The constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1884-1885, June 24, 1884, Image 4

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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION: ATLANTA, TUESDAY. JUNE 24,1884.—TWELVE PAGES. ) WEEKLY CONSTITUTION. Enteral at the Atlanta Po*40ffloc w second-clu. 1 0 j cour8Ci boon • hoarded; and in the large mall matter, November ll, 187S. I c (^j ei 0 ( ,|, e country it lias been lodged, ac- Weekly Con.tltutton, •l.ss Per Annum. I cording to recent inquiry, in the vaults of Clubaof five, fl.00eaeh; chit* of ten. 11.00 each I the safety-dejmsit companies. It is said that and a copy to getter-up of Club. [ compan | c , |, av0 alncc the |>anlc largely increased their rentals, and also obtained sur prisingly numerous additions to their cus- AT1.ANTA, OA., JUNK St, 18M. enormous, the claim being made that tills city will soon be the largest market south of Baltimore. Whether Atlanta becomes the great market for this product or not, It is plain that every foot of pine in the state will ‘soon Imre u rising value, and that the business of sawing and shipping lumber will increase year by year, until it becomes of immense pro|K>rtions and timber lands be in sharp re quest. Tite days of valueless timber are passing away; and our object in writing this article is to induce holders of pine lands not to permit waste or to sell their lands for a song. Tiie country will soon take all tiie yellow pine that we can pre pare for market, and each succeeding year will then add to the value of the standing product. There need be no haste in the marketing of pine timber, for every year re duces tiie quantity of white pine and in creases tiie vulue of yellow pine. THE TWO LOGANS. John A. Logan, candidate for vice-presi dent, professes to be the special friend and champion of the colored people, and the Memphis Appeal has taken tiie trouble to hunt up his record. Tiie result will be some- what surprising to the colored voters that lie now courts and Hatters, and tiie colored man who studies it will lie apt to hesitate before giving this arch demagogue and time server his support. Logan voted in ISIS for a constitutional provision prohibiting any negro or mulatto from settling in the state of Illinois. lie also voted in favor of a constitutional provis ion to exclude negroes from the right of suf frage or the right to hold office. But this is not all. Logan was a member of the Illinois legislature in 1853, and as a member of the judiciary committee, lie reported tiie follow ing bill: If a negro nr mulatto, Imnd or free, shall here after come Into tills state uml remain ten days with the evident intention of residing In the same, such negro or mulatto shall lie deemed , — Politics is on a boom. Fifty millions of wcl! - He is a harmoniser. He knows how to sugarthat this country wants and for which people are going to ehoose a president, and it j ff e U has°had moreexperienceTn such mattera it now sends out of the country nearly $100,-1 looks like most everybody is in a good humor • than anybody, and vet he wan left out severely. 000,000 a year. Of the sorghum licit he has about it. I am, and so are my nabors. There ! I thought mnvbe that it was because fhere also great hopes. It stretches from New Jcr-1 h'asen't been a time since the war that the wcre not fi vo tileces inatead or ff.ur, but I hear scy west through Pennsylvania, the Ohio | people felt so eosv about an election as they do j out- We n we wUI (e0 what wc w jjj sec- Gen , valley, Missouri, Kansas and New Mexico. now. The nation is safe. Both of the great partiss Will put up their best men and there is EGYPT AND MR. GLADSTONE. It is settled that there is to bo an European not muoh of principle or policy to divide conference to consider the affairs of J-^ypt. them - Thc < ’ oun,r y <• prosperous. We are all England desires to limit the conference to a doin S P‘ e “y b «“«r ‘ban any other na- consideration of the financial difficulties of tion of I K ‘°P le on the K lobe - Thcre “ 0 K 00 * 1 - the much-governed and much-perplexed humblc > old-fashioned preacher not far away country, just what will be discussed will be wko * Iw8 y > l>™y». “We < b «» k tI,ee > ob > Lord ! known on Tuesday, when Mr. Gladstone ,hat we " ve '» 8 lalld °f freedom, where the has promised to lay ail the papers on the e M P cl > 9 dispensed with. We thank Thee that table of the house of commons. It is, bow- we hllvc * P lat “ ud grant and a clear chain of ever, known that France has modified its po- ti,Ies “> 8 field in the