Newspaper Page Text
6
1-3 Uhr® Wmfe
.; BUST
Kair Vanishes Like
Kisgic. Eyetaehes EeaoitKcd
Monies a»d SacofeKrfs Rtnovad Forawr.
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M' X
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Liberty Bond Market
NEW YORK, April s.—Final prices on
Liberty bonds today were:
i 3%5, 96.64.
I First 4s, 91.20.
4s, 89.66.
First 4%5, 91.28.
J Second 4%5. 89.70.
; Third 4%5. 92.96.
Fourth 4Us, 89.90.
Victory 3%5, 97.94.
Victory 4%5, 97.56.
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GRAIN
I
CHICAGO, April s.—Fresh advances In the
corn market today provoked general selling
and brought about a sharp setback. Opening
prices, whic liranged from %c decline to
l%c advance, were followed by a tumble
all nround to well below Saturday's finish.
Oats, like corn, showed a sudden fading
away of strength.
Higher quotations on hogs lifted pro
visions.
CHICAGO QUOTATIONS
The following were the ruling prices t»
the exchange today-
Prev
Open. High. Low. Close. Close.
COKN—
May 161 165% 160% 165% 164
July 158% 160% 155 160 158%
Septlss’s 156% 151 156% 154
OATS—
May 90% 93% 88% 91% 90%
July 82% 86 81 83% 82%
LARD—
May 37.50 37.50 37.35 37.35 37.00
July .V... 37.50 37.70 37.50 37.55 37.25
> URK
May 20.75 20.50 20.37 20.65 20.60
July 21.55 21.60 21.15 21.42 21.30
RIBS—
Mav ..1..18.77 19.00 18.77 19.00 1 8.90
July 19.50 19.50 19.30 19.45 19.42
RECEIPTS IN CHICAGO
Today.
Wheat 9 cars
Corn 140 cars
Oats 97 cars
Hogs 4,000 head
CHICAGO CASH - QUOTATIONS
CHICAGO, April s.—Cash wheat, No. 3
hard. $2.63; No. 5 northern, $2.60.
Corn, No. 2 mixed, $1.69; No. 2 yellow,
$1.69(01.70.
Oats, No. 2 white, $1.00@1.01; No. 3
white, 95(099%c.
Rye, No. 2. 88%c.
Barley, $1.42@1.68.
Timothy seed, $9.00@12.00.
Clover seed, $45.00@59.00.
Pork, nominal.
Lard, 20.05.
Ribs, SIS.OO@I9.QO.
GRAIN MARKET OPINIONS
Bartlett, Frazier & Co.: There is nothing
in market surroundings to suggest lower
prices, although after so st.raigjit away ad
vance, something lu the nature of reactions
Should be expected.
Lamson Bros.: The long side is rtanger
nus. despite the apparent strength in the
rmh article.
Ware & Leland: We look for substantial
reactions but believe the trend will be ir
regularly higher until there is a change in
underlying conditions.
Press C/.: There wil Iprobably be a re
adjustment between the May and the cash
before long and May wil probably advance.
NEW YORK PRODUCE MARKET
NEW YORK, April s.—Flour, quiet and
flrm.
Pork, nominal: mess, $42.00@43.00.
Lard, firm; middle west spot, $20.35@
20.45.
Sugar, raw, firm; centrifugal, 96-test,
$14,00(01-1.01; refined, firm; granulated,
$14.00(014.50.
Coffee, Rio No. 7, on spot, 14%@15c;
No. 4 Santos, 24@24%c.
Tallow, easier; specials, 15c; city, Mr.
Hay, firm; No. 1, $2.30@2.35; No. -3,
$1.95(02.05; clover, $1.75@2.15.
Dressed poultry, quiet; turkeys. 50@55c;
chickens, 26@40c; fowls, 27@39c; ' ducks,
32(050c.
Live poultry, dull and nominal; geese,
20@22c; ducks, 45c: fowls. 45c; turkeys.
50(055c; roosters, 26c; chickens, broilers,
35(043c.
Cheese, dull; state milk, common to spe
cials. 15@31c; skims, common to specials,
4@2oc.
