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E FREE PRESS 1
BLAIRSV1LLE. GEORGIA.
V So delicate is the adjustment ol the
most powerful cannon that allowance bus
to be made for the cutvature of tho
earth before the discharge._
The New York Mail and Express cal¬
culates that a subscription of $32.27
from every inhabitant of the United
States would wipe out all form of public
indebtedness—National, State and muni¬
cipal. _
The city of Cincinnati has for many
year9 been a favorable abiding place of
Hebrews, remarks the New York Press.
At a recent celebration there Rabbi
Wise said that “Cincinnati would here¬
after be the Zion of Judaism in
America."
There is much in the lingo of the
Wyoming war, confesses tho New York
Commercial Advertiser, which is as per¬
plexing as some of that in the Bering
Sea quatrel. A rustler appears to be
a person who gains a livelihood by steal¬
ing other people’s cattle, while a regu¬
lator is a gentleman who lS paid $t> a day
for killing rustlers.
It is stated that a sugar redning com¬
pany in Chicago, Iff., is making 150
barrels of oil per day from corn, The
oil resembles linseed oil and may be
used for similar purposes. There is
about four per cent, of this oil in the
grain, which has hitherto been wasted
by the ordinary methods of making
starch and glucose.
Now that ramee culture has begun
seriously to engage the attention oi
planters in the Tropics, it is interesting
to learn on the authority of a foreign
journal that ramee fiber, under great
hydraulic pressure, may be made to as¬
sume the compactness of steel. It is as¬
serted that when so prepared it wifi be
particularly serviceable for steam pipes,
as it will not be subject to contraction or
expansion and also will not rust.
Within three years passenger rate on
the railroad across the Isthmus of Pana¬
ma have been reduced to ten and five
cents a mile for first and second class
tickets. Up to that time the charge for
passenger transportation on the Panama
Railroad was the highest in the world,
being $25 in American gold for first-class
and $10 in gold for second-class passen-
gers between Panama and Colon, ot
about fifty cents and twenty cents a mile,
respectively.
It is not a very infrequent occurrence
in the London police courts, declares
Once-A-Week, for infuriated prisoners
to attempt to assault the presiding magis¬
trate. Mr. Montagu Williams, who sits
in one of the East End Courts, often has
boots thrown at him, and on one occasion
he received a severe blow in the face from
such a missile. The habit seems to be
spreading. The other week the news¬
papers reported a case in which a disap¬
pointed litigant kicked iu open court his
own lawyer, for which he may have had
Borne excuse, and assaulted the reporters,
for which there could be no justifica¬
tion.
The remarkable progress of women en¬
gaged in business affairs is instructively
get forth, in the Massachusetts State
Bureau, of I Labor statistics. According
to the figures there presented m 1885,
there were]only about 180,000 womeu
engaged 4 in ^industrial pursuits. Now
there j^are f more %Than 800,000. Two'
thirds of these .working women are under
thirty years of age, and inasmuch as this
proportion has-been maintained during
the half dozen years, it seems to indicate
that marriage constantly tends to dopleta
the ranks. “Such being the fact,” com¬
ments the New York News “there need
be little fear that the industrial
pendence of the gentler sex will result in
an increase of old mafds.”
The New England Courier, a German-
American weekly, published in Boston,
Mass., gives some very interesting figures
showing how great and influential the
Teutonic race has become as an element
of immigration into this country. In
Illinois one-half of the foreign born popu¬
lation is German. In Minnesota the pro¬
portion is -one-third; in Nebraska and
Iowa more than one-third; in Wisconsin
one-half, or one-eighth of the whole
population; in Indiana, the banner Ger-
man State, out of 244,000 foreigners,
80,000 are of Gerraau birth, or fifty-five
per cent, of the whole. Out of 12,000,-
000 immigrants into this country since
1820, 4,500,000 have been Germans.
Coming from tbe most thrifty and best
educated country in Europe, observes the
Boston Globe, these people, constitu¬
tionally endued witli patience, skill
tnd perseverance, have engrafted a solid,
thoughtful, industrious, and peace-lov¬
ing element into the composite structure
of the Uuion.
REV dr. talmage
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN
DAY SERMON.
Text: ,% Put on the whole armor jof
God.”—Ephesians vi., 11.
There is in this text a great rattle oi
shields and helmets and swords. Soldier*
are getting ready for battle. We have had
recently in this church new enlistments, and
I shall address myself to those in this and
other churches who are putting on the armor
of God, and only who may recruits. feel themselves “Masterly to be
as yet raw often military cir¬ re¬
treat” is a term used in
cles, but in religion there is no such thing.
