The watchman and southron. (Sumter, S.C.) 1881-1930, January 09, 1895, Image 2

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Carlisle's Dismissal De? manded, Wall Street Kings Try to Run Over Cleveland Once too Often. V WASHINGTON, January 2 -The president has his dander up so to speak, and is prepared to show fight and a lot of ii. His head ts down and bis horns are this time aimed at his old Wall Street banker allies. Pierpont Morgan and H ?. Lanier, two of the syndicate of bankers who took the recent issue of bonds, are the raeu who waved the red flag in the face of the white house bull, and now the bull in question is ready to charge upon old-time friends. Las$ Saturday Morgan and Lanier came over to Washington in a private car in which they remained during their stay in order to prevent their visit being known, except while they were at the white house. The bank res came over here and put in a great kick to the president They wanted him to remove Carlisle from the head of the treasury department because they decleared he had failed to keep faith with them They were mad because of Mr. Carlisle's financial bill. That bill, they told Mr. Cleve? land, had played havoc with them They had organized a syndicate and taken $50,000,000 worth of bonds, as they expressed it, out of a spirit of patriotism They paid 117 for these bonds, and expected to sell them at an advance which would net the syndicate about $10,000,000 profit, j Instead of making money the syn- j dicate has lost, and it hasSost a big pile. Carlisle's financial recommenda? tions to congress caused the bonds to decline and instead of being worth 117 now, the highest recent bid on the late issue of bonds bas been 111 So Morgan and Lanier and the balance of the Wall Street wolves who forced the issue and expected to reap a han est of finances irom it when they failed to do so presented themselves at the white house and demanded Mr. Carlisle's removal They accompanied it with a threat that unless Mr. Cleveland did so, th/sy would never again aid the adminis? tration but rather would play havoc with it, and cause this administration I to be a complete failure. But the j bluff did not work Mr. Cleveland's old time bullhead- j ed spirit arose in him and he told the two bankers that "they could do as! they d-d pleased," he was running this administration and he did not give a blankety blank what they thought of it, or what they did. Mr Cleveland immediately seut for Mr. Carlisle and told him he was determined to put the Carlisle bill through congress, if the power of the administration and al! it had to be? stow upon d?feated members in the way of patronage could do it. Cleveland is redbot, and he is right j now preparing a message to congress j which will probably be sent in this | week, urging the immediate passage of a currency bill in thu message he will tell just what order of currency"bill he wants passed. lt is the Carlisle b}\\ with a few amendments The message which he is prepar? ing with the assistance of Mr. Car? lisis, ? am told to-night, will be a! ringing one and will contain a covert; threat, or rather Mr. Cleveland will come out squarely and say to con? gress that unless it passes a currency bili at this session he will call an extra sessiou of the new congress immediately after the 4th of March. Mr. Cleveland tonight sent not?s to several leading members of the house, asking them to ^all at the white house to-moirow. it is pre? sumed he wants to make known to them his decision to send in the message A caucus of the democrats of the house is to be held this week, per? haps Friday night, for the purpsse of attempting to get together on a cur? rency bill Notwithstanding the message and the desire of all the democratic leaders for the passage of a currency bill, there are those who yet predict that this congress will do nothing on the question They think a bill mny 3-et pass the house, but do not believe that if caw go through the senate. They say the time is too short to do anything under the senate rules. Major Black, of Augusta, is to make a speech on the Carlisle cur? rency bill to-morrow or Friday. Ile has spent the holidays here in prepar? ing his speech and will make it the effort of his life. Major Black has had several long conferences with Mr. ('ariisle and other financial ex? perts recently atid is loaded to the gunwales with data. With the data he has and the eloquence and solid argument he can throw into a speech the Augnsta congressman is expected to make a name for himself in this effort Colonel Livingston came last rnght. He had a conference with Mr. Car? lisle to-day and may make a speech himself on the currency bill - At? lanta Constitution. Mrs. Ames, the wife of Sheriff Ames of Belvidere, iii., is deputy sheriff of Boone county and fearlessly iakes charge of iosaDe persoos and prisoners j io transit. \ Will be Prosecuted. i Insurances Companies and Agents