Butter, firm; receipts, 2,051; creamery,
extra, 67c; do. special market, 67%(065e:
state dairy, tubs; imitation creamery, firsts.
44@66c; 45@46c.
ggs, steady: receipts, 25,656: near-by
white fancy, 59@60c; near-by mixed fancy,
42@47c; fresh firsts, 41%@46%c.
NEW YORK COFFEE MARKET
Close.
January 14.45(014.47*
February 14.44(014.46
March 14.42(014.44
April 14.42@14.45
May 14.55(014.56
June •••• •••••■• 14.6a@14.6S
July 14.78(014.79
August .... •• .... 14.66(014.68
September 14.55 @14.56
October 14.45(014.54
N0vember14.50(014.52
December 14.48 @14.49
NEW YORK, April s.Coffee, Rio No. 7,
14%c.
NEW YORK SUGAR MARKET
Close.
January 13.75@13.80
Mav 14.35(014.40
Tune 14.35@14.45
July 14.40@14.50
August 14.45@14.55
September 14.45@14.55
Cetober 14.20(014.35
November 13.75(014.00
December 13.30@13.45
NEW YORK. April s.—Raw sugar,
■ertrifugal, 14.79; refined, firm;
o 1c higher; fine granulated, 14.00(016.00.
CHICAGO PRODUCE MARKET
CHICAGO, April s.—Butter: Creamery ex
•.is, 65%c; creamery standards, 64%c;
• irsts, 59@63%c; seconds, 49(053c.
COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, April s.—The cotton
market was active and excited at the open
ing today owing to the continuance of un
favorable weather in the south. First prices
were 37 to 118 points higher and all months
made new high records for tlie season withh
May selling at 40.15 and October at 34.75,
or 55 to 97 points net higher, while De
cember showed even greater gains, selling
up 118 points, to 34.20. Business was gen
eral witli a broading trade and speculative
demand for new crop deliveries as well as
covering or relmying by sellers of last weke.
The Liverpool market will not re-open for
business until Wednesday, but houses with
English trade connections were among the
buyers hero.
.Many private reports were received from
the south, all of them complaining of heavy
rains in eastern and central belt sections
over the holidays and low temperatures in
the southwest. These reports seemed to
have been pretty well discounted by the
big opening advance on new crop months,
but May sold up to 40.48 later in the
morning,’ or 88 points net higher, and Oc
tober also made a new high selling record
at 34.81. Business then became somewhat
less active but the mhrket-held very steady
around midday with waiting the de
tailed weather reports for a better line on
over-holiday conditions.
The detriment weather reports confirming
the private news of rains in eastern and
central sections of the belt and showing
very low temperatures in the southwest led
to further covering during the early after
noon. which sent October contracts up 'to
34.90 and December to 34.20, or 112 to 122
joints net higher.
NEW YORK COTTON
The following were tlie ruling prices in
the exchange today
Tone, steady; middling, 42c, quiet.
Last Fie*'
Open. High. Low. Sale. Close. Ckse
Jan. .. 33.4033.6833.2533.5033.4532.40
May .. 40.00 40.45 39.95 40.27 40.24 39.60
July .. 37.25 37.95 37.25 37.70 37.70 36.80
Oct. .. 34.60 35.00 34.52 34.75 34.73 33.78
Dec. .. 34.05 34.25 33.80 34.00 34.04 33.02
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS. April 5.—A rise of a
cent a pound on the new crop months re
sulted in the early trading in cotton today,
buying being based on the abnormally cold
weather in the belt. Th4 opening was strong
and higher, and the demand constantly in
creased so that at the end of the first hour
of business the trading months were forced
71 to 103 points over the level of last
week’s close. May rose to 39.70 and Oc
tober to 34.55.
Realizing caused reactions of about a dol
lar a bale from the early high prices but
toward noon another strong buying move
ment set in as the result of the bulge in
sterling exchange rates and reports of snow
in Georgia. On this up-swing prices went
71 to 110 points over last night’s finals.
