University of South Carolina Libraries
Our Daughters' By Eliza)beth Knight To RO' babyhcoi my dat ghl:ers shou F anhood without any but nominal hooe was over, i am sure I sh to he trusted. and, cnc.. satis? :r;or itt: to l'ad:a their ind; :c L: in .\es. '""lt copies of C:O not know .:iei shouti:. b p::s.''' irs ii'e bac( sm .' U clining" r..._ : c 1 mii. c:.ais anid hi,h,, 1o re::;;c '-ir 'iit ds in a conunoa : deui" lt I.:- dl :.^. rs, .liJ Ci Uine of li:.. (i... taea iromu thema one of the most ofte. po,,,yore' in this ma:t:.r; somw:l their own -cth- -if they ev'er were youn:,' One oftenl ses kindly- but obtu.se pa:'. dau riE'l, whcen both the daughter a edge of tci chairs gie:-ing with impatie::e To so:e parents this desire to be alone Of course it may: but in many cases it is the delight lying v:holly in the exchange of Ion unrevealed cxcitemCnt at approachin g bl < straying over the horder of childhood into Often the most definite sensation the girl is thet she is at :ast a real young lady and ta man. She c-n::ot i.'nei herself into realizit happened, and. figurativey expeaiing, expec gown to shrink to the calves of her legs, hei a pigtail. The same parents who have no understar cent possibilities, in the relations of girls an< of the educating influence of such relations. who has not cone into close touch with me al'ays forces and facts that she never gra: personal importance: one misses in her the the consciousness of being able to swing an in if marriages are to be successfu!, it is should have a chance to know men well bef man she marries, but others. also, that she m that she may have standards by which to ju Do Animals Re By John Burroughs. HEN a bird selects a site for it Wif it must actually think, reflect we decide where to place our hc I saw a little chipping spar raspberry bushes. She kept ge ing, inspecting and apparently 1 I saw a robin in the woo trying to decide which particular place was hpped to this tangle of shoots and sat down, she readjusted herself. she looked about, sI she was slow in making up her mind. Did tWnk, compare, weigh? I do not believe it. tions she no doubt felt a pleasure and satisf; tion. An inward, instictive want was met material condition. In the same way the hermit crab goe.s fr seeking one to its liking. Sometimes two c that each wants. Can we believe that the ] It selects the suitable shell instinctly, and not Instinct is not always inerrant, though it son does. The red squirrel usually knows l butternut with the least gnawing, but now a: strikes the edge of the kernel instead of the stick its mud nest under the eaves of a barn smooth that the nest sooner or later is bou judgment in the matter. Its ancestors built u the mud adhered more firmly.-Outing. Iron, Coal, Pet By Prof. N. 'S. Shaler, X the first centuries of the Iron Ithan a pound each year for ea~ probably did not exceed, even i pounds per capita each year.] thing like that rate when the] North America. At the presen at the average rate of about man, woman and child in the land, and the di rapidity. It seems eminently probable that I tury, unless checked by a great advancemen iron each year to meet the progressive des When the American English colonies wel to come into use in any country. It is dou amounted at that time to 100,000 tons, possil folh in Europe than a p)ound, or about the sa the so-called "iron age." At the present tim and Northi America amounts to an average c of the population, and the incre,ase goes on a Petroleum, practically unknown to the O a century ago, has with wonderful :apidity b and many barbaric peoples; the increase in t than that of any other earth product. A Japanese on t By N. Shigeyoshi. HiE prevalent belief that "the Ja: T far from true. Their seeming Iji centuries of training, not ffrom patible with their sensitive nati To disprove the fallacy, let of hara-kari-an old Japanese disemboweling. I have so far gestion of the value which the hare-kari affe well informed on Japanese life. We may find elaborate articles on hart sidered book. "Tales of Old Japan:" but hit the hara-kari is derided as the barbaric moe their own lives. Who has ever thought of executed in the calmest manner possible, as sublime moment of human tragedy? Even to take away one's life almost inse by the revolver requires courage and detern age that are necessary for the hara-kari con of2. special class of Japanese. The spirit that can .perform the hara-k: witness on the battlefield, calm and uncomi: the statement that "the Japanese are insensi' Japanese Shoe Shops. New Like all other shops in Japan, a saddle shoe shop opens a broad side to the reshot street. it seems a misnomer to cali anese it shoe shop, a place where you' can tis o: only buy sandals or clogs, thangs we plaiL are not accustomed to call shoes. posti There is a low platlorm in front, upon indica which the cuistomner sits and drinks and tea while making U.s or her pur- Chr~on chases, the shopkeeper meanwhile squatting on his heels and discussing the news of the day. The sandals worn by the rickshaw coolies are call- Con ed warafi: they are waven of rice wave straw, and are sold at halfpenny a about pair. They are made in the c-ountry the S villages, and the foreigner watches most: the weav.ing with amused interest. "Even The prehensile big toe of a Japanese Anglo is of great assistance, as it is used ordeal for catching and holding the straws, dence leaving t'he hands free to weave. The ist te: pack horses wears straw shoes, as overw -well as the farmer who leads him. | World News of thte Day. The fifty-eighth report of the comn- L. I missioner of lunacy, issued Sceptember that I 7. 