the rains or melting snow. In the spring, after the frost is out of the ground, the ground is again lev eled and packed down by passing over it a heavy roller. li the season is favorable, a good stand is the result, and it is allowed to grow through the summer and in th© fall is pastured. Next summer the grass is mown and made into bay, and after the rains have started it on a second growth it is again pas tured, If it be pure clover the next summer it is again mown for hay, and a second and shorter crop follows, which is allowed to ripen, h cut. put in the barn, and in the win ter the seed is threshed out. Glover seed is a valuable crop, the market price ranging from >5 to #8 per bushel. I know of one county’ in Ohio which in one season shipped out 8100,000 worth of ©lover seed. The next year the sec and crop is plowed under and wheat sown upon it, or it is allowed to Jay until the next spring, when it is cross-plowed and corn planted upon it. This is the record of a successful slanu from the fir>t; but such success is the exception rather than the rule, for it often requires three years to get a good stand. Sometimes a freez ing and thawing March destroys the entire crop by spewing th© roots out of the ground, when they are frozen. Sometimes only a half stand is got, and then the bare mid thin spots must be sown over again. Had the Ohio fanners been as easily’ discouraged as some of our Georgia farmers, they would long ago have asserted that grass could not be grown in Ohio, and their fields would today have been as bare as ours. Now. let us see w hat the Ohio farmer real izes for all his troubles. The Ohio agricul tural report gives an average of only a little over one ton of hay per acre, and the* aver- ! age price of this is under >lO per ton. While here in Georgia we can average a ton of hay to the acre from our oat fields, without turning a furrow or sow ing a seed. and the average price is 820 a ton. “Where, then,” I think I hear you ask, “is the profit in your beautiful green grass and sweet scented hay?” That question 1 will try to answer in my next letter. W. I . Glessnek. A CONVICT AT THE THROTTLE. A Railroad Tell* of a Rido He Took with a T«‘.\as Sheriff. A number of the engineers who are attend ing the convention were sitting in the billiard room at the Palmer house, Chicago, says the Mail of that city. The conversation had taken a reminescent turn, and Robert lieriot, of Little Rock. Arkansas related the follow ing: “Ono of the most notable cases of reckless bravery 1 ever saw occured on the sunset r<m' in Texas in 1876. I was a conductor at that time and had charge of a construction train. Convicts did all the work, ami an armed guard was stationed on eacli side of the trai tto keep them from (.scaping. There was :i big force of the convicts—about 100 if I re member right—and about fifteen guards. “Among the convi. G was a Texas sheriff, w’ho had been sentenced to a term of two years for beating a man to death w ith a six shooter. As it afterward turned out . the sheriff w as also t pr ti v good engineer. 'Phissheriff and anoth er convict had put up a desperate plan of es ape. Some time during the morning they managed to pull the pin between the engine and the train. About noon, and at a given they dropped their shovels and made a dash for the engine. They were in thecaband had the throttle of the engine w ide open before a guard could lire a shot. Chumley and his fireman were lying on the ground under the shade of a tree, and the first Chumley knew anything was wrong was when he heard her t \Laust. Quicker than 1 can tell it lie was dashing after the engine, and before she had made over a turn or two he caught on behind. He climbed up on the tender, and, as ho hung w ith his hands over the top, was met by one of the convicts—not the sheriff, but the other one who threatened to brain him with a stick of wood unless he dropped off. But Chumley t wouldn’t drop, and he would have been killed sure had n d the sheriff taken his part. He opened the box under Chumley's seat, w here Chumley had a six .shooter, took out the pistol, and. cocking it, told the other convict to drop the wood or he would blow the top of his head off. Then he made the other convict help Chumley up, but made him stay back behind the g.mgw ay. “While these things were going on Chumley was between th© convicts and the guards, so they did not daro tiro thoir shotguns, and a moment later the engine was out of range. The sherift'-com ict-engineer told Chumley they would not harm him. but thev wanted liberty amt would not be thwarted. ‘You must think a heap of this old engine to take the chancVH you did to board her,’ an swered Chumley, and I didn’t want to see her go into the ditch.’ All this while the engine wa> fairly ily ing. NV hen Chuuily said he didn’t w *ut to seo the engine in the ditch the convict smiled grimly and said; ’1 can handle her as well as vou or any other man.’ They ran the engine a few miles and stopped in the heavy timber. The convict engineer thew her onto a dead center, shook hands with C humley, and a moment later lb© two convicts disappeared in the woods. Catch’em? No.no. Chumley’ ran her back to the train, and 1 tell you we were glad when we saw’ her coming and knew' he was all right. Ever hear of the eOnxicts again ? You bet I did. 1 met the sheriff about two years ago, He is running a cattle ranch and is rich and prosperous, and 1 wouldn’t gitehim away. He knew me at once and didn’t pretend to avoid me, but came right up and shook hands. Ho inquired about Chum -1 ley the first thing. 