Twice-a-week telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1899-19??, April 09, 1907, Image 7

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TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1SC7. THE TWICE-A-WEEK TELEGRAPH FIRST JSFS EXUUiiiEB TIE rn U8 >X, Apr! DUVS Or BW!< CLEARINGS FOR MARCH Hank ex at n-»r/»!( cities ia t‘:i • Un't^d -States a-s reported for M^rehbyR O. D'-.s <t Co r».f! ■* , t heavier s*tt!t*m*nt* tbr-J i^a th- hank* than in any priced in;? year, total ex h%r:' % for rh'* month b;in? 4U.72M 0 * :«*3. an in.Teas* of 12.5 percent, over March last y»-»r avl 17.2 per <**$.*it over \I irch l£)5. Tne-ear* substantial Tains and testify to the larc® volurn of tr-*'.** in nil w<*:ir n< New E vtrian*! cities. Central Western anil far Western cities le.vl in the j-*rr rU*£** of increase, but ther- ar»* good grains at the South and at P.udflc Coast ico. Ti Fion were rer y with t be discu ►ther cou f;."* Jnr.-ir.'.-e excrJ- d the on of Coromis- ent. and > th^* sec- s un- doter points, while in th- 111 Idle Atlantic . increase cotpp »rcd wi a 1: st ye'ir. owii ]« a In all * '-Cols there is a larj-r c b.nk settlements at New York City, ami the either of th-* t’»ro p.eredincr years, the first i B ** r <*n and Chic :r» also re:*ort substantial r The activity *hown at runny of the import* MM Ve Atlantic and Central YSVt*»rn Stire* U the improve meet r.:>te l in the South A?lnn*;c States. X*: f * Orleans reports a small loss, and w.il- there is a larj-* tr - n at most of the P*oi3c Coast points, the increase at Sah Fraocis.o is very small Comparison is made below of hank exchanges by sections covering three years; r.Io the average daily flares for Murch and the tlire- preceding months: omitting New York City, th~re is olva small fly to the fact that Philadelphia ag’-in report* a r March Stock market liquidation swelled vo'isme of bink darings was heavier than lu xea-e at New Y‘-rk City for several months. C', as do Pittsburg* St. Louis and Cincinnati. nfarturing centers in New England* the ft most satisfactory f-ature of tuc report; aLso it m • 037 13 )j. 77 » 11*1 I 4 ! 4 ! - P.O. + 13.G 1035. I3.il 1.438 P.C. +li.O t’Ofi ■»n b( U> th The matt r r was presented of the would-be immlgra «!*., »#* 2-5; »!i liiO Si*13 *+■ -’.5 4 ILL -ft! >.7 -f -q 83<>.25) > Jj 2 m n ;i 5li.i3i.0lJ 1/23 >2?77 5 *7 £5 .1)3 ‘ -yj + 10.4 +24.7 +11.5 +21.4 +3LI +45.8 FT^i'j r.mO. :>5 "A -fir. J s;.r» •? +‘2tJ) + 13.3 •8 J 77,23*. isJ> X.571.4*1.497 +1^5 S1 ^ ,332,075,2J l +17.2 $1=1.30^.000 +17.* $10^.262.000 + 21.7 4 -lA»S.i» KJ + l«i.ts U2 7,70*5.0 JO — i'l 475.3 J +21.8 a Japanese minister and he ad vised them that the course of the United States authority was in accord with the agreement b'tween the two countries and hence satisfactory to his Government. When they report ed they had been compelled to come to the United States fn search of food, tio advised them to apply to the Japa nese minister to Mexico for relief. Commissioner Sargent has been ad vised that about 500 Japanese Ihbor- or.s have recently left El Paso, going both East and West, and It Is stated that they will try to And admission Into the United States at unguarded points along the international line. SI isjpjTUQ fJ I $ \ ij ktli * hi 11 ^ U r|ip^50"fi^nn nnjn llia'noiUSiiJsviD OILII TV % 1 $3.*»?L*M.1<M Ne .v YurieUu/ H,-iW.277.H03 Unite I SUt •* $U.Ul.VS9U65 Average dally: Wirh y-irury 5ri.Pi.;iv) January 577.jji.Ojj Ia the South Atlantic States there Is stTl some Jrr^mlarity, but nt mo*t of the important ' cities exchange* r>how &n ln<*r» .--*e over both pr-ce-iing years. At BaUira:*re, Washington and Richmond there is a considerable increase, but nt Norfolk. Atkzzra. Augusta. Macon and Jacksonville, all Important c*-nt*»i^, the gain i«* larje, sho»vinga good trade at distribu tive points. The figures aro gii’en below in detail: M %VCIT. w«*n.o<rtoa ... lUrti « » *.! A ura< C t\ I T tot; $117.4 ’-WO , J7ii 21.9 *1.718 o.iai.tn 2.:«:.57s 53)«’. *‘J ) KW!.H3 13. <5 !3*.'.*Vl 2,VM.in i.uv;»7 Sa. Atlantic.. *i>iaitlod frjru toloL r. o. 10)5. p. n. ri- 7.5 $10+0; J.117 + 1J.0 + 7.*J 21.3) HI +-M t> + S.:i 2i.i3;.*n,j +2 \ —II * 802: 751 +45.7 — i * *4. : »7*;':t77 +vr; — A 9 12.'.02^»7 +L *.5 + IM M.UVaH +J.1.0 +1L8 8 . r».M7 + 4.5 +2i*!> 2,271.3)) +:« 3 — 0.1 •J72. r >"7 +it -i (W07-7D7 +2 '* '1 + 6.6 S-J7.0JJ.JuI +2 - - Tellegiraiplliins! By BRIDGES SMITH. And now they say that If we wculd eat less we would live longer. Science says we eat too much. Smart men who have studied up, and experimented ar.d tried it on the dog, have discover ed that the real cause o' our dying so early is that we overfeed. Where we new get away with three square meals a day, one light one is only necessary. One says we should cut out breakfast altogether, and about noon have a light luncheon of some denatured cereal and a drink of water: another says leave off supper, but. If you must have It, drink thin soup and another glass of water and, if you feel compelled to have something else, add a toothp’ck And they say It. and say it seriously, that If a man will restrict himself to this diet for a few years he can easily live to be one hundred years old. You may hate the wan next to you. but Its all rieht now And after awhile when some light eater wipes his Anger on his handkerchief ar.d moves off with his mouth full to chew it ns a cow does her cud others will follow, but if you love barbecue, you will linger and get another piece with the skin on, or another rib that the cook hid for his own tooth. Nearly all tho diseases, these scien tific men claim, are caused