The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 14, 1908, Image 4
t
4
TILLMAN SCORES
New York Banquet Where Whites
Dined With Negroes.
WILL KURT BLACKS
Says the Semite, Who Iterlares the
Incident Makes Progress Toward
Inevitable Catastrophe, lie Asserts
that Northern Peeling DilVers Very
Utile In the ltaee Question From
tlie Southern.
Senator Tillman gave on last Friday
to a representative of the Atlanta
Journal a ringing interview in
which lie spoke in his characteristic
fashion of a banquet recently given
in New York and attended by white
...in iicK incii and won)oh. who sat
side by side at I ho banquet tables.
Senator Tillman was severe in his
condemnation of the banquets, and
stated that the speeches made were
not for Now Yorkrs, but specially for
southern consumption, as was indicated
by some of the orators of the occasion.
The story of the banquet which
evoked the sentiments expressed by
Senator Tillman appeared recently in
the Washington Post, the Philadelphia
Telegraph and the Washington
Times, and all the eastern and western
dailies. The entertainment was
given tinder the auspices of the Cosmopolitan
society of Now York. White
women were sandwiched between negro
men, and listened to speeches by
negroes which advocated intermarriage
us a solution of the race problem.
Some of those present were Harold
O. Villard, editor of the New York
Evening Post; William H. Ferris, a
negro graduate of Harvard; "Captain"
H. A. Thompson, a negro who
said he was a soldier at San Juan
Hill; Miss Mary W. Ovington, a
white woman prominent in settlement
work in Brooklyn, who sat between
two negro men, and Edward C. Walker,
president of the Sunrise Cub,
which sanctioned the recent "af.Unity"
idea of F. P. Earle, who took
I net hk't * " { 1 1 9 * "
i. uuuu.i w quu ms wm? ior another
woman hp liked bet tor and whom ho
designated as his "afUnity."
Such ideas Senator Tillman stated
that the south would forever resist at
every hazard. He said that the best
way to eliminate the suggestion of
social equality was to remove political
quality, and that the best way to
do this is by the repeal of the fifteenth
amendment and the modification of
the fourteenth. This not having
been done, it was pointed out that
the states of the black belt, with the
single exception of Georgia, had taken
legal steps to disfranchise large numbers
of negroes, and that it was the
duty of Georgians to join her sister
states by the passage of a similar
law.
"My views on the race problem,"
says Senator Tillman, "are so well
known, by reason of the great number
of lectures 1 have delivered on
the subject, that I do not know that
it is worth while to discuss this latest.
phase of it. Hut this nncident,
trival in itself, only marks the rapid
progress we are making toward the
inevitable catastrophe. I have contended
for years that existing conditions
can inevitable have but one end
?bloody race conilicts.
"This banquet, or dinner, or whatever
you call it, at which a few
fanatics like Villard and other white
men of that ilk, had drummed up a
lot of denegrade or lunatic white women,
to illustrate their practice of
social equality and launched the propaganda
of amalgamation between
the race, will do no harm in New
York, and it was not intended to
affect conditions there. It was designed
for southern consumption and
to affect the south. For instance, Dr.
Ferris, the colored Harvard graduate,
emphasized this, when he said:
" 'This means more to the negro
of the black belt of the north.' The
incident is a revival of the old scheme
of those radicals who, with Thud
Stevens and Charles Sumner, caused
the re-construction deviltry in the
south in '68. That Stevens practiced
miscegnation, and Charles Sumner
endorsed it, and nothing but the imperial
manhood of the southern white
people?men and women alike?saved
our civilization then.
4,T1u4 nmnvt iwivucii'i ttoro tli mmolwuii
A UV HVfjl V IIV " kl|/UJ?WI U LUI WHfjIIV/Ul
the country will publish and send
broadcast over the south this story
of black men and white women sitting
down to dinner, with what results I
need not say. itoosev.elt's luncheon
with Broker Washington caused untold
mischief, and, as one of these
speakers said, 'conditions are going
to get worse in the south betore Ibev
get better.' When the colored people
get educated, th whites in the South
will have to recognize them.' Closing
his statement with assertion that deportation
is impossible, then it must
v- be amalgomatiou and education.
"A few statistics will Indicate what
tills means, .South Carolina has 2 2f>,000
moro negroes than whites; Mississippi,
265,000 more negroes than
whites, and the six southern states of
South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama,
Florda, Mississippi and Ixiuislaiia,
constituting the black belt, have 30,000
more negroes than whites. Your
own state of Georgia has over 1,000,
000 negroes and less thua 200,000
white majority.
