Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, March 13, 1907, Image 6

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. ffSimCSPAT, MARCH IX, Iffft. Huumuinmun (AND NEWS) JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES, Editor. F. L. SEELY, President. PskHahef tvary Artsrnaew (Except Sunday) By THE GEORGIAN COMPANY. At ■ Wert Atahaa* at.. AttamU. 04. Subaerlptlen Ratu g? iBfe:::-*|S cygarasag Gtoffta. erKrtfc.=atts-»fc cMV w.; “MW U MCI. I Cfft Ear fth. tt U UromUtt not l*c returned anise* tump* «r» *e*t for tb» THa OKOBGIAN t AWp .*BW» rigfeM&frarSus •r toy HeMT ad*. c/t Ire "do"I ii Is Veu Vr Mil'* i'taw **•** SBb TOMB •x! News WlnM tkt It rtrret rail- «lja can b# operated MCMMtaUy by tSSTa1 U?dijB» •w.'inVl? may'be Mil 114 tin la That dlnctto* ROW. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS AND ADVERTISERS. On Febrtre-y t Tho Oeerglan pur* afcosad tho nam*. good will, fnnehlMO, advertising MntnaU and subscription liM •( Tho Atlanta N two, and Tho Nawa It now publishad aa a part af The Geer* plan. All adoortiaing under eontraet to appear In The Nawa will bo printed In The Oeerglan and Nawa. without Inter ruption, except ouch ae le debarred by TM Georgian*# eetabtletied policy to occlude all objectionable advertising. Bubaarlbera to The Nawa will raeelve TN- Oeerglan and Newt regularly. All aabperlptlena paid la advance to The Oeerglan and ta Thb News will ha ex tended to caver the time paid for to both newspaper*. dfieuld you new be receiving two aeplea of The Beerglan and Newt, your name appeara ea both eubecrlptlon Hate. Aa eeen as Mieae Hate can be combined yea will raeelve only an# copy regu- Ka*t Lupaction. ' The loveetlgatioa* of meat and food ■tuts upon which the American peo ple eubelet have been frequent during the put two years and In no Instance have they failed to develop practices ta the matter of preparation revolting to the eenee and menacing to public haalth. The remit hu been benefi cial. Laws have been enacted In sev eral etatea and In other* are under way whleh. It properly enforced, wilt ta future protect the pnblle In the qual ity and condition of the food It eats. The national congreea hu takan a giant etep forward ta the recently en acted pare food hill. Bnt in addition to toy general en actment by states of pore food law*, there should be ipeclflo law* covering meat Inspection, t’pon this subject Collier’s for March l< uya: The following points should be embraced In any state meat In spection law. Persoos who pro pose to frame such laws will get valuable help by examining the federal law, which Is published In pamphlet form by the Bureau of Animal lafuatry or the United States Department of Agriculture. 8tat* mut Inspection, In order to insure such protection u I* fur nished by the federal law, should provide: Inspection for avwry town and village. Where loo little killing Is done In a community to occupy an In spector's time, slaughter-houses • should be grouped, end each butcher should be required to kill on a certain specified date. The cart eases of animals killed . In the abeenov of aa lupector should be submitted for Inspection with the viscera attached. The band tod longue should also be submitted. Violations of the law should be punished Bret by Boot of from •10 to 41*0, aad by Imprisonment if the .offense It repealed: at- - tempted' bribery should also be made a punishable offeree. Mail already Inspected under the feddWl Id'w should bleo be suit- Jed U> tors! Inspection Wher ever possible, local and federal In npactors should cooperate, and lecel reams Ik>ca should conform aa thwly a* practicable to the SOKS. TH* BJUUTXTUL, XSfOLVU TO BE ALSO GREAT. In 1IH the Hon. Abraham 8. Hewitt, of New York, standing upon Jbe summit of the water tower hill looking over that superb and perfect scen ery of Rome—her hills and fertile valley*, with the three limpid rivers rippling through fringed banks—declared that la the many times In which he bad been around tho world, ho bad never known a city of greater natural beauty, of apparently superior advantages to that which was spread out before him from bis lofty point of observation. And this Is aa true today as It was in lUt. The capital of Floyd, the city of three river* and an hundred hills, has no superior In beauty and In fertility among the cities of 'the South. The Etowah and the Oostanau- la Join their currents at the lower edge of the oily, making tba Coosa river, which flows thence southward la a navigable stream toward ths Oulf of Mexico. The valley of the Etowah and the vality of the Oostanaula and the vast valleys stretching