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BARNWELL', S. G., THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1887. NO. 33, SiiD’gMtMiiA «»f I»t«reit(, frmH ini Auttiforl- tative Source. (V. L Jone- in ihc Siuttcrn CV.tiv'tor ) * The farmer’s campaign is now fairly begun. His plans have been ere this fully matured. To execute them is now the matter of supremo importance. How "often failure comes just at this Men who can tell yon jnit how a thing should Ihj done frequently- Lick the capacity to do it themselves or have out new circles of roots at successive joints, one set above the other, but not nil at once. A considerable interval of time elapses Imtween the formation of successive 'whorls of-roots. Hut deep otitftwg interferes with the course of nature and causes new roots to form prematurely. Again, "by only partially filling the water-furrow at the lirst work- more dirt is thrown second working, and covers and smoth ers grass most thoroughly, dispensing with all hoe-work. Where com is not planted in the water-furrow wo have foqnd it aa excellent plan to use a tw ister poihfTj or turinng-s&evcl, and starting iu the center ot the middles bed up with bar side next the cofu. The last furrow can be run very near the corn, dirting it and by the end of November be ready for the knife. It is a mistake to suppose that farmers cannot raise (heir meat to advantage at the present low prices of bacon. A fanner can raise almost any thing that he needs on his farm cheaper than lie ean buy it. Hi the -matter of meat, all that is required is that lit- should arrange properly for it—not de pend exclusively, or even largely, on the corn-crib. Grazing lots, Bermuda and clover, Johnson g.iass lots for hogs to feed upon rootstocks of in winter, plum orchards, wild cherries, seedling peach trees, acorns, persimmons, etc., together with sweet potatoes, peas and ground- peas, present a cheap, inexpeutOV* bill of GKNKKAL. JACKSON'S 1)1 KI.. KKKCtVKK OX THK. JEWS. Somo Kfiiilnlw4‘iir«‘» nf u XotnMt- Kvrnt a ong Tilin' Ai;o. In the current number of the South ern Bivouac there is an account of the duel Viet ween 'General Jackson and Charles Dickenson, derived from the late General W. G. Hardnig, of Nash ville, which differs somewhat from the accepted story. 'Gi pend Itarding said that the duel grew out of a cpi the race-track 1 >etween Jackson and Joseph Ervin, Dickenson’s father-in-law. Dickeii - ,ii took up the quarrel and the duel >wi«l. The oilier account ©I CHKATING THE GALLOWS. and twuk^i wwe Gih»(H>od, BmOm the aiiuir narrates that in iHiKi Jackson tare upon which hogs can lie very i became-involved iu a quarrel at the race- iiy mined and fattened. We are not jHark "Ah a Mr. Swann, and ho found others do it under thair direction. ■ Tlic thing called “executive, power, V-how far-reachiug iiud impori avocation! How ipdi.'-jx'ii'Si farmer! He storms, ruins, blights, rusts, great many di, to work togeth' r for u mnltifanons tlie ope rat ’terminate iu a hale of < of corn! Atdyetwi are can be a farmer. Yes, seeds in the must manage Ittbort' ■T*, 1 next ^roi king. manures, ncii *, crop of; • w e re] IKIlt t! he rccoi he mu ist fight c old, iu | toiCG i"j. g iveu to 'Kllfl .. '‘-i crop i wi* b one of the r floods , drougni . •' • t*, « inilit r horVhmns, miUk-' •s.'nnd l a) mil!* j mu ilze. Ivnfiir c ■tinct t hirgs nri •t lie ua v. j OPflf! miry pom; I.H reroi .. easily lightly, but enough to cover up /oiing I enterprising enough; we work on from j Dicken.s :a'h iiwnie otTensivelyintroduced grass effectually if it is done -early | year to year in the sanin old wita, raining into the letters written by Bwaun. Diek- enongh. We contend that a hoe -need corn and cotton and little else, and I e n*dn hud previously made-disparaging m-Vpr enter a corntletd. Such siding trusting to the cotton crop to supply ail |.'emaikH about Mrs. Jacksou amt the ’our' wants. Year after year we have ( hneral had remonstrated with Mr. failed, but hojKi never dies. The fault! ^ iu “laint Dickenson's sjieoche*, hkj- is in the seasons, or the guano dealers, * n B be wished no quarrel with the or the merchants, or’something else; we | hdter, w ho was used by Jackson's I «-ves a giHsl opjiortunity to put mauun. 