It is either glorious falling advance or It disgraceful be
and ignominious thing all back. about would
a strange if our anxiety men
ceased the moment they were converted.
You would almost doubt tho sanity of that
farmer who, having planted the corn and
seen “My it work just sprout is ail above dona ground, I should say:
have no more
anxiety for the field.” No. There is work
for the plow keeping aud the hoe, and there must
be a careful up of the fences, and
there must be a frightening away of tho
birds that would pillage the field. And I
say the entrance upon Christian life is only
the implantation hard of grace in the heart. done
There is earnest, work yet to be
and perhaps many years of anxiety before
there shall be heard the glorious shout of
“Harvest home.”
The beginning to be a Christian is only
putting down the foundation; but after that
there are years of hammering, polishing,
carving, lifting, before the structure is com¬
pleted. It takes five years to make a Chris¬
tian character it takes twenty years, it
takes forty years, it takes seventy years, if
a man shall live so long. In other words, a
man dying after half a century of Christian
experience feels that he has only learned the
“A B C’s” of the glorious alphabet. The
next year will decide a groat deal in your
history, young Christian man. It will de¬
cide whether light you the are church, to be a burning and of
shining of or a spark
gre.ee covered up in a barrel of
ashes. It will decide whether you are to be
a strong man in Christ Jesus, with gigantic
blows striking the iron mail of darkness, or
a bedwarfed, whinning, grumbling soldier,
that ought the to be ‘Rogues' drummed March.” out of the You Lord’s
camp with 4 have
only just Earth been launched; and heaven the voyage is to be
made. aud hell are
watching to see how fast you will sail, how
well you will weather the temptest. and
whether at last, amid the shouting of angels,
you shall come into the right harbor. May
ferod help me this morning to give you three
or four words of Christian counsel, as I ad¬
dress myself more entered especially the Christian to those life. who
have My just now word of counsel is, hold before
first
your soul a very high model. £)o not say,
“I wish I could pray like that man, or speak
like this man, or have the consecration of
this one.” Say; “Here is the Lord Jesus
Christ, a perfect pattern, By that I mean,
with God’s grace,* will to shape all my fife.” In
other words, you never be any be, If more a
Christian than you strive to you
build a foundation twenty by thirty feet you
will only have a small house. If you build
a foundation one hundred by one hundred
feet you will have a large house. If you re¬
solve to be only a middling Christian you
will cnly be a aspiration middling Christian. worldly If direcr you
have no high in a ff
tion you will never succeed in business,
you have no high aspiration in religjous
things you will never succeed in religion.
You have a right to aspire to the very
highest style of Christian character.
From your feet there reaches out a path
of Christian attainment which you may
take, and I deliberately than say Paul that you David may
be a better man was or
or Summerfieid or Doddridge—a better
woman than Hannah More or Charlotte
Elizabeth. Why not? Did they Did have they a
monopoly of Christian grace?
have a private key to the storehouse of
God’s mercy? Does God shut you out
from the gladness and goodness to which
they were introduced? Oh, no. You
have just the same promises, just the
same Christ, just the same Holy Ghost,
just the same offers of present aud ever¬
lasting love, and if you fall short of what
they were—aye, if you do not come up to
the point which they reached and go beyond
it—it is not because Christ has shut you. out
from any point of moral and spiritual eleva¬
tion, but because you deliberately refused to
take it. I admit that man cannot become
a Christian like that without a struggle; but
what* do you get without fighting for it?
The fortresses of darkness are to be taken bv
storm. You may by acute strategy flank
the hosts of temptation, eviis in but there are that temx>-
tations, there are the way and it will you be
will have to meet face to face,
shot for shot, gun for gun, grip for apostle grip,
slaughter for slaughter. The
Paul over and over again represents the
Christian life as a combat,
When the war vessel of Christ’s church
comes into glory bringing it# crew and its
passengers it will not come in like a North
River yacht, beautifully painted and adorned,
swinging into the boathouse after a pleasure vessel
excursion. Oh, no; it will be like a
coming with a heavy cargo from China or
India, the marks of the wave and the hurri¬
cane upon it—suds rent, rigging spliced, bul¬
pumps all working to keep her afloat, vessel
warks knocked away, 1 see such a
coming and get out my small boat and push
toward her, aud I shout; “Ahoy, captain!
What are you going to do with those shiv¬
ered timbers? That was a beautiful ship
when you went out, but you have
it.” “Oh,” says the captain, h I have a
cargo on board, and by this round trip I
I have made ten fortunes.”
