Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, March 08, 1905, Image 1
^=*-?=* '
VOL. Xlll.
THf wmw\
iiiL liiLuiannm
Roosevelt and Fairbanks
Wih Brilliai
TREMENDOUS
CROWD! PRESENT
The G'ardest Pagcantiver Witnessed
on American Soil-Qreat Crowds
Present?The Inaugutl Speeches.
Washington. D. C.,' pectal.?Theodore
Roosevelt was t rauTormed from
president by chance into Resident by
choin from President thriigh an assassin
i.idlet into l'residen.through
the ballots of the people.
I'mi; the shadow of the grajMoomoil
capl'.ol. gazing into the placlc mar-j
I>le feat urea of (Ireenough's sta-te of I
tin- I 'M {'resident, the twentjsixth |
I'residtnt if the United States t-vore j
faithf.iiy to execute the laws ail to ;
preserve, protect r.iul defend the con-,
stitution.
One before he had taken thl solemn
oidigution; then, at the deati-bed
of l\is martyred predecessor, surnund-j
ed by a small company of tear-dlvmed j
friends nod counsellors; Saturdc. In j
the pr? senee ef a cheering host c fifty j
thousand people. ' Then he had tdden
many lonely miles over storm-wept
mountain roads to reach the "aglc
scene <f his elevation; now ht was
escorted along the nation's graidest
avenue from the White House t? the
home of Congress between two d?isely
pack, (i lines of his countrymen gathcrc.l
from every quarter to chef him
and wish him godspeed in the < ming
four years. Then he had said, with
? hocking voice: "It shall be m* aim
to continue absolutely unbroke the
policies of President McKinley fir the
peace, prosperity and honor of o.f be
loved << .ntry." Snteurday he le't It
for his eilow-cit izens, who had honored
him with a greater majority than
ever l > n :? given, to judge whether or
no lit i ,..o redeemed that pledge.
Th? nel of the Rough ltidei'8 has
written : his erowdod hour in Cuba.
Now iic ft; owed his former con',r&<te8
a now. ed hour in Washington. They
were win; ir.g for him when he emerged
fro. . !': \V: 11 House?-30 plako<I men i
under (. \ -mar Rrodie. With the!
crack . t. ... '-on A of the First Cavalry. I
t'nit. ; Army, tliey forme'l his i
esc .t ' the capitol. As thoy j wung;
around Treasury building into 1
IVnnsyi. mia avenue a division C' the |
G. A. i; with General O. O. HPward i
and st: in the lead, which had. been |
standi!., a*, salute, wheeled into the'
eolumr. while the cavalrymen cheek-1
ed Hoi i'-ict to accomodate the slow-1
or ft- : . < ps of the aged veterans. A;
mighty wave of cheers swept along!
the av< i:.a as the President's carriage ^
eanie i*i ghf. Throughout the whole:
route the President, with hat in hand. \
k? pi 1 a ;re In acknowledgment pf ihe I
greeting- On his arrival nt the capi-i
ml he 'v. . . ondnoted lo the President's
room, in he rear of the Senate chamber.
win : > he began at once the signing
el Ik ted hills. At neon by en- j
lercil ?i.e abode of the Senate tn? witness
t installation of Senntorf Fairbanks
a? Vice President. Thisteero-i
ninny ' n. hided, he proceeded t|<> the
star. . the east front of the enpitol
to re e the oath from Chief jjistiee !
Fitlh 1 to deliver his iuaugurui addre
s. Immediately upon its conclusion
' President was t>senrte?I lmnU
to i! ite House, where, after
liiiK'iiint itli t ho officials of the inaugural
msiiittoo, he took his position
on ti In front to review the
foir.al inaugural parade.
> v,?
'
ORT
iiminunimnii i
. liUliUKHIIl
> Inducted Into Office
it Pageantry
The inaugural cost about $65,000,
wihch it is believed has been fully repaid
in the sale of grand stand seats
and ball tickets. The guaranty fund
subscribed by Washington merchants
and business men will thus be returned.
Everything but the actual ceremoies
were in charge of the inaugural
committee, composed of Washington j
residents, and headed by ltrigadier
General John M. Wilson. U. S. A., retired.
appointed for that purpose by
Chairman Cortelyou, of the Republican
national committee.
The broad plaza whose level surface
stretches east from the national cnpitol
can accommodate an army. For
hours Saturday morning Washington
poured its own population and a vast
increment of visitors into the front
yard of the seat of government. From
the porticos and windows of the eapltol
building a good idea of the scope
of the multitude could be gathered.