1904, shows that in England and in re; WVales on January 1 last, 117,199 per- porte: sons were certified as insane, being the s1 2,235 in excess of the number on the thoug same day in 1903. This increase is * comparable with that of 3.251 in 1902, alike 2,709 in 1901, and 1,333 in 1900, the heavy average annual increase in the 10 Iship. years endied Decemoer 31, 1903, be- w vhate lu <>:13 ' cud tI Callers. 'd e p)re_ared for a young wom ch,p,e:-oge. ecfore their baby i:i i 'coer whether they were ied, i should gi"e them every dual ive. 1 si:ould wish them S se t:m i-:', that parents t.anished to the . ili.a ln , .avshulcl bec forced L (ulights ui u i, tiiat I had f;iure of' . l di:s n: '. P:1ren:ts are0 nes bee-' th,c have for,ottc: toinc up %:; entaininn(their nd tim: frien a:e stting on the means someti1ing: repre <hensible. Ot aoa m of plsres, the g. long thuihts: in an inward, irces iimpCr"fecly ulndc rstoo; at the w:rid of m-n anl women. ; xperiCnCin is wome( ring awe ihing as :uch with a -eal young ig that the miracle has actually ts momentarily her long tailed twist of hair to slide down into ding of the possibilities. the inno 1 young men, have no know edge A woman is always incoimlpete n on the mental side; there are sps: she lacks a certain sort of self-confidence that comes from terview or a relation with a man. absolutely necessary that a girl orehand-not only the particular ay have the means of comparing, dge.-Good Housekeeping. ason? nest, it seems on first view as compare, as you and I do when use. -ow trying to decide between two ing from one to the other, peer weighing the advantages of each. dbine on the side of the house the best site for her nest. She then to that; she turned around, le worked her feet beneath her, ;he make up her mind? Did she When she found the right condi action, and that settled the ques and satisfied by an outward :m shell to shell upon the beach, rabs fall to fighting over a shell tiermit crab thinks and reasons? by an individual act of judgment. makes fewer mistakes than rea iow to come at the nieat in the o d then he makes a mistake and flat side. The cliff swallow will where the boards are planed so ,nd to fall. It seems to have no pon the face of high cliffs, where roleum. f Harvard. Age the requisition was much less ah person. Four centuries ago it tthe most civilized countries, ten t appears to have been at some ~nglsh colonies were founded in t time in the United States it Is 100 pounds per annum for every ~mand Is increasing with startling efore the end of the present cen t of cost, It will require a ton of res of this insatiable man. re founded coal had hardly begun tful if the output of the world y to not more per capita of the me as iron at that late period in e the total production of Europe f at least two tons per each unit t a high ratio. ccidental peoples until about half ecome a necessity to all civilized he rate of consumption is swifter he Hara-kiri. panese are insensible to pain" IS insensibilty to pain comes from their nature, because it is incom us examine the very much talked way to take one's own life by met no observation and no sug rds, even in the writings of men I-kari -In Mr. Mitford's well con herto and still, outside of Japan, le for a barbaric people to take the value of that performance, id even with a last smile at the nsibly by gas or almost instantly mation. The fortitude and cour e from the training of centuries tri must be the spirit which we slaning, which has given rise to le to pain."-New York Sun. )airs are strunk around the high ,and the slow moving beast is I every few miles. In the Jap shop one will find many varie [clogs; a few with caps, others A few years ago the social m of a man, woman or girl was ted by the kind of clog worn the decoration on it.--London A~s to Religious Epidemics. imenting on the extraordinary o religious enthusiasm brought by some revivalists in Wales, ecolo, of Milan, one of Italy's famous newspapers, remarks: the self-possessed and sedate -Saxon is not proof against such s and can on occasion give evi of what the medico-psycholog ms the hypetaesthesia of an rought civilization."