southward furnish aa high a grade of cotton and as rich a quality of eareala ay any portion of the state and of tba South. What was once five great railroads now merge Into two systems at Rome and sweep the territory northward and eastward and westward with the finest facilities of distribution. And the historic people who Hve In this hill dty of Georgia are of ae fine a type of morals, of mind and of manner* as any to be found In this land of beauty and of chivalry. The only trouble with Rome la that It baa never yet found Its Industrial policies and Industrial program. The city of magnificent opportunities has bean handicapped by aoma enmities and by some factions which have altered Its natural development and kept It from Its highest aetata among the cities of the South. On Tuesday night Rome gave to the world the assurance that the energy and genius of Its people had crystallised at last Into an organized and co-operative movement for material development along the highest lines of progress lo our times. A large and representative company of all the- force* that made tht Rome of yesterday, and bold In their hands the Rome of tomorrow, met In the first annual banquet of the Merchants and Manufacturer*' Association and pledged them selves, for the future, to a cooperative effort along practical lines for utilising the magnificent opportunities of this heaven-blessed region, and. discarding faction and Ignoring Jealousies, Id mutual and beeeenjfng ranks, to march all one way toward the day of development and of Industrial glory. Certainly no Incident more promising has punctuated the recent his tory of Rome than this organised enthusiasm and purpose of lu people. Coming In the midst of this advanced and vigorous ago, such a move ment, ao well matured, ao well understood and ao vigorously purposed, amounts to an announcement to the etate and to the country that from this time forth no lack of Intelligence, no dearth of energy, no hiatus of wlidojn and of oo-operation will keep back this city of three riven and an hundred hills from Its deserved and certain place among the Industrial and social centers of this marvelously growing South. THE 1906-07 COTTON CROP. The American cotton crop for the aeeeon of 110447, as compared with all previous crape, !• a bumper yield and yet It Is not of sufficient site to be burdensome. From the Bret bale marketed to the present time. It has moved from the plantations to the mills at a pace that'has surprised the trade and In greater quantities than the rallroada In the belt have been able to move It la a manner satisfactory to purchasers. Despite this heavy movement, heretofore ao Influence making for a very low average price, the raw material at no time during the present action has ahown decided weakness. AU efforts to break prices to a level below the views of the producer have failed, due entirely to keen compe tition for an estimated bumper crop. Indicating that consumption la keep ing pace wlUj tho Increase In production, though prices are yet below the basis on which spinners are under contract for goods extending well Into the coming year. A decrease In the movement, however, would soon rem edy this, and for the remnant of the present erbp much better prices could be obtained. In the Lancashire district new mills for the manufacture of cotton cloths are springing up. Nearly twenty new mills have been begun the present year. During the put seven years more than a hundred have been established near Manchuter. Theso new factories, together with a large number of extensions and additions to existing mills, when fully completed, will have Increased the manufacturing capacity of this dis trict by 10.000.000 spindles. New mills have been built and additions have been made to the old mill* In the North and the South. The Increue In splndleag* In the Lancashire district Is attributed to the eetlmatea of a record American crop this year. The year 1M6. the previous record breaking crop, witnessed the greatest boom to British ■pinning In recent years, forty large factories having been added In that year, against only two mills In 1902. This advice, dated from Manchester March I. la the real Influence governing the price of cotton at the present Urn*. nepec-loa lays should i»-.