promised land.” Well, sition, and will take part in the conference. I kn ° w ' vbat ‘he old man means, and it is ,. t^.i . vi i j* I nil right. I wish we all could read our title P ranee at first objected lo an English occu- clear * to mansioll , in the ikicB . Lan ,i |, chcap pation and therefore toon English control of I enough down here on the ton side of this green Egypt, but in order to prevent the succession I earth, but I’m afraid wo will find it very dear of an aggressive Jingo cabinet in England, I U P yonder. This is a blessed country for the , . _ , , . ® ’ I poor. We can’t realize how she has made concessions, and will send rep- {>Iessed until wo read about the resentativos to the forthcoming conference. I old world and talk to people who have travelled Thc success of the efforts of Earl Granville I there. Just think of laud rentiug for $60 on saves the Gladstone ministry, unless indeed ?" e ' n England and $40 in Germany. Just ... . . ..... , I think of* tho average laborer working twelve Khartoum should fall, and General Gordon J hours for forty cents and boarrfinghiimelf. No and the garrison be massacred. The retention I wonder they keen coming over here, and they of power by Mr. Gladstone will now depend W0 V ld cUo ?5-° r Q 60Uth in, ! e 2 d orthQ.north «i 1A nninre '.j I and west if they were not fooled by those upon the nature of the secret convention I 0 „ 0 „^ wko arc paid to work for the railroads with France, upon the action of the confer- and get settlers for their lands. Thc south has eneo, and upon the efforts put forth to rescue I got no agents. We tried to establish agencies General Gordon. Thcre is a great deal of ofimmigratSonand wehad pamphlets printed *„it, _ . ... ,1 telling all about our climate and productions talk about an expedition to Khartoum, but I fl|J( | first thing we knew them fellows up a painful Jack of details. Thc public does I north had great big maps printed and stuck up not know whether an expedition is to be sent I everywhere showing the Dismal swamp to ex- UP the Nile, or is to start from Suakim and £*&£ ZXSFJ* ^"4“^ «ta eral Young will not be iguored nor Bartow county nor Cherokee, Georgia. We will be heard from later for these kind of things must be equalized and harmonized. Well we are through our harvest. The wheat shocks stand thick in the field, and are a solid comfort to look at. I’m looking at them now. Next thing is the “traveling thrash," and I shall sit down by it with a piece of soft pine in my hand and cut a notch for every measure as it is poured in the sack. There is ne politics about that, and everything is calm and serene. Cobe is hopeful and holds his head up. When I asked him last summer about his cron he said: “Major, it's about null aud void, and if the weather don't adul terate soon it will be nuller and voider." But he will have biscuit soon and be happy. Bill Aar. ECHOES FROM THE PEOPLE. * Cox(ir»hman Calkikh has been nominated I t omcrs> for the governorship by tiie republican con-1 Jn Uie IeMcr towna aI1( i throughout the vention of Indiana. The democratic con-1 country district.-! thcre are no safety-deposit vention meets on the 25th. Hon. Thomas I conlpan | eSi an d the biding places of tlic A. Hendrick, lias expressed ids willingness I household or the shop ore utilized something to carry tiie democratic standard, I after tho fashion of 1873. An extra dollar The trouble about cheap foreign Ialior has I boarded In a backwoods district is sooner or grown to such an extent that a bill hits been later recorded in the surplus reserve of the introduced in the house to prohibit thc irn-1 banks of New York, tiie financial exchange portation of fordgners to work under eon-1 and clearing liouse of the entire country, tract. In Pennsylvania, particularly, this This system of biding away money is at the labor now amount! to u great abuse and there I bottom of tiie monetary stringency that nf- is n general desire to get rid of it. It Is diets the country at the present time. Itag- aimed particularly at the cheap Hungarian I gravalca a hundred fold the trouble that It Is and Italian ialior. | trying to avoid. It tukes from .—; —7•—;—~ , , , I tiie manufacturer, and therefore lx is to be Impel that thc dirty methods of from t| , c artisarl and t , lc Ingalls, the Kansas senator, to secure a re-1 money , I( circulation, thc very life blood of election wiH be appreciated in their pro|x-r b(ll(lnea9 It lake s money out of active use light by ids constituents. If Kansas wants to to „ #tuckillg teK . W e need not blame the be represented on * bc door of the senate by I |j anka t |ie caat f or refusing to help tiie one who prostitutes bis al.lity In the unjust I country ,, a „ ka bv d Ucountlng paper of their abuse of ,hcr sister states, and one whose ve-1 cllato|llerB| wlli | c moncy ls 1)id away hy | ndl . nality and spleen lias caused him to In.