-New York Odds and Ends. L Harris, of Lyndonville, Vt. says ie has noted an interesting fact ard to sheep. He has just im some sheep from England and camer had a rough pasage. Al a passengers ho;'ses and cattle were terribly frightened by the roling and pitching of the big the sheep paid, no attention ver and contentedly chewed their irogh all the tossngo. TE WORK OF CONGRESS The Senate and House Revu!arly at Work-What They are Doing. Person-lities in the House. Not in recent years has the House .;in.d s'ch a spect:acle as it did Mon wt M r. Sulli;an, of ias- a chuFtl. a:, V illiam R. i irst as the cenrI figures. Both indlulg'd in per Sont::!ii the gaencagr and o s:irred the lIi) A. 1e JP!l he-:l).1 d ron Mr.. Hea.rsl, a tir: of :entc tin h l eri, by 7un plcion. chargel -.r. Sulliv wi:A :_nOIh(it". in a mnrde'r. T a:ai grew Out of the recent isci:ssi of the frcigh; rate ytuestiOn In the House, when Mr. Sullivan in quircd of Mr. Lamar, of Florida, who was favoring the Hearst bill, %%hy Mr. Hear:.t did not defend his own bill. this being followed by a eriticism of Mr. Sullivan in The New York nieri can and Journal. More Frequent Cotton Reports. The Senate heard ten witncsses in the Swayne impeachment trial Mon day, and devoted the remainder of its time to the consideration of the agri cultural appropriation bill. The major portion of the debate in connection with the appropriation bill was based on an amendment suggested by *ir. Bacon, providing for semi-monthly re ports on the condition of the cotton crop, which was amended so as to cover the last five months of the year. and adopted. Mr. Bacon, in offering his amend ment, said that no provision could be incorporated in the bill that would be of so much importance to the cot ton producers as this one. He traced the failure of the growers to secure profitable returns from last season's crop to the Infrequency of the offi cial reports. The loss in one month on this account had not been less than $40,000,000. He also urged that the Secretary should publish a synopsis of the infcrmation on which his esti mate is based, as vell as the estimate itself. Mr. Proctor presented a letter from the chief statistician of the Agri cultural Department, saying that the adoption of the Bacon cotton amend ment would involve an additional ex penditure of $363,000 per annum. Senate as a High Court. The Senate passed the agricultural appropriation bill and began consider ation of the bill making appropria tions for the District of Columbia. The Hansbrough amendment to the agrictiltural bill, relative to the draw backs on the duty on wheat, was agreed to after an extended debate, in which tariff questions figured to a considerable extent. The usual three hours were given to the trial of the impeachment charges against Judge Swayne. In connection with that case the Senate decided to take no testi mony on the point of inconvenience in the judge's residence outside of his district, also that Judge Swayne's statement to the House committee should not be used as evidence in the trial. The House managers introduced the Florida-McGular case of record in the Supreme Court of the United States. In this connection, :. T. Davis testi fied regarding inconvenience caused by Judge Swayne's absence, and at the suggestion of Mr. McCumber that this was not an issue, it was elimin ated. E. C. Dearborn, conductor of the Jac4sonville, Tampa & Key West Railroad, reiterated his previous testi mony regarding Judge Swayne's trip in a private car of the company. Joseph H. Durkee, of Jacksonville~, Fla. who was receiver for the Jackt snville, Tampa & Key West Railroad in 1893, when Judge Swayne made his trip from Delaware to Florida In one of~its private cars, testified that the expenses of the trip had been borne by the company. He said he had been appointed to the position of receiver by Judges Swayne and Pardee, the lat ter being circuit judge. Manager Palma then attempted to have the statement muada voluntarily by Judge Swayne b?efore the House committee in November last. placed before the Senate, 2-ut Mr. Thurston protested, on the ground that the- re spondent's testimony on a former oc casion could not be used under the law. The chiair held the testimony to be inadmissible under the law, and Mr. Bailey appealed from the decision, ar guing that this was not a criminal proceeding, nor the Senate a court witin the meaning of the statute The appeal caused the first roll-call since the beginning of the proceeding. The question as put was whether the evidence was admissible, and the Sen ate decided, 28 to 45, that it was not. A majority of the affirmative votes were cast by Democratic Senators, but the following Republican Sena tors voted with them: Allison, Crane Dietrich, Long and Spooner. The Democratic Senators voting in the negative with the Republicans were: Bacon, Culberson, D)uBois, Gormnan, MCreary, Patterson and Pettus. The names of the Senators who have not been sworn in the case were not called. W. A. Bloi'c, an attorney of Pen sacola, Fla.. was the last witness of the day. The coumt then adjourned. House Makes Appropriations. The House committee on appropria tions completed and reported the sun dry civil appropriation bill. The bill appropriates $65,558,880, which is ar increase of $7,718.669 over the appro priations for the current years. The increase includ'es excess required tc meet contract obligations for the con struction of public buildings, $3,224. 