1 want to live my allotted time, and 1 don’t think any man who sends that man back to jail two years would be alive \ery long after he got out.’’ FOR SALI€! Home in oxfoni> ge the kennon I'lace in ed :<■ o! Oxford: 7 r »nu dwelling ' u I nil nee, ■<».«> out bulldlncs. iroodtruit, water unsur ]'si»<ed. S acw"- very i u h land ill cultivation; di acm splendid w. od liv. 1 attached. A|-jv» i-t t >rth ofOvf.. I. .s) a re-, well Umbered, c vek an I two bmnchei ruuutng through it-4ttxv.it i.o .iete.« tn cultivation, u • tract lies veil Fnnue luntse. .table, vie. Address. V I’. nKARING. Oxfotvt. Ga. I>. 1 lente di-ea e.oi either sex, however in. dined, promptls. tic: " uhly .ind permanent!v l ilted Semi lt> eon: m stamps tor larje illni Uilresa. World's Ui» nsary Mml ulAswcig tton,M» M.ii-.i ureet, Buffalo. S. Y. Mustang Liniment VEXb 'N M LIXIMFNT. for and BkajU CH-vaie**. s. •. d.’tvc disc >very ever made. i ACROSS THE WATER. Frederick William at the Point of Death. THE DOCTORS INFORM HIS FAMILY Beu ltn, November 12.—[Copyright 1887 by New York Associated Press.] —The first dire news from San Remo was unheard in Berlin till towards evening. On the bourse business was over. Some evening papers had i congratulatory articles on the improving pros pects of the crown prince, when suddenly s 'mi-official reports were permitted to trans pire that yesterday evening’s advices were false news. Those reports created general const< rnation. The early announcements wore i vaguely put to the effect that the malady had been found to be of a cancerous nature, and that with regard to the further treatment of the crowm prince no trustw’orthv information could be obtained until a verbals report was se cured from Hr. Schmidt, who went to San Remo at the command of the emperor. At last a decisive examination was made yesterday morning, which resulted in the doc tors unanimously’ declaring that lIADICAL CURE WAS IMPOSSIALE, the only difference of opinion being as to how long the crown prince’s life could be prolonged. The crown prince heard part of the discussion between the doctors. He showed great self possession w hen told that his recovery was very* uncertain, and retired to meet the princess. 4 The confirmation of the statement that the crowns prince is afflicted w ith cancer, has re vived interest inline methods attempted for the extirpation of the disease. The National Zeitung, in an article bearing the stamp of authority, says: Despite the malignant nature of the ( am or, the larynx operation is now fre quently successful. The most famous Gorman operators are Dr. Hahn, of Frcidricksham hospital, Berlin, and Dr. Bergmann, who re cently performed five operations, ami in every case th'* patient rapidly recovered. Even the extirpation of the whole of the larynx has been effected with complete success. I'HOI ESSOR, TOEOLI»‘s WRITTEN OPINION is now* of historic interest. He declared that the removal of the first growth from the crown prince’s throat with the forceps by Dr. Mac kenzie's method, provoked a vigorous recur rence of the humor. After the fourth consul tation on the crown prince’s case, Professor Toboki w’rote: “I hold that the quite danger- Ics process of laryngo fissure is the fittest mode of completely doing away with the growth, enabling sureness ami absolute exact ness in excise of the diseased part, and the de struction of the seeds of further growth by cauterization.” Dr. Schrmter holds that the new’ grow’th below the vocal cliords is cancerous, and advises the complete cutting out of the w hole larynx. He claims tb.at an immediate operation would be very dangerous, but says he would consent to a postponement, as in the meantime the malady can be combatted by tracheotomy. Dr. Schro*- ter is convinced that the life of the crown prince might be preserved by the total excision of the larynx. Although the operation is very dangerous, ami its effect uncertain, it might be attended with good results. An excision from the windpipe, he maintains, would only defer death a few years. The emperor is naturally much affected by the serious nature of the crown prince’s illness, but the rumors that he has had a relapse, threatening death, arc untrue. Hu lias ap peared daily al the palace windows at the time for relieving the guard, and bowed and saluted ' th»‘ crowd waiting for him. Dr. Schrooter declares that the disease from which the crown prince is suffering is cancer. He proposes to perform the dangerous operation tracheotomy and completely extirpate the cancer. 'l’Lis, he thinks, will prolong the patient’s life three or four years. Dr. Macken zie is against this course of treatment, as he fears that the crown prince may succumb un der it. Mv» O’Brien Determined Nut to Wear Prison Clothes. Dublin, November 9. The Freeman’s Journal expresses the hope that the murderers of old man Quirke, near Tralee, County Ker yr, will be arrested and hanged. It says the victim was both karmic > and honest. Justice of the Peace Eagan paid a visit to Mr. O’Brien in the prison hospital at Tulla more. and states That he found him looking exceedingly ill. Mr. O’Brien told him he Lad not had a change of linen since be entered the prison. The governor of the jail, w’ho was pre&ent. replied that he could have a change if he wished, meaning that he could have prison clothes. A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Mr. Pyne, member of parliament, who was summoned for inciting resistance to bailiffs at the eviction at Scrahau. Mr. Pyne is entrenched in his fortified Lis f.trney castle. He defies the police to enter. He says he feels perfect!j’ secure, as ho is pro visioned for a siege of six months. One Hundred Thousand Men Attack the Po lice. London. November 13.