So I believe it will be when tho Christian
soul at last comes into the har bor of heaven.
It will come bearing upon it the marks of a
great stress of weather. You can see by the
very looks of that soul as it comes into dashed glory
that it was driven by a storm and
in the hurricane, but by so much blessed, as the voy¬ “If
age is rough, with will Him the harbor be shall be
ye suffered on earth, ye
glorified with Him in heaven.” Aim high.
Do not bo satisfied to be like the Christians
all around you. Be more thun they have ever
been for Christ.
My recently second word of counsel Christian to those who
have entered upon life is,
Abstain from all pernicious associations, and
take only those that are useful and benefi¬
cent, Stay out of all associations that
would damage your Christian character.
Take only those associations chat will help
you. A learned man said, “If i stay with
that man Pension any longer I shall get to
be a Christian in spite of myself.” In other
words there is a Now mighty power kind in of Christian associa¬
associations. what
tions shall wo, as young Christians, seek
after? I think we ought to get into com-
££ y better than ourselves, never going
company worse than ourselves.
it get into company a little
better than ourselves and there
are ten people will in bettered. that company, If ten chauces int
to one we be we get i
company a little worse than ourselves, and
there be ten people in that company, ten
chances to one we will be made worse than
we were before.
I do not pretend to point oat any evil in¬
fluences, but are there not some surround¬
ing influences that Stand are pernicious back from to your fur¬
growth in grace? that
nace in which so many young Christians
have been destroyed. In this church there
is a large company of young men and young
women consecrated to Christ. I know of
no better than they are. I into their
friendship. Young convert, Contact with invite them you will elevate
you. All hail, young followers of Jesus
Christ, my joy and my pride' My heart
thrills at every step or your advancemsnt.
’ when
X talked with you in that hour you
most tried to break from sin, and now 1 re-
jcice as I see you putting on the armor of a
conflict in which God will give you present
and evil everlasting; association.!. victory. Stand off from all
A man is no bettor than
tho company ho keeps, (io ainoiit; those
who are better thaft you are and you will be
made better. Go among those who are worse
than you are and you will be made worse,
My next word of counsel is that you be
actively Christians employed. with doubts X and see perplexities, a great, many and
they seem to be proud of them. Their entire
Christian life is made up of gloom, and they
seem to cultivate that spi ritual despondency,
when I will undertake to say that in uiue
cases judgment out of of ten God spiritual idleness. despondency is a
upon Who are
the happy people in the church to-day? The
the busy religion people. Show of Jesus mo Christ the man and who is professes idle, and
I will show you an unhappy man. Tho very
first prescription that I give to n man when
I find him full of doubts and fears about his
eternal interest is to go to work for God.
Ten thousand voicesare lifted up asking for
your help. Go and word help. of
1 have another counsel to give
those who have just entered Christian You life,
and that is, be faithful in prayer.
might as well, business men, start out in the
morning without food and expect to be strong
all that day—you might as well abstain
from food all the week and expect to be
P; e g , Ph /hto^ by way*to get^any ami £2$
into the soul is prayer, the only
difference between that Christian that is
worth anything and that who is worth
nothing is the the fact that the last does not
pray and other does.
Christian^ holy life 6 who and is gotUng'nfong^VKry^ast^iu this is
the who only getting
progress in' reli(^ t^^Blmber by the amount of
prayer; not bytheaHkest by ot hours, per*
haps, but supplication that
he puts up to God. mhore i, no exception to
the rule. Show me a Christian man who
neglects this kind of duty, and f will show
you one who is inconsistent. Show me a
man who prays, and his strength and his
power cannot bo exaggerated. of Why, and just
give to a man this power prayer you
give him almost omnipotence. Sabbath
This afternoon you will see two
school teachers. That one does not gain the
attention of her class. This one does. What
is the difference between them, their Intel-
from great prostration before God in earnest
supplication, asking that God’s mercy might
come upon the senool and that in the after
noou she might immortals gain the attention of those
five or six that would be around
w thl M*? “ eUg °SE '
of Lord God Almighty.
Another word of counsel X have to give
Be careful in Bible research. A great many
good read books half are of now coming out. We cun
not them. At every revolution
of the printing press they are coming. They
eover our parlor tables, and are in our boots Sit-
ting rooms aud libraries. Glorious
they are. We thank God every day for the
work of the Christian printing press. But I
have thought that perhaps tho followers ot
Christ sometimes allow this religious litera-
ture to take their attention from (rod’s
Word, and that there may not be as much
Just calculate experience?
in your minds how much re-
ligious literature you have read during the,
year and then how large a portion of thoi
‘
Word of God you have read, an 1 then con-
trastthe two and answer within your own
soul whether you are giving more attention
to the books that were written by the hanl
of man or that written by the hand of God.
