The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, October 09, 1913, Image 7
IEIICKATS 1SIEE M
TillFf BILL
CITTflN TAX IIIIPPEI
< 'unou* of Upper Braach Votes for
Delay ia Cotton Fatores Scheme
aad the House is Expected to Fall
Into Lim—Some Sharp Differences
Smoothed Out.
Disaffection among Democratic
aenalors whiqh Wednesday prevented
final action op the tariff bill was dis
sipated under the influence of a heat
ed caucus discussion and Wednesday
evening the caucus approved the bill
as reported by the conference com
mittee of the House and Senate. Bat
aix Democrats voted against approv
ing the report. The caucus decided
to abandon its position on the propo
sition in the bill to tax dealings in
cotton futures and leave the entire
subject for later legislative action.
Doth the amendment of Senator
Clarke of Arkansas, written into the
bill in flic Senate, and the less dras-
ti • administration substitute pro
se’ •. 1 i>y Mr. I'nderwood, House
lea ;<t. and reported by the House.
w : !l I' thrown out by the Senate
lit ■ ts
' Hie r.-Minis Senator Simmons
sai was rorifldtUit that th<- S^n
' ! i implcto its consideration
of .ff 1 >; 11 Thur«d»v He said
uounui w o j: 1 be made first to agrr.
o the ron'* r»n e r^p«'rt and tt.a’
FOR A SECOND DISTRICT
PRESIDENT INDORSES PLAN FOR
SOUTH CAROLINA.
Doe* Not Wlah Undue Haute, But
Thinks Duplication of Oflcera
Should Couae in Regular Course.
It became known at Washington
Thursday that President Wilson is
quite anxious to have the bill intro
duced by Representative Aiken a few
days ago providing for the creation
of another judicial district in South
Carolina, with additional court offi
cials, or one similar to it, passed at
an early date. The matter has gone
so far that Representative Clayton,
chairman of the House judiciary
committee, passed the matter over to
Attorney General McReynolds and
the latter has given his thorough ap
proval to the plan. Mr. McReynolds
went deeply into all the bills that
have been offered on this subject, di
gested them carefully, and ascertain
ed from members of congress and
others who are in a position to know
what the reasons were for the fail
ure of these bills to pass in years
gone by. That having been done,
according to what was learned at
Washington Thursday, the situation
was presented to the president and
he thinks that it might he well to
have the new district authorized, but
he, it is said, is oppos’ d to pr vid
ing f ir sm h aut hori/ut i. n n or,.- ot
tire *M! t rifeiK y bills, as ,s o'’en done
The sugKeMl m w is mad" that the
ma**er ■ are 1 f..r in one of *!i<*
eni*Tg* nev tells, or as Is known a’
Washing* >n. < : of ti c "ileth icn. > "
‘ills t.u» *li s plan d 1 r.ot n.e.u w r'.
IT HOSE ELECTlINSCIIinTEE
VUCIIEUS
TESTIMONY IF GIACE
i
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< n '. r•.*. irod ruttun •»! xmondiuent j
urel i» *o to r«-'r Iw fr’un the Senate
• mendr en>
W Hi ; :.e » s *p<,.^.! c\f br
th# S.T,*te tt.e Ho pruba* T • laid
*gre» !■) tr-p 'be i-otten fjtj'e* tai
pros • ’ r 'ef 11 *> 1 r t
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Churlestou Mayor Rcturus to Wash-
lug With Frieuda, Several of Wboai
Take tike Stand Against Congress-
mau Whaley, andT Tell of Money Al
leged to Have Been Spent.
The houae committee on elections
reeumed its inquiry at Washington
Wednesday to determine whether
there shall be a regular investigation
of the charges filed last week by May
or John P. Grace of Charleston,
against Representative Richard S.
Whaley, in which the latter was
charged with having used something
like $00,000 to secure his seat in
concross and with having made a
number of false affidavits in conuec-
tlon with such expenditures.
