Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 July 1886 — SOUTHERN. [ARTICLE]
SOUTHERN.
Charleston (W. Ya.) dispatch: At a banquet given by our citizens and the local press to the editors of Ohio, at which wore present Governor Foraker and the Hon. C. Grosvenor, member of Congress from Ohio, the latter said: “In Ohio there is more intense feeling against the New England States than there is against the South, owing to the fact that the New England States do not want the South and West to improve, but to hold them back by not legislating in the interest of the two great sections of the country.” He characterized this feeling as being “the overeducated provincialism of the East,” The gentleman was severe in his speech against the New Englanders. George B. Davis was executed at Seale, Alabama, for the murder of Archie Beeves. Bobert Dillard and James Emmett, both colored, were hanged at Greenville, Miss., for murder. At Baltimore Geo. Forsythe killed his wife and then shot himself through the heart, A lumber firm of Grand Bapids, Mich., has this year entered 100,000 acres of pine lauds in Louisiana and Mississippi. Other Western men are prospecting in that section A cotton-buyer in Texarkana sold to
Eastern parties three thousand bales of good middling by sample and arranged to draw against them. By filling his orders at St Louis with the cheapest grades he robbed his customers of $35,000.
