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V ?yrr-riT'l J HilgW ? ? 5 .. :,-m ? ? | "M i tobku ii, urn. * N(K 40, "COLUMBIA, QEM OF THE OCEAN" Shamrock II Fairly Outsailed in Every Race. 7f!DCl)P YET REMAINS IN AMERCA Sir Ihonias Upton Satisfied That the Better Boat Won ? fluch En thuslasin, ^ t* ?? > Tho final race between the chal longer, Shamrock II and tho defender Columbia, was run Friday. The Co lumbia had already "won Id two "pre vious races, and although the < lead bad been a -narrow one, gr<^t hopes tii her dttcccfey, v>\w fjrtoT In tho final race were entertained on Friday. She completed hor defense of the honored trophy In another stirring rare with ? he Shamrock II over a leeward and windward race of 30 miles, crossing the finish lino two seconds Ifcfi&jjud her antagonist, but winning by seconds on the time allowance. This allowance U computed, under yachting rules and Is based on the sailing length of each boat. The chief eleinent In it is tho Shamrock's lightship. J ust boforo th? warning gun they ugain headed up Into tho wind simultaneously and worked back to their former positions. Doth wore on tho port 'tack and close hauled, with tho Columbia on tho weather quarter of tho challenger. Tho American bout wan first to come about after tho warning gun at 10:65.^ >Tho Shamrock II lmmedl dlrectly astern of the defender, at the same tlmo breaking out her tremen dous ballon Jib and letting fall to | starboard htr spinnaker pole. It was ?Captain Sycamore's game ttS cross laJtt if possible. This lie was able to do, but while ho had tho pride of po sition in a leeward start, ho found himself 30 seconds behind the hand! cap gun. Captain Barr, in the mecMme, had delayed breaking out )\'v s&lls , held the Columbia's sheets in flat. Thus, he, too handicapped bis boafin crossing, but nut ho much as his rh1al, for it Is estimated that he was only 15 seconds behind the handicapped gun. Spinnakers on both boats were broken out on the line and away they went on what proved to be tho las' race of ti:e in jjtomaUonl series of 1901. xj^iirr kept up his good work and toWr advantage of every change of air that could possibly help him. Tho Columbia was seen to be perceptibly gaining, but every soul In the lleot TUB CO LUMBlXr relatively larger spread of canvas i than tho Columbia. Plucky Sir Thomas I.ipton, owner | .ojHJie Shamrock .II, standing on tho I wrld^e of tho yacht Erin, led his , guests in three hearty huzzabs for j the successfu^Iefemler. "She is the better boat," he said, "and she deserves to bo cheerel." Sir Thomas, although defeated, will go home with the satisfaction of knowing thai, liis gold?? boat-4* Hi<e fastest foreign yrtcht that ever cross ed tho Western ocean. During the ueiies of races not an untoward in cident occurred and Sir Thomas will return to England by far the most i popular'of all the foreigners who have challenged for tho America's trophy, j The concluding race was the cios- 1 est of the series, but because qf the flnkiness of the wind on tho." beat homo, as a contest' of the relative merits of the yachts it was not to be compared with tho magnificent bat tles of Saturday and Thursday. The ' wind was strong and from the shore, embroidqjing the sea with 'foam and piling up no swell ? ideal -conditions Tor tne ciialTenger. At the preparatory signal at 10:45 A. M. both boats were far up to the j k windward and came down toward the ' was wondering if she could pull up enough to croas the line ahqad. The wind headed both boats a bit. At 3:30 the Shamrock II went about on the starboard and headed for the middle of the line. The Co lumbia tacked under her loo. Darr's game belftg to backward the head sails of the challenger. On they came the Ame*4ean boat?gaining slightly. The crowd began to cheer, ? for it was tiien a certainty that the gallant defender was well "within her time allowance. The Shamrock II was first to