- the anJ <^,*1101... TIlia | lid | ng away mouthpiece by which the aenatc i* to J* 0 1 0 f money Is in fact the bottom trouble at thc turned Into a political machine, then she proMnt timc . K ortlIlia tely the process lias should return Ingalls,^ I culminated, and moncy is slowly returning to BuRKsms, the ex-dc|>artiiicnt officeholder I Hie hank, and, let us hope, to active use in Washington, is a typical republican. It I among business men and manufacturers, now develops that he lias had a monopoly on I If the house of representatives desires to the sales of old pa|icr from thc postoffleo, and I promote thc return of capital to circulation, that he has turned tiie proceed*—432,000—to I it sliould pass at once thc McPherson bill, his own account. One following so accumlciy I allowing thc banks to issue notes up to tho in thc footsteps of Lis trainers must be an I par value of bonds deposited. Tbit would object of adoration with lila.|iarty. Ycstcr-1 glvo tiie lianks thirty millions additional clr- dny’s telegrams show another defalcation of I dilating capital, and Uiey need such help now a former officeholder. There is but one way I when trade is in a condition of imrtinl parnly- to stop it—turn tiie party out who places I sis. Congress should act at once'on this hill. •uch men in charge. I It is a conservative measure that bears tiie in- OEOROIA AnJclEVELAND. I dorscmcnt of pnietieaMiien. The democracy of Georgia is to bo congraL I the ELECTORAL COUNT, ulated on the short and Imrnionious scsssion I Tiie bill for counting tho electoral vote, of yesterday’a convention. It met for a spe- which passed thc senate withoutan opiwising clfle pnrimso, aecomplisliwl its work, and ad-1 vote, was discussed last week in thd liouse, I the nine »hd Journed promptly without committing any I am i m ay lie nallc.1 up any day of thc present SmrelhiiVl mistake or creating serious antagonisms. 1 Two tilings limy bo affirmed of thc delega tion. It is for Cleveland utmost solidly, gentleman who has eanvassed thc matter I closely gives tills estimate: "If New York I Imimls may decide any contest tli.-it may arise I I rcta P‘ urc0 ‘ H |C Soudan anil the permanent I a u thoso chaps connected" w i t'l'i the Credit-1 and cut into the proper .hope by machinery, casts her 72 votes for Cleveland, lie will get I «„ to thc appointment of electors, ■uch deter-1 shall ho Slab, ami so on for uvery subsequent of- occupation of Egypt with a view to open an-1 Mobilier ami the railroud subsidies and the | Subscriber, High Shoals, (la.; 1. I. It true that tho solid vote of Georgia. If the New York mlnatlon being conclusive evidence of law- &e UmK'J^niTy! ^ inCn * K ' 1150 ovef *“ d ncxu,io11 - eramen'iu those sehemeib I hair,Tlue eyisi, and red complexion? 2. Is It true delegation is divided betweenClevelandland fulness, when congress assemble, to count tho Ho drew up tl.i. bill | lie reported it to the AMEND.^'thE* CONST.TUTION « b8 ‘ •'"T ri * a8 "‘ 8 “ ow l ° T 8 bi S .T?SSTPS, T1W '“ T SSS votes *Bny,ird ’^Ld he othe ” IdTl, "l T ^ '“’ t " 0 '' W ’ »“ “located it o„7.,e floor. It We prerent eUwlmre aToUmMeUeTirom tX I V C Trat: Tyour sub- do“b«SL^^ rthfwHdhW York vote h L? "““Tl " , »'!™nfl | ctlng return, or two was bis bill, and it became a law, and re- Judge William Keese relative to the necessity Kse he piunderc,{ the treaii^v. When " 8Ctt,#d Un,<> doubtful. II the iOlid Now York votcls cast or more state tribunals are in confiiet over mained a law until 1805. The records of the that exists for amending tho constitution of did Mr. Beecher and Mr. Adams and the H i!" „.' lt «tre«h r ier'tho“ d wT "i,?’ 