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ft? REVILES LEE Some Pension Drawer at Chicago Slanders the Great Soldier. STILL AFRAID OF HIM Compares Great Southern Patriot and Lender to Benedict Arnold, and Objerta to His State Remain ing in the Hull of Fame, in the City of Washington. Inveighing against the placing of the statue of (leu. Ilobt. E. Lee, In the Hall of Fame, in Washington, Col. Jasper T. Darling, past commander of Columbia Post, G. A. R., Chicago, Monday night addressed the initial camp fires of the State encampment of the Illinois G. A. R. He compared Robert E. Lee to Benedict Arnold and prophesied that the acceptance of the statue of the Confederate leader would be a step toward pensioning Confederate soldiers and opening the way to the Federal Government assuming the burden of Confederate war bonds.. In part the speaker said: "So long as treason is considered a crime against constitutional law, the statue of Robt. E. Lee, can have no abiding place in that pantheon dedicated to the heroes of the Revolution, and to those whose achievements have contributed to the triumphs of this Republic." The main portion of the nddress was in support of the contention that Gen. Lee was not convinced of the justice of the cause for which he Irew his sword and that be, therefore, should have no claim to the name of patriot. The speaker based his argument on a letter from Gen. Lee to his son, Curtis Lee, the text of which he obtained from a publication of a Southern historian. "Speaking of the impending war, the letter as published," said Mr. Darling, read: " "The framers of our Constitution never could have exhausted so much labor, wisdom, and iui utaraure on us lorilllillOIl 1111(1 surrounded It witii ho many guards and supports If it was intended to be broken by any member of the Confederacy at will. " 'It is Intended for a perpetual union, so expressed in the preamble, and for the establishment of a Government, not a compact, which can be dissolved only by a revocation of the consent of all the people in convention assembled. " 'It is idle to talk of secession; anarchy would otherwise have been established and not a Government by Washington, Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison and all the other patriots of the Revelution.' "Tbe words of that message and his subsequent acts cannot be reconciled," said the speaker. "If his oonscience dictated that letter, then what accursed influence caused him to embrace anarchy Just nkiety days later?anarchy as he himself had pictured it? "What does all this mean? It means* jat a solid South, the Daughters and Sons, propose to muke Washington a Westminster Abbey for the rebel uniform; and so not only vindicate, but glorify the rebel sword. "Then what? Simply another bill pensioning all Confederate soldiers. And long before thiB century reaches its meridian British bondholders will knock at liberty's treasury door and say: 'Redeem.' " THE WAGES OF SIN. Young Iiuly School Teacher Take* Her Own Elfe. Miss Minnie Alders, 20 years old, a school teacher of Princeville, 111., was found dead in bed at a hotel at Peoria. 111., with three bullet wounds In her body Sunday. One had pierced the left lung and the other entered -her heart. Her companion, S. T. Easterly, of Chillicothe, 111., a freight conductor for the Santa Fe, is detained by the polic" pending an investigation. No charge has been entered against him. Easterly and Miss Aider came to Peoria on Saturday and registered at the hotel aa man a"d wife. Accord! g to Easterly, the girl spent most of me nine in tears. mo sriu ui ten her early Sunday morning and went down stairs. He w?? absent about 15 minutes, he said. When he returned he found her dead. Tears Shoo to Shreds. At Wilmington, N. C., during a severe electric storm Miss Caledonia Roderick was struck by lightning, and her right shoe torn to shreds. She was knocked unconscious, but examined later by a physician showed that