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VOLUME I.
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California has over one hundred Granges
in full activity.
The organization of Granges in Kentucky is
progressing rapidly.
At Dakota, lowa, the Patrons of Husbandry
have established a Woolen Factory, with a cap
ital of thirty thousand dollars.
The farmers of Coweta county, Georgia, gen
erally, have determined to use less guano here
after, and to require more reasonable terms of
the freedmen.
It is a significant fact that no political organ,
or any prominent politican has, as yet, openly
dared to oppose the farmers united as Patrons
of Husbandry.
The Farmers' Vindicator, an excellently con
ducted paper, has been declared the official
journal of the Mississippi Patrons of Hus
bandry.
The ritual and manual of the Order of the
Patrons of Husbandry is to lx? translated into
German, and it is said German Lodges are to
be formed in the West.
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The Patrons of Husbandry iy the Southern
States, number at present, 2,500 Granges, and
are rapidly increasing. This is about one
third of all the subordinate Granges of the
Order in the United States.
The National Grange has recently completed
arrangements in New York city, by which
Granges throughout the entire country can or
der and receive all kinds of goods at exceeding
ly reduced prices.
Within a very recent period State Granges
have liven organized in Louisiana, New Jersey,
Florida, Massachusetts, New York, West Vir
ginia, Alabama. These States arefillingup with
flourishing, wide-awake subordinate Granges.
Let the good work prosper.
o—<40 —<4
Forsyth (Ga.) Grange has elected the fol
lowing officers for the current year: L. A.
Ponder, Overseer; R. C. McGough, Lecturer;
W. P. Ponder, Steward ; B. 11. Napier, Secre
tary ; W. A. Pye, Treasurer; Geo. S. Smith,
Chaplain ; Gideon Leary, Gate-keeper; Mrs. J.
S. Lawton, Ceres; Mrs. Geo. W. Adams,
Pomona; Mrs. Thos. M. Brantley,Flora; Mrs.
W. A. Pye, Lady Assistant Steward; M. T.
Harper, Councilman.
The champion cotton-grower of Henry
county, Tennessee, is John 11. Toombs, ami the
champion corn-grower is W. L. D. Hill.
The Paris Intelligencer say’s: “Mr. Toombs
made this season nine heavy bales of cotton on
twelve acres of land. It has all been picked
out, ginned and packed. Mr. Hill raised, on the
farm of J. M. Todd, a few hundred yards from
Cottage Grove, on two measured acres of land,
37 barrels, or 185 bushels of corn—92l bushels
per acre.
The Central Council of Patrons of Husban
dry, at Madison, Mississippi, recently adopted
the following resolution :
JuA»/ve<i, That the delegates to this council
are hereby instructed to call in person on the
m tubers of their respective Granges,to ascertain
the number oflules of cotton each is willing to
pledge for shipment to Liverpool direct ;«ulso
the earliest possible date at which such cotton
can be delivered at Canton, or other depot, for
said shipment.
The Patrons are responding to the resolution,
putting down tens and twenties on the spot.
ACCOBDING to a report lately read by Herr
J. Reugg, at a scientific meeting at Seeberzig,
in Switzerland, all the cattle in Europeamount
to 94,700,000 head. Os these Germany owns
13,000,000; Austria 13,000,000; France 12,-
000,000; Great Britain 10,000,000; Turkey
9,000,000; Spain and Portugal 4,500,000; Den
mark 4,000,000; Italy 3,500,000; Sweden and
Norway 2.500.000; Holland and Belgium
2,000,000; Greece 1,000,000; and Switzerland
1,000,000. The little Republic of Switzerland
stands at the head of the list in pro|»ortion to its
extent and population, owning 208 head of cat
tle for each thousand acres, and 567 head for
each thousand inhabitants Spain has only 39
head for each thousand acres of its superficies.
No one who joins a Grange is obliged to
trade, buy and sell, through the Grange, al
though experience proves that all who do so
find it more profitable, as well as economical.