Now, mineral you go to the drug but store and you gei
the waters, you have noticed
that the waters are not so fresh or spark-
ling or healthful as when you gat these vejhr
waters right ut Saratoga where they and bubble Sharon—getti»
(hem front tbs-
rock.
And 1 have noticed the same thing in re-
gard to the truth of the Gospel; while there
books, i find it is better when I coma tmtoo
eternal rock of God’s Worcl au l drink forth
that fountain that bubbles up fresli aul
ure to the life and the refreshment aud tue
ealth of the soul.
Read the Bible and it brings you into the
association of the best people that ever live:!,
You stand beside Moses and learn nE meek¬
ness, beside Job and learn his patience, be- !
side Raul and catch and something of his enchus-
iasm, beside Christ you feel His love.
Aud yet how strange it is that a great many
men have given their whole lives to the as¬
saulting of that book I oauuot understand
it. Tom Paine worked against that book as
though he received large wages and was in¬
spired by tho very power of darkness, con¬
fessing that all the time he was writing he
did not have the Bible anywhere near him.
Row many powerful intellects have endeav¬
ored to destroy it, Hume, Boling broke,
Voltaire have been after it. Ten thousand
men now Word are warring What do against the truth of
God’s you think of them?
I think it is mean aud will prove it. I will
prove it is the meanest thing that has ever
been done in all the centuries.
There and is a ship at sea and in trouble. The
captain the crew are at their wits’ encl.
You are on board. Y"ou are an old seaman.
You come np and give some good counsel,
which is kindly taken. doing That is all right.
But suppose, instead of that, in the
midst of all the trouble, you pick up the only
compass that is on board and pitcu it over
the taffrail? Oh, you say, that is dastardly.
But is it as mean as this? Here is the vessel
of the world going on with sixteen hundred
millions of passengers, tossed and driven in
the tempest, and at the time we want help
tho infidel comes and he takes bold of the
only compass and he tries to pitch it over¬
board. It is contemptible beyond everything
that is contemptible. Have you any better
light? Bring it on if you have. Have you
any better comfort to give us? Bring it on
if you have. Have you any better hope?
Bring it on if you have, and then you may
have this Bible and X shall never want it
again. I think of thing than
But can a meaner
that, and that is an old man going along on
the mountains with a staff in one hand and
a lantern in the other. Darkness lias come
on suddenly, die is very old, just able to
pick his way out amid the rocks and preci¬
pices, leaning on his staff with one hand and
guiding himself with the light in the other.
STou come up and say: ‘‘Father, you seem to
be lost. You are a long way from home.”
*‘Yes,” he replies. And then you take him
by the baud und lead him home. That la
very kind of you. But suppose instead of
that you should snatch the staff from his
hands and hurl it over the rocks, and snatch
the lantern and blow it out? That would be
dastardly, contemptible until there is nc
depth of contempt beneath it. If you have
a better staff, give it to him. If you have a
better light, give it to him.
When God has out the staff of the Gospel
in our hands and the lamp of God’s Word tc
light our feet, are and you going only to illumination? take from us
our only support our and rattle¬
I love the sting of the wasp the
snake better than I do the man who waute
to clutch the Word of God from my grasp.
Cling to your Bible! If this Bible should
be destroyed, if all the Bibles that have ever
been printed should be destroyed, we could
make up a Bible right out of this audience.
From that Christian man’s experience I take
one cluster of promises, and from that old
Christian man’s experience another, I put
them all together, aud I think I would hav*
u Bible.
You see, my friends, I have not tried 1
hide the fact that I have large expectation
of you who have entered the Christian fife.
Do not be discouraged. Press on toward
the priz«;^God Keep beside you and heaven Look before
you. your courage up. in thirty
years from now upon this church. Another
man in the pulpit. Other faces in the pews.
Another man around leading the alms the song. boxes Others the
carrying Thirty of
church. All changed. years have
gone and I look into the faces of the people,
and I say*. w Why, it seems to me I have
seen these people somewhere, hut I cannot
exactly say where. Ob, yes, now J begin to
These were the converts in I8D3 and
1890. Why, how you have change!!’
"Oil, yes," they say. "of course we have
chaugSU. I Thirty ‘ How years mattes wrinkles a great there
chnnge. say faces!” many "Oh. yes," they
are In your wrinkles. say.