luff across, but hardly was this percepti ble before liarr did the same thing j.with the Columbia, and they went over only two seconds apart. The L.two second* wore to the credit of thp ; Shamrock It In actual time, though she was a beaten' boat according to tho, rules of the game. The usual pandemonium that at tends the final victory In a cup con test folowed. Whistles, ^Ir.ena. -bells, bands and cli.ccrs united in a grand j chorus of jubilation, and J. P. Mor | gan's steam yacht Corsair added to the terrific din liy firing a national [ -solute of 21 gtftisr" ?pan tSStn* *? ***? * Td**r<* Jfr. Wi A. M'ntster Exonerated. Carbondalo. 111., Special. ? The coro ner's jury summonedl to inquire into, the killing of Ben. C. Brown, on the stfcfcls of this city Saturday a* noon, has rendered. a verdict fully exonera ting Key. Joe. McCamlah. T5ie priso ner i sa man 56 years of age and serv ed with distinction in t he Confederate j army. The funoral of Brawn wa< held Monday. Bogus Jmrtph W heeler, XTTT-" Boston, Special. ? The actions of ?? young man who for the past few 'days has boon masquerading under the name of ' Jos. Wheeler, Jr., U. 9. A.. are on gamins the attention of the po J lee. It appearetihe you ng man reg istered ai a leading hotel and from there ^ont notes to various taaicess men askipg forjoaoa of moiey. The ,:jWBten<t of this, operation has not Been Jrjkarned. The hotel clerk missed h!m an Investigation showed that he .not the* son of ??f fsmemi United m amy general, its he elaJtned to Then the poJJCe were pat'oa his Brevities. 1 J?a4e d-iwpetchc? Shpw Uia/t <1 (Operate ftg^itJns at close quartors markc.l the rcctwt^ unsuccessful Boor attack <fn Fort Etala, on the Zululand border. Rtutayd Kipling has come to the front /jjfcTa critic of the British War Officers relapse lmto old methods. Kin& Edward, who Is ill, Is sai/1 to he suffering from lumbago. ' FVench submarine bcwLfa are erhi else^ m jnpiJbfiins oM? *ben giilffltr. tftdto ftod en enemy. Valuable oarly mapa of America have been found at Wolf egg C as tie, Wurteanberg. President Qaatro, k Is believe.!. Is determined to retrieve bis foftunej on the Colombian frontier in order to avert * formidablaravoJutkm. ? ~r Dr. jiialqnln M. Martinez, the MS Chilean' Minister to the United States, arrived at Panama oa bW way to the United SUtea. The eld lac SOUTHERN INDUSTRIAL Nov l;ntei prises That Are l:urlchhi? Our Favo ed Section. Mnrlno Works nt Norfolk. Work has boon started nt Norfolk op h marine railway, machine works, boiler shops, saw mill ami woodwork ing department, equipped with moil eru apparatus ami muohinory for re pairing marine craft. It is the inten tion to add the ?construction Of tn^* >. schooners and kindred vessels. The railway will accommodate a. 1000-ton vessel ; its gro.imjfways . wtll extend 6G0 feet into the w^toryAvhore a depth of twenty to tvvyjifjXl\e feci Is hud. Messrs. I'Yed O. Smith and (loo. W. McCoy, proprietors of the Southern Iron Works at Uerklpy. Va . are build ing the new plant, and will operate it. Duck Mills to Hillside. The Aut hor J)uok Mill of Home. Oa.. will enlargo lis plant. This mill \vu? built during the past year and cord pleted recently. Its equipment iH mainly thirty looms and steam power' plant for tho production of duck and other heavy goods, It* capitalization being $20,000. The improvements mentioned will include the erection of an additional building and the in stallatlon of machinery, about $?_' o. 000 to $25,000 to he the expenditure. Thia enlargement will '"considerably Increase the output. South and West to Financc Their .. Crop*. The fact that not until last week did St. Louis call upon the United StAtes Treasury for money to move tho crops, and then for only $300,000, is an indication of how tho financial independence of the Interior has grown. In former years. Hustling at Henderson. A lotter from Henderson, N. C., siys: "Our town is humming with various now enterprises. The eotton mills, tho knitting mill, the buggy factory, tho ico factory and the strain laundry iuakt> things lively, and all do a very g >. d business." Industrial Miscellany. \york upon tHe government nr.vy- j yard at Charleston, involving tho ex- 1 pondlturo within the tVext throe yens of JG. 000. COO, is to begin early n.