1 he ,,. ao i, 0 f corIjl to be covered at the tut mu here- the- corn i trod need i !Ol*H r a bu -he. but car'] wid< vu!u prtt | f t . ly an e theni diout« -R-idr gn l•^t is that fell? W plant, what to phr to Jitow. \S i«at Is what discntmnatir deluabtl! Let tlie iluaUties go hi th< has no place for tl walk l lu n t< than ot. Bc-.iti-, dwarfer ami mill rertisod i more f< * valua fetd. way i‘y hte A ’ 1 . if are blind to the fact that it is ehietly iu ourselves and our methods. We give a as kaflir corn ‘or | thousand excuses for our failures, liut irn is pi' hiug like never the* right one. Now, before it is i roillo maize, too late, put some of the land you ha*l and matures | prepared for cotton iu sweet potatcA., « h.,vo been some m grounujieuK, some in kaltir com, ge crops; Wi aorne in German millet and ^-iome in mblc iiabit ► inai a> fur; r their lc a cuehuus in Nashville. Swann’s letters, however, renewed tne feeling i General Jacksou and Dickenson and re ; suited in the fatal duel. •lick-on in a conversation with ^ .. ■ C - m held with Diaken-1 can proq* ntv If ddn ujilaml ’d katli Bn! to matti n W'W <lu©et)y Hi kt The idanting id the euiUmvn^ c fronts iu -"hail it etriv or L Graniow !.©rc rip *f to diTlde Wt ean (tt«l V .1) *. ttflVi 1 i 1‘nncii.l. s. It is*, iQiti' rtAiii t^i it r!. Uave K>me d«i;i IV uf piatticity -t they are mulifh 1 f 1 t * iliniata- coc.hfi 'afi* rfa i'll fit ■ "'irir •* In ui the North, ] itlAmCll 1U 4'*4* jn.VT|)|^| sew ml vtwre, wi; lion, ao'juin a s h How ia thh? Ti t v s •'•I*s V aft* ><]’*% KML* c wived of aa havii cDa'acs it to antic 'IIAIU* tii« i*r« fat‘ f k n of OUr MWfOL' 4t 1 1 a aeourdingly; and yet u beha' • Ji. t if it hail Mich ml. .-Uigxnce. J-aio, native c- -rr, plan ted verv t.*r v in. K.tf. i to mak< cum or ilo maiz sluco iiotud the | Ml •u J, which forage corn. . on) in uy crux, nom. . valuable Mil l's III Milt TilKll\ ri:Ol.i liif D 'krt OQf. It u 1 ter, and A wood woiking factory ia U ©Ol n would erecUil at Longwotid. Fla. ! to n l v » It is rejiorted that a box fsc ti 5 Cfi»r □, lie had 4 . be built au J*idsonia. Ark. All t *rly ma- •her than The I’n-Jiytenam will build liter if much , t"k) church at Fnuikliu, Teun. A^un >p under .‘A large bnck manufactory h cciallv in cwtabluhed at^DwrUngtou. | A #a r . limit A large totiaooo factory is n-fH iftTl tl rrali nch lie erected at Knoxvill**, I rnu. 1 dared 1 hat !)« ie went on the “1 knew him,’' said Old Hickory, s cool, brave, dctermim d man, -? shot i ever saw, and 1 never j leave the tield alive. 1 owe .•‘Her KrroniineiiilliiK » llet>|c«i as vilnlitler to Turkey. < (I'rom the New York.Hines.V When Oscar 8. Straus, now Miuister to Turkey, was being urged for that office by his friends, Henry Witrd Beecher, a warm friend of Mr. S!raus’, wrote the following letter It is a pwcu^ A ., rlli . ll)itllU . liar letter. It tells more definitely than quarrel on- any words.othcr tlian its owuj.caii do- scrilie the broad statesmanship and ad vanced position of Brooklyn’s famous "■shvrr ' “Bboosi.i s, N. Y., Fell. 1-!, (9871 “GlIOVr.K CfJ VRI.ANO. “Deak Mr. Fursident: Home of our lie**t citizens are solicitious for* the a|>- pointment of Oscar Ktraus as Miuister to Turkey, Of his litness there, is a general consent that ho is personally and in attainments eminently excellent. “But 1 am interested in another qual ity—the fact that he iioa Hebrew. The bitter prejudice against Jews which ob tains in many parts of Europe oaght not between I to receive any countenance m America. it is liecause In-i4 a Jew that 1 would urge his apjMiuitmcut as a tit recogui- Hanl- ] tiou of this rem-irkat>U people, who arc I IVK Ml ItUKKFKH I.YNCHKD VOIIK VII.I.K. ^ - . _ . Armc'il Mrn Kilter Mu. Cniiiity Jail ' .Ki.reiMj (a|>t■■ rr tlirir I’rlrouem IImiii; Tlirm In Tr.-rw—IfiS Clar to road, fnghU'ned I bjcouung larg •u plant o ti.oSC dter, we that of idiar or It ta ix |sirt. will be eatabh J. O. Crow A bIh It* V Jthat a cauni In d at Lowry, coutriiiutors to Ameri- ami whose intelligence, morality and large lilierality iu all pule lie meaaures for the welfare of society, deserve and should receive from the ham Is of our government 'some such rvcognitioD. Is it not also a duty to set forth in this quiet, but dfertnal, method the genius ui American (iovermuent, adiien has rrnderits fonti>niig care peo ple of all eiviiiMal nations and w treats them without n ganl to civil ligioaa or racc'|MWuliarities as common citizens ? We semi 1 Hon s to iMiimark, Germans to Germany. we nrj«ct no man liecause he is a Frenchman. Why should we not make a crowning tvwti- monv to the giuius of our pi-pU’ by svndinc a Hebrew to lurk« v? ✓ J at 1>S Ala.. UT llS lias I* Hr ' »t)*V par N’D UV n.ty Ok spnag. t but Isrgi Uie mum deVi-tep eohlof « ids at ai ,t o Vtmlil an th Dili 1 far L _ .il th.