- TOM LAWSON, PRESTXDICfrTATOR. It telegraphic reports are correct, Tom Lawson, ths reformer of Wall street, the Implacable foe of the "eyetem," hu shown hie bud at lul ud raked In the stakes. Nevada-Utah stock went down with a crash Tuesday, and under the ruins were the Iambs, small traders, men and women who had fol lowed the apostle of honeety not wisely but loo well. And Tom Lawson stood afar off, adding more millions to hie bank account and chuckling to himself. t For years Mr. Lawson hu wept In public over ths cruel methods of Standard Oil ud Amalgamated Copper. In Everybody’s Magulne he hu told of the robbery of the public by Rockefeller and Rogera and "Om" Addtcks, and all tha rest. He hu held up hie hinds In honor et the robbery of the public (ud Lawson) et the hands of that pirate erew. He hu raved of 'Trent!td Finance" until It hu become a household phrase. For many months Mr. Lawton hu proclaimed In box car letters In the dally prau (hat copper would go down or oil would go up, and Ihouuuds took hie tips. Borne of them were winner*, and the lueky followers pinned their ftlth lo Lawson u the only original almon-pure tipster—and prepared to plunge even deeper thu before. Then Nevada-Utah became active In the market. l<aweon'e letters ad vised against the purchue of the stock. Through the Influence of Law- eon's published guide to Wait Street. Nevada-Utah wu held down. And all the while Itaweon’a brokers were buying, buying, buying. At last they were satisfied and began bulling the market, quietly but effectively. Then their selling began, and all the Nevada-Utah owned by Lawson ud his uaoctatre wu unloaded. On Tuesday Lawson's published card In the morning paper* announc ed that he "could not recommend the purchase of Nevada-Utah-" This precipitated a crash. The stock dropped from It and II a share to I2.S0. Ilut Lawson's brokers bed sold out long before the break In the stock began. According Ui pres* reports, "the written evidence Is all In Lawson's favor. He bad never. In print, advised the purchase of the stock." Rut Wall street men who were cautht In the eraak uy that Lawton's manip ulation* cleared him millions and that thousands of small speculators who bad Invested In the stock at tbs advice of hit broken were under the ruins. It would seem tbat law eon has not been too busy writing "Frantled Finance" ud novels of "the street" to give eosne of hit mention lo the wotlhelsUnii he he* denounced. Army~Navy Orders MOVEMENT OF VESSELS. Wuhlngton, March !».—The follow- log order* have been luued: Colonel Robert H. R. Loughborough, to Thir teenth Infantry; Lieutenant Colonel William A. Mann, to Sixth Infantry Major tVendel L. Simpson, to Nine teenth Infantry, and Captain Arthurs. Cowan, to Twentieth Infantry'- Major Millard F. Walt*. general' staff, from Wuhlngton to Havana, u chief ofetoff of army of Cuban pacifi cation, relieving Lieutenant Colonel William A. ManigFlnfantry. Foot Commissary Sergeant Oar bet O'Reilly, placed upon retired list. Colonel Ramsay D. Potts, general ■loft, from Wuhlngton to San Fran rteco. U chief of naff Poclflc division. Poet Commissary Sergeant Rene Wlleon. report to commanding officer. Madison barracks, for temporary duty. Poet Commissary Sergeant James K. Whit*, report to commanding general, army of Cuban pacification, Havana. Movements of Vessels. ARRIVED: March 11. Scorpion at Son Juan; Connecticut at Guantan amo. SAILED: March 11. Baltimore from Aden for Sum; Wilmington, from Shanghai for NanMn. PANAMA PRIMER Irreverent Resume or the Isthmian Situation Up to Date, with Cause. A hide extending a ehnrt w*y semes the Isthmus of I'sosum entirely filled with uimir;. WhErF did wo got It? William N#l«>n CmuvFll kindly •**•*•? Trwieli l’ta*tna Conpaay to •oil It to «a. What did tho French Panama Company *«•* ? Forty million dollar* Waa tho company aatladad. It waa naionUbad. , What did William NXnon Cromwell g#t? The aanata of the l.'nliad Ktales baa two tr/lu* to g#t him to tall for three yeara W What did we g**t? The Graateat Engineering Feat of the It would l»e If we could‘beep any engi Gntnn dam. Will tt arer he coottnwtld? It wilt bo aa aonn aa tha engineers find a way to make a atone float on mud. What la tho Cbagrea Hear? A denrared at ream tbat goat on a toot bat are they going to do with It? i sort of a canal la tbla to be? Itecauae tha president changed his mind. What la the difference between a lock canal aad a aca Icrel canal? One la Impossible and tba other Is Im PAl tM tits* proliahlc. Why dl Ho the dirt could begin la It flying? Its wings haven't grown yet la It likely tbat tie canal will Involve us In any deputes with foreign rminlrlca? ileaa we go to war with France How long la the canal? About a century. When will the canal he completed? This la a primer, not a dream book. Why? Who la Theodore P. Hhonta? He la an able and unselflah patriot, man who haa done well for hla country, of high ana enlightened Ideals and lofty