The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, June 10, 1911, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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Gorer>j2222ei2Z Building. Ai His Excellency the Governor of Guam had just sat down to break fast in the stucco villa, which by con trast with the other buildings in Aga na, merited its designation of "pal-" ?ace." Breakfast, although consist ing of an unvaryin!? bill of fare, pre sented at preceisely the same hour everyday, was an event in the trance like life of Guam, where nothing ever happened between the semi-annual visits of the supply-ship from Manil la, and the occasional call of a cop ra dealer from Japan. His Excellency was about to ad dress himself, with somewhat lan guid apputite, to a juicy bilimbini, whe)n ihis secretary, deputy, aide, chief of police, generalissimo, ad miral?all in one?entered excitedly to announce the approach of a ves sel. The ofKcial force of the Island be took itself to the veranda aim brought :'ta two gray heads togeth er in aliernate peeps through an ancient telescope. The vessel approaching rapidly was a wi r ship, flying the stars and stripes. That much was clear. I "What might be its errand was be yond conjecture. When within about three miles of shore, the cruiser stopped and pres ently from the side spat forth a bll-1 lowly mas of thick white smoke. The following report reminded the Governor of his responsibilities, a salute! They must prepare to re turn it immediately. Shouting di " ; ^'^'^'' ' 1^ - M/ir^ ^ lovrr, ?? 7rr ^ ^ ? -1 rections to some members of the mil itary force who stood nearby, the Sec retary hurried down to the beach where, upon the remnant of a ruined fort stood the only piece of ordnance tho Island boasted. He glanced into the muzzle of the venerable carro nade?a relic of prouder days?and hastened back to his chief. A pair of wild pigeons had nested in the cannon and even now were tending a brood of fluffy little ones Here was a dilemma. To turn out the birds was clearly out of the queb tion. On the other hand, the salute of a friendly nation demanded prompt answer. While the Governor pondered, with pucker 4 brow, the gun of the ward ship boomed acrosb the waters for the third time. The next report found the Governor erect J and decided. He had it He would sink etiquette and abate the dignity J due to the representative of His'Most j Catholic Majesty, the King of Spain. He would row out and nay his re spects to the com.m&r.de.' of the American vessel.' While a party of natives hailed out the old -pinnace, His Excellency put on his faded uniform, with its tar nished gold lace. He W&a soon in the boat and before long?tor the Cham orro Is a lusty oarsmau?the cruis er's side was reached. The American commander met the Governor with respectful courtesy and listened, not without puzzlement to his apology for falling to return ?the salute. With as much tact and City qTs4?<l7/3& gentleness as he could employ the American explained that there had I been no salute, that his guns were I lired in menace, that as an incident ' hi the war between the United States and Spain he had come to demand the surrender of Guam. The poor governor was speechless with amazement, War?he had heard no whisper of it. As to surrender? he thought of the sixteen men who composed his garrison, and of the one piece of artillery?with the pig eons in it. The blood of the Castile urged him to strike a blow for the honor of his country, but common sense proclaimed that resistance would be madness. So Guam fell into our hands, and the treaty of Paris confirmed us in the possession of it. We stipulated for its retention because we recog nized its stragetic value. Spain had never made any use of the Island ex cept to transport convicts there from the Phillipines. But that was stop ped after an enterprising gang of criminals -practically took possession of Guam and held full sway until a war vessel came from Manilla and took them back. Under the United States the Island 'I l? JJJls u li.as been made a link in the Pacific cable system and a naval station is being slowly established there. The Island is one of a chain of bases stretching across the Pacific, and I formed by Hawaii, Midway Island.' Guam and the Phillipines. Under certain circumstances Guam might play an important part in war. It considerably strengthens our defense against possible Japanese aggression, provided we have ample warning of