Eight acres of humanity spread fanshaped
from the focus made by a little
covered shelter, open at the sides,
where the president was to stand. Over
toward the imposing facade of the Congressional
Library it extended, literally
a "sea of fnces." There may have
been uiiiy .'0.000; probably there were j
nearer 100.000 in sight of the President
when he took the oath.
Stands on the central portico, extending
to the tribune wherein the ceremony
occurred, covered an acre. From
the central entrance of the eapitol to
the seats of honor surrounding the
pagoda-like tribune was laid a carpet
of crimson plush. Long before the ceremonies
in the Senate, where Vice Pros- j
ident Fairbanks was taking his oath
of otllce, was concluded, most of the
reserved seats had been filled by ticket
holders.
All In all it was the grandest pageant
ever witnessed on American soil.
The ceremonies were simple hut solemn
and impressive. The order was t xcellent,
the weather was fine and the
exorcises were dispatched without a
hitch.
At a sign from Chief Justice Fuller,
the clerk of the Supreme Court stepped
forward, holding a Bihle. A hush
fell over the crowd. The President
raised his hand, and the oath to support
the laws and constitution of ?tw? !
fluted States was revontly taken
amid deep silence.- When this had lieen
concluded, there was practically no demonstration,
and the President began
his inaugural address. As soon as he j
finished speaking, he re-entere ! t'j*
capitol. and as lie disappeared within
the building a signal was flashed to the !
navy yard, and the roar of 1:1 guns was
begun in official salute to the President.
The expiration of the old Congress
and the beginning of the new was wit- j
nessed at noon. Senator Fairbanks
took the oath as Vice President and ,
made his address as follows:
VICK PRESIDENT S ADDRESS.
Senators: I enter upon the discharge
of the duties of the position to which
I have been called hy my countrymen
with grateful appreciation of the high !
honor and with a deep sense of its j
responsibilities. I have enjoyed the ,
privilege of serving with you here for
eight years. During that period we have
been engaged in the consideration of
many domestic ouestions of vast im
portanee and with foreign problems of
unusual and farroaching signifieance.
We submit what we liave done to the
Impartial judgment of history.
I can never forget the pleasant relations
which nn\e been formed during
my service upon the floor of the Senate.
I shall cherish them always !
among the most delightful memories ;
of my life. They warrant the belief
that I shall have in the discharge of
the functions which devolve upon me I
under the constitution the generous j
assistance and kindly forbearance of
both sides of the chamber.
We witness the majestic spectacle of
a peaceful and orderly beginning of
an administration of national affairs ;
under tiie laws of a free and self-govJernlng
people. We pray that divine
favor may attend it and that peace and
progress, justice and honor may abide
v.ith our country and our countrymen.
v MI]
FORT MILL, S. C?
THE INAUGURAL SPEECH
President Roosevelt's Remarks Were
Brief, Timely and Appropriate.
The inaugural address is as follows:
My Fellow-Citizens:
No people on earth have more cause
to he thankful than ours, and this is
said reverently, in no spirit of boastfulness
in our own strength, but with ;
gratitude to the Giver of Good who has |
blessed us with the conditions which
have enabled us to achieve so large a
measure of well-being and of happiness.
To us as a people it has been granted to
lay the foundations of our national life
in a new continent. We are the heirs of
the ages, and yet we have had to pay
few of the penalties which in old countries
are exacted by the dead hand of a
bygone civilization. We have not been :
obliged to fight for our existence .
against any alien race; and yet our life
has called for the vigor and effort without
which the manlier and hardier virtues
wither away, tinder such conditions
it would he our own fault if we
failed: and the success which we have
had in the past, the success which we j
confidently believe the future will [
bring, should cause in us no feeling of
vain-glory, hut rather a deep and bid- J
ing realization of all which life has j
offered us; a full acknowledgement of
the responsibility which is ours; and a t
fixed determination t? show that tinder i
a. free government a mighty people can
thrive best, alike as regards the things
of the body and the things of the soul.
MUST R7 EiUENPLY.
