The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, May 19, 1887, Image 1
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A
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, VOL. X.
BARNWELL, 8. C., THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1887.
All ABOUT THE BAPTISTS.
made bT Dr. Edward Jodson, of New
York, the son of the veteran
MKMUBBSHIP OF THE CHURCH
THK SOUTHERN STATES.
IN
ThaSMaloa la LonlarW* of HaprcMata-
tlTMof the ImnieaM Hembenblp-Im-
portant Features of the Contention—
Sight-Seeing and Business Heatings.
(Letter to the Augusta Chronicle.)
Aooording to the latest returns, which
have been recently made np from official
sources, there are in the fourteen South
ern States and the Indian Territory
2,060,985 Baptists. Of these 1,065,171
are white, and are in accord with the
body known as the Southern Baptist
Convention. This is the body whose sea-
dons have been held in the beautiful
brown stone bdifice of the Broadway
Church. The building is of ornate de
sign and modern architecture, and ranks
with the churches of which Drs. Hemp
hill and Wimtts are pastors, as among
the finest and most costly religious edi
fices of the South. Through three daily
the spacious auditorium has
filled with representatives from
South of the Pennsylvania line
and the Ohio river. From Oeorgia there
fifty-five delegates, and Oeorgia
the president and secretary,
the fifteenth session over
Dr. MeU, Chancellor of the Cai-
f, has presided, end the seventh at
the secretary has served at the
long table.
fte reports of the two Boards of tbs
convention, whieh control the operations
respectively of home and foreign mie-
a year of great proa-
[ near from all tklaa
The year has
in numbers end
n for many yea
ea oootnbated, se
ed to this convention, far fotei|
1107.00.S3, ami for home
Tbs fonagn stahni
are mHhhshsil in
> Italy, Afrisa and Chin
of mianooartsi is 110,
i for
These are 36 schools, wUh 687
Uuework abruaif awTthe^meUon in the
danse population of the city of Shanghai
of a shapal. anurety at the npenss of s
Publication Society, and Dr- J. P.
Greene, of St. Lome. Dr. Judson’s ad
dress on Saturday night moved a vast
concourse as I have seen few assemblages
moved, and following it came the rat
tling and disconnected remarks of a
minister of Augusta who rightly com
pared himself to s small boy folio
Gilmore's band who was set to the wot
of raising some $2,500 for the fntnre
' ‘ ns of the Board of Foreign Mie
ns, which was done under the abiding
influence of the speech of the great son
of the greatest missionary.
A FAT BLACK BOTTLE.
scon yoster-
wonla fitly
tmOVT.JO.
Filled to tho Cork With Five Dollar Troo-
ury Notes.
There came to light in Macon
day a New Year’s story that
adorn a temperance lecture.
A bright little girl gave away what
was regarded as s pleasing secret It
happened in this-.way: The Telegraph
man stumbled into s millinery store yes
terday and while waiting to get the at
tention of the lady who makes the female
population pretty, idly listened to a con-
venation between a customer—evidently
the wife of s mechanic—s .d the millin
er. The lady was looking at a very
pretty bat for her little girl who stood
at her aide with hungry eyes. The hat
was purchased, and the Telegraph man
mentally thought it looked like extrava
gance for a mechanic s family to throw
away four dollan and a half on n hole
Kiri's hat
As this was the only purchase in whieh
the child seemed interested, ahe tided
up to where the Telegraph man was
standing and artkaatyMd: “We dot
lots er money now." The reporter here
mentally coned himself for forgetting
to buy • ticket for the last lottery dimw-
ing.
“Wham did you get it, tier
“Paps broke UT bottler
“Broke the bottle?"
“Essut; th' bottle was Jm’ as fuller
money as it tood be, an’ we's 'mb now.**
No true reporter can be idle when snob
an item as this Is in spanking distance,
and H was not saom Umn s few minutes
before the child's mother was per-
foUowing story,
WILD LIFE ON THE BORDER.
Throe Mexicans Who Tried to Rob a Sheriff
and What Happened.
(From the Philadelphia North American.)
A tall, spare man, with glittering
black eyes that stared you unflinchingly
in the face, lounged carol oasly around
the Ooptinental Hotel last night.
It was James Hart, who was at one
tfanr^aitf of * tittle lowff 1v WnnKrastr-
western part of Texas.
The town at the time of Hart’s election
was fairly overrun by lawless people.
*1 reckon I seen some putty excitin’
times on the frontier,” he said to e North
American reporter.
