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\ » «* . . _ c.a ^2 > ® “IP FOR THE LIBERTY OF THE WORLD WE CAN DO ANYTHING.” VOL. II. ' . J)AELINGTC)X, SOUTH OAHOLINA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOJ3EK 14, 1891. NO 6. [Communicated] The 8«h-*re»s«ry. ]Continucd from our last ianue.] A great difficulty under the sys tem of buuk or government issues has been to avoid an “excess,” and although it is impossible to determine beforehand the amount of issue that will constitute an excess, not only with reference to the basis, but also to the business requirements, gov- ernmeiit or banks have bj;eu more Or less strielly 'limited by lap*. caqnot, hqweTeii .as tm exeess of ", . _ for it constituting not an ulflmaie, but a present security. In the sub-treasury plan this dan ger is provided against by a self- regulating feature, of it which promises to be jierfeet in its work ings. As soon as the demand for currency arises the products begin to [mss into the storehouse, and consti tute a safe basis for issue, and on the other hand, with the decrease by sale of the security, the amount issued decreases. There cannot, therefore, at any time, lie a single dollar in circulation, but has more than its value represented in products—a present security in the hands of the government. Why do I say present security? Because at any time that the government, under the law, may order a sale of products stored, a purchaser will be at hand who will give for the product eighty per cent, of its value, with expenses addul, Ix'ving the full amount due the gov ernment. This is a fact certiynly with reference to the food product, because death by famine is less than two years ahead of the human race. Will the government lose anything from the fluctuations in price of pro ducts stored? The possibility of loss here *is precluded not only by the fact that the government secures it self by a margin of 20 per cent., but alio by the fact that products would be stored when prices were low. Thus the security would increase in value while in the hands of the gov ernment. This self-regulating prin ciple of the plan, moreover, would prevent an excess of storage, thereby avoiding a jaissible redundancy of currency that would effect other in dustries, or interests, in this way. Whenever there was, if such a thing should happen, so great a storage won hi cease, and sales would have the advantage of aseeurable payment in full and the saving of cost of transportation. One other thing recommending for experimentation the two elect products, wheat and corn, their harvesting and prepara tion for market occur at different seasons and cover nearly the-whole year, so that there Ik- no sudden or dangerous increase or decrease in the volume of currency. In a proper view of this plan the question of a loan by the government is not raised. Interest between man and man may be justified, but be tween the government and the citi zen it is robbery. When the govern ment issues certificates upon silver, the holder of the certificates can surrender them and demuud the sil ver. When the government issues legal tender notes upon cotton or wheat these can be surrendered with the certificates of deposit, and the cotton and wheat demanded. The act of the government in the issue of currency is the same. It is the ex ercise of its incidental power of dis tributing money to the pm] le, and the fact that the government owns the silver is the one case and not the cotton and wheat in the other, can make no difference. If this plan is adopted the question arises, what effect will it have upon the other or present currency of the country, and especially gold and silver? Assume two premises which J think every one-who has given thil subject any consideration will concede; First, that an absolute national credit sys tem is inevitable, and that gold and silver has had its day us a sole basis for currency, and I answ er. There will be but one national Currency, each nation having its own paper money for its internal trade, while its gold and silver will take its place as a product in the sub-treasuries by the side of w heat and cotton, and no doubt, if the necessity should arise, be used for the settlement of inter national balances or national debt to other con utries. The gold and si l ver product of the country is one that can be stored from year to year, and can always be relied upon to provide a sure basis for a part of the curren cy that will remain more or less con tinuously in the hands of the people. Under the present system of finance each nation is effected to a greater or less degree, dependent on international business relations, by 50 Bushels Per Acre. Work While it is Day. Sow Wheat. I “GENERAL SHERMAN.” The failure this year of crops m Frances Power Cobbe: Every There 4 nothing the mailer