*. at HI nilJlC fail »v it.zaaui v rrei Knoxville, , r s-ciing mar lean., to mauul uiuery lacttm- ' »» s w Lhe-kenaot b*- gave U ».wpt*r itti rtifAin..!. Lm Aaaroyany uhl a toieMsu ia being t-rgadu *1 to are talar, i 1 fifv-d SIM i factory at Giarki |\ i*;t , iAliU !«• Ta A * •nn. rvrviving man, aa 1m ■O rmi*e It ia report's 1 tliat a canning f •ictk • r\ (ieu* rat Rich re- n.*Ar^sl jeounl for the prejudices But how a t'hnetrau irn from s Jew 1 esumd iimintjr itarH suckled at ilamai; our iv»>ts are to ut. We are Jews our Uoasuas ami fruit. Judatssu in •. •luiiou, u strange tor the tW>0kl k on which it ass W X ** (From Hie lorkvillc t miulrer, AprilC.) Yesterday morning opened on the closing scene of one of the most fearful tragedies ever enacted in Y’ork county. WiUi the brutal murder of tHe little In- uoccnt boy Johnnie Lee Good, on the evening of the .‘10th of last Xbvemlier, our readers are familiar. On tluxt eve- * niug, os the investigation of the jury of inquest aud subsequent confessions de- i velopod, the murderers proved to be I’rindley Thomson, Bailey Dowdle, Dafi Kolierts and M use Lipscomb, with a num- tier of supposed accessories before the fact, it being bebeved that a combination for the pueposes of robliery and murder existed among the negroes of that neigh- : borhood, in llnltook's Creek io’.uahip, aud adjacent to Broad Uivcr. •:Several of the aocesaohcs or acoomplkxs whose uamew acre thvulge<l by the^ investiga- • lion were lodged in jail, where they now are. Excitement ran high in the ht ighbor- hood of the murder, as indignation was al.«> manifested throughout the .-ounty Hie victim was an unoffending y ' than fourio- u yuan old, the sou of well- J to-d< • and worthy j ami la, by whom hr 1 was idolized. In an unfortunate moment, 1 as I’nndiey 'rhomaou confeased in the jail, the little boy detected him. Muss, j Dan and Baihij, in the wet of »»ealmg 1 cotton from hie faib. r’e field. To pro- . vent exposure, ttu. eotton thieves lieu tal ly munlrfiwl him. Frindley uumU this I arul with them aftrr the o ‘ton in I ^ft.igoo.rs fleki, and left yum theea. | iia^B lied the Iwy’e waiel, 1 had hie | hge^Vfiwsi was choking him, an I Dan j Mm<i th« f'0-k . Nt ■ ad w. lit * wwj by 1 the pasture liehl. Halley hit him first', limb of a with the rock when we first got hold of ' pudte ad the bov. I Nui mw the buy nrs L • Dan : tu.. t tern with which the party wn As far as can be known, no or even outcry, was made by an; doomed men. A man whoaa required him to-^am near the loeahty of the hanging, mw the crowd a] ing, ana stepping permitted tl A to one aide of the entire|prooendon to nem without offering any He gives the opinion that the victims were mounted. He could me no one OB foot, and all were leisurely and ouietly. He mw the party not far from tne spot selected for the execution of the deed, n kn<U on the road leading northweat from the jail, and only a snort distance from tha Mane marking the first mile from the Court House. - x* The most interesting scene in an tMil of this kind is supposed to be the hear- ing apd demeanor of the fated wrsteh, but just here our account of this one must be at fault. We have not seen any one who said he was these, nor do we know whether or not the men bore up bravely, or whether any words of eon* fessioD escaped their lipo. It ie < whispered, bat with bow I cannot tell, that Giles Good wm ra il i red to set as the executioner of 2 our i to tie the knot of hie hsrt requirement he is said to have de murred, ejaculating “how tha devil do To My. you es; boa: Again i it la As soon m it Mhonff to do au, he eenlhm, taking with him tve ana, but they arrived too late to Ussy found .laaghng bum the trees four from one tree on the SHl ■nW of the road, aad the other tram the oak hard by an Life wee found to mid: Arvlg Li* tn HUk Ui rile H* jiu hit The Hhectff eaoeed the on eM < to Util i i , b 1L it u* Turn the The I Ltc i gro* have tropic- but pro< ZoUcn it iu Inuti ehiioug p >M h u t<> lr that young | of groeth th the neaK-u. large, |>tiuri Lxcarry it «p Our iiuftx i favor of earl; not grow oil qoi nt]y som -e hat fruits ts-thr, Opel housed and sold Then, agniu^ tolly loTllhg gootTsTau usualiv t-nuUKh mi larding eaiJ that ihicb wea th -rel Jack) tlh^l n, IL ir* r. !