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iS-j.,, The People. vol.xxxev BARNWELL. S. U., THURSDAY. MAY 25.1911 NO 38 FELDER WANTED Dispeisirj Ctuustita Orders Hn ts Ctne tad Gve Evideecf. MAY DECUNE TO COME DOE TO BRIBERY LORIMUR'8 ELECTION DECLARED TO BE OORRITT. ♦ Judge's Ruling in Case Charged as I'nwarranted Interference With Perogatives of Ilegislature. The report of the Helm senatorial Re May Take the Position That He committee, appointed to investigate Will Respond to the l>emand u n .j^irciunetances surrounding the eler- j tlon of William Lorimer to the Unit less the Probers Are Named by the ed States senat" was returned to the [senate at Springfield, 111., Wednes- l/egislature as First Suggested by j -pfjg vital points are: the (iovernor. i A critlc *8m of Judge Petit of Chi cago. for his ruling in the habeas T. B Felder of Atlanta has been corpus case involving Tilden, Cum- ordered by the new dispensary com- an( ^ Benedict, and this expr-'S- mission to appear in Columbia on 8 ' on - , , A ‘Your committee has reached the 'May 29 and tell what he knows of conclusion that the election of Wil- the affairs of the old State dispen- Ham Ix)rimer before the last general sary. assembly would not have occurred He has b'*en ordered “to furnish no ^ ^ )een ^ or bribery and cor- ^11 inforruation in his possession in; r ”H, t . i,0n . .. _ ... The report says the committee BREACH WIDENS WHAT IT HAS DONE i PEACE IN SIGHT THEY WANT WILSON ! SAYS ITS BAD lasarfeat u4 RefiUr RepabBcuu Gel tilt Farther Afirt FEELING IS INTENSE If the War Going on in the Republi can Party Does Not Materialize Now, It Will Come Into Evidence at Next Republican National < on’ vention. GREAT AND GOOD WORK DONE BY THE FARMERS* I N DON. Diaz AaiMices Williifiess t« Reiigi as Presideit af Mexice. SENATORS AND CONGRESSMEN SAYS HE IS THE MAN. ITesident Barrett Points Out What This Grand Organization Has Done for the Farmer. To th (> Officers and Members of the Farmers’ Union: A new epoch was written in Amer ican history when the',Fanners’ Un ion became a truly national organl- vHAion. Other associations of far- tners Bad preceded It Hut " tlicy BEFORE FIRST OF JUNE l)e 1 at Bara, Minister of Foreign Af fairs Will Take Charge With Mad- ero Acting a« Chief Adviser.— Treaty of Peace Expected to Fol- lr. Parker Dea«ices tk« letMs •( tke New Yerk Celtei Exckatfe. SPEAKS YERY PLAINLY 1 had fallen by the sword of partisan The Washington rorresbondent of: lK5litios ,,r ha(1 faile,i ,0 h pn - tthusiasm to tin' iiurvcst - so they fr-gard to any matter or matters oon- ne( ted w4th the said State dispensary went over all the testimony in the against any officer of said Institution. t or of this State, and particularly the governor of this State.' 1 No announcement has b-‘en made by Mr. F lder as to whether he will come to Columbia and give the in formation desired. It may be that he will refuse to testify at this time on the ground that the new dispen sary commission has no right to make the investigation requested by, the governor of the State. In the event tivat he refuses to ap-. pear before the pr-sent dispensary i i I>ee O'Neill Brown, Pemberton, The Columbia State says an analysis of the row In the Senate over the election of a president pro tempore has given special emphasis to the growing division among the senate Republicans. One thing after another Is widen ing the breach among them and there is no sign whatever that it will be closed. The old guard leaders on the Republican side and the progres- sets forth the summoning of H. H. Kohlsaat. publisher of the Chicago Record-Herald, and Mr. Kohlsaat's disclosure of the fact that It was Clarence R. Funk, secretary of the international Harvester Company, who had told him of a conversation, which he (Funk) had with Edwin Hines, in which he Is alleged to have informed Funk that he had succeed- d in electing Mr. Lorimer to the United States penate at a cost to him and other unnamed persons of about commission, if is likely that Mr. Fel- 1 tjoo.noo. der will withhold hia information un- Regarding the habeas corpus de- til an investigating committee is r | 8 j 0 n of Judge Petit In the cases of named by the general assembly The Tilden. Cummings and Benedict, the resolution passed by the n-'w- dispen- committee savs: earv commission is as follows: “Such action was an unlawful !n- Be it resolved, that this commis- tcrference on the part of a m-nit^T sion meet on the .'9th day of May, A. of the judiciary with the legislative 1> 1911, asfl that Thomas B Felder t> r arv h of the government.’’ of the firm of Anderson. Felder inability to make a s rchlng in- Rountree & \\ ilson be r-qujred to ap- vesligatlon when all documents alleg- pear before said commission on that erf t o hav- been in the hands of Ttl- date and furnish them with all in- Cummings and Renedh t could formation in his possession or in the located is noted, possession of his firm in connection committee also touches on the with all matters and affairs of any so-called “jack-jxjt'' episode, but de- and all claims line oF owing to or by clares that so long as no person pub- the State of aouth Carolina from and ndv connected with that matter, is to anv and all person or persons, in any longer a member of th- 0 senate, obedience to the contract made with no recommendation is made, ttie late members of this commlsion , - , fell. I si>eak advisedly when I say that the Farmers' Union is the first or ganization in history to sucoessfully join theory with practice, to begin the movement of weeding the poll-! tlcians from the innermost councils of the farmer, and to tnvpress upon the latter that the Improvement of his lot rests not in the hands of some sives are getting further and further: far ~ 0 ® npllfter or hy-by-nlght re- apart. The feeling between the two|* ormerT - -bluiseJf. factions moreover is getting Intense. Today the world asks less for rhet- Not a few political observers be- or * < ' an( ^ more for results. This Is a lieve that in the split now on there j ver - v summary of what we have* Is the forerunner of grave trouble accomplished together with a state- in the Republican party In 1912. lf; ment of w,1Mt wo w i' h the such trouble does materialize it will the Almighiv and our own materialize at the Republican con- courage, to accomplish: vention. Those who believe a third! We have 1.628 ^warehouses, main-, party Is coming believe the beginning!'y ^ or Coring cotton. Mississippi ( of It is now being fashioned in the leads tho warehouse movement, with senate In the struggles of the old| a niillion-dollar corporation, guard and the progressives. own and operate a large rum-. Senator Oallinger, nominated In a! b «r of elevators and terminal agenc-, Republican caucus for president pro Jos for the handling of grain, tempore, might, under the clrcum-i own and operate 246 packing stances that used to obtain In the house* senate, he rvpeitod to get the Re-' own and operate dozens of 1 publican vote, but the progressive Republicans, with the exception of four Borah, Brown, Kenyon and new spacers We own and operate coal mines. We own and operate several hanks. Dixon did not go into the caucus Hour mills, creameries, pickle fac- and did not therefore vote for S< n- lories, several hundred stores, an im- ator Gallinger. They consider themselves in no way bound to sup port Senator Clapp, one of their own n um tier. plement factory, a phosphate plant, a phosphate min ■. Wo own and operate tobacco fae- tories and warehouses, produce e\- The split comes after two years changes, fertilizer factories, peanut of constant factional' fighting. Of w arehouse: peanut recleaner. course there were forerunners of many cotton grading srhiols. coop- trouble before the last special ses sion on the. tariff, but when that ses sion was held the differences be- erative life and fire insurance com panies. Any number or other genera! Imsl- BRIDE AT EIGHTY-FOUR. In writing by the said Anderson, Fel der. Rountree & Wilson. “Resolved, Stnond that the said Mrs. Nancy Mints and Preston Bet- Thomas B. F l.ier at the same time be required to furinsh all informa- iion in his possession in regard to any matter or with the said tlMin Married. tween the regulars and insurgents ness agencies are owned or controlled became acute. In the seven ballots by members of the Farmers' Union cast in the senate on the question In this connection, it must not he four insurgents voted steadily for forgotten that the Union docs not of (Tapp. They were Bristow, LaFol- 1 e11e, Gronna and Poindexter. Had filially own these concerns We are not a close corporation In . \er\ A marriage of unusual interest matters connected f ron) several standpoints occurred State itis[tf>nsary gevrra i [piles from Barnwell at the they been present, Senators Cum- instance, ownership or control rests tilings, Bourne, Crawford and Works in individual members, consorting to- against any offender of said institu- honio of Mitchell Sundq^. the tion ir of this State, and particular- Hth ( nst when Mrs Nancy Mims I the governor of tins State, the * as marr p 1( i t o I'r.'Ston Bettlson, Magistrate M (’. Kitchings of