no injury resulted other than the severe shock and a slight burn on her right foot. Snow Storm. Northern New Mexico was In the grip of a henvy snow storm Sundnv ' night. The storm evidently Is a continuation of the one that swept over southern and eastern Colorado Saturday. Considerable live stock will be lost. *- - - WANT SQUARE DEAL FOR THE NEGRO BY THE SOUTHERN WHITE PEOPLE. Sonic Broad Statements Made at the Southern Baptist Convention on the Race Qaestion. When B. D. Gray, secretary of mr uumu mission uuuru, responocu to the call from hundreds of voices at Uie Southern Raptist Convention he did not prove disappointing, says the Baltimore American of Saturday. As the negro was the question for discussion, he seemed to voice the sentiment of all present when he said: "We have got to treat the negro right: we have got to get riJ of some of our inherent meanness and give them a Just deal. The best thing to do for the negro is to set him a good example. There are 10,000.000 in our land, and not the hundreds of millions in Africa of this or any other race concern us as much as those in our midst." The Rev. Dr. George W. McDaniel. of Richmond. Va., in another address on the negro problem said he hoped to see the day come when the negro would be given justice in the Courts. "I blush," he said, "when 1 think of the negro given the limit of the law for a petty crime and the white man set free for the same crime J merely because his skin is white and he has the intluence. Negroes are not Baptists because they know so little, but because they read with unbiased minds the Word of God. ! When we think of them and how they were the guards of our women when ' the men of the South were oft.' to war?I say we need to do the negroes of the South justice. ' I)r. McDaniel reported on negroes \ for the committee appointed to con- , sider that subject. He stated, from the report, that the Baptists were do- ' ing m r to evangelize the 9,000,000 ' negroes of the South than all the ' other denominations combined. He said that $12,000 had been expended in the work, and that 25 negro ' missionaries were employed. Two 1 hundred and sixty-five Bible conferences had been held, he said, for negroes, at which 19,555 pastors and deacons attended. Ho explained that the missionary work among 'lie negroes was done by the home mission board of the Northern Convon- ' tion. He stated that the relations 1 between the white Baptists and the 1 negroes were of the most cordial 1 character, and recommended that the 1 present policy be pursued in the personal activity of the pastors coming 1 among the negroes in evangelizing them. An appeal from the Baptists of , the North, asking that their orithren of the South aid them in tak1 care of the negroes, was referred to a special committee, and may create a grave crisis in the Convention ' should it come up at a future session. The appeal came from the ' American Baptist Home Mission Society, with headquarters in New 1 York. For years the sentiment of Northern Baptists toward the n^gn has heen gradually changing, and, as one of the delegates stated, "The Northerners have come to realize that the negro is no angel and we ' are not heathens." "They used to call us heathens," he said, "because we didn't go at the work very strenuously. Our policy has been to evangelize the negro and educate , him In morals and the Bible. This appeal is very much out of place. The Northern Baptists want us to educate the negro along their lines t?y giving him an education in ] science, literature, philosophy and what not." 1 MARKS LONG FLIGHT. < In Aeroplane and Is Given a $ 10,000 < I*rize. . Glenn H. Curtiss flew from Albany to New York city in an aeroplane Sunday winning iionon prize offered by f.he New York World. ! He covered the distance of 137 miles 1 in two hours and thirty minutes, and came to earth as calmly and as light as a pigeon. His average speed for the distance, ?r>4.6 miles an hour, sur- ' passes any record ever made by an aeroplane in long distance flights, and in its entirety his feat perhaps eclipses anything man has ever at- , tempted in a heavier than air ma- | chine. m * m j Killed About (iaine. j At Anderson Hugh Alexander and i John Polite, negro lads of 17 and ! 