the attack. ; Today, Japan could take Guam as easily as we did and would have Ut ile mor? difficulty in seizing -the Phillipines The Island can not be! made formidably defensive. Its strength and utility are inseparable from the co-operation of a fleet. On the other hand, to our vessels ma noeuvering in the Pacific, Guam would be of the greatest value in breaking the long journey from Hawaii, or Samoa, to Manila. . The distance from Honolulu to Guam is j 3,3OS miles and thence to Manila; 1,506. It is even less to Yokohama. From Panama to Guam the distance is 7,846. Guam is only a small dot in the ocean, barely 150 square' miles in extent, 30 miles in length, and from 3 to 10 miles in breadth. Small as it is, hardly more than two per cent of the Island's area has been placed under civilization and habitation is limited to a few patch- I J cs along the const. There are some- ' what fewer than 10,000 inhabitants, distributed among about a dozen centres, of which but one boasts a population in excess of 500. This' one is Agana, where more than half! , of the 'people of the Island live. | I Agana has been the capital since time immemorial. When Magellanes J j reached Guam, on his memonable I voyage around the world, the seat j of the Cacique of Guam was at Agana and it always has been the residence of Spanish Governors The United States marines and the offi cials connected with the naval sta tion are quartered at Samuye, about 8 miles to the south of the capital. Aagana has not a single point of interest. It is a commonplace col lection of one-story houses, with thatched roofs and whitewashed mud walls. A little shallow stream runs through it. Until late years, this was the common place for washing clothing and the depositing of refuse. Tt was also the chief source of the street iriAQa. supply of drinking water and, na turally, a powerful agency for the spread cf diseases. Thes^ conditions have been greatly Improved under American control of the Island. The people of Agana are, perhaps, a slight degree less poor than the re mainder of the . inhabitants,' hut practically -all of them live from hand to mouth, and, when one of the periodical hurricanes sweeps the Island, they are reduced to cne vet.^e of starvation. Tneir main oe-. pendence is ?-n the crops which : hey raise on little plantations, a few from the town, where they take up their abode in the harvest season. Rice, maize, tomatoes, and garden truck are cultivated most extensively and a little tobacco of a passable quality is grown. The greatest area is devoted to cocoanuts, which are indigenous to the soil and require little care. The cocoa tree furnishes the native with the greatest variety of necessities. From it he derives meat, drink, wine vinegar, me lasses, lard, shoes, clothing: in shades his other crops; it fattens his chickens and hogs; it yields the thatch, the woodwork and the crude furniture of his house; from its sap he takes the yeast for his bread; its fibre he fashions into cord and mat ting. But the most important product procured from the tree is copra, which is the dried meat of the co coanut The tree is more prolific in Guam than in any other part of the. world, with the exception of the I Caroline Islands. The crudest meth ods are practised by the Guamese in preparing copra. The cocoanuts ripen all the year round and each | morning the rancher and his sons j make the rounds of the grove, pick- j ing up the cocos which have fallen during the night. These are piled up beside the ranch hut until a suf ficient quantity to work upon has been accumulated. In the process of extraction, one man, w'Crr- his machete splits a nut open and hands the pieces to another who is seated astride a low wooden horse with a 723 I chisel-shaped piece of iron fitted to the end of it. This man with a dex terous turn of a half nut on the chisel separates the meat from the husk. Women take the pieces of meat as fast as they fall and spread them out on mats made of heavy (grass. These are laid in the sun that the meat may he dried. The naked children run constantly around the mat driving away the pigs and the chickens. Such members of the family as are not engaged in i?e work described stand by ready to carry the meat under shelter at the first sign of rain, for a very slight wetting will spoil, it. After five or six days of exposure to the sun the copra is sufficiently cured, it is then placed in i?;Tass sacks and carried to Agana where it is