-xt AiiunUi. Tilts work in v OiVOo tho c..n- ! struction of two drydoeks of trtono r.n I concerts 750 feet long and 140 f e I wide, and accommodations for tho , torpedo Heel and machine and re. air shops. p- ! . The Southern Pacific Railway Co. ! has placed its Urst oil-burning engine j in service between llcfustou and Gal- j veston.' The officials l/ftvc found "that-1 with G75 gallons of oil as much steam can be produced lis with four | and one-half tons of coal, and that the combustion of the oil is .attended with s satisfactory results. Steam can be raised more quickly than with coal, i and as high a rate of speed attained, j At the meeting of the Island P. irk Driving Association at. Albany, N. Y., "Darlpl," driven by Miss Ni> \\ Plielp-*, of Wotervlelt. N. Y . ben? trie world's record for lady drivers by 3 scouls. The horse trotted the mile in 2:00 !?!. The befit previous rcconl for a lady driver was 2:12 1-2. During August there were mined at the Brushy Mountain mines in j Tennessee 21,44G.f>5 tons of coal, j whfle the coke, ovens turned out j 4,712.90 tons of coke. Tlfu l.ong -Island -ttatlrrnrrt-trcrc Tiled 1 an application for permission to con struct a tunnel undcrgfthe I2ast river to New York city. TexllJe Notes. l*hc Scotland Cotton Mill of Laurlh burg, S. C., is about to contract for flVo ' 10-inch revolving flat top cards. and u asking for bids on this machinery. It is proposed to organize a $20,09J stock company at Greenwood, S. C.. for -the erection of a cotton-batt'n^ mill, and. Mayor T. 11. I/ee can jflVe ;n formation. - The Tlfton (Oft.) Cotton-Mills Co.. has completed its new mill, and ex pects to l>e in full operation in another wook. The spindles number 5132, a:nl the product is 4e be thread, nnd^aTer" Uwe curtain and yarns. The Wiseaaset Mill^ Co. of AIl>a marlc. N. CL. lias eompteted-'ttie ?20':Q school building which. It luw be ir erecting. This school Is to be equlppel end officered for instructing the chil dren of ihe mill's operatives. The Durham (N. C.) Hosiery Mills states that it will remove to its now plant about November J. With the MO new maehlne-3 to be added Ibe plint will h^vc a daily output of al?out 12'|p dozm sovoJtfsH lw*':. au-1 halt-JucAc. TKark Is progr'sclng steadily on the thd new mill for. J. A. A. W. C ork an 1 "associates at Augusta, Oa. The plant will have 3560 spindles and coet com plete About $50,000. The 'burned plant, wbleh this new one replaces, had 17C0 spindles the Fannvllle (Va.) Knitting MlllA Co. has^leased its plant to Joseph O (burton "of Lynchburg, Vs. This Vl?r la and of modern equipment, an1 Mr. Barton will oontlnue Its operation il*r installing twenty additional kn't ting waaflfclaati-^ttia piudgcrT* liilf hoae. > . v < On one' jay laat week r ease la rt Brt9?nt!st: aaren foreign nations w-rr in mKmsmwrnsr^ 1 g ? . - f - - ICHpMpW ''TM wlU of Frsallant McKJnto. iM toe prob?a Mt Onto*. Ohio, am tfesTSt to MM. VcKtefer -mi Wm %u?. STEAMER FIRED ON.! t L X 4 South Americans Taking Liberies Willi the British lion. ONE BAIL WENT 1IIROIGII T IIP SHIP I l:ng!and \N ill Send a War Vessel to Protect tier lntc((j>ts Some Com plications Probable. \ Colon, Colombia, lly Cablo. ? (Pro vlous cabling of this mat lor prevent ed.l A force of Liberals, numbering at least J?5o. attacked Mono Island, commanding the entrance to the port ,J r Tyiijsca. ficpCvuubei' 21. Tho Island had all aloiig been garrisoned with fewer than a hundred troops, well supplied with arms, ammunition ai?1 commissary storoB, including moriN than 150 bean of cattle and other