by the quantity and quality o' food we eat. Every mouthful, no matter what, is more or less inhabited by bacteria or germs that knaw into our vitals: that if & census was taken of our interior department the population would go into the millions. Atlanta has recently passed o.n ordinance condemning milk that has more than 100.000 bacteria in a given amount, and ail the dairymen kicked against it because they said they couldn’t produce nrlk with less than 500,000, and bless goodness! we d'dn’t know there was any at all in good milk. Now Dr. tviley says he has restrict ed himseif to meat once a day, and very little then. If he couicj get next to one of thes’ Georgia br.r’oecues one time, he'd change his diet. It might be meat once a day, but he’d cat enourh of that thirty-pound shoat at one sitting to last him a week. I would like to gather some of the«e scientific men who are searching everything we eat and drink for bac teria. and who are devoting their lives to finding cut how little we should cat. and how long we can live without oa<ing—I would like to gather them around a Georgia barbecue Just one time and see what they world do. I'll bet a mule that they would try to ur.do all they have done and conclude, that In spite of bacteria and all sorts of germs, a Georgia barbecue onco a week, or at least onco a month, is ne- cesary for man's existence, whether he lives long or not. Udii jin FIGURE MS GONE THE COTTON MARKET. Weekly Interior Cotton Towns. thus far for the season have been 3,Sk7 922 against 3,594,140 last year. Stocks at the seaboard and the 29 ... , .leading Southern interior centers have NEW lOi.K, Apt*! 5.—The following is ■ decreased during the week 126,738 the motement of spot cotton at the lead- i )a ! es against a decrease ^tiring the Ing interior cotton towns for the week ending Friday. April 5: NEW YORK April 7.—The s furni. kings and decorations of the of the late Stanford White was pleted today, the receipts of th being 577.935 and the total of tl tire sale reaching $125,803. The Important article sold today t sample of the Grand Gobolln tapestry, which brought $10,500. CYCLONE CAVORTED NEAR CRAV COLUMBUS, Ga., Ap reached Columbus J storm approaching in flercene«s ford Ala. yesterday afternoon, i through portions of Russell and Counties Alabama, and crossing into Georgia, did considerable damage Gentian, in Muscogee County. A i Baptist church nt Crawford, Ala., completely destroyed. The same build ing has been twice dynamited by un known parties the result It is believ ed of factional differences In the con gregation and each time the damage to the structure has been repaired. Tho residence of Lemuel Wynn a planter in Lee County, was destroyed and even the furniture was torn to pieces. That jin one was injured there seems re markable. Near Gentian. Ga.. several outhouses were blown down, many trees were uprooted and damage was done grow ing crops. So fpr as knawn, no one at nil was. Injured during the progress of of the storm. ’ TOWNS— 16 JX o L £ Shipments. •f. rf M Stock. Albany . . . 31181 10 .... 1724 ! Athens . • . 37311277 30 sos7 : Atlanta . . . 1011-16 31I1C07!.... 12634 I) fen ham . . 22o! 42l.... 1729 j Charlotte. . . 11 1714 220 .... Columbia . . ..... 3G1T414 lGS-l 1 1 Columbus. Ga 10ii 132 915 aio 121"-8 Colnm.. Miss. .... 171 6031 I Da'Ins . . . . 47 287 633 i Knfaula . . . 247 76 1205 j Greenville . . 13311317 3265 Greenwood . . 2C7 57 si 1799 Helena .... 173912172 9724 ! T.ittle Rock .. 10 3-16 4612063 r, TT . 36076 i Macon . . . 10% 402 SI 2067 1 Meridian . . . son 588 6290 ! Montgomery . 10U 937 421 42 12343 Nashville . . . 10% 199 472 $13 | Natchez.. . . 232 42 8528 Newberry . . 51 888 i Raleigh . . . 10% 85r 299 ....i 696 j Rome . . . .|.. ! 487 3 >2 ....i 4213 1 Relma . . . .] 130 32!) I 18-,.I Shreveport . . 10 799 2172 175' 113°5 VJcksbiirc . .! 40S ; 1991I ...J 18758 Yazoo City ,.| 73| 463] ....! 5416 corresponding period last season of 103.692. Including stocks left over at ports and inferior towns from the-last crop and the number of bales brought into sight thus far from the new crop, the supply to dale is 12,446 475 against 9,973,149 for the same period last year. SENATOR P~TTUS PROTESTS AGAINST APPOINTMENT « WASHINGTON. April 7.—Senator RcBus, of Alabama, has lodged with the President a protest against tho ap pointment of Oscar It. Hundleys to be n Federal district Judge i'; tbat State. After seeing the President, tho Sena tor said that he did not regard Mr. Hundleys ns fit for the place and that l ine-tenths of the men of his own par ty were against him. Hundleys’ ap pointment has not been formally an nounced at the White House, but it is understood that tbc President has prac tically made up his mind to appoint him Liverpool Cotton Statistics. LIVErtPOOL. April 6.—Following are the weekly cotton statistics: Bales. Total sales of all kinds 37.000 TotAl sales of American.../ 33.000 English spinners’ takings K3 ono Total exports .' 18 000 Imports of all kinds 112.000 ii ! Stock of American Total saletf to exporters... ....1,130.090 .... 230.000 .... 234.000 of the clearing-house banks for the week shows that the banks now hold 519.441.225 more than the legal reserve requirements. 'a an increase of $6,309,950. as com pared with last week. The statement follows: Now York Cotton Exchange Statistics. NEW YORK, April 3.—The following statistics on the movement of octton j required., for the week ending Friday, April 5. I Sirl}i us c ’j‘’’’-tLl’ wrre compiled by the New York Cotton I IjX - L • ac P°- - ls - Exchange: Weekly Movement. This year. Port receipts 110.127 To ml’ls and Canada 1M19 Sou mill takings, est 41.000 Stock gain int. towns 12,749 Inoreos .