13 years of age, respectively, quar- ( relied over a game of checkers. Al- i exander picked up a shotgun and fir- < ed on Polite, the shot causing instant | death. Alexander attempted to run 1 away, but was captured. Must Remain. The department of Illinois, G. A. ] R., at Freeport, 111., Thursday tabled ' as "111 advised" the resolution call- ' InR upon President Taft to take steps 1 to remove the sfatue of Robert K. 1 T-ee from the Hall of Fame at Washington and return it to the custody forty-five thousand. ? j A pirl is awful smart to be cross l with a man so as to make him think ( he is the one. t * OR i*"- . ; TILLMAN'S CONDITION THE SENATOR IS STILL RAPIDLY IMPROVING. The Dispatcher from Atlanta Saying Ho Had a Relapse Were Entirely False. Dispatches from Atlanta Saturday In fVio nlfnnt # Vs n O - Till-.- V. . 1 (.eveloped rheumatism follow'ig nil effusion of blood on the brain and had been ordered to a saii'tariun in that city for immediate tr m ..lent f j this new affection are e.\a<;>" u0 i end misleading, according .o Or 1 V. Dabcuck and Col. Augost Koha of Columbia, both of whom hav ?t ? i.t v oeen guests of Senator Til a' Trenton. After a careful study of the s<.?.ator's condition. Dr. Habcoek made the following statement: "I find Senator Tillman in u very comfortable condition; in fact, lie ?o much be*t r i .vcr t t?? see him again, considering the nature of the attack he had last winter in Washington. His expression is good, and his speech natural. The only effects remaining from the paralytic attack are a numbness and ilragging of the right foot and leg. "The treatment followed so far has largely been that of rest and liet and under this regime,1 ve has reached his present improvei*d condition; therefore the future management of the case will be along these lines and every effort made to secure for him rest, quiet, freedom ] from care and worry. For the present tlie senator lias decided to return to the sanittarium in Atlanta, where experience in formed 1! iiess lias resulted in benefit. Suggestions ire frequently made that Senator Tillman spend some months abroad. This question cannot lie determined it the present time, and its ultimate lecision will depend largely on Senitor Tillman's physical strength. "Considering th seriousness ? f liis attack last winter liis present condition is all that his physicians could have any right to ejfpect. ' "How about Senator T? man's Rheumatism?" I>r. Dalfeock was asked. "Senator Tillman has no rheumatism, as far as I could see, or he could describe. He continues his gymnastic exercises, as he has been doing since his return from Europe, and says that sometimes his right shoulder joint is 'rusty,' meaning, 1 suppose, that motion of the joint is less free than formerly. This, I suppose, is the basis of the rumor that he -has rheumatism." Col Kohn says: "This was Dr. Babcook's medical view of Senator Tillman's condition, I saw him about dx weeks ago and then wrote an account of his condition, and to a layman's eye there is the most marked and decided improvement in Senator Tillman's condition. Six weeks ago he had to be supported in walking; now he can and does walk without any support. He used a Swiss walking cane, but he gets about without it. Six weeks ago he spoke in monosyllables; now he talks freely and starts discussions. He laughs and cracks jokes and is in the best if humor. This may mean much or little medically, but is indicative of his feeling." 8TRUCK BY LIHTNING. Thirty Thousand Barrels of Oil Is 1111 T*n .