"thirty make groat many 1
year.-, a "Yes, have
•'Have you kept the faith?” we
kept the faith.” "Where are those you?" people "All
who used to sit in tho pew with
gone!” "Then I say, "Well, I feel lonely;
come, let us sins one of the old hymns we
used to sing thirty years ago, in 1891, on
communion day. Any ot you know the old
tune? Some one hum it. Yes, that s it,
that’s it. Now, altogether, let us sing, just
as wo did in 1893:
“ There la i a fountain titled with blood,
Drawn ______from Immanuel's veins:
And sinners plunged beneath that flood
Lose all their guilty
The dying thief rejoiced his day: to see
That fountain In vile he.
And there may I, sins though away.” as
Wash all my
IN PARIS.
The Newness ami Briskness of the
j| 1( , p,.,.| U .i,
younger 1 W0Cdor and ^ newel than .London "."“Hi
.
The latter, of course, as well as Paris,
has been practically '‘made over”
since the coup d'etat of Napoleon III,
j n 1852. After he was seated firmly
fX 3™ th ies“e £ thr T l ^ futlhl
r riei B hl: orhood of tho
Louvre and the Church of the Nlade-
line torn down und miles of new
streets laid out, SO that today 1 ai ls
is almost entirely modern. Of course,
down by t he Cathedral of Notre Dame
there are some old foreigners places, looks but the
p ar j s known to as
f ie *,-V K y f . F.vervthirur } -rfHK here ‘„7,i
' s ’ 01 anc * pleasure. I lie maul-
finish their work quickly so they may
join their male comrades in pleasure;
the small shop-keeper takes out tile
w ife aud babies as soon as grades evening
comes . g 0 jt is with all of
wor king people. The rich and SOCial-
‘y great are all for pleasure. Even
the horses go iastei heie thaU cluy
where else. The noise is something thorough-
terrific—all the principal
fares being laid with beyond macadam descrip- pave-
meat; the clatter is
tion. Never have I seen more nor
finer turnouts than here. The horses
large, well groomed harness and faultless, spirited,
the carriages and
and the servants well tailored and
smartly set „f up the altogether, talk about the
iu spite iu-
nrnn ® ,oas< ,« r c i ‘ of nvervthinw ' IJI in ,f„ Paris
because of tile new tat iff, r .1 r find a- diess-
es are cheaper than in London. The
foulard simple morning and printed gowns delaine, of crepon, ill the
making of which Parisian dresstliak-
ers excel, cost about two-thirds what
** Lourtt *** Worth would 1 chai foi
01 „0
Ment I do not, $45, know, while but in Others London charge they
fljoni chfrmience $30 to
at the higher price-not,
of course, if yon find a dressmaker m
fill unfashionable quarter, whose cut
is frequently as expensive good, indeed, establish- as the
work of more
m ents.i ’ other Silk stockings thino-s are cheaper in
p F , 1 S 't* ner ln ? S ' seem 36 P, the 6 sumo ‘. ani °
> London. , As , far I have been
as
rtfclEhcchj aJUe fio see, piqg a woman Jo Iter may individuality, wear any-
All materials, made in every oonceiva-
ble wav, ifffe fashionable. Hats range
j n shape from tiny Hat circles to large
poke bonnets with decided crowns,
ipther high and small. French worn-
GU bttvo not adopted tho have loose the sack En¬
.(foaWXIS glisA. universally Plnladelvhut as Record.
— Corr.
» -------—---
A number ot' old English “halls” and castles
are advertised for sale or to let.
Tho Vast Benefits of the Erie Canal.
Although on account of the prac¬
tice of vessels going “up” freight light, only
about 30,299,006 tons of were
transported during the season of 1890,
the >y were carried an average distance
of five hundred and sixty-six miles;
so that, multiplying the tons carried
by the distance iu miles, we have more
than seventeen thousand million ton-
miles,or a one-fourth freight distribution of the ton-miie- equal
to almost
age of all our railroads. This lake
freightage has been done at an aver¬
age charge to shippersof 1.3 miffs per
ton-mile. The shipments by railroad
on the contrary, are averaged Commission by the
Interstate Commerce at
9.22 miffs per ton-mile; so that there
was a saving on each ton transported
by this water-road over the average
charges by railroad, for an equal saving dis¬
tance of $4.48,or an aggregate the producers
to be divided between
and consumers of this country, of
more than $135,800,000.
As the Government has appropri¬
ated not quite $30,000,000 for the im¬
provement of the Great Lakes, their
harbors, aud tho rivers thut run into
them, ceived tho through people the of this cheapened country dis¬ re¬
tribution made the possible single by this of 1890, ex¬
penditure, and iu half times the year total cost
four a
of the improvements; or. to state the
advantages ot’ this improved of water¬ lake
way in another and way, the cost
freight was six one-half per cent
of the value of the goods transported transported ;
whereas if they had been
at the average charge for railroad
freight, the cost would have been
fully forty-six per cent of their value.