\
FAST MOYCLF !U1>IN<;
Caused the Dentil of u CoIoihmI Hoy nl
Spurt niihurg.
A colored boy about 13 years old
a as killed Monday morning in Spartanburg
by being thrown from a bicycle.
The boy was riding down the
street at a great speed when he came
in collision with acolored woman and
vus thrown over the hurdle i)ii<s, re
wiving such a severe bl >w on the
eft side of bis head that death revolted
in a few minutes.. Tb colored
boy was employed Ht Wrighton's
market, and bad been up South
Church street to do some errand
Coining back he speeded down Kirby
Hill, which is the custom of nine
tenths of the cyclists. The ice wa
gun was standing in the street, and
Mrs. Connor's servant girl was getting
a piece of ice. As she turned
from behind the wagon the bicycle
was upon her. There was no time
for her to gel out of the way, or for
the boy to turn it is wheel, so there
was a collision. Strange to say, the
woman was not injured.
SAD .\CCI1>F\T.
Litllo Hoy and (?irl Drowned oil a
Pleasure Sail.
A vary sad accident occurred Friday
afternoon in Charleston harbor
by which Jiinmie and Myrtle Mitchuni,
r. and 10 year old children of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Milchutn. were
drowned near I bum Island, in the
overturning; ol the small sail boat in
which they were taking; a pleasure
trip. In the boat were Capt. Mitclium.
his mother in law and four
children.
The boat was on a tack when a
sudden gust of wind struck the sail
and before the party could readjust
themselves to steady the craft in the
water it capsized. The towboat Cecilia
went immediately to the assistance
of the party and the crew of
the boat with the assistance of Capt.
Mitchum and his 10 year old son
managed to rescue the rest of the
party struggling in the water.
Negro Murderer Hanged.
At Lavvreneoville, Ha.. Friday Henry
Campbell, colored, was hanged for
the murder of 1*211 a Hudson, a negro
woman, last .January. John Hudson,
iiiiHDjiiui 01 uic murciereu woman.
Intel previously been Riven a life sentence
for ihe same crime.
"If this program of the V'.ltards
should be carried out, the future traveler
through the heart of the Con fedracy,
when the mixing of the races
has been completed, could discover
nothing hero except mulattoes, or
even a darker admixture. It is needless
to say t hat this will never occur,
because, if deportation is impossible,
the destruction of the black race is
not. And those who sow the wind,
may live to reap the whirlwind.
"I know better than any other
souhern man for 1 have tested it,
that the northern feeling on this
question differs very little from our
own. And if the Republican liatloal
convention shall adopt the Ohio
program of reducing southern representation
it would l>e the duty of the
Democratic convention to meet it
with a plank declaring 'this is a
white man's country and white men
must govern it.' "
In answer to the question whether
such a plank would gain us votes in
the North, Senator Tillman said "if
i lui I?in\nltliohi\c nvnoo i li a
issue, 1 have no earthly doubt of it.
Southern men would only have to go
among the northern people and discuss
the question as 1 have done,
boldly and frankly. No Republican
speaker can meet the arguments and
facts that can be presented, and the
feeling of caste, race superiority is as
indelibly fixed there as here. The
question never will se settled
until the North shall agree to the repeal
of the fifteenth amendment and
modification of the fourteenth, so as
to set at rest once for all the negro's
aspirations social equality, by taking
from hint political equality, or leaving
it to each state to settle."
When asked if the action of South
Carolina in regard to negro suffrage
was unanimous Senator Tillman said
"in a manner yes, and then again, no,
because there was considerable discussion
and threats in certain quarters
of mobilizing the negro vote
and controlling the state constitutional
convention by those who claimed
to be the guardians of vested interest
and corporations. If you should ev/At.
#. /1.V..1 I. :.. i ~
vi iitivv it uvum fs i ?i 111mv in Kia
along those lines and your negroes
are not disfranchised, you can readily
understand how many thousands of
them would have their taxes paid so
that their votes could be used at the
polls.
"It is well understood now by a
great many northern people that the
negroes are the balance of power in
many northern and border states,
such as New York, New Jersey, Delaware,
Maryland, Kentucky, West
Virginia, Ohio, Indiana. Missouri and
Kansas, and there is intense bitterness
of feeling in Washington because
of the impending control of the national
Republican convention by negro
delegates from the South, who,
said to me, can deliver no electoral
votes, but will nomiuate a man for
the safe Republican states to elect.