$1.06?,638.S00 5 6.143.600 .. 1,036 713.10 16.895.800 50.398 800 71.651.500 . 205.958.000 . 27S 619.500 259.178.275 19.441.225 27,038,650 *421 *764.400 11.25S 390 10.633.900 4 222 950 6 309 959 9.333,975 Into sight for week ,..139.797 137,799 Total Crop Movement. Port receipts 9.061.761 6.333 .839 To mills and Canada.. 1.022.508 785.221 Sou. mill takings, est.. 1.75.9.000 1,614 000 Int. stock ex. Sept. 1... 345 792 '31TS16 j Macon aV5He • Into sight for season.. .12 197.051 9.550.876 | Note—25.775 bales deducted from over land from the season. last week and $3,134,603,000 last year, i Inc. Dec. Richmond $5,585.000.... S.4 —a- i Savannah 2 313.000.... 31.1 I Atlanta 4.914 ooq... .ig.3 Nor'olk 2.G95.P00... .28.3 I Augusta 3.327,000.... 25.2 | Knoxville 1.661,000... .15.5 Charleston 1.39'JlflO.... 4.S 1 441.000.... 6.5 776,000.... 5.4 NOT HURRYING V/ITH DECISION. WASHINGTON’ prll 7.—Chairman Knapp, of the Interstate Commerce Commission, said that the com- Cotton Receipts. NEW YORE. Anril 5.—The following are the total net receipts of cotton at all >rts since September 1: Paps. ilVesten 3.603.095 Now Orleans 2.1 n 4 03.8 FAMINE IN Gfl Mobile Pavonnnh . Wilmington No-folk mission would not be in n hurry about | rendering a decision in the Harriman ise, the arguments In which were con cluded yesterday. He said that the record was very voluminous and the matters Involved of great Importance. The commlS'j’on. therefore, would pro ceed deliberately. When the decision of the commission finally is reached It will be announced to the public. BUI IMS lil SHORT on* Hatton I . Newport Nows Phll^olphln FYnncisco Prnnswlck T> «**t Townsend Pen cola Portland Ore Port Arthur nod Sabine Pass. Jacksonville Fla T-oredo. Texas Minor ports 23*).777 ...l.CPt 544 ... 14SM5 ... 3W.n*5 ... 51ff229 ... 54.331 ... 1*221 ... 65.973 31.721 IS UNPRECEDENTED According to the se'entists. a man who feeds cn three full meals a day. commits suicide, and sooner or later will die. We eat a wad of breakfast and thereby give the digestive appara tus a full day’s work, so they say. Then when we get away with a big dinner ws simply pile on another full day’s work before the work on the break fast is fa’rly under way. Then on top of it wo dispatch a hearty sup per, thus adding another full day’s work or three days’ work in one. The result is that we keep the digestive machinery going all the time and it finally wears out and wo die. Dr. Wiley, chief of tho Bureau of Chem'stry at Washington, is a crank on what we eat. He has a cass of ycung men who will eat or drink any- th-'ng he selects, -whether poison or not. and he makes notes of the result. His conclusions are that we eat too much meat. He has meat only once a day and very little at that. I’d like to see him get in the vicinity cf orle 0 j- Walter Chapman’s 30-pound barbecued shoats. From the New York Evening Post. The late Constantine, Petrovltch Pobiedonostseff, ex-procurator general cf the Holy Synod of Russia, was one of the most remarkable of the men who have figured in the struggle in Russia between conservatism and re form. He was born in Moscow In 1827. at a time when his father occupied v the important chair of Russian literature in the University of that city. His education was carried on under his father's supervision until he was fitted to enter the Imperial Law School at St. Petersburg. From this institution ho was graduated in 1846 with high honors, and at once received the ap pointment to the chancellor's office of the eighth department of the Senate, attaining in a few years to the rank ! of over-secretary. In quick succession ho advanced from one position of re- spons’bility to another until 1S68, when only fort.v-one years of age. he had reached the second department of the Senate, and was appointed to the de partment of the Supreme Civil Court Here he gave increasing evidence of great legal knowledge and ability. In adition to his routine official duties, his erudtlon and executive capacity placed 5 .... i hi m ®t different times on commissions Dr. Wiley goes on the idea that when I charged with administrative reforms we wont our digestive machinery over- i in various departments of Government time, our bodie« and systems are brok- I In 1861, for instance, he was engaged cn down. He says a man may drink 1 in re-organizing the Judiciary Denort- a glass cf typhoid germs if he is in vig- ment; in 1S7-5 he examined the rep-art orous health, and may not get typhoid lished a series of ieetures delivered previously at the University of Mos cow. This volume, entitled "Course In Civil Law," ivas immediately recog nized as a standard work and con tinues to be the authoritative treatise cn the theory and practice, of Rus sian law. He was also the editor of a collection of Poushkln’s “Flowers of the North." to which e affixed a long the North,” to which he affixed a long he is said to have read with sympathy and admiration. He was a prolific writer and his references to gen:r.i! and literary subjects show him to have been a man of wide reading out ride the sphere of his special activi ties. The spirit which actuated Pobiedo nostseff in his intense opposition to reform was undoubtedly an Intense and narrow type of patriotism. His exclamation, "Russia Is not a State; Russia is a world!” invokes an image of the self-sufficient.. omnipotent Power which he conceived Russia to be—a power capable of controlling her own destinies and evolving If at all. in accordance with the fixed traditions of a past