character. Why? Because ha resigned from tha cast! to ika a better lob. Who offered Walla ea a Job? Thomas F. IUan. Who offered Hhonta a Job? Tbomaa F. Ryan. What waa Wallace's Incaotlra? Merc lucre. What waa Hhonta* Incentive? The betterment of mankind. What constitutes an Investigation of the canal? A trip to Panama. What hare the recent Investigations been one by Poultnev Bigelow and one by President Rooaevelt. A malicious and premeditate' What was the nrealdent'a Investigation? A thorough rerVaw of the work (Iona and under waj. a searching Inquiry Into condi tion*. a personal, aatlaflictory and complete 'nsjwctloti of everything In the canal tone. long did I^oultuay Bigelow aUy on the Isthmus? Two days, flow long did President Roosevelt stay What !« the attitude of congress toward the canal? Congress thinks the glory should all he the president*) IV pirviuru t m. la this uuaetflsbneaa on the part of con gress? Yea. and tender regard for the presi dent. How leader? Congress la firmly of the opinion that the president, h any way. but given free rein. will congee*# give the president all the money he wauta? Yea. Then wb^t? Congress will alt back and say. **I told jrou ao,** when the explosion cornea. I toes congress think the president will dig tha canal? Coigraaa politely hopes be will. What la a canal contract? Homsthlng ■ canal contractor does not What la a hid? A proposition to do something that wl'.I nt be allowed. Wlat is a canal contractor? A man who la looking for trouble. l»oea he find It? All of them have ao far. Are canft contracts subject to change? change of what? William J. Oliver? lie U a sufferer from preatldlgttatlou* In what way? The prealdeut changed hla melon to old 'ollrar think ka would gst the coi tract? lie did: but he didn't. lie* mil. imii iiv- linn What did he gel? Home valuable evperlcncc. Was he led to believe he would get the contract? lie thinks he was What has he learned? He has lea rural there la a great differ en«-c between I icing led and being puttied. A WORKINOMAN’S VIEW ) ... OF IMMIGRATION, To the Editor of The Georgian: We beg leave for apace In your valu able paper, which I* much read by our working people In-this locality, la which to give our views on the very Impor tant Immigration question. The following le what a delegate did not nay at the Immigration convention recant ly bald at Macon. Go. A work ingman felt Ilka (* centa with a bole In It, especially so when Its eaw that the men In charge of said convention principally were the same men that were allied agalni the child labor bill when .It woe up for passage. Along with them were the banker, the big land speculator and owner. Now, the gist of the main speeches clearly show, ed that It was to double the price of land and cheapen tbs price of cotton and labor fin this mate. What con we of the South offer to Immigrant* that they may be Induced to come tbla way? Have we got thousand* of acres of government, land that they may taka up at the mere coat of paying regletra. tlon teas and become an owner of a home? No. we can not offer them eueh Inducements, Can w* offer, them better wages on the form than the West? Sta tistics do nbt boor us out on that. Do our mill manufacturers and other lines of trade pay to skilled labor as much as the North and West? Nat so. What ran we offer? We can offer them a line climate, but a man can not Uv* on climate alone. Why do our boy* emi grate to the North and West? le It not for the reasons the opportunities are far better than they are here? We are compelled to answer yes. Why was It thet the Immigrants brought*to Charleston. B. C, last fall were so much dissatisfied after they, found out tbs prices they were to receive for their labor, some of them going back homo, some to other parte of tha country, where better wage* are paid? if 1 am correctly Informed, this Is true. le'U not true that some of our great man ufacturers south of us have been ar raigned In the United Btales courts on the charge of peonage, taking advan tage of the poor Immigrant? God for bid that a Georgian should be guilty of such a crime! Does the farmer want more cheap labor to raise 16,000.000 bales of cotton, that the price of that product may be sold to tn# manufac turer at 6 cents per pound? To tbla we may say not. Cotton la already too cheap an be very profitable. Can he pay ths wages labor receive# In the West and raise corn and other products to compete with them? We say no. Then who went* Immigrants? What Is nil this motive behind this scheme? Is It not commercial greed and the same spirit that moved the Dutch trader to decoy the poor