in Danger. i Since th?1 newspaper articles on I the question of the liability of the j Lloyds tn pay the regular insurance ! license of the State, Comptroller Gen . eral Norton has been doing Some in j vestigating and has found that anum ! ber of fire insurance companies are j doing business without having paid j the required license. A good deal of : the information has been secured j through letters received from persons j holding policies in these companies, j These policy-holders, since the talk i about insurance matters, are anxious ' to known whether they have policies in companies which have complied with the law and whether those com panies are responsible. Mr. Norton states that he proposes to take steps to prosecute every com? pany or individual doing business who has not fully complied with the provisions of the law. The majority of the violators do a small business j and that is the reason why they have I not been detected before this. The Isaw on the subject are plain, and the Comptroller General says he propose to follow them. The consolation policy-holders in companies now violating the law have is that while the companies and their agent J or adjusters are liable to punishment the companies are riot released from their policies. The following are portions of the insurance laws of the State, com? piled by the Comptroller General, which may be of interest at this time : '.Every foreign insurance company of any class-fire, life, marine, surety, security, guarantee, hail? storm, live stock, aceident, plate glass and other like insurance com? panies-foreign land association, foreign building and loan associa? tions, foreign banking associations, and all other like classes of like business, not incorporated under the I laws of South Carolina, except national banks and except benevolent institutions organized under the j grand lodge system, shall each, be? fore transacting any business in this State, pay an annual license fee of ?100 to the Comptroller General, on or before the 31st day of March of each year, to be deposited by him in the Treasury of the State. It shall be unlawful for any Buch foreign companies as are required to pay license fees, to transact any business in this state, untill they shall have and keep some duly appointed resident agent in this State on whom legal process may be served, so as to bind the company he represents, and service or process upon his agent at his main office shall be sufficient to give jurisdiction to the court issuing suia *e in any county in this State. And every resident agent shall re turn to the County Auditor of each county his gross receipts from said counties for taxation as other property is returned for taxation. '.Any person who solicits insur? ance in behalf of any insurance com? pany not organized under or incor? porated by the laws of this State, or who takes or transmits other than for himself any application for insurance or any policy of insurance to or from such company, or who advertises or otherwise gives notice that he will receive or transmit the same, or who shall receive or deliver a policy of insurance of any such company, or who shall examine and inspect any risk, or receive, collect, or transmit any premium of insurance, or make or forward any diagram of any build? ing or buildings, or do or perform any other act or thing in the making or the consummating of any contract of insurance for or with any such company, other than for himself, or ! who shall examine into and adjust, or I aid in adjusting, any loss for or in j behalf of any such insurance com ? pany, whether any such acts shall be j done at the instance or request or by j the employment of such insurance ! company, shall be held to be acting 38 tho agent of the company for which this act is done or the risk is tak?n. I "Any person who shall transact any \ business of insurance in this State for I any company7 of the United States or : foreign State not incorporated by the j laws of this State, without first hav? ing obtained license by law required, or after his license has been with? drawn, or shall in any way violate the foregoing provisions in relation to license of insurance companies or agents thereof, shall, upon conviction in any court of competent jurisdic? tion, be fined for every such offense not more than ?100 : Provided That nothing contained in this sec? tion shall release any such company or companies upon any policy issued or delivered by it.'"-Columbia Register. - -B ? ju A Coffey vi i lo (Kan.) darkey got drunk and went to sleep in the high? way. A drove of hoirs found [urn. and before he was sober enough te fiwlif then? off they chewed off ?ii- nose. ;i part of one e:ir and otherwise mutilated his physiognomy. Inspector Williams when asked b} Mr. <?off, before thc Lexow committee how he had made SM much money, replied tl><u bc did ir by buying Japa? nese real estate. But as the law cf Japan prohibits foreigders from owning real estate in that country there are no grouods for his assertion to stand on. I Butchered Like Sheep. Fifteen Thousand People Brutally Put to Death. BOSTON, Jan. 1.