*1 I'n A severe electrical storm, accompanied by rain and wind, vUi'd Sour Lake, Texas. Sunday morning between 12 and 1 o'clock, doing condderab.lo damage to derricks and ibher oil property. Lightning struck t steel tank belonging to the Texas Dil company, which contained about 30,000 barrels of oil, valued at $4 a barrel. The tank and contents were totally destroyed by fire. This Is the second storm in the vicinity, witbin the past week, which has destroyed and damaged oil fields prop;rty estimated at about $150,000. DIED FA It FItOM HOME. N'ortli Carolinian Out West Meet* Sudden Deatli. The decapitated and mangled body af A. A. Icard of Hudson. N. C.. was found on the track of the Northern Pacific Railway near Lester, Wash., Monday. He had been drinking and it i3 cupposed lay down on the track ind went to sleep. A. A. Icard was 21 years old and came from North Carolina about a year ago, it is said, ind was employed as a logger. A 'ousin, George Icard, took charge of :he body and will send it to his lome for interment. Burns Proved Fatal. Mrs. Joseph T. Patten, of Onawa, Iowa, who was burned Thursday afernoon while wa&hlng out a "rat" jsed in her hair, in gasoline, and was hurried to a hospital, died early Friday. Made 11 tin Leave. Following the publication of aleged often- ' 'tides in his paper, 3. N. Br egro was driven out )f Brool Miss., and h'a plant ir>d reshu-nc burned. MET IN FOG Large Steel Steamers in Collision injhe Night on Boron Bay. BABY AMONG THE DEAD Several Sailors Were Killed by Falling Hatches Before They Could Jump Overboard.?It Is Not NowKnown llow Many Were hist in the Accident. News reached Pert Huron, Mich.. Tuesday that 17 lives were lost in the collision of two big steal freight steamers on hake Huron, north of Point aux Barques, in a dense fog Monday morning and that the steamer Frank H. Goodyear of Cleveland was sunk in 4 7 fathoms of water. The steamer James 11. Wood, of Cleveland, which struck the Goodyear. limped into Port Huron harbor Tuesday, with a big hole in her hull, carrying half a dozen survivors of the Gocdyear. The latter carries a crew of 23 men and several passengers. Capt. F. R. Heminger, of Algonac, Mich., who commanded the Goodyear; Chief Engineer Gibson, Steward Davis Barrett, one wheelman and two passengers, Mrs.. Thomas H. Rassett and daughter of Marine City, .Mich., were saved and brought to Port Huron on the Steamer Wood. The only hope of the survival of the others who were on board the Goodyear lies in the possibility of their having been rescued by th< steamer William Siemens, which was near the scene of the wreck. Both the Wood and the Goodyear are big v- ssels, the Wood 614 feet long and the Goodyear 43G feet. The former is a steel ship. The Goodyear passed the Soo downbound at 10.30 oaiuruuy ana me ooa passed Port Huron up-bound at 7.20 p. m. Sunday. Many of the Goodyear's crew were killed by falling hatches before tney had a chance to jump into the water. All had life preservers when their vessel sank. The Goodyear's cook had his baby dashed from his arms from a falling hutch and the infant was lost. FIGHTING IN NICARAGUA. i Fourteen Insurgents Killed nnd h Great Many Hurt. Two days fighting near Rama, Nicaragua, cost the Estrada forces fourteen in killed and twenty-nine wounded, according to a report to the State Department from Consul MofTat, at Rlueflelds. The casualties of the 'Madriz forces, he adds, were not learned. Gen. Menan retired, after the fight, to his retrenchments. Large quantities of amunition and provisions, said to be the entire stores of the Madriz forces at Illuefields. he reports, were said to have been captured by General Mencada, of the Estrada faction. ATTEMPTS AT SUICIDE. An Alahantian Who Tries Various Ways to l?ie. At Cottonwood, Ala., \V. J. Lord, a prominent farmer and a leader of the Christian Science sect, is in a precarious condition as the result of four alleged attempts to commit suicide. With his mind wronght up over the nroximitv of Hailov'* pnmo? ? .. it is stated, and believing that he had sinned against the Holy Ghost. lx>rd Is said