Much has been given to us. and mueli
will rightfully be expected from us. We
have duties to others and duties to ourselves;
and we can shirk neither. We
have become a great nation, forced by
the fact of its greatness into relations
with the other nations of the earth;
and we must behave as beseems a pec
pie with such responsibilities. Toward
all other nations, large and small, our
attitude must he one of cordial and sincere
friendship. We must show not only
in our words, but in our deeds that we
are < arnestly desirous of securing their
good will by acting toward them in a
spr it of Just and generous recognition
of all their rights. Hut justice and generosity
in a nation, as in an individual,
count most when shown not by the
weak, but by the strong. When ever
careful to refrain from wrongdoing
others, we must be no less insistent
that we are not wronged ourselves. We
wish peace; but we wish the peace of
justice, the peace of righteousness. We
wish it because we think it is right and
not because we are afraid. No weak nation
that acts manfully and justly
should ever have cause to fear us. and
no strong power should ever be able
to single us out as a subject for insolent
aggression.
OUR RELATIONS MONO OURSELVES.
Our relations with the other powers
of the world are important; but still
uiuii- 1111111111.(111 arc ciiir I't'iaiams
amoni; ourselves. Such growth in I
wealthh. in population and in power
as tliis nation has scon during the century
and a quarto:* of its national life j
is inevitably accompanied by a like
growth in the problems which are ever
before every nation that rises to greatness.
Power invariably means both re- :
sponsibility and danger. Our forefalh- |
ers faced certain perils which we have
outgrown We now face other perils
the very existence of which it was inpossible
that they should foresee.
Modern life is both complex and intense.
and the tremendous changes
wrought by the extraordinary indus- j
trial development of the last half con- I
tury are felt in every fiber of our social I
and political being. Never before have j
men tried so vast and formidable an i
experiment as that of administering j
the affairs of a continent under the j
forms of a democratic republic. The ,
conditions which have told for our '
inatvelous material well-being, which
have developed to a very high degree |
our energy, self-reliance and in lividual !
initiative, have also brought the care
and anxiety inseparable from the ac- :
cumulation of great wealth in indus- \
trial centers. Upon the suet ess of our
experiment much depends, not only as
regards our own welfare, bat as regards
the welfare of mankind. If we
fail, the cause of free self-government
throughout the world will rock to its
foundations; and. therefore, our responsibility
is heavy, to ourselves, to 1
the world ::s il i< l/wl:iv mill t.> tl...
generations yet unborn. There is no >
good reason wiiy we should fear the future,
hut there is t very rens.ii. why we
should face it seriously, neither hiding
from ourselves the gravity of the prob- I
lems before us nor fearing to approach
these problems with the utile tiding, unflinching
purpose to solve thein aright. j
Vet. after all, though the problems I
are new, though the tasks set before
us differ from the tasks set before our |
fathers who founded and preserved this j
republic, the spirit in which those tasks
nipst lie undertaken and these problems j
faced if our duty is to h well lone, remains
essentially unchanged. We know
that self-government is difficult. We
know that no people need such high
traits of character as that people which
s eks to govern its affairs aright
through the freely expressed will of the
freemen who compose it. But we have
faith that we shall not n;ove false to
the memories of the men of the mighty
past. They did their work, they left us
the splendid heritage we now enjoy.
We, in our turn, have an assured confidence
that we shall he able to leave
i ms nernaj-e iiuwasu'ii aim ee.iaigeu u?
our ehildren and our ehil Iron's ehildron.
To do so wo must show, not
moroly in great ori. es. In;t in tlio everyday
affairs oi life. the qualities of practical
intelligence, of coinage, of hardihci
d and endurance, and, a hove all.
the power of devotion to a loftv Ideal,
which a.:' h irreat the men who founded
this republic in the days of Washingten.
which made gnat the men who
preserved this republic in il:e days of
Abraham I.ituola.
ll :
WEDNESDAY, MARE
BKi APPROPPIAIIONs"
Congress Spends Public Funds With
IavUH Hand
THREE BILLS AGGREGATE HEAVILY
Senate Passes Postoffice Bill, Carrying
$181,526,843; Pensions. $138.I
000,000, and Rivers and Harbors,
$38,350.899?$332,000 Added to Riv- !
ers and Harbors Measure.
Washington. Special.?During the
day the Senate considered and passed
throe supply bills aggregating an appropriation
of over $357,000,000 and at
night took up a fourth bill carrying
over $07,000,000. This session began
at 11 a. in., and after recess lasting
from 0 to s. continued well into the
iVght.
