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AMDFN VOLUME XVIII. CAMDEN, S. C.. FRIDAY, OCTOIUCH 18. NO. 41. SOUTH CAROLINA ITEMS Newsy Items Gathered frcm the Different Sections of Soulh Carolina. Clemson Will Cooperate. Columbia, Special.?Upon request I ^lemfion college lias consented to aid ,the society in making the field crop department representative of the ag- i nctihurul resources of the State, and; and all farmers are urged to lend their aid, to send samples of their produce and to take an active inter est in making this department the , best of the South Carolina State fair to be held bore Oct. 28 to Nov. 1.! 8?id a prominent fuir official. Ex ' hibits for this department may?be' ?hipped to the secretary State fair, . .0 un|hia, S. C., by freight, prepay the charges and send bill of lading to tup secretary and the charges will! be remitted. At the close of tlie fair j the exhibits will be returned free and J all premiums they may have taken < will be sent. It is not necessary for J the exlubitoy to attend the fair to ex Jiibit in this department. Prof. J. N. I Harper director of Clemson experi-; mental station together with, all the associate professors have solicited ex-! hibits during the year, and will de-1 %their energies in arranging the ex hi bin Is in u systematic and educa-! tional manner for the fair. Clemson college will also have a lage exhibit but nothing from the college will bo ui competition with the individual ex hibits. the premium list is entirely new in (his department and has been arranged to cause exhibitors as little trouble as possible. The Prizes. Ilerc are the prizes offered for the largest yields: I 1 Largest yield of corn on one acre> first prize .$25, second prize $10. 2. Largest yield of oats on one acre, first prize $15; second prize $10v 3. Largest yield of rye on one acre first prize $10, second prize $5. | 4. Largest yield sweet potatoes one acre, first prize $8, Second priae $4. I , 5., Largest yield cowpea hay one ncre, first prize $10, second prize $5. ' 6*, Largest yield alfalfa hay one acre, first prize $10, seepjid prize $5. Largest yield cotfon ono acre, first prize $15} second ^prize $8. Greenwood Taxable Values. Greenwood, Special.?Auditor J. I). Watson of this county has completed liis annual report and the figures ar<^ of considerable interest. The report shows'] that the increase in taxable values in the past year in this couu Sy amount to nearly half a million ollars the exact increase being $470, 205. The total taxable valuation of property in Greenwood county for the present year is $G,207,880. Last year tho total taxable property v/af?. $5?737,G75 which shows the increase of $470,205. There are 319,890 acres of land in the county and the valua tion for taxation is $2,964,770 and' the taxable value ? of buildjmgs U $157,f)75. The railroads in this coun ty are put down at $909,155. The per sonal property is put down at $2, 273.935. f There are 1,774 horses in the county valued at $91,160 j 5,600 *head of cattle valued at $68,680 ; 3, 608 mules valued at $203,060 ; 879 'sheep and goats valued at $1,045;' 2>995 hogs valued at $8,390; 240 watches valued at $4,360; 675 pianos and organs valued at $25,246; 4,807 carriages and buggies valued at $88, 830; 2,560 '.dogs valued at $12,830; merchandise valued at $31p,970 ;man ufnatures $863,190; etc. Comparison of some of the items aro intersting for instance, the tax on the *2,560 dogs in tho county amounts to moro than tho sheep and goats in tho county- m Coroner for OconM. Columbia, Special.?Gov. Ansel had appointed J. W. Holleman as coroncr for Ocor.ee county, rice W. L. Har bon resigned. Mr. Holleman was the ftfrst coroner t>f- tto eounty serving from 1869 to 187^and ^ highly res pected official. The office came ' to him unsolicited. 