Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, February 20, 1907, Image 1

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Th* | fay, Witt WO rMSg* *> t*»P*mtera. Atlanta Georgian and News VOL. V. NO. 198. ATLANTA, GA-, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20,1907 PRICE: IV THAW INTERRUPTSJEROME WHILE QUESTIONING WIFE Sensation Develops in Trial of White’s Slayer. JKISH LAWMAKERS ATTEND THE TRIAL .Mrs. Thaw TellB of “Bear Rug” Photograph of Hereelf. oOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 THAW 18 TO BE TRIED O BEFORE ASYLUM CLINIC. O O o Toledo. Ohio, Feb. JO.—Harry O 0 Thaw will be tried, figuratively, at O O next Tuesday's clinic at- the To- O o ledo Insane asylum. Publlehed O o reports of the evidence will form O O the basis for the discussion. Hu- O 0 iierlntcndent Love says he believes O o maw insane now as well as when a o he killed White. O Ooooooaooooooooaaoooooooao NEW YORK, FEB. 2fc—WHILE DISTRICT ATTORNEY JEROME WAS CROSS-EXAMINING EVELYN NESBIT THAW THIS MORNING, HER HUSBAND, HARRY KENDALL THAW, ON TRIAL FOR THE MUR- OER-OBL.BIAIMRMIDJMHITE, GOT. VERY""EXCITED AND INTERRUPT. EO JEROME. New York. Feb. 10.—When court opened at 10:10 o'clock this morning. Kvelyn Neeblt Thaw went on the stand to undergo the gruelling ordeal of a , athlng cross-examination at the hands of‘District Attorney Jerome. He had spent many hours of last right studying the testimony which ehe save In answer to the friendly ques tioning of Mr. Delmas, and was armed with a long list of purposed Interroga Hone with which he hopes to shatter the rerakrkable story she related In he* husband's behalf, Did Not Dread the Ordeal. \vhtp.J*«»-,,Tha.w ttSfihsS the court thr did not seed) IS be in dread of the tortuouJTSWeal to which sbe knew eho would be subjected. Notwithstanding im null uHill»i~» —' ‘~‘~r non to tty snd breek down her pathetic narrative, ehe sppeered ne brave ss iver and looked to be In the best of spirits The four weeks of humiliation which »li« has suffered since her husband was put on trial for the slaying of Stan ford White has not affected her mate rially and far from fearing, she seemed anxious that Mr. Jerome meke every endeavor In hla power to Impeach her sworn testimony. Four days ehe hen been on the eland altogether; generally in ordeel suffl- i lent to break down the ordinary wom an. yet thi prackjrand comely young t ife of the young Pltteburger Is as < aim and cool os the strongest man 1'iulil possibly be under the clrjuin- ■lances. Irish Msmbers in Court. Two Irish members of the British parliament were at the trial today. 1 hey were Richard Haselton, of North Hal way, and T. M. Kettle, of East Tyrone. They eat In a corner of the r "im with John T. McCall, vice presl- FOES OF RUSSIAN CZAR MAY CONTROL DOUMA Hi- Petersburg, Feb. JO.—Electione tor tbe douma ware computed today. Government circles are eiuplOed by the success of the Social .Democrats and the radical press Is MuItanL There le more talk of massacres to force martial law and to postpone the assembling of tbe new douma. OPERATORSTO DEMAND UNION'S RECOGNITION Will Put Straight Pro posal to Western Union. UNION STRONG IN LOCAL OFFICES Claim Atlanta Office Does Not Deal Fairly With Operators. Continued en Page Thirteen. Within the next three days It Is pected that a committee composed of members of Atlanta local No. SO. Com merctal Telegraphers' Union of Amort ca, will visit J. Levin, general superin tendent of the Southern territory of the Western I'nlon Telegraph Com puny, and demand a readjustment of alleged practices said to be In use In the Atlanta office which are non-union and prejudicial to union principles. This committee wilt also demand that mtrclal Telegraphers’ Union of Amer ica and gtve the union'meh nndtVYbe Jurisdiction of - Ole Atlanta local 'the rights end privileges of union man This is the tint development of the ex tended meeting of union telegraphers which woe held lest Sunday afternoon, the result of which woe published ex clusive ly In The Georgian Monday aft ernoon. What the result will be If the officials of the Western I’nlon rsfuse In recog- nlse the committee Is not known, but It Is predicted that the matter will go before u special meeting of the union and n walk-out of over a hundred op erators will result. Organised circles are discussing the situation ltnd It Is behoved that trouble Is In store for the We-t.