University of South Carolina Libraries
If | llie Dillon Herald If DILLON, S. O. When thins* are what they seem we're usually been there before, as? certs the Washington Post. , There is not a plug hatted candidate in South Carolina this year, boasts the Columbia State. While a Baltimore society girl was snaking a speech on woman suffrage her hair caught Are. Hot-headed people, those suffragists, remarks the Washington Times. ( Another American millionaire has resolved to renounce his native land and become a citizen of England. He will remember us, however, rejoices 12 the New York Mall, to the extent of coming hack occasionally to draw his dividends. Professor Koch Is said to have held the theory that when all nations have become highly civilized and prosperous the human race will gradually boI come extinct through race suicide This seems to Indicate to the Ne^ York World that there is somethinj \ wrong with civilization and prosper ity?-or with the Koch theory. Two business men were conversing iover the luncheon of coffee and pie The older man had jnBt been married He was telling his friend how happ: he was, relates the Argonaut. Ant he wound up with the ecstatic cry 'And, George, what puts me In th seventh heaven Is that her first hus hand's clothes fit mo like the pape on the wall." France has probably had a large share than any other country In th development of the submarine boa but, observes the New York Tribune the , officers who command the cral of that class built for her navy hav not quite mastered the art of keepin out of harm's way. In a place wher there are so maay vessels as In th English Channjl it might have bee supposed that a sharp enough watc would have been maintained to rer der the recent accident impossible. ===== In a letter from Stuttgart a corre spondent of a German paper says tha finH?rninnn >10" cn l""" nous with saccess that the perform ance at the royal theatre when th< drama, "Children of the Strand," wai (received in silence was remarkablt and unlooked for. "Only after th< third act was there a small sign o approval, and when the final curtair was lowered hisses were h^ard in al parts of the house. The stage man ager had probably expected a differ ent result, for the curtain went ui after it had fallen, but the actors evi dently had seen and heard the sentl ment of the audience and did not ap pear again." In the Youth's Companion Dr. L.u thor H. Gulick, president of the Play ground Association of America,write: on "Celebrating the Fourth," takinj a strong stand for a safe and sane ob aervance of Independence Day, an< suggesting some substitutes for fire works, noise and carnage. Dr. Gulicl , believes that the older schoolboys o America should take the celebratioi lin hand and arrange parades, exer Hies and sports. That President Taf Agrees with him is shown by the fol jowing letter, dated at the Whit House: "I heartily approvo of th boys of America organizing the cele bration of the Fourth of July on bigger and better basis, in co-opera tlm with city officials." The corporation does not "slip ou of bed o' nights while the director are sleeping" and hold up wayfarer on the public highways, submits th< New York Press. It is the director and other officers who concfelve th< i crime and carry It out. Robbery o the public through unlawful restrain f competition is by flesh and blooi persons Just the same as a bank Ii looted by a band of burglars. Th< only differences are that the burglari there no corporations as a shield foi w Mr crime, that the booty of railroad 'splfators is larger than the plum f Aw T-J-of the safe blowers, and that ths ^letima of the offense number railU l>as In the case at bar instead of a 'i ndful, as In the case of the cruder t1>ll>r ?mA?i? <K\iir Do way money gits up an' gits/ b Xilbtaa^ Kncle Eben, In the Washington A. Yropff erf- "?howa dot If dar is microbes ^ J' Ao )lt none of 'em is lazy germs.' m A . ifflsW the Commoner, soon gets lntt . DATES AND PLACES FAIRS , Announcement Made For the Holding I of Fairs in the Oreat Virginiai Carolin as-Georgia Circuit ? Handsome Prizes Offered For Races. Richmond, Special.?The following ere the places and dates of fairs in the great Virginia-Carolina-Georgia ' associations: Galax, Va., August 30, 31, September 1, 2; Radford, Va., September 6, 7, 8, 9; Tazewell, Va, September 13, 14, 15; Roanoke, Va., September 20. 