When Mr. Grace readied Washing
ton he bad with him Frank Hogan,
Will am Wingate, Scully Sullivan,
Mike Harry, Steve Sergeant and Leon
!l. 1-ai ri'cy, by whom he expects to
prove hd case ngainat Mr Whaley
Ti, ’Se v bo •• - t.fi> 1 at W' dio-sday s
• -n n were Hogan, Harry, Ser
t< .n' and l.arhsev
II’ -an a policeman, designated by
Mr Whaley as a political follow er of
tbe miv
’ b. a*
t o i
Ad M
' 1 !
* ws
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; •» »
AtNTDICNTAL KNIFE WOUNDE
MAY OAUHE DEATH.
Is Perfonnlag Operutiout For Otkcn
Health They Receive Poluoaona
VmU.
Two New York surgeons were at
the point of death Wednesday night
from bjood poisoning as a result of
infection incurred in the performing
of operations. One was Dr. Robert
Morrison, o£ No. 354 Tompkins ave
nue, Brooklyn, head of the faculty of
Williamsburg Hospital, the other, Dr.
Emil Roehm head of the second sur
gical division at Bellevue. Dr. Boehm
is twenty-seven years old and a grad
uate of last year from John Hopkins*
University.
I^ast Tuesday Dr. Boehm operated
on a patient at Bellevue for the re
moval of a carbuncle. In the course
of his work he laid his knife aside.
A piece of gauze chahced to cover
it. and when Hr. Boehm had occa-
s.on to roach for another instrument
tlio infected point of the knife prick
ed the ball of his left thumb, he be
ing left-handed.
Dospito the pain Dr. Boehm fin
ished liis operation. In his room he
took what seemed sufficient antisep-
tir
riUDUl IDT1IH AS IT AT-
PEAIS TI SATITAII
SAYS fi. I. P. IS IEAI
Vetera* PolltAcal Writer Tells of Re-
publican Rejoicings Over Recent
Maine Election and Then Proceeds
to Show That the Party is Dead—
A Few Worda on Teddy.
By a reduced majority the Repub
licans carried the old Jamea G. Blaine
-district in Maine the other day, and
t<fie Democratic candidate at this by-
election polled within about 100 of
the number of Votes Woodrow Wilson
got in that district at the regular
presidential election of 1912, But
all the standpatters In this town, in
congress and out of congress, are In
an ectasy and assert that the cam
paign of 1916 Is already decided In
their favor by the “verdict” from
Maine, where a Republican was chos
en to succeed a Republican in the
Sixty-third congress by a plurality
I L’bn loss than that cast for the He
ir measure but the tiny wound did j , uil)llran candl(lato laat November,
not heal By Friday his entire hand! Nobodv begrudges the G O B this
had swollen, and he called in Dr | linl(1 ( , nh of ron solation.
•r. tol -1 ' he lum-e com mil ti-f
\\ tiiil'-y
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I am going
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Mr
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1 t an ►« t
Hi-njamin J. Lee. visiting surgeon.
.«. <• perform" 1 an opi-ration The
*■ .filing slopped at the wris*. but
t‘a’ night there wire evidences
’hat tin-
" ,t the young man s system
Te’et-r itns ni-re sent Si’urday
Hr
S re
to
At father an 1 brother, » ho
i-
:>
ph' In S’ l»uts. and k
r arr-.vi-l from that, city Wcd-
h m 'a tern pi ra-
n ght Hr Hi
pat
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It Is so
lone 1nce they have had anything to
rejoice over that we are glad they
have emerged without annihilation
from a conflict which all mukt agree
po-.son had‘spread through- |Wa8 a (irawn battle
If the RepuMicans had chosen the
eround for this little tryout, they
'*oul 1 have selected the Third Maine
district For many years James r,
Blaine « as 'ta representative It has
long been as Intensely Republican s
community as I^ncaster county.