which the procurator him self represented In all its magnificent authority, its bigotry and political conservatism. In 1905 Pobiedonostseff resigned from the office of chief procurator, stating that he was unwilling to re main in office under a parliamentary government. The Czar accepted his resignation from the Holy Synod, but retained him as a member of the Council of the Fmpir-'. The ukase which had forced the old conservative from office by giving greater legisla tive and religious liberty to tho Rus sian people was issued at about the time of the anniversary of Pobied- onostS'Tf’s jubilee as procurator-gen eral of the Holy Synod. No man in Russia Incurred more bitter enmity in the ranks of the re formers than Pobiedonostseff. His name was on the lists of the terrorise among those "condemned to death.” and several attempts were made to kill hint. The last attempt of this kind was made in July. 1905, only a few months before his resignation from office. Miss Fannie Andrews makes protest in Montgomery Advertiser: Ti'e would especially commend to the r readers the excellent :s r,vil!e by Mr. James d :n last Sunday’s Ad- tko Macon, Ga., Teie- tt to be printed in let- d laid cn the desk of •/'.vr and chapter presi- 1 States. Mr. Calia- mt writer both lived attention of oi paper on And, Callaway, copi vertiser from graph. It oug tors cf gold a every school tea: dent in the Unit way and tho pre near AntJersonville durinr of the war, and he know speaks, in his magnified cf the Southern people s'bllitv for that great wre i great part whereof he vindication om respon- g. One fact OS ONE” - NEW YORK. April 7.—The annual dinner of "Tho GrIIIers Club” was held in this city last night made the occasion for speeches by a number of prominent New York State persons. Including former Gov. Odell, D. Cady Herrick and others. The motto of showing the spirit of the people of the neighborhood toward their unwilling guests. I am sorry he forgot to men tion—or perhaps ha was too much of a boy at the tiiej to remember it. Dur ing the marching and counter-march-. Ing of prisoners be describes, in tho vain effort of the Confederate Govern ment to get them exchanged, in the summer and fall of 1864, a band of some 5,000 passed, on one occasion, through the neighborhood now known - as DeWitt, on the road between Al bany and Thomasvllle. The planters along the route were so moved with compassion at the sight that they or dered their negroes to collect such provisions as could be provided on the spur of the moment, and distribute them to the suffering Northerners. There was no time to do any cooking, but hampers of potatoes, turnips, groundpoas, sugar cane, etc., were emp tied in tho rood before tho melancholy procession and they were invited to help themselves. At this distant day I. can still recall positively' the names of three of the persons who performed this net of benevolence: they were Mr. Robert (Bacon his brother. Mnj. Edward B'aeon, uncles of the present senior Senator from Georgia, and Mrs. Troup Miller, sister of the present writer, who was managing her husband’s plantation while he was off at the war. There were doubtless many others who did the same, for the unavoidable suf ferings of the prisoners nt Anderson- vllle were n subject of frequent conver sation and universal regret among the people of that section. Father Hamil ton, .a Roman GatViaij^ rw’est from Mn- con, devoted himself to the sick among them with ? self-sacrificing love that ought to entitle him to a. monument nt. the hands of the G. A. R. Itself. And speaking of monuments. Mr. Callaway's allusion to the movement of our Georgia sisters for building a memorial to Wirz at Andersonvllle, brings up tho question whether some other place would not be more suita ble for such a testimonial. While we fever, because bis system may throw off the poison: hut if lie is broken down, one of the germs will get hold of his intestines and produce ulceration and typhoid. And there you are. If you eat heart ily you overwork your interior: if you report of the minister of publ'c education: and several years later he helped to reform the Prison Department and to revise the Penal Code R'y 1872 he had become a member of the Council of State. In 1879 a member of the Coun cil of Prisons and in 1880 he succeed ed a cousin of the novelist, Tolstoy, as over-procurator of the Holy Svnnd. an don’t eat you are broken down and I office which ho held with inflexible Vu- tyohold germ, and the pneumonia germ. " " ‘ - * and all the other germs, knock you flat You'll d’e if you starve, and you’ll die if you eat. I would like to get these food speeil- ists and thority until his resignation in 1905. Probably no post in Russia could have given Pobiedonostseff .a broader scope for the peculiar and interns- In fluence which he exerted over public affairs. The office is in itself a mon- church 6.326 70 825 147.777 1’ ’ i’3 128.660 Total N V. [man He also BO 1 . April 7.—In the trial of idgo Abner Smith and other f the defunct bank of Ameri- e Judge Pinckney in the •ourt. Clarence S. Darrow tes- nt the bank was “looted” Crrelman and Abner Smith i ■ s fr m the date the i;i- ipened for bus'nrss. Mr. D.ir- I ratified as having warned Je- i Pierce against Smith and : ami of his having demanded ; h be forced out of the hank. ( ta: .1 that he had told Smith ..9,069,221 Comparative Cotton S+-tem"rt. NEW TORT April 5.—^^ fnllnwing comraratlve ststemetat of cotton ae week ending Fridav 'prll 5- 3 n 97. 3995 t nort rerrlnts 197.ra.3 in 69.2 a-ets. sinre Rept. 1 9,069.291 6 8‘8 S'q 'vno-ta ‘ WASHINGTON April 7.