—The scene in Tra falgar >qnaie today has not been equalled since l.Bta). w hen the people, asserting the right of pul>lie meeting, destroyed the railings around Hyde park. Four thousand policemen took possession of the approaches to Trafalgar square at an * arly hour. They had been on the ground but a short time when the various societies, socialist, radical and Irish, ap proached the square from everv direction. The paradors were headed by bands of music, and carried banners and mottoes. The police attacked and dispersed each group as itarrived near the square. Fierce, fights took place on the strand, Northumberland avenue. White hall, Pall Mall and other adjacent streets. < hie of the societies succeeded in entering the square, but was repulsed after a bloody tight, in which was seriously in jured. Mr. Grahainwas subsequently arrested for attacking the police. At 4:80 p. m.. the crowd in the vicinity of the square numbered one hundred thousand, and the police were powerless to thoroug'hly disperse them. Cavalry and infantry were summoned to the assistance of the police, but no charge was made, as the people of their own accord began to disperse at dusk. About tw o hundred citizensand forty policemen were injured. Fifty person were arrested, among them being Socialist Burns. Some oi the in jured were well enough to leave the hospital after treatment. One patient was dreadfully burned with vitriol squirted from a syringe. Another dolares that ho was bayonetted. Two policemen were stabbed with knives. It was noticeable that crowd, while hooting the police, cheered the cavalry and infantry posted in the middle of the square, ready for action in case the crow d broke the police line. If the crowd had succeeded in breaking the line, it is believed that the riot act would have been road, and the infantry would have been ordered to fire. THE HISTORY OF THE DAY. The proclamation of Sir Charles Warren, head of the London police, forbidding the holding of a meeting in Trifalgar square to day, wars placarded throughout London last night. At 8 o’clock this morning Trifalgar square presented an animated appearance, ow ing to the continual arriving of bodies of police, small drafts have been made from every Jin the metropolis. Three hundred grenadiers were stationed in the barracks in the rear of the national gallery. Police, to the number of 1,5(X) formed a hollow square four deep on the southern side, fur the purpose of protecting Trafalgan square. Two thousand and five hundred more were held in reserve. U ntil one o’< lock there w ere no signs of a procession. At that hour groups, mainly of sight seers or roughs, began to assemble in the vicinity of the sonare, but a s.piad of mounted police kept the traffic moving, and ’ dispersed each group as it formed. By three i o’clock there was an immense concourse of ' people packed on the steps of St. Martin’s ’ church and Morley’s hotel, and on the roofs of | the houses in the adjacent streets. The ma jority <eumed to Ih‘ respectable persons at tracted by eurinsiLv. The remainder were i loafer> of the worst classes. Al»out four u’ehn k Gr.ib.nn ami Burns, at the head of ' about four hundred men. made a determined . attempt to break the police lines and enter the I square from the Strand side. The i»olice how- nr KT TPF’.t BA« K and captured both leafiejs. Graham bleeding Kuliy from a wound in the head made by. a pol.eeman s club. In the meantime bodies of imraders had arrived bv even retamnding av i enue. but they were ami eomn.-lbni Mustang Liniment : \N 'trsTAXin.lM^FXTiid^thtoPiles, I Olx: d.a&s. Cak-d BuaxaT. auA aU I>rLAM*.riAa> to surrender their flags and banners before ; arriving at the square. Numbers of crowded i omnibuses harangued people from the knife j boards., while vehicles slowly traversed the j front of the square and Charing Cross, the i crowd cheering wildly. At 4:15 p.m., loud cheers heralded the arrival of the cavalry force, witii Colonel Taltet at its head, from j Whitehall, and Magistrate Marsham prepared to BEAD THE BIOT ACT, in case such warning should become necessary. While the guards trotted eight abreast arotuid the square, cheers went up, accompanied by shouts of‘‘Bravo, Marsham! We want free speech; we are all true Engli.ll men, Irishmen and Scotchmen. We only want our legal rights as citizens of London. A second circuit of the square by the guards elicited opposition from the mob of roughs in the crowd who shouted: “Britons shall not be ruled by lead and bayonets.” Three groans were given for the home secre tary. The guards patrolled the square several times, and then turned into the adjacent streets. They succeeded in awing the roughs, and in greatly thinning out the crowd. At five o’clock the grenadiers wheeled into the square with bayonets fixed, and with twenty