sold, or bartered for merchandise. The copra collectors break the meat into the small pieces, for the sake of securing greater compactness, and pack it into sacks, each containing 130 pounds. It is ultimately sold to the Japanese trading schooners that make regular trips for the crop. To return to the Guamese: it is probable that their condition will in the course of no great time,' be materially improved if they have the capacity to rise to their oppor tunity. The naval station will create a demand for a large number of la borers in mechanical work of a more or less skilled nature. The author ities realize that tuey would have difficulty in inducing! Americans to accept employment. Furthermore, a sudden damand for an extra upply of labor, such as would arif? under easily conceivable clrcu- stances, could only be met by a local re sponse. These considerations, and a desire to benefit the idlaaders. have determined the authorities to make an effort to Qualify the Guam ese to fill as many as possible of the positions in connection with the na val station. They are to be given opportunity for manual training and instruction in mechanics., in connec tion with the common school educa tion which is now available to them. What :i Bant Account Does at The People's Bank It helps your credit. It stimulates your courage. It guards you against extrava gance. It givss you confidence in your judgment It helps you hold up while you are out of work. It furnishes the l>est receipt for all money you pay out It creates business habits that will increase your savings. It protects against loss by rob bery and personal injury by rob bers. It enables 3 ou to pass over per ods of sickness without embarrass ment. It m?tkes you able to run your business, instead of your business running you. It teaches economy, which is the first round in the ladder to success and prosperity. Your business wel come, The People's Bank ELLOREE, S. C. Xo( ice. Under and by virtue of a resolu tion of the Board of Directors of the Rowesville Cotton Oil Company, a meeting of its stockholders will be held at its office, Rowesville, S. C, on the 19th day of June, 1911, at 11 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of go ing into liquidation, dissolving and winding up the affairs of said cor poration, and also for the purpose of determining upon the sale and con veyance of all the property, rights and plant, of the said Rowesville Cot ton Oil Company. E. N. Chisolm, President Rowesville Cotton Oil Co. -1 Notice. The regular monthly meeting of the Orangebur? County Farmers' Un ion will be held on Tuesday, June 13th. at 11 o'clock at the court house. There are several important matters to come up at this meeting, the report of the committee on "Fer tilier Laws" being the most Im portant. We hope that there will be a large attendance of the union members as well as delegates. W. W. Culler, J. H. Claffy, Secretary President. Get the J. M. batteries at L. E. Riley's and you get the best. BLESTODIES THE FALL OF SAMARIA It Kings 17:1-18~-Juno 18 "Be that being often repmcd hardeneth his neck shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy.'?ProterCiti tO:l. ROSHKA. Klus of Israel, th* central personageoT this stud? Is paid the rather doubtfUi compliment of being less eri' in tbe Lord s sight th:*n some of bK pnKleci'ssors Gradun'iy tbe Assyri:iii kingdom had extended Its control to Israel, and Oosbea maintained bi> hrune by paying tribute. This continued for several years nn til the KIuk of IsraH ibought hlmsell sulticieiitly In league wlttj tlie Es.rp tlaus on the south to refuse furthei tribute money. In consequence, the Assyrian army advanced and laid siege to the capital city. Sa maria. It seems astounding. in deed, to learn that tbe city with stood the siege for three years. The end came in the ninth year of Hoshea. and sig nified the end of the ten-tribe kingdom, the people being transported by their captors several hundred miles to another portion of the Assyrian empire. The overthrow of Israel, recounted In this study, we are directly told, was a judgment from the Lord. "There fore tbe Lord was very angry with Israel and removed them out of Hi> sight; there were none left but the tribe of Judah only." Sin tends to nntlor.nl destruction In a very natural way?by sapping the vitals of tbe people o.' the nation. But in Israel's case there was something more than this. God entered inro a special Covenant with that nation by which