This percentage, would have obviously
taken so large a part of the value of a
considerable proportion of the goods
that the labor and profits of their pro¬
duction and distribution must have
been lost to the community if depend¬
ence had been placed on railroads
alone. —Fcrnnn.
The fact that ahorse at fuff trot if
sometimes, at all events, entirely in the
air without any of its feet touching the
ground, lias been proven by by an instanta¬ Otteu-
neous heim, photograph taken of M. Versailles
Photographic vice-president the picture
Society. The dog
Bhows the horse trotting J.n a cart
with a single occupant, and the shad¬
ows on the ground clearly demonstrate
that all its l’eet are in the air. The legs,
both fore and hind, are spread, advanced, the right
fore and left hind legs being
while tho left fore and right hind legs
are pointing backwards. The left fore leg
Is a little bent at tho knee.
DOMESTIC amenities.
“I hope our boy won't take after you,”
growled Mrs. Caudle. “He won’t umount
to anything if he does.”
“Well, I hope he won’t take after you,
either,” retorted Mr. Caudle. “If he
does, he will be a lecturer of tho dullest
type." —[Brooklyn Life.
S •ms. /:■ it )
s
Tlie suspender girl lias come to stay.
Mrs. Buffington Booth receives hut
seven dollars a week for her services to
the Salvation Army.
Miss Nina Picton, of New York City,
is one of the few successful women com¬
posers of orchestrations.
When two rings are used at a wedding,
tho bride pays for the groom's ring aud
the groom for be br'de’o.
In Finland the women consider a kiss
on the lips as the greatest insult, even
from their own husbands.
Open work scrim with ribbons run
through it makes a pretty strip tor the
centre of the dinner table.
With her income of $500,000 a year
Mrs. William Astor ought to he able to
struggle along comfortably.
Lexington, Mo., boasts a woman ex¬
press agent, a woman manager oi a tele¬
graph office and a postmistress.
A new dormitory for Vassal- is to be
built with the $50,000 that is that col¬
lege’s share of the Fayerweather bequest.
Rubbers of white leather are among
the odd things bought by fashionable
women to wear over their party slippers.
Give your best young man a bouton¬
niere of nine violets if you would have
him fashionably attired as to his button
hole.
The Duchess of Marlborough now buys
her clothes in New York. She says the
American modistes are better than the
English.
Queen Victoria has decided to send to
the World’s Fair some specimens of her
knitting and spinning, done when she
was a girl.
The late Amelia B. Edwards was a
woman of letters. She was entitled to
wear Ph. M., L. H. D. and LL. D. after
her name.
Dr. Mary P. Jacobi, in New York
City, and Dr. Mary Hoxon, in Washing¬
ton, are each reputed to earn $40,000 a
year at their profession.
Mrs. lagalls is quite unlike her dis¬
tinguished husband in physical appear¬ the
ance, for she is as short and plump as
Kansas ex-Senator is taff and thin.
Miss Alice Rideout, whose designs for
sculpture at the World’s Fair were ac¬
cepted, has just taken the contract for
their execution, the sum being $8200.
The “Coston Signals”—the colored
light system of signalling both on land
and sea—was the invention of Mrs.
Martha J. Coston, of Washington, D. C.
More than 400 married women have
applied to the Bureau of Charities sfad!
Corrections in New York City since the
1st of January for relief for themselves
and their children.
The women of Toronto, Canada, not
only took an active part in the late local
elections, but they compelled the meu to
work as well, and so robbed the rings of
much of their power.
Miss Lalla Harrison, of Leesburg, Lon-
don County, Va., has been selected as
the most beautiful woman in that State
to represent it as one of the original
thirteen States at the Columbian Ex¬
position.
The women of Cincinnati, Ohio, have
asked for a separate room in the Woman’s
Building of the World’s Fair, which they
wish to furnish and decorate throughout
as illustrative of the culture and art of
that city.
Herrmann, Lane County, Oregon, can
boast of quite a brave young lady who
has recently taken up a claim on the east
fork of Indian Creek. Her claim is above
all other settlers and it is said she stays
weeks by herself.
It is said that enterprising London
shop-keepers employ well dressed women
to stand in front of their windows and
by “ohs” and “aha” of delight attract
people’s attention to the glory of the
goods inside the windows.
