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yp~ Araihbold, the-treasuor n er~ saan Institoton,have not .s ed in e *s1n* anythingthat kqh6- ofiral earinarg,Ite pbjet hoe ugte~dn," and the favQrite theqryis hat the "tandard Oil peole have een. so freely, pressed in the last feW onths and'have gotte so mnany frIght0)Wd g'Impos' of the Atorin ahead that hey, wanted 'to ask th' piesident if he could not do 9o*ethidg 'to assuage the uisoasiness that is ap pearit ii financial eircles (note Standard Oil. 0bcef). -By lrylog to make it apear'that te agiAtlii foi' egislatig "ireed againt ltoadi and ertain oter coryorations is making caoital timid an,d may sooner or later bring to a halt the great boom that swept Over' the coyntry. The ,S;tanakd Oil pe6ple,. according to the 1 batet report, .hope to be able to in duce'the president to put a pedal on the , fast moving ahinery that' is seemingly destined to make great 'and important corrections in the existing laws. deiling, with corporations. These,Standard Oil people may have had the nerve to come all the way over here to ask to an interview witfi the president to suggest that he alleviate 'the uneasiness that is al leged to be felt," said a bright and prominent official of the administra-' tioU, '"but I can hardly believe it. And I should have given much to have beei presert when such a represeita tion -was made to the president. I will bet anything that he told them they had 'better go back home and attend to their own business and to remember that if they will ceose dodgI ng process serviors,. eease the unfair and low methods of driving competition out of the coyntry and not conegl properfacts as/to their ftairs t'ere would be far less of rad ioal. teno'ency than at present. The Standard Oil trust, is more responsible today forthe growing feeling of rad icalism in this 'country than any oth er 'corporations, including big rail read.G It has cold-bloodedly, foully aud corruptly stifled and killed com petition, .driven' men insane by de priving them of their properties, with losses of. their fortunes- and their homes, and" when the full history is written sof it.s doings, 'will itself be driven out of existence or so thor oughly cnrbed. that it 'will n'ever 'be a menace t~o thotUnite<d States if l'aw makers have the brains to enact laws t-o do so. ~"I do not believe that any honest man of capital will fear the' mutter n jgs &f the Standard Oil' and the de pression t at seems' to be stealing eir lc lIals of that concern. Thero .*iil' be tio laws uade 'in this couin.try tiasin er rob ganital 'of, a -fali and legtimate return 'for its money, but insth end.the'laws that. 'will be put on 'athe books will im mensely strengthen leal and p'roper methods of blisitess and prevenit rob bery, 'Ir~ruption, trielkery and t.he ac-" en~mtl'atiofr of 'great 'stims 'by -illegal' and iingeeent methods. This country will continute to prosper-if crops re main good and the'e will.be no serious 'fall irn the prices of legitimate,.stocks *and bonds sirm,lj because the Stand ard Oil truitlis. begintng to feel the gaf. 'On the, contrary, it 'Qught to, *and probably will, create a buoyant feeling on'-the part of honest men with money if they 'find that the greatest and most corrupt concern of all is getting *~.Jneqe. "I againfepei thie I suspeet that tl,e President kn~'what to tell those fellows and aid so - TE. sO8 N ~)i5I HERE. Judge, PA*r Mk A .7ngin In his seoh t ltsFriday night, Juidge Prker1ih aroydtd the aemracy of thes#6thtOf e~e"e its importance at'N rigity, aw he in1t 4 ul Ut,t gi At ,InW6M$ e%' te o b i'tg I t i c p latt e h er 9tt 0~nn~ r i in an Adiess bOOe te legisla t u&oCtheAtate off iagphippi a-fe ysngo, a desi ton insist that never before w4s ite's poCsiei e- to igioro the grwing fen'dency t6 Iook o -the g eirnint or state for sup pa.