Willis- ton i>erforming the < eremony The lion Cole 1. Ukase, in accordance with his . ommunn ations heretofore would have voted for Clapp. Senator Bacon. Democrat, got 86 votes as his highest number. Th- highest Senator Ballinger got was 22. Clapp got four votes and the gether f<T their Own hem-tit That is the true spirit of co-operation. Before this order was organized, statistics showed that T" per cent, of the farmers in the South were made eoher in person or through pride has reached tier Mth milestone he did not quite get a majority of cent.w the pres-, of this State, and that he of |j f p S j 0 „ rnf , v . while 7 1 vears have others were scattering Senator blighted with the curse of the niort- Bacon narrow I v escaped election but gage. We have cut down the per- lo one half, and our work in also furnish any Information that he 1>aa *,d OV(T t he head of the groom has in his |w-ssession. showing any q-pi 8 j K Mrs Bottison's fourth matri- < onnei t ion or an> dealing in person nominal \enture and the second for or as agent for others that th ■ said the .-room. The courtship ts said to lion ('ole 1. B|ea.-o may hive had have been very short, consisting of with 'he State dispensary direetms only’one call from Mr Bettison The or any other persons or persont: con- hapry couple will make their futtir-' home in Rosemarv township, this county. Fifty people witnessed the (eremony. those present and voting A few changes, it is true, would throw the election to Ballinger, hut it Is a that direction has hardly begun T'tv • influence - f (lie Farmers’ Cn ion U written upon manv of the best qm-stion whether any such changes laws put in recent \ears upon state nectcd with said institution “Resolved, thirl. That a < opv <' these r solutions lx- transmTted hv registered tetter through the Cnit-d States mail to the said Anderson, Felder. Rountree & Wilson, and a cops Individually to Thomas it. Fel der of said firm." ; i lit occur In the first place Senator Balling er is recognized as one of the lead ing conservatives of tho senate old guard The conservatives charge him with tieing strongly reactionary. and nation il statute books. In man' states we have secure?) radii al mere,isos iu public school i ppropi mt ions In many of the states ilo' Farmers' I nion has Is en instrumental in the establishment of REV. GEORGE \V. WALKER DEAD. ('resident of I’aine College for Twen ty-eight Years. Rov Beo W. Walker, D. D.. presi dent of the Paine College for Ne groes, and a widely known Methodist minister, died at Augusta, Oa., Wed nesday, aged sixty years. He was a native of Marion, S. C., and a gradu ate of Wofford College. In 1882 when the Methodist Epis copal Church of the South decided to have a school in which to train negro t^ael^ers and preachers, Dr. Waiker volunteered to undertake the ; work, and he was made president of F’aine College, which positiob he has held ever since. The n-gro men at the school will be active pallbearers and the white Methodist ministers of the city wilt be honorary pallbearers at the funer al. Bishop Warren A. Candler has wired that he will attend the funeral. BRYAN GIVES HIS VIEWS. Trust (Question More of an Issue Now Than for Years. William Jennings Bryan, while at Toronta, Ont . on a lecture tour, said Wednesday regarding the Standard Oil decision: “This decision is likely to make the trust question more of an issue than it has b^en in recent years. While on the face of it the decision seems a victory for the gov ernment, it virtually amends th° anti trust law by construing It to prohibit, not all restraints of trade, but only such restraint a.-' the courts, after each lengthy litigation, nay decide to be unreasonable.'' It will be not iced that Bryan's views coincide closely with the opinion rendered by Justice Harlon. Thev are fighting not Ballinger per- ncriru P ural ((.Ib-ges. snnally. but the things he is standing for. They insist that a man of more liberal views ought to ho In tho ■ hair of the presiding officer of the senate (ttlior iii; port a nt* legislation, state and national, now pending, is an in- 'ii< ation of 'he resistless influence of the org.tni, ition among American farmers \' have made systematic anvasses - 1 the various legislatures. —-—♦ and of sev ral successive sessions of Rich Farmer of Union Bounty Ixises congresses Then* is a new view point in Washington toward the avst . p|H a American farmer and the might of W T Jones, the wealthy Union Farmers' Union, demonstrated In JONES BOBS TO I'RISON county planter, must spend the re mainder of his days in the state peni