-Letters have b^> received by well known parries in tl; city from reliable sources in Turkc giviog still further testimony regardii the outrages in Eastern Turkey. T, ! following letter comes from a city n a great distance from tho *cone of fl outrages. The writer is a man in who the highest confidence may he place who has spent more than a thin! of century iu that country, and kno?;? tl country and people perfectly. This te j tiniony is from a source wich is entir I ly independent, of any which has bet given before. Later accounts increasi if possible, the horro-s of what h? taken place. The letter juat received as follows : "The Armenians oppressed h Kurds and Turks said they could n< pay taxes 50 both Kurds and thc gm ernmenr. Plundered and oppressd b the Kurds, they resisted them an there were some killed. Then false ri ports were sent to Constantinople tb j the Armenians were iii arms in rebe liou, and orders were 6ent. to the Mus hire at Erziogan to exterminate thea root and branch. The order read bf fore the army, called in haste from a the chief cities of Eastern Turk?*} was: 'Whoever snares man, woman or child in disloyal.' .*The outlawed region was surround ed by soidi-rs of the army and 20,00 Kurds are also said to have been masse there Then they advanced upon th centre, driving in rhe people like flock of sheep and continued thus to ac vance for days No order was given no mercy shown. Men, women, chil dreo were shot down and butchers like sheep Probably when they wer set upon in f h is way, some tried to sav their lives and resisted in self-defence while those who could, fled in all direc tions, but the majority were slain. "The most probable estimate is 15, OOO killed, with 35 villages plundered razed and burned. Women were out raged and then butchered. A pries was taken to the roof of his church backed to pieces and set on Are. "A large number of women anc girls were collected in a church, kep for days, violated by the brutal soldier! and then murdered. It is said the num ber was so large that the blood flower, out of the church door. The soldier! contended over a beautiful girl. The} wanted to preserve ber, but she toe was killed. "Every effort is being made and will be made to falsify the facts and pull thf wool over tile eyes of the European governments. But the bloody taie w?l finally be known, the most horrible it seems to me, that the nineteenth ceu fury has known. "As a confirmation of the report, thf other day seven hundred soldiers werf returning from the seat of war ; aod ai a village near u? one was heard to say that he alone, with his own hand, bad killed thirty pregnant women. Some who seem to have some shame for their atrocious deeds pay: 'What could we do ? We were under orders.' " THANKS TO GLAOSTONE. BOSTON, Jan. 1.-tn consequence ol a meeting of the Armenians of Boston, held in Friendship Hall, last Sunday evening, the following cablegram was j sent this afternoon : j To Hon. W. E. Gladstone, London, Eng. : "Armenians of Boston thank you for your sympathy and aid.*' Armenians of this city feel that the diplomats of Europe will never take interest, in the affairs of their country? men unless it isshowu that every act in I their favor is keenly appreciated aud they haye taken this means of express? ing their sincere gratitude for the stand taken by Mr. Gladstone in his speech last week. -~^?=>^.-?-?- (Milli - Southern Industries. j How They Progressed in the Year Just Ended. BALTIMORE, Jan. 1.--In its annual review of Southern conditions, the Manufacturers Record says : The industrial situation iu the j South during the past year was characterized by a steady re-estab? lishment of confidence, and a slow but sure upbuilding of manufacturing interests Prevailing conditions dur ; ing the year have not encouraged ! unusual development and the general j tendency has been to follow a conser ! vative policy. The year carried over as a legacy many of the adverse conditions which were features of the previous years. Legislative prob? lems of national moment hung in un? certainty during the greater portion ; of the year. The panicky feeling of I the two previous years occassionally ; made its influence felt and the atti ? tilde of foreign investors towards : American securities continued as :i . dep lessing factor. Thc your has been more of a period I ol recuperation than of progress, yet . there has been a firm movement ! which conceived with cautiousness and a liberal application o? business principles, possessed all the (.lenients . of healthfulness Capitalists have been ; slow t" foster new enterprises, and I only those enlisted 'heir support ! whose environment nar. offered the i most encouraging and legitimate j prospects. j Thc