Bennsylvsnts. or ths Western Ra-
rve of Ohio Nor !« that all the
new tar'ff puta < n the * r e« Mat three
rriat products of Maine vli lum
ter p<.’a''wa. fl»h And vet they
rarr'el the Third Ma'ne d «tr1ct by
a bersar!? 'on plurality when they
had • ilura'.lty the year before
v • » n an who ha* tse»n about this
’■■P to! 'or a third of a century as I
• »>«■ W ': be slow to charge I if War-
rm with unwarranted llcenwe of ro-
i'» ' at art en to : m degreei. and
• wa« feared 'Lst be would not r«-
• • r He ! «* t’o.-n In t..s present
» -I'l-in onlv »;nce Julv 1
W rr »- n er' -ru.ixl an opera
• >.n on tm.< yrar
U r.’eee * N,
>Vand
w.i. • jeering 'rom a rup
of Oop In Sontk
71 Per cent.—-California
First Wltk 10« Par Gent.
The condition of the cotton crop
of the United Statee on Thursday,
September 25, waa 14.1 per cent, of
a normal, compared with 88.2 per
cent, on August 25, 1913; 89.2 per
cent, on September 25, 1912, 7l.l
per cent, on September 25, 1911, 66.9
per cent, on September 25, 1910, and .
68.(1 per cent., the average of the
p&at ten years on September 25. This
announcement waa made at noon
Thursday by the crop reporting
board, bureau of etatlatlcs, United
States department of agriculture, In
its final condition report of the sea
son, the condtion being estimated
from reports of Its correspondent#
and agents throughout the cotton
belt.
During the early part of the grow
ing season this year conditions were
favorable In the Western cotton
states ond unfavorable in the East
ern cotton state^; as the season ad
vanced, however, prospects declined
in the West and improved somewhat
In the East.
Until the latter part of the month,
which Thursday's report covered,
there was severe drought in Texa*,
Oklahoma and Southern Missouri,
hut this was broken very generally)
during the third week of the period,
the heory rains at points in those
states as well aa in portions of Ar
kansas were thought to have caused
some damage to the open cotton.
During the eeeond week of the period
high winds and heavy rains were
thought to have caused some damage
In Eastern North Carolina In that
week the drought was reported as
severe over much of Tenneeeee and
portions of South Carolina, while the
drought In Arkansas was consider
able relieved
of conditions by
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v 1 a* a BubxM'u-e that j •
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It lx m * IS circle t bv a v ite '
*' h - 6 Si-r vfors Reel ihirnerene ,
Var'i'-m. U>ll;« fflorman and!
Hugbce voted agn'nst the mot'on
t.a* rs w’ o supported the Clarke
amen In-oiit t-xlnr cottogj futures ev
pro^B' 1 strorsp opposition to Die ad
Trlr.Dtration “ ihstl’ute asd declared
they wuiild pr"'er to a'low the entire
matter to co over for ppeclal leglsla-
tion r.i'her D an accept the Under
wood substltu'e. This plan was final
ly adopted without a vote. •
i r'
i 'rr
e-a.»e - e , x
X w I rx’ 1-e * r -e ’
> *• me I’x" !■ « at 1 1 x r r
** e ev ^ 1 %)
r.- • lay afte-t; n kn •• k
t .It. t J. t r T VS true and lex
r a:. 1 xogfifiy Inlu'r'. Kn* tieer
iD er >,v x stray hui et ..r t j: »■
f 1 ::t. ( 'b*-r ae Tra.n N > It of D.e
^ uDn-rn Kx !» av puli. 1 ;t of Ha r r
>!."alv f'>r CoIu:ii‘’al The conduc
tor la sal 1 to have been b t across
the head w th a piece of w >od and Is
painfully bruised It Is thought that
Engineer Orr was Tilt bv a bullet fir
*-'l bv some members of the crowd
but this Is uncertain He was only
slightly wounded The negro porter
was knocked down and bruised.