'He is the father . of Mr. Lee Q. Holleman (>the Stalo bank examiner. o - ; SmaU> Boat Capsized and Three arc Missing j Charleston, Special.?A small boai loaded with phosphate hands capsized Thursday morning in Ashley river op posite Town' creek throwing the oceu ' pan|?vt>f the boat into . the water. of them "Capt,V Mitchell, Dick Spencer and George Wasp ai;e missing and are thought to be drown tod,. Piiml Williams and Peter1 Dev c?ux were -rescued while clinging to * the bottom of the overturned boat by Captv Pinekney of th? R. C. Berkley. the men fere all of Xaryvflle. ? *' "i Ander Cherokee'? Mineral Deposits. Gaflfney, Special.?In the course of an interview with Dr. 0. F. Lee the eminent geologist and mineralogist who is making a geological and min eralogical survey of this county the following facts were given. Cherokee couuty has more mineral deposits of larger and more varied kind than any other county in the Union. Its iron deposits ar? aboilt fourteen miles in length and about 12 miles in width and 15 to 400 feet deep, comprising about 700,000,000 tons consisting of i the following grades of irpn. Silicate j of iron about 07) per cent., brown [ hemalite iron about 80 per cent, spec ular hematite iron about 1)3 pel* cent.; magnetic iron about 92 per cent., ' liminite iron about 05 per cent. Man * . ? i ? | ganese ho estimates at several million (tons; bog or wad manganese is found i in immense deposits covering a radium of 16 miles in length comprising mil lions of tons from 0 to 40 per cent, of binoxide manganese. There is a veift, of graphite extending from drover, N. C., through Blacksburg to Gaffnev and nine miles beyond to the south west containing 10 per cent pure ear bon from analysis of various eminent chemists made especially for I)r. Lee which is very gratifying to know from a commercial -ctandpdint. Largest Ginnory East of-Texas. dreenwood, Special.?The high wa ter mark in the ginning record qf the Greenwood N oil millf> ginnery' was reached here Friday When there were ginned and packed lGS bales of cotton in one day. Tho ginnery here since the burning of the gitHiery of the People's oil mi^^UAnderson is the largest east ofriver. The Anderson the same size. Since itwa^MQBj the one here has no rival outside of Texas in size. .The 16 gins turn out cotton in a jiffy. CapL F. S. Evans manager for this district of the Southern Cation Oil company says he ?believes this ginnery will gin ehve around 7,000 bales of cotton this yea* Last year the total crop of this coun ty was a little over 27,000 bales. This was a short crop but if this ginnery gets 7,000 this year it. will be about one fourth of the entire crop of the country. Nearly 3,000 bales have been ginned to date. ^ Revenue Districts Are to be Merged. Columbia, Speeial.-r-As 'announced in n special from Washington some lime ago, the revenue district of Goor ,Tia will he merged into tho South Car olina ? district with headquarters in Columbia under the charge of Mnj. Micah Jenkins the collector of intei' nal revenue. This action is ta&en by the revenue authorities according to Capt. Johi^ G. Capers tho acting commissioner of internal revenue be cause of the prohibition law~which will go into effect in<> January and which will cut down the revenues of that State from about $tf00,000 to $35,000 approximately. The action of the revenue authorities is impor tant in that it probably means the employment of additional clerical force in Columbia and the fact thht the national banks *in this eitv will receive deposits heretofore going to the national banks of Georgia. Charleston Commissioners Named, Columbia. Snecbd.?Gov. Ansel has appointed H. F. Brewer, I). L. Sink* ler and J. G. Mansfield as commls. ?doners of the municipal election to be held in Charleston. Hatten Shoal* Company. Anderson, 8pecial.-^?The annual meeting of the stockholders of the HattoA Shoals dompany who own the Hatton Shoals oh the Tu?aloo river was held last week and the follow ing board" oT directors ~wair~elected: Hugh McRae, E; W. Van Lucas, M. F. H. Governeur, T. W. Davis, H. M. Chase, A JB. Sboldin?, Raymond Hunt C. Van Louven and H. A. Orr. Fell 45 Feet. Charleston, Special.?T. J. Bacon, a Bell telephone lineman Tell from the top of a 45 foot pole 'Thursday morn ing at Coming and Rfjriiffe streets, end was badlv injured. Reports from tho Roper hospital say that he i* internallv hurt, and that hi? con dition is critical. He w?s at work on the crossttrees of the tall pole and eanie in contact, it is thought with a Kvo wirej The shock caused him to To?c his hold on tho crossarm and he fell to the ground-below with terrific force. While no bones have been found broken the shock was heavy *n4^b? is badly hurt. Warfaatx are Out for Jhomatcn'a v Armt Spartanburg, Special.?A warrant hfca b^n awem oat before Magi* trata Kfrbv by A. Barrens for tba bar Lrt 41 mtymw frisk* *?