■ •u it urged ; xU-*rt t tins n: time ft or <>( MlUtJ iu r, »1 »*ly to •ut ia ,t ui» is at all r - iVle. it prof >*7- d to fit organize a g&>, k loqijsuiT at Tlnba.laQX, La, to liah a eaumug factory. :ii<' nim of dJ-«,Uikl has l2r« **■ " *>rk nackimr e 14 gv itlj mi dal ung •\frnal>h> t i-xbitutron of IcmiH •ut approval it 1 a. etreery tvun U- p f bktsL ever about per. I r with- a 1,< S .V' 1 Via fit: >uieh*, in u mow- erabng * iweehed •lr* tael UA V*Nrm. ■ IMMITH •Pf* Ik tl Ud Coll..:, hard, r to r* early i early in_ nUntmi’ in fur th tl •n L>ut be .'ll. up IU tl . liH'Ti, ! Of cu i t-hidf Mhi i Uaiql. is then up|>ortunity > soil to thoroughly, the is apt to it will Is' tastclc l*r o that gw o with sw I hhould Jx the sulks argo stalk at it fweh plnnl *1 developing g»* Cif uuko very it- • trt, ami . Some 'Wii "Very y Muaii. ri‘ objec- e«4 Vhe If pretty ry a’jout May I. It is rejHirted that Mr. M Girardeau, Mo., will «*4ttldb>b taro factory at Florence, Ala. 1 he Arkansas Hump gnd 1‘ iwuiy has been incOrporaled linek, Ark., with D. G. dent. i York Financial Cbn review of the eotti-i that for the Wr«k total rco ipts 1st' against tK.J’Vi I l l shew the |»revi< l>*h^ tlirea' «f*-L s i>Ul receipts silo* 1st .TpHU.vtl I ■ah-*, ag ,• tor the muu|s-rv. sing an inatease wuoe lo, of l»l,ie*» hah v The exports for the week ••miing irvwntng reach a total of TT/H'J Isnia, of Ui Grewt itntaiu, and 21,Mil U- the rrst of the continent. The imports into continental ports daring the week have l wen fti.ono bahv. . Therf was a !• er» a*»' in the eotton in " ,7 kllxi 1 WfMAa ** Hfiicii wmt |liff« Usji'a fia! of I bj iAiir. lUMief |Im l' rind ley's eoniiwaum, tha wuuude on Uw. on deal ls«dy of the boy eorrotairetiug his staUue ut an to the mauber of ti.i!«etM»n. | After ttus c>>utrwMoO was watte aud be lt la ,e gui ,t De I w e known, be | - «l. i i and Mot western t lift threw IU’ 'i. t.-mU-r 1, 1( P which lASli : -V aM to r raiv H Lslei of It June sight Fnday night of dji. pared with the some date u( ItVM .. isernlioiTaisteu ercaae of 119,065 LmsImi as coinpa mi . w b«n comwpouding daU* of r well Urey do, immc- c f iHT.ihA liwlta > Vxplaiu to vu that, wiai 1?<M m 7® u : The old interior shn-kn hare decreaet Mr. Booth Beeuis to be bring tli . lab i it mapt to i it will bu tasteless and nut rohatied by be too dry. AiU r ti \ mp “pl.-i^u r.^' i £a ilk ought to liave other mwiign moth s of pliintii/: 11 tton, .utliciout opjortuinty to t-uable it to dd-limo • make n iittie nubbin, and the crop . it L reporttsl that a company will be forage will lack quality; formed at Nash villa, Tenn., to . stablish jHitU ry aud terracotta works. think tlu posae riimkt'Nneare meant w hat lu; wrote, aud one of his inaiu tlreala is of tire man who wants to know whether Hamlet was really, insane or only feigning. He was si>t-akiug of his reception at the Baldwin as com- AU iu* 1*1 waskU IK-w, and a ■ compand d we hivv g .n«» l»q.A method of coieriug Mid w by a double-foot plow and ing off with a board or with a harrow. Cotton/seed will come up through a thick toveriu earth, but they wilt fFprernr ar.d g realy to come up whro thus cow ml, and will appear al»ovc the surface promptly when the aupo.il up ns dirt is removed by board or harrow.