-rn l.'nlon. Follewt en Advance. The fact that this action on the part of the Atlanta operators follows almost immediately after the Increase of 10 per cent in wages nllowed by Robert C. dowry, president and generat manager. Is recorded as unusual. Inasmuch as the diffcient unions tnroughout the country requested this raise- This Is explained fully by one of the union telegraphers, who claims that the practices In vogue In the Atlanta office practically nullifies the raise, and that In consequence thereof the 10 per cent raise eventually finds Its way hack Into the coffers of the coritpnny, without benefiting any one. "They put the ’phot' wires In the hands of the lower paid men." said he, "and as these 'wife* have been costing them larger wages and higher paid men •ALARY INCREASE 0 IS EXTENDED « Tbe Western Union, on 0 Wednesday afternoon, ex- $ tended tbe recent order in- 0 creasing salaries to .eeb* all independent offices. It was stated by an official of the company that it- was was believed this would do much to bring about rec- conciliation between offi cials and operators. The or der follows; cWoyd, Atlanta, Oa. “You are authorized to 0 include managers and oper- 0 ators at all independent of- 41 bees in tbe increase of 10 ft 0 per cent in salaries March 9 0 1, 1907. Please distribute this order to all indepen dent offices without delay. “J. LEVIN, “General Supt.” OLIVER’S ANSWER GOES TO CAPITAL Old Divorce Suit In terests Canal Com mission. CERTIFIED COPY WAS SECURED AS ART MODEL LITTLE GIRL POSED TOLD TO OT The Georgian’s Article Fol lowed by ViBit of Canal Commissioner. t '000000000ft i KILLED ATCONM Tragedy Relieved To Have Been Result of Land Deal Dispute. Special tu The Georgian. Concord, Oa.. Feb. JO.—Harvey J. Crouch, a young farmer living noai Gay. fla; was shot and killed this morning by his cousin. George P. Brown. • * No particulars can be learned, but It Is reported to hnvc been the result of a misunderstanding as to land deal. Brown claims self defense. It Is said. Crouch leave, a wife and one child. Crouch was a brother of R. O. tc J. H. Grouch, of Griffin, and a nephew of R. F. Strickland, of Orlfltn. and a broth. |er-ln-law of Dm. E. C. Thrash and W. IA Human, of Atlanta. Oa. Growth and Progress of the New South The Georgian records here each day »>me BY JOSEPH B. LIVELY. The South possesses practically all the land available for settle, ■cent and cultivation that remains n the country. Texes alone having lsv.000,000 acres subject to eultlvatlrn with only I4.000.ooo devoted to ag riculture. The remainder of the 8o*ih lias the riches! and cheapest farm ing lands In the world, thus presenting the best and most profitable Held •»f investment to bo found on the face of the globe.—The Tradesman, hattanoogo. SUBURBAN REAL ESTATE. The Georgia and Alabama Industrial Index says: “The numerous developments of .mburbnn real relate, folios#d by sale and utilisation of building bits, lh an Important factor Juat now !n the upbuilding of cities and towns in Georgia and Alabama. In many instanrra thn flevetnnem show their thorough fait! instances the developers show their thorough faith In Ihelr PP'l*HhN | by Investing considerable sums. In addition to the first cost. In laying off and grading*itrestm, paving tldewelks nnd making other substantial Improve ments of a public character befoie placing building lots upon the market. GEORGIA INDUSTRIES. Following are Hems of Interest concerning the Industrial growth ot Georgia and Alabama from The Georgia and.Alabama Industrial l»d**. New cotton mills are to be built at * enroll ton and "parts. Mattress fm lory at Columbus. Contract has been let for th , e J 1 ”** 1 “t Way cross that will represent an Investment of 1170.000. A land com- imny with a capital stock of 1175,000 Is being organised at olumbua. At Albany the expenditure of I too. 000 in street t*»lss *■ WJSjjf 'ion tn sumter county a company with ■ muiraltaiiiSwa ^1«««!b being organised to develop kaolin deposits. Other miscellaneous Items reportedore: A branch factory at Gainesville. < oncrete .