—To correct an erroneous report that has found general circulation with harmful re sults. tho Red Cross today issued the following statement in regard to the j Chinese famine: j “The famine in China is unprece dented in severity and the period of Ipr—ateat nrrnv is ver to come Many weeks must pass before thgit> will be ; relief ficm new crops and hundreds I of thousands, yes. millions today are I kept alive through contributions of j the American people who have sent their donations to the Red Cross at Washington and the Christian' Herald of New Ycrk. These two organizations have furnished over two-thirds of all relief supiies sent to China to relieve the starving millions. The largo amount of money and shipments of supplies already made ha’/e only part ly relieved the situation, and while 7 h0 .T f ™, s i Dm8I,t t0 th e rigid union m enure. wruo art ? ? ° f f °°A and (and state. The Holy Synod is ode of foeflbfi- to ^o h 1° V ?J" i the four * reat executive councils of ..ed.ng, to _o with .me to a good old- • the Russian Government: its mem- fashioned Georgia barbecue. I want to I bers are annotated hr Z see what they would do at one like I ftaf/ontrlTT^cciesiastfc^^affartl ’ ! within the empire is absolute. In his >r>v,a +.v,„ j... t . i position of over-procurator of this r So peopie^prefer To to soring water because of tbe i the ,esal adviser of the metropolitan £f drinWltod,.Xt BUt * to will want to get under the shade of ■ 15® to trees, whether water- or beer. : ^ office, he further acquired author- At sfx o’clock the night before, the i , in „, t , ho na Fi e . tI,s .9 z 5 r ’ to ap : trench having been -nreviouslv dug. the ' a “ archbishops, bishops and carcase of a twenty-five or thirty pound i hierarchy. This au- shoat. split wide open and thoroughly I th ?, rl , t> endowed h:m with tremendous cleaned. Is laid spraddl’ng on iron rod's j P° !,t,c fl as we]I as ecclesiastical pow- over the hickory -embers From ihe I er - and tended to make him master of " inning of the heat the man with i ? usr ' Ian domestic politics especially tho swab and bucket-of sauce must be- i ’ n a ^‘ t* 1 " relations of politics to the gin his basting so that the season- i church ’ _ Pi ? bI edonnstseff became by ing can oook in. the Club is “Socet Tu Urn.” There > all appreciate ar l sympathize with t! generous impulse that prompts these noble women to vindicate the memory of a much injured man, thero is con siderable divergence of opinion in our ermnla :!'i-iu .-•« to the advisability of placing the proposed monument at An- dersonville. In the first' place, the site of the famous prison is. practically, now r.o longer Georgia, soil, having been taken over by the United States Government and we (I use the pronooun advls'dlv. for I as a daughter of Georgia myself, .and every clod of her old red hills is as dear'to me as niy own flesh! could not place a monument there without its consent. Even if th's should he grant ed, would it, in view of the prevailing sentiment at the North, be in the best of taste: would it. in fact, be consist ent with our own dignity and the dig nity of our purpose, to intrude our selves add it ! nto company where we are not wanted—and where, to tell tho truth, there seems no especial reason why we should desire any memorial of ours to bo? On the great battle fields, where the men of hoth sides fought and fell together, it Is all right All nlcht long the cook adds the hickory twigs and chunks ns the cools begin to deaden, so that there will al ways be embers and not hot fires and the basting man must drench the meat at Intervals, or when the meat begins to look dry. By th? side of a tree His °PPO s >tion to the element of re there is a bottle of liquor not neces- f °rm was demonstratfd at the very ! church. virtue of the Influence which he es tablished over the present Czar a power behind the throne which time and again defeated the efforts of the reforming party in Russia, and ac complished more, perhaps, than any other single influence to conserve the mcdiaevalism of the Russian spirit. o-ts for wr-k... ;._|92 927 ^ Tro .-v.! I hundreds of thousands of lives have k at] iT^g^ports gaa ""5 5 ’Vo? i ,5i ; pn sowed, hundreds of thousands must Rtoc' Stock at Int. t Stock at T ivcrocoi Anin. afloat fob G. 3.... 78 136 1,66a nao 1S7.000 World’s Visible Supply. NEW ORLEANS. La.. April 5 —Sec- statoment of the world'* visible supply of cotton issu'd j onV th» tr-vh: die unless large additional sums of money and large shipments of food are immediately provided." The following cablegr2.n1 received by the editor of the Christian Herald from the c’ltor of the North China | news, terrible as it may seem speaks today shows the total visible is 5.315,- 216 against 5.STS SIR last week and 4.- *25 4 - - 1.-st year. < -f th‘= rh- tn-1 r-f American cotton Is 3.S83.2J5 .against To refu: also l di et out and that S do so. Mr. Borrow fus.nl to serve as 1 rector of the bank or to net as its at- toraey. although urml to do ro by s-rne of the officials of the institution Mr Darrow test'(led Just before th? failure of the bank he had drawn up a report which contained the result of an examination of the bank’s affairs. The rerort also made reference to f. me of the officials of the intui tion. David E. T_e"'rden, trustee of the cerate of the dofr-'c: F. E. Creeiman I.umber and M-nufaduring Company, preceded Mr. D arrow on the stand. The State s"ught to show by Lam.s- den that Creelrnan’s financial condi- s: >n had been such that Creeiman could 1 nt nt et t' - e oN'cttlotts con tracted in connection w'th the bank Mr. Lam? den testified reel?’ in o rate was $j,- 1.91 the rs:ate wculd be more than 6 per cent lied. He also stated t 1 --.: rboro were ola'ms aggregating S500.