^-Bear in mind, tlu* knocking off or harrowing ir u good list her knock- vtliug down not of r should not be gathered until the little uubbin is in rousting car. Another very valuable food crop, f l ,arc biised machinery to double tlic w hicll may be started the last of thiK ° f tli, if carrillge arui wa e on mouth, is Gt-rmau millet. It hr au ex- j ac * ot y* ceediugly strong, nutritious forage— D. 8. Forney aud Samuel II. Now- • j„ troiigei perhaps than any other, unless berry, of Wythcvillc, Virginm, • liave , had bmm mieeiaUy miuested uot to play purcliased acres of iron oro lauds , “HumU t,” as the jn ojilo lnul Monday couldni cor tain. He confessed to making one speech, but the result was not very encouraging. Some years ago he went with his com pany to a place to play one nip hi Uu. _ , foixl. It calls for rather rich laud, but not labor lost; it is really equivalent to | grows well on poor laud when manured exception^ be made of clover hay aud j«ai me*. Whilst it may uot equal these, in Pulaski county for «85»,000. * jin that the year before and they wanted m some_iesgects, it nux better balanced , The Central Manufucturing and Im- sonietliing else. When they aSsembksl a first working. For two years we have tried the broadcast harrowing of cotton with a smoothing harrow. 1,1 was done the first time just as the cotton la gan to come up. The harrow was run obliquely across the rows. About a week later it was run ogam at right angles to the tir.-t. It may be run squarely across the rows, but never up amt down them, for in the latter case it would almost certainly iu- jure the stand. Where the laud was clean and Tree from obstructions, the work was very satisfactory; even where land was not perfectly clean, the stand was not much injured'. If no rain has fallen since the soil was stirred by the plow, the harrow tends to run too deep; where the soil is crusted it works finely-. If one does not use a harrow the scrape should be started jnst as soon os the first cotton makes ltd appearance. The wing next the cotton should bo set perfectly Hat and the cotton sided so cloudy that the two furrows almost meet Y r ery little dirt w:ill he thrown the young cotton, and even if some is, it will not interfere seriously with its coming up. Should the ground be crusted, the crust will be broken; more over, the grass which usually comes up with the cotton will be killed. Nothing contribute* more to the easy, pleasant working of a cotton crop thaq to begin plowing it curly and plowing it often in the early stages of growth. Wo gener ally leave too much for the hoe to do. By running the plow early, properly and often the hoe-work may' be greatly minced. One thing is very clear, that unless the cost of production can be re- irovement Com vely Mount, C has boen form til at irginia, "and will start IS and properly prepared. Stable manure, i )rick - works und a ^ ood forking factory' ootton seed meal, ommomated fertilizers ,, , -y,. - °^ or composts will answer. The land , 10 ™"®t4ty Laud Company, capitid should be prepared, as described above, i has Ix-cn incorporated at for drilled corn, a half bushel of seed Al,a., to start a manufae- sowu on an acre and very lightly liar- unu K town about live bales from Bir- rov. td in aud then rolled. All small j seeds, which must be planted shallow, D. T. Case, J. A. H. Bell and N. W. should be rolled after they are -harrow ed i Dyer have leased a building at Atlanta, in. It insures both more prompt and! Ga., and will fit it up with machinery more-certain germination of the seed. ; f° r 'i soap factory. They w ill be known Remember that German millet should | the Georgia Soap Company. — • ho cut promptly as soon as blooms ap-| -The Bessemer Manufacturing Com pear, the seed form and mature very pany, capital stock $25,000, has been quickly after the bloom, unusually so, - aud it is uot desirable to let the seed mature. They are so small that they are not properly masticated, may swell iu stomach and do harm, or else pass through undigested and aredost. The extreme ease with which this millet is cut aud cured also commends it to our organized at Birmingham, Ala., to man ufacture at Bessemer, sash, doors and bliuds. S. T. Brittle is President, aud A. S. Camp, Secretary and Treasurer. The Helena Street Railroad Company, capital stock $50,000, has been organized cut auu cured atso commeuus u io our ^ A r K -, ,p ^‘ reen ^ t ^ ^ liar ^ e high esteem; it has decided advantage “ D lb HargraveSi secretaiy, over corn, forage in this respect. - and h ‘ Horner, treasurer. The Increased interest has been developed of late in the grourdpea crop on account of the introduction of the variety termed Spanish.” We do not know its origin company will build their road at once. Klrm In Hi.