11 '! ,<! • 1, «I>ut«l rcturno, 'he rct.n-f accepted hy I Illinois legislature establish all wo have 1877, and wo commend It, as we commended Harpcrj and Judge Tourgce and the other ^ “3 c ^ Ita there bem any recent icattered oyer tho field. Wo are Inclined the two houses of congress voting separately, stated. It is therein printed that Logan was those that havo preceded it, to thc serious at- rwhm^mrtedthawhola reduellonlu newspaper postage? i ! , n C ° of ‘ho but agreeing concurrently, ahall be voted, before the war tho most bitter and nnscrupu- tcntlon of our readers and to tiie people of | republican shebang for twenty ycars and just I The following act has Just pareed, aud received *** * I Mr. Eaton, chairman of the lioaso committee I lou«ci\oiny of thc colored roeo that could bo I Georcla. Tho irrotmd upon which Judge I now begin to prench political morality. There I the president ■signature: It may be assumed with equal certainty I ol i the subject, lias submitted a substitute for I found in tho country. Ho hesitated ai’iibtli-1 Reese bares his argument in favor of tho '* • OInathin ? peculiar about this. Ths truth is Be ltcnaeteitby the senate and lionso of ropre- that tiie delegation is squarely against tho I the m-untc hill The substitute nmvMiw il,n( I it I CS °, , ms argument in favor ortho I Arthur lla 3 a slntc and theso fellows wore on I sentatives of thc United States of America, in con- renewal of the Morrison bill in tho oonven- tho two bnnww shall vote l,.b„r! !a “ J.^ ifL L‘ h ! .**?“ !*• . T ha Y * cre «U. interested in so.no way In | gress assembled, that the n.to of postage on news- tlie country: one in the extreme north, where | tho maple abounds, another just adjoining, stretching from Maine down through New I England nnd northern New York, skirting northern Ohio and Illinois, sweeping over ARP ON POLITICS. ! ing mortified when they left out j our man. Wc had a man, and we are a good HE THINKS THE NATION IS SAFE ! We extend front Athena to Colambua. Wo EITHER WAY. j thought we had a right to representation, : and we put forward a man who, of Wisconsin, Minnesota and Dakota, along the I He Contonti Slmitlf to Take Matters u Thtr Ars * ail others, is the best known man northern boundary of Montana, and down I and Thanks Osd That They Ars no Wors«-An tiie western coast of Washington and Oregon. ‘•Tills belt, he says, is able, with proper at tention, to produce from sugar beets all the . for a national convention. At the last national j convention General Young was the chairman of thc committee on credentials, the most ira- j portant committee of all, and he did his work ery such negro or mulatto snail be deemed guilty of a high misdemeanor, and for the lint offense shall be lined the sum of 130. If such negro or mulatto shall bo found guilty, and tho line r.s- — .. pea™ before* wbom ( t he 1 nroceedintt wJ-ro'hmLU tberc 8ro difficulties; and if Berber lias fallen it was all so and they wouldent come. Those | low^'.l'.'.'Z.la filmll be thc «luty of Mila Justice to commit wild I the followers of the False Prophet may be I northern rascals have been swindling I Knn«u« y negro or mnlatto.tp tneeustodyof tho slieriff,.or | — | us for a hundred years by all sorts o 'trick. Kentucky 13 L. P. Grant, Atlanta, Gh.: Is thcre an Imtance on record of a flowing artesian well bored in the “ancient rocks," such as underlie tho city of At lanta? A geologist in the city assures us that there is such a well in Sow York. It was bored through new rock and then through “ancient rocks," and water flowed freely. G. W., Anniston. Ala.: What are the different electoral rotes of thc states, and how many are necessary to elect? There are -101 electoral votes, and 201 are neces sary to a choice. AlalmniA 10 Louisiana 6 X. Carolina If. Arkansas 71 Maine »* Ohio 1S5 California 8:Maryland 8 Oregon Colorado 3'Massachusetts 14 I’cnnsylvaniRJM) Connecticut... C Michigan i:t Rhode Island.. 4 Delaware 3 Florida 4 Georgia 12 Illinois 22 Indiana 15 Minnesota 7 Mississippi Missouri Ki Nebraska 6 Nevada 3 N.Hampshire. . New Jersey 0 New York 36 8. Carolina Tennessee 12 Texas 13 Vermont... 4 Virginia 12 W. Virginia 6 Wisconsin .....11 Prophet may 1 ncRro or mumiKi to me uiuwujr ui hid nncriii, or i _t,i A t!,.«.» ., „ . i m *or a miimrcu otherwise keep him, her or them in custody; I tt “* c overwhelm Khartoum before aid can I an( j ( ] cv ices. But wc will get even with them I Total.. *iiMtf<?e shall forthwith odver-1 reach the hcscigcd. There has been a pain-1 after while—see if wo don’t. Thc time was I W. J. P. t Troup Factory, Gn.: How many cot* plan?mentioned^nwldalircrtlse^ I *ul lack of decision ami definiteness in the when wc had statesmen of principle for our I . liistlL-c ahall, at public auction, pro-1 English management of tho unrising in tho presidents n nd mibinets. Who ever heard of a j SlxtJ -tn o arc ri ported in the census of isso, buk II nrurn nr iniilAtto to Btiv norafin nr I ” o O priaUlg 111 UlC | ta „ (M1 j # | im t nlniidprimr thn <rnvAmtiicnt or hnimr I Alhniv 1nk«rn ssttwin tann hnllf argument in favor oi me i ^ rt j,' ur jj Q ^ ‘ ft 8 i n t e ftn d theso fellows were on I sentatives of the United States of America, in con- (vnivnn. isi * i i n a i > , , i w . 