i jne» -
X ' » XX • - B *
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• xi ix' rg
x i
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e • e, • • • x' J * n * x r
X ' r * 'A ’ X - » n
>e ’ t e > ml , | ‘ ! •■
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k
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and ft—dav ♦♦ was ^**eve«t '
» »«x 'I'-.r The v » on whom he
• ■ •■« , era' n died ‘htn
x •• • • • r r ' h e r ea '• er
* w n t a« t-een c,>nneci^d
x‘ .rg If xp ta! ' >r n-v
ant ’ aa t-e-n aclia tn all
kt Ms Tonipk’na avenue
r w
• * ’A 1
• • ex •
’ x "x r
-ce w*en he - res'el the character
T’-te**' Tl' ni*”j*e In Ten Thog
• x V-xr Herr ar# g'x»e aelnaa
’■n v prn'r«x to believe hut
•o hr eve that In a fudg
• ounced aralnat *he tienm
* b» a v ng’.e HepublVan
v In Vain# tnora than a
*»' re t waa p<>#e!b!e for
that tr. rax j r e to l-erome the law of
'►■e 'x-1 Ix ’'ndtng on the entire
vrr.e-tcxn e'er» 0 rate the autumn of
'»'« tVter the new tariff shall have
been ’a for e tr.ora lhaa a twaivn
m "« Di *
**- me of ern have come up to me
»"h aral'e# nearly aa t road aa that
t' te James wears when he haarw of
X 1 -e •].
rx n c victory but n >t quite.
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Ten rr.
1*11
1 >11
1*11
Av
Virginia
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1 0
TO
71
N t arollna
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71
S Dar»lln% m
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7 7
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71
Florida
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71
A >a Sara a
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89
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Arkanaaa
71
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69
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M Mourl
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71
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Ok lahoma
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California
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PI-\N A (t»NnrDKR.\<T
em
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i hl< ago
Tim T<>nx •»£
\< < nraulatr Daily.
t^j-lnxce
W WTS RACES SEPARATED.
Haiti more County Asks Legislature
to Pass Ijvw.
In accordance with a resolution
adopted at a mass meeting of resi
dents of Baltimore county to protest
against the location in the suburb of
Mount Washington, of Morgan Col
lege, a negro institution, the next
session of the Maryland legislature
will be asked to pass a race segre-
the county is to be divided into plats
of Baltimore county, Identical in
principal with the segregation ordi
nance of Baltimore city.
According to the plan decided on,
the county is to be divided into plats,
corresponding to city blocks for seg
regation purposes and the same rules
of occupancy applied to them as are
now applied to city blocks, thus an
entire plat will be occupied by mem-
rs of only one race,
i —
#
Makes Counterfeit Cash.
Prison officials, after an Investiga
tion, found remains of plaster of
parls molds for small coins In the
cell of Sam Howerton, serving a sen
tence for murder, at Nashville, Tenn.
Howerton, It is said, melted the met*/
by means of a wire attached to thy
fflectrtc light In hia eaQ.
Needed No Treatment.
When the ambulance arrived at a
Washington hospital Wednesday It
turned out that Willie W. Mickle, of
Camden, S. €., was not as much in
need of first aid as the policeman who
had called for it thought. Mikle threw
both the young Interne and the driver
out of the ambulance, and when he
was finally subdued with the assis
tance of part of the crowd which
gathered about, he was in no more
need of the hospital treatment than
were those who had come for the
"patient.” •
Fatal Fall From Horse.
Mrs. George Getty, wife of a
wealthy stock farmer of Silver
Spring, Md., and one of the best
known women n the Unted States,
was killed Monday In front of her
home when she was thrown from a
road wagon while breaking a saddle
horse to harness.
Steamer Burns at Sea.
Fifty four shipwrecked persons
from the British freight steamer
Templemore, which was burned at
sea eight hundred miles east of the
Virginia capes, Thursday night were
brought into Baltimore by the steam
er Arcadia. No Uvea were lost. Tbe
bulk of the burned vessel now 1« be-
1 lieved to have sunk.
*
fa-i
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fxtl.l r
t
' r Mi
••• Tl,-- •
• • 1 !
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h« ’ 1 * V * 1
•• ‘-a *;>• r ’
$«
‘ : n
1 !.
" x^ron 1
r :i.a r v In D.