elections, is responsible for it. These achievements are the out- R WAGES OF INSECTS. Died at the Reunion. , Two additional deaths among the veterans attending the Confederate reunion at Little Rock, Ark., occur red Wednesday night. \V. M. Rivers of West Point, Ga., aft^r having been taken ill at the union passenger sta tion, died in a fe whours. W. L. Galloway, of Paris, Tenn., fell from the second floor of the Pealiody school building and died in a few moments. Georgia Cotton Growers Think They Are a Menace. Fearing that their cotton crops may be a a riously damaged, if not 1 entirely ruined, by the cow pea cur-j culio, which has recently made its ap-, pearance on cotton stalks in certain j l>ortions of Georgia. W. H, Ward and j others of Ohoopee, Toombs county* Ckfoxgla. hasp forwarded to Congress man Edwards of that stak*. at Wash ington. a jar of the parasites, which have been turned over to Dr. L. O. Howard, entomologist of the depart ment of agriculture, for examination. These bugs have never before been known to eat cotton stalks, always confining their destruction to the pea vine. It Is .believed that, unless something Is done quickly, cotton grower* will eefer greatly when the parasites spread from section to " “ox- v . . . Ji Auto Kills Negro. While speedinlja to the hospital in New Orleans with James Lavin. a painter who had fallen from a lad der, an automobile ambulance late Wednesday ran over and killed Hen ry Sims, a negro boy. The negro was skating and darted toward the sidewalk in front of the ambulance. He waa placed in the ambulance be side the painter but died in the hos pital. t/*ntiary for killing his wife, unless ward tdpn °f a great new movement executive clemency is extended. * n American agriculture. lint they The supreme court gave a cPcision :,re ''oiuparably important to the Wednesday .dismissing the appeal for °f, fraternity which we have a new trial on the grounds of after- wrought up among the farmers of discovered evidence, and Jones will nation. It is fraternity, appoal- be taken to the state penitentiary J n K to Intelligence, that has wrought within ten days to begin serving his progress. And the same force sentence. The opinion in the case is "ill develop in a thousand unex- by Robert Aldrich, acting associate T’eited directions to solve the prob- justjee. The supreme* court several h'nts of the American farmer, months a,i)o affirmed the decision. Notable among the triumphs of The governor several days ago re- ,bo or BHnization is that one which fused a pardon* has brought a social awakening W. T. Jones was tried at the Feb- among the farmers. In many states ruary term of court in Union county *' bas brought thousands of white in 1 908 upon an indictment charging women and children out of the cotton him with the murder of his wife, Ma- fields into the schools and the homes rion E. Jones, by administering to — where they belonr. Had it done her or eausing to be administered nothing else, the existence thus far strychnine poison. He was convicted ,be Farmers' Union would have of murder with recommendation to been justified by this transformation, mercy and was sentenced to the (hat is merely in its beginning, state penitentiary for life. 1 cite these facts as-The basis of a a t | an argument that now' is the time for every American farmer to affil iate with this organization. Salutes an Old Warship. With the ship's hand playing the national air and the blue jackets with riflee at “present,” the United States battleship Idaho Thursday sa lt has passed the stage of experi ment. It is an assured, an achiev ing, irrmanent institution. Every farmer, however small, who joins it Bold Masked Robbers. At Lob Afigeles, Lack Doyle's saloon, famous as a training camp for prize fighters was held up Wed nesday night by two maaked robbera. The robbers stood seven men, includ ing a constable, against a wall, rob- J*d and then locked their victims In ’Vmr yard which is surrounded by bandit* W*pod. luted the resting place of the old increases his own power by the or- wooden United Spates war sloop Mis- ganized might of his three million sissippi, of AdmIFal FerrasuCsv fleet, (brethren. riddled and sunk by the ConfedWate if we have saved many millions for land batteries at Port Hudson on the our members by co-operation and Mississippi river during the civil legislation if we have defeated sev- war - eral congressmen who were un worthy of office, several senators who were untrue to pledges; If we have radually Instilled Into our people, gruelling, persistent labor,, the doctrine ©f business