oant nLoLn4l + MAGAZINE SECTION MT VERNON ROCKCASTLE COUNTY KY MARCH 23 1906 Pages 1 to 4 EIGHTYSIXTH BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION OF WOMAN SUF FRAGISTS IN HONOR OF MISS ANTIIONF Protest Against Laws Which Allow Mothers Small Protection Over Children Plea for Exercises of Corrective Ballot It is a rare occurrence when noted men of the country gather together to do honor to a woman who has worked and striven for a cause to which many of them are antagonistic Yet this was the case a week or two ago when statesmen political leaders jurists and literary lights joined in paying homage to Miss Susan B Anthony the great woman suffragist on the occasion of her eightysixth birth I day I This meeting was held in Washing ton D C in February Miss Anthony of course being present to listen to the addresses and words of felicity She had just come from a convention of woman suffragists in Baltimore Among the letters of congratulation read was one from President Roose velt which said Let me join in congratulating Miss Susan B Anthony on the occasion of her eightysixth birthday and extend my best wishes to her upon her con tinued good health In reply to the numerous congratu lations Miss Anthony owing to a se vere cold confined her remarks to these few words I wish the men would do something besides extend congratulations I have asked President Roosevelt to push the matter of a constitutional amendment allowing suffrage to women by a recommendation to Con gress I would rather have him say a word to Congress for the cause than to praise me endlessly The Rev Anna Howara Shaw a prominent woman leader presided over the meeting introducing the speakers and incidentally poking much fun at the members of the stern er sex She said that any man who accepts a post of especial learning im mediately dons a gown It was true of college professors of graduates and of men who sat upon the Supreme Bench She stated that the gown is a symbol of wisdom Over One Hundred Woman Leaders In connection with this celebration of Miss Anthonys birthday one hun dred and fifty advocates of woman suffrage swooped down on the Mem bers of Congress and hurled at the Statesmen all sorts of feminine oratory on the subject In appealing to the solons of the Capitol the argument was made by the women that God did not intend the female to be subserv ient to man and that she should be given justice through the ballot The principal address was made by Miss Mary Thomas of Baltimore who protested against the laws dis criminating against women We have no right to the children we have cradled in our loving arms beyond the age of seven years she said and now our boys of eighteen need not ask our permission to join the army and navy if their fathers are willing The girls of Maryland who cannot contract legal marriages under sixteen years of age may then con sent to their own degradation and their destroyer go free Think of this terrible injustice to ignorance and innocence and grant us the power to protect the child who cannot protect himselfThe The saloon keeper the cigarette vender and the gambler may ply their nefarious trades next door to our very homes and we are powerless to save the boys of the land from their influ ence We ask of Congress the right to express our opinion at the ballot b > x because it will be the surest and safest way to accomplish what we desire Miss Anthonys Remarkable Bat tle Against Ridicule and Calumny Susan Brownell Anthony was born 86 years ago in the Hicksite Quaker settlement at South Adams Mass and was as quiet and gentle and obedient a little Quaker maiden as any of her playmates in that tranquil spot Her life was uneventful until she took up teaching and went out into the world She was 26 years old when she made her first fight for the right of suffrage It was for the right to vote at a tem perance meeting which was dominated by young men The Sons of Temper ance were holding a convention at Albany N Y and the Daughters of Temperance were invited to meet with them Susan was one of the Daugh ters who accepted the invitation Ear ly in the proceedings the young women discovered that their position tin the convention was purely an honorary one The men did not propose tnat they should have any voice in the pro ceedings It was against scripture and against her natural sphere that woman should raise her voice in the councils of men were the arguments of the men in answering the protests of the women and in refusing their petition to be allowed to vote Suddenly a tall slender Quaker girl arose from her seat and followed by six others marched out of the convent ion hall The leader was Susan B Anthony It was her first rebellion against that order of things which gave men a monopoly of power She Immediately set about organizing the Womens New York State Temperance Society That was the real beginning of what has been her lifes work In which the central theme has ever been equal suffrage for the sexes Great Courage to Withstand Rebuffs It required great courage to under take this work at the time and in the manner she did But she possessed that requisite and exercised it on many occasions She never faltered never lost heart though she was con stantly subjected to ridicule calumny and opposition Few women were brave enough to follow her in those days In 1852 she addressed a large convention of men teachers A clergy man who was present