* r. It.’
h w
rd
a- 1 D:at
bi-t»•‘•-n
he
of
1! w .rk- ra a,
1 ■ and $'
Harry tf-Hfl* 1 that s' one tm*
•an a blind tlcer and the city
rhar’.-ton fin* 1 him every thro*
tnonD.s Tbe efforts of the commit
tee «.-re directed towards an inD-s
tigation of the character of the wit
nesses produced as well as to what
they knew direct concerning the buv-
Ir.g of votes In the First district. A
great deal was told, but much of It
was hearsay, and this made little If
any impression upon the members of
the committee. While at Intervals
something was said which would In
dicate that Mr. Whaley’s friends had
spent large amounts of money for
him, summing it all up, there was al
most as much testimony against the
Hughes supporters as there was
against those of Mr. Whaley.
While the witnesses testified to cer
tain money having been passed about
which had the Whaley tag on It, and
while much was said about Whaley’s
tremehdous "swag” and how It might
be gotten, testimony was of an indi
rect kind and few instances of direct
vote buying were brought out which
seemed to impress the committee.
Summing the whole day’s proceed
ings up, it Is narrowed down to the
faet that $13,000 is the amount said
to have been expended in the ninth
Uharleston city ward for Whaley and
Hughes—about $8,000 'by Whaley
and the remainder by Hughes.
Mr. Whaley was a guest of Cpeaker
Clark at an elegant luncheon served
In the capitol. •
Rc 1 ’j’ 'Inn Do
' the refuse.
■ I.
Mamr Harrison early Wednesday
-t.H.g < • "d a ape* lal meeting of
D.e ouru SI to determine some meth
■l of .Hxpoo.ng of the city garbage
*t n.l inlgtit D.e plar.t < f the DMcago
1 »h:ch baa taken care
waa i lotted, folio* Ing
the Ignoring of the company a ultl-
ma'uin, sened Tuesday upon city of
ficials. that unless It was pa! 1 $492.-
oi'h'i In cash by 12 o’clock, “we will
U t the garbage rot In Chicago's al
leys".
Aroused by the menace of TOO tons
of garbage accumulating dally In
Chicago, many aldermen asserted
Wednesday that the city would be
justified In exercising Us police pow
er and seize the plant. A settlement
with the company could be made lat
er tfiey said. As alternates the etly
can duhurTfie gorbage In clay holes,
considered a health menacing pro
cess or deodorizing the refuse zy
sprinkling it with some solution.
Auto Victim Dies.
B. J. Wilson, a stock broker, died
Thursday at Binghamton, N. Y., from
a broken spine, the result of an auto
mobile accident Sunday night. With
two companions Wilson drove his ear
Fatal Explosion.
An explosion and fire in a paint
room on hoard the new Argentine
battleship Rivadavlo, while at Quin
cy, Mass., Tuesday, resulted in the
death of James 8. Laidlaw, a
draughtsman. The battleship was
not damaged. It is believed that
Laidlew lighted a cigar and acciden
tally ignited a quantity of gas, •
Fish Causes Death.
Herman Berlin, a Milwaukee mer
chant and banker, was drowned
Wednesday in an effort to land a
large fish. While tugging with the
fish, Berlin stood erett in the boat,
which was overturned.
Policeman Hurdles Bullet.
Call Officer Lum Wood, of Colum
bus, Oa., owes his life to his ability
as a hurdler. As he entered the yard
at the home of Frank Andrew* to
make au arrest, Andrews fired. Wood
juipped Into the air, the ball passing
between his legs. Wood escaped
without Injury and arrested bis man.
xrd xa' 1 ' It'a all o?*r old man. the
u-Tr hax xvBtgbvd th* Item'xriM'
x frrlnlatratlon and found It want
I
tr. r ’
’’ovV The day a'ter ihla hy-el^c
tl n In Main* th# Fnited Statea f4*n
at* pa»**1 Die I»vmorra'.lc tariff by
rr.or* than th* fiamocratlc majority
:n tha' body and It waa a malarial
r*<1»jrt!on In the rat*« of the Fnder-
w.x.d bill The very r*it day bual-
nexx rav* op'nlon of that reault by
adianrlng tha prlrea of all the lagltl-
mate x*rur1tt*a of our vaat corporate
ent* rprlwa Mark you, tha etand
patters la congress bad predicted
wo* to bun'.nesi”. The following
‘Lit ur lav the great concerna of Dun
and Bradstreet came out with roseate
p'etures of the situation The bill Is
not yet a law, but doubtless it will
he ere thin stuff la printed.