-block plant at Madison. Church building at Quitman. ALABAMA INDUSTRIES. • At Clanton a 150,000 cotton mill company hu been 0 »T* nl «^; J h « Kojtcttd building of 210 mile* of railway has bean- announc ed, mad plana to 'build a railway line through an undevelop ed auction art taking final shape. A Birmingham tordwvr* Jlrm "HI build, a warehouse at a coat of I17MO0. -i-JSTTn nmeLtnni muntv tabllahed at Columbia. An election haa been ordered aJSSESZ »*pon the Issuance of $110,000 of road hat bean lat for the oonatmctlon of a church In IHrmlnghamat a «Mt about 97I.0M. Among othei Item* reported are. Art glass works, Birmingham; gas plants In four counties; ingham; lumbar and turpantlnu company. ^ . two r3un r dock. tool. •• iTiheXV TwmWmR contracting dock, and b>ats at Hors ■lee; two business buildings, one sev Among*the othrr contract awards noted In School bulldlnea 110.IMS: pumping station. Jm.OOO. remodollng court ■ hool building., house. 115,000. Is Oil King's Cash Tainted or Not? CISTelssd, Oblo, Feb. JS.—"Who shall say John I). Itoekefrller's money I. tainted?" asked President Jacob U. Hchunnsa. of Cornell university. In nn addrena here. "If the ta.osa.oon Just tfren to rdnrstlon gOu. for the civilisation of the Mouth, II Is tar from tainted." In npsrate. you can see that tha low paid man does the work of the old and experienced and htgber paid man. with no Increase to the company. Instead of adopting fair rules governing the distribution of goad 'tricks’ and the best wires, ihey are manifestly unfair. Neither the hlgh-woge man nor the low-wage men Is benefited.” Enthusiastic and largely attended union mreilnge have been held tn Chi cago and other large cities, and the union le Increasing Its membership in great number*. It having bean reported that l.tso took the. oath at a meeting February 10 at Chicago, and took the union oath. Huperlnlendsnt Levin Is out of At lanta, but ti expected to return Inter this week. Other officiate of the West- em Union disclaim any knowledge of trouble being Imminent and emit* when William P. Armstrong, of Washing ton. D.' C.. a member of tbe Isthmian Canal commission, applied to the clerk of the superior court of Fulton county Wednesday morning and secured certified copy of the answer mads by William J. Oliver, lowest bidder for the Panama canal contract, to the pe tition for dlvaroa filed In Atlanta May 13. 1105, by Nonnle Oliver. The fact that this old suit In which Mr. Oliver figured won being dug up and dragged from tha musty flies to possibly defeat bis bid far the digging of the big canal was published sxclu lively In The Georgian two weeks ago. and the visit ot this official of the canal commission adds Interest and Impor lance to the publication. alleged In the original N’onnle Oliver petition that eh* was the lawful wife of William J. Oliver and that he de- serted her. She asked for 51*1.000. It as first tiled In Knoxville. Tenn.. and later brought to Atlanta." because Kite was a cltlxen of this county. Different copies have been made of the original petition by Atlanta attorneys and It Is said that they were sent to Washing ton. Mr. Armstrong left the city Imme diately after he secured the eertmed copy, presumably for Washington. Hie coming was not heralded and he went about hla business In a manner not calculated to create the suspicion of the local prase that such an Important official was In the city. Bill Excluding Japs Is Signec By Roosevelt Washington. Feb. JO. — President Roosevelt today signed the Immigration bill This measure's chief feature I* the exclusion of Japanese coolies from this country. As a result of the passage of the bill Japanese children, below the age of 15, will be permitted to attend the unite public schools In San Fran cisco. The bill was amended at the sugges tion of members of congress who stand close to the president, and who under stood the administration's views on the subject. The amendment designed to fettle the school trouble on the Pacific coast wbs drawn by Secretary of Rule Root, and was the remit of conferences between Prtsldent Roosevelt, Mr. Root nnd Mayor Schmitt and members of the board of education ot San Fr*n clsro. It Is understood that the provisions ot the bill are not acceptable to,the Ul I III 1 *J»II hi® Japanese, but that a treaty which I* now being negotiated with the mikado's government may straighten out the tangle. MILITIA ORDERED OUT TO PROTECT NEGROES AT TRIAL Richmond. V*.. Feb. 10.