The rise continued to mount to 76 to 115
points, October going to 34.70. Late in
the session much from the long side came
upon the markets and prices reacted moder
ately under it, the trading months easing
20 to 30 points from the topmost levels, and
October falling to 34.40. The tone of the
market remained steady during the reac
tion.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
Tlie following were the ruling prices in the
oxcliange today
«■ Tone, steady; middling, 41.25 c, steady.
Last Prev
Open, flich. I„»w Sale Close Gies*
Jan. .. 33.14 33.35 33.10 33.25 33.15 32.12
May .. 39.50 39.75 39.40 39.48 39.40 38.99
July .. 37.10 37.50 37.03 37.29 37.26 36.50
Oct. .. 34.40 34.70 34.20 34.38 34.37 33.55
Dec. .. 33.75 33.97 33.53 33.73 33.73 32.82
NEW ORLEANS SPOT COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, April s.—Spot cotton
steady, 25 points up. Sales on the spot
1,876 bales ;to arrive 855. Low middling,
33.00: middling, 41.25; good middling, 44.25.
Receipts 6,164; stock 360.613.
SPOT COTTON MARKET
Atlanta, steady, 43.25 c.
New York, quiet, 42c.
New Orleans, steady, 41.25 c.
Philadelphia, steady, 42.25 c.
Galveston, steady, 43.75 c.
Montgomery, steady, 40.25 c.
Norfolk, steady, 39.75.
Savannah, steady, 41.25 c.
St. Louis, steady, 40.75.
Houston, steady, 43c.
Memphis, steady, 41.25 c.
Augusta, steady, 40.75 c.
Little Rock, steady, 42.50 c.
Dallas, steady, 43.80 c.
Mobile, steady, 40c. .
Charleston, steady, 40.50 c.
Wilmington, steady, 59.50 c.
Boston, steady, 42c.
ATLANTA SPOT COTTON
Atlanta spot c0tt0n43.25c
Receipts 38
Shipments 482
Stocks • .29,349
AMERICAN COTTON AND
GRAIN EXCHANGE
COTTON QUOTATIONS
The following were the opening, highest
lowest, close and previous close quota
Hons on the American Cotton and Grain
Exchange of New York:
Prev
Open. High. Low. Close. Close.
Lian 3.45 33.65 33.32 33.48 32.45
Mav .... 40.00 40.48 40.00 40.20 39.57
July .... 37.65 37.97 37.45 37.68 36.78
Oct 34.65 35.00 34.55 34.71 33.82
Dec 34.25 34.40 33.99 34.00 33.00
COTTONSEED OIL MARKET
NEW YORK, April s.—The cottonseed oil
market closed firm. Prime summer yellow,
18.95; April, 18.65; May, 18.92; June, 19.20;
July, 19.41; August, 19.43; September, 19.30:
October, 17.75; November, 16.45. Sales
25,800. . ,
ATLANTA COTTONSEED PRODUCTS
MARKETS
(Corrected by Atlanta Commercial
Exchange.)
Crude oil, basis prime, tank lots ....$17.25
C. S. meal, 7 (Ter cent ammonia, 100-
ton lots 68.00
C. S. meal, Ga. common rate point,
100-ton lots 67.00
Cottonseed hulls, loose, car lots .... 18.00
Cottonseed hulls, sacked, car lots .... 22.00
No. 1 linters. 9c; No. 2 linters. sc; No.
3 linters, 3c. ■
SHEPARD & GLUCK COTTON LETTER
NEW ORLEANS, La., April s.—The heavy
rains over the holidays, followed by a cold
wave that caused record-breaking low tem
peratures at many points, caused a buying
wave on the opening in cotto ntoday, and
it was felt during practically the entire
session. Surprisingly little realizing com
ing on the market, everything considered.
After such a rise as we have had of late,
reactions are natural, but It will require
very good weather to cause much of a down
swing.
NAVAL STORES
- SAVANNAH, Ga., April s.—Turpentine,
firm; 233; sales, 25; receipts, 61; ship
ments. 1,190.