"The South, and least of all Georgia,
cannol afford to yield one Inch
or father in this conflict. Our civilization,
and everything which makes
ife worth living, depends on it. And
all other Issues sink into inaigaiilcauce
In comparison.
WILL DO MUCH GOOD
DKMONSTItATlO.N' ON KAHMS IN
THIS SOI TH.
KMrnicrs Cooperating Willi Agricultural
Departineiit on Selected Area*
to Stimulate lillort uti All.
CongtsMnan Lever has recently '? reived
a letter front S. A. Knapp, s| ei
tl agent in churgu of Farmer's Co
>pernt ive I)omonstration work, stating
t hut the Department of Agriculture
has stalled the work in the 7th
Congressional district. South Carolina.
and that they hope lo do a
groat deal mote next year. Fifteen
lemonstt at ion farms and ninety cooperative
farms have been established
in Lexington county; thirty-five
demonstration and ten cooperative in
Ki< bland county; ten demonstration
and forty cooperative in Orangeburg,
and live demonstrative and twenty
co operative in Calhoun.
Dr. Knapp in his letter said. "A
valuable practical feature of this
work is that all the held agents are
Southern men and residents in the
Stales in which (he demonstrations
tire made. They know the peopie
and the conditions."
Dr. Knapp has very briefly outlined
what is to be accomplished by this
Fanners' Cooperative Demonstration
work in the following;
' The object of the work is primarily
to greatly increase the net earnings
of the average farmer, by the
improvement of the soil, by the use
ui iiM* iM-si seen and uv in*> adoption
of better and more economic: met hods
on the farm. ?
"This is accomplished hy farm demonstrations
of an acre or more made
hv a farmer in every neighborhood,
if possible, under instructions from
our central office and supervised by
field agents, who visit those demonstrations
monthly.
"Thus the crop on an acre under
the best management is contrasted in
every ncighbornood with the crop of
tlie average farmer. The effect is
immediate and the results are astonishing.
"In 19011 tli first cooperative farm
was established at Turrell, Texas,
and the farmer, W. C. Porter, was
guaranteed by tlie citizens against
lost, if any should occur in following
the department instructions. The
work was a success.
"From this small beginning the
Farmers' Cooperation Demonstration
work has increased in five years from
one locality to ten States, and from
one field agent to 1 11, from one farm
to thirty two thousand directly instructed
and nossihlv half a million
uided through observation.
"The funds appropriated l>v Congress
tiro used only in boll weevil infested
territory: to wit, Texas, Louisiana,
Oklahoma, Arkansas and one
district in Southwestern Mississippi.
Cooperative Demonstration w ork in
the remainder of Misssippi, Alabama,
| Ceorgia and the two Carolinas and
Virginia is done by funds from other
than government sources. The great
value of this work is shown by the
successful production of cotton by
the average farmer under boll weevil
infest ion.
"Our instructions are also directed
to the more profitable production of
the standard crops, because rotation is
necessary to he best success in cotton
prod act ion.
"Aside from the demonstrations,
the educational features of the work
consists mainly in reducing the
science of agriculture to a few practical
problems, easily understood by
the common farmer, as the following:
Letter drainage of the soil; a deeper
and better seed bed; more humus;
tno Dost seem; thorough tillage; moiv
horspower and better fools; more and
better farm stock; these are taught
by letters, circulars, lectures and demonstrations.
"The cooperative feature of our
work gives to it elasticity and adjustment
to conditions. Farmers cooperate
in furnishing land and working
lite demonstration.
"Hankers and merchants cooperate
in furnishing, free of cost, the best
seed for the demonstrations and in
refusing to advance less the tenant
works the crop under our instructions.
"Business men's clubs and boards
of trade organize farm demonstrations
under our agents and pay all
expenses. The Business Men's Club
of Helena, Ark?, has 1,000 such
farms. The Farmers' unions are givling
great assistance by organizing de
monstration farms in cooperation
with us.
"Some 2,000 women in the South
are organized in clubs for the betterment
of the conditions o f rural
homes. They are actively assisting
us by urging the general adoption of
our demonstration work. "
"These women are practical and
urge not only greater earning capacity
for the farmer, but greater economy
and more comforts in the home.