1 — -ho organic law of thc state I it. They were all interested iu some way in I gross assembled, that the rate of postage on newa- # » T i |_|t| t . , . . 1 1,10 two * ,OUSC!4 voto jointly, instead of I of Illinois, he wanted him sold into slavery I have been fully and clearly set forth in his I thnt ring, and now they begin to holler wolf. I papers and periodical publications of tho second lion, i no mu was uappiiy ueicaieu in ti»M separately, upon the returns. As thc houso I if ho could not pay a series of heavy fines, communications, nnd wc do not hesitate to Wh y» Mr. Blaine> is about the best man they class, when sent by other than the publUher or liouse, ftnd the issuo that it unwisely raised I outnumbers the senate such a per capita vote I The most cruel and arbitrary measures were I say that ho has fully justified Ills potion. , h , nvo , IIe J* 1 ! 1 ® bcststaicsmanjandhas I nc wsagcnu, shall bo one cent for each four ounces .hould bo 8 >'0W0,1 Unrest with It. The Georgia I wmlIl , of - ally lllako tll0 house the measures ho preferred In tho case, of Kll“wK^“tIjfib l 'T uSt’aJSL “whT™ If" ^ J U " T PK * fnJ^' °fi Mism tlio". T i^i7?m'ti| la “ l ' mo 11,0 J ud K° of tbo retun “- Tho rc|mbllraiis negroes or mulattoos found in tiie state. And Itccso devotes Ills attention totlie effect wliich when heateals there is n-’t^inglitUe about It, 'Jib™ wu' 1 ”'"'' 1 ,0 TOld lnaKCr ' towards flglitkig Uie k r«it imttleof KM on are llgliting tlio |>cr capita principle, and tills man is John A. I-ogmi. It Is thezamo I the provisions of tho constitution of 1877 and he divides liberaliy nnd tells on nobody. STw* si. _t. thpre uastnek the Iseiie of ndmlnlslratlve reform, nnd will hhcro Is every pros|>cct of a long dlsanssion of nm" that ia now socking tiie votes-of have on tbo trial of important causes and L'flnrfkSfwlt^hrm’forSundSrinR ffejot? I *^fen^plras^Sw^e^ ’^ined ll, T.^corr 0 , Jl nflZZe, U ^ ^ lU ° ">«». on the ground that i,o has the administration of jX Tl.ore who are 2SJS"'^T^hiv.^l tn dl"f»f„°ng Bor - published at Austin T trained against the corruption of the rtpulili-1 stated to tho house that lie considered neither I lieen their best and truest friend. The bare familiar with tiie methods of procedure In ‘hat wc thought itwnsa plankin their plat- . , Z; p hcdst Au * tln ’ T ran^rty. »tb® lit e ki otof fciither-heads t | lc renato nor (lio l.oiire plan tho right one. trutltis, he is the same Lognn at heart that our courts will conclude that Judge Uccse form .‘ 1 T I”. "VuhM mi I GE.o...DM(ren, Aln.-Yo riL„™ „m y . , ” hl *. VlCW l l,eh0H " T ‘I 10 ™ ,,,tltu : !‘°«“*» 18M ’* nd lf *»* he " *«n tho matter very mildly, for the Kgh and*won’t want any more and Z SSKffi’SSS&A? WHY PEOPLE ARE POOR. I 8ta ‘«- Tlio re|Hirt of the executive committeo before him, our readers can study tho mat-1 day thnt he hud a letter from him since his I ncan are made by drying the grapes on the vines, tor for themselves and form their own C on- llo '! ,inttUon llMd i if 1,0 ® loC “° or,prcmU,lg ,llom out 1,1 ,bo ,un ’ ot ,n hc “ ,c<1 —... - -i— tneep at fX 8 */1 rooms. 2. Our native gmpes will not make raisins. D. C. B., Gainesville, Ga.—1. What Isthcnamoof of in office. I reformer tnre 1 t protest , of the representatives of the Geurgln dcnioc ^ ■ .no ri-|nii. in tac r.iwiin cuminilieo ■ SUOAR. . ™ «n own I make a c l can Wo feel that our delegates to Chicago on I **‘° Aasoolated Charities of Boston is n I Sugar is declining the world over,on account I elusions—though it is but fair to say that I darkcy that was those two points ..re in thorough accord with l v , ry lnU '_ r * ,lln « 1 B,,d document. «f the immense beet root yk-ld. Tho yield the results have not been overdrawn in the But Mr. OMrindb. „ c „ aalnMTllIe . oa.-l. What I. thenameof Uie masses of the democracy of the state. Thp "'l™ 1 ““ >' ,M * l,e ‘* U " M o( ,PWv of beet culture In 1HH48. i. estimated as fol- • IgbtestpartIcuiar. Judge Uceso would have _ 0 ? L .ouThcrn “nJld . reuUwrn I'ZreoMh.^SSK^'k 0 » TMK osmimin cnTrnN I *" d 110 col,l ' l,l * ion " drawn are npplicablo to I lows: Germany, 1*10,000 tons; Austrla-Hun-1 11,0 constitution amended so ns— I pci i igrc ® u;, ancestors came Irom Carolina. I of the pimiral phrase, ’’oatlng Vmw?” ““"hat THb ukuwinq COTTON. i all y c ||y ami any section of tho country. I gory, 455,000 tons: France, 405,000 tons; Hus-1 To 8trlke out tho provision as to the in-1 fclevclaml it a Carolina name. They were the I «IM Kites.Pinkston do that created such a political The area in cotton tills year I* not iimtcri-1 According to this report four causes oo-1 g|a, 310.000 tons* lleljrium, 105,000 tons and I tawtaetton of and action cm local and special I old cavaliers and wouldent stoop to do a I ft f ® w **** f*? 