Nor is it true, as unimformed persons have
stated, that a property qualification is required
of those who desire to join.
A private letter from Vernon county, Mis
souri, speaking of the prosperous condition of
of the Order in that vicinity, says :
“Several leading merchants of Fort Scott
have made us fine offers for our trade —goods
at ten per cent, above cost. They furnish their
mark and the Grange their seal, so that there
will be no cheating, and they will give their
books and invoices for inspection, if we wish it.
A committee will visit Fort Scott soon, to
make necessary arrangements.”
Tea Culture in Georgia.
Mrs. R. J. Screven, of Mclntosh, Liber.y
county, Georgia, contributes the following in
teresting article on the successful culture of tea
in our State, to the Rural New Yorker:
1 was very much gratified on hearing
that you were pleased with the samples of
tea I sent you. As you requested me to write
to you again, I have thought that an ac
count of our experience in tea culture might
be interesting to you, and to some of your
readers, as several persons, since reading
your notice of my tea, have sent to me for
seed, and inquired as to how the plant was
cultivated.
When the United States Government,
through the agency of Mr. Fortune, intro
duced the Chinese tea plant {Thea Bohea}
into this country, and distributed them by
the aid of its Senators into various sections
of the land, my father had fifty plants sent
to him. They arrived in good order, grow
ing in genuine Chinese soil, and were from
three to four inches high. We put them at
once in larger pots, with fresh rich soil
around them, but were very careful not to
disturb the ball of earth which surrounded
their roots. During the first summer, they
were kept in a partial shade and watered
freely whenever necessary. They grew oil'
beautifully, and by the next winter were
from eighteen to twenty-four inches high,
and looked very healthy. In the month of
January we planted them out in our vegeta
ble garden, five feet apart each way. They
grew remarkably well, not one dying, and
stood both the cold of winter, and the heat
of summer as well as our natural plants.
When three years old, we made our
first gathering of leaves. We had the di
rections Mr. Fortune gave, for the prepara
tion of tea. and we were particular in fol
lowing them closely. Os course we had
none of the conveniences which are used in
China, but we tried to imitate them as near
ly as possible. We plucked the leaves in the
afternoon and spread them out upon a table
until next morning. We then rubbed them
in our hands, and dried them in a common
Dutch oven, stirring all the time with the
hand to prevent scorching the leaves. Each
turn was dried in five minutes, then taken
out and rolled again. This process of roll
ing and drying was continued until they
appeared perfectly dry. It was then put in
glass jars and kept well secured from the
air. In about three months’ time we began
using it, and were delighted with our suc
cess. Os course all our friends must have
a drawing and each one pronounced it most
excellent. Since that time we have made
our own tea every spring, and we consider
it so far superior to the imported tea that
we find no pleasure in drinking the latter.
Me made quite a mistake in placing our
tea plants five feet apart, for thev have
grown so large that it is impossible to walk
between them, and they are about ten feet
high. 1 hese bushes produce seed everv
season in great abundance. From these
seeds we now have between fifteen and twen
ty thousand plants of various sizes, and we
continue to plant the seeds out everv fall
as soon as they ripen. Many of them*fall to
the ground, and come up thickly under the
parent tree. We have quite a grove set out
ten feet apart, and from these we are now col
lecting the most of our leaves.
The climate in this latitude suits them per
fectly, and there is no more trouble in cultiva
ting them than there is with the apple or ;>ear.
When a plantation is once established it lasts a
life time, and alter the bushes are three years
old, they require only the weeds to be kept out
of them for they shade around their roots so
perfectly as to kill out the grass. If our Gov
ernment would again become interested in mak
ing tea one of our staple productions, we would,
in a few years, lie quite independent of Chinese
production.