pro visions in proportion. The landing? wild effected before daybreak by means of canoes. Simultaneously the island wus stormed from the other end by Liberals on the mainland. Morro Island is surrounded by shal low sand banks 'and tho only means of approaching .Tumaco is by tho nar- j row river which is within easy reach j of the island. Tho llritish steamer Quito, bound from Cuuyaquil, Ecuador, Panama and touching at ports between, anchored off Morro Island, on the night of Sep tember 2t}, and weighing anchor at daybreak, started up the stream to ward Tumaco. The Lllu'fals tired a shot across her bows. Suspecting the 1 situation. she immediately turned, bu / ^ IIU? shots and one cannon con tinned to be fired at her, the fonder j striking her several times and latter ! once, the ball making a hole right through her above the watermark, though the damage in other respects was slight. The Quito then steamed to the farthest point the tide would permit and again anchored. The 11 r- j lag was now resumed, but It quit after a few minutes, the Liberals see ing the imprudence of their? action. It is significant that shortly after the Quito .incident became known, the llritish warship Icarlus left itinama for a destiiraiiou not made public, but presumably Tumaco. The steamship agents have been officially notified not to accept freight at that port. The situation on the isthmus is unchanged and quiet. Street car collision. Atlanta, Spceial. ? ' Two cars cn the Consolidated SttfT-cj, Railway were in collision at the corner of Fair enl Washington street Sunday eveirng, in juring eighteen people. Both cue were crowded and were under carslderabl ? headway, on a down grade, when t!:cy j mot. The Injured are: Motorman W. P. j fJ add y. serious; H. S. Johnson, prrsi d- nt of the Chamberlaln-John-Dul:oise | Company; Miss Lumpkin. Molormcn <;. W. Shaw, Conductor P. I). Alexan der, Conductor J. It. Finch", Mis. W. II. j L;vc, Mis. W. A. Love, Helen Uagley, Mrs. F. K. Baglcy. Mrs. Eva Dompsey. Mrs. Shon, Thomas Lamar, Stu.irt Woodson, Frederick Foster, Frank Stonakla; John Kt'cbcrs'cy. Sister Mary Piter, John Joseph's Infirmary. All are fioip Atlanta excepting M:s3 Lumpk n. wboae home lt^ [n. ColuinbtiB. Qi. The Tars' were off Schedule. X^^^oar Killed In Colltrfoa. . Utfca, P^Y., 8poclal.? One qf the worn wrecKlUn the history of ih* .Mohawk dlv!s!o^ of the Ntw Yor'x . Central * Htmion mverK*TOoia"~o= curr&l Tuesday morning In the Tllligt if Orlskany. rcven miles west of thfi city. Four railroad i/ka aero killed lo the wreck and one was injt?i#4. An east -ho. md freight engine collided with ft It^teaglxrs whi?h waa cr&eln* t on : track tbx%? ??"traek four, ttraa raw tog tfte.wreek. / ?.? ?' Curat A*f*n Twxl C<iiplrt<<. . toit Lake, 8pee!al.? !*?{*?# A# poa on Me l^o/*j^jWer o*** ?rf the I*** ffaUift HaltinaH.; ? ' ^SE0W&?iB3S $16,000,000 Improvements. Pittsburg. Spocial. ? It Is announced on go.xl authority that 11. C. Fink and the Mil Ion in tor oats, composing t.h? Union Steel Company, will build al once a $L'0r>,000 plant at Donora, on the Monongahcla river, to mako broom and nHRtrftd \\ i r 1 ? ajid o:h<r speciaU tics. The Matthew.* Woven WJre Fen re Company, controlled by the Union Ccmpany, will build a woven wjre fcnce to coat $100,000 with 75 t~rs Sally capacity and the eompany will double the capacity 'cf tl;o barb*! wite department by installing 32 machines. Altogether the present outlay will roa/?h $o00,0f)0 and future lmn"ovr iii en 1 3 v/hl^ h iii? .Uiiiiii?Suud Co4?pa ny has In view Will cost between $11, OCO.OOO OJld $18,000,000. K'llcd In Luzon, Washington, P. C\, Special.? Thf War Department roreived a cablegram Sunday announcing that Second Lieu tenant Allen T. Crockett was kll.ed near Candolarla, I.uzcu, September 24, Crcckett wch appalnted a scond licu tearttTt of volunteers in June of TD00. having entered the r?g!mena as a j>rl rare, an-3 was sent to the Philippine IcJands. In^ 1301 *be? was appointed a ?eooend lieutenant In the regular arm j ar.1 signed to the Twenty-first In fantry. He. was on duty -with the Ilocan scouts from Dosemhw. 