(*95 which had V“a eliminated for various w mins Creeiman is «->id to owe tho bank of Art or: on $140 029. ;th j 4 OO7.S1S InsL week and 3.002.457 last i Egyi and of all o’hor kinds, inch . Brazil. India, etc.. 1.433 000 r-iinst 1 371.020 Dst week end 1 533- ; 000 'art year. Of the world's visible supply of eo*ton there is row afloat 1 and held in Great Britain .and Cantin- 1 c"’a] Europe 3,045.000 against 2.182 aeq last year; in Egypt 192.099 nga'nst | 161.600 ia<-t year; in India 737 090 nga’nst 997.02.1 last year: ,nitd in the United States 1.321,000 against 1,193,090 last year. SHANGHAI, China. April 6, 1907.— Klop-ch. New York.—Approaching period of severest pinch. Authenticat ed instances of corpses exhumed; can nibalism. Foreign relief work'liff ef fectively, mnir.taing whole districts until harvest ” of A: th-: : e cm! n s 2-.9 922 treble on the NETT ORLEANS. In. . Anri! 6.—Sec retary He-t-r’s weekly cotton state ment Issued f--dy shows for the five days of Anril an increase. over ]-st years of 43.990 .and a decrease under the same period year before last of 35.- 900. For the 217 d.avs of t that have elapsed the aggregate d of the same days of last year MINISTER KILLED EY GAS EXPLOTICN O., Anril 6.—Rev. J. .T. i came here from. Marshall. Tex-s. three we--ks ago to occupy tbc pvlnlt made vacant by the death of the noted colored minister. P.-v. James Pnfn- d-xter. w*>5 billed t-dav by n.n e-riarion Of n-mra.I g-«. n--ed by'hi- lighting m.ar-h in - rnnm V ere t'-e -ess w-s cs- fan'.ng. A!onto Davie. In whose room the explosion occurred, was severely burned. sar’ly the finest, but a fnir’.v good ar ticle. so that the dusky barbecue art- iris may ward off midnight malaria Alon-g about morning, when the car case Is a perfect brown and th- grease drips on the dying embers and sends up a sniteful sputter, and ihe air Is surcharged with that odor of roost pig that filled Charles Lamb’s soul w'th ecstney. if you were to gaze on the s-enc you would find that the bottle by the tree is emntv and *he a-tists are fiat on the ground snoring. They fin ished their t-sk so far as the cooking was encerned b-cause thev completed the first stave of the barbecue. About early breakf-st time the art ists awoke. Th«y touch up the fir? opening of the reign of Alexander III., when it is said that by his influence the young Czar was Induced to sup press the liberal manifesto which Count Loris-?,lelikoff presented to the council in the name of the late Czar, and to issue some days later, and greatly to the surprise of Alexander III.’s minlstears—a n-ajoriti’ of whom had voted for the morel iberal docu ment—a manifesto which committed the government to the policy of con servatism which it pursued for many years. Although this version of tho fate of the manifesto was denied by Pobiedonostseff, it was currently ac cepted at the time. It is. however, certain that the over-procurator voted row. >.ot orly is the shoat done, but j with the dissenting ministers, it is well seasoned and had to soak With the exception of the problem of 2 6-9 o-o. Lonrrh-mrren': NORFOLK. Va. aoremea's strike to Did Dominion r.l the Merchant! nr?- r! m Unrrpan: ■erds of 100 men. as -c\— r il ships r.l*n ;o tar.9 cun:e in today. ?■ Strike Certimies April 7.—The long- here continues with s and Miners Tr.ans- v each working ut>- The C!d Dominb-n here wi h unloaded •f her arrived 'run The situati- 11 is r at :'•••■ more ir-ir". 1 la. 1 s of the strikers The amount brought int ir.g th- week ha’s been 1 rg-. nri 1SS.444 for the same seven days ins’ year. The movement since Fertember shows receipts at al! Urifed Stries ports 8.969 2-1 against 6.790.704 inri year. Overiand across the 2'isrissippi. O' 1 '- and Po»-mac rive-s t- Northe**p tr'i’s cud Canada 1 026.605 evairst 703 350 last year: interior stocks in r»- c-ss of rh irfi h-’d at the close of the commercial ve*r 349 7S9 sga'nst 244.070 BRAZILIAN F'. crT -r fn RCUTS TO JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION WASHINGTON. Anri! 7.—The State fifihr | Department was advised today by the | e " I Brazilian embassy that a squadron of I u ason j the Brazilian navy, composed of th iron-dad Riarhuelo and the cruis'rs Barroso and Taipoyo. ur 'er the com mand of Rear Admiral Duarte Huet DeBacellar is on its wav to Hamnton Ronds to represent the Brazilian Gov ernment at the Jamestown Exposition j j opening. ss I ‘ ‘ — rht dur- vear: F : 990 'wvnst them mi’is 1.690 276 t-klns last s 1.- vear. PEARY V/M-L MAKE ANOTHER I DASH FOR NORTH POLE. I WASHINGTON, April 7.—Civil En- j gir.eer R. E. Peary. U. S. X., has ap plied for an extension of leave of ab- ! senee in order to resume his effort to : reach the N-rth Pale. The dash to I the pole will be attempted in the sum- ! mer of 1908. the t- wnt 28.21 week 1" St y 1m? V can 1 Foreign expo- ■e- r 791 16? -e-a iking ?'~e tori for j Cbiesoo's Mew Postmaster. • WASHINGTON. April 7—The Pre.ri- ! dent today appo'nted Daniel A. Camp- th-j« f- r f.tr j be!!, of Chicago, to be postmaster at " 212 901 emi-st 3 '"4 S"5 i that city to succeed Fred A. Basse, who The tonl tn.’