“People out my way use ter say I
could nte. Well, mebbe I kin and
mebbe I can’t
“I remember onct—that was just after
I was elected—that it 'became known I
had some dust hid in my bedroom.
“One night when we war asleep three
darned greasers kem 4h and tried to
ealit.”
“Did they get away with Hr aaked
the reporter.
_ “Stranger,” mid the ex-sheriff delib
erately, “oonHiderin’ that there air three
graves jes on the other aide of my house
with the bodies of three groannri in ’em,
it is patty safe to my they didn’t git the
dust” _
“Thar kem to onr town one day," con
tinued the ex-sheriff, “a young feller
from the east. Hie name whar Bob
Chambers, ec he whar ea bright and ae
* ineotne s youngster as I aver laid eyes
on. All the gals in town and on the
neighboring ranches got dsad stock on
CONDITION OF THE CROP*.
The Map Report of tho National Depart-
1 meet of Agriculture.
The report of the United
pertinent of Agriculture for May relates
to the condition of winter grain, the
progress of spring plowing end the pro
portion of the proposed cotton area
already planted. It indicates a d
in the oofl£tion of wheat BI two i
since Anil 1st, the general average for
the whole country being 86, against 96
at the Rune date m 188$ 70 in 1885, and
94 in 1884. The changes in condition
have not l>een uniform throughout the
winter wheat region, some States show
ing an increase, s majority a slight de
cline, and a few a heavy falling off
Bye has suffered from the same con
ditions which have injuriously affected
wheat but on account of its hardier na
ture the general average is considerably
higher, standing at 90.8, against 92.8 on
Anil 1st and 95.7. at the same date in
1886. The condition ia barely below the
average, being 87.8, against 96.7 hi May,
1836, and 82 m 1885.
Tbs season has bssB mo
advanced in all parts of the country than
usual, spring plowing being
behind only oa the Atiaatie oc
to Psunsylvanm, and on the Pacific
slope. In these seetiona H has been de
layed by oold .and excess of moisture.
Elsewhere the work la ahead of the ever-
the sssscin, especially during
ed. “You are a brick. When the war
is over IH come North and join you.
What’s your name?”
“Louis James,” add the aouava, as he
reslung his knapsack, picked
end disappeared in the wood
neve, i
up hie gun
taction against crows, but it is a dipnted
question as to whether the crow in the
cornfield is an enemy or a friend.
Though he be sometimes destructive to
the corn, yet he destroys many insects
and grubs.
Largs tress can be moved end trans
planted, thus taking advantage of several
years growth, provided all the roots and
some of the sabering earth be carried
with them. The place in which they are
to be deposited should also be specially
for their reception.
A prominent nurseryman says that
nursery practices iir peach propagation
and culture have weakened the vital
power of the tree, which ia unable to re-
rial as dsprsaring inilustioss as formerly,
when the trass from seeding grew well
and lived to an old aga.
[ oenanow.
near each other, but
. Finally hs jumped
r a lady, wno was
party kuM rim 1
bad a way of lookw at ye
s that w
them big black ayes of
' * like j
‘Night i
■ temperature above normal and rain
fall at minimnm. The proportion al
ready on May 1st is estimated at 80 per
cent, of the whole, while the amount
usually computed at that date is about
ff proportion of action already
planted amounts to
of 1
A fresh egg will rink when pissed in
•tar, aadwhan bolted the akin will not
peel off like that of an orange, as in the
ma with thorn not strialtyfresh. State
jgs sra glassy and vary amooth, white
trash eggs have s peculiar rougham
Where the ground has boon wall har-
>wed and made even and moth the
labor of harrostinc will be limimi, as
m ground witt ba better fll lor tha work
of thabarvmtiwg maohlna. BsmovaaU
proposed area, and ia riightiy aatak up. It
than at tha mime date ia any saacaad wh
ag five yean, but is iritis Isa mlam than
li BO
s dog cannot ride-on the skvaHL road,
bat this does not apply toother wild or
domsistio animate.
nisi is the zeaac ,
r, accompanied by a young boar,
’ hing about forty pounda,
evaded tho tiuoMakar s
down town on one ticket
The dude wore one of thoee short-
waiotod and sawed-off i
called Norfolk jackets, bat tbs cab won
_ but an air of
The two mt down
the bear
on the seat near
ling down town, and she went into
another car. There was 4 good deal of
room thou near the dude, but nobody
wanted any of thorn seats.