to have made an attempt to shoot himself. Unsuccessful in this, he jumped off a roof, and fell on his head, knocking out his teeth and sustaining other in- i juries. He then cut his throat and jumped into a well. ? i RAIN STOPS FIRE. Timely Showers Prevent Destruction of u Town. A fire at Texakana, Ark., which destroyed thre- business houses at 2 o'clock Sunday morning, caused a loss of $100,000. The flames orig noueu in ino second noor of a clothing establishment. The Norwood building, one of the oldest landmarks in the city, was destroyed. The flre department, was -hampered from the i lack of water pressure and a heavy downpour of rain at an opportune time prevented the fire sweeping one 1 of the principal business blocks of the city and the city hall. ? 0 ? I They Clot Scared. Roys Rent up a number of fire balloons with skyrockets attached during Wednesday night at Talladega. Ala., and many negroes seeing them | and thinking the comet was going ( to do damage, fled in terror. The reports reaching here say that practically all the inhabitants of certain quarters rushed away and gathered at another place and began at once to pray. i One good deed can deserve anoth- ( er a long time without getting it. CLUBS SH0CKIN6 WEAPONS Designed to drain Victim and Cut riim Into Mince Meat. ClubB were the weapons ot prlrnV live and savage .nan. Ancient spec! mens from Me_ico are heavy sucks grooved along the side for the insertion ot Uiaueo ot obsiuian?that is, volcanic glasB. The dioux City is a Hal piece ot wood, curving and widen?ng away from tne grip and terminating in a spherical head, which in modern times carries a long spike, nunc in*; muues oi several l>utcUer knives are commonly inserted along the margin. The national museum oI the United States possesses u great variety ot these shocking weapons, designed, as the troniiersuieu say, U) 'knock down the while uiau auU then tu braiu hiui and cut hiia into uiiuce uieat." The Kiugsuilll Islanders and other i'oiyuesiaus matte dreadiul flushing weapons by securing rows oi marks teeth along a hart oi wood. These weapons vary lioiu a tew inches to sixteen feet in length, and t has been sum llial in all lue range >f weapons devmeu by mankind theia .a nothing more blood-curdling to behold. Ikey show how the sword may nave been evolved trom the club, even by tribes unacquainted with the use ut metals. Airman weapons, again, are exceedingly complicated, owing to the acquaintance ot the natives with iron. The standard club is converted into a sort ol tomahawk by tne audition oi biades, or into a primitive spear by the audition ol a sharp spud. The plam clubs ill the Airman ilea are used cuietly lor throwing. The small kiiubbcd clubs, or kcr rles," such as are louud among the Katllrs and other Atricau tribes, are generally used as missiles. Yv Uerotis the ciuh proper was -oou brougal to perfection among savage tribes, and was luug ugo abaudoued as a weapon ol civilued warfare, the mis lie typilied by the thrown clubs, or 'kernes" is still being improved up 9ii 111 boomerangs, bows and arrows, crossbows and are-arms. ? Chicago News. Squirrel beat the Lightning The cbipuiuuk docs ciunb trees, and that not rarmy. ills usual cry may he represent* u as cheep, cheep. His cueek pouches are very distensible. 1 have oiteu removed as many as ten or htteen beechnuts lrom them. Just how large a single thing he may be able to luck into Lhc-m 1 cannot ?ay. The red squirrel is a lively, destructive and pestiferous wretch. There is no oluer animal ot his incucs ?o lull oi the devil. ui'i iom weaver useu to tell a nory that well illustrates the iiupishuess ol the reu squirrel. One day ue was out in the edge of the clearing when he heard . red squirrel chattering, screaming and whistling for all ue was worth. Weaver soon located nlni in the tip top of a tall cottonwood tree. He was in high glee, twist lug and turning and audaciously de lying ".he whole world. A thunderstorm was approaching, and soon out of a dark cloud a bolt ol lightning made uirectly for the tree top where sat the squirrel. The rtd imp evidently saw it coming and he darted down .he tree, with the lightning after him. It was nip and tuck as to which would get down first. When witnin three or four feet of the ground the squirrel gave a spring and lauded some distance from the foot of the tree. The lightning went straight Into the ground. "Chltter-r-r," said the squirreL "You don't catch uie that time."