1900 to August last, and met his death wbjlf serving 1^8. rcilment. (UN. HAMPTON FOR SIN.UOR. Col. Jones \N Itedraws and Suggests Ills iiloctlon. A statement was given tho press on Saturdav In Col. Willie Jones. the , chaii man of t Is o Democratic party in (his state, who has been an nvnwod candidate for scuatorial honors, win. h will set tho people and tho politicians "! tho Stat<> to ihlnUinn, and talking Col. Jones withdraws trom the racu. I an?l In doing so makes tho suggestion that the other candidates for Senator* I Mel. am ill's seal step aside also, and | let tho position bo unamiously ten dercd to lien. Wade Hampton lien is what Col. Jones says of the matter in his statement: "I have concluded not to enter the I are for the 1'niled Stalls "I'M ; i because l reel thai I cannot (;lvo I up my homo business interests, uuIcks I there be a special demand for it. I haw a very largo personal acquaint anco with the Demoerats of this State /Judging from letters received and Uiinny personal interviews I feel satis fled that my chaucos for llio nomiua tlon to this distinguished position would have been fully as good as that of any candidate whose name is now mentioned in connection with the sen i atorsliip. I would have no political fear to run against any man in this Slate except two, namely, Senator Tillman and (leu, Hampton, because 1 believe cither of them could beat nie or any other man in the State. '"By the way. 1 think tho very best solution of tho senatorial contest would be for all of the young men who are now candidates for the place to announce their withdrawal on tho condition that Gen. Wade Hampton accept the position ami lot the old general bo' elected without opposi tion. "Without any roflectlou upon any candidate now in the field I bcliovo that Gen. Hampton's views on na tional politics meet with the approval [ of practically all the Democrats in tin; State. Such a happy and gracious! I event as the .selection of Gen. Hamp ton at this particular time would make the Democratic party of this State absolutely irrestahlo and save I us of much agitation and feeling when there is so much else for our people ! to do. "I happened in 1 >? 7 7 to be one of the six DcmocrJ|ic boys who carried Gen. Hamplcn on our shoulders from the platform where he was inaugura ted through t he- street.-* of Columbia to tho'hotel. and today again it would be my .great pleasure to cooperate in elevating him to tills high position, because I believe it would* be for the j good of the great Democratic party ' 'of my Stnte." I Acjutant General Makes Inspections, j j Adjutant General Floyd has return ed 1 coin a tour of Inspection of tin;' , militia; and he reports all companion j I so far us inspected, to be In excellent: condition as to equipment, and what Is equally important to their proll cieney in the manual of arms and the drills. So far as his Inspection tour has gone, Gen. Floyd Ms extremely gratified at the great interest being taken In the militia. Ho visited Ches ter. Vorkvllle. Hock Hill, and Fort Mill during tin; past week. At tho latter place a new company has been : organised ai d Gen. Floyd was greatly j pleased with the showing made. At all of the places visited the military! organizations entertained the adjut ant general, ? who responded in his 1 usual hafipy style to frequent calls A llomlcidc. As the result of a crap K-imfi Sat urday nlgbt on the edge of iho town Lewis White, a Greenwood negro, ?was killed, and another negro, name unknown, probably fatally wounded by Julian Foster. The shooting oc curred at a "sociable." Foster and Wt^e were shooting craps when the other shooting began. White ? was killed and Foster the? turned bis fire on the crowd of