There ought to be soeae ruling on this
question of bear transportation. It is s
r that intenotaall of us. Ohi wild
and reptiles be nlamed as people,
white dogs era ruled out? Oris a
accompanied by a small dog, ba t
out white tha owner of an
an active hornet’s asal ■
property with him^on his
peopkffor he hungiy™
bind legs of s lattrosd
Tbs question to be sabasitSed to tbs
railway! by thus tearing down tha
sea Boa, aa soasmon earnor% to ada
‘ by a ‘
or a ri
to tha prsfndioa of any ana.
It is to bs hoped, however, that forth
" ariooa may ba avoided by
been ot homo, end if tho
not
need not say that I do ac
Wolealoy. far ho to an ea
humbug. It WM the
J.
of the
he fail
i at the
‘Diak
of e
She didn't some tar tak
told him so one night
“He didn't say nothi
hte heel and went out
Naded into tolling the
being jotted down by this 1 “One bright *»a \ eaaqoa
orthead finger of maaiory upon the found the daod bodyofbob Clmmb*
umb worn pege of s oientel note book: tying by the roadsule, near aa old b»a
“I ban pamrd through the ordeal of A ballet bote in bis bead showed bow
rue wife, and I am
_ - by
Nomtento as tha svenms pleat
that data. The proi>ort>o&s by
are as follows: .
North.Carolina 70, Booth Carolina I
Mi ___
•v
pteii
poor rtirvlff oft
but ^ ^ ^
AN mclURET OF i
J. B.
saa bo thus kep«
They on slossly
of the
_ will
27 to 80
tofTOa The
tetaoaovls
Mrs. To the <
The New York
ithe 1st of I
to fte i
lathe
whole of
to Chrio-
wife, and I am too happy was kilted,
er what sad how much I j “In
tamed who had supphad
points in tbs South and
Cuba. This terse of Chi
had gathered together 11
had Kalita new houses
a soot of over $00,000. 1
persoas added to the
Lm The moot
fmitetten mismone
pulpits St
worship at
i Bumbrr of
“I I
tho UttiK^Umag iaknd of Cuba, sad it
has bssn dssenbed as never haring bean
i in the history of
In
isd Dias, was ordained at Key West,
.in the followuiK month a church
' in Havana, whieh, at the
ter one year s operation,
three hundred members,
and two other churches have been estab
lished. Aa attempt is to bs made in the
future lor the erection of s
Baptist house of worship in Havana.
One of the most important works ac
complished by the Board has been that
of avoiding doctrinal and ptsetiosl in
teroetion to colored ministers and church
officers. A number of very learned sod
able seen have bean employed in gather
ing these leaden of the negro population
together for the purpoee of instruction.
In tins work Georgia, Alabama, Florida,
Maryland and Mianiamppi reap the bene
fits. There | * *
this race em
About these
tain Rttif instennrs of heroism end aeori-
flee which could not be known, perhaps,
otherwise than through the dry details
of *"""*1 reports. One of these con
cerns the Citadel Square Church in
Gbarieeton. It so happened that just
before the terrible earthquake, whieh
not only shattered their church, but
which also destroyed many of their
homes, the process of collecting the reg
ular contribution for missions was in
S the
for fnissions, while without a sanct
uary in which to meet, and while they
had nothin# but the green sward light
ened by the smite of God’s son where
they could be gathered together. Some
might sneer at this enthusiasm and term
it «««»»», but to me it looks like
common old-fashioned honesty. They
did not own the money that had been
given for a speoifle purpose, and no
right could possibly exist for diverting
itfrom the purpose for which it was
given. But ft was grand, nevertheless.
The speaking in this convention is al
ways of the highest order of merit. It
a tremendous amount of gall in an
ordinarr man to seek to address and in
terest 700 men drown from the best and
moat odvarioed and thoughtful men of
the South. So that when arguments an
to be mads there is a general depend
ence upon the mors able and eloquent
men. One of the Northern visitors in
Us address quoted the remark of apris-
otise who had bean captured by Borne,
and aftat bis wIsmo and return to his
home, described his captors as a “nation
of P—1— ” That might ba a little
overdrawn, but still H ia a serious thing
to take the floor before suoh n body. If
the ceBbte is small and the ammunition
wmk. tha poor fallow soon diaoovers it
Lb^Z&«3giftrot
s drunks
now to go over
saflbrad. Mf husband dsanh hmrityl
and often half of hie wages went for
dnak. He kept s large bteek bottle of .