—Throe com panies of military have been ordered out by Governor Swanson to protect Pater Hudson and Herbert Hteptoe, the negro assailants of Mist Gladys Bhel- Ion, at the trial at Amherst. Vs- today. Since the crime Inst January, tha ne groes have been In loll In Lynchburg. Although the feeling against tbe ne groes was of the frensted type at the time of the assault, no excitement nnd no attempt to lynch the negroes Is ex pected now. £00000430000000000000000000 O FELL FROM HIGH TRESTLE: O O WALKS AWAY UNINJURED. O e union In At phalanx, and If a strike Is declared they claim (hat the Western Union win be badly crippled. ROOMS WERE BURGLARIZED WHERE FAMILIES SLEPT. Special to The Georgian. Chqrloite. N. C„ Feb. 10.—Informa tion from Mooroevtll* today states that tbs homes ot C. E Hawthorn* and Richmond Foltrans ware burglarised nnd over 1100 In money and Jewelry taken In both homes. The rooms were entered when the ftmllls* were sleep. Ing. O Special to The Oenrglan. O O Columbia, 8. C.. Feb. JO.—James O O Lester, a machinist o| this city, 0 ~ fell 50 feet from the Columbia. O Newberry and Laurens, railroad O trestle Into the folumbla canal O this morning nnd stuck In the 0 mud 10 fsgt below I he surface of 0 the water. He pulled loose and O swam ashore ami seems non* the O worse for the wear. O O Witness Tells of Order Given by Pen rose. AS GUARD FORMED SHOTS WERE HEARD Private Got Permission to Lie Down, Fearing Bullets. Washington. Feb. 10.—Elmer Brown, of Company II. testified today before the military affairs committee that Major Penrose was not liked by the dt- of Brownsville, as he had been led to understand. He thought tKbdue to the fact that Majdr Penrose did not associate with them and did not go to the card rooms and saloons. The wit ness said that on the afternoon of Au gust, 11 he saw Dr. Combs, the mayor of Brownsville, Major Penrose, and stranger talking near the poet ex change. They appeared to be angry and were shaking their flats. Brown sold be watched them, as he thought there was going to be a light. After they separated. Major Penrose went to the quarters ot Lieutenant Lauriaon, In command of Company B. Later the order was Issued that all be In tbalr quitter* Brown testified he went out of quar ters the night of August 11 about 5:55 and got a bottle of beer at Allison's sa loon. There were fifteen to twenty men in the saloon, drinking and gam' bllng. About six were soldiers. Boyd Conyers, a young private of Company B. was the second witness' examined today. On the ntght of Au gust II he was awakened by the ser geant calling out the guard. The shooting was going on when tha guard formed. He heard two bullets fly over between the guard house and tha post exchange. He was stationed by Ser geant Reid at the head of the guard house and kept watch. He said he heard further shooting In town after being stationed In tbs rear of the guard house, and got permlaalon to II* down, fearing he would be shat. Conyers sold tbe Inspection of the rifles of the guard In the morning of August 14 wo* vary strict. On cross- examination Conyers said he was con fident the shooting was In the town. He said he h«H4 A good deal of shoot ing tn the town after being stationed In the rear of the guard house. INCREASE GRANTED TO CAR WORKERS AT AUGUSTA SHOPS Will Return to Work at In crease^ Wages and'Year ly Contracts. AufftiRtJi. Ua., IVli. 3ft—Th»» itrlku of the .ir M-orkrrs of thr (toorfftn rim! Flwrlnrtoii ml Woatrrn CaroMna railway* caim to n ti»Ao tiMjnjr. Tlir Charlratou ami Wratrrn arollna mrn get in rrnta Inrraaar |H*r tlajr or rt'iialr track wen. ami 46 mil* per lat Im-rcaac of oilier car worker*. All the Georgia tnen get n flat |m*rcniw f jo uenta per dajr. The railroad ngreetl ii *l*o yearly contmet* with the men IntltvIilualN. hut Oo not rreoftilse the fnr Workef*' nnton. mm LIKELY Senate Committee Decides Upon Favor able Report. SENATOR MORGAN IS FOR MEASURE Bacon’s Opposition May Not Prevent Ratifica tion by March 4. Washington, Fet. 10.