The appropriation measures passed
druing the day's sessions were: Tho
postoH'tce bill, carrying $ I SI .000.000 and 1
the river and harbor bill, carrying in !
immediate appropriation and continn- ]
ing contracts. $3S.350.S99. The river i
and harbor bill was increased by
000, among the increases being Witiyah
May. S. C\. $10,000; Charleston. S.
$25,000; Cumberland River, T< on. $30.00O.
During the considering oi the postoffice
hill Mr. Clay took exception to
the increase of the appropriation for
pneumatic tube service to $1,500,000. j
nuii me rosimastcr Ueneral's
estimate called for only $500,000. He
said that the plan was to extend the
service to cities of 'JOO.tHIU. aim added
that already cities of 100.000 were beginning
to ask for the service. He also
asserted that the expenditures on hehalf
of the postoAires in the I'nited
States were now practically equal to
the entire expenses of the government I
fourteen years ago.
Mr. McCombs prpose I an amend- j
ment giving preference to soldi* rs of
the war of the rebellion in the matter ,
of the transfer of railway clerks to i
the regular clerical service.
"Make it soldiers of tIn* civil war," :
suggested Mr. llaeon. adding. II is
more courteous."
The change was made and the
amendment agreed to.
The Senate agreed to conference reports
on the Military Academy ami
Agricultural Department appropriation
hills.
The report on the agricultural appropriation
hill showed thai tin- Senate
conferees hail receded from the Senate
amendment requiring semi-monthly reports
on the cotton crop,
Mr. Da con read a telegram from ;
iifSHHMit Jordan of the Southern
Cotton Association, urging the importance
of more frequent reports anil
himself dwell upon the wisdom of the
amendment. He said, however, that
he appreciated the pertinacious and
unyielding opposition of the House and
that the Senate could not do otherwise
than yield. lie attributed this
opposition to the Agricultural ivnui- j
ment. saying that subordinates, and
not the head of that Department had
haunted the rnpitol to defeat the It gislation.
He remarked that it was the
duty of legislative officials to execute
the laws and that if they <ould not
do so they should he required to ft tire j
from office.
Mrs. Starford Poisoned.
Honolulu. By Cable.? Mrs. .lane ;
I.athrop Stanford, of San Francisco,
widow of the late Fniti d States Senntor
l finnd F S'anford, died at 11.-10
o'clock Wednesday night at the Moana
Hotel here. Suspicious circumstan es j
surround the death of Mrs. Si:uie>:d.
She was taken ill at 11 o'clock, and
said: "1 have been poisoned."
An autopsv was held and it was
found that strychnine had been administered.
but by whom is not yet determined.
to Start South.
Now York, Special. A number of
iim ,,......1 **
.... .... ..iDi'in in i in .m'W I '>rK .National
League baseball lnli will leave
for the Southern training trip by the
City of Mason, of the Savannah liii".
on Thursday. Mathewsen. Wilt/. :
Bowerman, Dahbn and others will be
..menu till' players to start. They no
from Savannah to llinainyliam. Ala.,
to play from March l"> to the kT>.
Company Bankrupt.
Meridian. Miss.. Special. The Meridian
Water Works Compan\ litis been
thrown into bankruptcy and A. M.
Lynn, of Birmingham, has been appointed
receiver. Mr. I.ynn is district
manager of the American Water Works
Company, which owns the Meridian
plant. Meridian has alrca lv voted SIM'.C00
bonds for a ne-.v plan if the present
company's franchise can he annulled.
Receiver for Lumber Company.
Valdosta. ila.. Special. Judge Km
orv Sneiuv of thi> i'nt?..,i sst.ii... nit
trict Court, li;is appoint' 1 \V. .1 Hutlor.
of Macon, and J. I*. Coffoo. of
Olvmpia. joint receivers for tho Mm
nosota Lumber Company, which has
largo milling plants in Colquitt and
Clinch counties. The roct ivors were
appointed upon petition <T the receiver
of the fir t National i'.anlt, of
Faribault, Minn., which holds claims
>f ?11<U)00 against the htmher company.
The company's a. : <-t are
en at $1(50,000 ami liabilities at
000.
riML
II S,1905.
LIFE SKETCH OF PRESIDENT
Sketch of the Life of the Man Inaugurated
Saturday.
The Congressional Directory.
Theodore Roosevelt, President, was
born in New York city on October U7.