with the financial condition of every other I Europe—the cereals, barley, wheat,; ont ‘ remember the famous line ^ S(fa80 ; )3 lu ,j the lands of the Pied By John €. Ropes, in the Atlantic Monthly. country. A monetary crisis in Lon- rye and oates—will make these grains I creuee at u Inch the old h omal ', mout secti6n when it comes to rais-j General Sherman thus found him- don makes itself felt in New York ; high i u the United States, notwith-1 a,ulleUCC r06e m 111 U tl,muU of ns soon as the cable has transmitted stou di' ug the immense crops produced I me „ j u p- the fact. We must get away from this hu miliating, aud when we come to think of it, terribly alarming depeiu .ilence upon the financial condition of Our neighbor., .The coming system “lyimamau; nothing hu- would have ing w heat, In the old days befort the war small farmers made twice! | self in a very difficult [Kisitiou. He . 4l . . (1 . .. enough to supply their own wants | h tn,c ’ wf Al,a » ta ’ in tins country at least this is the | each woman add to this in un cm * *unt|fiour was Inui’cd from our fiiilh "'hich the public undoubtedly eon- opinion of the agricultural depart ment at Washington. In Edge-field County oates is the oulgr {pit crop worfli' to Augusta and Columbia. People i sidered to have been the objective living in the towns could get a sup- point of his campaign; certainly its that carry so much misery and dis aster in their wake, and that we be lieved to be inevitable concomitant of the credit system us it at present exists. I have said that an absolute credit system would be adopted. While this is ti ne, in relation to the me dium of exchange, national and pri vate credit paper, 3'c-t it will inevita bly lead to a cash system as to transactions between man and man among the larger classes of the peo ple, because under this system, as can be readily seen, production will create the demand for currency and demand in turn will create the sup ply, such a supply as will bear a pr iper ratio to the business of the country, making it possible for it to be done on a cash basis. Fo by the adoption of the sub- treasury plan we will not only reach a reliable credit, but a cash system that will, in a great measure, put an end to business failures. Should you, kind editors, find tnis of sufficient interest to publish, I will be encouraged to offer more ar guments on a different line of thought at some future time—ideas familiar to many Alliance men, but perhaps new to your non-Alliance readers. Farmer. The Ecuiueuiral Conference. Washikutox, D. ('., Oct. 7.— Five hundred delegates assembled at the Metropolitan Methodist church this morning to take part in the opening exercises of the Ecumenical Conference. The gathering was called to order by Bishop Bowman, of the Methodist Episcopal church. The hymn, “Jesus the name high over all,” was siing, and after prayer by Bishop Bowman, the opening ser mon, by Dr. Arthur, of England, was read, owing to bis feeble voice, by one of his Colleagues, Rev. Dr. Stephenson. Bishop Keener, of the Southern Methodist church presided at the afternoon scesiou. The first address of welcome < as by Bishop Hurst, of the M. E. church; the sccoud by Dr. J. II. Carlisle, of this State, and tl^e third by Dr. Douglass, of Canada. 'The responses were de livered! y Rev. Dr. Stephenson, of England. Mr. Geo. Green, of Ire land, and Rev. R. Abercrombie, of the United Methodist free church. Jerry Simpson Talks. Topeka, Oct. 5.--Jerry Simpson says that the Alliance vote among the.fanners in Kansas is increasing, but slowly since last year. The principal gains have been in the ci ties and towns where the Citizens Alliance lias keen hard at work this year. He estimates the increase at 20 jK-r cent, over last year. Speak ing of the negroes in the south la- said: “They ate llocking to us in the south. I believe that this movementis a solution of the race problem. It divides the.colored as well as the white vote of the south. If it does nothing else, it will do that much good at least. The old light between the blacks and whites will be broken; the blacks will take issue with each her in politics the same tin w hites. That’s what they ought to do. The lines are closer drawn in the south than here. Everything di vides on the S' b treasury scheme. It is either endorsed or opposed by every mini in the south.” “How many-members has the Alli ance in the United JStntes ?” “In thirty-eight states and terri tories we have 4,000,000 members.” “And you expect to have a nation al ticket in ’02 ? Who will head it ?” “O Lord, 1 don’t know. Pome farmer now unheard of may spring np and prove himself the right man for the place. Just at present the only men in sight are Weaver aud Polk.” 