*- i ??1 tl . nan wttujm* ??ar$,! WILL INVESTIGATE ESCAPE Special Term tOf Anderson Court Galled by Judge Hydrick. Anderson, Special.r-Judge Hydrick has ordered a special term of the gen eral sessions court to convene her? on Monday* October 21, at which time the grand jury is cxpec.ted to make some presentment concerning the es cape of Allen Emerson from the county jail. It was at the request of the grand jury that'Judge Hydrick issued the order for the spcciul term of court. Detectives from several agencies have been in Anderson looking into the jail delivery and one of tittup was allowed to appear before the grand jury. Headers aro familiar with the kill ing of Thomas F. Drake by Emerson in Augusl, 1905. It will be remem bered that Mr.- Drake walked into his daughter's room and there found her in a compromising position with Em* erson. Shootihg commenced and Drake fell dead. Emerson came to the citwtnd gave himself up. lie was at one time deputy sheriff and at the time of the shooting was a chaingang guard. His trial soon followed and lie was found guilty of murder hut was recommended to the mercy of the court. - llis sentence was life impris onment. His attorneys, ready and willing to do anything for the unfortunate man carried the ense to the supreme court. It was only about one week or pos sibly ten days before the supcrcmc court affirmed the decision of the low er court that Emerson succeeded in securing his freedom, lie left during the night time and his whereabouts have l>een o mystery ever sinoo. * Almost every mail train arriving in Anderson since the jail delivery of Allen Emerson has brought quantities of letters and inquiries to Sheriff' ?Green'8 office. A drty scarcely passes that the sheriff does not rocoivo nu merous telegrams. And the funny part abou.t the whoie^alfair is that every communication whether it he a letter or a telegram, announces the fact that Allen Emerson wanted in Andersyn to serve a life senteuee for the murder of Thomas F. Drake has been captured. He. has been "cap tured" every day in the week, almost in Florida, Tennessee, North. Carolina and other States, and some time he is "captured" in two States on the same day. Sheriff Green in as anxious as any body to cApturo Allen Emerson. He investigates every bit of information that comes to his office but the tele grams aro getting to come so often and all "collect" that he is*begin ning to feel the burden. The tele grams are not "boiled'! down, eithei The senders evidently think that they should put a lot in a telegram to im press upon the sheriff that they really have the escaped prisoner. A couple of days ago the sheriff received a tehtfgram from a man in Ducktown, Tenn.,saying that he knew positively tha( he had Emerson. The sheriff can not afford to send a depu ty everywhere to follow up wHd goose chases, so he always hesitates to investigate. The m^an at the other end of the line kept on persisting by telephone, by wire and by mail. Fi nally Sheriff Green sent Deputy Sheriff Scott to Ducktown to see the captured man. He returned to An derson emptvhauded. When Mr. Scott arrived in the small mining town of Ducktown he was led to a hotel where four men wore sitting around guarding a man who meekly submitted to being placed at the best hotel for safekeeping for a few days. At first glance Mr. Scott saw that the wrong man had been captured, so the fellow waa given his freedom. Before going, however, ha demanded of Deputy Scott a written statement saying that he had been arretsed, sus pected of being Allen Emerson and turned loose. His likeness was so much like Emerson's that he was afraid he would again be taken for him. The people here are^.'divided in opinion as to EmeVson'* whereabout* Some think that he has skipped to another country. Others believe that ho is in a neighboring State, while the majority of the people believe that Allen Emerson is* in Anderson^ county right now. u. About three Weeks ago the Ander son Intelligencer inserted a parr graph in the "squib" column saving that if Emcftiotk would furnish them his address th?" paper would bo sent him for one year free of charge. A man using, the name of Emerson an swered fi*%i Texas. The paper was flnty ?ent and in a few days The Daily Mail received a letter from tlie Texas man saving that be bad rcceiv* ed The Intelligencer and that he was sailing for Constantinople via London He also sept his "low" to all in quiring friends. K*r? KUM at Hot Union, Special.?Joa Foster color ed was shot and k>M. by Buster Moorfcemd colored Friday nifht at a hot snpper mi tfct'fcoilMM Joa