7 .. . ally less than It was last year, or about \i\% count for * t of thc nrovailimr novortv and 1 it.. 'Vi ah ^ r " bills. mean thing. .Tho Clevelands arc all about 1* Senator Daniel W. Voorhecs. 2. It means tho million neres If the season should Drove I i , ., * ® , 8 P« > I Holland, 40,000 tons—making a total ot 1 I | tt Caroliua now, and nro still tho I acceptance of a disagreeable rann or measure by at million ai rcs. ll the season should prove I degradation. They ore drunkenness, ignoe-131.5,000 tons ns against 2,047,000 tons tho 2. To fix tho limit of tho biennial session to . )roU(l nnd nob i 0 stock person or a party commItted to an opposite com™ favorable, inc crop win reocu se\en million i ftnpc> laziness and pride. Only a small jht- I year before. It is believed the beet root cul- I eighty days, with no power of extension, nnd I When Grover Cleveland gets to bo president 13. 8ho charged certain democrats or alleged kuklux bales. >Y hat would be the effect of such a I con tago of trouble comes from illness and I turo will be increased, lather than dimlniab-1the same time reduce the time to be do-1 will c' n “ crop upon prices. In 1882-83 there was a I misfortune, and nine-ton ths of our poverty I cd mid were it not forth© duties levied in I voted to local legislation. I lowing i...*•'“****" '"tV.^Vr-A I , J *. w * c :*, Mouwin's Mill, Ga: 1. How many neo» rmi> of (1 !M0 000* in 1883-81 thornmwlll 1><« I » « -, 4 1 a.iiwiurun uums itiuu m '■ .. 4 4 4 . I mantle when tho old man is gone, lin free I pie have died from the effects of liquor in the last . * ' ’, , . * I a,li i misery are tho results of intemperance. I our eustom houses, sugar would bo material-1 8 * rcs * or ® to th® governor, subject totlie I to Bft y that I believe Mr. Blaine is the smart- I ten years? 2. How many die yearly in Georgia about Q'TW'WM naics—a loss ol l.J00,00U I Ignorance ia also set down as the cause of I )y lower than it is If Cuba was In a peace-1 approval of the senate, the appointment of | est man, the grandest man, but Cleveland is | the uw of whisky? 3. Whnt percent oi pco- •• * •— •••• - • - ■ iy i Mirniiiii ii ib, iivuuaswiiiiBimei the safest ami most reliable. When Ben Hill I P le «° to thc M y |um from *** use? i I whipped out Blaine in the Andersouville inat- I have no statistics In Georgia that will give; Paml |ter Blaine didn’t go off and pout and I thc desired information. with I plot revenge but be gavo it up I Echo, Oregon, June thc8.~EditorsConstitntfonr . Another imtential cause of itoverty do-1 contend with. As it is tliev can scarcely 1 4 disqualification for rc-clcction to the next I nobly ami went over nnd congratulated I yiiJlSK,SS^St& A? 8 »»*h®ni ^..raging If tlio growing crap »i,oi„,l prevo MrvM u pi,ire in tlio l.-u ‘ au/.liat rllt.rown a aJ r „g.,verL“n, 3 term’on the part oftlio governor. r j7STf* T^"»‘ b8 ~ toBaaiarKeone. „ , he w i dMpread , tld rulunu.-A^mliiig to their own report?' To ' ncreMe th o number of renator. to “r^aBnTSr Ponn^S^Tv'eSuc" *1 ^^ ‘»r tha, Nteerer Hie crop of IV - W WMG,tH0,0t bales, ltlj,!,! c f improvidence. WiU» the I sava the Ft Louis Republican, I eighty-eight I like that. It did me gpod. And when wc I if this is a far question pics ancer Respectful brought to the fanner who praduced it $277,1 exception ot internpenutce tlio improvidence I “tiie process they use for makimr I 0» To restore the provisions of the constitu-1 wanted to build a nvonument to Mr. Hill he 17°®" II. T. Pace. mm,. The current crop of about 5 7M.,«« of Ul e m«rea of our people i. the enure of M.grar U wa-reful in ,to extreme L compared ‘'on of 1803 re to the .election of juror, for ^KSmVuIh. hre""^^ manlKd iiMK“ bales w ill uriiig to tno runners I , miro poverty nnd suffc^ug than anything I with thoso cmployeil in the beet sugar Indus-1 t,ie trial ot civiI ani1 criminal cases. I on ^ him that wouldent have doue that. I He 1* a handsome bachelor. •244,000,000. This crop was grown, I else. The people who work for wage* and I try. The machinery is an tin uated and mis- I All these matters are important, and some I Logan is dead weight. He is a half Indian—I student. Athens, Ga.: 1. Were the cute In tho ““tCT"^ ,, " 0,, ' r * d « ricul ' un ‘'Ul»rlre d om.tre« rule lay anything hy for ecptlble of crey improvement, re that ,h