'Hie .Lick telescope frequently shows 100,000,000, shirs, but a lick without a telescope frequently does as Well. purposes on a small scale. In 1883 Edge tie-id county produced throe million bushels of red oates, the greatest yield of any county in the United States; so abundant/ indeed, was the crop that we know of two furmers in this county who had oates of the harvest of 1883 for five years thereafter. All this by way of pream ble, and to show that this region is the habitat of the red oats. It is true for several years after 1883 there was a succession of bad oat years—severe winters that killed out the plants and discouraged the fanners very much—but as those were phenomenally cold winters we may. expect not to see their like again soon. There are two ways to make oats; one is to sow a large acreage without fertilization, and the other, to sow a sinalk-r number of acres and fertilize intelligently. 'The following is the plan pursued by Gov. James M. Smith, of Georgia, a most successful oat raiser, and the extract given be low is from his pen: “I*t (be ground be laid off in lands twelve feet wide. Using the rust-proof oats, sow one bushel to the acre, and distribute broadcast200 pounds of some good nmmoniated guano to the acre. With a five or tive-aml one-half inch turner, turn iimler the guano a:.!! oats together. Then lay off the smile land again at right angles with the lirst sowing one bushel of - the same rust-proof oats to the acre and 200 pounds of the siinle amniouiutcd guano; and plow guano and oats in with a five inch steel scooter, be deep and close phatic way: “I am a woman ; noth ing concerning the interests of wo men i.-> alien to me. lake the sor-^ jij^-of dour from any wheat mill in I capture effected a great change in thg wants, -tktf ditD|W» (above y^j^iiitj.y N-cd wheat was always the minds of the Northern people in dant. Occasionally a partial j respect to their expectation of final would occur for the varieties success in the war. But Sherman ncrallylate. ! knew that the capture of Atlanta of HmtU.were generally sown [itself signified little. He knew per- od. | the Tennessee River, on his northward Nothing, how ever, came of these \ march, within a short distance of suggestions, for the very good reason Gavlesville, where Gherman’s army that considerably to .Sherman's sur-| lay. Not to operate against un army prise, General Hood wa the one to n l.ich should thus recklessly expose take the initiative. His cavalry,\nu- i it.- communications would indeed be der two able leaders, Foriiest and unpardonable. But Hood bad uo Let I be plowing and well done in i-uii un Acme or harrow over the cognize mat your earlier care be for the weakest, the poorest, those whose dangers are- worst of all. Think of all the weak,'the helpless; the wronged women and children, and the harmless, brutes; and save aud shield them as best you cat even us the mother-bird will shelter and fight for her little helpless fledg lings. This is the natural field of feminine courage. Then, when you have found your work, whatever it be, give yourself to it with your heart, and make the resolution, iu Gods sight, never to go to your rest leaving a stone unturned which may help your aims. Half and half charity does very little good" to the objects, ami is a miserable, slovenly agent for the workers. And when the night closes in, the long, last night of earth, when no man can work any more in this world, milk-and-water half hearted charities will bring no memories of comfort to you. What a thought for .those last days when we know ourselves to be going home to God—God, whom at bottom, after all we have loveed and shall love forever—that we might have served Him here might have blessed bis creatures, might have done Ilis will on earth as it is done in heaven, but we have let the glorious chance slip bv us forever! then and the’wheat was "* pTi I'm' 'early' fee fly wefMhat he had-not set out so that a good stand was secured be- from Dalton with the object of get- fore the freezes came. Now the best 1 ting possession of Atlanta, but with land is saved for cotton. Wheat is generally put off in sonic odd cerner and plowed in late iu December with out preparation and often without manure. Alwtit. half the years par tial failure follows as ii ought to co. We cannot hope to equal the big vields of the Shenandoah Valiev or the object of destroying the mail) Confederate army in the West; and he •knew also that he had done prac tically nothing towards carrying out his intention. He recognized, in fact, that he was in most respects far less favorably situated for de stroying that army than he had been or Hie prairies of the Northwest, but' on the 1st of May ; for, difficult as by sowing good laud in time we may he had found it to be to obtain sup- expect twelve to twenty bushels to plies in his march to Atlanta,— the acre. 1 draw ing them, as he was obliged to Our farmers should