21, 22, 23; Lynchburg, i Va., September 27, '28, 29, 30; Winston-Salem, N. C., October 4, 5, 6, 7; Greensboro, N. C., October 11, 12, 13, 14; Raleigh, N. C., October 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22; Charlotte, N. C., October 25, 26, 27, 28; Columbia, S. C., October '21, November 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Au- , gust a, Ga., November 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12; Fatonton, Ga., November 15, 16, 17, 18. The total purses offered by j these combined Fair Associations on | horse races, amounts to $20,000 or , i over. The entry books were closed on June 1st. ( AMERICAN VICTORY IN GERMANY. 1 . Prosecutor Finds Oil Company Has Committed No Wrong. r Berlin, By Cable.?The long and | , venomous can^paign waged by German newspapers and rival industrial | interests against one of the German branches of the Standard Oil Company?the Deutsche Vacuum Oil 5 Company?has just been brought to . a v^t.orious end for the Americans . invoi.-ed. j A well known Hamburg newspaper j for months printed such a series of attacks on the "American graft meth: ods" alleged to have been practiced 0 by the vacuum company in the coni duct of its German business that the ,r public prosecutor of Hamburg felt constrained to make an official investigation with a view to eventual in-' sr dictments. The prosecutor has now concluded his investigation, especially of the work of E. L. Quarles, Ameri can manager of the German corus. pany's sales department, and an- | tt nounces that 110 necessity exists for J e pursuing the inquiry further. XT~ 1 - - nu evidence 01 anything warrantin;? prosecution was found against ? Mr. Quarles, ajid the costs of the en? tire inquiry will be borne by the n State. h The result of \'a* investigation eonstitutes a notable triumph for Anier- ' ican interests in Germany. It is not the first time that Germans finding themselves unable to compete with Americans on ordinary t terms have resorted to slander. Uncle Sam. "Leav? Tt. aiati? ? 8 | Pensacola, Fla., Special.?Judge W. b ' R. Sheppard of the Federal court 3 Friday denied the application of the , Southern Express Company for a ' i permanent injunction restraining the j State Railroad Commission from en1 . forcing an order reducing interstate 1 i rates about 17 per cent. In rendering 1 .'t his decision Judge Sheppard stated 1 .! that only in extreme cases should a ! i Federal court interefere with State : officers who are endeavoring to en- ! " force laws passed by the Legislature. 1 Capt. Lyon Not Qnilt7. , New York, Special.?Captain Sam- ( uel K. Lyon, of the 25th infantry, U. ^ S. A., recently tried ' at Fort Myer, (Va., for irregularities growing out ' 5 of the Brownsville, Texas, matter, 5 was found not guilty anil honorably _ acquitted by the court. General Wal- ] j ter Howe, commander of the department of the east, however, acting as j reviewing authority, passed upon the || 11 case and disapproved the finding of |, t the court. - i n Big Tobacco Loss in Kentucky, t Henderson, Ky., Special.?Reports 1- reaching here Saturday from Hcndere son, Union and Webster counties in- , dicate that damage approximating 8 $2,000,000 was done by a cloudburst 1 Friday night. It is estimated that 1 a 50,000 acres of pooled tobacco in | Henderson county alone have boen ' destroyed and one tobacco plantation OAA - - vi ?.w acres is a total loss. I Gasolene King at Elks' Reunion. 8 Detroit, Mich, Special.?Five mil8 lion dollars' worth of autos rolled s through the city in an unbroken line s of twenty-five miles Friday afternoon. s There were 2,500 cars in this monster 1 . procession, whioh took two and a | half hours to pass. Truly gasolene , 1 was king at the Klks' reunion, i While this trenraendous automobile ' ? pageant was wending its way through ) ) the streets the Wright brothers' air- !