complimented her afterwards afterwardsYou You spoke ably and well he said but I had rather see my mother and sister dead in their graves than to hear them speaking from a public platformUnceasingly Unceasingly she preached the doc trine of womans suffrage and equal rights Few even among women them Partial Suffrage in Many States I never saw that tall stately Quaker girl coming across my lawn said Mrs Stanton But what I knew another bombshell was to be hurled into some assembly of men Miss Anthony was arrested and fined for illegal voting in 1872 She had cast a ballot at the election She never paid the fine Since then four states have granted the right of suffrage to women 23 states have given them the right to vote at school elections and New York permits women taxpayers to vote on all questions affecting the tax ation of property For years Miss Anthony hoped to live to see a woman elected and inaugurated as President of the United States but she has a bandoned that hope now realizing that such a thing will not come to pass in her day Her life is now less strenuous and she and her sister Mary have a quiet pretty home at Rochester N Y She keeps in touch with every cause in the interest of or for the advancement of woman and in her voluminous corres pondence continues to give advice and counsel to women in all quarters of the globe Out of her little workshop in the attic of the Rochester home comes much of the ammunition used in continuing the battle for suffrage Six years ago at the age of 80 she learned to operate a typewriter which she employs In her personal corres pondence and In carrying on her work Time has dealt gently with her She is still stately and erect and her step has the vigor and elasticity of most I Women many years her junior Her memory is undulled by age all of her faculties seem to retain the keenness which made her such a power In the prime of her life Her Interest ia the worlds affairs is unabated and her mind is attuned to every movement having for its object the bettennefft of mankind TRIUMPH FOR ROOT GERMANYS NEW TARIFF ACT ALLOWS SMALLEST RATE ON AMERICAN GOODS Securing This Unlooked For Conces sion Makes Secretary of State a Diplomat of First Rank German Market Prized War has been averted between the United States and Germany not the strife of cannon and sword but com mercial war which nevertheless very seriously threatened important Ameri can industries The recent action of the German reichstag in passing legislation defer ring from March 1 next until June 30 1907 the assessment of the maximum SUSANB ANTHONY Lcader of Woman Suffrage Movement Who HasflJust Celebrated Her Eightysixth Birthday I selves grasped her message and her 1 very name became a term of derision She was caricatured insulted jeered at I and maligned In the early days of the movement Womens Rights was the synonym for dress reform for neglect I ed home duties for rabid political tendencies and for unwomanly women womenI Elizabeth Cady Stanton was Miss MissI Anthonys earliest ally Together they I conducted one campaign after another seemingly making but little headway at first They traveled all over the country going from place to place in open wagons stage coaches or what ever other conveyance was obtainable and from door to door on foot They endured many hardships and were sub jected to insults innumerable People said of them that Mrs Stanton made the balls and Miss Anthony fired them She proved her good marksmanship by making every ball count schedules of the new imperial tariff against American goods thus averting a tariff war with the United States is the climax to a protracted interchange of correspondence between Secretary Root and Ambassador Sternberg in which Secretary Root has achieved his first great feat of pure diplomacy The success of the State Department in obtaining for another sixteen months equal consideration in the German trade with other governments that have made great concessions to obtain the minimum tariff in Germany without I any amelioration of our schedules against German goods entering this country ranks as one of the notable works of statecraft in several decades of the recent history of the American foreign office Had Secretary Root not already given ample promise of being a diplomat of the first class he would lightin in international politics All Done in a Month Only a month before the action of the reichstag the German government was position tion that the maximum rates would be enforced on March 1 > In the light of the reichstags action at the earnest solicitation of Chancellor von Buelow one might be led to think a colossal bluff had been attempted and pushed to the last moment by Germany But this it is understood here is not the case The seed of education as to the result of the tariff war which Mr Root had been sowing did not sprout until within the last few weeks then its growth was rapid Realizing that Mr Root was thor oughly familiar with all the premises and sound in his understanding of what the results would be of any course pur sued by Germany and that he could not be shaken from his position of polite regret that no concession was possible at this ond of the wire the German statesmen quickly went to their reichstag and had legislation passed deferring the trouble Had the department here shown signs of hysteria or had Secretary Root not fully appreciated the several angles of the case or had