c o‘them are of vital importance. Apart, how-h ba ‘'• b8b «f‘^ I ^2a^«SS^3aSdfta5SErSSBM^ upon 10,780,000 rerea Thc product poraere, old agc Blld ricknere T.» much U wreted, «„, c acreage and reme an.o.mt of cane now over, frem all other eon.idem tion,, it i. worth , h ,',* rt ivereince tbo wre. Be will do S '“ ,,cr " fc “^ “• AndyrtU'OvWhl® rtock. an , only I muc i, and tire fact larelf-crident that I f u | condition her crop would add to the I judge. °f tire .uiwrlor court ami re! id tore. ao,ouo bole, lore that at thc cormponding I huinere mean. lilleiMM, and hllenewi mean. I luqre vi.ililc impply, uml tho Ixnii.l.nn plan-1 A To extend the terma of the governor a time of lret year, and are actually larger tlrnn 1 110g | t >ct of wife ami children. I , cr!l would have Ixjth flood, nnd low price* to hoada °‘ tllc department, to four years, wi in 18*2or 1881. There figure, are not eu-• — - ■>-• - I * I - j. . duction In the .tock held throughout the l aIld tcmi>era(e, but if lie lialiitually live, up I lia. alreadv ventured to nredict thc New Or-1 .tltution be made clastic enough to meet thc I turbulent di.turber of the public tranquility, j the bwtpriacs for serial sturlei? 2. Abtoihenumo world. The return, scarceiy reinid the bare I... .1 1—. 1.1.1 I ‘ .. V. ' .. , W 1 .1 I lie 1. no gentleman, and I’ll bet ten dollar. | bet ot toobeap n«e. replied to nuke a chapter? world. Tlte return* scarcely re|mld the hare j to t | lc very lret cent of his income, or a little I Iran. ex|H»ition this fall will probably prove requirement, of labor required in ila prodiicUon, leaving | beyond It, he and thore de,Huident upou him I of not lere advantage to the iiuprovemeitkof I 7^, nothing for repair, or wear and tear, not to | are a b»lutel.v certain to come to grief. I sugar apiwratua than the Atlanta exposition The Associated t’lioritie* of IkMlon will do I did to cotton machinery. Tiie Inventors and ACROSS THE WATER, mention profit* and improvement.. If a abort crop did not incrauc tiie price, wh auch times re there will a great crop do? thnt Mr. Blaino feel, handicapped by having I 1. Sensational papers like the Weekly nnd Ledger him on bis ticket. But such 1. politic. Tlrat of New York pny tho best price, to American wa. the way with Garfield. They tied Arthur writers. 2. From one to twenty page*, on to him. He WM nothmg but a ward politi- F . c AIhan 0a . , W l nt ,t r ie of shoe 1* ornn .lid not inereaso the nriee u-h»i In I ' , , , i 7"” 7~ I *" w,w " miniwnsiiu 1 Lord Randolph Churchill I. bitterly attack- I cian bumming around among tho brothel, of I nsedln’waiklne matches? ' 2.’ aliort crop did not mcreare the price, «hat in | a good work in conUnulng to explain tiie machine makers of tiie world will he thcre. in . Gladstone’, policy in Egvnt. 1 v ' ~ v - 1 - — >■ -•«' ”•>- > W?»L. * oanssM .ik,it-»Mu Mil.I ....... I mi ill _ . . .1. t I .t . is . . • I * * < ®* I * | causes of poverty and misery. Tin y may | They will sec the needs ami the defects of the I York. History is still repeated. The I knoe-breeche**? 3. Do they use (Stimulants, and if l men of the nation who won’t utoop to I n °i what do they me? It all goes I 1. A shoe with soft uppers and a stiff* sole. 2* .'L® HT^,’L th . e 1 ,10t '. ,mke *">■ b >“ ‘ b ® tro-|pre«n, .y„en^ and romc one will hit on | bn M in London. resentetl to Mrs. § w . . The governor of Berber was not captured, I *‘8® ^ ut , . r %C ecU m°-| 1 re P u . b *‘® an# * r ® I answer the purpose better. New Spurgeon’, fiftieth birthday h*. been eele-1 ^, R ‘ n0 „ cal ,. t b« nia , lo pre<idtntl „ A check for $22,500 was I bv favors and by rings for pluuder and office. I Most of them do, but it U a matter of taste. 3. Blaine is a great man and I was hopeful of the I Very few use stimulants. Lemonade or milk will ^Urmiak but It doc. reem to he a good time mTO dou. truth, re, forth in the report tfmW !he right'thing furaish th^piulro ret ? 