* assta1tee, 0r diebial fa4'6r, which will relieve the recipient from that effort and those obligatiqns hith erto deemed lincumbent upon all our people. Whether it takes the form df direbt subidies-tlie colt of which may be estiiated--or is hid away in those- miore costly and. demoralizing sysrtems under which some favored in dividual or..elass ma levy a relentless toll uon the earaings ot the income opf all our yeoyle, tie-effe't upon insti tutions and haracte'irja,'h6 same. If we support a dozen paupers in a poor house, we can calculate the eost, but the beneficiary of a vicious system of corruption or bossism, in country, state, .county or' city, not only 'takei for his own purposes the earning of fiis neighbors, but he so breaks all the moral laws that he becomes at once a menace to society and an evil example to all our people. "During all its history, the' demo cratic party has denounced the lodge ment of undue power, in the govern ment, has opposed its logical outcome, the granting of special privileges in the levy of taxes, and has insisted up on economy in expenditure. Under these as guiding principles, it built upon its own organization and has only been able to maintain it by con stant devotion to them. In time they have become inalienable polficies and ingrained traditions. In or out of power, in nation or'state, in the do mands of its leaders, in the devotion of its rank and file, in war or peace, in its early or its later days, it has stooi for these thifs. "While this conscientious devotion to an idea has commended itself to the democrats of the whole country and has thus made and kept the party, rational, during recent yearq the peo ple of the south, without variableness or shadow of turning, have been its mainstay. Shirking no responsibility, seeking qo national rewards, promot ing no special interests or. movements, they have neither been truculent in victory nor discouraged in defeat. Going on in their way, regulating their own affairs, without hope of commanding subsidy, paying cheerful ly to carry ot policies in which they could biav no part, they have so im pressed,their time that the one special problem coming to thlem'from the past has been solved in such a way that the whole country has not only liieen fored to approve and applad but to imitate as the only way to deal with it. ''Bfut :t,he time hasi comne wh~en ne* duties and~ responsibilities must be, undertaljefi by the democrats of the south. It is more than twQ score years sinel the war closed and. your people fAid thefhselvee * upon .the threshold df what promnises to be the most remcrkable buiness develop We ha&ve t know'tne bee them. HE} ne10Lkd u0 111 U 4tro$ a,~idst dioveet of t I p ap; #;fiave so main o on and:t.Ah&01 3 in oi$ k~ tst qro tc of the 'soil , ipiaii'-Ari the wonder and the' 4 'iltonIgtlhvworld . fit it;e our J0t0if to pr6 i eOple aid cojisisteney', in ,te faco6 avRiinericilinjbatance-4hat was jixg ponderant, in politics. only .have yo stepped. aside" - i the earliest. day siWce self-government was reatiem 'you have sent your 4est men into ) i) lie life. They tave beeii -ut' .od modest, able, devoted, patriotin. am honest. No jail or jenitentiary li opened its hospitable doors to admi your senators,- representatives 0 kovertiors, nor, have ,the officers' 0 the law, from detectives to attorneys Ereneral, been compelled to hale' the into the criminal courts.. In the fac of this record you haVe not only' p* thitted u4. of the north to present ti you candidates for president and vid bresidit but you have"insisted uoi our doing so and have then voted fo them, and that, too, When sometime no other states did so. ""In 1896--you tried Nebraska an' 4inee that .day, no old denfocrati aorthern state has accredited one o :)r party to the United Sfates sen Ato and in none has there been i rriendly governor. All the democrat ic trainihg schools of the north-ele nientary, intermediate and higher were closed and have remained ac r'ho party paralysis was complete ani ilmost fatal. In 1904, hoping to our ,r palliate it, y6u advised returnin again to New York for your candi late, only to meet the worst defeat it 3ur party history. It is now nearl; twelve years since any man professinf ievotion to our party has been chosei Ii nation or in any northern demo nratic state to fill an important execu Live office. At the last election, per liaps eight out of ten voters then un ler thirty were ranged with our op