Rosin, firm; sales, 125; receipts, 25;
shipments, 816. Quote: B, 15.75@16.00;
D, E, 17.35@17.45; F. G, 17.40@17.45; I,
17.55; K, 18.00; M, 18.25; N, 18.40@18.75;
WG, 19.00; WW, 19.25,
METAL MARKET
NEW YORK, April s.—Copper, firm;
I electrolytic, spot and second quarter, 19@
19%. Iron, steady; No. 1 Northern, $47.00
I (048.00; No. 2 northern, $45.00(046.00; No.
2 southern, $42.00(043.00. Tin, steady;
spot, 1637.5; April-May, 63.50. Antimony,
$10.75. Holiday at London.
Atlanta Live Stock
I (Corrected by W. H. White, Pres, of White
Provision Co.)
Good to choice steers, 850 to 1,000 pounds,
1 $10.75(011.25.
I Good steers, 750 to 850. pounds, $10.25@
I 10.75.
: Medium to good steers, 750 to 850 pounds.
$9.50@i0.00.
, Good to choice beef cows, 750 to 850
: pounds. $8.50@9.00.
Medium to good cows, 650 to 750 pounds,
$7.50@8.50.
s Good to choice heifers. 550 to 650 pounds,
] $7.00@8.50. ,
The above represents the ruling prices on
j good quality fed cattle. Inferior grades and
dairy types quoted below.
Medium to good steers, 700 to 800 pounds.
$8.00@9.00.
Mixed common cows, $7.00@8.00.
; Mixed common cattle, $5.00@6.50.
: Good fat oxen, $7.50(08.00.
J Good butcher bulls, $5.50@8.00.
j Choice veal calves. $7.00@9 00.
| Yearlings, $5.50(06.50.
Prime hogs, 165 to 225 pounds, $14.25@
14.50.
; Light hogs, J 35 to 165 pounds, $13.25@
13.50.
Heavy pigs. 100 to 135 pounds, $11.75@
12.00.
Light uigs, 80 to 100 pounds, $10.25@
10.50.
I The above applies to goorf quality mixed
I fed hogs.
i LIVE STOCK BY WIRE
■ EAST ST. LOUIS, 111., April s.—Cattle:
'• Receipts, 4,400, including no Texans: market
strong; native beef steers, $10.50(015.00;
’ yearlings, steers and heifers, $10.00(013.00;
f cows, $9.75(010.75; stoekers and feeders,
, $10.00(010.60; calves. $16.00(017.00; Texas
cows and heifers, $4.75(06.50.
Hogs—Receipts, 14,000; market steady;
mixed and butchers, $16.15(016.60; good and
heavy, $14.50*015.60; roughs, $11.50(012.75;
light, $16.30(016.60; pigs, $13.75(016.25;
» bulk, $16.15(016.50.
' . Sheep—Receipts, 2.C00: market steady;
' clipped ewes, $13.75(014.00; lambs, $17.00@
! 20.00; canners and choppers, $5.00(06.00.
■ CHICAGO, April s.—Hogs, receipts, 4.-
000; mostly 50c to 75c higher; bulk, $15.75
I @16.50; top, $16.75; heavy $15.25@1G. 10:
, pigs, $14.00@15.75.
‘ Cattle, receipts. 3.000: unsettled. Beef
, steers. $10.00(015.50: butcher cattle, lieif
;ers, $5.00: veal calves, $16.00(017.50; fecd
|er and Stocker steers. $7.65(011.85.
* Sheep, receipts, 500: nominal. Lambs.
]514.00@20.50; ewes, $6.00(015.00.
BIG CROWD VOTES
ENDORSEMENT OF
SENATOR’S RECORD
(Continued from Page 1)
what he thought of the Hall county
outcome.
"I am not uneasy,” said Colonel
Perry. “He won here today.”
And that was the truth, simply
stated and truthfully told. Senator
Smith won here today.