whiskey all the time u> the bouse, ia |
olditioo to what be drank in town. Oa
Eve night An yean ago he
boese drunk, aadae something bed .
wrong with bias, ha was in the
kind of a humor. Our oldest boy
was m the enb very risk with the fever,
sad there was not scent of money in the
to buy him the rhespaet toy. My
ad bed bean sway from home all
day and being drunk nad forgotten all
about his Chnstmas. I put my husband
to bed and retained to the bed side of
my dying boy to wmtoh and weep. It j
waa nearly daybreak when I saw raj
psemoee son Staking fast- Hushing out cup j
of the hoaee I called in a lady fro-nd, ~ ■’
hen aroused my husband. The
had aomewhni sobered him, and
ae he loved hie boy devotedly, he was
bending over the little fellow, beg-
ginghim to say something to him.
‘TTie little fellow slowly turned hie
toward his father and arid: I’m
going to die, papa, for I see tho angels
beckoning me to come. This is Chnst-
pepe: please let me see
what Santa Claus pat in my stocking.
My husband went to the mantle and
took down the little stocking. It wee
empty! He stood still and stared at ft
for a minute, and God only knows the
of his heart in that short time.
He tuned to my, bat ou boy would
not have heard him had the poor man's
breaking heart allowed to speak. Ou
boy was dsad! -
‘‘The day before New Year's my hus
band called for the bottle. May God
ive my feelings at that minute, for I
ted he, too, was dead. I obeyed him
mechanically. To my sunrise, he took
the bottle in his hands ana, pouring the
whisky on the ground, aud: *1 will
drink no more; And the money I would
spend to? whiskey we will pat in this
bottle, and all enjoy the contents. ’ Yon
can imagine how happy I was. He had
sworn off many times before, bat I knew
he was in earnest this time. We modes
calculation, and estimated that whiskey
cost him, taking the past year as a basis,
on an average of five dollars a week.
You sec a good deal of his money went
to pay court fines for drunkenness. Well
ft was decided to pot five dollars a week
in the bottle for five yean, come what
would. The time was out last New
Year’s day, and the big black bottle was
broken. Now figure up how many five
dollars that bottle contained!”
“Two hundred and sixty,”
“Yes, or $1,000 dollan. But this was
not all. We roved omugh in that time
outside of the bottl'i to bay a little
home.” *'
“Bat are yon not afraid in breaking
the bottle you husband will break his
resolution?”
“No; because we have started another
bottle bank,” arid the lady with a happy
smile.
The husband is a Macon mechanic,
well know and enjoys the respect and
esteem of riL He says be never knew
how much genuine pleasure them was at
home with nis loved ones* until be got
" 7 Whan Nelly
e nearly went e
“One day she
tightly a
of Bob's
OusL
Jems* who is 1
mysthei the
with the
Davie.
of Louie
are m-
i ot
and was!
“It was late ou Saturday night
‘The miooa was full of men drinkm',
smokin' -
of the
of hri
‘«cs I to myself, •Disk, ae boy, ye
air the one who gave Chambers hri set
tlor. HI 'rest you.'
“I slid up to him, end placing my
shooter agin his head, mid quietly:
'Diek-^Tseoan ye sir wanted to oo-
f a cell down at Laredo jail. ’
“ ‘Wat fur?* he sold up ia an instant,
and farin’ his bends on hri weapons.
“^‘None of that! hands uq over you
“ Te rir wanted for TdBfafBdb-Chtm-
and his
sober enough to sppreciato ft, and to fill
instead of empty the fat black tmttta.
“Oven
Repetition is sometimes tbs only way to
Unprutf s truth upon the mi ad. Accord
liver
urgatTvel
I rak) <
Iveta cm
Ithe
to be
i of sick sad i
wonderfully
of the
ever see that
gray button
chalk.
‘It’aalfa,’ he yelled; *ye ain’t got
no proof.’
‘Mebbe not, but d’ye
afore? 1 says I, tearing the
on the table.
■Sanders tuned the color of
and then said:
“Well, I suppose I might as well
g’long an’ ’prove my inneroenoe in
court.’ „ ^
Yso; yer bom and mine, already sad
dled, stand afore the door.”
“Didn't he show any fight?” asked the
reporter.
“New,” was the response; “it wouldn’t
do for him to show fight in thot plsoe*
Chambers was worry popular, and the
hull darned town would a fit to kill his
murderer if riled. Sanders knowed this.