methods in ing; if we have weeded out of Black Hand Work. Early Wednesday morning a bomb exploded in the heart of the hotel district of New York, and shattered a few windows without hurting any-'fa body, but it caused such consterna tion among the sleeper* in the big hotels that the police reserves had to be called oat. the organization some of the most unprincipled scoundrels in the land, and thereby strengthened it— Haro not the right to go before low Surrender of Diaz. Advices from Mcxh o City is to the effect that President Diaz ami Vice President Corral will resign before Bine 1. Francise-o de la Marra, min ister of foreign relations, will be come provisional president ad in terim. Francisco I. Madero, the reolu-' tionary leader, will be called to the city of Mexico to act <;s de la Barra’s chief adviser and as the greatest guarantee possible that every pledge made by the goernni'-nt will be car ried Out. - As viewed by the public it will lie virtually a joint presidency, pending the calling of a now presidential elec tion. The caMnct wHl be reorganized The minister of war will be named by de la Barra. The foreign oflee wilt be In charge of a sub-secretary nam ed by de la Barra. Other cabinet members will be chosen by <]» la Bar ra and Madero actinip jointly. ’ A new election wlU be railed with,-' in six months. Political amnesty will be recommended to the chamber of deputies. These are the conditions upon which ITesid-nt Diaz will ompro- inlse. Virtually they are admitted in high quarters to be a complete surrender t> the revolutlonBts The resignation of Diaz ind the ''joint' 1 reg- ncy” of de la Harrt and Madero are said to constitute a guar an tee so complete that the original insurreeto demand for 1 t governors no longer needs to he consider'd. The cabinet was in almost con tinnal session for two d.t>s and de spite th>‘ severe illness of President Diaz TV' president s entire face Is infected from an ulcerated tooth. He speaks with the greatest difficulty, hut. while he i.s in severe pain, his condition is not regarded as calling for alarm at this time, d spite his advanced age The government V conditions were telegraphed to Judge Carabajal on Wednesday afternoon with instruc tions to submit them to Ben Maib ro If they are accepted, which is re garded as certain, an armistice rov- (oering the entire republic of Mexico will be sign <1 Inasmuch as the gov ernment believes it has made ever> (V’tuession that the revolutionists ha)** requested, it Is firmly tvlieved that a treaty of peace will follow. Without abating one lot of their admiration for the man who lias made modern Mexico, the public re- ccied the announcement of his in- t tilled resfgnation with profound sat isfaction S'nrp the battle of Juarez they have realized that the presi dent s renunciation ot his high office alone could bring about psace. Bus iness throughout the republic has suffer d severely and the people gen erally were eager for an honorable peace. the American farmer, and. on the record of things done, tdd him in his own interest and our interest to join with us? We are entering upon a tremend- otsly important era in our national The supreme court gave a deetsilon first or reap his legitimate share of the last, unless lv is organized. Do \ou object to the order bo- history Organization is its keynote; sorvation of energy and effort its slogan. ,.•* ^ Whether hard times 6r good times are ahead, the farmer will not he able to minimize the effect of the cause you know some crooked cus tomers in it? There are many such in every religious denomination. In many secret orders, one or two black sheep in your own family. Does that fact keep you out of the church, the secret order, or cause '■on to desert your family? Hardly. It. makes you more anxious to g» In and cure these evils, if you are worth being called a man. and not a beast. That same influence should bring you into the Farnvrs’ Union, with the divine determination to help your brother man—and if you help your brother man. you eannot avoid helping yourself, and your children and your children’s children. Some foolish people have believed we wanted to injure the small mer chant, and have therefore criticised us, or refused to affiliate with us. Tell such people that we do not intend to put the email merchant, or any other rightful business factor, out of commission. We want to co operate upon equal terms with the business man. We need the mer chant, we banker, the manufacturer, the teacher, the editor, the preacher, other professional peo ple. And they all ne*ed us, as