Ffcwtsr, (thit foster wot tyag GAME LAW AND LICtNStS Must Secure Permit From Clerk of Court?in Lexington No Hunting Until November let. Columbia, Special.?Mr. T. Gilbert Pearson (lie secretary of the National Audubon society was in the city n few days agb in consultation with Mr. ft. F. Taylor who 1h president of the South Carolina branch. Mr. I'ear* son has gone over with the nieiubers of the society in this Stute (he law passed at the laht sesbion of the gen eral assembly and as the game season is now on in a number of counties, it is advisable and atmoHt necessary that the pubic he informed as to the requirements. The. section relating to the hunting of deer saytf: , "It Is unlawful to hunt or kill deer between the 1st of January and the let of September except in the coun ties of Clarendon, Colleton, Marlboro, Kershaw, llorr.v, Hampton, Darling ton, Marion, .Beaufort, Florence, Charleston, Dorchester and Bcrkfey wherein it shall he Unlawful between the 1st of February and the 1st of August. For violation party to be hoed not less than $10 nor more than if'io or by imprisonment not Icsh than 10 nor more than 25 days. '*lt is unlawful to have in posses sion any fresh deer skin or meat Ik* twocn above doles," ^ "Clone Season" for Birds. The law then requires that any per son desiring to hunt certain game birds for scientific purposes shall sc enic from the secretary of State a certificate, for which a fee shall'be paid. /* / v. The hunting of quail and Wild tur keys and such game has been general ly misunderstood by the sportsmen of Kichland because of an impression that in Lexington county the "close season 7 ends Oct. 15. This is a mis take. That section of the act of tho last general assembly says: "It shall be unlawful to hunt any wild turkey, quail, ftartridgc, wood cock, Mongolian or othet^-pheasant, between the lirst day of March and the fifteenth day of November, except in the following .counties where it shall be unlawful to hunt them be tween the first day of April and tho first day of November: Beaufort, Hampton,, Dorchester, Colleton, Chai Icston, Barnwell, , Berkeley, Aiken, Oconee, Lexington, Fairfield, Saluda, Georgetown and Clarendon, or to sell or expo*.:? t?r sale, ship or exnprt for s^ite, to pofhunt, net trap, or by fire light to catch, kill, iujure or pursue with such, intent any of the birds named in this section nor shall any person destroy or rob the nests of such birds. For violation on convic tion they shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be fined not more than $20, or bo imprisoned not more than 30 days. Nothing in this act shall prevent the importation for sale of any of the said birds. * TKi having in possession of any of the said birds sold or exposed for sale or shipped shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of this act and the bur den to show that they were imported from another State or Territory. The South Carolina society hn? had printed a number of certificates which aro sent out to the clerks of court to be issued to non-resident hunters during the game season of this year The law requires that a license of $10 be paid to tho clcrk -of court in which the hunting takes place and does not give tho hunter the right to trespass upon any private property. A stub, to be kept by the clerk of court requires that an itemized state ment be turned into the Audubon so ciety and a blank on the license gives Ihe description of the license includ ing height, color of hair, weight and ' eolor of eyes. The license is revoc able by the society at any time.. The counties in the State of North Carolina "last year received $10,000 in fees from the operation of this li- J f-ense clause. Mr. B. F. Taylor, presi dent of tho Audubon society of South Carolina hae been to a great deal of ?xpense to get the people informed of ?he workings of the Audubon law, but be expect* to get it all back when li cense fees begin to come in and in addition will have a surplus for next year. The game law of South Carolina ioclnres all birds to be the property ?f the State. It is then declared un lawful to kill any birds. There are I hen certain exceptions named and these exceptions are "game'? birds, lo distinguish thern from birds of plu mage and song. The particular function of the Au dubon Mociety is to protect aong and plumage birds. But* the gamo bird# also need protection during the breed-' infc season. Therefore is it made uii-j lawful to kill even game birds betwen March and Nov. ? 