sow wheat lib- j l H Bom Nashville and Chattanooga, orally this year. The small amount —he had yet successfully accom- for sale in the’Couuty is worth $1.25 ' Pushed this task ; he had carried his a bushel. Fair flour is retailing at ' nmiy as far south as Atlanta, and $3.00 a barrel. Europe is demand- l 10 had bad a chance to strike the. Confederate army in his front all the time. But now he knew he must stop. His line of communication 'That would carry flour to $8.00 a j ' vas ah'eady dangerously long. He barrel. Can Spartanburg fanners I couW Billow up Hood’samiyin- ufford to pay that when their own ing large quantities of American grain. Many persons believe that to $1.50 a bushel. wheat w ill go lands will produce wheat at less than to the interior of the country, rely ing on his existing arrangements, Some Figures. both case.-. Tiu-i some smoothing |and. Where farmers cannot have the use of harrows, a large blackjack, gtun or dogwood brush, drawn bv two mules, and a rail fastened across the brush to keep the limbs down and properly spread, answers a good pur pose as a substitute for a smoothing harrow. It is very necessary to have ^ natives of native parentage. Here the laud smooth; in case the oats fail | ill,c figures one might aualyz: and ! to grow tall they can be (--.it and ! speculate upon and draw some im- saved much better than if the land . pi'essivc lessons from. With onlyj is uneven and rough. Owing to j 8,000,0f*0 see bow many criminals are The census of IH'.tO shows an in-' crease of crime. In fact, there is great increase. In 1880 there were 709 convicts in Hie United States to everV 1,000,000 inhabitants. In 1890 it bad risen to 722. In 1880 the number of criminals was 35,538; in 1890 it is *15,733. The increase of population is 24 KG per cent.; the in crease of criminals is 27 28 per cent. 'That is a very bad showing indeed. Of the 45, 233 prisoners in confine ment in 1890, 14,087 were colored. 7,207 were foreign-born, 6,584 were native but of foreign parents, 1,747 $1.00 a bushel? There are tl,o„. und transport with hiio all the stores, sands of acres of idle land that would make good wheat if properly pre pared. Of course there are many farmers who say that it will not pay to raise wheat. The same ground planted in equipments and ammunition that, in a serious pursuit of such a pow erful force as the Confederate army was, are necessarily required. More-1 over, he had by no means as large an army us that with which he had cotton will buy twice .the Hour that j. ,uove!l «I«>" Dalton at the outset of the campaign. Nearly one third of his men and many of his best officers had to be employed in guarding the railroad, and in garrisoning the sub- acre will make. Such fanners gen erally buy their flour on liens. Take one acre and see how cheap wheat mav b? raised. were native but with one parent a foreigner, and only 12.842 were white 25 Bushels cotton seed $3.75; 1 '‘i'liarv depots of subsistence and am- sack dissolved bone $1.80; 3 pecks of; niiinifion. Diminished, then, as his seed 93 ; 1 day's plowing; $1.00; cut- i active army was to two thirds its ori ginal size, and arrived as he was at the end of his line of supply, what | was there for him to do? For nearly a month after the fall ting and hauling 75$ ’Total cost] for one acre $8.23. The probable yield of that acre I would 3.0 twelve bushel.-, the eo.,t of j which would be onlv 08 cents a bush-1 el. Is that dearer than buying flour drought in the spring it is sometimes j negroes. the case oats head out low, and yet j In this country the population of ^ have fine heads. In such cases, if j 1890 was about 63,000,000, accord-j they are well saved, the yield is very 1 ing to Honor. It was uodoubt two or j little cutoff, except as to straw. Oats ; three millions more in fact. of Atlanta, which took place on the at $6.00 a barrel cash ? ! 2nd of September, 1804, the situation Anottier objection farmers make to in Georgia was substantially as de mising wheat is that the nulls have scribed above. But it would be all run down and they cannot make! a great mistake to suppose that Gen- flour fit to eat. That complaint j eral Sherman felt himself to lx? at serves as an excuse for laziness. We | the end of his resources. He ap- j used some flour made at White’s mill plied to the problem before him n from wheat not well dried, and it mind exceptionally active and in- ■vas first class. Noah Bell brought genions, and full of enterprise and I ns A sack of “middlings” for w hich ■ industry. He was constantly devis- tiie children cried after they got a ing new plans by which the prestige I taste of the delicious batter cake-= i which the Federal army had won in and “black bread” as they called it.' capturing Atlanta could be utilized Florida after trying < and by which, in some way, by com- Bcli’s “middlings” left an order for binations with other commads which j a sack to he shipped to liar home, nere to operate eilher from the Gulf ** 1 IC ! Captain Tsanc Hadgelt left some of Mexico or from- the Atlantic ] his flour at our door last week and it Gcean, the initiative, with all its in is a beautiful cream color, and the ! ^'imible advantages, could be main- taste is U'lter Hum the w hitest pa- tained. To read his corrcsjxmdence , tent ever made. There are other'' lt ^is period with Grant and IJal- C ?". ! 