negroes. in the bouM -where tbo sociable wah in prfaneee. The strange negro was hit. Foster made good his escape. He is a tall, reddish mulatto, weighing about 17 T. pounds, has prominent cheek bones and sharp oom, an unusuai featdr* ev<? Id a mulatto.; ? Burglary |? Ctkrthiry. Cokeefevry. Special^T** store at j W. K, Palme? aa*toa was b rate kt^ m WtatMlftV McK, Htfl . VM " 11 _ ' for a sneech. ) (ien. Floyd Intends personally to I visit ctotv military company Uj tlwe State, lijnk'HK pressing duties 01 his' office prevents. On tile tour just made ho says the Yorkville company, for Instance, showed up T?8 men and rifles. The commander of the new company at ? Rock Hill is Capt. Dunlap, who was ( an officer of the Second South Cai'oli- ! na regiment, II. S. V. '*** | Next Saturday flen. Floyd expects', to pro to Charleston, where he is to meet tho exposition military com j niittoe, of which ho is chairman, und endeavor to get tiie preliminary ar rangements for the big military foa i-ffnT of the ^position under way. H<;. rnyr; that ho finds "Hid" military com panies taking Area-t interest in the coming display*. at tho exposition. From Charleston lie will go on an In *p**ot4on tour to -the JVHMei? section of the State, visiting Darllnjftfih, SunjpCer, Florence and other /conn ties. ' Uurke Knocks Out Corcoran. Savannah. (.a., Special. ? Jimnile Iturke, of New York, knocked o*it 7om Corcoran, of Savannah, at the theatre. Monday ni^TTt^-fM. the twelfth round of What was to have been a 23 round mill.* Corcoran took tho count tvlee in tbo first round, but rallied and ninde nine faat-xounda. lu tiie eleventh and twelfth Burke nounde.d bis man unmercifully. ARP ON WEATHER, Bartow Philosopher Discusses Winds and Rains. he loicnns on politics. too. I Itltiks 1 tie (1. A. Iv. iMe ? Are No! I IM.ased NN lib tin* Course Roosevelt ! Is Pursuing. | The eleim nt.s are unsettled. The w n I seems t < ? be veering southward Roose velt keeps on siylng kind weirds ab Ml ?s and the republicans arc in a statj of apprehension. The (J. A Its made 1 !i:st iuA&uU <>W? NSSYtf* \ ?NO "11 r' ' dared to exalt tlio bravery nn ism of our iK*op)t>: but he answorei them Ixu'rt nobly. And now they are .? consternation becauso he invited (Mark llojyell to dine wlrli him. '1 iv? City of Shushan is perplexed. 1( looks like there is a power of good political fun ahead of ua, and we can't b? w.>i3 ted. MeKinley wanted to be kind, on I they wouldent lei him, but my opillkn is that Roosevelt is going to run t'i ; machine According It) his emoLiuiw. li t is a man of emotion ? good, generous emotions and our emojlonal nature is the best jxirt of our nature. That is the reason that women are better than men; they are more emotional. A .sel fish man. a greedy man or a political "rer so" have no emotions. Tiie.v plot and scheme for eprsonal advantage, Hamlet said t'.iat a politician "Is a man who would ritvumvout Uod. They bribe and deceive to gain (heir e id. lint Roosevelt is outspoken, candid an 1 fearless. The politician's utteran e-i are cautious and come from bis head; Koosovqlt talks from his heart, an I if he fools like Inviting Clark IIowcll to dlije lie is going to do it without .con sul tm& Mark Ilanna or tlie G. A. R:'a or for a nvonieni considering what the party will say about it. I like Roosevelt because he has a wife andThildren ; in fact, he has hot r? married twice and has two sets ot Children. That's all light if the chil dren harmoiii/.ze and the last wife a., as good to l he children of the Oral wife as she is to her own. Our unrest nvlghbor for long years had three sets of children. Colonel Uayard, a widow er with two children, niarr'od Mrs. j Hand, a widow, with theroe children^ Two more children were bo: n to the ! last marriage, and all way pea.o |?n>l harmony In that household. Vlittv re^> jnlnds me of another family, where there were three sets, and they dld?nt harmonize, and