?A. W. Adsto, in the New York Sun. The Foker Only. An old Scottish lady was being closely cross-examined in court re larding a case of assault, in which her husb&uu was alleged to have playea a conspicuous part. "And now, my good woman, tell the court what sort of weapon it was your husband struck you with." "Who said h- used a weapon?" snapped the old li dy. i uu tstxju eu yourseu wnen you Kave your husband In charge," annwered the astonished lawyer. "1 said uae sie tuing, for the thing that oor John struck me on tho held wi' was naething rnair nor less th n the poker." Atte. the laughter had subsided the lawyer tried to show her that it was not always wen to call a spade a spade. "Weel, veel." answered the old lady, "ye may ca' a pade what ye lik but I'll maintecn tae my deein' day that oor John (truck me wi' the poker, an" wl' naeth cg else." The old lady gained her point. Strategy. "I thought your bank wasn't going to give any vacation this year?" "It didn't lntena to," rep led the assistant cashier, brown from n long juting, "but 1 put on an anxious look ind puttered over my books so long Ibey insisted on my taking a rest." "So thev could exnert vonr ar 80unt8?" "Sure. And {hey found them In inch elegant shape that when I truck for a raise they had to give it."?Philadelphia Ledger. Carrier Pigeon Service. 8everal of the smaller Islands of New Zealand are without telegraphic communication with the mainland. A ubstltute has been found In carrier pigeons. To send a message by a pigeon costs twenty-five cents. More Than Microscopes. The human heart concerns us more than poring into microscopes, and is srger than can be measured by the pompous figures of the astronomer.? tie. er son. -jtesunoX o; |ii t q j i uj oq j?a# (t(M noX uoqj ittuo ou oj osjb; eg enj; ouiud Xaoqdojd leq Xap ittqi atati puooos oq; jo; puy ,;;ub;sissb Joq;rub jo; esi;jOAp? Oi OABq pjnoqs ; q3noq; sa.. 'Xubiuo* paqjvuioj eqs ,,'oui o; sqooi u? 'XJBSSOOOU svn uoiiBUBidxo ojq UOI;o?;si;bs ;BOJ% i n.?i r>qi psvt.-iAins one qiooq oq; raoj; poP-orao qo;?i oq; jo *ujipip Xjo;tuouioad ioiju )ou pwqOunuog Briiiv ;t jdtjmq sai Bus tin po.\OJd ARq ;on pinow djbmj?ijw ao< b poood -joiui eqs qoiq.w e|qm Jdiu.tqxl 1} rqj iu?inpa?ui? <q m pojoqo oqo ,/joq;o a.?'3 jo ejtro o>ih; B.ia'-j,, *p.?lU5*n eon; s.Xioijkiv ..ioia ;o ajbo aqcj ? puu eiuoo o; Xpuej noX ?j??iJ|H ?ill i ';i sj won.. :X(;ao9 Xjoa pojinbni mi ojoioq era j mio) * joj fouj j.-?q pojpn;s on ;ub;? -ni av ni op s * XJofjRis i? saw ubio SunoX oq: ?uno oqj uee.wvq oq -IslA ;s:if 'qoBq puojq s.uianog kb;iv lu ooutqS Sfu puoqojdiuoo u qn \\ joj pirqeq poqoi?| sb.w joop .qqnop oq; jaq; ojpb biu qiooq oq; o;uj 8ui1 -daju :>uk 'Xipo JJliq mnnoo ss is pi?3 ?'op o; Suincqdo oj ouios loli poqjBOjq aqa ..;qd|orng? poiuti) Xjof -JPIS uaSoq oq ijoh ssilV !.. qo(j o;inb osi? pub '[>oodui eo;u Xjoa oq jqH(iu oq q8noqj hb penooi oq.* ubiu aunoX b -pojojuo uviu SunoX b pun "?op oq; uodn qoouq a oiubo B um uninn it - ??uii pjeq .iuj .?oa)( ?qa uvqj joq lojd ja})jq u pjaojiI p?v \< {njjaaqo pexjosqa oq>- .,*jq3p ijb mo atuoo |||a j. ejns tu.i avo.vj,, 'u3ja poo2 XjaA b j| qqanoqj ,<qs !.<nM?U8 poJ.?A|nb mqj s.p|3 oqj jhiu 0Ajat>",2 31 'lasBapl X|]Bnpn sb.u aqs loj ||b joijb pjbt| uooq a\mi jatuu pnaq b tnnuaa .,'3u j?j pail -doja oa*.:q Xhiu oq,,?jqHuna qjuajq jaq -..sdBtpad jo juajjoaaoj oabq jsnux aq nuiqj j 'uaqj oju|S jo>j? pBeq jaq qooq? pi? 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