friends, and, not as suspicious out siders. The greatest drawback the Ameri can farmer has ever labored under has been his willingness to be swayed by the man who flattered him, and who would not tell him unpleasant. | but wholesome, truths. This dsy Is j passing! The lamer is learning to Wilson i« Strong With Bryan, Al though He Once Bolted tlie Tick et With Biyun On It. The eorr-spomlent of'--the Kpartan- htfhg Herald says the correspondent in Washington of one of the leading papers of the south claims to have made a poll of the Democrat* in Con gress for his paper on presidential prefcp-’nrrjr, wtrh special references to Woodrow Wilson. IBs findings are summed up as fol lows : That Woodraw Wilson has the sup port of ahont four in every flve mem- B ,. n of the AmeTlcan Cotton Manu . hers he has interviewed. ! , . . That ho is especially strong in the facturPrB *Moclat!on. which met on . south. Thursday at Richmond, Va., waa a That while Northern people regard him as a northern or eastern man and In general have little knowledge of his southern origin and relation ships, the southern people all look upon him as a southern man and are greatly attached to him on this ac count. That In tlv south generally Wil son Is regarded as even more of a! Hons which have existed for some southerner than Champ Clark. Mis- 1 time between the association and the sour! I* rm-arded as a borde r or wes- exchan^s. tern state W ilson gets the fullj i’r. Parker's assertion that the New advantage of being a Virginian. That] York cottoe exchange eaters to spec- Champ Clark's boom has decidedly ulators rather than te the needs of reo'ded in tho month since Congrees met and the Wilson movement has e(orrespondently gained. That since the graft revelations in the Ohio legislature the Harmon sen timent has waned even faster than before. Commenting on the result of the poll a Washington newspaper Wed nesday say, “General confirmation of this view Is unavoidable wherever one mingles among public m^n In Wash ington Republicans generally think W ils n will tie nominated by the Parker, adopting the report of the Democrats, tmt many of them can- committee unanimously and contlnu- didly talk Bryan, hoping that Bryan ing the committee for further coo lies Argument With the Prosklent of the Exchange Who Wee Pres ent, But the Manufacturers Asso ciation Agree* With Mr. Parker and Adopts Condemnatory Resolu tion. The feature of the first day’s ses- a heated discussion In the afternoon between Arthur Marsh, president of the New York cotton exchange, and Lewis W. Parker of OreeoTllle, chair man of the committee on relations with cotton exchanges. The occa sion was the report of the committee and the result was practically an open rupture of the strained rela- legltlmate business, and that the prices of cotton have been manipulat ed by members of the exchange, to the great detriment of -both spin ners and producers, waa cheered to the echo by the convention. Mr. (Marsh warmly defended the exchange and polntd ont that It was an asso ciation of merchant# trading in cot ton, with rules In the interest of ths merchants rathsr than In that of ths manufacturer or the producer. The convention decided with MV. mav y. t !>.. named and believing that | ference with representatives of tho Bryan would be the best man for the exchanges and with Instructions that It ‘public,ms -If relief is not given It shall seek a Mr Wilson's western trip is being remedy through Igislative channels, followed with the utmost Interest. The gist of the committee's report because it Is expected to develop more si as follows: definite signs of the n^ntlment of 'Manufacturers' association should Thnr vert ton. which has alwavs moat have no fight against cotton exehan- stunliU stood In Bryan Thus far 1 ges lf_ those exchanges truly reflect representatives has indicated that ( conditiona of spot cotton. On the Wjls. n looks good to the old-time j contrary, an exchange, If legltlmateiy Brvan followers. managed end regulated, and if the ‘ (Moreover. Mr Bryan himself Is prices ruling thereon are truly rep- reported verv wHl pleased with the emulative of spot waliyis. is and person and the performance of the should be of decided advantage to Jersey governor albeit Wilson has not cotton manufacturers, as also to pro- i record of regularity In support of ducers, but if. on the contrary, the ,tr . vin j prices reflected on the exchanges are *■•»— merely tho result of speculation for worm HKAK IUjKAMK. or against the value of the como4- * tty. or if thoee price* are only re- Refused Holiday and Mill Workers <* the speculative actions of one element as against another Take It Anyhow? 