poilents and today the party organiza tions are lifeless, their one tim Leaders are dead or have abdicated or worse, have become republicans while in more than one state th threat hangs over them that they ma become the victims. of the sPoiler, 'th destructive, or the corruptionist. "When such ,onditions co1nfior you, why should you hesitate an longer? Until the democrats of N< braska and New -York and othe northern states have brought fort fruits meet for repentance-or a least so long as they are threatenin to give themselves and the party ove to further destruiction-should - yo not assert yourself? You have born the heat and burden of the day. You statesmen have demonstrated thei ability not only to take care of th interesta of their states and their se< tion, but they have been the only. dar against aggression at home and tLi threat' of discredit abroad. Amon them are men with the knowledge, es perience, honesty and courage to rel resent their fellow partisans withot the 'surrender 'of principle and thei fellow-countrymen with safety an honor. "I, myself, p)laced at the front ft a time, have every reason to be grat4 ful to.delnocrats everywhere, especia P1L >een'in the] ~t. We have :ked the- Ch~ IATTANOOGA REVI Plow built Io thos 6e no rk Al uw ulee 60r 6i Pt and ho,v 1gt0i"wet I k is foi- the i ase thr* I e is'nsad i g4ts ni6al Ue now so el&.ly, pei'eled by the Y ple. The *hle hi'eee hn,i the 0 lly offectiv erdS&ts of tie eeuiI I yshould be ro&bed."and when n troy theni0elv6 seio;hjd holonger hes- C sre, deuiie o refibe- to seek or to 14 PCept those hoAor-S-WhIch are -their t itt due for r welldne. 'It muay o possibly be that the 1arty will go to d6feat again,, but silice 1896 it has a done nothing else' aei' northeri h lpadership and certaInly it cannot do a "T believe flrmly tiat it will do bet- c ter, because it will at once0 eliminate a V *he factions wiich are inevitable, so t I long as their leader's feel that they fl have-only to capture a few state or- o t ganizations in -the north, nominate o e- their candidate and then depend upon C the south to support and elect him if r - possible. And certainly no faqtion t t -an refuse to support, a worthy south- a Sern candidate in the light of the 10y- I alty of the South to every party can didate. But, if this course would give v 1 southern democrats the recognition t r they deserve, it will also put them up- o ' on their mettle. It will make it neces sary for them to insist upon devotion t0 ideas and principles; to avoid, as their character and traditions assure, extreme policies; to keep themselves thoroughly in touch with ill the ele ments to be found in a national and Sprogressive party; and to be ready e and willing to anticipate and promote h all the needs of a great country. The IT , contending ambitions of self-seekers; k the claims- of interests purely local, a the demands that grow out of popular o clamor, the shifty and shifting meth- tA ods of the demagogue and the agita- l tor-all these must be avoided, wheth- c er leadership comes from. north or V buth. cast or west. The ideas and tendencies behind these things are M typified by the republican party of the present day and no attempt on our part to enter into competition with it. eln hope to command success or so to restore character to our par ty that. it may again attain power. "If we are honest with ourselves, earnest and vigilant in the recognition tlhose popular needs which are both sife and democratic, and regardful y o our own ideas and traditions, we D shall ogain be intrusted with power amId we shall be ready for it. When t this tine comes, the south ought to be andl indeed, it. must be, the one great effective force in bringing about such a happy consummation -sorely b needed if our institutions are to on t dure inviolate. r A nyway, there is more or less 4'rig.inalit about the man who rides a hobby. B Starving to IDeath. a Because her stomach wa r' weak e ened by useless drugging that shcecould no't eat, Mrs Mary HI Walters. of St (Clair OQumbuh, 0 . was literally .tarving todeath. She writes: "My ,. stomach was so weak from useless *t drugs that I could not eat, anid my rerves so wrecked that I could not r le;and net l.efore I was given up to ddie I was induced to try Electric Bitters; with the . wonderful result that im. p(rovement began at once, and a com r iete cure followed.'' Best health ,. Tonic on earth. 