-inris of 5.meri- has been elected to the mayoralty. Mr. North South and Canada, Campbell is now a State Senator. and soften under the skin and be the ribs over the deadened fire. The work is now about half over. There is th? stew to make the bread to out and the table to set. There Is rente 1 sauce to concoct, and then comes the curing up. r'vrv man who loves b- r he-ne n-n-r hove a” outsid- niece or some of the • ribs. The re-1 barbecue connoisseur j takes a> th-- choicest bits the ribs and the crisp -’--in in bis mouth, and 'o j gnaw on th- ribs because they caught ; more of the sauce than the other por- t tions. Now that everything is ready, all I g-tber around a table mod- up or ; thrown together for the occasion. If ! ‘here ,-r- mq r»r*a-s In th- gr-n tb-re wl’-l be fen wooden travs fi’ie with a b’g greasy hrr r ,-n bnnk of th shoat. a dab of n-t-*o ealad with the J ringlets of red onion in full view,' ,- cueun-ben pickle end a rli.-e or so of rye bread but. if you love bsrbmue 9_s you should, tike a Ple-a c f the hot h-e eak? in-*—>d Standing guard at every tray will be a bottle of beer, its to vou to take ho-r or water. If take water you don't love barbe cue. TT 'hen the m-ster of ceremonies savg "Well, bovs. there's re ladles around. vett might as veil tai’eh in." its t'me- tn eat. Re-ch down Into your pocket pud —et nut yotrr knife. Don't mind getting gr?as.e on your fingers, bu* pick up a. rib or a niere with the s^in on and. sifter nlent'ng your feet squarely on the g-.-uud forget everything you ever knew but the good things, and fill veur mouth. Don't be in any hurry. You can hurry through some things but. if you love barbecue, veil w'li now take your time. Remember that tbe-e's plenty r* it. and vou car. g-t another niece. T’-rse artists who have 'cued i- i-eou- r v >-ir hu-'niss p-d have b-td back a reserve surp'y. They want it fo- . v>ewselves and hope it won't be called * er hi’p vou are thus engaged in get- p-rp-si all over veur flng°rs and nd the corners of veur mouth, now the emancipation of the serfs—a re form. which Pobiedonostseff 'advocated in two art'rles printed in 1853 and 1S.6I —the procurator set himself squarely avoir st all liberalizing influences . whether from Russian or foreign : sources. He believed, apparently with 1 complete sincerity, that only disaster i could result alike to Government and j to the people from any propaganda ' of Republican ideas. He maintained ! that the re-ord of history 's to tho i effect that the elected do not represent | the will of the electors: that eduen- j tion only serve- to deb-.uch the intel- ’ lect and the morale of the peasant I who Is not fit to carry on selective | processes: and finally that any rivalry. I between church and State induces a ■ kind of civil strife, and “practically j resolves itself into a rivalry between two forces. Intelligence on the one hand and the populace on the other." In addition to his political and le- ! gal responsibilities. Pabi-donostsoff I won for him-elf considerable raputa- : t'on as a who!?:’ and writer. From : 1860 to 1875. while he was engaged ; in the oltici-l labors already noted i he occupied the chair of ’Russian civil j law ’n tin Moscow University, and un- j dertook the lege’ education of the chil- ' dren of Alexander TI. H? had nrovi- ousiy instructed Nicholas II In theology j and had prepared the pre-ent Czarina ! a- well as the dowager Erunre-s. for j admission to the Russian faith. He 1 was therefore ‘intimately associated with the Tmperal family for more than a third of a century and exercised p grer.ter degree cf influence over them than any other man. It was during the year in which he served the Im- nerial family in-the capacity of tuto- that Pobiedonostseff first established the influence over the future Emneror which has so greatly augmented his own power during the long life Just closed. He accompanied Alexander.on were many quips and jokes and hu morous songs. Mr. Odell, in the course of a speech, said: "Every ago has its fables, its vaga ries, its strenuous men and times when the voice of the reformer, like that of the grasshopper, is a burden in the land. The time comes when thero are fewer diseases than reme dies, more charlatans than physi cians and more apparent faults than virtues. "Some men who have become fa mous encircle themselves within the boundaries of their own egotism. Give to me the simple man in preference to him whose constant hankering for power and pelf has distorted his imagination and led him to the belief that his honesty is the only simon pure article and that all other mem bers of society are cheats, frauds and liars. "It takes something more than the power to Inflict personal ot political chastisement, to climb hills and to shoot to make a brave man. The bravest man Is he who can discern his own faults and make both confession j to mingle the memorials of our dead, and reparation for them. Dignity is j The glory and the tragedy of thos- the characteristic of a gentleman. Re- I great fields belong to both alike, and sponsibllity should bring with it re- j we have a right to raise our momi- spect for Judgment, but when there is ments there as high as Heaven, if wo a sacrifice of both dignity and respon- 1 can. slbllitv through utt'ra.nces that are ■ But there are spots in the keeping of incompatible with either or both, that ! e'ther side where th? other had bes! man is not a great man who thus in- < not intrude. How -Mould wg fool, for instance, if some zealous daughters of New England were to propose the erec tion of a monument to Grant or Lin coln in the Cmfedorate cemetery at Richmond? Ar.d .vet there Is nothing invidious in the feeling: wo of the South all honor and respect Lincoln, but there- is an etornol fitness of thing- which should preclude even h's statue forever from eer'nta snots peculiarly sacred to the Southern heart. In th? same way, Andersonvllle Is a spot consecrated to the Northern heart by