“And what puzzles me is that the
very crowd who have been the loud
est'in abuse of the president, some
of them going so far as to retail
slander of a personal nature abou,
him, are now the loudest in then
sanctimonious demand that we In
dorse every act and every phase of
his administration. A few weeks
ago the progressive Democrats ot
this commonwealth, the Democrats
of virility and independence, not in
terested in patronage or spoils, un
dertook to launch a movement, as
they believe, for the good of the par
ty, but we were disfranchised by
the star chamber action of a little
subcommittee. In that situation,
compelled to make a choice between
two extremes not acceptable to us,
we issued a summons for a great
Georgia statesman to lead our fight
and give an opportunity for an ex
pression of our viewpoint, and at a
sacrifice to himself he answered ouf
call and took up our fight. He is
here today. We intend to present
him as our choice for the Demo
cratic nomination. (Applause.) But
if he is not the choice of the party
then he will be patriotic enough and
big enough and loyal enough to re
lease the delegates and set them
free to make a choice with the lights
before them.”
Senator Smith was greeted with
applause as he rose to acknowledge
the flattering introduction by Colonel
W. A. Charters. He began by
saying he was not one of those
who despairs of success for the
Democratic party in the
election. On the contrary, he said, H
we act wisely present our rec
ord as it should he presented we
can place again a Democratic presi
dent in the White House. The Re
publican party is shot to pieces and
the thing for the Democratic party is
not to shoot themselves all to
pieces.
“We have to our credit,” said Sen
ator Smith, “a magnificent record of
constructive achievement, a record in
which the Democratic congress
shares a part of the praise with the
Democratic president. We can plant
ourselves upon our achievements and
win in November, but it would be
stupid to launch our campaign upon
the proposition that President Wilson
has never made a single mistake and
is Incapable of making a mistake.”
This point evidently impressed the
audience and they responded with
applause. The senator then men
tioned as among the matters on
which he disagreed with President
Wilson the immigration bill and the
bill repealing the daylight saving
law. The immigration bill, as he
pointed out, was aimed; at keeping
out of this country the Ignorant and
vicious scum of Europe. Congress
passed it and the president vetoed
it, and congress passed it over his
veto.
“Palmer asks you,” said he, "to
approve the president’s veto and
disapprove the action of congress.
He asks you to approve the presi
dent’s veto of the bill repealing the
daylight saving law, which under
took-to change the sun and the solar
system, and to disapprove the action
of congress.”
But he made it plain that
what he said was not a criticism
of the president. He said he would
not be guilty of a single syllable of
criticism of the president’s great rec
ord. He was merely contending that
to write a platform at the ISan Fran
cisco convention based upon the the
ory that President Wilson could do
no wrong and make no mistake would
be absurd and suicidal for the party.
“I do not believe,” said he, “in a
one-man government. That is not
the -kind of government our fore
fathers fought for. If the adminis
trative branch of the government is
to pass all the laws then we might
as well dispense with the legislative
branch.”
With regard to Mr. Palmer’s can
didacy, Senator Smith said:
“He is running in Georgia and
Pennsylvania. The Democrats there
are vigorously opposing him because
he bolted a Democratic nomination in
his state two years ago. They are op
posing him because they consider him
disqualified as commander-in-chief of
the army and navy because of his
Quaker religious beliefs. lam going
to begin my candidacy by carrying
my own state, and then I am going
into Pennsylvania and make as many
speeches against Mr. Palmer as he
makes in Georgia against me (laugh
ter and, applause), and when we get
to San Francisco I will have more
delegates than he has. Os course,
he thinks he is running strong in
Georgia because Colonel Dean and
Clark Howell have told him so.
(Laughter:) He thinks he will carry
Hall county because Colonel Dean
has told him *he would carry it.
(Laughter.) Hall county always
votes for the candidate selected for
it by Colonel Dean.”
This struck the audience as ex
tremely amusing, and they respond
ed accordingly.
Then Senator Smith paid his re
spects to the Atlanta Constitution.
“For more than a quarter of a cen
tury,” said he, “that newspaper has
sought to belittle and misrepre
sent my official conduct. Prob
ably its grievance goes back to
the time when I bought a little
afternoon newspaper in Atlanta and
In two years built up a circulation
superior to that of the Constitution.