15. There arc 14 counties however in which hunt ing of game' birds is permitted untily April i and the hunting season opens Nov. 1, instead of the 15th a? in the other 2Z counties. s . ? >., The licenfle* to be issued ^lo non residents require ,a complete descrip tion of the holder thereof ro that he may not transfer. St <o another A Cowardly Orlm^fV -traraii, Special.?llaeh indica tion vmt1' Mt and tMf expftspMd feore 8un4ay mwminf wj^n it bttmst* that l(. Babb, locate on ?t*a*? Ud 1 < atlki Ml w|li* Uililil STEALING SEt D COTTON Six Negroes Lodged In Jail at Saluda Becaubo of Their Attachment for the Fleecy Staple. Saluda, Speriul. John dales, Till* man (* ray, John Smith, Dave Town send, Hence Coleman and Meek Dan iel all negroes wore lodged in jail here on (ho charge of stealing .seed cotton from tin* win house and otf the wagon* ut the gmnery of Mr. \V. I'. Hiibhtou at l'lcakuut Cross in tlio county live nnies noitli of Johnston. Dr. Knshton of Johnston a brother of Mr. NY. 1'. Knshton rushed into Sa luda late Friday evening and had warrants issued against the nhovo parties and - the sheriff went early Saturday t)ioi'ftiug and "bagged" ilie whole tfaug. It appears thai then lias been seed cotton missed from wagons at Mr. NY. P. Knshton's gin nery, wliieli remained there over night for several days. A wnteli was kept and the parties above named or some ol" them at least were caught in the act. It is stated that the .colton stolen was carried from time to timeto another negro in thai community who acted as salesman, he having sold up wards of 10 bales already from a two horse farm when it is believed His en tire crop would not have yielded so much by several bales. Lt is said that the stealing of seed cotton in that section has been going on for several year*. Negro Shot by Sumter Man. >$umter, Special.?Hit-bard Good man colored was shot twice Saturday afternoon by Lawrence W&'paman .1 white painter one ball passing through the negro's wrist and anoth er striking; him in the mouth. Jt wa-l thought last night that Hie negro would probably die out he is getting along well with tlo indications ol' fatal results. It appears that Good man pulled Mr. Lawrence Woga mnn's father ofT of his wheel whiln he was riding through nn alley off Hampton avenue and was boat in* him and had cut <>I<1 man Wagoaman in the neck with a knife when young Wogaman came up and fired upon the negro. Tt is said that Goodman had h.P.d " seve*'!* 1 r?<v? hpfnv 1 lot shooting occurred and was in a drunken and quarrelsome state al though it is said that ordinarily he is a quiet fellow. It is paid that old man Wogaman had done nothing to precipitate a difficulty with Goodman. Lawrence Wogaman has been placed in jail. Monthly Sales at Dispensaries/* Columbia, Special.? Dispensary Auditor West, lias issued his state ment showing the total sales at coun ty dispensaries during the month of September. The table show?that the sales have grown in one month* nearly $3.0,000 and only a few of the coun ties lost by comparison with August. Of these Florence lost about $1,000' Georgetown about the' same amount/ Lexington about $600 and Kichland about $2,500. - On the other hand Charleston gained about $1,000 in sales and Berkeley, Orangeburg and Sumter over $3,000 each. The other gains were not so largfc but enough to run up the total , a considerable sum. The sales in Charleston for the month of July amounted to only $17,092.31, but since then the now beer dispensaries were established ane one of these sold over $12,000 in supplies the next month. I Negro Woman round Dead. Greenwood, Special. ? Kachuel Simms a negro woman was JouimI dead with a bullet Mfound in heiNiead at her home in tho hear of tho Magno lia street. She was alone in the house and it is not known when the sliol was tired. Another negro woman (passed the house earlv in the morn ing and noticing the front door ?Pen looked in and saw tho Simms woman lying dead on the floor, She had beon shot with a pistol, tho ball en? tering the right eye. A vory soiled man's collar size 10 was on the lloor and 60 cents in money and an empty whiskey bottle were beside it. There was sorao whiskey in a glass on the mantel. The house has had a rather bad reputation 'for somo time having other inmates, but there seems to have "been no one else there. There has as yet developed no clue