African away from hie native home and sell him Into slavery, and later the same spirit moved the shrewd New Englander to sell him to the Southerner because he wax not profitable In a cold climate? Latterly the Southerner wo* envied by hla Northern brother for the reason that his slaves were making everything necessary for the maintenance of home, and each maater was becoming a king on hla own throne and cutting out tha Northern manufacturer’s market. Hence the move to aboUah slavery and save the great West for our future generation. All this move woo not for the great love of humanity, but a sel fish motive, one of commercial guile and avarice. And a shrewd set, not being bold enough to come out openly, but moved to excite the pulpit and press—all this pretense claiming to com* from a human# standpoint— thereby accomplishing their desires and satisfy their selfleh greed. But. fel low Georgians, remember that every trangreaelon and disobedience shell re. oelvq a Juet recompense of reward. Now, how shall we escape If we neglect ao great a salvation? Have we not already paid heavy penalties In that of the late war? Then we should taka wnrnlng! Let us have such conditions to offer Immigrants that will prove a blessing to them aad not be detrimen tal to the welfare of our labor already with u*. Pay them wages sufficient to main tain an American standard of living. Then, and not till then, will we be In favor of removing the restriction on Immigration or Inducing them to com* her*. These conditions guaranteed, they will Come of their own volition, and will be of a claps that will not degrade or lower the moral, social or financial standing of our own people; but will build up and bring In good blood to be mingled with oura In tha future, and can be absorbed as the real demand will warrant. W# view this matter with suspicion: It looks ta u* that It la a move of the shrewd land speculator and the unfair textile and other manufacturer. If you will search their past history one would Judge they have but little regard for patriotism or love of country, hut only view things from a commercial standpoint. There la already a great wall of pro tective tariff thrown around our man ufacturers, and we believe It le their purpose to Import cheap pauper labor that they may make larger dividends, Juet at the time when labor le begin ning to emancipate from under wage slavery. When chattel slavery was GOV. NORTHEN REPORTS ON HIS WORK TOWARD . % SOLVING RACE PROBLEM glare there tuts sprung up some open and thew-k l B a»- t^tbjwp; meet of ths relations of the tares.-.1 deem It advisable lo bavo tho wigeerrstlv* people of tho stale know what beg b inveee of the state. This le especially deeltibl* not htve Joet completed a reneee* of . rooty, three coast!**, or Jest oao-half of tho whole number of the routines la (ieorgla. Pint, what his been found 1 It Is qnlte well known to the people of - *-— f--- cutlra « AtUpts. et least, t hut the etermite tnltte* of tk* boslaeee Men's Bu Union, la co-operation with, tad sndi leadership of. the. ministers af ths ... gave six or eight wreke to the preparation of s paper looking to tho adjustment of conditions, so as to prevent Iswlrseuese, crime and mob eloleaeo In ths Mate fur si time la tho future. On the 20th of Koreaber. Just tw> months after tho riot la the city. I mallei a ropy of our paper to oven dally paper la Georgia and aiked Its pnMirstlon. otmul- tanroaaly. accompanied by tn editorial In dorsement. I farther asked that X espy of mulxlsg Ue pnbllretkm and be sent to air. Some of my old llmr friend# whom 1 hare they rex not leave borne. Three boys iblu. *.uL. foo Jr“>! t “*• V ot •*>??••* *ot. i know them. The people are gslng lo male some of them sick |?}ker do retool, lax things In the night that scare them.- Or win* you know •rory prominent rviti •tela* In the stale expects GTSTJeffi,, hTTofy.]* 1 " 1 b * w *“ts to-be careful with they will aonn he removed. New Whet Has Been Dene? b As before elated, eeesntythteo raunlles fliave bees clan lord. Three const Ira fell down oa aw at lr*!, because the mme. meat wee unpopular then. Beveoty rnuu- tie* are now standing strong, coasplrc.na sad outspoken for the prevention of lew. {menses and crime and mob rloleac, i„ •hrir owo lore! communities, regirdlr» i,f sol heard from say paper except tbe Harannsb Were eud tk* Home Herald. These two papers bar* taken rigorous hold and are doing great service °*Ahont the'tat of Febt oaher eommunlredlon lo all tho denies Is Georgia, saUif If they would sec cost* - to help ne br editorial Indorsement, won they not dlsraatlane alt refers