400:; excess required to meet contract obligations for river and harbor works I$2.571,.932. The appropriation for river and har bor works under contract Include thE following it:eriis: Charleston harbor, S C.. $25,000: Cumberland Sound, Ga. and Florida. $40,000: Winyah Bay, $25, 000: -SavanLnah harbor, $175,000: St. John's river, Fla., $205,000; Southwest Pass, Mississippi river, $1.250,000; Ten nessee river below Chattanooga, $50, The items in the bill for public buildings already contracted for are as follows: Anniston. Ala., $60,000: Charlottesville, Va., $35,000; Florence S. C.. S35,000; Jacksonville. Fla.. $100. 000: Macon. Ga., $50,000; Nashville Tenn., $40,000; Savannah, Ga., $80,000; Selma, Ala., $30,000. SMemorials in House. Washington, Special.-Sitting in special session, the House conducted memorial services in tributes to the memory of the late Senator Matthew Stanley Qruay, of Pennsylvania. Mr. Dazell presided. Messrs. Adams. Sib ley, Kling, Brown and Bates, of Penn tlvania: Girosvenor. of Ohio. anrd Gous den of New York. eulogized Mr. Quay's life and ebaracter. The remnarks were particularly expre.si-;e of the esteem which lie was held, anci extolled him as a man, as a useful public servant an an onizenr of wonrderful ability. IHE RACE PROBLEM speech By President Roosevelt At L.1nColn tiilner IS CONSERVATIVE IN EXPRESSION the Chief Executive Appcais to the North For AddedA Friendliness to the South Because of Conditions For Which the South is Not Alone Re sponsible and Makes Acknowledge ments to Crusaders Against Lynch ing-Backward Race Must be Train ed Without Impeding Forward Race -Must Maintain Race Purity. New York, Special.-As the guest A honor at the Lincoln dinner of the Republican Club in this city Monday sight, President Roosevelt made a apeech on the raco problem. He ap- I ;caled to the North to make its friend ;hip for the South- all the greater be :ause of the "embarrassment of condi tions for which she is not alone re ;ponsible," declared that the heartiest acknowledgements are due to the min istcrs, law oficers, grand juries, pub dc men and "great daily newspapers n the South who have recently done auch effective work in leading the cru :ade against lynching," and said that the problem was to "so adjust the re iaticns between two races of different ethnic type, that the backward race be trained so that it may enter into :he possession of true freedom, while the forward race is enabled to pre srve unharmed the high civilization wrought out by its forefathers." Among other things the President ;aid: The President's Address. In his second inaugural, in a speech which will be read as long as the mem ory of this nation endures, Abraham Lincoln closed by saying: "With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness In the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we aro In; * * to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with all nations." Immediately after his re-election he had already -spoken thus: "The strife of the election is but human nature practically applied to the facts of the case. What has oc curred In this case must ever recur in similar cases. Human nature will not change. In any future great national trial, compared with the men of this, we shall have as weak and as strong, as silly and as wise, as bad and as good. Let us, therefore, study the in cidents of this as philosophy to learn wisdom from, and none of them as wrongs to be revenged. * *May rot all having a common interest re unite In a common effort to (serve) our common country? For my own part I have striven and shall strive to avoid placing any obstacle in the way. So long as I have been here I ave not willingly planted a thorn in ~any man's h)ocom. While I am deeply sensible to the higli compliment of a re-election, and duly grateful, as I ti ust, to Almighty God for hav'ing di rected my countrymen to a right con clusion, as I think, for their own good. t adds nothing i:o my satisfaction that any other man may be disappointed or parned Dy rne reruft. "May I ask those who have not dif fered with me to join me in this same spirit toward those who have?" VICE NEGRO'S ARCH ENEMY. Laziness and shiftlessness, these, and above all. vice and criminality of every kind, are evils more potent for harm to the black race than all acts of oppression of white men put to gether. The colored man who fails to condemn crime in another colored man, who fails to co-operate in all lawful ways to bringing colored criminals to justice, is the worst enemy of his own people, as well as an enemy to all the people. Law-abiding men should, for the sake of their race, be foremost In relentless and unceasing warfare against law-breaking black men. If the standards of private morality and industrial efficiency can be raised high enough among the black race, then its future on this continent is secure. The stability and purity of the ho::e is vital to the welfare of the black race., as it is to the welfare of every race. NEIGHBORS CAN HELP MOST. In the next place, the white man, who, if only he is willing, can help the colored man more than all other white men put together, Is the white man who is his neighbor, North or South. Each of us must do his whole duty without flinching, and if that duty Is national it must be done in accord ance with the principles above laid down. But in endeavoring each to be his brother's keeper it is wise to re member that each can normally do most for the brother who is his ir mediate neighbor. If we are sincere friends of the negro let each in his own locality show it by his action therein, and let us each show it also by upholding the hands of the white man. in whatever locality who is striv ig to do justice to the poor and the helpless, to he a shield to those whose need for such a shield is great. CRUSADE AGAINST LYNCHING. The heartiest acknowledgements are due to the ministers, the judges and law officers, the grand jurors, the pub lic men and the great daily news papers in the South, who have recent ly done such effective work in leading the crusade against lynching in the South; end I am glad to say that dur ing the last three months the returns as far '-s they can be gathered, show a sa'- r number of lynchings than for any ot' r two mornths during the last twenty years. Let us uphold in every way the hands of the men who have led in this work, who are striving to dc all their work in this spirit. I am about to quote from the address of the Right Reverend Robert Strange, bish op coadjutor of North Carolina, as given In the Southern Churchman of October 8, 1904: MUST MAINTAIN RACE PURITY. The bishop first enters an emphatic plea against any social intermingling of the races: a question which must, 01 course, be left to the people of each comnunty to settle for themselves. as' in such a matter no one community nl indeed no one individual-can dic tate to any other; always provided thai in each cality men keep in mind the fact that there must be no confusing of civil privileges with social inter course. Civil law must not regulate so al praies, o ciety, as such, Is a law unto Itself, and will always regulal its o0,ln practices and habits. Fu recognitJn of the funda,:ental . _ that al. m' n should stand on an equt floting. as regards elvil privileges, i no way interferes with r,ognition the further fact that all reflectin men of both races are united in feelin that race purity must te maintainet NATIONAL DiST!N AIE. Let us be steadfact for the right: bu let us err on the si!le of :rnerosit rather than on the side Of iiclive : s towad those w.ho df er from uo _s to the method of at:inng the righ let us never fo:get or duty to hlth) i uplifting the lowly, to taield fror wrong the humble; and let us likewis aet in a snirit of the hroie-t an frankest =eaerosity to.word our broth ers. all our fllow-contryre.n:m spirit proc eding nrt from weakoes but from strength, a spirit which take no more atCunt of lo(ality than i (oes of class or of creed; a spi:it whi. is resoiut'!-y lont on seeing that ti Union whi:h Washington founuedi an which Lincoln s:iced from <!e .ru i) shall grow nobler and greater thrimc: out the ages. I believe in this country with all m heart and soul. I helieve that our pPc pie will in the end rise level to ever need, will in the end triumph ove every difficulty that rises lfore ther I could n'ot have such confident faith i the destiny cf this mighty ;,eople :f had it merely as regards one portion c that people. Throughout our lan things on the whole have grown hette and niot worse, and this is as tie c one patt of the country as it i, C another. I believe in the Southerner a I believe in the Northerner. I claim th i'igiht to feel pride in his great qualitie and in his great (ieeds exactly as I fe' pride in the great qualities and deeds c every other American. For weal or fo woe we are knit together, and we sha go up or go down together: and I be lieve that we shall go up and not dowr that we shall go forward insted of hall ing and falling back, because I hav an abiding faith in the generosity, th courage, the resolution, and the coi: mon sense of all my countrymen. PROBLEMS WILL VANISH. The Southern States face difficu problems; and so do the Norther States. Some of the problems are th same for the entire country. Othei exist in greater intensity in one sec tion; and yet others exist in greati intensity in another section. But in th end they will all be solved; for fundh mantally our people are the sam throughout this land; the same I qualities of heart and brain and han which have made this republic what is in the great today; which will man it what it is to be in the infinitel greater tomorrow. I admire and rE spect and believe In and have faith i the men and women of the South 2 I admire and respect and believe i and have faith in the men and a ime of the North. All of us alike, Nortl erners and Southerners, Easterners an Westerners, can best prove our fealt to the nation's past by the way i which we do the nation's work in tt present; for only thus can we be sui that our children's 'hildren shall is herit Abraham Li:.coln's single-hear ed devotion to the great unchangit creed that "righteousness exalteth nation." SPORTING BREVITIES. Reginald Fineke won the amate squash championship of America. Receipts at Yale for athletics in thl yerer 1903-4 were the greatest in th history of the university. By a score of 1 to 0 (roff School di feated Cutler School in an interscholas tic championship hockey game. A plot is on foot in Florida to ovei throw the Racing Board of the Amer: can Amateur Automobile Association. Hippolite Grasselli and Signor M:u coneini divided first money of 35.980Of about $7195, in the Grand Prix at liv birds at Monte Carlo. S. G. Averill. scratch man in N. Y. A C. handicap squash tournament. d< feated G. C. Hlutchinson in straigh games by 15 to 10 and 15 to 9. Patsy Donovan says the America League has the National beaten in on respect, and that is in the matter c fast, clever players at third base. W. H. Sigourney defeated C. F. Cor kin in the semi-final round in the toun nament for the national amateur bi lard championship by 30 a, 273. The twenty-ninth annual bench shot of the Westminster K(ennel CIu opened in Madison Square Garder New York City, with an entry of 17G dogs. E. JT. Conill's sixty-horse power Mer cedes touring car won the 100-mile at tomobile road race in Cuba, with Ma jor Miller's thirty-horse power Renaul racer second. Sam Shannon. an ox-prize fighter. o London,. England, who for years Wa the sparring partner of Paddy Slavir the Australian heavyweight, commnitte< suicide the other day at Winnipeg. The intercoliegiate rowing regatta a Poghkeepsie tpis year will be held o: July 1. Thm will be three races, on for four-oared shells at 4 p. mn., anothe for freshmen eights at 4.43 and th third for 'varsity crews at t o'clock. LABOR WORLD. The National L.abor Tribiune. of Pitts burg, has entered upon its thirty-thirt Chiengo trade unions liRe been en listed to fight the spread of tuberculo Some 4000 women in Germann n now enenced in the Government tele )hoe service. n Minnesotn wa~es in the ficur nat rist milling industry range from 83'.( to SaG a week. The .Tonr'normo W'ilors' FT'ron o Amerien voted to hold only quadren nial conventions.' A movement is under war to oonsoli date tha throe or-ntiza.t'0as of wood working crafts in England. In the platformi of thu' recently er enn'zed C'anndian Eabor Lec-ne plank: re included adlvoentiug nublie ownor sin of natural opportunities and publi utities. James McM2nahon. nresident of thn Blnst Furnace Workers andl Smeller of Americn. hnC entled for Enlan1 t study the condition of the blast fur ne workers in that country. A new wag" agreement for 19.)O hriIZe and structurn1 iron worker thro'ghout the T'nited Sta tes has heei decided iinon' hr the Executive Comn mittee of the Tnterna tional Associntiom of Bridge and Structural Tron Workers The project of estnblishin~ Stat' schools for mechlaniea1 instruction 0T the Continent for ehnauffen'.s is hein favorably received. and the Govecrn uet ut Genera. Switzerlnd. has mudi a renort on the fensibility of the rhmn. Offiils of the Tnternatinil Tlr'other hood of P:noermokers hare issuied cirular ealling attention to the foe that the OrZnnzn1tion has ndopted label. which will lhe anitnod to al products manufactured by iis meal hers. The co-operation of trades-union ists is asked to further the union laeld nroducts fLEW WALLACE DEAD rWas Known Throughout the World of Literature FAMOUS AS AUTHOR AND VETERAN s .T.ne Man Who Gave "en Hur" to the World and Was a Conspicious Par. e ticipant in the Mexican and Civil W;s Pasce Away After a Wasting l!lness at the Age of 78. t Cr-:frdsvile, Ind., Special.-Gen. SLe;w Wallace, author, ex-minister to Turkey, and veteran of th? Mexican a an:1 civil wairs, died at his home in this -(:ity. at &: 10 o'clock Wednesday night, aged 78 years. The health of General Wallace has been waning for several y years, and for months it has been gen r erally known that his vigorous consti tution could tot much longer with stand the ravages of a wasting dis fease. e For more than a year he has been unable to properly assimilate food, and this, together with his extreme age, s made more difficult his fight against e death. At no time has he ever con fessed his belief that the end was near, f and his rugged constitution and re r markable vitality have been responsible for prolonging his life. Besides his physician, only Mrs. Wal lace, his son, Henry Wallace, of In e dianap'-11s, and his wife, were present. e When told by his physician that he was dying, General Wallace was per fectly calm and his last words were expressions of cheer to his grief stricken family. Bidding them farf e well, he said, "I am ready to meet r my Maker," and lapsed into uncon sciousness, from which he did not re e cover. No definite funeral arrange ments have been made. a General Wallace was born at Brook d ville, Franklin county, Ind., in 1827. He t served in the Mexican volunteers. Dur y Ing the civil war he commanded a division of the Federal army at the capture of Fort Donelson, and was pro moted major general of volunteers in a March, 1862. In 1863 he prevented the capture of Cincinnati by Gen. Kirby d Smith. On July 9, 1864, he intercepted Gen. Early, who was marching upon e Washington with 28,000 men, while he e nad only 5,800, and succeeded, though - of course driven in defeat, in detairing Early for some days until Washington a could be re-enforced by Grant. In 1865 he was mustered out of the volunteer service and returned to the 'practice of law at Crawfordsville, Ind. He was Territorial Governor of Utah in 1878-81 and served from 1881 to 1885 as minis e ter to Turkey. From this period until his death Gen. Wallace con.fined him self largely to a literary career. It is as the author of "The Fair God," a story of the conquest of Mexico, his .first novel, and "Ben Hur" (1880), that he achieved his most signal and last ing distinction. Probably no other novel has ever had such immense and continuing sales as "Ben Hur." Later works were: "A Life of Benjamin .Harrison," "The Babyhood of Christ," and "The Prince of India." Religious Education Association In Session. Boston, Feb. 15.-Numerous depart mental sessions at which were deliver -ed addresses dealing for the most part with the religious education of the American youth made a busy day for the delegates to the third annual con vention of the Religious Education ' Association. Nearly a score of meet .ings and conferences were held during ) the day, and the second general ses sion of the convention was held to - night. Russian Cavalry Advance. Tokio, By Cable.-The Russians have begun an extensive cavalry movement against Field Marshal - yama's extreme left. Wednesday night they were attempting to cross the Hun river west of Liao Yang with t 9,000 horsemen. One force of cavalry i stole in Liaohunschl, and simultane Sously another cavalry force approach red Tacha, which is situate:l 18 miles southwest, and 27 miles west of Liao Yang. Nine thousand ca"alry with artillery approached the river a mile elow Tacha, and attempted to cross at 6 o'clock in the evening, advanc ing on Heikoutal (Pekowtai). The Ishelling of Oyama's center continues. Carnegie Wilt Testi'ly. New York, Special.-Andrew Car regie announced that he would go to Cleveland to testify against Mrs. Cas sie L. Chadwick, who is under arrest in that city charged with obtaining large sums of money on alleged securi ties bearing Mr. Carnegie's name. It is alleged that the signatures were forged. . Mr. Carnegie's announcement -was made after a subpoena ordering him to apepar at court in Cleveland on March 6 had been served upon him. Squadron Leaves Libau. Libau, By Cable.-The third Pacific ?quadron sailed at noon Wednesday. Grand Duke Alexis and Admiral Bire leff inspected the squadron before its departure. The ice-breaker Ermak cleared the way. The battleship Vlad imir Monomach, was the first to start and the others were towed cut in t ur-n. All the vessels were out at sea by nightfall. Division Meetings Tuesday. Atlanta, Ga.. Special.-Thae Atlanta division of the Southern Cotton Grow rs' Association, with delegates from every county in the State, will meet Tuesday, February 21, in the State capitol here, to perfect a S:ate organ ization. On the same day there wifl be a meeting in the capital city .01 every cotton growing Stat-e in the U nion to form similar organization. T here will be a meeting in every ounty in every cotton State to select .~ delegates to attend the various Statt neeetingre PALMETTO AFFAIR Many Newsy Items Gathered all Sections. Charlotte Cotton Markct. These fgures represent prices paid c:agons: trict good midd-!ing ........... - good middling ...........---------7g Strict middling ................-% ::~ddl1iug .... ...... ............ 7 4 tiae. ....... ........ .........6 to T Stains .... ..................5 to 5 General Cotton Market. Galveston, steady ............7 New Orleans. firm ............. Mobile, quiet ............ ....-----" Savannah, quiet ...............7 7-1 Charleston, quiet ...............7 Wilmington, steady ...............