Aa Laredo was too far away I couldn't
take him down thar thet night, so I
^ ted for Jake Roberta's place, about
miles from town.
“The darkness rim so dense that yon
could have cat it with a boarding house
knife.
“ ’Bonk the only'fhing you could hew
above the efaflfar of the horses’ hoofs war
the chirpings of the night insects and
birds in the trees.
“We riopned at a ranch, got a drink
en’ then pushed on.
VI noticed Sanders keep eyein’ the
thtek underbrush that fay like a shadow
the dark road.
thought he wanted to escape, and
) make, San
mj
but looked
stroke afore him after that.
“Just as we got to a portion of the
road that skirts a lonely fake Sanders
imitated the scresch of a night owL
“I knew what that meant though.
“Quick as lightning I slid offer
boss to the ground.
“I was just in time.
“A doaen rifles belched forth their
ntenta.
“tttyhoim dropped dead.
“Sanders put spurs to his hone, bat
not soon enough.
“Up went my gun.
“Crook!
“Banders fall over his animal dead as
a door nail
“Aa aoon as I fired I changed my po
sition. It wu well, fu another voUey
whistled thro’ the aa.
“I jumped into tho fake, swam i
end mads my way back totha tow
with Um
3W£
popular rebel offlcar,^slUiuu^i hajras an
fiTJStar sd^
of Virginia, and tha
cold. The man
of
to the hardships of
in
dull
Profiting tty tha example of I
Napoleon, Btaaregarl hit upon the plan
of aelaWishing a theatre in tha camp for
the amusement of the troops,
was sslseted to organise the
and the work of erecting the theatre was
n. The man who waa antroeted
the funds neoaaaary to arigaga tha
eomnanv skinned B
with the money, and
th* Federal army broke op all the
During the ww, Mortimer styi
thee tree in the South cotnad a
The horrora of the stage
and sometimes added toby dramatic per-
ahd when an army entered a
own the first thing ft did was to organ-
ae a company and play in the theatre.
Some of the armies contained enough
soldier-actors for a very fair riaed oom-
y, and in some oases plays wan ro-
rsed ahead, but oftener still the com
pany was non-military and briongad to
he theatre or traveled about _
^ y in some town occupied by troops.
e prices charged ware 60 eente for
privates and $1 for ofifaers and tha
houses wan universally packed,
andtanoes wan enthusiastic and ge
ly in the very best of humor, so much i
as to make ft rather difficult to play.
Mortimer was paroled, and played off an
on for a yew or two with all aorta of
• . ■. * m m ^ ave
mofessionaL
. and all aorta of sectional
ism and politics. Once at Corinth hs
played “Richard ILL” in a linen duster:
trat the audience didn’t seem to mind
the discrepancy s bet, and insisted on
his coming forward in the tent scene and
■rngiiig the “Star Spangled Banner” and
“In the Prison CdllStt.” On the
night of the second day’s battle of the
Wilderness Mortimer was on picket
duty. He had not eaten a morsel for
over thirty-six hours, and he was nearly
dead with hunger, and very faint, having
but recently come from the hospital. It
had been the wont of the soldiers to sup
ply the place of food with copious chews
of plug tobacco, and Mortimer’s pockets
foil of the weed, but the doctor had
(ring it
to ba
He
stand
forbidden
ing by n tree, faint and despairing, and
in the agony of his situation OTWrimart
aloud: >
“I’d give the bigristphig of tobeeco
in the world for e piece ofSerd-faek,”
“I’ll take you ut your word, Johnny
Reb," exclaimed a hearty voice, and be
fore Mortimer could bring his gun to his
shoulder s form sprang out of the dusk
and e itaMart aoueve stood before Mm.
• ‘Tve been watching you for some
time,” continued the Northern man,
‘tana I thought you row ma and wrogot-
till I Kami ;
had
you can neve aUthe hardtack vow Jews TV
can crack. Fork over." Such changes Mm
toe foodsad pamsd^oror a ptog^of Yu-
ican be
Iro for th.-
iu<tan iix
IMAof
far the mmsMpsrtod hnse bena‘
ton "to MghV Tndty^agft,
pared with toe <x>nes|)otHliaf date of
Wc, aada
a trout yard
186.4
If the esepfa hel a ataauri el
tlsrta'
•t i?.