lie made ex cited efforts to have Congress act hur riedly In giving Germany concessions before March 1 the Germans would have d rldnr1 that the TJjiIted States could be coerced by actually applying the maximum tariff but < Mr Roots placid explanations that nothing at all could be done here either before or after March 1 had an exceedingly quieting effect upon German tariff opinionsSecretary Secretary Roots Impassive attitude which was so remarkably effective In this case Is all the more notable In view of the flood of excited protests that have come to Washington from associations of farminv amifacturlng I and other producing interests In the Middle West which consider the Ger man market their velvet STOCK EXCHANGE SEATS Points of Vantage Where Millions Are Made and Lost While You Wait In keeping with the recent remark able rise in stock prices in this coun try is the rapid advance in rates at which New York Stock Exchange seats are selling The membership of the Exchange is strictly limited to 1100 and seats are therefore objects of ardent desire on the part of many hundreds of market operators to whom a membership would be mate rially valuable A month ago a seat sold for 85000 a record price A few days ago membership rights were sold for 90000 and one seat was bought at the unprecedented price of 95000 It is believed that if there is another transaction of this character soon the price will reach 100000 or somewhat more than 50 per cent greater than the rate at which seats were sold two years ago In 1872 Stock Exchange seats sold for 4000 and this was re garded as high An idea of the reason why Wall Street operators are anxious to ob tain the right to transact their busi ness on the floor of the Exchange is gained from the fact that the stock transactions nowadays average close upon 1000000 shares a day If every member of the Exchange were active and if the business were evenly di vided such a daily business would give to each member a commission upon about 990 shares amounting to a yearly income of 32700 This is of course entirely apart from individual operations and profits These Stock Exchange seats are re garded as assets There has been in the past some trading in them for the sake of the profits gained by the rise in the rate but the tendency was dis couraged by a rigid enforcement of the rule that the purchaser must be ac ceptable to the governors of the Ex change Men now sell their seats only for urgent reason such as failure of health or removal to other fields In the latter case the New York seat is probably more profitably turned into cash at the high rates now prevailing than to be held for future use When a member of the exchange dies his executors sell his seat for the highest obtainable rate The bidding is often spirited and some of the most strik ing advances in the record prices have been scored in this way MILLIONAIRES FOR WAITERS Caddies Feasted as Guests of the Germantown Cricket Club Near Philadelphia Millionaires and men of promin ence in the business and social life of the city turned waiters and fed the little lads who have served as caddies on the golf links of the Ger mantown Cricket Club at a banquet at the clubhouse at Wissahickon Heights the other night The lads were delighted with the feast but more pleased with the attention show ered upon them by the dignified men of affairs who left nothing undone to make them happy As the eightysix youngsters rang ing in age from eight to sixteen years sat about the banquet board garbed in their regular costumes Samuel T Heebner one of the old members of the club wielded the carving knife and huge slices of turkey were prompt ly hurried to the hungry youngsters by the millionaire waiters First exMinister to Italy William Potter would hurry away with a plate then Sheriff Brown and Direc tor of Public Safety Potter would rush from the carvers side carrying plat ters heaped with turkey and tempting vegetables Edward S Buckley Jr president of the club took a hand and was assisted by VicePresident H H Kingston Harian S Page Howard Perrin Joseph S Clark Charles T Cowperwaite Henry A Lewis Robert C Cooke William R Buckley C H Potter William Disston and W Find ley Brown and all of them were busy looking after the wants of their cad dies all of them men of great affairs After the collation had been served William C Houston chairman of the golf committee called the gathering to order and made a brief address in which he congratulated the boys upon their behavior during the year As a means of still further pleasing the cad lies each was presented with a box of candy and prizes ranging from 51 to 250 in gold A Propeller In the Air An English device Is reported of an air motor boat which while not re markable as a speed craft is yet very useful in navigating many bodies of water which on account of their ex treme shallowness are practically clos ed to navigation Other deeper rivers and lakes are likewise avoided by a screw or paddle wheel craft on ac count of their growths of rank vege tation A flat shallow draft launch has been constructed which overcomes both dif ficulties for its screw propeller or fan works not In the water but in the air Driven by a motor the fan whirling in the air sends the boat along at a good rate of speed 0 Curara one of ths deadly poisons and that with which South American Indians annoint their arrow heads has been found very helpful In the