'i'!’ 0 :' he ". iltlve WUltc-S fm ‘‘! good mills in the Comity, ami if von , interesting, albeit In.the plan proposed for sowing ^ »i.sh 13,, l-. convicts : wi! | 1 , 1 . lk ,. Ult . ; h .... w ill ali he 1 times rather puzzling. grow better after cotton and peas j 63,000,000, about 8,000,000 are ne- tban after any other crop. Tln-y grow very well after corn. Thov do - not grow liinl yield so well when sown on stubble lend. groes. They furnish 14,677 crimi nals. There arc more native whites | than there are negroes and foreigners 1 at •d aniiiiaii.ted , persons born ah load ortho chil- negroes], Suggestive. There are Soi i ' put in first-class 'partan. oats 1 have > guano, but cotton .-ced is also a good ; tb'en of foreigners and tin fertilizer. Sound cotton seed used ] combined. as a fertilizer for oats sown early in j at least 10,1100,000 natives, mu iej The rrn'Mign the fall often germinate and come iiji. people flatter themselves tlml crime! , n , nl ! q : s In such cases the cotton seed does Wheeler, had during Soptemlx*r been threatening the railrood from Atlan ta to Chattanooga, and also the rail- ; roads running south from Nashville, ! and in some places cutting the line j for a time; but in the last week of ! SepleinlxT Hood's main army broke j camp and marched north. The most famous episode of this movement of Hood’s was the resolute and success ful defense made ini October 5th bv General Corse of our post at Allii- ' toona Pass,—one of tin most nicnior- I able occurrences in the whole war. j But we cannot go into, details here. Suffice it to say that Hood struck the railroad in several places, broke up the communication for a time, but finally drew off his army, towards the end of October, to Gadsden, in the .northern part of Alitbaiiia^without a serious engagement. Sherman then reestablished the railroad service to Atlanta, and couceutrating the great er part of his army at Gaylesville, Alabama, waited to see what bis ad versary, whose army was lying not many miles to the southwest, would do next. Sherman bad been convinced by this raid of Hood’s that Atlanta was not permanently tenable, so long, at least as the Confederate army of the West remained substantially intact, nor was it worth the cost of holding it. What was the good of remaining at such an advanced post as Atlanta, where every mile of the only railway 1 y which the army could be supplied offered a temptation to an enemy’s army substantially in good order ami condition? For, unless lie .should' cut loose from his base at Chattanoo ga and march south, giving up his hold (>n the railroad, or else should intention of committing such abluu- der as this. He moved westward as far as Florence, Alai ama, some hun dred. and fifty miles west of Chattan ooga, mid there concentrated his troops and supplies. Here he was on the 1st of November. Here he and Beauregard, who was advising with him, hail fixed their base of operations for their proposed ad vance on Nashville. Now, for Sher man to march across' 1 the country from Gaylesville towards Florence with a large army was not only not an easy task, but it involved the abandonment—so Sherman thought — of Atlanta, and an entire rearrange ment of bases and lines of supply. On the other hand, to retire the n-niy to Tennessee, and there repel an invasion of the enemy, seemed like a confession of defeat, or at least of having entirely failed to car ry out the true objects of the spring campaign—a tiling, us Sherman thought, cert:Ji.ly to be avoided, if possible, t here remained another course,- and it was one which fasci nated the Federal commander alike by its originality and its startling audacity,---and that was to reinforce 1 li'jmas so as to make him equal to the task of repelling the invasion, if one should he undertaken, while the main army, under Sherman in per son, should march across the State of Georgia to Savannah and the sea. Bearing now in mind the great at traction which this project possessed for General Sherman, as appears from his correspondence with the Wash- mglon (uuhoiities, we must not be surprised to find in Sherman's let- ti'i's ‘o Grant and llalleek evidences ni an unwillingness on bis part to retreat to Tennersee, Sherman must j niatter in ail its bearings remain at Atlanta, since the nilro el ^'lUuiviy in the face, and of a strong communication could be extended no further. A large Federal army stale mated at. Atlanta, if we may use an expression borrowed from t he chess board, and whose long line of com munications t .