Miss Mary T. Nance, president of the
Women's Clubs of South Carolina, for
rural improvement, has been largely
instrumental in organizing this effective
work.
"County superintendents of public
Instruction are organizing hoys' clubs
on a largo scale. The superintendent
does the work free of charge. The
boys demonstrate on their father's
farms. The public gives suitable
prizes. Our department furnishes
seed aim instructions.
"tu addition, our agents visit the
ry
TALE OF HORROR
Eleven Bodies Found Buried in
Farmhouse Yard.
i
HAD BEEN MURDERED.
Anxiety of John llelgeleiu Over l)isnppenruuee
ol' liis I hot her I.earls
to Diseovery of Murdered Bodies
of Two Men, a Woman und Two
Children in Vnitl of Woman lie.
contly lliirncd to Dentil.
A dispatch from Laparte, Intl., says
one of t h?? most growsorae murder
mysteries ever unearthed in that section
of the country came to light
Tuesday when the bodies of five persons.
all of them murdered, were
found in the yard in the homo of
Mrs. Belle Ounness, who, with three
of her children was hurtled to death
on the night of April L'8.
So far only two of the bodies have
been identified. These are Andrew
lielelee, who came to that eity from
Aberdeen, S. !)., for the purpose of
marrying Mrs. dullness, whose acquaintance
he had made through a
matrimonial bureau. Tht other is
that of Jennie Olson dullness, a Chicago
girl, who had been adopted by
Mrs. dullness. She disappeared in
September, 1906, and it was said bad
gone to Los Angeles to attend school.
The other bodies were those of a
man and two children, apparently 1?
years old.
The body of llolgonein was dismembered
and the arms, legs, trunk
and head were hurled in different
parts of th yard. It is believed by
the authorities that Guy Lamphere,
who has been under arrest since the
burning of the dullness home, on
the charge of murdering Mrs. dullness
and her family, committed the
Helgelein crime, Lamphere is a carpenter
and the manner in which the
body of Illgelein was dismembered
lends to the belief that it was done
by somebody familiar with the use
of a saw.
In some quarters it. is believed that
Mrs. dimness may have known something
of tho murderers of the live
people.
A possible solution of the dunness
fiirm in vctnrv *' ? '
, << uiv ii ? <m ut-epeiHJU
Wednesday when four additional bodies
wore found in the barn yard, developed
Wednesday night. Evidence
tending to show that the nine dismembered
corpses unearthed Tuesday
and Wednesday had been shipped
to Laporte, probably from Chicago,
came to light. The testimony
of draymen who had carted trunks
and boxes to the (iunness home lent
color to this supposition. The Laporte
police also received information
that two trunks, consigned to ,'Mrs.
Belle Ounness. Laporte, Ind." are
help in an express otlice in Chicago.
Two of the nine mutilated bodies
were identified with reasonable certainty.
Anton Olson, of Chicago,
viewed the body supposed to be that
of Jennie Olson, 16 years old. foster
daughter of Mrs. (iunness, and pronounced
it to lie that of his daughter.
A sister of the girl, Mrs. Leo Olander,
of Chicago, confirmed the
lather's khmtiHeat ion.
Ask K. Helegein, whose inquires
regarding his missing brother, Andrew,
led to the first dscoveries on
the death haunted farm, became sure
that the largest and best preserved
of the corpses is that of his brother,
Against this identification, however,
is the result of the autopsy performed
on this body by Dr. J. II. Meyer.
lie found conditions which, to his
mind, proved that the man perished
long after Andrew Helegein disappeared
last January. Dr. Meyer said
the corpse showed evidence of having
been in the ground less than two
weeks. Ask Helegein, however, refused
to be convinced by these findings,
and his certainty led the coroner
to accept his identifteatkn for the
present.
TKAGFiDY IN GKOHG1A.
Two Young Men Shot and Killed
Near East mat*.
A dispatch from Eastman, Ga.,
says Tom Spiers shot and killed Oscar
Stuckey Wednesday afternoon
about dark. - It seems from reports
that an altercation arose over some
work on the farm of Mr. .1. S. Stuckey,
which resulted in Spiers shooting
and killing the young men. The
Stuckoys ore among the best families
in Dodge County, being highly respected
and esteemed as quiet and
law abiding citizens. The community
is very much wrought up
over the affair. A deputy sheriff and
posse left for tho scene of the killing.
All who try don't succeed, but all
who succeed tried. I
rural schools when invited, (and
this is almost universal), and instruct
the boys in demonstrations."