one day when they v/crc :\-r!!::g !n !!?e vnnl thn wife came running in and said to her husband: "John, you'd better go -out yonder with a switch; your children and my children are fighting our dill drcn." 1 am pleased to loam that our pres ident la coming to Georgia nnxt fall and will visit lils mother's old home at Itosewcll. Think I will meet him there and Khow him aronnd, for almcst ev crbody else In dead but me that was there when his mother wna a girl. I will show him whore we hoys played bullpen and town hall, and where his uncle half Dan or half of his llnc'c Dan and I played sweepstakes and Dan always won my white alleys. Yes. I will show him around. But that colony of fine Savannah people, all* blooded stock, are not there now. There were the Kings and Dunwoodya, who were la colloge with me. Not all the Kin* lK>ys, of course, for there were nine of them, and only one sister for the whole crowd ? a JleatHlful girl. I have a very dear cousin In Birmingham who has nine girls and one son. What a pity that (/hose two families were n:>t neigh bors and cotemporarles so that tho children could have mated and inter married. I like families with numerous offspring. If I had the making of the constitution, whether federal or state, I wouldent let a bachelor hold a pubMc ofTioe; he shouldent be eligible (o go to congress or the legislature. It is not possible for him to feel deeply conojJin^ -ed about tiro l>erpeVn!ty of govoin mcnt. It La the children and tho grand children we fathers are living for. An unmarried man lives for himself. lie may bt* smart and rubral mwrwelT edu cated, but, as Kipling says, he <?n't un derstand tho peternal anxiety. All those Itoswe'l boys were manly and well favored. They ma/to good preachers, good sold.'ers, good archi tects and manufacturers and wer? g?0 I rltizcns. Poor Tom King bad his kg shattered at Manassas, and as so6n in he could walk was In the field agi'n and was killed at Chlckamauga. H-! was a bright, cheerful, handsome man, and everybody loved him. Old Barrjng- I ton King s*?nt north for a teavher a"?hkJ got one- by the name of TTtrft.'buT TTie ' boys dident like hlity They aaid he was a hypocrite and \an abolitionist and was Just fooling papa. They called him Slickflsh, and guyed him until he was sent back tp where he came from. Oolonel Bayard married Birrlng^cn King's sister, the Widow Hand, an. I moved to Rome. Ho w a courtly ^:cn tlomnn,%a descendant ST^Cfceraller Ba y a r$I , and his .grandfather was Nicolas Bayard, a .French Hugcnot. He was a cowln to the Senators Bayard of Dele ware.- He was an expert swordsman, and lored to show youths ba?k strike by which his ancestor* white from some troopers, slowed up hi#, borae cred. as ttrey eame up ?' W| gallop, l-at thejr bead* off one by cn> ' with title same -back stroke. One of his graadaoghters, MU& Plcfida Sea>, has recently - wedded a Mr. Tracy, ot . York, a nephew of B. P. Tracy, wh# ? was ~ Bayard's dMtfiters married ggfyaaajgBsi. tot ? iSSf- J mother lived there and married there. 1 like t<> speak of him iui our president, and 1 don't want any Georgia paper tq call htm Teddy or to make sport of him in cartoons. Bomb idiots think those caricatures cf our president are very smart and funny, but tho people who have respeet for the h'gh Office thitik they are shameful. Yod can't do* made the man without dograd ng th i office. lint we 'Will have to wait some tlmo ?* on Mr. Hcoaevelt. Vou e;\n't a ways sometimes generally tell, as Co bo would h.ty; wo must wait and see h..w lonn this south wind blows? "the swie. south wind that breathes upon a ban < of violets," as Shakespeare says. An l we are (he violets, We have bolh hope and eon fid en < e. for man of emltion? ean't ?o back, uix?a bis ancestors noi the (dace <>f their nativity. The Llul lochs have been horned in Georgia. More 111 iin o?