The Monroe (Forsyth, Ga.,) -IcitYTfiser, in
one of its recent issues had the following sug
gestive item “Mr. Cyrus Sharp, clerk of the
Superior Court, informs us that about sixtv
Factors’ liens have been foreclosed up to
this time, aggregating to about $30,000. This
is a moral item, that should be studied by our
farmers.”
FRANKLIN PRINTING HOUSE, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 187-1.
The Cotton Tax.
THE FORSYTH GRANGE RESOLUTIONS AND
THE MAJORITY AND MINORITY RE-
PORTS, SUBMITTED AT THE LAIE
GRANGE CONVENTION.
The following are the resolutions adopted by
the Forsyth Grange, and submitted to the late
Grange Convention, with an interesting and
i able speech, by Captain L. A. Ponder, as a
! substitute for both the majority and minority
reports of the Special Committee on this sub
ject:
Resolved, That in the opinion of Forsyth
Grange, the Cotton Tax Act was unconstitu
tional and oppressive, and that it is the duty
of Congress to pass a law refunding to the pro
ducer said tax, with the least possible delay, in
order to do justice to the producer, as well as to
restore the independence of that class upon
whom the virtue and liberty of the whole conn
try depend.
j Resolved, That we look with indignation on any
I effort, by the purchasers of cotton to get the
lax refunded to them, either by the act of Con-
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“learning to write.”
gross, or the adjudication of tbe Court of
Claitrs.
That we expect our Senators and
Representatives in C >ngn ss to use the most
earnest and untiring efforts to procure this
measure of right and justice to the cotton plan
ters of the South.”
The majority report is as follows:
1 hat we respectively request our Represen
tatives and Senators in Congress to urge the en
actment of a law restoring to the legitimate
claimants the unconstitutional tax imposed upon
cotton crops of 1862 and 1867 inclusive.
The minority report is as follows:
The minority report recommends that our
Senators and Representative- in Congress be
requested to urge the passage of a bill refunding
the tax collected : first, to the party who held
the cotton at the time of passage of the act in
1862, and all the balance of the tax to the pro
ducer and n>> other person. under such proof
anil regulations as Congress in the act may
prescribe
The majority report was ad pted.
Mr. B. F. Wardlow, of Madison, is the
W. M. of the Florida State Grange.
Depressed Condition of the South.
Mr. Edward King, who has been traveling
through the South writing a series of papers for
Scrib-.er's Monthly, says : “The planters have
unfortunately trusted too much to cotton. Em
barrassed by various financial difficulties, they
mortgaged their crops in advance to buy food
for their negroes. It has been a bad year.
The caterpillar has stripped the fields. The
yield of cotton in some sections is not half the
average; it is not enough to pay the advances
on the crop, and leaves nothing for the winter.
All the corn, and flour, and bacon, all the cloth
ing, and other manufactured goods for these
exclusively cotton growing districts must be
brought from abroad. There is no money to
pay for them, so the planter and his laborers
go cold and hungry. Till industry in the South
is organized upon a more provident system, a
crisis like this will be a frequent occurrence
and a constant menace.
There are two remedies. One is in the hands
of the Southern people themselves, and con-
sists in raising with tl.eir cotton at least moder
ate supply of food for home consumption. It
is madness to live year after year at the mercy
of money lenders and caterpillars. The other
is in our hands, and we should lose no time in
applying it. It the South could manufacture
its own cotton it would have work and wages
for the idle. To do this it needs capital. Mills
have been established in some places and are
doing well : there are thirteen cotton mills in
Alabama, and nothing but the want of capital
prevents their erection at all the centres of cot
ton production which are now suffering most
severely for the lack of food. In manufactur
ing enterprise, however, the South is unable to
make a single step without help from us. Des
titute and burdened with debt, it looks to the
North for aid. Any man who will build a cot
ton mill in these destitute? districts will do a
more beneficient deed than the founding of a
hospital or the opining of a soup kitchen.* And
it is a charity which will pav —not the priceless
rewards which are reserved for the next life,
but the sordid dividend- which follow a gc-«d
business speculation in this.