He bound Himself and they bound themselves. Israel agreed to be God's people, to serve and obey Him faithfully; and God agreed that. If they would do so. He would specially favor them and look out for their interests, their flocks, their herds, their heajth, their prosperity; all were to be blessed so long as they were loyal and true. On the contrary, God specially pledged Himself that If they as a people prov ed unfaithful to the Covenant, He would specially chastise them, punish them, deliver them to their enemies, etc. Thus Israel's prosperity or defeat Indicated surely the Lord's favor or disfavor, in a manatr not applicable Catapult (or throicing atones. to orner nations. Destroyed Without Remedy Our text, taken from Proverbs, tells what will be the final outcome of any conflict between God and the sinner. Whoever shall be remanded to the Sec ond Death, there will be no hope for him. The philosophy of this is plain: Adiimic death, which comes to all men as a result of Adam's sin and his con demnation as a sinner, is to be entire ly wiped out. and Adam and all of his j race are to be fully released from it ' Those of us who, as the Spirit-begot ten Chun-h. enjoy this favor in the present time, must not expect any further favor along this line in the fu ture,'for Christ dletb no more; and only one share in His redemptive work is provided for every member of the race. When in the future all the world < are brought to a knowledge of the Truth, the grace of God will th<?u be to them "a savor of life unto life. 01 of death unto deatb." as It is now to the Church. Israel's Promisee* Hcstitut-on The Israelites era Hern! the pi-nnlf for their failure ss n nation, the were destroyed bur i:->t wlthotr remedy Indeed, the RlMi' tells us th?l In the end of tins Agi ns soon ns the eleetlou i.* lb! C li u r c h Rliall hare been coin plctcd and tho First Resurrec tiou nccomplisli rd. God's favor will return to Is rael. the twelve tribes, and their re gathering will be the first blessing to humanity under Messiah's glorious reign. St. Paul brings this matter to our attention very explicitly in his letter to the Romans. (1125-32.1 The logic of his argument should be carefully noted. Including the fact that Natural Israel will receive itercy at the hands of Spiritual Israel?In the Klnpdom. The nation of Isrnel transgressed Divine commands, and was therefore worthy of punishment?but this did not signify that the nation would be come alienated from the Divine mercy which God had already Intended and promised through Abraham. Neither Israel, in the days of Ho shea nor at any other time, nor any other nation, knew anything about the life and Immortality which God purposed to proffer to mankind through the Redeemer in due rime. As the Apostle again says. "This great salvation bepan to be spoken by our Lord and wns confirmed unto us by them that heard Him."-Heb. 2:3. Ge^ your gasoline from Riley's. He handles the Gulf Rezning and you will have no troube. i THE CLEMSON AGRICUL1 UR AL COLLEGE. Enrollment Over 700?Value of Property Over a Million and a Quartei"?Ninety Teachers and Of ficers. Seven full four years courses, in Agriculture, Engineering, eu. Cost per session of nine months, including all fees, board, heat, light, laundry and necessary uniforms? $121.87. Students who are financially able, pay $40.00 tuition additional. SCHOLARSHIP AND EN TRANCE EXAMINATIONS. The College maintains 124 agri cultural Scholarships, and 43 Textile Scholarships, <worth each $100.00 and free tutltion. ^Students who have attended Clemson College or any other College or University, are not eligible for the scholarships unless there are no oth er eligible applicants.) Scholarship and entrance examina tions will be held at the. County Seats July 14th, 9 a m. Next Session Opens SEPT. 13, 1911. Write at ONCE to W. M. Riggs, President Clemson College, S. C, for catalogue, scholarship blanks etc.; If you delay, you may be crowded out. Notice of Final Dlcasharge. Notice is hereby givi?n that I will file my final account as guardian of Glayds U. Millican, a minor, with the Judge of Probate for Orange bury County, on the first day of I July, A. D., 1911, and will, on that day, ask for letters of discharge as such guardian, the said minor be ing now of age. M. E. Zeigler, Guardian of Gladys U. Millican. Datc-d: May 30, 1911. Dead Man Comes Rack. Official records showed that Dan Richardson died August 15, 1909, at Waukegan, 111., and an administra tor was appointed by Probate Judgo Cutting. Recently Richardson daz ed the court at Chicago by walking in and demanding his estate?