It is thus seen that this work is
do?ng a great deal of good throughout
the South, and with more liberal
appropriations by Congress in the
future this work will greatly nh^ to
bring the South b ack to the top of
ti e ladder where she was before the
war, and to which she is now taking
great strides. *
WANT BRYAN I
T-he South Carolina Democracy^
Will Vote For Him.
THE DETAILED VOTE.
A Majority of tin* Delegates to the
State Convention Instructed to Vote
for Inst ructcd Delegates to the
National lh'inoerntie Convention
Who Will Vote for the firent Com*
nioner's Nomination.
There will L?e 1>32 members of the
State convention, two for each of the
12 senators and two for each of the
124 representatives. Of these 332
there are 170 who are instructed by
their county conventions to vote for
delegates to the national convention
who will support Win. J. Bryan for
the presidency. This is a majority
O .1 .it., ti i ?
?| O, uciuuu'iy instructed.
Tho Columbia State Bays of the
1G2 delegates from counties which
have not instructed delegates, there
are quite a number who will vote
to instruct for Bryan In some counties
the matter was not brought up
at all, in other counties resolutions
of endorsement for Bryan were adopted.
but t in- delegation to the State
convention were not instructed. In
Richland, for instance, tho convention
took no action, and these 10
votes are placed in the nninstructed
column, although it is known thai
five and probably more of the ten will
vote for an instructed delegation
ICx-Oov. I). C. Hevward c'aid that
lie will go to tlie Stat' I emocratie
convention a liryan man. Ifo is not
entirely wedded to the idea of instructing
the delegates to denver, hut
he docs believe in endorsing most
heartily Mr. Bryan's career.
(Jen. Wllie Jones, who is a candidate
to go to Denver, is out ipok^n
for Bryan. Both (Jen. Jones and Gov.
Heyward have attended national conventions
before. Therefore it appears
that the majority elected from Richland
county will favor endorsing
Bryan, the county convention havincr
failed to instruct the delegates one
way or the others, resolutions on
both sides being tabled simultaneously'
There was a strong Bryan sentiment
in Barnwell, and Chester, and
Williamsburg, Lexington endorsed
Bryan. Nothing has been heard from
Georgetown and these counties, therefore,
are put in tne uninstructed column,
although as a matter of fact
there are perhaps a score of the 162
which may be counted upon for instruction
and a few others may be
classed as "doubtful," but are classified
as "uninstructed" in order to err
on the side of liberty.
Ins. Unins.
Abbeville .S
Aiken 10
Anderson 12
Bamberg 6
Barnwell S
Beaufort 8
Berkeley S
Charleston 18
Cherokee C
Chester 8
Chesterfield 6
Clarendon 8
Colleton S
Calhoun . . -1
Darlington S
Dorchester 1
Edgefield 6
Fairfield 8
Florence 8
Georgetown 6
Greenville 12
Greenwood ... 8
Hampton 6
Horry 6
Kershaw 6
Lancaster 6
Leo 6
Laurens 8
Lexington 8
Marlboro 8
Marion 8
Newberry 8
Ooonee 6
Ornngeburg 10
Pickens 6
Richland 10
Saluda w 0
Sumter. . 8
Spartanburg 14
\ ? |"^??'
The
CADAVlt
weight 660 1
BB
COLUMBIA
m ^^^^hav^ha^aevera^eai
%RoSBS?7 # other kl?dt ol vegetable (
ly jihCollard plant*, and Tomato
^"2^^^ I now htvr ready for si
Early Jeraey Wakefield*, Ctu
^JjJ'eaa being the b
/^ ftfrnM*'^ will atand aevere cold with
to mS'*!8?!..ft1*
mc*$Wi'?aii m We have special low Expr
ii 11' ? order* will be shipped C. O
I would advise sending m<
returning the C. O. D'a.
Other plant* wiij be rest
,n(* Personal attention. Wh
1 guarantee satisfaction. A<
CWl'CiHT IX t'XDKKTOW
And All Occupants of Launch Wcr-""
v
Thrown in Water.
At Kast Liverpool, Ohio, of uine
young men who started out in a gas- -
oline launch for a ride on the Ohio
river at ten o'clock Saturday night,'
only three are living, the others having
met death by drowning. The
nine men leaving the dock in a gasoline
launch, went up the river a mile
when their engine broke. Futile attorn
ps were made to get into running
order again. The boat Moated ddwu
stream on the West Virginia side of
tne rive and when it had gone dowu
as far as Chester, it struck a fleet of
coal barges, which had tied up there.