whatever as to who committed the deed. Rouse Negroes .Captured. Abbeville, Special. ?Lace Rous? nnd Arthur Rouse the two negroes who were implicated in a shooting scrape with Dr. S. T. Cade nnd Clif ford Cndc near {tardeait several days ago were~"BaTely lodged in jnil here Friday. The art-eat of these two ne croeg was largely due to Messrs. Al oert-Oilbort and Oscar Cornie of Wil mington. Both negroes had gone to Georgia but Mr. Gilbert succeeded in getting them back without rtjuCh trQu-' ble. *he Meaars. Cade were not se riously rfuft, only a few bird shot taking effect. v 9mUh WlllUn* KUUd. SparUnbarf, Special.?Smith WU liuui a witll known earpcnter wt# ruu <*?r ail* iAirtantty mi?rMf tr*i* No. 41 o ath* mia W*f Ill MS ?ISSili New? of Intorort Gathered Ttom A1J Parts of tko Country?Paragraphs of Moie or Lesi Importance? What the World '.s Do;nz. Mrs, Cassie L. Chad wick's son b?* conic forward ' and she will not bo buried in l'ottor's .Field. The V?>rk "Fair closed with a largo attendance. Though Dr. Joseph Archibald Rob ertson who owns a tine Virginia es tate, isjboinpr sued for divorce he and wife continue to live together .in ap parent happiness. The liiisitanin is expected to hiftke still ,b?|itor record. * The Stair Railroad CommisVilpnorb' sot tyVth thwj jJIkj only rod not ionWiiji)^ railroad rates have been made by tho Fe<lorol (iovernrvnt. Army and navy officers arc eriti* oifing earh other in regard to lh< records made in (ho target pi.'.jticf of the llt'??t and coaijt artilllory. Commissioner Capers says new pro hibition laws compel the rearrange ment of revenue districts in th< South and West. The Episcopal (ietioral Convention in Richmond considered a number oi important measures. ?. J *V. William J. Bryan spoke or. "The .Average Man" to a greal crow<l iu Richmond. Governors Hughes, of New York and Swanson of Virginia made ad dresses before tIm> convention of th? Daughters of the American llevolu lion at Jamestown. (Jen. Frederick 1). Grant mid eighl oilier army olllcers took the Presi dent 's <Io.so -a 15-mile horseback rid? Tlie International Missionary Con vention of tl'e Disciples of Christ be gan in Norfolk. , L The Wellman North Polo oxpodi lion steamer Frithjof was lost" id' a storm witli the captain and 15 of tho crew. Sixty thousand workmen paraded in Budapest, Hungary, as a demon stration in favor of universal suffrage Miss Anna Brccso was married to Lord Alastuir Rohort Inflos-Ker. Emperior Francis Joseph was re ported to bo much.improved* The condition- of Emperor Francis Joseph causes alarm. An American automobilist who had ruii down and killed a boy/ narrowly escaped death at tho hands of a French mob. Only Hie engineer of the Arctie steamer Frithjof survived, all others being lost with tho vessel. State railroad commissioners in convention at Washington declared strongly against yielding to the Fed eral Government any of the rights of the Stat?s to regulate railroads. Secretary Metcalf ordered tho navy yards to concentrate all their forces on repairs tb the battleship fleet, j AttorneyrGeneral Charles J. Bon<* I parte decides that foreign ships car lyiug United States Government car goes exclusively are exompt from port dues. K Tho turbine steamer Lusitauia ar rived at Sandy Hook early this week breaking all records for liners. $ An oil tyiyer for a Standard Oil subsidiary company testified that he knew nothing about $20,000,0(70 in lonas charged to him and that tho trust fixed prices. ? John Mitchell president of tho United Mine Workers announced that owing to ill health he would not be a candidate for re-election. The President shot a fine buck but no bear was sighted. The Austrian steamship Glulia with 703 passengers had a thrilling experience at sen when flro broko out during a storm. There was a groat throng at the York fair, An agod woman and ,4lireff'tftltldfSfl perished in n burning Ikxjso uenr Now Holland, Ohio. 0 Four out d sr'vcn persons lost then lives wlven a burning skiff was over turned in tho Deleware river to put out the tire. The cholera has attained alarming proportions in Tokio. Au agod watchman had a "tight wit h two burglars on the nineteenth floor of a New York skyscraper and pre vented them from making a rich haul. Shanghi Chinese and European.) accorded Secretary Taft an enthusias tic-welcome. *. A Fricnchman named Antoino Thomas tolls a remarkable story af having stojen the famous capo of Orth and many other church treasur es ip France. M. Repnaiilt, the new French Min- I ister to Morocco, presented hi$ cre<l- | entials to thto Sultan. I ? ' ?' ? i There was a sharp d??tiiit in tfce Now Yorjt Stock Exchange ' The Cnhan labor oiKtrnntion-htv'* resolved upon ? general strike if tfe? railroads employ strikebreaker*. Sargajj.; ?" -A'' I ouiia A Comprehensive Address By Justice Brewer TOUCHES ON RK1W QUESTION Delivers Strong Ad<I.c>} jC'->rc tho Meeting of tie Amcrica:: Ilission ary Association?Autrica 1 Duty Uy *o a Ki^/.?r ti'. - ct Chris %'*. O.