'element, then the exchange become# a serious disadvantage to tbs manu- fartur-Ts and to producers and ceases to be a legitimate body. "The two princlpel exchanges la the United States are ths New Or leans and New Yerk cotton exchan ges. Under the rules of the New The workers in the Ware Shoals Manufa'turing Company, located at Ware Shoals, have given t h-* manage ment notice that they do not Intend to work Thursday when ttovernorj Bleaso speaks at Ware Shoals . The | mill workers had asked for a holiday!' , in order to h ar the speech by Gov- ^ r,<N ‘ n,, Mch t an «* ^ ernor Bleese. but the mill manage- he fr )n » ra ,n ® och c,09 ° r reUt,on nient refused to shut down for the t0 th * ^ ,C< * ° f ,p ? t cot l toa th « “ day. Then the mill workers gave P T. ,CM ^ notice of their intention to Have the mill for the dav. , The men are quoted as saying: | v Ry reason of the rules of the N.w Wo are going to hear Governor 1 Y ” rk ^ oUon “ >• ••Won. Bleaso. The mill will have to doi tha ‘ the pr,caB of «>ntrac4. on that without us." Governor BHase **<' h *' 1 ** ™ » P^ity with spot speaks Thursday at Ware Shoals.' r ° tton i or # truly representative of The president of the Ware Shoals 1 th * P r,c ® of •P 01 cotton In the com- Mannfaeturlng Company Is B. ,). munity of production plus the car- Reitzel, of the Reigels who owp the j r, “? a ^ market. j Reigal Sark Company, of Jersey City, At t1 “ eB the Prlc®« of contract* N . j are much above the prices of spot Th ' mill is located near the Salu-^r 0 ^ 0 "- At ° thar tlme * th * y ara maeh tracts on the New York cotton ex- > change. da River There will be given a picnic below. Thursday and on this occasion the "Your committee la forced to con- fGovernor will speak. A teleVam | c, # udea J naJor,ty of th * Wednesday afternoon indicates that of tbe New York cMtoa ******* *re more Impressed with th* view that two mills will close Thursday for the speaking at Ware Shoals. It Is to their Interest to gater to spec ulators than to make of their body Amateur Aviator Killed.- \ «<*ange reflective of A V Uardlee, an ameteur aviator, ; th ® V™ va ‘ na , of tk “ <*>®™odity in wag killed at Domlngeuz field at Los w <5 ®, . Angeles, c a |., on Wednesday whiKl Your committee recomnsends that trying out an aeroplane. „ ard , w j t b ‘» a.~oc)atton once more exprem It. came here recently from Ohio and I earnest hope that the fcotton ex- had made several successful flights.^ part, ®“ lar,y ^ *® w York exchange, will rectify their. rules so as to make a true and prop- pick the cotton strands out of the e r delation between contract pricer wool—where the politician and thejand spot cotton; that if theee rnlee public, man is concerned. The quick- be not so properly regnlated aa to er he completes the job, the better ma ke this relation, that your commft- for his own material, moral, mental i tee be authorised in the name of tho and spiritual salvation and those of association to present such memorials his brethren. to the legislative bodies as may lead The Farmers' Union has survived. to a proper regulation by them of some of the mo^t develish schemes ever devised to crush an organiza tion. With infinitely less money than any organization of our numer ical importance, we have accom plished yasi results. We are turning now with increas ing emphasis to the Job of distrib uting our products in a business way. Heretofore, many counselors have urged and “helped” us in the matter of pppduction. Now we are seeing that distribution, scientific and co operative, is ev*n more important, as Newt Gresham saw when he first launched this great undertaking. We are working toward the Ideal of making the Farmers' Union the transforming Influence In American ! farm life. To that .end we ask the : co-operation df the wealthiest and the ! most poverty stricken farmer. CHAS. S. BARRETT. Union City, Ga., May 15, 19H.r the cotton exchange*.’ Negro Democrats Meet. The negro National Democratic Convention opened at Indianapolis, Ind., for a three day*’ session Wed nesday, and more than two hand-' red delegates were in attendance. James S. Greene, of Georgia, is chair man, and W. H. Grant, formerly auditor in the' treasury department at Washington, la secretary. A Very Old Hone. E. 8. Richardson, of Tyler, N. H.. drive* a hone that la known? to be at least 39 yean old. It is tbe last hone that Dr. Gaga, of Briar BUI and Concord, owned, end It to Mr. Kichardaon by tbe danghter, Mr*. Morrill, It ago. The homo to l» laa tor Mg age.