- \or:h Carolina Town*. UK rtreaoual*; jr nertala i uf PimJurjf, Batky, , Um* pM>t up lorling of <4»- of (hr county found ot Ij uclung. mm! Inunloa |Im- four nanarel, to*, blood of Odra Good, tire Mippuartl matigaior of tire a aUo denuUMkii iiKtUal for lire of Lu* priM.drta, brcoralng itiafioi Mre tilrenl of iynrhifig wwukl be tt- tviu|itr«l, ou tire cvratoK of livecMbar Ittti )irociued au order Iron Judge Wittrer-jMM'u IrmmifersikK tlreaz lor aato- Imyawg to ttre jaii at (olumLia, and ou that night they wore apuited away. True to hi' expeetettoua, about 7 o'clock oil tlic following morning, n crowd o( about acrenty-fire mounted nreu, guinrd, approarMd the jail, p; with axoa aud "ledge hamnuwi and —»«*l aUh abut guda, and a numhay ol them M«uriug au ontnurea through tha eofTMlor, prootided to tire third floor and O'WUm-ihmI battering tire .inudan ahiitter covering tire iron door which tire ceil". By the lima the nrean H l i>j iLe noise and had i, ondia- ^reparad uy are. .ur. imxmu aeruw °e j during the week 'iM.IVtd luh-a leas than at o, d >y tlu- unique convu :i.»n that ^ mmc period last jvar. 'lire. ruompU. Hhrrrtt lie wr .te. aud M ^ beeu 7,U4* mu u ^ a gnding'on the Oiirl floor. more than the same week last JM, aud 0D( , pLel of UuVooden "Latter wm tince September 1 the receipts at all the knooked oat end tbe crowd were moving towns are tialea more than lor th.i nn t j l0 WO rkz as tliouuli they meant bua- ■ame time in 1HH.Y-8C. . utaai. Whim the Sheriff inUrposod, the The total reoeipla ftom the phtntattona crowd deouted until he coiivmci.il them since September 1, 1H8<3, were .», iJo,9Ul that the men wan*ed were not in the tialej*; in 188«>-N» were *>^11 ( *,ilO uAlei; jAi), 'lb© whole party, which, aauI© in were 4,107,070 Imlee. Al- from their demonztration on the jail, had though the feoeipte at the outports the quiet aud orderly, then peaceably liast week were 5i,lL) Imlos, tlic actual rode out of town, movement from plantations was only j The Sheriff foiled the would-lH! lynch- 5,457 bales, the from l ho Btoclur its and saved his prixouors, who about at the theatre they found the baggage had gone astray aud the costumes for “Richelieu” had not arrived,. "They must play something else, aud the only thing they could do was to make up a bill of a farce aud three acts of “Hamlet,” which, were easiest to put on.. Mr. Booth went out before the curtain and made a little speech. \ “They listened to me,” he said, “aud when I got through a mau in the front of the orchestra looked up and said: ‘All right; give us “Hamlet.” ’ I went off feeling very proud of my speech. , I had done brilli intly, I thought. Just thou I heard somebody talking in front of the curtain. What s this, I "'said to myself. Somebody objecting—a row— and 1 grew excessively nervous. Just then oue of the men came in from the front of the house. ‘What’s that? Who’s that talking out there?’ ‘Oh, it’s all right. It’s the proprietor. They didn’t hear a.word you said, aud he hr explain ing to them tliat you’ve changed the bill.’ ” Mrs. Cleveland Among the ^owef*. balance being taken •t the Interior towns.; 0 f the demonstration were in. 4*a<>t year the receipts from the phuff*;! North Carolina on their way to Colom- tlottm f^if! uih ofune -Vei‘k were •R*,5f)(>, Um, where they remainad 11 *• fa 1 last Sot- bales, aud for 1885 they were 14,'J34 arda y, when the Sheriff deputized Dr. bales. ^ ’ . A. Y. Cartwright and Mr. James H. ^ The increase iu the amount in sight Hiddlo, two men in whose courage under 1 ritlay night, as compared with last year, contingent difficulties he had full oonff- ial(5,b80 batos, the increase as compared j denoe> to conduct the prisoners from with 1884-■85 is 820,572 Imles, and the: Golumbia to Yorkviile. The transfer increase over 1883-84 is 002,255 bales. | waw accomplished without incident, and on Saturday evening they were returned to their old quarters in the YorkviUe [from the Indlnnupolts Journal.] ; jail. There arc more romances of the cruel 1 H tbat the excitement days of slavery among the colored peo-1 indignation incident to the murde* pie, even a quarter of a century after i h * 1 subsided, and certainly all feeling proclamation, tlian Ituinaum of ihr alairry l>n>». 