1858; entered Harvard College in 187G
and graduated in 1880; took up the
study of law, but in 1881 was elected
It) the New York Legislature, and was
twice re-elected; in his second term
in the Legislature was the candidate
of his party for speaker, the majority
of assembly, however, being Democratic;
during his third term served
as chairman of the committee on cities
and of the special committee
which investigated the abuses in the
government of New York city; was a
delegate to the State convention in i
1884 to choose delegates to the Kepub- j
11 can national convention, and was se- i
leetcd as one of the four delegates at !
large from New York to the national j
convention; later in the same year he j
went to North lkikota and spent most
of his time there for several years on
a ranch, engaged in raising cattle; j
in 1SS0 vas tin* Republican nontint e j
l'or mayor of Now York oily; was ap ;
pointed a member ?>f the United States '
civil service coinniission in May. INNli,
by President Harrison: resigned this
position in in order to accept the
presidency of the police commission of
New York city, under Mayor Strong;
in April. IS'.tT. was appointed by President
McKinlov as Assistant Secretary
of the Navy. I'pon the outbreak of
the war with Spain in IS'JS, resigned
tliis post and became lieutenant colonel
of the First United States Volunteer
Cavalry, was promoted to the
colonelcy of the regiment; was in the
lights at Has (Inasimas and San .Juan;
was mustered out with his regiment
at Montauk. Long Island, in September.
ISltS; was nominated shortly afterwards
as the Republican candidate
for Governor of New York, and elected
in November, 1SUS; was unanimously
nominated for Vice-President
of the United States by the Republican
national convention of 11100, and elect- j
ed; succeeded to tin* Presidency upon |
the death of President McKiuiey, September
14, 11101.
Vice-President Fairbanks.
The Congressional Directory.
Charles H'arrcn Fairbanks, of Indianapolis.
was horn on a farm near
Unionville Center, Union county. Ohio.
May 11. IS.".:!; was educated in the com
moil schools of i Ii?* neighborhood ami
at the Ohio Wesley University, Delawaro,
Ohio, graduating I'roni that institution
in isTii in tin classical course;
was admitted to the bar by the Sup fine
Court of Ohio in isTl: removed to Indianapolis
in the same year, where he
has sitae praetieed his profession;
never held puldie office prior t<? his
election to the Senate; was elected it
trustee of the Ohio Wesley University j
in 1SS5; was unanimously chosen as the 1
nominee of the Republican caucus for j
United States Senator in the Indiana
Legislature in January. 1S{?3, and sub- '
sequently reeeived Itis entire party vote
in the Legislature, but was defeated by !
David Turpii', Democrat; was a delegate
at large to the Republican national
convention at St. Louis in lS'.tti, j
and was temporary chairman of the
convention; was a delegate-at-large to
tli" Republican national convention at
Philadelphia in WOO, and us chairman
of the committee o;i resolutions reported
the platform; was appointed a
member of the United States and llritish
joint high commis. ion which met
'.a Quebec in I ", for the adjustment
of Canadian ructions. ami was chairman
of the United States high commissioners;
was elected to the United
St.'ties Semite January -i>, 1 st 7. to succeed
Daniel W. Voorhces. Democrat,
and took hi. .-eat March I. IsbT; was
re-elected in tl'Ol!.
Body Identified.
Chicago. Special. The body of the
woman found dead Itist Friday in Lako
Michigan, at the foot of Fifty-ninth
street, was identified as that of Mrs.
i*,v;i nemiom, wikihc nome is .'aid to
liavc !>? ? 11 in Milwaukee. The elew to
ih?' woman's identity was furnished by
John McCarthy, of Chicago, who asserted
that he had known Mrs. Reliant
t for some time, and positively
idenlilie-.l the body as: that of the Milwaukee
woman. Mystery still surround
the death of the woman, but
the police are of the opinion that they
have a murder problem to solve.
News by Wire and Cable.
Mr. Robert I... ('ampin II was -rrieker,
with smallpox in the Vcstmorolan 1
Club, Richmond.
Four persons were injured in the
wreck of a limited passenger train at
Rochflsh, Va.
A movement i: on foot to have all
hanging in Virginia take place in the
penitentiary.
Two Ku-himuxl im>-( <)< ... who nro
(oinlcinr.' i i?? bo hungr-d, w.-re baptized
in a bath tub in tlx: jail.
iv
* 4
<$
>V?v * N
NO. 50.
STORMY CONDITIONS
Worse Troubles Confront Russians
At Home
LABORING PEOPLE STILL RESTLESS
Labor Delegates Representing the
Whole Industrial Popoulation of St?