Mark Twain on Woman,
Mark Twain, the well-known humorist, re
plied to the toast of the ladies at the festival of
the Scottish Corporation of London. In doing
so, he said : lam proud, indeed, of the dis
tinction of being chosen to respond to this es
pecial toast, to “The Ladies,” or to woman, if
you please, for that is the preferable term, per
haps ; it is certainly the older, and therefore
the more entitled to reverence. [Laughter.]
I have noticed that the Bible, with that plain,
blunt honesty which is such a conspicuous char
acteristic of the Scriptures, is always particular
to never refer to even the illustrious mother of
mankind herself as a “lady,” but speaks of her
as a woman. [Laughter.] It is odd, but
you will find it so. I am peculiarly proud of
of this honor, because I think that the toast to
women is one which, by right and by every
rule of gallantry, should take precedence of all
others —of the army, of the navy, of even roy
alty itself, perhaps, though the latter is not
necessary in this day and in this land, for the
reason that, tacitly, you do drink a broad
general health to all good women when
you drink the health of the Queen of Eng
land and the Princess of Wales. [Loud
cheers.] I have in mind a poem just now
which is familiar to you all, familiar to
everybody. And what an inspiration that
was (and how instantly the present toast
recalls the verses to all our minds) when
the most noble, the most gracious, the
purest ar.d sweetest of all poets says:
“Woman. O woman? or
Worn—”
—[laughter]—however, you remember the
lines; and you remember how feelingly, how
daintily, how almost imperceptibly the
verses raise up before you, feature by fea
ture, the of a true and perfect woman ;
and how, as you contemplate the finished
marvel, your homage grows into worship
of the intellect that could create so fair a
thing out of mere breath, mere words.
And you call to mind now as I speak how
the poet, with stern fidelity to all human
ity, delivers this beautiful child of his heart
and his brain over to the trials and the sor
rows that must come to all sooner or later
that abide in the earth ; and how the pathet
ic story culminates in that apostrophe—so
wild, so regretful, so full of morunful re
trospection. The lines run thus :
“Alas '—alas I—a—alas 1
——Alas! —alas!”
—and so on. [Laughter.] Ido not remem
ber the rest; but, taken altogether, it seems
to me that the poem is the noblest tribute
to woman that humans genius has ever
brought forth —[laughter]—and I feel that
if I were to talk hours I could not do iny
great theme completer or more graceful
justice than I have now done in simply
quoting that poet’s matchless words. [Re
newed laughter.] The phases of the wo
manly nature are infinite in their variety.
Take any type of woman, and you shall
find in it something to respect, something
to admire, something to love. And you
shall find the whole joining you heart
and hand. Who was more patriotic than
Joan of Arc ? Who was braver ? Who has
given us a grander instance of self-sacrific
ing devotion? Ah, you remember, you
remember well what a throb of pain, what
a great tidal wave of grief swept over
us all when Joan of Arc fell at Waterloo.
[Much laughter.]
Who does not sorrow for the loss of Sappho,
the sweet singer of Israel ? Mho among us
does not miss the gentle ministrations, the soft
ening influences, the humble piety of Lucretia
Borgia ? [Laughter.] M’ho can join in the
heartless libel that says woman is extravagant
in dress when he can look back and call to
mind our simple and lowly mother Eve array
ed in her modification of the Highland cos
tume. [Roars of laughter.] Sir, women have
been soldiers,women have been painters,women
have been poet.-. As long as language lives
the name of Cleopatra will live. And not be
cause she conquered George 111., [laughter.]
but because she wrote those divine lines —
“Let dogs delight to bark and bite,
For God Lath made them so.”