^y tJw jtfc xo, But tk.it 5?c*iuo? ci rcrdnit. * Vvho Be come American (^itizen. t<- Year. % .... x, Ing ?o h flintier >-Jo11* in t. < # iristian MM?rl<t ?<>! oni; the twgvii *. ee but ttio horded of frn t'.&nct:* wjto icc.oiiio American (it:vim !? yevr formed tho principal t> p'.' of di?<ussiofa bu fore tlio AmtM'icun Min*ion.u'y Asso ciation at (lie . ??.-.?suns of \r.o trien nial council of tho Canijifegatipnal church. Notable address en wore delivered by Justice David J.^iewev, on lu? importance of the American mission ary wovfe f?> tlie nation; by Kishop C. R Galloway, lit Mississippi, Oft the Christian education of thy nojfro and by fdrmer Governor VV, X, Northern, of Georgia, who told of the work of tho fChristian Lea'gjio of Georgia, an organization in that *8tate \Vhich is composed of members of both *?cca and has d< ?J? much to lease# crirnd, Justice Brewer's Address. Justice Brewer upoko in port, a* follows: "The uplift through Christian edu-yS cation i*. the principal work of thi American Missionary Association. True, they aro not the only objects of its interest and eare. All the des pised races in our borders are includ ed. T havo myself done a little preaching from the bench of the Su preme Cour^on the duty otf Christian America to the heathen Chinese. What I said made but slight impres sion on the courts, but it will yet bo heard and heeded by the great body of American Christians. But thf numbers of the colored people so sur pass those of nil the others and-their - reintions to the natftu are so pecu liar that not unnaturally" we look oarnestly npojL-tl?9 work pf the asso* oiation among the colored j>eople. And, their vast numbers attest the "value oi this work to the nation. Surely any-, thing which is uplifting que-ninth of our population mustNbe of profound interest to all Tirm Believers to Social Order. "Many of the vast multitaclee pouringjinto this republic are raeially . blooded and selfish* Not a f?# eomv tainted with the spirit of ttgfMNfar and are willing to destroy all social order in the cope of persooi0?fitia out of the wreck. These ; become citizens as we are and as is this colored and enfirauuv^ t ed race. And while the colored broth* ers may be too fond of the ebiekco coop and the watermelon patch, they are firm belieyeri in social order. will flnd ? no Johann Most, *" Goldman. Osolgosg, or--?pw nmonr thcm. In the struggfle wl may be expected to eome between or? der and anarchy, may it not'be that these people, grateful to the nation for their liberty , and to the jg ' pie of the land for their* t knowledge, purity and social i prove themselves a mighty force, holding law, order and the sujf of the nation? Stranger thin happened than that these people, crushed and -wronged for generation^, should become at last strong defend ers of the nation and the eojmmfnity at whose hands tfyey have hitherto ip?F eeived justice. . J "1 s ! "They are here as citizens. What* ever temporary restrictions may be placed upon their ..approach to. the ballot box the llmo will" come when all barriers will be broken dowrf and they will enioy everywhere the full rights of citfcfiiiship. v f | fl wal I In vlir wl wTXT III~f IRDlk" If IBM VH multiplying skilled workers. It i* one thing to pick cotton or hoe ftota* toes and something more valuable to make a watch or rim an engine. The Skilled laborer is worth mpre to the nation than the . -and?tho industrial training ijt ifnmptqn, Tus kegee and elsewluye is creating a higher, closn of laborers in th$ mid.st ortBis people. *.* ' i, ?' M. ...II. *. Bxyanafc Ch*rK*W. . Charlotte, ^peciol.?TrtisW, cealra liantlon and right*, the' in corq? tax regulation, swollen for tunes, imeprialism and fcovertrmental conditions in foreign ? countrieHy Wera discussed in an all-ixidnsive addra* of two hours Monday Jiifflit 1 William Jemring? Bry*? ?t il 4iv*l before an audicm*