3 hat liisl or history, but on trial have fouud it a very excellent variety. The |K)ds fill well, and cluster largely around the main root, making the digging of them quite .easy. On suitable land that is rather sandy and with lime in the soil, the groundpea is a very valuable ad junct to the food crops of t..e form. Scarcely anj thing is bettor for fattening pork, and ax,, farmers are- much more disposed to raise their meat tlian they formerly were, we coimpend this crop dooed there will be very little profit in to thair attention also. It should be ootton at present prices. ' planted at once; it is bettor to shell and Ai soon ss otton-planiiug is finished, I-plant the seed out of the hull; they will early-planted corn will be ready for iu. come up more quickly; drop at least taro first working. If planted in astor-fur-. ia a hill; rows three feet apart.aud Lilli' row manure may now be dropped near | two feet in Urn row. . [From Uii* Wilmington star j The fires in the towns of North Caro lina arc particularly destructive. Lum- bertou was the first to suffer, then Wil son, and now Oxford.. The fire in the last-named town destroyed the business houses on one street, but did not reach Maiu street. • None of the*towus is pre pared for fire, They have au utterly in sufficient supply of water, and not many of them have the needed engines aud apj'oratns for putting out fires. For thirty or forty years Oxford had but two or three builunigs burnt, one a smoke house. But for the last thirty-five years it has suffered from many fires, and in 1854 or 1855 many businetw houses were I hi rued, causing a loss of acme f55,U0D Mrs. Cleveland is an ardent admirer of the beautiful in nature. The con servatory and flower bods in the execu tive grounds receive daily a share of her attention. She has developed into a gardener of no ordinary merit and has lately personally supervised the work of GarJener Pfistor. The gardener ami bif assistant') welcome her presence among them with delight, as her delicate praise of their horticultural efforts lightens the burden of their work. 'They strive onl v to please their beautiful mistress, and if success attends their efforts the remain ing portion olithe day after her morn ' ‘ Indeed to the emancipation white-skinned people are •generally aware. It is quite customary for in quiries' to be read from the pulpits of colored churches asking the whereabouts of a brother or a sister, or perhaps a mother or son, from whom the person making the.inquiry was separated either daring the war or before the war, when families were divided by the auction block. The other day a letter was read from the pulpit of one of the colored Baptist churches of this city, in which a brother asked about a sister from whom he had' been separated for over twenty years. The same letter had probably been read, as is the custom, in uearly all the colored churches in the country. This one found an answer, the sister being Louisa Smith, a worthy colored woman, who. has lived in this city many years, and is now in the fam ily of Dr. J. L. Thompson. The brother is a preacher in St Joseph, Mo., and they were separated in Kentucky when the war was in progress. them. The clerks in the east wing of tlie State, ing visit is ven lie east wing of War and Navy .building also enjoy the hill of corn, and the will cover it up. In this the wing of the tenpe nex it will run very flat and ■ quantity of dirt i 1 and i i to .the. a t6 dirt it tom It to first plowing In this oonnecovn case also set should reoeivo. ntton t Um. coni au tarty vux: tn.^ hxq^ thro*•only a, tarn, and the doaefy i into the water- itilov fieso, are the swix t potato turn. The 4 large, ig- -it Domingo -’fied rad skin with or $40,u0a Not many mouths ago a fire morning risiU*of Mrs. Clevehn l to Imined the old hotel and some stores. | gardens. This morning she made visit, and, r, walked through the to flower beds. and Now twenty eight stores are in < The removal of Prof. Sanborn, of N. It is quite fsad.^tf the sitpears put Log H., after bmag M May. be u 'tf rhi k—Ufj :m Uil ta X. to Dv. ('•■■aapilua. _____ « Xolw iitoUnding the great number who yearly succumb to this terrible and fatal iliaeaae, which is daily winding its fatal coils around thousands who are uacon- aious of its deadly presence,. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery will c^eam*. sad purify the blood of scrofulous impure no, and cure tubercular coasumptlon tsLich is oaly scrofulous itisrsir of the oiuftt. fiend 10 cents ia stamps sad get Dr. Hanes’s oussptete traalias au lion aad fbr nummary vengeance was slumbeting until Monday morning when the unmis takable lunacy of the father of the mur dered boy rekindled the anger of all who witnessed the unfortunate man oh the way to the Asylum. No cautious in quiry, however, could discover any undue feeling in the general current of public sentiment. The inquisitive news paper man, in his suggestive way, bn- deuvored here and there to g^in a cine, but every person approached fij»on the subject expressed the opinion that the law would take its course. Late Monday evening the Sheriff felt a sense of perfect security, and Yhikviile retired Monday night, little expecting to wake up next morning to find five dead bodies dang ling from the limbs of trees almost within the corporate limits. The men chose for the hoar of their work the wee small, hours, and at half past 4 the Sheriff, who was also jailor, waa awakened by a noise at the door. He rushed up to the crowd in his night dress, and he refusing to surrender the keys, his visitors proceeded to the third door and commenced on the some door that had partly yielded to similar treat ment duly a lew weeks before. The Sheriff was powerless to oiler and endeavored to attract attention to the jail by rapid aad socoeasive firing ol his gun. This had the effect to bring to the seene n lew persona, Amt by the, time they armed, tLe Bncffing party hind h"U-odi entrance, secured tha men they •anted and loft. The wooden door be- foconlnded tonne opened by firs-. town n of hie body M body uf Hatley Dowdle wee las mi | moo of by his father. The other were bnnad et the eepooee of I e of the lynching sproed over B^ndlj, end from •arty la the H onul lota ta the dny, Um aeane wm vmted by throngs of pan Theeolorod people, of eon the dead bodies with no lam the whites, hot U they bj.Mery Th mdley. The *v Mi Dean Gmrao If he hes trotted that Giles Good led bun into thet mm I do hdieve * far he could lend my ohikl bettor tiran I oonld. He bee obj«-t*d , prevented] hie mother from teaching him the nght way, and from my child's sotton what mnde mo he elweys’ Good from ten yean old. It correct him. Do, nfaeee, if y my child's n.i k. I nmk t tikw Good’s, too* for my soke. I do want to see my child once more, and if he ia hong I do went his body. * Maer Tnomsosi." This letter was intended for the Sheriff, and is s key to the bed reputation soo- tainud in the neighborhood by (hies Good. He wro suspected of Ixung the chief instigator of the thieving whiro led to themunlcr New York Mid Waablagtea gocletj. The attitude of New York society peo ple toward Washington is peculiar, and show their bumptious provincial ism in e dozen ways. One New York woman who has spent e couple of sen- sons here remarked kindly that aha oonld see e greet improvement in the art of dinner-giving since she to Washington. “Of coarse New York dinners neve always been perfect, but here it is quite a new thing, you know, this dinner-giving,” wm her bland re mark. When repeated to a few Wash ington hostesses who have been giving dinners for e score of years there was an immediate tempest in a teapot. New Yorkers have the coolest wav of just such speeches about Washington, and assuming an air of oofideaoeoaion as if it were very kind in them to be * mn Trd by the capital’s doings; yet at the rearo time they make all these pretensions they come here and go the jiiretnet lengths to get into the full swim of so* ciety. President Arthur*first tumU the delights of capital society patent and accessible to his New York friamto, md the fashion once established keeps itself up. Until the unfortunate night Amen she recited “ ’Ostler Joe” Mrs. Potter thought Washington social Ufa faeciaafl- ing; after that she had a chance to are its more f ’ mind. Ail] beset by requests for friends from New York, toe place of their residence emphasized, as though giving thej cants particular value.—From ington 7 iTwtm ••hp frigid aspect, and changed her Allhosteaeee who aurrtea Ua In 1881 the Baroness Burdett-Couttsi riod Mr. Bartlett, who waa more thai yean her junior, and Georgs Kliiou, was much older Gross, whom she married la death of Mr. Lewis To j Mine. De Staet, sooth letters, was 4$ when I K-cuod husband M. French officer of flfi.