sc* to TIL man’s bleep be moae ntleraneee. that were tinned to quote Tlllmet «• Mylnj I WI« governor of Itath <*riff... with the o#tta of offlc# wtrnj In ay month lo «nfoitw tbm low. I would lo#d • tuoli to “ Thl* •rvonttt* for tho lo* lynch * negro." Tbla •rroanta for the lo* jMfferroce u to effort om tbe port of afcer* In my letter to tk# dalllee I alto nM. Hie farther utterance, pabllrly made, Ik abaoiute disregard esd defiance of lew. To hell with law. woald tend to corrupt every man In Georgia who had eur regard for tho hlrii Piere Tillman holds In the senate of tho United Stales." To this lector I hare thus far bed only one reply. Tbe editor told mo he bed long More eliminated Tillman from hla column*, but he proceeded further to any: "lu re- gard to an editorial ladontng your egort. would say that one such appeared, aad I am Dot surprised that you failed to recelre such from soy of tho dslUe* la the elate, outelde^ef Attain, because your plan ta not You are oaartly correct la mentioning ths i ■ho/dayftare Uw rerefuT^JItlrte . ... aMSfi are giving on th-lr beet aad oust conservative business m ,„ constitute com ml tiers which will h* ,|«| taut and. active In the.prevention of iff, *sW>ad. M both* buelMls of them committees to ,i... elfy aad the SaSS W? :r,K°v ora Of Idle, vicious negroes end n good uuui her of no account white men. It le the Idl Idle white man 1'* whit# men .thet grow vleloo* end get the devil Is thorn, and do aU kinds of me'i, uem and stir up strifn and make dlecr.br and crime In tbs community. Those cun sregotng lo handle three Mks-u-DIt* nod black—and pot them to work end work them untll they work the ttarll out of the, You .know | am tolltuf ell tho people the problem of ire tore* to. “The deill is while folks nod hell Is the uegrosa" These remittee Sr* going to keep folks under special watch to prevent and sot wslt until sn assault Is c ■vent crime . - — Is rnmndi- ted. snd lben burn t "nigger" ur lynch t thing* end many gmr,. ,— „ have a committer nmi lk# beet lawyers In Ueoryla to welfare of Georgia." "We have considered, eud Mill do.' that In.the race problem silence Is golden." II Is pertinent to My that I make this tatter lbs text of erory speech I deliver before the people. I do sot tell what paper tt ta nor the name of the editor, se I hope soon to convert the paper end the editor with them on u similar fine honor to bo the governor of ike Mat*. Before I entered t— “ 1 Before I entered upon the great and re- ■pooMbl* duties of that high place I die- corned win myself ike Mengrry of mur derous mobs, end I determined to us* my beet endeavor* to free the Mate from each barbarous policy for lb* eorellod punish, meat of criminal* without authority of-taw. I anticipated mobs and I determined to do to apprehend and bring to punish men! every man connected with such damn Ini Influence upon our elrlliutloa. Before I had ouch trouble I addressed a tatter to each and erery dally paper In the Mate, asking If I would Im snetslnrd In such policy. Tho answer, without sleep to test the sincerity of the nlltorn. - To n man they Mood he me In ntrong and lengthy editorial* letter I need an- -ther opportunity, because of another lynch- eg. Tbla time no editorial followed. ■ used another and another id another and another opportunity, hut editorial ram* to mo. After that 1 stood *11 by myself. Just a. |'em now standing practically, except that We have the sup smS.'vsvssmwswr H#D,e Tht press of tho stats could become the strengthen lux of rirlc righteousness If ths editors would only use their opportunities and their powers tret why. You aek me what w* are going to do about It. i cuadldl^my. la reply. I have don* everything I . - have found etlll another great big hln- dranc*. Tbe Moolh need* men. esn-crowu ed, (lod-MTeu men. for the leadership of the people. The politicians, I have found, are practically egolhst tie. tasny of them are streagly for us. S iteb . me*, broken down ny mohe. Ther ten suggest other sew taws that will ... •title the county committees to handle the Mir end the vicious that give us to mu. tt trouble. This taw committee win. dmilii. Ire*, five us s sew definition of "regraru." If ao, the committees ran handle, effectual ly .a whole lot of bed folks. This committee of tawyors will further rite ue roe enactment something like the Virginia taw for the protection of the ilc. rims of assault. They will also 1*11 ue ihe remedies for the delays lu the court* nml how le tel over trifling technlrallilr. They will doubtless, alto tell us whet to do with lawyers that have become nui sance# In hi offering the