‘inj)tiugly invited at tack, was certainly a lame and impo tent conclusion of the campaign so bravely and hopefully begun on the 41 h of May. Some issue must be found from this unsatisfactory state of affairs. The natural thing to do, and the thing which at this time General Sherman undoubtedly wanted to do, was to resume the original plan ; that is, to - make (lie destruction of the Confederatenrir.v th< of t he evidence that when Hood’s move-1 n ments against the railroad forced Sherman not only to send Thomas to Chattanooga, but to go north himself with the bulk of the army, leaving only one corps at Atlanta, he greatly desired to bring Hoi.l to buttle. But Hood was too vary to accommo date him. lie saw perfectly the great advantage to the Confederates in prolonging the existing state of things to his mind, nothing could well be de.-iiv to dwell only on the more fa vorable condi (tons of the problem, and especially to present the scheme so that (arty its most attractive fea tures should be displayed. 'The idea of a march to the sea, which should demonstrate the hollowness of the ( onfederacy, which should amaze and delight the world by its novelty and its audacity, and which should yet involve no risk to Hie sixty thou sand picked veterans who were to perform the feat, took manifest pos session of General Sherman’s mind. But Grant, whoso imagination, if he eu'r had any, was note.M'ited beyond bonds even by this brilliant propo- sal of his favorite lieu tenant, urged, on federate army the sole object! j,, a dat(d Novel!lbl;1 . l8t> , •campaign. There is abundant, Sherman that he had I. very little good as a fertilizer. Anoth er objection to using sound cotton seed is their cost. When furmers live convenient to transporatiou and cotton seed oil mills, cotton seed: often sells for 12, 15 mid 18 cents! a bushel. Counting forty bushels of is not increasing. There is but one j or; .( ol . country that is classed as civilized, 1 — perhaps—Italy—where human life! An acceptable third party is held so cheaply as In the United { ment—leaving the young couple by] •;„ ll i iil . ,| Uia | K , p, States. 7(0 roniHls In one Day, Mart t j themselves. All (lid ! tie pr;p>.-e Spartan- P- il!l : Tlei' plan ; and some of his sag- ] gestions strike the reader as wild • enough. But they were merely sug gestions ; they did not in any way commit him to action. It is true I that no man was ever more'fertile iu expedients tlnm General Sherman; m,u '* but. then no man was ever more par- arranging the de- i tails of a military oUerutioii, No speaker with the not always the bed ennn sa I he acorn gen w.l ever lived who realized more ] Join; . . Hi rper, the 10 j j.pj g Taar , seed to the acre, and Jo cents jx-r year old son of County'Commissiuner | ((,j ck | J. H. Harper, and a negro man pick-] d 7i*0 pounds of cotton between and h’ckor/ uni !i«iii.« . 're very thick f " !i . v * b »'' S1,eli " au 11,8 »“* where bushel for seed, to fertilize an w'th eo'ton sce<!, uilleort $0. It is highly probable that 200 pounds of suns one day last week. Master John some good grade of aninionitited picked 345 and tlienegro355 pounds.! guano, at a cost of $225 will benefit the crop of oats equally as much as the forty bushels of cotton seed. In one case the cost of the fertilizer would be $0 per acre, mid in the other only $225 jut acre. Practical tests have demonstrated that the succeeding crop will be benefited more where the guano was used than where the cotton seed was used. A mixture of cotton seed meal, acid and kuiuil makes as good a fertilizir as any. This, I belpve, is universally admitted. Oats sown on good land, prepared and fertilized us I have suggested, will yield fifty bushels jxir acre on an average. 'The yield; ■r than Several years, is a sure the all of which, be ign of u severe winter. HI', f tom a re l wrti n»w of knowing just have k-en for i 8Vl ‘''- v i MHm<l " f »'><l i‘'ery ounce I ] of Hiumunitioii was tocome from; and ] ! it is quite safe t» say that he had not , ! the slightest intention of changing Another man has kvn t iken in by j his hsse until he. had settled all these This is big work and if any body j the gold brick swindle. John Apple-: iin d other important details to has or will beat it, the Enterprise man, of Columbia county, I’eum, i his own complete satisfaction, wants the figures.—Lancaster Enter- 1)a j d >$3,500 for two gold-plated brass ] Therefore, whgn we find him six?ak- prise. bricks, and ' Hid not discover the '“g of a movement to be made from ... . 