investor became an investiga tor during the year and well planned idustries benefitted thereby. Endur? ing good resulted to the South from this movement ar.d its significance is already shown by a wider and more personal acquaintance of the invest ing public with its resources The record of progress made during the year evidences a well defined pre? ference for Southern investment and reflect ? a more general existence of favora)!e impression, that, with the full restoration of confidence in the business world will influence a tide of capital towards Southern channels and as the aspects of things for the; new year are more cheerful than those which ushered in 1394, it is a perfec J}' reasonable deduction to look for g-eater prosperity and greater progress in 1895. The faith of Southern men in the future (if this section gains new emphasis from a study of the controlling part through capita and enterprise placed in the advancement made during 1894. Nearly 600 more enterprise* wein established in the South during 1894 than in the preceding year, the total number being 2,829 as against 2,293 ' for lc93. A pronounced feature in the building; of new factories during the year has been the aim to establish a dasi' of industries that will retain at horne trade heretofore supplied from distant points. These new industries have also been characterized by the adoption of modern machinery and the employ ment of skilled labor and improved methods The aim has been not only to successfully provide for th-? home neighboring trade, but to invade dis? tant narkets lor their patronage This i3 illustrated in many lines of indus! ry, particularly in the build i- ? of machinery. Southern made mn I chineiy is now found in Northern and Western factories, and figures to some extent in international trade Southern flour is exported to Europe in large consignments, and is winning extended popularity at home. The products of the Southern stove fouu deries, canning factories, carriage and wood working factories, etc , are as well making reputations at home and abroad. Broad guaged business methods are winning success for Southern manufacturers and enhanc? ing tie prestige of Southern indus-1 trie6 Conparing the year just closed with 1880, the statistics gathered by th 2 Manufacturers Record show the following increases : Railroad mileage, from 20,612 in 1880 to 46.900 in 1894; annual yield of cotton, bales, 5,755,000 to 9,500.000; annual yield of grain, bushels, 431,000,000 to 600,000,000; coal mined annually, tons, 6,049,000 to 30.000,000 ; annual pig iron pro? duction, tons, 397,301 to 1,560,000 ; number of cotton mills in operation, 161 io 425; number of spindles, 667.000 to 3,000,0'J(? ; number of looms, 14,323 to 68 0 '0 ; capital in? vested in cotton mill s $21,074,712 to ?107,909.000 ; numl <-r of cotton oii mills, 40 to 300 ; capiial invested in same, ?3,504,000 to $30,900,000. Lumber dressed, value of product, $46,938,100 to $114,746,674 ; caoital invesied, $26,902,644; to $92,604, 374; farm assets, ?2,314.000,000 to $3,182,000.000; value of farms pro? ducts, ?666,000,000 to $805.000,000; capital invested in manufacturing, $2*57,244,561 to ?800,000.000 ; value of mr iiufactured products, $457,554, 777 to $1,000,000,000. Outlook For The Year. Reports of the Industrial Condition of South Carolina CHARLESTON Jan. i.-The News and Courier publishes to-day a general re? view jf rbe industrial condition of the State. It has received replies from thirty-three of .its correspondents, practically covering the entire State, and touching generally upon the con? dition of the farmer*, manufacturers and vorking people, as compared with rheir condition in previous years : bow the reople generally have met their indebtedness of the closing year and what credit they will be able to get in 1895 ; how the volume of trade at the stores has compared with former years and M hat policy the farmers will adopt as to the cultivation of cotton and pro? vision crops in the new year. While replies vary greatly as to de? tails, and- tue reports in several in? stances are evideutly colored by the pessitjistic or optimistic sentiments of the writer*, there is a general con? sensus of opinion that money is very scarce ; that labor is cheap and plenti? ful, i nd that home-raised hog and homity are more abundant than in many years. Cotton mills, with very few excep? tions, are reported as flourishing, hav? ing paid their usual dividends. 