—'Th# senate committee on foreign relatione decided to make a favorable report on tbe San to Domingo treaty at Its nesting to day. AH tho -BepubUcohe of 5b* com- mines who weie piessm ruled for Hi* favorable report. Th* Democrats gen erally opposed It. The only exception on the Democratic side was Senator Morgan, of Alabama, who was allowed to vote by letter, as he was sick *1 his home. Hs sustained the treaty. The only modification made I* the treaty by the committee was suggested by Senator Morgan In ble letter. It won the elimination of a provision to th* effect that the Amer ican collectors of customs for Santo Domingo should be selected with the advice and consent of the senate. The point woe mod* (hat those mm R constitution and that ir wu not Photographer Arrested and Held at Police Station. i GIRL MODEL WAS JUST FIFTEEN To Help Her Parents She Answers Advertisement in Local Paper. ADVXXTismtarr U8ZD TO LURK Tbe following advertise ment appeared in a local paper on Wedneaday. Feb. 13, under the healing “Fe male Help Wanted.” Wanted—At onoe, artist'• model. Mast be young and good looking. Good pay. Address M. M., care P. D. Carter, alias Frad Johnson, who says he la a medical etudant. la undar using Annie May Mallory, a Th* girl and her father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Mallory, are ahu held. Carter has been under police surveillance for some time as a sus pect. and was arreatad Wednesday morning by Plain Clothes Officers Row an and Rosser. Carter hod a room rentad-ln the Vir ginia Hotel, In Broad street, and her* he was using Mias Mallory to pose al most In the nude for artr photographs. Carter's defena* ta that h* saw an off, vertlsement of the Western Art Cot*- lay. of Chicago, for art ptetoao*. After contraunicating wn*' them, he ■oral eooary for the senate to confirm them, paper and Mia* Mallory responded to their selection. It la now generally predicted that the treaty will be ratified at an early date. President Roosevelt Ii Insisting <m-n vote upon It before March 5 and tha Republican leaders of the senate ex pect to get a vote. They believe the tvooiy will be ratified th spite of the fact that Senator Bacon has not abab doned his opposition SIMP LIKE TO BE MUSHED FIMI Eton PORT Within Few Months For eigners Will be Landed In Savannah. ... rnllnunit rsfns^l to ftltow * union hlolp. hut s*rr«Mt tn b«**r the ffiievniiue* fmmii n rmmnlttiw. If th* mrn think of thrlr nutitfM»r Is unjtutly <II*ub*r*til A victory f«»r thr strlkrr* is fuurt here, tint In « moderate form Tin* met. all *»» laiek tu werk tomorrow i nor nl nt Mii'cdetl oooooooooooooooooooOoooooo engineer.aK.LLE0 BN T L|0HT> OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC o MARCH NEAR NOW| O Special to The Georgian Columbia. 8. C., Feb. ----z. . - Lynch.! a fireman at a stationery en- GU8TY WIND8 PREVAIL. D. K , nc at the Powell tlupply Company's March gives notice of lla prox- O Unity. In gusty winds. Up around O the s'andler iter b ulldlng—but, never O mind. Forecast: 0 "Fair Wednesday night artd O Thursday, with no marked change O tn temperature." O Temperature* Wednesday: 7 o'clock a. m. s o'clock a. m. t o'clock a. m. 10 o'clock a. nt. 11 o'clock *. m. . 1J o'clock noon I o'clock p. nt. J o'clock p. nt. .M degrees O ...17 degrees O ...II degrees O ...40 degrees O ...45 degrees O ...M degrees O • .51 degrees plant, was Instantly killed early this morning by a shock from an Incan descent lamp on the engine When assistance reached him a minute after hr grabbed the lamp Ike was gasping with the lamp In hla hand. Lynoh tvss Jl years old and unmarried. LOCOOOOOOOOOOpOOOOOOOOOOOO Richmond.' Prominent Meson Dead. Hpeclol to The Georgian. Norfolk. Va . Feb. JO —Colonel Hen ry L. Turner, aged *1 years, wealthy, and one of the mnet prominent Masons In Virginia, died suddenly today fol lowing hla return from a meeting of the Vfrgtnla Grand Lodge of Masons at ■pedal to The GeorgUOh Macon. O*.. Feb 10.—There has been no lark of enthusiasm In the conven tion held here. To Establish Ship Lina. Ry for the moat Important develop ment In the Immigration convention ha* been the movement to establish an Immigrant ship line between vannah and a Kuropean port. Th* Idea was first advocated by Governor Ter' roll In hie address to the iconventlon yesterday, and the afternoon session established the fart that within thk nest ninety days a regular line of steamers will be eetabllahed between a German port and Havannah, and an Irregular line between ports of Italy and the United Kingdom and Bavan- nuh. with an Immigration alallnn un der Federal supervision at Havannah. Resolution* Adopted. The report of the committee on reso lutions was as follows: "Whereas, The slate of Georgia le In a