“In 1892 the Constitution supported
David B. Hill for the Democratic
nomination and I supported Grover
Cleveland and helped to carry the
state for him and he appointed me
to his cabinet and the Constitution
never recovered. Then, in 1906,
Clark Howell ran for governor and
I ran against him and he carried, I
believe, thirteen counties, and that
hurt him awfully. Whenever my
name is mentioned the Constitution
cannot tell the truth. It has in
Washington a correspondent who, if
paid according to the lies he writes,
would -be richer than Rockefeller
(Laughter.) lit has even gone to the
extent of questioning my loyalty to
my government during the war. No
newspaper ever resorted to a more
miserable, cowardly lie. Whenever
Clark ,Howell puts in his columns
any reflection upon my loyalty to my
government he makes of himself a
miserable and cowardly liar. He has
reiterated the lie that I held a po
litical conference and made a polit
ical trade with Senator Reed and
Mr. Hardwick. He knew that was a
lie when he put it in his paper and
has kept on repeating it. Only this
morning he said I sent to Thomson
a messenger to urge Mr. Wa’son nm
to run. That was a lie and he knew
it was a lie. The Cons-itu:.<.•■
lie again in this campaign. It will
lie so often that I cannot keep up
with Ms lies. But I am sure the
people thoroughly understand its
malice and hatred and will no more
believe its lies this time than they
have before.”
Having thus disposed of Mr. Pal
mer and Mr. Jowell, Senator Smith
got down to his real subject, which
was his own record and the ques
tion of its approval or disapproval.
He commenced with the League of
Nations.
Article 10 was the first one dis-
cussed. The senator gave his view
that this article would impose upon
the congress of the United States
an obligation to participate in the
wars of he world. It would chain
the nation, he declared, to send its
men and expend its treasure in every
war of every origin' without any ref
erence to the will of congress or the
will of the people. He showed that
the president’s advisors in Paris
were against this article; that the
article as adopted by tlie peace,con
ference and presented to the senate
was totally different from the ar
ticle as written by the president:
that the article urged by Aunchin
loss and Miller, the president’s ad
visors on I gal matters at-the con
ference, was wholly different.
“And what do we ask,” said he.
“We simply ask that congress have
the right in each separate case to
make a decision as to whether we
shall use our men and our money.
We simply ask that there be kept
in the hands of the people, speaking
through their congress, the power
to declare war or not to declare war
We simply ask that Article 10 os
brought in harmony with the consti
tution of the United States.”
At the conclusion of his discus
sion of Article 10, Senator Smith
took a vote of the audience as to
whether they wished the obligation
put upon their country without res
ervation and almost unanimously
they voted in the negative. Three
school girls and two young boys
voted in favor of the article without
reservation.
As to mandatories, Senator Smith
asked substantially the same. Tn
other words, as convincingly pre
sented, he was not willing for the
representative of the United States
in the council of the league, a rep
resentative named by the president
and responsible solely to the presi
dent, to accept for the United States
the task of policing any turbulent
foreign country which might be dealt
out to us by the council. He said
he was willing for this nation to
take its rightful share of the bur
dens of civilization and to discharge
in full its obligations of honor in
every country, but he was not will
ins' that one single spokesman, sit
ting in Switzerland and acting with
authority for the entire government,
should accept, for example, a manda
tory in Turkey that would require
250,000 men and one billion dollars a
■y r. All that he asked in the way
of reservation was a reference to
congress for its approval or disap
proval. If congress accepts any
mandatory, all well and good. But if
congress should not accept a manda
tory, then no league council and no
representative in the council should
be allowed to put it upon us.
Again the senator took a vote of
the audience and again unanimously
they approved his position with re
gard to mandatories.
Briefly he touched on the article
•establishing an international labor
tribunal, which, as he remarked,
might take a notion to decree that
the farm laborers of the United
States should not give more than
eight hours a day to work in
the fields or might decide to in
terfere in any other question
involving labor in the United States.
He also touched briefly upon
the article giving Great Britain six
votes to our one, which, as he ex
plained, was equivalent to a contract
between two citizens in which one
insisted that five of his sons should
have the right to vote in a contro
versy involving the Interpretation of
the contract. They naturally would
be expected to “stand up for their
daddy,” said he, and the audience
emphatically agreed with this view.