rounds of ball cartridges in their pouches. They were asconipniied by an ambulance. They halted in front of the National gallery and opened into lines. The mob was thus caught between the lines of police anil military, and tlie roughs were compelled to run tlie gauntlet. Some of them showed a disposition to maintain their ground, but tlie soldiers brought their bayonets to a “charge” position, and the sight of cold steel quickly caused them to retreat. Soon after 5 o’clock the police made a series of vio lent charges with their batons, in a determined effort to clear the whole vicinity, many points of which had been crowded all the afternoon. During one charge, the whole window of an electrical shop fell with a crash. The crowd asserted that the window was broken by the hoofs of some of the policemen’s horses, Tlie police. Jiowever, assert that ’ bricks were thrown at the window. The loafers made for the con tents of the window, but police caught many articles and arrested the thieves. Byti o’clock there was no fear of further trouble. At (>:3O the whole force of Life Guards again patrolled the square and finally THE CROWDS DISPERSED COMPLETELY. Some excitement was caused at "Whitehall by the victorious police marching with the captured flags and banners. The mounted po lice and Life Guards were now ordered in the direction of the parliament building, the side streets being cordoned with constables to pre vent rushes. This move cleared "Whitehall and Parliament street, and the guards with the exception of a body retained in Trafalgar square, were enabled to return to their barracks by seven o'clock. Quiet was now somewhat restored, though the square was stiil cordoned by bodies of police, which alternately relieved each other in order to obtain much needed refresh ment after standing in the same position ten hours. At 7:30 o’clock the remaining life guards returned to the barracks. SKIRMISHES ELSEWHERE. More or loss serious skirmishes between the police and radicals occuned in various ether parts of the city, especially at the foot of Wellington street and Broad street, Blooms bury. Clubs, sticks and stones, were freely used, and ntanj' persons were hurt. The po lice were everywhere victorious, and ruptured many socialist flags and banners. Between four and six o'clock seventy injured persons were treated at Charing Cross hospital. The police had a severe fight about four o’clock near Wesmiiistcr bridge with a strong procession of socialists from south London, consisting of about eight thousand men, under a single leader. This procession had been or ganized as the principal one to move in solid phalanx upon Trafalgar square, and while the police were engaged in a scuffle with Mr. Graham, it was hoped that it would be able to carry the objective point. The police got an inti mation of this scheme, and Sir Charles Warren ordered Superintendent Dunlop to hold the position at Westminster bridge at all costs. Dunlop had a division of police under his command, noted for their tactics in clearing race courses. Tlie paraders from Peckham, Bermondsey and Deptford, jhined the forces at "Westminster at four o'clock. OCCUPIED PARLIAMENT SQUARE. When Superintendent Dunlop ordered them to disperse a tremendous struggle occurred. The flags carried by the paraders were made the rallying points for the inob, and around them fearful struggles took place. Eventually, however, the procession was completely dispersed. the police capturing ten flags. Twenty-six persons ' taking part in the procession received club wounds in the head, and fifteen constables were more or less seriously injured. The executive com mittee of the radical federation held a meeting tonight and resolved to hold a meeting of dele gates on Wednesday evening, at the London Patriotic club, to decide upon measures for re peating the attempt to hold a public meeting ou Sunday next. At midnight tonight all is quiet. Three Things Settled. From the New York World. The result of the election in this state set tled three points as thoroughly as any political R ent enn be settled in advance : President Cleveland will be renominated by his party. Mr. Biaiue will not be renominated by the repub licans. Mr. George will uot control tlie election next year. New York is the pivotal state. Mr. Cleveland's friends have had a complete triumph. They are en titled to the fruit- of tlie victory. Grover Cleveland is indeed a luckv man : and James G. Blaine may be said to be a dead cock in tlie pit. Ei'i.io tn . Ala., Oct. 20, 1886. Dr. A. T. SIIALLESBEBIIiIIi. Kochester, Pa. Dear Sir: Last February I received from you a bottle of your Antidote for Malaria, and gave it to a'young lady at tending school here, but who had not been well enough to go for several weeks, and was quite broken down in health. In a few days after taking the medicine she was back in | school again, and has not lost a day the entire summer. 1 think it is the best medicine I ever knew. Yours t ery truly. R. C. Williams. Broke His Arm. Albany, Ga.. November 13.—[Special.]— I Colonel Nelson Tift met with n painful accident. He it- pped from liis romi upon the porch in trnnt of it, : en lie stumbled over a pile of wood upon it and fell to tin- gr riiol, striking upon u is'i.vy plank wall and bie:i!:ln: his left h:oi ut.ove tlie wr'st. 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