[More laughter.] The story of the world is
adorned with the names of illustrious ones of
our own sex —some of them sons of St. Andrew,
too —Scott, Bruce, Burns, the warrior M’allace
Ben Nevis —[laughter]—the gifted Ben Lo
mond, and the great new Scotchman, Ben Dis
reali. [Great laughter.] Out of the great
plains of history tower whole mountain ranges
of sublime women—the Queen of Sheba, Jose
phine, Semiramis, Sairey Gamp; the list is
endless, [laughter,] but I will not call the
mighty roll; the names rise up in your own
memories at the mere suggestion, luminous
with the glory of deeds that cannot die, hallow
ed by the loving worship of the good and the
true of all epochs and all climes. [Cheers.]
Suffice it for our pride and our honor that we
in our day have added to it such names as
those of Grace Darling and Florence Nightin
gale. [Cbeeics.] Woman is all that she should
be—gentle, patient, long-suffering, trustful, un
selfish, full of generous impulses. It is her
blessed mission to comfort the sorrowing, plead
for the erring, encourage the faint of purpose
succor the distressed, uplift the fallen, be
friend the friendless—in a word, afford the
healing of her sympathies and a home in her
heart for all the bruised and persecuted chil
dren of misfortune that knock at its hospitable
door. [Cheers.] And when I say God bles B
her, there is none among us who has known
the ennobling affection of a wife [or the stead
fast devotion of a mother, but in his heart will
say, Amen I [Loud and prolonged cheering.]
The Farmers' Fiadicator, the official organ of
the Mississippi Patrons of Husbandry, pub
lishes the following “Plan for a Grange Bank,”
as submitted by W. M., 8. W. Land, of Rocky
Point Grange, of that State. It is worthy of
consideration : “I would propose that a char
ter for a bank, with all the privileges, fran
chises and immunities, be obtained, to be
called “ The Grange Bank of Mississippi;” to
be officered, supervised and controlled by the
State Grange. In order to accumulate a fund,
or bullion—if you please—upon which its op
erations shall be based, let a temporary contri
bution or sale of bales of cotton, be made, to be
paid with the currency of the proposed bank,
with interest at per cent., at such times as may
be agreed upon by the State Grange. Let this
cotton be sold for gold and placed in the vaults
of the bank. M r e will say, for demonstration,
that by the time this can be effected, that there
will be four hundred Granges in the State. Al
low that each Grange contributes or sells twen
ty-five bales of cotton —average weight 450
pounds. This would give ten thousand bales
of cotton, which, at seventy-five dollars per
bale, would produce a fund of seven hundred
thousand dollars in gold. Upon this sum, as
is the custom, one million four hundred thous
and dollars in the currency of the Grange
Bank, could lie issued. One halt of this sum—
plus the interest—could be used inpayment for
the original supply of cotton, and the balance
1 > constitute a medium for the benefit and relief
of Patrons. When a mortgagee threatens to
force a crop, or homestead, upon a depressed
market, let the subordinate Grange to which
the member belongs indorse his note, with sea*
of Grange, etc., for the requisite sum ; have it
discounted in the bank, and lift the mortgage,
and give the brother the benefit of the best
market price. Or, where a member has not the
means, (and is found worthy,) to purchase the
necessary supplies, let the subordinate Grange
come to his relief in some similar manner. In
all other respects let the ordinary rules and
customs of banking obtain in conducting the
general business of “The Grange Bank of Mis
sissippi.” _
Standard Weights—For grain, seed, etc.,
per bushel:
M’heat should weigh 60 pounds
Corn, shelled 56 pounds
Corn, on the cob .. 70 pounds
j{y e 56 pounds
(Jats 36 pounds
Barlev 46 pounds
Buckwheat 52 pounds
Irish potatoes 60 pounds
Sweet potatoes 50 pounds
Onions’ 57 pounds
Beans 60 pounds
Clover seed 64 pounds
Tiniothv seed 45 pounds
Flax seed 45 pounds
Hempseed 45 pounds
Blue grass seed 14 pounds
Dried peaches 33 pounds
The Vermont Patrons of Husbandry have
made arrangements by which they now receive
their groceries from Boston at wholesale prices.
NUMBER 11.