Similarly the senator presented his
reasons for asking a reservation
which will prevent the council of the
league from interfering in domestic
questions like immigration, rates of
tariff and other matters concerning
us and nobody else.
“Mr. ,H. G. Wells,” he said in this
connection, “the famous English
writer, has gone so far as to ask
that the league have authority over
such questions as the treatment of
Armenians in Turkey and the ne
groes in Georgia. When he put his
finger on my state and suggested in
terfering in a problem that concerns
my people then I became uneasy and
that is one illustration of my reason
for asking that we state explicitly
what we mean by domestic questions,
so that the league shall have no pre
text of authority to regulate our in
ternal affairs. It is bad enough to
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have so much interference from
Washington in our affairs, much less
from all of the foreign governments
of the world.”
In conclusion Senator Smith re
cit’ed the history of his fight in 1914
and 1915 to prevent the shipment
of cotton to the neutral ports of
Europe. He said some friends had
criticized him on this matter because
they evidently misunderstood his mo
tives. He went into details and pre
sented the whole case clearly and
convincingly. It was a situation
where the British authorities in their
determination to win the war exer
cised extreme measures to prevent
'American cotton going into neutral
ports of northern Europe. There was
no law for it, but on the contrary
the whole of the law was against it.
Senator Smith protested and the sen
ate supported him and Secretary
Lansing supported him and President
Wilson supported him and the cotton
went through. And then again in
the fall of 1918 he made another
fight in behalf of cotton when Presi
dent Wilson determined to fix a price
upon it through the war trade board
and in that fight the president car
ried out his determination and cot
ton ■was forced down SSO a bale.
“I went to the president and beg-,
ged him not to do what he was do-l
ing,” said Senator Smith. “But he!
would not alter his determination. |
And you paid the cost or helped to j
pay it to the amount of $75,000,000. 1
If there had been any necessity for
it I wouldn't have opened my mouth.
But it was not necessary and I do
not believe the pi-esident now, If he
were well and the matter should be
presented to him, would claim it was
necessary. Yet Mr. Palmer asks you
to censure me and vote for him
because he approves every act and
phase of the administration."
And this brought the senator to his
close.
“I have had all the honors you
can bestow upon me,’’ said he. “I
am sixty-four years old and for
more than fifty years I have been
going under a dead strain. I can
well afford to take a rest. My labors
in the senate are heavy and arduous.
There is no money in It, no rest in
it. Often I am criticized and mis
represented. But there is in it the
satisfaction one gets from a labor
of love. I have done my best to rep
resent your interests. When I have
differed with the president It was
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WOOL growers, write Athens Hide Co.,
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_ ———
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because I knew your interests wer
at stake and 1 ought to differ wit'
h|m, because I was closer to you
interests and understood them bet
ter than did the president. And noi
you are asked by a man from Penn
sylvania to vote for him as a censur
of me and my work for you. I wil
accept a vote of censure from th
people of my state wften they hav
voted on the delegates who pass th
vote of censure, but not before. An
I am going to give them the recor
and let them make the verdict, I
they do not approve my cour»« M
the senate I wish to retire and no
attempt to serve them again. An
here today, before we adjourn th!
meeting, I would like to know you
verdict upon me, and I ask Colone
Charters to submit the question t
you.”
And the question was submitted i
the way above described and the an
swer came back as . clearly and di
rectly as any judge or any jury
any - audience ever gave a verdie
and when they had given it the at!
dience filed through the bar of th
■ courtroom and shook the senator’
hand and told him again, standin
. close to him and looking in his ey
in a man-to-man way, that they ap
• proved his course and were going t
vote for him.
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OWN YOUR OWN ORANGE GHOVE II
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A few dollars a month will buy it. Plan
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CGRfTANb’ COTTON~
170 Acres, $3,300
Estate must be closed; first man on th<
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FREE U. S’. LAND—2'6<X(KM> in Ark
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_ OWN _ A FLORIDA^ORANGE GROVE
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POR SAT.E—PLANTS
CABBAGE PLANTS
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TOMATO PLANTS
VARIETIES New Stone and Greater Balti
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