0 TC S ~ in which to ptub all food crop* to Uie nt-1 to wl.oul.l lie eon.untly kept in view, it is it nt work. Men will make machine, to do The governor of IWrbfr wa. mort-to keep tho anblik In good condl- lwwib | e ,| ie WU r« of a few genemtiona to anything nowadays if only astured of a I but is .till at large with *100,000 of govern-1 " g ",' n “ . ‘no snoune i. .or mmi Reader, Jackson. Ga.: I. it true that many yean tion, and to look sharply after whatever else I bring the public mind up to a proper appro-1 market for them. Louisiana ought to be able I W1 «nt * 8° I and that is the leading paper I agoastrongwind blew back the waters in the- will furnish f<wid fur man nr ImC Them I i *• / 4 J , 4 , . I . lAmntniw uu^iu iu w aoii i ment money. I but you see the Tribune was on his slate. I lake above Niagara FalLi. causing the channel to is need too of economy Most articles I c 4 | 1011 of tfm P ewnce » Justly, etlucation I to make sugar at a profit aa cheaply aa any I France has adopted a divorce law for the Whitelaw Reed is to be minister to England I ron dr > ? U n«Hl, too. or economy. Moat article* I an a economy. | country in the world. At least she ought to | fi „ t time sincc 1816 | and that is all right, lie will make a good | You an of dally use are lower than I OEORQIA YELLOW pink. they were last year, and if there is | > ought to I tfjit time since 1818. I be able to have the best machinery and the I i are partially correct In your question. The u i . 4 . . I one. He is smart and bold and has got raon-1 wind blew the waters back, exposing many rocks , , f , , . The Southern Merchant, a trade journal I be it equipped planUition. in the wor.d—and I * IM ^ C * n *** c ’* d ,>r ” ldc „* °*J ej^ enough to d° him m ld hi, children. 8» I ncviTsccu before, but tbc channel in. not’eft en- energy InrelaUonto foodcrop.and economy puWithlM in llaU i m ore. says: ’’IVopic who .he lias not go, them yet." DvmL.lte nlou .gain.t the Emneror ofGer- wSff we eau’t pleree evcrybo.lv. and re if ' gu^riier Orahard nm o. - „ Inhandiing the result* of caah cro|«, no onel are I10 , directly identified with the lumber I In the meanwhile tiie dc|>artment of agri-1 TOaI ,'y are reported • I u e ? u r '"V. 1 ’ lat '* ,8ke Blaine, and I curing »ut*cViNlS^fo®Tii?Coxrentwro»®or n any ^-ormotmprodue- cu.ture propore, to re. wh.,^ th. havc^iv*, ^.„,U- ^7^^.'l ot ^ ^ ‘ ^ low hm Il.c rr.,1, „ i» u. r ’i-.i «. .111,. I! °" ^ lll, !' bl ' r (b ® "o“‘ b c r n states. Hut, I lies of sugar making in other portion, of the j Uctory underatamting o» to the Iwlicv to be | »ay the other day that he knew Blame wo* a | No license ii required, low, but the croj will U raised a,^uuusuall} I l argv . *, it ^ it, development is almost in in-1 country. Fifty thourand dollar^ was appro-1 nuraued in Eavnt I g««d man, for he wa* a Presbyterian. nFN ,. ' ,nYt «nd with proper disposal of capK.l prianM bv ,1,/agricultural billfor the inve^ P -- ,‘ ba V rrejudice,/ and DENIED BY THE CONSOL. Uilng .bovethe cost of production. and energy there can be no iimit placed to ligation of production. Provirion for the ex- THE WEEK IN CONGRESS. dj ^*£1. y We jgrt „ Spain Ha. no Though, of SelUng Cubo-Bo- WITHDRAWAL OF BANK DEPOSITS. I producrion. At present tiie market ia some-1 |wnditure of a portion of this has been I In thc senate the bill to pay Georgia the I man believe that Blaine is a bad m«n. We I ?"* Cab “ n Jfew *- * * - * • - 1 r 1 1 - • • 1 »ork. June 21.—Senor Juarez, fipanisb pletion Is now stayed, but the money that I south will furnish tlic world with full supply I peri men ts last season in thla Une being aoiuo-1 guage was used on both sides. The bill pro- I at Atlauta. It looked to me very much life it I and to the Spanhh miuteter at Washington has been withdrawn from the banks has only I of lumbcr-particularly of liard and fine I cemful as to warrant their continuation upon I hibiting the importation* of foreigners under I c »ty against country. We I alarming dispatches oddmsed the governor in part been returned; where is the remain-1 woods. Pine wood ha* not general I v been I a laroer wwle this mr. The exneHmont^ I eoutracte m t^rform UW wu Th® I h * v .t territory | general der of it? It remains in the country, tha certain, bat it if far from certain where in »iiw ■ v>vu( B wjciiuw |miv >■ uuw i» mgn umirasi-* — < ue appropruuon Dins nave oeen unuer ais-1 «»u ■« me mg cum o» auihu, «uu I sailto New York to confer with th# PmnUh min country it la depoaited. If it had been loaned the best of our native wood* for line interior I *** ®»nc sugar of the south. There I cu*sion several days. The conference report J ; nd . Au *R , i ta,l n 8 - V w na 5 Sf 4 to ^ I liter and himself on the sublectof the -Jeof Cuba! after it wa. drawn from th* banka, or had | work." Tho Southern Merchant proceed, to | •». ‘Yofcreor Wylie, the chemUt of the de- (toeing General FiU John Porter to the army .p"e B did h ud " Sh h“or a,em Jl I b J?* ,h f* tha "“o'* •* >brerd. He ta rare been invested in real estate, wheat, oil or sttte that the lumber buaineei ol Atlanta is I*rtmcnt, njt, four dlfteren, sugar belt, in W u sdopted. remehow’ I couldent help ’ feel- I afe,muffin ECTtr entertained by the