<- huMilriuJ vA*ra named a county for Governor Bulloch, ftud we wouldojit mind naming another for i|is grcu t great-grandson. Georgia has n&ver had a president, and wo will ? be pruiuil to have even half of one, es l>eelally the material half? most all meat and Rood men have bred after the dam.? Hill Arp In Atlanta Con stir.,, tuiton. . ' <*? <*& KEW5Y GlE ANINCS. M iscelln neon* railroad I rn flic Is now n( Us highest point in the history of railways. The Congo l?'ree Slate has planned-, a service of automobiles between Stan- v-~ ley Falls iyitl Itodjaf. The Hour mills or Dululh, Minn., are preparing m:tkt? 10,000 barrels of 'lour every twenty-four hours. Thr> Kelgian Government has just prepared a bill to prevent tho publi cation of Bmtday newspapers. Over *000 volumes of the late United States Senator Davis's library ha vo, been given io Minnesota schools. Arthur II. Williams, of Now Hamp shire, has been a p])o lifted United. Suites Consul at Snltlllo, Mexico. if> The sum of ?100.000 has been given " Colorado College for a new hall of. science, th?> donor to remain unknown. Three hundred corporations In Texas arc in trouble for falling to reply to questions relative to tholi' standing iu (lie .State under the Anti-Trust law. st< The Ko.val Commissioners from Swe den and Denmark have met to prepare . a common civil code for the Scandina vian kingdom*. Norway r.Iowf, The ire hmau class in JlarvarJT Unl**. versm- this year numbers r>53, exelu f-iv/of special students. This Is the largest freshman class ever admitted. A new scheme of study lit Gift public fchools ?f Baltimore, Md., provides lor no holne work iu t^e four lower grades. '# ' Italians throughout the , United Stales are planning to erect a monu ment to i'reiddeii-t Mclvinley. It Is to be placed in one of tire sqnrtres Ct parks of New York City, and It Is to cost $100,000. The Civil Code of California lion been amended so as to require street mil ways acquiring franchises under if to penult iuall carriers In ploy of the United Government - ;o i ide free'whllo^Wuty. LABOR WORLO. v. :!- ? : ; , Tlio United Kingdom has 850 blast furnaces; France, 570. ? ? ' Female compositors In Paris are not loyally penult ted to b'ot type at night. There are now slxty-throo unjoni la the International? "Wood, Wire --and Meial La the i' a' Union. Vancouver, H. C., has a ecboofr teach ers' union formed on exactly tho name lines un a trades union. All employes of tho Klectric Ter minal ItailwajtfA'cfisacola. Via. J hare gone on strJl^rbecause oue of their number was discharged. lino result of the lack of j?n .efficient ? apprentice pyfflOTu'Is tbo number of "jacks of all trades" that are found the cities and towns of theeountry.. The Stale of Washington 1ms 444 lumber mills, sawing, over 0,000,000' feet per day, turning ..out .20.000,000 ? strtngtrfi" 'fiud~eJh"pfoyiug 24,000 men. Fall Hivcr manufacturers hare re fused to the live per cent, in crease demanded by ?nlH "pn"?- ? t:-rr, TVlTO Ira ve" threatened to Strike. Over iio.OOn elothlng workers in Phil* adelphia, l!o?ton and iiaithuore ara preparing to Ko on n general jstrike 'against the sweating system anuYer better wages. . r"'~ ? * " ? ~ A writer in tbo Cologne flrtsette de clares that .servants t'tv the United ?States do only balf as much work, de mand twice as much free time and four times an much wnges as vervant* in Germany. ^ '/l^c t rade schools n^o. graduating the bt^UU41e?^woi*t*n wt?r are to be found in the mills awl fae- - lories of tbu cowitry. Tho trad* and technical schools may yet solvl^tbe . apprentice problem. Alaskan mine owners are arranging to take 800 Japanese to Daaraoip to work the placer diggings dmrlng winter. Thcjr belhsv?-.that/' ' ment of Japanese at ToW solvo theproblcin p/ reducing* 1 ? 1 '? 1 I T \ . Arithmetics gslaed. ajeibington, Special.? l&e, /tatlTe df a book publlahln j ^ ad on Aeelst?9t Secretary Iba TiaiiuiJ XJ#PU1W?T^ list froas the Miswi of aad artUaastlca by At fcMStA