punishment of rrlm. Inals, after rrrrybody know* they ought to bo'hong. The "they" Is this last ecu- tanre ran refer to the lawyers or Ihe crim inals. Just as the reader may see lit in Interpret. That tk* public may hare some Urn cf ear partial because the fftbkkflflht trie and president cotton mlltaTIT li! Ha'ri'e field, wholesale grocer: J. F. Monk. ms>.. ml eaw mill - and saw mill mao; o. A. Bell, grocer: J. It. Alien, editor of The Hally Oh*rr\rr: 4. K. Unwell, county reboot rommleclcm-r: J H. Hall, wboleeal* hardware; II. w. Ncn Ion. inrnentln* operator; K. It. Utark. rath- Irr or Bank of Moultrie: A. R. Huger,, gents' furnishing; It. A. Autre/, nstsl |tnres; O. II. Williford, cashier nttirne' Thee* gentlemen will now appoint twn nr league with tho best negroes In the inanity, and, together, they will stand tut taw and order among ail Iks people In a communication like this II I, net possible ta toll ad tbs things these rirlc league* will stand for, aa It alwnya tatr, me an hour apd a half to do this, she* I apeak to tbe people. It might be well to add that every , bounds tbr committee Whcnsrcr i for such sorrier. I hare ntaiui thirteen mere eountkv lato before I finish this trip. T return to the rlty. I will glee to the K i.llc * complete Iftt of all the nuiinilt >e Haft represent all the counties il,n.~l represent all the rouatles i thl* time, that the people may know um-t more of whet haa hekn do Breslau, U*„ March *. abolished wage slavery waa enthroned. e Man warring aver tinea to and w* hive rid nuraelvea of Ihla grant wage slavery system, which Is almost wore* than chattel Slavery. Aa It la now. If n man gal* alck and die*. It will be told h* was a good old wagon, but he la ''broke down," and mth plenty of cheap labor pauper) there will b* more elavee Ilk* him. Now. If he had been a chattel elave, Ihe beet physician would have been called lo him and he would have been placed In good, comfortable quarters and every attention poaalbla given him, for should b* dl* tha master would suf fer a great lose. A* It ta now. when the wag* slave gtu alck h* ta lift to the cold mercies of the world, and If left to those who only view things rrom a business standpoint h* would ha left tn die In misery and want. But, thanks lo the God of heaven, w* have many thousand! who have never bowed their knee to Ihe god of greed, but they will tenderly attend to tnllr needs and sufferings, and should they die, will decently buried and Home of our laborer*, and eapacltlly throe of ihe different craft*, who by Whet elec haa he learned? lie has learned to distrust circumstantial evidence. I mi Oliver pul lu Ike lowest bid? I ml he complete his bid! Ye Hid hr have everything all right? . Reerythlat but one thing. What wn* that? U.crctblng hat a chance Wh- ■ doe* Oliver come In? lie .preit'l come In—he gnen out.—Oat It. Itlrtbe. In The New York World. Mrs. Mattie MuKawen. Mrs.' Mottle McKowen died at a pri vate sanitarium Tuesday night after a long Illness. Mhe le survived by four daughters and five none. The funeral aervlree will he conducted by Rev. T. Cleveland, or Ihe Wallace Presbyterian church. In Ihe chapel of H. M. Patter son A Bon. Thursday morning at la o'clock. The Interment will be in -ahom o#. bar former homo. to emancipate themaelvue from under the long hour and low wage eyetem. have been a me to get horn* from their work In time to bath* their (•cen, dree* and gat out on the front veranda In the glorious light and sun shine sufficiently long enough to read the dally papers, eo ax la Inform them selves. And bailer *1111. to get belter acquainted with the Hill* ones at horn*. Remember. Ihe workingman le Inform ing himself more at present than aver before. We view this move of Immi gration wlih grant, ooncem. \V* lp-. don* tha view* of Congressman Bln on thla matter. W* listened with much Interest to Ihe remarks of Mr. Bar- gent. Ha told Ihe convention how to get tabor, pay-as good wage* as lYe jour*, and w* would gut nil the tabor needed from Ihe North, Kasi and YVoat: but wu noticed Hum -he convention was careful that this reformation was ndt widely circulated. ,YV* were vary much wiaeiy ctrcuiaiea. ( v>* were very muen amused at the very generous and un- semen offer of some of tbe mill men to Ihe planter*, saying In the planter: "We ere willing that the land owners should have their orders for tabor filled first''—and they would get theirs taler We could reed between, the sen- cents cotton, and their labor will be so disgusted by that time we will get him In the mill Juet a* cheao as we wont them! Fellow Georgian!, can't you see? Now, 1 wish to etata I am a workingman, n .native born Georgian: my father le n native born Georgian, an ex-Confederet* soldier, ray grand father waa a native born Georgian of revolution slock, end served our coun try, at the galea of tha beautiful city of Savannah, G#. during har great peril In lha war of 1112, against n foreign foe. Therefore having these rights aa a eon of Georgia, and being urged, by a large body of working people, to say through the pres* what we did not say at the, grekt Immigration convention. Slid We feel that the third parly hoe some rights (the working people—people who should be heard from). Now shall we, Ihe brawn and muscle of the South, who have brought Ihla beloved South land of oura from ashes and deep*ra tion. sine* till ud mad* It what It la today, alt atlll and tat our country be filled with the lowest grade of tabor, and to the satisfaction of tho protective end protected unfair mill owner and the greedy land speculator? No: wo ■hould see to It that none but the pure blooded Anglo-Saxon races should com* to ue. And of a type of our anceilry who hu mad* this country whet It ta. Even they should be allowed to come only when they can receive such wages u will maintain them comfort ably, and not be a menace to our own tabor. The great cry for labor la not caused by the ecarclty of tabor, but by It not being properly systematised and poorly paid. In my own craft I nm In touch with twenty thousand men. end should our amployara coll on ua for on* hundred man ud they would In- aur* tham steady work for *lx. eight or ten months, this notice would go before the eyes of those twenty thou- eud men within ten day*' tlm*. Theta- fora tn but a few day* these man would be coming In from alt parts of tha country, relieving lha places where that close of tabor wu congested, and sup plying tbe places In demud In the meantime. Each man would know Just what the wages he wu to receive ud how long hla hour*, Mao how long hta Job would taxi vale corporation*, but let the elate work them, and. used u proposed hr our distinguished statesman, the Hun. Hooper Alexander In extending the state of Georgia's railroad from Hi* dty of Atlanta to tho sen. If the rail road* that are ao much Interested in flooding our fair Southland with rhear labor, will only upply our home people with 1 sufficient car* to traneart our lorn to get tabor, help us to organise ud ayatepsatli* ,our tabor. Fay them u good wages a* are paid *ie*wb*re. Treat them kindly. Teach our owp boy* to work. Keep them away from the overcrowded business ud profes sional avocation*. Oat to work our selves. There nr* too muy permittee and mistletoes end not enough oaks. There are too muy Idl* now; tha mare fact that n mu bu n few acre* of land and n few dollars laid up dose not place Mm above work. Werk le hon orable. w* should not live on the ■went of other men's faces. Enforce our vagrancy taws. Rid the town* and cities of all Idlers and 1 osiers. ~ current business, they would do ex ceedingly well. There haa been mure cries for core In our midst than f->r tabor In the pul year. If the above suggestions were carried out your labor trouble would he largely solved. We especially urge the Farmers' Union ami the great, conservative msssee I" co operate together with u* of the skilled tabor clueee, to see to It that labor hu n .fair deal. Consider this very Im portant question, one that Is of aa much Importance u the abolition of slavery, and we should see tn It that no leglx- tatlon ta juet allowing private corpora tion* to rumlah their own money, un der tho gulae of tha atate, to Induce Im migration for their own private gain, and dodge behind tha state m avoid th* Federal taws prohibiting same. It Is tlm* w* war* up and doing Ag itate th* causa of th* farmer, see tbat he get* n living price for hla col tun. for upon hta success Haa .nil our sue- coaa. With ■ and t cant* cotton we all will ha In tba ditch, ud than we r.mld do nothing but ptay th* army worm, turn on each other ud devour our- selves, ud th* country go back Into disintegration and decay. GEO. a HARDMAN Llthonta, Go. Th* Pannaylvanta repeal of tha measure wu IU to 0 of repf'*-' THIS DATE IN HISTORY. . MARCH 13. i&S&Src Ears *--»• •mnaissgs* »»S36fi'JBrEhtf ■arass vjssz* MTmtll turried 1W uM*a b hi r .re A wai—. -re.-- ~ ototlort aflvtflBf aboil Hon #f th* * W*ra?*nve* tart by on. «• uu#w mu wifipra in* beq* hots •»* iuwn mna io#ien. troh mu a>. l. ek# " leaves Otv* the farmer nit th* tabor who prefer to go to prison thu work, '"e-* 1 K?L,S llu^ be wants first, and w* will have I or « let them go. Don't Itau them lo prt- ta N« xert.