1 )e: pire the low prices of cotton, farmers have dor.c their best to repay the laukers. factors and merchants, and gjod men can generally get credit as heretofore. lt i> clear from these reports that the acreage in cotton will be very much reduced; that provision crops will be planted extensively, and that there will tu- mach less commercial fertilizers bougl t this year. Altogether, the outlook i- Hot a> biue as Minn- ot the croakers would make tt appear. Col. ingersoll has made as muet! So.IM 0 on one lecture and an averoge ol SI OOO a lecture, but lie says he is getting tired of ?he platform. ITEMS. Several officers of the German army will bo detailed r,-> iosrrucc the Chilian army in ';:ci;e-.. J. V> Floyd a:;d Steve Elkins are coudidates for U. S. Senator from West Virginia. Charles Eiockstatdee, of the United Stares Ginrhiftg llo-j>e, of St. Pani hus skipp-d with ?40,000. ' A number of the states of ibis Lui-oj ; have legislatures in session now. st;d New Mesioo has two An Ohio farmer who went to town to j take our an insurance policy found h H ! barn buming when he gor, bael:. The ; (oc?;mo:ive that brought-him home .*er tire to it. Imperial writers say that the gold j contained in the medals, vessels, chain??, I and other oojec-s preserved in th? I Vatican would moke more gold coins i , f* I than the whole ot the present European ! circulation. I I We have no desire to disoarago ; Greenville, bur as showing the relative size and importance of the two places we mention that while the semi-anuual dividends of banks and factories in Greenville last July were $82,375, in Spartan burg they footed ?140,000 - j Spartanburg Herald. In the decade from 13S0 to 1890 j the capiral invested in cotton mills in j j the Soo h increased from $21,000.000 j to $97,000,000 The capiral now in- j v.-.sred amounts to about ?106,000.000. a five-fold increase in fourteen years j And th" bulk of this was in three*! States, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. Mr-* xAmeiia Jenks Bioomer of Coun-j eil Bluffs ia., is dead. She was the i inventor of the women's dress reform costume now popularly known as '.bloomers.'' She showed her faith in her dress reform theories by wearing "bloomers" fer about seven years ; then she discarded the things and went back to the same kind of skirts she had worn before. Year 1894 will be remembered in the south as a year of five-cent calton; in the west as a year of fifty-cent wheat; in Florida for the destruction of the orange I j crop and of orange trees by the cold i weather; aud throughout the whola ! country for the adoption of the j Wilson tariff. It was not a year nf pros j perity. It was a year io which the peo ! pie hoped for better times and in which ; the times steadily grew worse.-Sa ! vannah News i ? Not many years ago there were seve ! ral varieties nf grapes, each struggling j to become the favorite of the public j To doy the trade is chiefly in the Con j cord and Delaware varieties. Early in : the 60's yellow bananas could not. com ? pete with the red ; to-day the latter i have been almost driven out of the . market, though vf-ry many still prefer j them. There used to be a dozen va j rieties of pears competing with an al [ most, equal demand Now the Bartlett, i and Seckel rule supreme. Apples aud j bernes to a less degree have undergone j the same process of natural selection, j and now there are one or two varieties j of early apples that promise to super i sede ali the rest. A York county farmer has solved the : ; problem. "Just let every farmer in the South," be expiai o ed, 'who could j raise, say ?200, buy futures and then I refuse to plant a furrow. When ! setting up time came, the 'bears' ! would all be bursted, and the price of : cotton would be out of sight The ... I only trouble with the idea is that, like . others, it cannot be carried out." I Spartanburg Herald. i I When the "new liberty, bell" was j ; cast in Buffalo for the Columbian Ex- ? i position there was an overflow of the I metal. This has lately been utilized ? j in a novel manner. Small bells, each I a perfect miniature duplicate of the original, have beeu cast and sent to j rr people ali over the world who have in j any way accomplished anything toward j the advancement of liberty The bells ? i are about four inches in diameter at the j mouth, arc of perfect tone, and are ! ; mounted aud engraved. The pope, I Dr. Parkhust, John Philip Sousa, the j city of Norwich, England, the Sons of ; Londonderry, Ireland, John W Goff, i ? the parliament of Belgium and the : Republic of Peru are among the recipi- ; ent8 of the bells. A New York editor-in-chief gets a I ? salary of ?50,000 a year. Others get \ j $10,000 and ?12,000 a year. Manag- ; i ing editoi-6 are paid from ?100 to ?150 per week, or a better compensation than that of senators and representa- j tatives in congress. Editorial writers j get from ?50 to ?75 per week as a rule, and in cases of rare ability, as | much as the average salary of a manag- ; ing editor. City editors receive from ; ?60 to ?75 per week, and in a few instances ?100. The pay of news editors is about equal to that of city eiiitors. Literary, theatrical and musi? cal critics average $50 per week. Copy-readers are paid from ?4(1 to ?45 per week. Reporters earn all the way from ?15 to ?