The^ourrent is swift at this pohJ^uud
tin? gasoline launch is believed to
have gone under the tow and then
floated down the river. All the occupants
were thrown Into the water.
Texas For Bryan.
Texas decided by a large majority
in the primary election on Tuesday
to send a solid Bryan delegation
to the National Democratic convention.
Killed by a Rooster.
Max Crockett, Jr., fifteen years
old died Wednesday at Lewisbjirg of
a wound Inflicted by a roo*tei^ .
Union * . t?
Williamsburg S
Vork I "
Totals 17 0 10J
FOUND!
One of the best Commission Houses
for you to ship your Fruits Potatoes,
Cabbage, Peas and everything in this
line to. Write tlieni today. They are
Hewitt & Company,
10 K. Camden St.. : Baltimore, Mil
CLASSIFIED COLUMN.
WANT El).
Salesman Wanted?Sell retail trade
your locality, $65 per month and
expenses to start, or commission.
Experience unnecessary, llemtngsen
Cigar Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Cow Pens?I will pay $2.20 per bushel,
f. o. b. your shiping point for
Clays and Unknown Pens. ' Write
me. II. H. Daniel, 504 Tchoupltou- las
St., New Orleans, La.
WATCHES AM) JKWKWtv]
Elgin and Waltham Watches?High
Fsiuut? jt-wBiiy, uirfci irora laciory
to you, cutting out all middlemen's
profits. Write for beautifully il- ^
lustratcd catalog No. 14. free. E.
M. Schron, 108 Astor Place, Jersey
City, N. J.
FOK SALE?M1SC E FLANEOUS.
For Sale?Laundry outfit consisting
of washer, extractor, stove and dryer,
boiler, mangel, pulleys, shafting.
etc. Write J. W. Ivey, Florence,
S. C.
For Sale Cheap?One Ruger Bread
Mixer, one Thompson Moulding
Machine; four Bread Presses; two
Bread Troughs; one Cake Machine;
50 Plane Moulds; and many other
things used in a first-class bakery.
Apply to L. E. Riloy, Orangeburg,
S. C.
For Sale?One twelve horse power
Blakeslev Gasolene Engine, cheap.
Also lot of shafting, pulleys, etc.
Apply to L. E. Riley, Orangeburg,
S. C.
FOB SA LE?EGGSAA1) POULTRY.
F.ggs for Hatching?Barred Plymouth
Rock and S. C. Brown TiCghorn.
$1.00 per sitting of 15, packed and
f. o. b. Pure stock, k'ew lii?>o??.
Blythewood Poultry Yrfrds, Blythewood,
S. C.
Why buy an Organ from the Peddler?
When you can buy a superior organ
from your factory representative for
less money, and on easier terms, and
have absolute protection in tlie guarantee
given by the makers. We make
low prices and grant from one to two
years, without interest, for settlement
and only bind the organ as security.
we save you money and supply Organs
that will prove a life long pleasure.
Write at once for catalog and special
prices and termB to theokl^taidlshed
i MALONF/S MUSIC HOUSTC,
Pianos and Organs. Columbia, S. C.
r a Shingle Mill.
prleed power feed shingle mill on the martj
8,000 to IB,000 shingles per day, 4 to 10 H. 1'.;
Ids. Carriage has automatic return motion.
BEST GOODS-BEST PRICES'*
Write us for close price quotations.
SUPPLY CO. - COLUMBIA, S. C.
_ ' *
experience fn growing Cabbage plant* ?d lUI
danta for the trade. vU:, Beet plant*. Onion plant*. 1
ilpment Beet plant* and Cabbage plant* a* toBewiJ
arleston Large Type Wakefield*, and Henderson Bnc#
c?t known reliable varletle* to all ex(>gieM?l trwJr f '
grown out in the open air neatr-^t Water mI /
out injury. %
nt*. In lots of I,### to 9,m at $1.5# Mt tkm
per thousand, It.Mt and over at $!.## nag HMMtadf
ess rates on vegetable plant* from that Met r ti
. D. unless you prefer seadlng money wRl mm v"
>ney with order*. You will eave the c$Mq|aa 15
ly In February. Your orders will haviiafMMNk
ten in need of Vegetable plant* give nee a trial ?r#ern
fdress all orders to - f
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