7^ ’*!, 7T . fraud until he carried the bricks to Mobile, utilizing the Alabama mid (liurloo > lewart 1 smell, the gic.il ^ 1|d|lt f ( „. ... dl> ; Chattahoochee rivers as lines of uap- Jrish leader, died rather suddenly ou i [ ! ply, or the capture of Savannah by huge bronze statue of Urn. Ii'ixips to lx* sent by Grant from \ ir- was uiiv fled at Ch icago on i k'i•>''*, uml 'hen the establishment of ceremonies were 11 new base on the upper part of the large concourse Savannah River, wc ihay admire the Wednesday the 7th. “Johnny,” said the pretty teacher, The Grant “what is a kiss?” “I can’t exactly! the 7th, and the put it in words,” returned the boy,] participated in by a “but if yer .” of people, among them quite 11 num- j fertility of Jhe mind w hich could ber of ex-Confederute soldiers. hud such ways of escajK from an en- The period of a generation has 1— forced inaction, and at the same been lengthened, it used to be thirty! “Oh, if I had only taken this time fed entire confidence that be- years, and later increased to thirty-' medicine curlier in life, what years fore any important step should be . four; now a scientist say* the aver- '' '•u fei'mg it vvouid bau' snu-d nie. taken, matters would be arranged nmy vary from twenty to eighty age term of himnm life him beo.i in bushels per acre, according to sea sons, land and various other causes. was the touching exclamation of one , v who hud bucu cured of rhoiinmtisin ; 'h 8 "Huost care mid piecaution, creased in the last fifty years from j by the use of Acer’s 8urst*|iarilla. Bu - , at any rate, us General Nher- lliirty-four to forty two years. ! Scoivs of -itch cases are on record. 1 man's own movements were concern- more gratifying than to see the main Federal army of the. West flying fiom point to point on the Chattanooga and Atlanta milroad,--hererepairing a burnt trestle, tin re lebuilding a blockhouse, here, again, relaying a few miles of railroad track;and all 1 liis time suffering occasional panics whenever Forrest’s cavalry approach ed dangerously near the railroads south of Nashville. Hood kept well to the west of the Gharianooga i.nd .ytlauta railroad; and lie ! cew that he could, iu case > s heru4iii iliouid un ve against him, lead him a chase through a difficult country, m ross considerable rivers, and put him to great trouble to obtain bis subsist ence and forage. For, in moving against Hood’s army with the inten tion of engaging and in hope of des troying it, Shcritiuu could not afford to use the light equipment which sufficed for the unopposed march to the sea; nor would it do to scatter his army in order to obtain provis ions, as he then so freely did. If he was to make Hood’s army his object ive, he must arrange his dispositions accordingly; he must carry with him abundance of ai tilery, of umimiui- tion, of supplies of all sorts, and be prepared to fight battles. 'This Hood calculated Sherman did not • wish to do, situated as he then was. And iu this calculation Hood was quite right**. The Federal comqiand- better “entirely ood before starting on his proposed campaign; that, “with Hood’s artny destroyed,” he could go where he pleased “with impunity.” “if you cun see the chance for des- troving Hood’s army, attend to that first, and make your other move sec ondary.” Girls Who Wait Get Left. c process is one. While iiaving a good \i hen most pretty girls reach nine- t.'eu they become engaged to some poor young man, and as he hasn’t money to marry on they wait until he saves it. 'I he waitii: a ;nng and tiresome tiie young man is !::ne, spending ninety cents ami sav ing ten for his marriage, tiie girl is Sl owing a little older, a little plainer, a little more careworn and wasting her youth in waiting for a nmn who in most cases finds some '>110 else more attractive and breaks the on- -Mgeinent. if girls will look around ai the great number of girls who Slave ••wailed for some poor mail to their sorrows, they will probably hesitate before entering into an en- gagement that promises to be long and fruitless, and that leaves them worn out and with no faith in human nature at the end. Very often a girl who is waiting fora young man to Income rich throws away the real opportunity of her life; very often she is a slave to Hie caprice of a man who finally deserts her. \ cry often under such circumstances a woman gets a wrong idea of life and accuses the world of faults when it is not guilty of. In a wav’ men take very good care of themselves, for the reason that the) accept the lesson of life, hard though they sometimes are, but women make er was indeed prepared, and iu fact the mistake of trusting Too niutfh uii.\ioii8, to move against, Hood, ^if and suffering lieedlcssflv’’for Ht:— Hood shyuld bv so mi wise" us to cross' Atchison Globe, : tn ' ' , i tr '•'••• ' ‘ > ■ V, v .. ,, z ,, ,, THIS PAGE CONTAINS FLAWS AND OTHER DEFECTS WHICH MAY APPEAR ON-THE FILM. ■ #i>.