-7 Norfolk, steady ...............7% B3altimnore, nominal .............7 New York, steady .............7.8 Boston, quiet .................7.80 Philadelphia, steady .............8.Q South Carolina Items. . A serious rear-end collision betweep two local freights occurred Monday morning about 6 o'clock on the South ern railway between Greers and Tay lors. It appears V'at both trains were running as extras, southbound, and the train in front had stopped to get up steam, when the train following crashed into the train which was standing. The engineer on the front train, whose name could not be learn ed, sustained painful though not seriu injuries. One of his arms was broke and he was considerably bruised about the body. The colored fireman on rear train was badly hurt and is not ex pected to live. Physicians were sum moned immediate.y and went to the scene of the accident. Mr. F. G. Trefzer, the well known jeweler, who mysteriously disappeared3 from Union on Tuesday afternoon, Feb ruary 7th, was late Thursday afternoon found' in the Fair Forest creek and evi dently committed sui..ide while in a: state of mental aberration, as a wound was found near his heart. For a week' the keenest anxiety has prevailed and searching parties have scoured th country, but though many idications pointed to his body being in the creek; nothing could be really done, as the stream was greatly swollen on account of the recent melting of the snows, and not until Thursday afternoon was it possible to take out a boat and insd tute a- thorough search. His body wr discovered about 4:15 and the w near his heart was apparently made by a 38-calibre pistol ball. The discoven was made by J. E. Mabry at the bend4 in the creek, a stream about six miles: west of Union, half a mile below the bIg Rice bridge. The body was kept unde# water by some willow trees. By the crossing of an' electric light wire with telephone wires' at Roek Hill early Monday morning, a fire was caused outside of the telephone office which called for the fire department's attention. The damage to the teleph system put all telephones. in the citY except those on Main street out of se vice. Some were burned out entirely. It is difficult to estimate the 'Enancial loss. The street lights were out and' large force of men seeking, for th crossed wires were unable to find th This li the second blow to 'the tel phone- system within a week. damage was done recently by the b zard, and the company had not qui fnished,.the work of reparing. Will Brown, colored, was accldent-< ally shot Monday morning at Travel ler's Rest, Greenville county, by Mri$ Otto Evans, a merchant. Brown was ii Mr. Evans' store and was. wo ihile handling a pistol. The ball tered the stomach and Inflicted a gerous wound. Dr. Goodlett, of h ville, was Immediately summoned gave the injured man every atten but it could not be learned whethe not the wound would prove fatal. Evans is very much distr'essed over occurrence. While her mother had gone out M well for a bucket of water, Ethel, three-year-old daughter of R. Lewis, head of the card room ofm Tucapau mills,, at Spartanburg,p too near the fire and the flames f the open grate set her dress on She was fearfully burned and the attention of several physicians, of her injuries. The police department of S burg is to have a "hurry up" This was determined at a meetin the city council Monday afternoon. Capt. John Adams, for 12y keeper of the life-saving station on Sullivan's Island, near Charleston, died suddenly Sunday morning from natur al causes. He was burled Monday af ternoon from the Charleston Trinity Methodist church. Capt. Adams was In his 58th year. Col. John D. Cappellmann, of C leston, has been appointed to himself as a member of the visitors of the State school deaf, dumb and blind at Ce Capt. N. A. Walker, superi that institution,' reports the school to be movin very satisfactory manner. The friends of W. G Jew who was shot last Mrs. J. D. Bivens at Br acount of alleged impr have begun a collection pose of further Investia ig. Greenberg was burl the Berith Shalom cemet Albert White and Kit G ed while on their way Mond ing from Coosaw Island to the ers mines near Beaufort in work, were drowned by the ca of their row boat. Ed Mack, colored, was convicted murder without recommendation at Maning. Mack slew one negro with a shotgun and tried to kill two others,. the load wounding the second one in the arm. Judge Klugh sentenced him to be hanged Friday, March 31st. The two hundred and more members of tht: South Carolina Medical associa tion will go to Greenville for a three days' session April 12, 13 and 14. It has been decided to have a banquet after the business of the meeting is finished, and a reception will be held at which the delegates will meet the citizens of Greenville. The local com mittee is already at work preparing for the visitors. Dr. Robert Wilson, of - Charleston, president of the assocla- ' tion, will preside at the session. Dr. C. B. Earle, of Greenville, Is vice-presi. dent. . . .. ..