treatment of hydrophobia IN THE WARM SOUTHLAND A FEBRUARY JOURNEY FROM THE LAND OF ICE TO THE LAND OF FLOWERS Breezy Account of a Midwinter Trip to Charleston Jacksonville and St Augustine Hotels Which Are Palaces We left Washington on February eighteenth and after spending two de lightful days in New York boarded the Seminole for Jacksonville on Wash ingtons birthday Now the one accom plishment of my life has been that I was always a good sailor but on this trip I had to succumb never raising my head from the pillow from the hour we started until we reached Charles ton I thought pretty faithfully of my son who was sick for 12 days while go ing to the Isthmus It was a terrible passage for us very cold rainy and completely dismal Nearly every one was sick only two ladies and a few gentlemen my husband among them being the exceptions I had the dub ious pleasure of taking all my meals in my berth For two nights the steamer pitched and rolled to such an extent that my husband couldnt stay in his upper berth and when we came around Hatteras it seemed really peril ous The captain said it was the rough est night the boat had experienced for five years and it will be a long long while before I shall want to round Hatteras again Saturday morning however the misery was over and at eight A M we stopped at Charleston with a partially clear sky and a few hours before us in which to do the City We drove to the Battery and walked the length of the sea wall CALHOUN MONUMENT CHARLESTON S C covered with red ones We went into St Michaels church one of the oldest churches in the South twice injured by fire and the walls cracked during the great earthquake The three walls are lined with memorial tablets the pews are of the old style high ones FORT SUMTER CHARLESTON HARBOR OSCEOLAS GRAVE FORT MOULT1A MOULTthere there The street is broad the houses right on the street their grounds on either side planted with vegetables magnolia trees roses in full bloom and a wealth of vines everywhere The houses here were built before the war and are immense three story structures running way back with two and three story verandas facing the South to catch the sea breeze Quaint old carv ings are on the doors which are also resplendent with great brass knockers The view is fine and expansive in cluding Charleston Harbor Fort Sum ter in the distance and the Ashley and Cooper Rivers In the park are severa old statues and on a warm night il must be a charming spot Flowers in Winter Then we drove through the town encountering everywhere gardens in bloom and trees in foliage as if it were the month of May A lady we mel gave me an exquisite red and white camel a and I saw aa immense bySb our heads just appearing over the tops We rambled through the market a ono story building extending from block to block till I think I counted six Here we saw fruits and fresh vege tables in abundance the darkey women balancing great fiat baskets on their Continued on next page I GINSENGInrno Largo rroflts In mall rardeos Write for prices of roots and seeds Order roots and seeds now and arrange to start a garden in sprint Illustrated book telling about Its history cultivation Vrotits market etc i 25ctsin stamps Address Visconnin tiinneng Wiseoneinlinengt Dtr8 UurUcnt UOd Atlauia St AVausuu Vla A SAFE INVESTMENT 5 or More Per Month Buys Protected I Interest in Tropical Plantation OFFICERS PruMmt WHo H AnUBTRONn ExTJ S Railroad Com Phi la Pa 1JJunlIlh l V1JJunl fgR I V fgRExEditor ExEditor Times Phlla Pa Secretary and OYra u rCMMcMAliOW Phllfl Pa Counsel A L WANAMAKER PhI Pa This Company Is developing Its r plantation of 288000 acres on the Gulf in Campeche Mexico and Guarantees 8 Per Cent Interest payable semiannually to all who buy Its Shares w henever possible extra dividends paidthi3 paidShareholders Shareholders will therefore receive at least 10 this Year rAs development work progresses earn r ings will increase dividends will increase and when developed the permanent crops of rubber penequen and trcpica fruits and the sales of live Stock will provide cur shareholders a substantial In come for life and a It gacy fcr their families Nearly 1 000 laborers under experienced managers employed Mahogany from cur 10000000 forest being sent in shiploads to United States ports A woodturning factory has been estab lished Stores factories and tannery in operation Now is the Time to Invest A limited number of shares offered at par 5300 payable 5 per mcnth per share Each share of stock represents fourteen acres of land Price of shares will SOOn be increased to 350 The stockholders money Is fully secured as the en tire property including over 200 buildings railroad line etc paid for in full and deeded in trust for protection Of stockholders to Philadelphia trust company Investment returned In case of death if desired Over 3000 persons already receiving dividends By making application now you secure shares at par and recelvo 4 pr ct onyour money April 1st BOARD OF DIRECTORS Consists of officers and H A SlKBiini Pres CIty Not Bank Mason City Ia Jonu J lUimra Justice Supreme Court Norfolk Neb VICTOB Dn Pone Jo Da Pont Powder Works Wilmington Del A O StEWAKT ExAtty Gen Ports Rico Ban Juan P n Write today far tree booklet and handsomely illustrated paper A rcqacs t by postal OF letter will bring both to your door without charge INTERNATIONAL LUMBER DEVELOPMENT CO 796 Drexel Building Philadelphia Pal