The jewels ot Mrs. Astor, widow oi
the multi-millionaire who died, recently,
in Paris, are probably the finest i,i
America. At times she has appeared in
public wearing precious stones valued at
between $50,000 and $100,000.
The money order department of the
Pittsburg (Penn.) Postolfice is exclusively
iu charge of Miss .Mary Steele, and the
receipts, almost $2,500,000 last year,
mark it as probably the largest business
handled by any woman iu America.
Miss Howe, the woman who won the
second prize in the competition for de¬
signs for the Women’s Building iu the
Columbian Exhibition was a classmate
of Miss Hayden, who won the first prize
in the Boston Institute of Technology.
Ex-Empress Eugenie, of France, felt
so acutely the complete ab9ence_of rec¬
ognition which she experienced when
walking about Paris last year that she
declined to stay there on her way to
Cape Martin, though much pressed to do
80 .
Mrs. Potter Palmer has asked permis¬
sion of the German Government to have
the great doors of the Strasburg Cathe¬
dral, which were designed aud wrought
by Sabina Steinbock, reproduced for the
Woman’s Building of the Columbian Ex¬
hibition.
A fashion writer from Paris calls this
“the banner year of fashion,” for there
is nothing ugly. Mam’selle wonders if
she overlooked Russian blouses when
glancing in at the shop windows down
the Rue de la Paix or over 011 the Boule¬
vard des Italians.
A new industry has been invented by
a clever girl. She caffs herself an ac¬
countant and auditor for large house¬
holds. She finds plenty of employment
in looking after the business of 3 few
families of large expenditure, whose
heads have not taste for the work.
THBEE-CEJiT COTTON.
THK EVIIj EFFECTS OF COMMISSIONER KE*»
bitt’s statement pointed OCT PV
EX-COMMlf-SIONEB HESDEBBON.
To thk Farmers of G eorgj a :
Having entered the race for Commissioner
of Agriculture, I propose in this letter to lay
before the farmers of Georgia, my views in re¬
gard to a matter of vital importance to them.
I refer to the cost of rain ing cotton to the av¬
erage farmer,and to the bad policy (to give it
no worse a name) of promulgating to the world
erroneous views as to the cost of raising the
flo»cy staple. March 18th, published
In his interview of
broadcast through the land, Commissioner
Nesbitt states in offect, that cotton can be
raised in Georgia at a cost of from J to 3 1--J
cents par pound. widely copied
These astounding statements,
and quoted, caused comment and discussion
all over the state, and not only in the state,
but over the United States and the world in
al] cotton circles. Here comes the official agr -
cultural head of the greatest cotton growing-
state in the south, and says that Georgians
can and do raise cotton at 3 1-2 cents per pound,
leaving in it,even at present unprecedentedly
low prices, the handsome profit of 100 per cent,
to the grower.
Had such a statement come from a ring of
speculators on the Cotton Exchange in Wall
street, bent on “bearing” the market so as to
make a profitable deal for themselves, the
world would have understood their motives
and laughed at their statements; but, coming
from the Commissioner of Agriculture of
Georgia, the world is bound to hear with
respect and credit the statement; credit it,
ye-, the speculators will credit it, the spinners
and manufacturers of New and Old England
will credit it; they are eager and anxious to
credit it; it means largely increased profits
and handsome dividends to them- But will
the farmer of Georgia credit it?
He who counts in his humble home the cost
of his cotton finds, that after denying him¬
self and family all luxuries and many ncccs-
sities, that he is still heavily in debt, and the
mortgage is still upon his farm, bis house, his
mule, his cow and the meagre furniture in his
cottage. Pathetic words those, when one. com-
pre hends the whole situation—“the cost of a
pound of cotton.”
But not only does the farmer take alarm
when he hears the words of ill-omen come
from the Department created by him and for
his protection, hut our public-spirited mer-
chants and cotton men raise a note of alarm
as soon as the unfortunate statement comes
to their ears. As soon as he hears of It, Mr.
Samuel M. Inman, the well-known ai d suo-
oessful cotton buyer-identified with cotton
intetests all of his business life, an honored
citizen of whom his city, his state and section
are proud,—he writes a letter to Mr. Nesbitt
and tells him that this statement, coming r.s
it does from one in his important position,
“carries a weight and responsibility 1 hat is of
vast importance.” It will be telegraphed to
every important cotton market in Europe and
America, and used in cotton circu ars and re¬
ports. It will be a ‘bear 1 argument for still
further lowering the price, and will be quoted
as an authority for years to come.”