$1, 142. A dead man was identified as Richardson by his sister, it turned out. Richardson was officially de clared alive and got his estate back. Wreck of Four Trains. One of the most disastrous freight wrecks in the history of the New Haven railroad occurred near Fair field, Conn.. Wednesday, when four freight trains piled into oach other, killing five men, injuring at least seven, two fatally and leaving two unaccounted for. EXCURSION* RATES. Southern Railway Announces Special Low Fares to Points. Meridian, Miss.?Account Sunday School Congress of the National Bap tist Convention, colored. Tickets on sale June 5ch and 6th, final limit June 14th, 1911. Philadelphia, Pa.?Account North ern Baptist Convention and Baptist World Alliance Congress. Tickets on sale June 9, 10th, 12th, ISth. Extension of final limit may be had by depositing tickets and payments of fee of $1.00, until Sept. "list. Asheville, N. C.?Account South ern Students Conference, Y. W. C.' A. Tickets on sale June 8th and 9th, final limit June 28th, 1911. Black Mountain ,N. C.?Account Southern Students Conference, Y. Of. C. A. Tickets on sale June 15th and 16th, final limit June 28th, 1911. Charlottsvllle, Va.?Account Uni versity of Virginia Summer School. Tickets on sale June 17th, 19th. 23rd, 24th, 26th, and July 3rd and 10th limited fifteen days, unless ex tended at Charlottesville, until Sep tember 30, 1911. Knoxville. Tenn.?Account Sum* mer School of the South. Tickets on sale June ISth, 19th, 20th, 24th, 2f>th, July 1st, 8th, 9th and 15th, 1911. limited fifteen clays unless ex tended at Knoxville until September 30th, 1911. For information as to rates, etc., apply to ticket agents or address: .T. L. Meek, Asst. Genl. Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ca., or W. E. Mc Gee, Division Passenger Agent, Char leston, S. C. Municipal Notice. Office of Secretary City Board of Hoalth, City of Orangcburg, s. C. May 27, 1911. Notice is hereby given that bids will bo received by the under signed up to 2 o'clock p. m., June 10, 1911, for the privy deposits of the city for the year beginning Jun^ 15, 1911, and ending June 14th. 1912. The bids must state the loca tion of the dumping ground and its distance from the corporate limits of the city. The successful bidder will he re quired to execute a note approved by the board of health with Interest at S per centum per annum payable .run^ 15, 1912, for the amount of the bid or must agree to pay In monthly instalments. The oity carts will de liver the deposits The right to reject any and ail bids is reserved. By order of the Board of Ileaitb. L. H. Wannamaker, Secretary. Engraved visiting cards are near est and best. Let Sims Book Store take your order. John Wanamaker, whose life has been insured for a million and a half, once said: From the day an honest man pays the first premium for life insurance, that first receipt of his gives a new impulse, a new light to his eye tand a new hope to his heart. The late Grover Cleve land said: Get a policy and then hold on to it. It means self-respect; it means that nobody will have to put something in a hat for you or your dependent ones. Dr. Lyman Abbott said: One could easily bear to take his wife and children down with him into poverty so long as he could be with them to help carry the loaa but to go off to his eternal rest and leave them to go down into poverty and to fight the wolf from the door, what more terrible prospect? The Rev. T. De Witt Talmage, said: It is a mean thing to go up to heaven while your family go to the poorhouse. When they are out at the elbows the thought of your splendid robe in Heaven will not keep them warm. The minister may presch a splendid sermon over your remains, and the quartette may organ loft, but your death will PROTECTION THAT PROTECTS, STRONGEST EN TME WORLO'c THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOOETYo sing like four anj be a swindle. ;els alighted in the SEE ZEIGLER & DIBBLE SPECIAL AGENTS Orangeburg, S. C. We Are Always on Top when it comes to selling a firstclass carriage at a second-class price. The price you can judge by comparison. The carriage you will hiave our guar antee for. And that guarantee stands for something. We are not a thous and miles away. We are right here on the spot ready and more than willing to make it good. L. E. RILEY