Then there will come out of bonded
wir»house* some $ 1 T)O,fi00.flon worth
of merchandise, mostly raw mate
rials. which will go Into our shops
and mills to be fashioned Into fin
ished product. That will give em
ployment to labor, and before the
present administration expires by
lapse of time, March 4, 1917, I confi
dently predict that the American
manufacturer will be as much of a
free trader as is the British manu
facturer. Mr. Redfleld, secretary of
commerce in Wilson’s cabinet, is one
of the most successful manufacturers
in the country, and he Is as nearly a
free trader as any man in public life.
A year from now his tribe will be
legion In New England, New York,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio.
In 1911 when Oscar Underwood and
Champ Clark were "projeckln’ ” with
those “pop-gun” tariff bills of the
Sixty-second congress a manufactur
er was here from Illinois and he made
declaration that if they would give
him free wool he cared not a rap if
they put his woolens pn the free list
also.
So it Just amounts to this—if the
country is prosperous the fall of 1914
the Sixty-fourth congress will be ov
erwhelmingly Democratic and the
Wilson administration universally
popular. On the contrary, If Indus
try languishes the Republicans, or
Bull Moosers, pr whatever name they
take, will come In; but even If they
do, they will not dare rehabilitate
that sbameleea robbery, that arrant
knavery, “protection,” which la aa
dead aa African slavery. Ita twin
relto.
Five Me«U-aa Matea IVnffoaa ta #»-
cade Fw>xa the RepaMtr.
At a ecu fer *nr# held at Hermoll)-
!o five Northern fttatea of Mexico
d*cdl*d to ae<-#de from tbe federal
government to form tha Confederate
rtta'ee of M*xlro. according to Ameti-
rana arriving at El Paao. Texas. Wed-
neaday. from Hermoelllo
The atatea whoee repreaen tat Ivan
agreed to the aeceaelon plan are:
Sonora. Durongo, Coahulla. Rtnalao,
and ( Mhuahua Oily the rebel gov
ernment In Chihuahua Joined In tbe
movement Venuatlano Carranza Is
to be prealdent of the new confed
eracy. the Americana say. and In his
cabinet will be Gen. Angelea, a for
mer federal commander, as minister
of war; Augustin I^abansst, minister
of haciendas, and Juan Sanchez Azzo-
cana. mtniater of foreign relation!.
Eduardo Hay, It ta aald, also will be
given a cabinet place. Lower Cali
fornia is not included in the new gov
ernment. as its promoters aay the
revolution has not succeeded there.
Tne dar after the election in Maine
there was printed a manifesto from
Col. Roosevelt, in which he served
notice on the G. O. P. that it had tn
surrender to him at discretion, that
it must abandon even the name "Re
publican” and accept what he calls
his principles. If the standpatters
agree to this, he will accept them,
condone their wickedness and lead
them In a charge next_time.
And Teddy—he’s a polltlclon, and
don’t you forget It. He knows that
the G. O. P. can never be anything'
other than what It alwayfc was, a sec
tional party. He knows that the
South long ago forgave Appomattox,
the march through Georgia, the van
dalism at Columbia, but he also
knows that the South wili never for
give the humiliation of reconstruc
tion when the proudest race in the
world was made politically subject to
the most abject race in the world.
Hence, If under the name Republi
can that party honestly proposed uni
versal beneficence and the Democrat
ic party promised universal malevol
ence, the cotton South would go Dem
ocratic "hell-bent” as Maine went In
1840.
Teddy knows that, and nnleM
Woodrow Wilson be bit master la tha
art, Teddy Is the best poHtlelan In tha
land, and he haa the ken te aaa that
nndar tha nama
party haa aaewat |fc
too
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y
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