<il> per week, with an average of ?40, and space-writers of j par ti eu lar talent have been known to make as much as ?125 per week, though tin- limitation of topics and the pressure of competition usually keep their incomes down around those, of the best [aid reporter*, there air some writers for syndicates ?>i newspapers, men with names that have certain value, who earn from $.>,(HMi t,> Sii. 000 per year, and there ar?- others of lirst class technical capacity in various lines whose salaries occasionally reach . ?.5000. An advanced woman went to a marinee at rh? Lyceum Theater rb* nrhercayio company wirh two other (adie* equally far advauceu, and they sat behind e couple of old-fashioned girls. wore naring velvet bonnets, says the New Yr.rk Press. After the curtain wenr ur? tiie three sisrers in culture obviously bridled, casting lonks of pity and scorn na the two girls. Finally, with au air ?>f determination '"-ne of ?he rear guard leaned over between the broad brims cf the other two and said: "Esc;*.--" me. ladies, will you kindly remove your hats? We really can't see the R'age .'We're so sorry."' responded the other, brightly and at once they took took off their 'nats. A dury performed is a rainbow in the soul, and the three ladies who hud done rheir duty leaned back comfortably with an air of conscious virtue. But why, oh! why. should these three Spartan sis? ters flush angrily and feel insulted when a wicked, wicked man behind them leaued over and said : k,I beg pardon ladies, but do you mind taking off your sleeves? I really can't see the stage." I don't pretend there's any morai io this story, and you'll agree wirb me that that man was a meal, sneering, sarcastic groundling. ? ? ? ? mm Some time ago a lot of peonies was received at the treasury department for redemption. Among them was a coin which was rejected. The treasury would not give a cent for it. A clerk in the office redeemed it and gave ir to Congressman Johnson, of North Da kora, who sent it to the Smithsonian Institution for identification, and later he received word (hat the coin is of the mintage of the year 284 A D., and cir? culated in the time of Emperor Diocle? tian, lt is a verv valuable relic, worth many times its weight tn gold. ?? ? ? -? A handsome Wal! Map ol' United States is now offered each new subscriber to Ranc McNaliy Railway Guide, or if preferred, a map of any individual State. Subscription, $3.UO per year. Write to 136 Adams Street, Chicago, for circular. ? ? -- Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cutt, Braises Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. F'?ver Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hand.? Chilblains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or DO pay required. It is guaranteed to give per foct satisfaction, or toonej- refunded, Tice 25 rents per box. For sale hy Dr. J. F. W. I>e Lorioe. After the Grip 1 Headache-Pa:n in the Sack -That Tired i;Geting System Built Up By Hood's Sarsa parilla - PSer?t Proven. ^^^^^^^^ Mrs. Wilfred Johnson Tho following is from Mr3. "Wilfred Johnson, whose husband is an attache at Kellogg, Minn., of the Chicago, Milwaukee a:id St. Paul Railway: "C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: " I had an attack of the grip last winter, from which I did not fully recover. I was all run down and suffered with severe headaches. Pains in the back and s:i':h a tired feeling made me wish for death to relieve lae from my intense sufferings. Atlast LJke a Drowning; Person grasping at a straw, I bought a bottle of Eood's Sarsaparilla, and bef< re it-was ;:r.r.e I ncticed a great change. J purctaacd a.second ar.d third betti:- and v. is*.: i ^oxi'A convince every one what an cxcaUent medicine 'leo..'s Sarsaparilla has proved to b& tay case.*' M:?s. WIUTKED JORXSO>". V 'Xi. )\.-y:)y:'r, Minnesota. Hold's s :'-"r- easily, yet promptly and f ff".-ii- riv, vu the li;cr and bowels, i?c A. WHITE & SON, Fire Insurance Agency, ESTABLISHED 1866. Represent, among other Companies: LIVERPOOL k LONDON" & GLOBE, NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE, HOME, of New fork. UNDERWRITERS' AGENCY. N. Y., LANCASTER INSURANCE CO. Capital represented :?75.0uO,000. _Feb_J_2 THE THE ATLANTA JOURNAL Has tile Largest Circulation of any Deal?/ IN THE SClim Il contains ail the News both Foreign and Domestic is well as splendid Miscellaneous matter, such a* Weekly Letters fron: Bill Nye and Iu-v. Sam P. Joins, and is everlastingly Democratic. The subscription price is $5 00 per year: $250 six months; Si 25 three months. THE WEEKLY JOURNAL contains the cream i>* ail ttint ap nears in the Daily, as well as matter written especially for ::. and is ot special interest to farmers. We wan! to p.! th*? Weekly into every.household and h ive therefore reduced the price to 75 cents per year lor a si tittles inscription : or ia c!ul>s of live 50 cents per year each. Send joe specimen copy and see list of premiums of? fered. Address 77/ E . 1 TL A y T. t JO I 'RX. 11, Allanta, tia. . A