condition which demands action with respect to the Industrie* of the state on the line of her material development, throughout all Georgia and especially In the Southern portion of the slate complaint I* rife with respect lo a de ficiency in laborer*. People who are operating Industries, tor the want of labor, find themselves unable lo make progress: ami new enterprises are not started for the reason that men who have money are unwilling lo Invest It In manufacturing or other Industrial operations with the fact stating them la the face that they will be unable to operate them for want of laborers. These things have brought about a restless condition on the port of our people, pspeclaltr In the southern.s*c- Hons of the state, where efforts have been pul on foot to Iniport negro la bor front Cuba, Porto Rico and other Weet Indian Islands. Therefore, be It resolved: I. That this convention favors Im migration of the beet and highest type which Is available, and desires that steps be taken to keep out of the state thfft lisas of people who will be a menace lo our tgdqslrlal progress and a higher type of civilisation. J. We most cordially and earnestly representation with nan pact 1 Invite oil Interests and all people of th - mtaratfon legislation now Carter,.soya further that tbs glri'e mother brought bar to bl* room In th* Virginia Hotel and gave full PeU 75 Cents an Hour. The gtri received 75 cents an hour, and Carter waa to receive to cents for every pictura tbo" Cblcago conceru ac cepted. Carter Is held under a IM* cosh collateral, and the girl and her parents are also held. The officers captuerd a number-of photographs sold to have been made by Carter. Boms of thsse show th* young girl wearing nothing but a small trunk. Others ora nude from th* waist up. Mrs. Mallory said that she bad ac companied her daughter to tbe studio In the Virginia Hotel, and had not trusted her alone. She did not think mere "was anything wrong tn poehns. The young girl had wished to help bar parents by earning a little mosey. PROMOTIONS ANNOUNCED ON SEABOARD AIR LINE. 8pec 1*1 to The Georgian. Norfolk. Va* Feb. to.—Jo* F. Msaa, superintendent of the Birmingham di vision of the Seaboard Air Lina rttl- way, who Is to bo succeeded by W. II. Waite, of the Queen and Crescent rail way. will become superintendent at tha Jacksonville division of the Hesboant Air Line with headquarters at Jackson ville, succeeding H. W. Stanley, who becomes superintendent of transporta tion with headquarters at Portsmouth, Va, T. O. Cole resigned as car serv ice agent, which position Is shnHslmd. to become traffic manager of the Beth lehem Steel Works at South BedUs- hem. laudable movement I 1. Under existing Federal laws, all efforts to secure Immigrants (and we w-ant non* except those which are de sirable) must be had under the diron- tlon and supervision of the stale. It Is, therefore, eminently Important that Itbe state should taka the matter m hand and provide such means and give direction to such operation* an w in se cure a sufficiency of good people to meet our labor conditions. 4. Thousands of spindles In the cot ton mills ore Idle and other manufac turing Interests or* retarded, while building Interests In many triacw ora almost st a standstill. All for a treat of a sufficiency of labor to property conduct operations. Thro* conditions added to tn* tact that we have minims of actus of land In Georgia now lythg Idle, which could be made to longsty Increase the wealth of the state, i to tntsnalty tbe need for active opera- Hons In securing desirable Ima lion to tbe state. 5. The fact that we have nut labor sufficient to handle the spindle* ta tha cotton mills which w* now have la < cotton nulls which we now nave la op. eration In the state. In addition to tb* drawback which It occasion* oa ac count of a decrease In tbe output of th* milts, u a reason w hy men with capital will not Invest It In additional rnMsn mills In Georgia. All of which la gross ly detrimental to our material ps ffpese and advancement. *. When population le Increased con sumption of edible product* la ta- oreosed. and hence mere paopls wM 1 put to raising edible products .taUtei of producing cottop. 7. We must rordtally and ! dorse the action of Senator A. 0.1 and the other members ot the i state tv no operate with us In thk foie umgreaa. a*