the memory of Ihe great tragedy in which we had no part, except as the unwilling witnesses of sufferings which we vpre powerless to relieve, and for Which, as Mr. Callaway has plainly shown, we were in no wav responsible. But .aside from, the— reasons, th? 50- lect'on of Andersonvllle as the site of a monument for V.’lrz would he likely to defeat its own obicet. Ever since th? war it has been th? Mecca o' throngs of negro excursionist-- on Dec-, oration Day. and neither they nor the 1 class of wh'ios who eo??so-t with them | would he able to appreciate the mo- : lives or respect the object for which ■ th? monument was placed there; and even if it were not mutilated the sur- round-'nc? and associations o' *h? spot a.r? such t’-at the mere fact of its pr-s- i one? would h? more likely to m-oate - irritation than to carry conviction. . Hence, all thing? conr-M-red It soo-us ’ that some other place—Macon. Ameri- . eus or Thomnaville. for instance, would be mor? suitable far the monument contopiplated than a snot wher- It would meet the eves cf those o-lv whom no argument can convince. The cities rrent'oned a-.- visit?,1 every year hv thousand? of Northern tourists of a class more likelv to b? free from prej udice. and therefore more open to rea son. than the floating and often un thinking crowds that flock to And’er- sonville. Many of thorns tav for weeks and months: there Is nothing In th? surroundings to stir up unreasoning animosity, and th? lesson of th° mon ument would r’nnd at least a chance of being attended to. E. F. ANDREWS. clulges, no matter if the ignorant ap plaud him for these utterances. "That paternalism is government which seeks to take from the Indi vidual the power of initiative and per formance. which alms to safeguard him in the same manner In which we protect that infant, not only fails in its purpose, but is a positive injury and detriment to th? community. "It is much better for us to dis agree with the great, and 4he intelli gent. to be tenacious of our rights, than to be like dumb driven cattle, acquiescent because it is easier to be followers than to be lead-rs. follow ers of those who like ourselves, are but human and liable to error.” a (it nrpisff ml rtiilfi [in m No. PITTSBURG'. April 7.—Train 322. cast-bound, the fastest train on the Pennsylvania Railroad between Pittsburg and Cleveland, was wrecked at S o’clock last night near Hudson, Ohio, 123 miles west of here. None of the passengers were injured, but the fireman, who jumped when the accident occurred, was seriously injured. According to the railroad officials th? train was purposely wrecked. An in vestigation disclosed that the attempt mad? by the wreckers was the same used several times In this vicinity, re cently. Th? rewards for the capture-: of the wreckers are -renewed tonight. A reward of p $2,500 is offered to anybody givtag information leading to th? iden tity of the wreckers, and $5,000 if this information is furnished within forty- eight hours/ The attempt to wreck the train to- n'ght was similar in every detail to the ones attempted in this vicinity recently when the Chicago Express and the Keystone Limited were derailed. When the news was received here considerable . excitement prevailed at the railroad headquarters. A large rce of detectives was ordered imme- i diately Vo the scene in an endeavor to '■ locate some trace of the wreckers. j TOM MOORE CONVICTED KILLING HIS BROTHER WAYNESBORO Ga. April 7.—Aft er a trial lasting three days the jury at 11:30 tonight brought in a verdictl of guilty, with recommendation to 1 mercy, in the case of Tom Moore, charged with the murder of his young- ! er brother, John Moor near Keysvllle BUM! m Of;I rsfllULU PRICE CF ILK his tour through Russia and ofter- wa.rds published an account of th? Journey under the title "Letters Con cerning the Tour of the Her?ditary and th“n getting in a word and some j Czarevitch in Rus?'a. from Petdrs- beer, you are at peace with the world, burg to the Crimea.” In 1868 he pub- tine ATLANTA, Anri! 7.—Four hundred I dairy-men. of Atlanta and vicinity, met i h'T last night, raised the price of milk l and cream, formed a union and agreed on January 16 last. Judge Hammond t0 hlre a n - ilk Inspector. The increase iramediateiv sentenced Moore to t'he I in prices ranees from a 10 per cent in penitentiary for life, the jury’s recom- i ere?.** in retail trade to 36 cents for rnendaticn having saved him from a j hotels, restaurants, etc-, and 23 cents capita! sentence. ! for the retail, dealers. This will make. Tom Moore is 21 years oid. He was t: io P rlr 'p cf milk sold on streets 44 In financial straits and there was in- cents per gallon. surance for $6,000 upon the life of his ' brother in Tom Moore's favor. There- ! SEVERAL EDITORS In was found the motive and the au thorities wove a net of evidence that fixed the crime upon him. Destructive Fire in New York. NEW YORK, April 7.—Fire practi cally destroyed a six-story hullding oc cupied by the Ragus Te.-t. Coffe? and Spice Company and th? Union Pacific Tc-a Company, at Washington and Laight streets toda.v. The loss is esti mated by tho members of the firm at $300,000. . IN HAVANA I RECEIVE THREATENING LFTTERS HAVANA. April 7.—The editors of Important paners here, including the Am'rican editor of the Post, have re cently been receiving letters threaten ing them with dca.Th if thev do not cease publishing black hand society stories. The letters are signed "The Sister Society.” Secret service officers lately have arrested several members of the black hand so-.! ties who have been t*r- rorizing merchants.