It is hard to calculate the damage done the
farmers of Georgia, t he merchants and others
holding cotton, by this ill-advised assertion of
the Commissioner, this season; but the end is
not yet, it will be used by the spinners and
speculators to bear downthe price of the grow¬
ing crop about which (he hopes ot the toiling
masses now cling. He has“builded better
than he thought,” if it was his purpose to kill
off the only money crop of his people, but I
have the charity to believe that he knew not
what he was doing.
Mr. Inman then asks Mr. Nesbitt for the fig.
ures on which he bases the remarkable state¬
ment he had made. When called to "taw” by
Mr.Inman, Mi. Nesbitt; begins to lay stress
upon the fact that it will require years of c are¬
ful preparation of the soil„of intrusive farm¬
ing and heavy Ter^ilizijg; before *3 1-2 cents
cotton can he raised. Ho then gives tho figures
of the State Experiment Station on a little
garden plot highly manured and backed by all
the wealth and resources of the nation. He
also gives the figures and experience ol’Cap¬
tain Corput, a wealthy farmer, who pays cash
for everything he needs, who has by intensive
farming brought up his Jand to a high state of
fertility, and inconsequence makes a fine crop
and a handsome profit. Colonel Nesbitt is
telling the farmers of Georgia nothing new
when he teds them that big crops can be raised
by the intensive system of culture. It has been
"ding-donged ” into his ears in season and out
of season by the agricultural journals and so¬
cieties, by the general press and by tho De¬
partment of Agriculture under my adminis¬
tration, for many years past.
But now comes Sir Oracle, and with the air
of a man promulgating a new aud important
fact, informs the world that from a bale to a
bale and a half per acre can bo raised in Geor¬
gia, and at a cost sot exce edino three ash
a half cents per pocsd.
Statistics.— In compiling the “Common¬
wealth of Georgia,” as far back as 18S5, I pur¬
posely rofrained from giving the cost of pro¬
duction of cotton then selling at about 10 cents
perpound. 1 had figured the cost at thattimeal
about 8 1-2 cents per pound, but refrained from
giving it, believing it would have an injurious
effect on prices. (See Commonwealth of Geor¬
gia, page 300). At the same time 1 used every
effort to show tho farmer that the intensive
Bystem would pay handsomely. See in the
same book, pages 361 to 365, instances of heavy
returns on farm crops of every description
from all parts of the state, under a system of
high culture. See also on page 367 the report
of the committee of which I was chairman, iu
awarding the prizes in the contest for
the best acres of corn and cotton offered
by the Geo. W. Scott Cbmpany. In
that contest the highest yield was 3 1-2 bales
per acre, the lowest 1 bale per acre, tbo high¬
est yield ot corn being 116 1-2 bushels per acre,
the average being 81 bushels. Whilst the com¬
mittee commented on the handsome profit to
be derived from such high culture and urged
it upon the farmers, they took care at the same
time to show that the farmers throughout the
state only raised a bale to 3 1-2 aert s. No, Mr.
Editor, tbe farmers of Georgia know these
facts just as w. il as tbe Hon. Commissioner
himse f; he is not telling tho farmer anything
he did not know before; but that farmer is
doing the be3t lie can under the severe condi¬
tions of life upon him, under the burden of
time prices for everything that he needs to
make his crop; usurious interest charges add¬
ed to the unjust burdens of the robber tariff
make it impossible for him, strain every nerve
as he may, to change his melhod or to make
more than cine-third of a bale to the acre, or
to make it at a less cost than 8 1-8 cents per
pound. Shepperson, the great cotton statisti¬
cian, writing in Nov. 1891, stated that cotton
selling at that time for about 8 1-2 cents was
undoubtedly below the cost of production.
No, the average farmer of the country cannot
raise it for less, and God forbid that tho-e who
should befriend and protect him, should try
to beat down and cheapen the products of his
labor by putting the world on notice that he
can raise for 31-2 rents what costs him 8 1-2
cents. I can hardly believe that this great
wrong against the farmer of Georgia is Inten¬
tional on the part of the Hon. Commissioner,
but if not intentional it is surely a blunder,
which is little less than a crime.
Respectfully. .Tons T. Henderson.
A Boston woman makes a business ot
hour taking eare of children by the day or
at her home on week days and Sun¬
able days, to the great relief of mothers not
to hire a nurse, and not wishing to
accept the charity of the day nurseries.
Her services are so much in demand that
she is sometimes engaged as fur as three
weeks ahead. Business women and tired
mothers who cannot otherwise leave their
homes find her services of great value.
This adds another to the many expedients
by which refined women, too delicate or
too retiring, may earn a livelihood with¬
out laavlnu their twmtAii