| . ship was soaring and wheeling above ). the earth at the State Fair Grounds j in successful speed flights, and on the | ' river speed launches were cutting ? ? the river at express train speed. t Married in Masonic Hall. > New Orleans, Special.?With the > grand lodgo room of the Masons here 'njnishing the nniqu? setting of the t ceremony, A. P. DennDon and Mrs. ^ Roma K. Stiles, partners in business, 1 Friday night entered ir.to the elcser ' J partnership of marriage. * Their home is in English, Tex. It 1 was the first time in the history of j , Masonry in the city that wedding i ceremony took place in a lodge room ; o' ;*. ? ; Tor. WHOSE ITS FATHER?1 Distinguished Men Disagree as to Originator Conservation. UNCLE JOE ADMITS MISTAKES. Speaker Cannon and Gilford Pinchot ( Wide Apart on the Question of the t Chief Promoter of the Conservation ? Movement?Pinchot's Party. <3 1 Kansas City, Special.?Gifford Pin- ^ chot and Speaker Jos. G. Cannon en- c gaged in an extemporaneous debate upon the subject of conservation be- j fore the Kuife and Fork Club in this ^ city Friday night, and while each man gave expression to the highest personal regard for the other and both agreed that conservation of the nation's natural resources should be c encouraged, they differed on the whole as to who was the father of oouservation. * Mr. Cannon said that J. W. t Powell, at one time directly of the t government geological survey, deserv- s ed the honor, but Mr. Pinchot assert ed that Theodore Koosevelt was the t father of conservation. t Turning to Mr. Pinchot, Mr. Can- v non said: "I have the greatest personal regard for you, but I understand that you are now engaged in conservation 1 work for the organization of a new t party. a ''T tell you, sir, that a party cannot > stand on a single issue, although our t party did stand on a single issue once 1 in that great conflict between servile f and free labor." $ Shaking of his record as a public 1 official, Mr. Cannon said: B "I admit I have made mistakes. 1 r\_??? n?i t i i ?I uic? uvni, x nave own mistaken a score of times in the last 35 years. There are other fellows in Congress * who have been wrong just as often, ? but they are not honest enough to r admit it." ^ "Theodore Roosevelt was ttie fath- c er of conservation in this country," s Mr. Pinchot said, "the national con- ( servation association is continuing the 0 work lve started. The last session of Congress did great work ami our association was largely responsible for it. The withdrawal bill as it passed c was due largely to the efforts ef the ^ association. s "We now intend that the people s must be compensated for what the ' private interests get. The old prac- a tice of giving perpetual grants to pri- * vate interests now is ini|>ossihle and the future is now safe against the ^ oppression of monopoly. "I believe a new school of politic* ? is coming in the United States. This 1 new school will decide whether tlm n country shall be governed by money \ for profit or by men for human wel- 11 fare." a. d Warm Times in Tennessee. a Memphis, Tenn., Special.?In even Q town and village and countv in Tennessee, the State's serious political r situation has aroused the most intense feeling. Regular Democrats and in- ^ ?urgent Democrats and Republicans ire lining up their forces for the ^ struggle -which comes in August. n ivhen the State judiciary and county elections are held: No candidate to c nppose flovernor M. It. Patterson has t been announced. s Adjust Rates on Hardwood Lumber. ^ Washington, Special.?That Louis- f ville, Ky., be made a reconsignnient s point for hard wood lumber shipped 0 from the Southern States to points fi in the North and West, and that rates he adjusted accordingly is a request F contained in a petition received by F the Interstate Commerce Commission. ' Monorail Accident First Trir* New York, Special.?T'* sons were injured a - ~ hurt, in the firs* urday of ' betweei i 11 the suhi. oward * Tunis, th. .as motor-I 1 man, brok one passenger ? broko a 11 Trainm d Man Fight. * Alban al.?Coot Taylor, a n- i shot to death, j" and Ra Edgar J'urmen 0 was slig r in a battle be- t tween tl special train on t the At It ie railroad and g the negi night. The ne- _ II ?ro was U Purmen and fl lad sho e times. Con- a luetor " 1 then took n ' land in otins? the nejrro * :hree ti him instantly. The shot ; between Thorn- ' isville a. " Spect c i \ Now York. New 5 -Four hundred n housand ?. witnessed Satur- !? lay afte iat spectacular r jier Are - i> >boken T en year? ? 