Petersburg Issue Peremptory Demads
Which the Government ii
Almost Certain Not to Grant.
St. Petersburg, Hy Cable.?Ulack
clouds are again lowering over the industrial
situation of Russia. Tha
strike at Moscow has been resumed on
a large scale, anarchy reigns in tha
Caucasus, and at St. Petersburg tho
measures which the government advanced
to quiet discontent and restora
good relations lad ween masters and
men appear to have failed, with tha
probability of causing the storm ta
break anew.
The labor delegates representing
the whole of the industrial population
of St I 'el ersiluiiM' mi.I wli,,
ed to choose fifty members of the
Schidioski reconciliation commission
met again Thursday and reaffirmed
the resolutions adopted the previous
lay, which threatened, in case the
demands are not granted, not only to
refuse to elect labor representatives
to the commission, but to order a resumption
of the general strike.
These demands are for the release
of imprisoned workmen and freedom
fiom arrest, unhampered speech, full
publicity of meetings of the commission,
and the abolition of the censorship.
A practical ultimatum was delivered.
calling for an answer today, and
there is little expectation that the
government will grant the conditions
demanded. The strike already has
assumed large proportions here, about
lUl.OOO men being out. Among thosa
who struck yesterday are the employes
of the St. Petersburg shops of the
Warsaw Hallway. The strike has not
yet extended to the trainmen, but the
leaders may decide to order them
| out in order to paralyze one of the
most important railroads in Russia.
in n su'ucri on nauway.
St. Petersburg. My Cable.?In a long.
I dispatch from ('.moral Kuropatkin
: which was received here, the commander-in-chief
of the army in ManI
?hnria Rives details of various attacks
by the Japanese during the last
I f< \v days, and a dispatch from Mukden
1 cceived at midnight. indicates a conI
tinmition of the artillery duel; hut
neither report throws any light upon
| the rumored intern ion of t'.enorul Kuj
I'opatkin to withdraw northward,
whieh has heen the gossip of St. Petersburg
for the past two days. A
ptiv.iti ii 1 .patch i cei\<d last night
concludes with this significant, sentence
"Within t u > weeks you may
i Xpert great < v. nls."
The Siberian Railway, which is being
worked to its full rapacity by
purely military Traffic, is about to
nnvo ft further burden imposed upon
it ?namely, that of feeding the re.stdent
non-combat tint population. Tho
stocks of provisions in Siberia were
not :is large as usual at the beginning
of the winter and are now run low.
The government has been informed
that provisions must be imported by
the railroad or that the towns will bo
face to face with famine within a
fortnight. This will necessitate soma
delay in the forwarding of military
supplies, whieh are sorely needed at
the present moment."
No Tobacco Trust Investigation.
Washington, Special. No action will
bo tnki ti by the House at this session
Oil the Kehoe resolution :'o- ?n inupoH
Kation of iin* "tobacco trust." Itcnres<
illative Smith, of Kentucky. who was
delegated hy tin judiciary committee
to consult tin- \tiotney Cetieral on the
subject, has fotui'l it impossible to arlan^c
:t sath fotory int< rview. and expressed
ii?t* opinion that with the atccl
trust ami Standard Oil investigation,
the Department of Commerce and Iahor
will he running to its full capacity
during the summer.
" I %
Exiled Negro Sues the City.
Lynchburg, Va., Special. Suit was
instituted in the clerk's office of the
Federal Circuit Court here hy Rev.
.Ccliar I .lonet . colored, against tiicity
of Roanoke for $:to,tico. and another
against Mayor Cutchin ami City Sergeant
.1. \. Manuel, who are sued as
indivi lual: and not as officials, for $120.000.
.Folic: is the colored Ikiptist preacher
who we. charged with preaching
mi iitfl'iiiim:ii??r\ >rm? ;i in Itoanokn
shortly after the terrible assault a
vim :i :<> mi Mi Shell hy a negro,
an I wiio v a afterward: foveed to Hots
from i an I), and lias sin u been
residing in Pennsylvania.
To Print Coll Weevil Literature.
Wa hinrton. Sjieeial. The President,
fa ni to C..ie i an elaboration of an
ays. .Mural bulletin published a year
ago. an I eontaining the i>: orvation?
lor i'." l. relating to the holl wre.il. It
wa. i nl to Congress in order to have it
1 i111 I for general distribution in Texas.
Louisiana and other ootLon-growing.