50c. Guaranteed by W. lM. Peiham & Son, druggist. MPLEMENT handled all ~ttanooga aft4 RSIBLE Disc low ndib#eltr Is 'b4 4 I 1 Miss .Leslie Lel ,'rim dMeii d r hfits of pioo '-om anyp;4nA'soblity gap Matros are gazing akane at e Winger element for fear that, sandale ? oe1t w Il beqome .be rage. secially Miong athletic young wo' ken, too i4din zogt to lWss Leighis j n , st4ekcindess corset- a 18i exIAtence, And careful atention tiio*i ie, Y*hich has ieie pod he,r,ognifilent physique. And Miss Leigh is an extremely thleti woman, an accomplished a orsewoman,. n'good tennis player and t ii exert on bnowAhoos. Miss Leigh explains that she thihks I rsets aboininable, and as to ob6r, lie hays it do'es a positivo injUry ' 'to ie feet, in adaition to beini Sub1r uo'ns. She t6kes just as' much care f her feet d& o her hands. Instead C shoes, she wears sandals. Miss Leigh gives a highly artistic ondition of the role of "Teresa" in he ''Isle of Spice," which will be the ttraction at the opera house on farch 31. J. E. Norment, the governor's p1ri ate secretary, confirms the rumor iat he is 'a candidate for secretary f state. He who seeks temptation is either a rol or otherwise-with the odds In I avor of the otherwise. The Breath of Life. It's a significant fact that the strong- ( it animal of Its size, the gorilla also as the largest lungs. Powerful lungs teans powerful creatures. How to I eep the breathing organs right should C D man's chiefest study. Like thous- E ads of others, Mrs Ora A Stephens, t Port Williams, 0 , has learned how > do this. She writes: "Three bot- $ es of Dr. King's New Discovery c opped my cough of two years and ired me of what my friends thought msumption. 0, It's grand for throat ad lung 'roubles." Guaranteed by r. E. Pelham & Son, druggist. Price ' )c. and $1.00 Trial bottle free. SAVE EVE Among the various I!ESOLUT ION S orAthe year 1906' Jon't forget to resolve :o Save Every Penny .hat you can. There Fore You Must Buy Good Goods CHEAP. This you can only ac complish when trading at 0. KLETTNER'S, Headquarters of Genu ne bargains. It will be mone to buy from us. 0. KLE~ s! usiness lon~ standard mal 3r the farmer is the only si liwari tuoke4lste one fhOIhasa,IeN 1,trted - Oitl. Well Worth Trying. W. H. Brown, the Popular pension &ttorney, of Pittsfield, t. S's:"Noxt o a pension, the beat t is )r. Kmgx's New Life Pille. ", e wrleg 'they keep my family in Splenld iealth." Q ilck, cure for Hsadhhe, ;onatipation and Biliousness. 250. uaranteed at W. E.' Pelham & so's WrUg store. .arrige is on the ohing that will ake,the conceit out of some m etIn. "Corect English-m How to Use It.V k MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THi USE OF EN4GLI81H. JOSEPHiNE TuRC BoxAsER, EDITOR. Partial Cntents for this Month. ,ourse in English for the beginner. )ourse in English for the advanced pupil. -Iow. to increade one's vocabu'ary.. [ art of converetlon. ;hould and Would. How to use them. "ronunciathmns. (Century Dictionary.) lorrect English in the home. rtEft"gsh In the school. j,hat tosay and what not to say. urse in letter-writinjg and pro t uncia Htoo s I. tion. phabetic list of abbreviations. lusiness English for the business man. ompaund words. How to write them. Udies in English literature. AGENTS WANTED. 1.00a Yerr. Send 10 cents for sample py, CORRECT ENoLlgn, Eranston, Ill. Mn r ds. H K AwitS out patu.'e *Book , t r.exiicn sentir A AGENT WO~LLR. D 1.00 a9e11e 104 Ns fror Smpe R CENTi JANUARY SPECIALS. 10 lbs. A.,& H. Soda, (bulk) >nly 25c. 4 Boxes Star Lye only 25c. 2 lbs. best Green Coffee 25c. 6 pkgsOur Own W. Powder 25c 5 lbs. Good Rice 25c. 3 boxes Oysters 25c 2 lbs. California Peaches 25c. 2 lbs. Apricots 25c. 5 yds. best A pron Gingha'ms25c. 5 yds. Standard Prints 25c. 1 lb. Smoking Tobacco 25c. I Bot., 1-2 gal., Pickles 25c y in your pocket FTNER. Senough to <es of Plows s had tested iccessfu Re SCo.