*
a befajured. Hsooe old walk, half
m dttabsa and anrii like ahould be
vsred or filled apw
The dHahm along the aid
ahould be opened now. in <
e busy season end tbs "
In filling vacancies I
pafahro pot the roots down aa deep in
tite growid m posribfa, as tha smaou fa
1D6 we+BOU DM BMP TCfT ItaTOIWOie lo
tbs growth of young stnwbenypfanfa,
fnalL ** ■WW •fW
Evergreen hadgm may be trimmed and
C d in shape as fate m (his month, but it
beta not to cut bask too much.
The smell siae broticn will now begin
to give way to thoee weighing three to
low pounds pro pair. ~
12, Mil
of South Caroli
ne, end points to the State’s staHsttas in
and points to
mifaotaring eni
State hm sail
ftronbles, and
(flourishing a
meat is mnde I
•4 the saete towaa have bem U
m Beptamber I the wiripls at
ITttall ta i M86-81
in 1884 5 wars 4,742,31
lbs issripta at the outyo
••1A077 briss, the i
at
eeipte from the
week ware 18,164 bataa and for 1886
they ware 2,298 betasTThe lissmam in
amount in right Friday night, as oom-
pared with lari yew, fa 49,briss, the
metaam as aoaspwad with 1884-86 fa
696,496 balm and th
1888-84 fa 688,096 bsfaa
The Chrontafa, in ifa
ives some into
lovemcnt da
dine from the flguroe
tag month of the two preceding years,
the month’s total being M^UT lelan
* Had 61.982
The State has suffered little if any from
labor troublas, and shows bar msnufae-
thetin 1860 she had
1,280 factories end 17,000,000 used as
OHdtal. In 1880, 2,078 factorim wen
running, $11,250,000 owdtal was in naa,
and the product waa $16,700,000. Lari
* uno had grown to 8,248
.280,000 mpitel, and $80,-
000,000 of products.
The Oemmbue (Ga.) Enquirer-Sun
gives the above figures, and says that
oaring the fast rix years there him bom
again of over eighty per cent, sod adds
“tsirt there something to be proud of
in thatr Exemption of many indus
trial enterprises from taxation bee tend
ed to give big help to growth. Under
sooh policy the cotton mills have grown
till now they employ $6,000,000 ofmpi-
tal, as compered wife $8001000 in 1800,
while the annual product ban become
$5,600,000 Mainat #700,000 at fee war’s
oiitbrmk, Trade in busbar hm devel
oped as bandsomely. In 1800 $1,140,-
000 was employed as capital in timber
production, asril the market value of the
output then was $1,194,000.
$3,250,000 was the capital in
the product brought |6,236,00a
end rorpenfeso making hove kept pees:
in 1880 ILOO^OOO wm the value oftfait
produet; fast jew ft grew to $$900,000.
Thu ssronr or yn Brauar of Sra-
re-
period Of the
two preceding sseeone. The net move-
■T for the month is also Mow that
for April of 188$ but exhibits an in
crease over the nuns month in 1886 of
7,868 bales. The totals am $0^804 bataq
feta yew, against 60,468 betas in 1886,
end 29,636 betas in 1886. Notwfthstaod-
isUsr month's mnvswmt, the
net for the maeon to data eon-
in exesfoof feet for say atyufar
peric d in our record.
The Chrontate says feat, in eoasassa
*h the overland, reestpta at tite ports
during April rsoord a decline frame
yew ago. In fact, the net arrivals have
been less .than half whet they were in
April, 1886, reaching 89,1W betas,
against 202,866 batan and fat comparison
with 1886 there is a lom of 14,180 brisa,
the total fern being 1064176 tnlm. For
the sigbt months, however, the aggre-
_ fata excam of that for either 188^86
or 1884-86. The exports to foreign
porta have Mtanoff very considerably
daring the
eamemmfeef hs* yaw of $$890,00a total taking, to
The faereat tnnremi in ert^ wm in her 1, W86,sn
■hipped aggregating 196,11$ against
822,149ay4wago,md l8$aQ2fal8W.
Coutroatad wife last yaw^fee total to
eoordaan eaesmef
i&gsszsz
I ta 14$000bataa.
i in faefftattotasemtov
,477 bataa mem ferns k
722,781 bales man than in
ill Mil
toetyl
iof Hi
.-.(-VH'-Vj
■ *
to Ml
^ W?-'
■rileoioNd people aU fee fand feap
want, Dos tufty bum agrtt id pvt IM
grantor a mortgage on^tha land, and
work it to
• and to its
garni
sold to tenants to
pm month. Theaahoetato: