Macon daily telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1905-1926, November 08, 1908, Image 19

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THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 8, 1908 It is One of the Many Homes Purchased by The Standard Real Estate Loan Co. WASHINGTON, D. 0. THE HOUSE RENTER’S OHANOE TO OWN HIS HOME. The average house renter pnvs for his home EVERY EIGHT YEARS and THE LANDLORD STILL OWNS IT. The money you pay out each month as rent is a dead loss to you. It is your Christian duty to provide a home for your wife and children, as you cannot always be able to earn money as you aro at the present time; ns afflictions, old age and death comes to us all, so' it behooves you as a .business man to provide for yourself and family a shelter while this opportunity is offered you. Try our plan; we can put you in your own home and save tho money yon are now squandering in rent that, does the wife and children no good. With each $1,000 borrowed you will have to pay only $7.50 per month, with 5 per cent simple interest per annum. Our contracts therefore insures you a home on long time and small monthlv payments that are LESS THAN HOUSE RENT. You can pay the loan off at any time yon- desire in whole or in part, thus stopping interest. . We give you six months grace in case of sickness or loss of position. Call on our representative in your city, Mr. J, M. Bentley, at the office of Dunwoody & Cabaniss, Real Estate Agent, 357 Third St., or write direct to the com pany, or to J. St. .Tulien Yates, General Agent, 404 Aus tell Building, Atlanta, Ga. . ' Investigate us at any time through any one or through the Mercantile Agencies. ( The Standard Real Estate Loan Co., .... WASHINGTON, D. O. AN EXCITING DAT ON STOCKE NEARLY A MILLION 8HARE8 ARB BOUGHT AND SOLD DURING TWO HOURS’ 8ES8ION. NEW YORK. Nov. 7.—Tho excitement la tho speculation vu maintained today, aa la witnessed by tho transactions of nearly a million snares during the two hours' session. Tho Hat of different la* sues dealt In la an unusually long ona. thua testifying to the variety and breadth of the market The dealings In fact gava many signs of widespread buying fever, such aa breaks out in periods of a great bull market. It was stimulated by the roseate views of tho Industrial outlook contained in published reports of (treat orders placed for commodities, wholesale resumption by mills and sudden activity in commercial lines. These reports were borne out In part, by the more sober and detailed canvass of tho commercial agencies, whose weekly reports testified fully to the revival In trade. In case of some detailed reports, rail road orders on an enormous scale for new equipment and other outlay, there came specific denials. A lively affeet on the speculation was caused by the belief that the railroads of the country were em barked upon-a concerted attempt* to se cure hither freight charges. The tem porary Injunction granted against the en forcement of the order of the Interstate commerce commission for the reduction of Missouri river rates fed the eenvlctlon that railroads are to have a freer hand in fixing charges. Some effect on prices was made In the second hour by the extensive realising sales, hut new points of strength developing when the market dose great animation. aharp reduction In the ba predicted before the market ar ' :: . market was active strong. Total sales, par value. 61,240. United States bom The .. surplus wsa predicted clo«ed. although the - published The boi.. Total sales, par value, were unchanged . .. .. —_ Total sales stocks today ware flt.100 shares. NEW YORK STOCK LIST. Amalgamated Copper American Car and Fo American Car i * •7H nmn ivan i.Ot ton Oil • ««» American Hide and Leather prof... 19 American Ice Securities 17 American Linseed It American Locomotive .* v nt American locomotive * Amer. Smelting end I ... Pi American Smelting and Refining..., * “ * Reflnhig prsf...10S% nlng 1*414 h American Sugar Refining , American Tnhncco pref. Atchison pref Atlantic Coast Line Daltlmore nrd Ohio 1«.1% Baltimore nnd Ohio pref 8* Brooklyn Rapid Transit RH Canadian Pacific 1751 Central Leather M’- Central Leather pref. COTTON IS STEADY LOWER DECEMBER 18 ItyEAK ON DISAP POINTING CABLES—SPOTS CLOSE QUIET. LIVERPOOL spots clostd 8 03 NEW YORK spots closed 8-80 NEW ORLEANS spots closed 813-18 THE LOCAtTcOTTON MARKET. The Maoon ootton market yesterday closed quiet an0 steady at the following quotations; Good Middling - Strict Middling !» Strict Low Middling Low Middling •* •pot CetUn R M£.ment ^ Nov. T, 1908 *” 445 Range of Prices. Stock on Hsnd. Nov. V 1808 NEW YORK. NEW TORK. Nov. 7.—The cotton mar- kst opened steady at a 8*cUne of Ipplnts *- -V advance of S pole**. Deoemberbe- ■Ion houses/" Demand WBi^PPOmotod by tags jssrussfe "Th.r^r.lSuin. for ov.r th. -Mk. r.So'^.nrinrS.rjr.rp enough to supply buyers. Fluctuations were rather nerrow and irregular around the closing prices of last night during the middle.of the morning, ^he ootton msr. ket dosed barely steady with prices 1 to 6 RM.lSti'of'cotton »t y!« t oort. tojl.r war. 10 «»J tool.. aaaln«t M.MI t.lM l".t ,Ht an.t St,til bal,. laat »«•"• IS", th. wnrk <e"tlmat«il) ll0,W0 bjl.» Jf.)Ort 413,4X1 bale ]Mt walk and 111,111 baloa "'tmIy'. rfe.lpta .t Now Orl.tni wwa l5 &".« awfin.l 10.001 bal." Lot Mar and at Hourton If,HI bat,a asalnot 7.H1 bat., last rear. Spot Cotton and PutiirM. NEW YORK. Nov. T.-Bppt ontton ct(i.«d qulal: mlddlln« nplnnda 1.20; mld- dlln* milf 1.15! >.lt" none. Futures oneued end closed baraly Steady as follows: Op*i .. 99% Jersey 206 I CheanpenVa and Ohio 48% Chicago Great Western 7% Chicago and North Western lS^ti Chicago. Mil. and St. Paul 147* C.. C.. C. and 8t. Louis M Colorado Fuel nnd Iron ............ 4014 Colorado and Southern 45% January t.W . 1.94 9.87 »S!3f r f..v::::. , .:5SS irji May .............8^88 8.81 S.tl July* ,V.V.V.V.'.V.ViUT 8.81 fc.7R August 8.73 8.78 1.88 December 1.05 1.01 8.03 8.01 99% , , Southern Colorado and Southern 1st pref... Colorado and Southern 2nd pref.... ... . i Consolidated Gas 145% 11 Com Products 1914 11 ~ ‘ nd Hudson 17r ! RJo Grande Si Delaware i ! Denver and ' Frio .. Erl# 1st pref. Frit 2nd nrof. ....... General Electric .... Great Northern pref. ... Great /Northern Ore ctfe, ABOUT GEORGIA STATE BONDS CITY ATLANTA BONDS ATLANTA & WEST POINT R. R. DEBENTS GEORGIA R. R. STOCK AUGUSTA & SAVANNAH R. R. STOCK SOUTHWESTERN OP GA. R. R. STOCK WRITE TO • J. H. HILSMAN & CO. STOCKS AND BONDS ATLANTA, GA. H. Q. A. NASH, Pr.iid.nt, CHA3. NEVILLE, Vie. Pr.ild.nL H. G. A. Nash Audit Co., EXPERT ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS 203-204 National Bank Building, Savannah, Ga. Expert Accounting; in All ItB Branches. Railroad Bonds . _ . ^ . . nid A.k.4 Central of Oa. tit mort. t par C.ntlit CwitSi "of ”01 eon«dliriii^d' 1141 1(8 118 Central O*. lot Ine., 144S....... 84 BS CeStSI CM. 2nd IN. 1M» 48 48 cntni oi. iiiaii. b». * r.wnrla A B»nkln« 0* . IM J(< It.' R *' ljiniilnf‘ Co.',' 'i o£**oS' n i FC'k , w.;iiii::::18 E..l»Si n. R.. * nr.. J• • • }J Rr.bo.rd R. R. 8 t>r-.jltl--.- I. Atlanta * Writ Print {« SI, p | SI: « 5: 8:: 8 State of Georgia Bonds is IS Crackers. Farona sodas. •«. Singe- 7e. Assorted cakes. 1>e. Lumber Quotations at WHOLEdALi. * slsil® Grain and Provtslons. These prices are at wholesale and not Corrected by *B. It. Jaquts A Tinsley Co. coBj)-a«i4»3. whit. ...i jr. Carload lota. rithir'.arWe'd or bulk, n^de on applies- Mon. OATS—White dipped W No. 3 white 83 No. 3 white.. x * Specie' H^T- ipeclal quotations mads on Choice timothy 1.09 No 3 clover...., M Timothy and elovar mixed.. 81 Alfalfa hay 1.20 Bedding straw $8 BRAN—Pure wheat 1.10 FLOUR—PrlrSf BtoSr*finer *P*t! ’ }.on Ro^-al Owl, best patent I.IB Top Notch, first patent 1.1* MEAT.—Water ground Juliette •» MEATS—Pry eaJt rlhs 10 Brmked masts. other . sizes as named cotYon* sack.*.*' l* ■alt. B*ark strap BALT—lWMba^whlte ept! OfEltSB—Full cream ^ ,TR i!; u d»if Vt ^ 0A1 ■WSKS- TlMMW "i . 4* New Torkrrtlow.,...,414 COFFEE-Choir« Rio i! w 1! Common ,.t to 10 ArbueOFs roasted. 18.84 Medium M4 to 1 ire September 1. ?30l Consolidated ivcelnU ....; Fxports to Orest llrltaln.. Illinois Central .... * ' ‘rbnroueh Met. ::: i*»« A i<>« toil Intcrborough Met pref. 30 ! International Paper II 1 International Paper pref M International Pump 31 *< Iowa-Central 3IJ4 Kansas City Southern r'St Kansas City Southern pref 8XH Louisville and Nashville HUH Minneapolis and St. I<oula 41 Minn.. St{_P. and Sault St M 1*5 Mlssour* — Mlsrom StiP. am 3 Pacific •<» , Karsas and Texas 32K Missouri, Kansas and Texas pref... C7H National Lead Ms Now York Cenlrnl 1181a New York. Ontario and Western.... 4*14 Norfolk snd Westsm >... *1 North American 70H Northern Pacific 18114 Pndfie Mali 2!» Pennsvtvsnla ...l* 5, 'i pittshi*rg°c!«and*’fiLWuii::::::: *3^ Pressed Steel Car 84U Pullman Palace Car 172 Railway Stool Spring 4814 Rending .*. 1*7<1 Republic Steel pref *7*4 Rook Island Company 2«H Rock Island Company pref 4* Ft L. and San Fran. 2nd prsf IP St. Louis Southwestern it* St Louis Southwestern prsf 80 Sloan-Sheffleld Steel and Iron 78*4 Southern Pacific 11*14 Southern Pacific prsf. ............ Southern Railway 34H Southern Railway pref. 1114 Tennessee Copper 4414 Texas and Paelfie 2*14 Toledo. St tattle and West 3* Toledo. Bt. U and West, pref 8*y Union Paelfie 17*14 United States Rubber *1 United State* Rubber 1st pref 184 United States Steel ... K8J4 United Rtntes Steel pref 11*14 Utah Conner 48 Vlrglnln-Cnrollna Chemlrtl ......... W!4 'Mrgtnta-Carollna Chemical pref 112 isillP m Wabash pref. We*tlnghoua« Electric .... Western Union Wheeling and Lake Erie Wisconsin Central 27H Standard Oil 830 NEW YORK BONDS. IT. S. refunding 2s. reglitered I$*H tr, ft. refunding fa. coupon 104 TT. S. Sa. registered 100J4 U. S. Sa. coupon .'100U TT. S. 4s. riglatered 12014 IT. 8. 4*. coupon.... 1*1 American Tobacco 4s 7*11 American Tobacco 6s 10V< Atchison general 4s 10014 Atchl-on adjustment 4* Atchison cv. 4a 1(* Atlantic Coast Line 4a M Raltlmore and Ohio 4s. 100 rtilil-fore and Ohio 9%n 84U Rroolclvn R. T. c4. 4* 7*H Central of Georgia Is.... 10*% Central of tleorgla 1st nc *5 Central of Georgia 2nd nc 4* Central of Georgia 3d Ine 41. Chesapeake and Ohio 4*4* 1J4 Chicago end Alton *H* 7* Cb'cago. R. snd Oulncv new 4s Chicago. R. I. *nd P. R. R, 4a...... 7**4 Chicago, R 1. ft nd P. It R. col. 5«.. T8U ::::::::::::: 5x Cnlcmdo snd Southern 4s M Pelt ware and Hudson cv. 4a 1o;h Denver snd Rio Grande 4s M KU kt”.! 1 ?. ;;** .'tv ‘iriJj’■ Mrivi::u:t::::::: T-n::I.Ylll. IBS V«,h. unlflM 4. IM M.nbAtlxn ron«.l 5* ■ Minn Mil Re. Louli 4,. TJH 8hf.'.vr it &±a 8s;:; sa ?:x:: fea New Jersey Central gen. Is 1 *H Northern Pacific 4a Northern Tacjnc fa 7414 Norfolk and Western consol 5? Oregon Short Line rfdg 4a 9514 Penn. cv. 3*4*. 1515 Penn, conaol 4s 10*1 Reading gcne-sl 4s Kd Republic of rube Be 1$V Ft L. and Iron Moun. consol 5i,,..lll St. L. and Fan Fran. fg. 4« 7* pt. taut* Peiithwegtem cer.. it 77 Seaboard Air Line 4s MM Sotitnern Prelfic 4s 9?*4 Southern l*s^ifc 1st 4s Southern MB Tern. K* TO!edO. Ur. ton Urlon wsbieh i.t«..... inj wrc l .*rnr% take Erte’ii::::::::: JJh wteenny centrj 1 ^. ;;;;;;;^ 8b»Tf «z ’ 'J 4 . w .*".*7! :::-.iiU, ' r!teei n 2rd V 5i!!!i!!*.I!!!!!Ii!l.iol4 ,9i% Receipts end Export!. Rehefnts and Kxporf*. . , Consolidated net recelpte Export! to Great Britain SJ fi.1 Exjiorts to continent 38.941 Stock on*.hand all port! 107,600 Exports i Export! ... .1,140 .A 7* .... 710,882 .... 127 R71 ....1,04*.032 „ ►... 18,1ft Exports to Mexloe Price, Reetlpt!, Salt!. Stock. T PrlceJP e-t it Tsilea ist"' I W2->3| 9I3|1M*0* New Orleani J* 18-1«' 1*388' 188* . * 18-161 8286 Savannah ... I 18-13 *'.10 9.KB ’*ioi Hi i»>-i 1*478 *1**5 10181 *J*1tl 1171* 74413 “4ii* Interior Movement nnhla . . . . ... Louie Cincinnati .... Louisville . . Little Rock..., Prioe.iRects. ga’es.l Sick. 17811 1*001105487 1789 "— 1-18 Sit • }*"" Sill 1*0*11 •1110 71211 smolisisiB 8| 12814 408 LIVERPOOL. LDTERPOOT/. Nov. 7.—Spot cotton B ulet with price* 3 nolnte higher: Amer- •an middling fair 8.81; good middling B.IS: middling 5.01; low middling 4.*3j good ordinary 4.12; ordinary 3.92. The rales of the day were 8,000 hales, of which 100 bales were for speculation and export, and Included 8 *no hales American. Re ceipt! were 46,000 bales. In eluding 12,600 hales American. Futures opeiwd steady and closed quiet; American middling G. O. C.: Noyamhtr , dny-June run*-July July-August August-Septemher Rentember-Octoher Octobar-November Close. NEW ORLEANS. NKW ORLEANS. Nov.* 7.—Spot cotton closed qnlet, prices unchanged, middling 111-18. Sales on the spot were 800 hales and 950 bales to arrive. Futures opened quiet and steady at a decline of 1 point. The eeealon wan quiet and mainly devoted to evening up Knee over Sunday end the census bureau rs- liquidated port on ginning Monday. Loni more freely than shorts an< qusnee was that prices fell o .... stood 3 to 5 points under the level —*—*—*- closing. On the does the * the ronae- until their yesterday's dosing. On the dose the tone waa quiet and steady and prices showed A net decline of Sa4 points, Futtp-ee closed aa follows: November, bid 1.19 December, hid 1.74 S nuary, bid 3.71 bruary. bid * irch, bid* - bid U. M. NEWBERRYiCO., Successors to Ross McCullough Lumber Co, Rough and Dressed Lumber Wood—Pine and Oak LET US COYER YOUR HOUSE WITH CYPRESS SHINGLES We also deal an wood and carry both pine and oak. Our Prices are Right and Delivery Prompt Exclusive Dealers in Hard Wood PHONE 116 In Memory of Edmund Burke The Tablet at Bath Unveiled By the Amerioan Ambassador. (From the London Times, Oct. 23 ) A notable addition was made yes terday to the large number of hUlorla houses In Bath that are distinguish*J by memorial tablets. Mr. VVhltHaw 1 Held unveiled a tablet at No. 11. North Parade, which commemorated the fast that Burke, on hie frequent visits do tho city, reilded there. Tho American ambassador waa met on his arrival at' the Great Western Railway station by the mayor (Mr. Hodgson Miller) and tho mayoress, and a number of former mayors of the city, ami was driven through some of the principal atr-ja:* to the Guildhall, where ho waa pn- sented with an addresa of welcome. Mr. Reid said In hie reply that the Senator Bingham referred to in tho ad • dross waa supplied by the great Kirt- Hsh family of the Barings with «wj son-in-law. Lord Ashburton waa one nnd the see/md aon-ln-law had. by another marriage, two aons. who were not unknown In their public Ufa to day. One of them wee Lord Itovel- atoke, and the other, better known In their foreign service yedra ngo as Blr Evelyn flaring, would occupy a p«*r* nent place In history an Lord Cromer. (Cheers.) Another gentleman whose name waa not racorded In the address had been mentioned to him as being also a resident of Bath and an being buried there—Thomas Pownall, a name which no American could recall with out a feeling of gratitude. Onn of tho curious Incident* In connection with that day’s ceremony wa* thnt ho had heard It said that the authorship of the Letters of Junlu*. which had been settled by Macaulay In favor of Sir Philip Franola. was now to be proved In favor of Blr Thomas Pownall. and It wa* Mated that they were *ent through Francl*. (Laughter and oheera.) At the oonolu*lon of Mr. Whltelaw Reid'* apasch he wa* *nt*rlalncd at luncheon In the banqueting room. The mayor propoaed tha health of the American ambn»«ador. The • ambassador, r**pondlng, said that tha air became almoat oppressive to an American when he reallaed tnn antiquity of -Bath. The Baxon Chron- ■ .i ik. a! ■ "arrlnvi"" meant that politic* had nothing to do with moral*, or merely that Hhnkcs- peare had nothing to do with politic*. It I* not *o far a* Mackintosh wont, who considered Burke “wlthoua paral lel In any ate or country, unless with Cicero nnd Lord Bacon"; or mo far a* Lord Morley went, who. aeaklng an other standard of comparison, pro nounced him your ‘'greatest man since Milton.” There 1* an estimate In another pltce by this last accomplished states man and man of letters whirl: 1 would Ilk* to quote. He said that Burkes "I* one of the greatest names In tho history of political literature. No ono that ever lived used the general Idoas of the thinker more mien sufully to Judge the particular problem* of tin* statesman. He was one of tin- groat masters of the high and difficult art of elaborate composition." Thnt last. Indeed hn« been one of the complaints airnlnat him. Even now wa hear occasionally from somo pnrila- e.a no doubt have their affect nt tho moment, hut are found a few years Inter ns dry a* Inst year’s prairie grass and as unreadable aa a table or logarithms, that Mr. Burke would never do for tho practical hnunn or commons of these times—he la too rhetorical nnd ornate. It mny bo ao; It Is not for me to defend tho lasto or tha day In political discussions. And yet what could be terser, wnat could go more directly Ilka sn arrow, to the henrt of tho matter In hand. ( than many of th leplgrnmmntlo aon- ...l.t.l. ■■.rlnbln MliriOht OVef wa hear occasionally from some pnrua- in ma protracted mentnrv authority, whose own speech-. jAiuorlcon colonist*, ana lug prmraci u nt h.h and unflinching realsUnce to the high office. He waa a party man. and moat useful and highly prized an such, but not What the managers called a safe party man; and ho had tho de fects of his oratorical tcmporainnnt. It Is not necessary, here and now. to dwell on these; but It ought always to ho sold when they aro mentioned, that even his fallings leaned to virtue’* side. ITe shone In every field wIuto hlj« abilities were exerted, and l< ft n great record 1rv many—In isconomlcal re form, In maintaining tho principle* underlying the Revolution of tfl**: in tender cure for tho land of his birth, tiro winter wncui crop nu c nnd tho church of hla mother; In ro- damagod by Sought caused »n uu» t ..v» ■utnniA iiiu-i* to flia reactionary rolKv of more than 1c. per bushel In wiimt Ul*ViJl 1 n.iifru I,* inlustlco In India. I price* on the local exchange today, and of the ministry, to final quotation* showed net gains of lie and to the - destructive P nd.ncb« of |D •. tho French revolution. Hut I may be - - ---• • pnfdoned for thinking that tho highest aervicn of hla whole Illustrious career, the most courageous at. the time, the wisest, the most fnrnoelng. was found in hla outspoken sympathy with lit IT SCARE WHEAT VERY STRONG FINAL QUOTATIONS SHOWED NET QAIN8 OF MORE THAN A CENT A BUSHEL, CHIfAGO. Nov. 7.—Fears that tho an- tiro winter wheat crop has been ssrlou-iy » me. pnri 1 Corn, oats and provl&lons were si M strong.* and unflinching measures which ...» American Revolution. . ^ . „ No otiier mnn In England, hardly one oven In America, aaw quite no clearly aa Edmund Burke that after an unwise ministry had forced tho colon- 11stn Into a long war In defence of tho ‘English principle of no tnxntlon with out representation, tha only pnsalhlo outcome of the war by which the real England could succeed was an Ameri can victory. Yet no other deprecnteJ tho struggle ae much; no other at the outset sincerely desired to praaervn tho authority of parliament and tho Just —I .rnn.li IfA AVI'fl H 4IY111 - Whoat— Deo. . Mny . July . Corn- Dec. . May . July , )eta— Dec. . May . July*. Si?J 3.»0 Hubbard Bros. A Co.'s Cotton Letter. L NKW YORK. Nov. 7.—Llverpoolrefused to follow the edvenco despite the opening of the Lancashire mill* on Monday, ad* varying 1 to 3 points less than expected. Our .rnarxst showed steadiness until the lest hour, when some little realising sad hedge sailing caused a small dsdlns. Tha market was quieter, tha buyers of yester day not following up their purchases, but they did not sail. No change Is to be In tha temper of tho trad*. They tue to feol bullish on tho return iSdence since the election, which le Up the strength of the flock msr- The movement of the crop Is verv '• b A l A ginneis report or snout 5,000,• •« is expected on Monday. Weekly Bank Statement, NEW YORK, Nov. 7.—Th* statement of the clearing-house basks for the week (five ders) rnow that the banks hold 630.379,971 more than th* requirements of the 25 per c*nt reserve rule. Thle Is a dscreaso of 61.309,1I0 In tho proportionate rash reserve as compared with ls«»t week. iThe statement follows: kSSiu':::::::::: iIimIim; Circulation 83.5l4.lt tagal tenders 7*.*»<>1 " ' 1 l.e a. 73.9S* isi.ifk ,RP8 179JMJ s a» Ex-U. 8. deposits 33.893,1 The percentage of actual l__, clearing-house bsrks at the dose of bua< (nets yesterday 39.48. The statement of t anks and trust com panies of Greater New York, not members of the rl^srlng-hou-e. shows that these Institution* have aggregate deposits of lt.S77.230.298; total cash on hand. 1103.- 179,700. and loaas amounting to 6972,968,- Cotton Seed road station In Georgia. - ton at any rall- Icles recorded the death of a "grieve of Bath—ths Snxon predecessor of the modern mayor—In th* year 908. so that Hath had a record of more than 1,000 year of continuous municipal gov ernment. (Checrn.y Tha company then want to the North Parade, where, at tha request of the mayor, Mr. Whltelaw Rsld unveiled the hronso tablet' orented at No. 11. henring tho Inscription: "Here dwelt Edmund Burks; born 1729. died 1797. Mr. Raid'* Speech. . Tho occasion which you are honor ing with your presence today I* of a kind long alnco familiar to you. What a story of the groat Georgian and Vic torian tlmoa might In fact bo recon structed from the tablets In memory of former residents, which you have already set up In the street* of Rath! Your town has bean a haunt of great man; th* vory air Is filled yot with the shadows of the mighty. Foremost In your civic record comes naturally your old member, the masterful Chatham, and hard after his yet more masterful son. Then you have commemorated the stay among you of Britain’s greet- est asllor, Lord Nelson, and of British soldiers who won Imperishable renown In two remote continents, Lord Clive In Asia, General Wolfe In America. You have chnrlshed likewise the mem ories of residents of gentler fame. Here on this very North Parade, as you tablets show, dwelt Goldsmith, whom to this day all men love, snd Wordsworth, whom all admire. On tho Bouth Parade 'a s^n your tribute to the beat novelist Rrltaln had to that time produced. Rlr Walter Bentt, while there le place for another to one of th* greatest men of letters she ever produced, flamuel Johnson. Yoor other novelists range from Henry Fielding and ane Austin to Charles Dickens, and your poet* from George Crahbe to Thomas Moore and Walter Savage Landor. while with Impartial 'h«na« you h«v. plarM «l» for O.lnuborourl'. th. »rtj»t: Quin, th" aetor. »nd H.r«rh»1l th« Mtronomtr. And y»t. ffrntl.m.n nf B"th. In "II thla brilliant »«l"*v you h»v« left th" irmt.it to th« l""t. H" mor" nr»rly -our own. to". th»n many or th« ath«r". It w"« h.r* h. found hi" devotrd wlf". P«rh»n« th" mo,t fruit- ful porlod of hi. nmt nnhllo e»r"»r h* «p-nl •• th" r.pr.MnUtlV" In lh" houi" of common" for your n*"ro"t n«lfhbcr. lh. noonle of Brl.tol H.ro h" cam* habitually for r«»t and *n- Joym.nt; and h*r« h. cam", too, wh.n h. knaw tha «h«dnw of death waa upon him. fn th'« v-rv hmi«« ho «o«nl lh" r»cth. —h'ch any .cllylty wa. |.rt him. and ha only quitted '• for the eer'-o*' and beautiful deathbed at Beaeonafmld. Did I go too far In ratine him th# greatest vou have yet commemorated? Ts Is not so far ae Mseaolav went. Me said quite slmplv that Edmund Rttrfce *w#s "the greetest man then living” We may be aura the emi nent hletorien end almost omnleelent ■critic forgot neither of two other great men then living. William Pi»t c.f Charles James Fog. when he deliber ated eh oar that snnerletlve. It Is not #0 far ye Grenville wen» when be s^td that Burke ts to polities what Shake*n^are le to the moral world. 7n eonsfd-rlng that enlortum. however. T must confess I have Iften been per- Th« on« UndV"orT.Va^noth.r™. 0 i| , h, | " ln ” , r to "r" • 'nmp 1 ": "a.ntl«man aay-Ainerlc» IP J™, . “ whll.t wo ,loaa an pn object worth flghtlna fw. Cjjr . y nUr nne astor« did "t length! talnly It ^ again® open ihelr fives to the m-hushnndrv of brat way of gaining them or again. |r | jUBf , pp Thfty /ounr1 t h„t the tyran, "Nobody alien persuade »«•. ''9» n jG ® . ft f^ people could of nil tyran whole people oro concerned, that net n i__ *i. ft bn rndumd." 'Then hi I of lenity are not means of concilia- . ministry that, whllo re! Hon." Or apaln lok. lh. pr.jni.nt ;7,T n , " ,,c ^ 1 nTim"'lulhoilly of tho aenteneo Into which he put lha wholn * * i,nd navrrths- phlloaophy of hla opposition to the ^ of the crown, I’renfh Revolution; "Whenever a aep- K | Vf ' n w BUPCr .a„|veiy to various English nrntlon Is mndo between liberty nnd * ™m Un ltl<s nnd also to the Walsh, all Justice, neither Is In my <>PInlon' the rl'ghts of English subjects. Are Or again. In objort ng to the employ mlonleta. ho demanded, no ment of Heaslap soldiers much English as the Welsht By ouch list: colonists: I nnX "l^r* ho cams to regard tho atrugglal I have not yet learneda delight In fitad. J ps rebeUton, but a chrll war. In Ing Fort Knlphauoon In the heart or -i-- tho HrltlHh dominions." Or, to luko a man many tencea which aprlnklo alinnkt every page of his speeches. Take a very familiar example: "It looks to mo nar row and pedantic to apply tho ord - tn« prr^urm-. u-.... .... - nary Ideas of criminal Justice to this J n MMMiMtBt!!in* but when el'io « *• •« *53! r. ThSWSSuSSSftaJ? uh..- rl'yVi't" of the crown." if" evon eflmlt. ted tho precedents, both on those is- a -a M I.. lha anlAnlha frtP tflfX- iv lion wunom , nf";iT'"winy‘ u'o' "n oT^cTn , rto’;or,tc^t.ho H n r «<’ trssussrssJ! ■ toftcfl fault of loo much rhclorlc. con dcn.crt Into fewer ond more concnt i« Icnpcrt, ho franaiy roroani.rn .c», ; c. |. h" pul It In luflW.hlia phraa", tha _ 0 rklo* ahlrla wi o.aarllnn of the tltlo wnuM bo tho Inrt Burlap, of llalit It nf th" "lilt." Whllo thtre waa "till a «ilot .iamanil, but in rhnnee to draw back, he "leaded with ....TT 1110 annul ■ final example, what could hotter ex pose the Imbclllty of tl*.a propoanl to treat privateering as piracy, and sor- vice In the colonial nrmy as troason, and to enforeo against both, whora op portunity offered, tha pennltlea In the statute of Henrv VIII. than his na nni n rmruiim, "7 ,1- which Englishmen In tho oolonlos fought for old English rights, and In airtnln* tho«o rlalila fnr thomaolvoa mail" thorn b.no,forth forav.r aacura fnr KnylfllWl, ton. , . . . What Mr. nurka rqn.tantly »"ii*ht In tho Amcrlo.n huolnc.., whllo It won po««lhlo. wn. rcconelllotlnn, Hla mo., tnipnrt.nt ull.r.ncn flurlna Iht ■ Intutn of Honrv VIH, innn nm ful phrn.c: "Thoy tlilnk tha dafaati In America con bo componaalatl by tha triumph" of Tyburn." . If lllnmlnntlna nnnh"« llko tne.o >|Ifl or nlnrv eonlnlno are a fault In polltlenl discussion, may - - •— not too common nnn r«nsnin oranirr are a rauu ip 1'""“'■“ - powerful or persuasive plea for peace, are at least a fault not too wmmj" A mon t h A f ( a r the momentous docla- among the publlo men of our day* — J " Open. High. Low. Cios. . 1:0014 1.0114 1.0014 1.015* . 1.04 1.05 1.04 l.or, . . 99 1.00 IST4 1.00 <i«i 62 : 61% iil ill ill 4lU 4*U 4*H 61H 8064 BOH Oats— Dec. May July*. , . ^‘Jan. 1 *? .Til.0114 18.18 16.05 16. May . . .15.9214 16.07)4 15.90 16. Laru— Jan. Mny . . . Short RlbSw- :»7H 9.40 Jan. . . . 8.4714 8.8114 1.45 f.80 . May . . a 8.65 1.6314 1.16 8.80 ‘ DRY GOODS. NEW YORK. Nov. 7.—The dry goods market closed firm today with a gar-d nndsrton# manl/rsted. Dress lines wore firmer and wrr« sought Tor February ship ment. Fine whit* goods, ‘iota plain and fancy, war# firmer and In hotter cog. Pen*alee advanced and colored good* t*i9 —ui— .1.1.1. wero iio. re re low. NAVAL*STORB8. CHARLESTON, S. C.. NoV. 7.-Turfl lentlno aloady at Rosin st^a«ly, junto: A, B. C. D. l,.81: R.9.BM744: F, ‘.8714; O. if. 3.17*4425; I. 2 *5; if. i li; M. I.lli N. 4.U; W. d., «.i»: w W. 8 15. -i AavAnNaH. Ga.. Nov. 7.— 1 Turpentine firm at 3314as4; sales 1,202; receipts1 1 shipments 4.009. Rosin firm: stirs 3.188; receipts 3.822: shipments'9,661; stock 145 - 450. Quote: A. II. C, D and E. 2.*a; F, 2.*214a8S: O. HlliO; H. 8.40: T. 3.90; < 4.30; M. <.25; N, 5.15; W. 0., 4.10; W. W« 9.18. Now York Money Msrkot. NEW YORK. Nov. 7.—Money on call nominal. , . . „ , Tim# loan* strong but dull: no days Sf 10 day* 814*314; • months S»i«4 j>#r eon*. K in« mrrmntllo paper 4a<H por esnt. rllng exchange otsy with actual business In hsnkora bills at 4.*3.88sMl 61 for 80-dsy bills and at 4.65.15*4.65.70 ton '^Commercial hill* 4.8314M.6IH. ' Her silver 60. Mexican dollars 45. long debate.* from lha Btamp Act ♦« tha Declaration of Independence, was entitled "Conciliation with Amorlos.” Moony tho publlo wnm "ur . ^ ||on k , wro ,. ; "Wo «r« jlejH In Would that morn d"b»to» woro ton Wnofl nM u n nwo how II will ho. J ornato and rhetorical ■ »fl»r lh]" Jon- „„ no , «ow i con wl.h aiicocaa to vlncln* foohlnn—I will not any In jrouf )hnM w hoaa victory lo to ooporota parliament, for It would ha uobacnm; fr0 „„ , lnrg . , n q noh |, port of our inn In ma lo otprcoa nny opinion oW>ut , mnlr ,. , tm |M , rt0 j w |,h auonau to thnt; but parhnpn I mny vontnro to oppra„|„ n nnd nbaurdltK* aay, would thnt Ihoro worn moro or ahrar m.nlnt Innhlllty to oup- them In our honaoa nf conar«.al __. porl Inluatlco waa lha kev tn hla whola Vr. nurk" lllintratcd oonaplcoonaly, In Amcrlrnn affair"—lo hi" In thla vary halfhhortmod. another w hnln conduct lnd,od In avory public quality not too common amon« our n ,, thl , „Hoh make, hla publlo man—howavar It may ba with rt |, ruM |„ n , of old Elahlcnth conlurv ynura. II" "corned to pandor to tn« a vivid and/ vital part cr tha proludlco" of 111" conatltiicnl", nr how ]H*rnturo you chorl"h In lh" to ovary au«t of chanuln* nnlnlnn, In, Twontlolh contnry. Their «r'at valuo ordar to hold Ihdr vote". Kvcn whan WB< , nfl „ th „ h . oonalnntly looked drat o candldalo In flrlaiot ho tn"J to cndurlnq prlnolplf" for llaht on pnlna lo maka It elenr that ha would cnrr#n t problem". That wna the not raomtnlto their Inalruclinna na al- ornwn in* trait In tha wonderful equip- way" hlndlnff hi" action. "Tour rep- m , n( which mnk"» him tho rrcotcat rc"«ntntlvo ntv»a you." he cvclqimcq. „„ tnr m. country, "nd II" moat not hi" Indtiatrv only, but hla Jut*- .pjcndld writer nn nubile affair";—the mant! and ha batraya. In*tc»d nfaarv- nnty a critic of the day acid. Inar you. If ho aocrinco" It to; par who had combined lha Iwn quallli"" "pinion,” La tar, arhan thla .ottltodo — - ci.™ n„ch mA ever wnn iin'i cmnninnj nm imi usurr, w - In like perfection sines Cicero. Rush Mted discontent, h'* told them rnnk j, # y, y enntemnorary ludf- ic cn«y did not permit Ihelr members m< , n t an d hy that of posterity. Tn nn to act unon a very enlarged view or ranch nf great men snd great deed*— “ * Rnseherv has aegrsao cneir n**i»*n»t simswrur* oonnoi, m the history nf Into a ennfueed end sniffling hustle nf th „ wor j4 up to that time since the local agenny. He knew efrnrts had cnmtng nf Christ ..da ic. iniuro him In tnrlr eyes. r hnv* nnt irml ■oral IgemTy. nr mirw ■ ■' Tnnung nr r.nnsr. been made to Inlure him In their eyes, j have nnt rnsnilaned what many may but "the use nf character Is tn be a nnw cnr.rider Ills highest claim nn ynur ■Mela era In it calumny.” ”1 could not grateful rememberance. He • the anthr.p shield against ‘ A,, nm n nf tha suecesafu! Imperial nn’lny nf Great have served ynu aa I have dnnt. e Rrlletn. The sblost Imeerlallst of today proudly added to th* eleetnra. and B(| | Bfatt m#vra rtnsrly nr oom- court you, too. I canvassed vou tnmugn |, r rbrnslvelv than Rurk* d!d, almost sx- vnur affairs and not ynur persons. R ctty at eonturv and a third ago. Let You must look tn the whole tenor of me read his outline: .... , ynur member*, conduct.” It proved In hold of th, colonies Is In the close the end too much tn hope fur. even wiliArfS hSuJ^ r In a eltr 'weighs FfWIewg, snd sm protection. The»e Ilka fjurke. Yet Brt«tnl may well he #rf u #B which, though light as atr. ere proud of tha wisdom that ehoea Burke u atrnng as links of iron. T-ct tha eolo- as Its representative during that part n'es always Vccp the Me® of their elvfl of his nubile service which time has I 0 ?* 1 rtVh r ws*ln^admlrlna *th’e flne end nn 1nrt * ,,n4#f hosven will he of power to Join with us In admiring the flneen 1 |Mf thrm from th#lr p„t calm dignity with which h* accepted lgt | t .^ nnc* .understood that your gov- hla final db>tnle«al. Ifc rejeteed thit emreent may ho on# thing, end thefe the tustke of his course, whether on prtvilsfes another: that tho«c two thins* to Ireland or America, was no 1onr*r may exist without any mutual relation: . .- a. mi.H i ..11, A the rcm*nt l< rone: the cnh»'lf»l» to Tone- Hardware—Wholegal*. 1 ROPB—Manila. 13c; 8es«l. So: cotto* ,0 pr "v 1 m.APKa. "o. r.r ib. IRON—J'.tuo par Ib. baa.) Swa4. «H« I b^o»I—Horsfc 64.68 to 14.10 kog; mule, >h”A« 7I.» tc 64.76- \ BUCKETS—PI'flu. 63.08 do*.; whlto o*-. dar. thro; hops. 14.00 MfAlNB—Trace. 64 to 61 doe. GUN POWDER—Per keg. Dupont eraeli fMEUft sack. Wj5g-_fC,lnt*d. 11.30: cedar. |lti HHGVEI.H—17.00 to >U per do*. CARDS—Cotton. 64.50 psr dcs. Gandy Stick candy In boxes. TI4a Htlrk candy In barrels. 7a. Grocers. Mixed, pall 714c. Cream mtxrd candy in pads, 10*, •h City Bonds. Maoon • pa. ]« 1« Macon I pa. t»H JOT 3 .onrer may exist witnom any muruai relation in MM. "No." ho oartalmad. "tho tka o-m-nt ja j»?«;jh» o^aflon.laJoan. rh»rpaa oroln.l m. ora all of nn» kind, SSf-JSS, JZZ rti l!i‘ &TT! iZ, to cnargos againsr urn nil III «m»-t nmu, that I puehod the principle* nf general justice end hencvolsnca ton far. far ther than ri rsntfona policy would warrant, and farther than the opinion nf many weald gn along with me. fn every accident which may happen through life. In naln. In tn depression, and distress. 7 will call to mind this accusation and be mmfnrt- ed.” If h|* Inftv ^hsds takas any cognizance now of Tinman affairs he mav read what theao communities them*ctv»s think nf that teewrattnn ’n the Brtstnl statue nnd the n*th table. •and * dlVaol u 11 on/ As Inng as you have w!*<V.m tn Vee-* the sovereign author ity of this rnantry as tho sanctuary nf liberty, tho sacred tsmele consecrated to ot»r common faith, whe-ovrr the chosen race and sons of Eairimd worst!* free dom. they wtb tom theti The mnr# they multiply,, Qw more rn.ia vou wilt he vs: the m«reurrdent»v tFey love ll* ertv. th# mor# nsrfmt will he fheir chonisnco. . . . DfPr-incni thla parttcipnllnn of Deaden, and Ww ..... ”1 ‘ V'VIVlIaL hro.k th. S5 h""d whi.h .JOnJI; ! s%s ttLST* !TS SB mi'T Sf'now VSEB ef the rTril-h'constitution, which. Infused ent and ***£*«• the empire, evsa down to tho mlauteol Th# policy thus outlined was rojoeied by th* monarch of tho day. with disas trous results. It *vas aooepfed with forvor mm fidelity by his grandtlauKhter and great-wrandson. Under lham tha «h Umpire has grown to dc*erve. far mor# fully oven than when It was uttered, the familiar eulogy by tho great Massa chusetts senator: ”A power which has dotted ovsr th# surface of the wh<A# globe with her po«*#**lons and military posts, whose rnomtng drum-beat, follow ing the sun end kesplnx company with the hours, circles tho earth with one con tinuous and unbroken strain cf the mar- ttai airs of England.’’ Tho earth Is still circled with those, but now also with swootor strain* those rising from th* common language, common Institutions, and common atms and aspiration* of a reconcile 1 roe*, eairylng civilisation to tho remotoot parte of th* earth, and mak ing mor* and more for unlvtrsal peace. I hnv# only one thin* to add. The colonists whom nurko befriended were after ell but a frehl* folk, lei's than three millions, scatter*! alnnc ,l -- eastern fringe nf a continent with t ocean on the one hand and a straw wilderness oa the other. Th«r have since cvcmpwad that continent and stretch#.! out in slthor dHarisphere to the Islands of the seq. : her* on Rurke’s threshold, to utter RRSiMB ricna. in revor- ttlMld* to th> lurke'e t t end In