150 Uvea werp ' ost. As be ascertained. t wo mon :- t> ? injc the eonfla- < ^ration. , i.y loss will rnr * ,'ctwe """ *1 ooonnn ? FIVE MANGLED TO DEATI Walloon Bursts High in Air an Aviators Crash to Earth in Shud derinf Death?Sunshine Expand* the Gas. Leichlingen, Rhenish Prussia* B, Dable.?Oscar Erbsioch, the Germ a. leronaut, wno won the internationa mlloon race at St. Louis in 1907, am bur companions were killed Wednes lay when the dirigible balloon Erbs oeh burst at a height of several hun [red feet and dropped to the earth i rumpled mass. The craft was of the non-rigid type .76 feet in length and 33 feet i llameter. The motors were of 12 lorsepower and drove the airship a t speed of 28 miles an hour. The War Department recently put hased one of Erbeloeh's balloons. The cause of the accident is a mat er of conjecture but it is believe* hat the bursting of the bog was du o the expansion of gas by the warr unshine. The wreckage fell so heavily tha he gondola Mas broken into bits an* he muter buried in the ground. Th ictims were frightfully torn. Everything Covered in This Policy. Wow York, Special.?In addition t< ife, accident, health, fire, burjrlar\ ornado, automobile and yaclii insur ince policies, Russell F. Hopkins, i 'oung millionaire of Irvington-on he-Hudson, who formerly lived ii Atlanta, Ga., has taken out a iJ/i.OO1 >olicy against assassination, of whicl S2.000 is to go to first informant am !l,000 each to the three others wh< nay supply information rcgardini he deed. Hopkins first came to New Yorl is consul for the republic of Panam; md in 1900 married Miss Veri iiegrist, a niece of Dr. J. J. Law ence. a patent medicine proprietor o >t. Louis. He built a magnificen ountry place overlooking the Hud on. adjoining the place of Miss Helei Jould, and installed upon it a mena :erie open to the public. Roosevelt Friend to All Parties. Oyster Pay, N. Y., Special.?Then lore Roosevelt said with emphasi Vednesday that he has taken n tand as vet in favor of either the in IIrirnn ^ rvv lUn * ? n 1 nv?>o uic G^umiD in me rvepun ican party and he desires to eoiTec my impression that he is showin; avoritism. Of the situation wit hi ho party in New York State he sail le saw only harmony ahead. "I want you to make it clear," h aid to interviewers, "that I am sec ng both sides. I wish you woul nake that emphatic. My main in erest is in the State, but no nationa ssuee. I want to see both regular nd insurgents, party men and in lependents. I want to see Democrat ,s well as Republicans." "But you don't want to see Dem erats win?" he was asked. "Not if the Republicans do th ight thing," he replied. Leroplanes Could Wreck Warshipi Atlantic. City, N. J.. Suecial.? }lenn H. Curtis tossed oranges an< airaic bombs within three feet of th leeks of the yacht John E. Mehere II ised in place of a battleship durinj lia sham battle arranged to demon trat3 the utility of aeroplanes i oast defense. The mock bombs wer Iropped from a height of about 30 eet and Curtiss purposely failed t trike the deck of the yacht for fea f injury to the officials - nd passen ;ers gathered on heExperts agreed of aero lanes armpd i?rh ex losives ip be or'- 'hem !. Call. ..?Hon. Charle one of the foremos . .iators, a millionaire an* nber of the gentry, vrho recentl; lew from Dover to France and re urn in a Wright biplane, was kille* hiesday by a fall from his aeroplam t the Bournemouth aviation meet OSlying Boy Calls for Dead Mother New Orleans, Special.?With th* ealization that death was approach rig, Clarence Desforges, a 15-year Id boy, began to call for his moths o comfort him as he lay on a cot it he charity hospital Monday. He gradually lapsed into uncon piousness, and died Late in the after mon. Death waa due to a bulle ired by his father five days ago. It ipilnnl rntro > - -1J T* * ? .n?c ciorr uenorjs atally woundod bis son, killed hi: rife, and then himself. The boy died without the know edsje that both parents were in thi mre. Mayor Oets Bis Conscience Fund. Savannah, Ga.t Special.?Savan lah's conscience fund is richer b; 11,500 as the result of an unknowi nan's requests. The money wa landed to Mayor Tiodfeman on th itv's main street by a prominen niniater, who declared it had beei aken from the city by one who wi?h d to keep bis name i> secret. Th ninixter was made internicuUary aftc fivinj his word of MCTeey.l . ? m 1 HI! NEWS MINUTELY TOLD d Tit Heart of Happenings Carre* I- From the Whole Country. i Direct exchange of postal money orders between this country and: Uruguay will be possible after October 1 next, the amounts in both directions to be expressed is United ^ States money. Q ' The tide of emigration of home J seekers to Canada has turned, in the i opinion of officials of the Reclamah tion Service. Thousands have re-: turned and a great many more are expected back soon. ~ |' The elaborate funeral given King * Edward cost the English nation $202,500 as is shown in the supplementary ^ financial estimate issued. tt Nearly 75 years old, but hale and j hearty, Ross Magnus rode horseback Jill the way from Weet Virginia to ' buy a farm in Colorado. It wa3 his first trip from home and he says it - was great and worth all the trouble. While playfully tossing her 6months-old son, at Morganton, W. Va., Mrs. Plummer Pride allowed the child to slip over her shoulder and e fall to the floor. The boy's neck was o broken, and death was instantaneous. The mother is overcome with grief. William S. Kenyon, assistant to the attorney general, is in Chicago, 8 assisting the officials of the district attorney's office there in the presentation to the grand jury of evidence in the so-called beef trust and 0 oleomargarine fraud cases. ' Organized InKnr Vino 1 * _ iioo uvt uocii lairIt dealt with by the present administration, and its enemies are in the majority in Congress, according to 0 Frank Morrison, secretary of the ^ "American Federation of Labor, j \ The naval yacht Hornet, a steel Q vessel of 425 tons, built for Henry ? M. Flagler and purchased by the Government for $117,500 at the otitic set of the Spanish war, will be sold _ to Nathan S. Stern, of New Orleans, a 'for $5,100. Contracts have beej) signed by the f pavy department for the construction t of a steel fuel oil storage tank and . p. gasoline storage tank at each of n Ihe following naval stations: Bradlord. R. I.; Norfolk. Va.; Charleston, p. C.; Key West. Fla.; Guantauamo, |Cuba, and San Juan, P. R. t The United Kingdom sobered up |>r)4,000.000 worth in the year 1909, a jtcrording to dgures furnished this o government by Consul-General John - !l. Grifiiths. of London, who reported fk marked falling off in the consumpt (tion of intoxicating liquors in the g British realm during 1909. In that n rear the amount expended for inil "toxical ing liquors was $730,000,000, at decrease of $5-1,000.000 from 1908. c Sixty thousand crates of peaches, .constituting a large portion of the ri mi * Eiioersj. crop, are rotting in Fort " Valley, Ga., on account of the failure of the refrigerator car companies to 8 supply iced cars for Wednesday' and l~ Thursday's harvest. 8 President Taft withdrew more pnillions of acres of coal lands in l" ^different States of t-he West, bringing the total of coal lands withdrawn e made b# him up tb the enormous total of 71,518,588 acres. Something like* half of this amount is new vith' drawais. Applications are pouring in from ^ banks throughout the country whose e ptlieials are anxious that their instiitutions be made depositories under P the postal savings bank law. * j Mr. and Mrs. T. Karberi, of Pensan cola, Fla., received from Governor c Gilchrist a handsome spoon bearing 0 the seal of the State of Florida. 0 Married 11) years ago the wife is r jnow only thirty-seven years old, but * Mr. ami Mrs. Barberi are the parents of 13 children. Six of the ehil dren are twins. Governor Gilchrist suggested that the Legislature pass - *n 4ct_qjlowing the parents a pension ' Discovery of the existence of a new counterfeit $10 gold certificate has been announced by Chief Wilkie. The 3 certificate is represented to be of the t act of July 12, 1882, series of 1901: 1 and bears the cheek letter "1)," plate No. 150, the signature of W. T. V Vernon, Register of the Treasury; I^ee " McClung, Treasurer of the United i States, and the portrait of Hilligas e The note is frotn a photographic plate - printed on bond taper. Because her mother doubted her word and sent her to her room as ' punishment. 10-year-old Alice Dunn, s at Meadville, Pa., drank carbolic - acid and died an hour later. Owing to the fact that some letr ters mailed to Mrs. Frances F. Clevei land, widow of President Cleveland^ have been charged with postage due addressed, the Postmaster General has - at the postoffiec to which they were t issued an order calling attention of i postmasters to the bill passed at the r last session of Congress whereby s .Mrs. Cleveland's letters, like those of Mra. Mary I.ord Harrison, widow of - 'President Harrison, are entitled tc ? free transmission. Officials of the Census Bureau say they are paying as fast as possible the enumerators who collected the statistics for the Thirteenth Census. The ^^^Wrto^n^enumerators is aver-1 i airing more than $100,000 a day audi s has once gone as high as $170,000 a I L day. Director Durand is appomtingl t agents to collect statistics of the iftal mates of jail*, prisons, reformatory, almshouses and hospitals for e aane and feeble-minded. Sixt>fnew r hundred of thase areata will 1 / the i pointed. '> i J.V ' CAPITAL FAtJMUM' Interesting News Gathcfff rr*> the District of ColumbiT*wta,th i THE AMERICAN CONGRV^ Personal Incidents and ImporP"**10Happenings of National Pablishod for the Pleasure an formation of Newspaper Red tribe. P> are: Only 13 Confederates Left. K y? The death of Senator DaneX" Virginia, and Senator McEnervw,l*lon Louisiana, leaves but 13 former * federate soldiers in Congress. *ort to are Senators Bankhead and Johil next of Alabama; Senator Bacon, of <1 &ia; Senator Money, of and Representatives Talbott, of land; Richardson and Taylor, ) Alabama; Rucker, of Colorado; I Jk ingston, of Georgia; Spight, of fllis 1 sippi; Gordon, of Tennessee, ; 4, Lamb, of Virginia. Senator Ta .* ferro, of Florida, who has been de? feated for re-election, was also in the Confederate service. Senator Tillman quit school in July, I8G4 to ? ? the Confederate Army, but, was st en with illness which caused the f of his eye and kept him an in 1 . for two years. a Higher in Cost, But? "The congressional committ- 3 < the cost of living recently dc I fifteen reasons for the high c< living, and yet one of the mo; 1- . portant reasons for high price i? left out of their report,'* says 2- 4 itor McCabe, of the Departm< xt Agriculture. "The execution c 10 pure food law has undoubtedl; id an important effect upon prices >rmerly resort was had to adulte and misbranding to reduce the .c? | of alleged articles. Now people ouy raspberry jam, for instance, and oav more for it, but they get what t i "* * pay for. So it is with many of articles in common use. This ferease in price, of course, is ? ^ apparent, but it impresses the peopla ' ^ who make purchases as real." * Lightning Rods on White House. ^ . I _ "N Lightning rods avo being raised ^ over the White House. It is by Gov- * ernment decree that the executive ^ mansion is being equipped with ap- * paratus to protect it from electric onslaught, and during the absence of President Taft from Washington, the equipment is being installed. The rods are placed on each of the ^0* 12 chimneys above the mansard roof and points to arrest the lightning will ^ai be placed at intervals of five feet * .H along a cable, which runs around the ^*9 parapet. No lightning rods, however, * are to be raised over the executive offices adjoining the mansion. Bids For War Vessels by Oct. 1 Plans and specifications fc the ,> two new battleships authorize by congress must l>e ready accord g to a decision by Secretary of the Navy Mayer, in time to receive bids by October 1 for the on? to be built by contract. The other will be constructed in the New York navy yard. It was decided also that hids on the six new destroyers authorized should be in by September 0. <^*"1 No Postal Bank Till January 1. Postmaster-General Hitchcock f" 'j presses the opinion that no 4C3| wrings bank can he established oe-v~-^^M fore January 1, 1911. He matle this statement in a conversation ,ith ~~Sj ; Postmaster Campbell, of Chicago, J who requested that one of the first | banks he placed iu operation there. ! Acreage and Condition of Crops. The July crop rcj>ort of the De-< partment of Agriculture shows the following estimates of acreage and condition on JiUy 1 Corn, area plant )00 acres, an increase < re? or 4.9 per cent as c< as: year's final estimate | ~j! The average con 'as 85.4 as compared v fcn- *sjj[ year average. ^ Kew Engraving Bi . i T"?l 1 ?riUfl n&V* been > I supervising archite L.1 jSBttk for the new buildu ? x$Zr of Engraving aid 1 fHHH to cost $1,750,400. Th >s been examined bv the C . aioioV^HK Fine Arts, created by ??s,olP^ which D. II. Burnham Cliic*oA is the chairman. Its i'.: ictions wl J largely advisor}'. The 1 tiding is<> VJjjflfci be 850 reot long, foi r stories t ' height, classic in style of architects Kfek and is to be constructe the ait of the present buildin; tich wil be absorbed m the war ogressea. S|?J Catterpillars Destroying Miade Tree*. ^?7j Shade trees of Wtshh, ^ for theif number claisifl- ' ing stripnMl^eift August 1, of XM ^classification burtsa. ' aJU ?urtn are applicable to intra^usiness subject to the rules I classification in the commission's ption sheet Not 5, which is .Note 'Mpi i the SoutbWn cfaaiiflcation. The classification does not chance ,? Jr^ril old rates materially.