Newspaper Page Text
THE LEADER B. T. HOBBS.- Editor. BROOKHAVBN. » MISSISSIPPI. ..-II .. .... Advance In Learning. It is not alone on the city pavement or in the shadow of the huge sky scrapers that the gold brick industry flourishes and the wily promoter takes his commission from the credulity of the public. The rural inhabitant yearning for excitement and expe rience doesn’t have to 'hunt up the genial bunco artist, but now has the goods delivered at his own door, says an eastern exchange. A majority of our readers are familiar with the na ture and purposes of what is technical ly known as a “merger.” There ire many kinds of merger. The milkman who owns a herd of cows and a pump in good usable condition can easily effect a merger. A would-be business man with an abundance of money and no experience and a practical business man with abundant experience and no money can form a merger. A man with a hole in the ground, a man with a plan for printing mining stock cer tificates, a man who knows how to promote and a man who has money in the bank may get together in a mer ger. The merger of the lion and the lamb is as old as history. There is something fascinating about a merger —to the man on the inside. There must be at least two parties to a merger; there may be several. Some times both are equally benefited; as a general thing the weaker is benefited at the expense of the stronger. The mixing of milk and water benefits the water more than it does the milk. When men who own sawdust and men who own grain merge their holdings in order to manufacture a breakfast food the sawdust owners are willing to accept a smaller allotment Of stock than the grain owners. These state ments may seem aimless and desul tory; but as “Cap’n Bunsby” would say, “The bearin’ of which lays in the application.” The Han of Sixty. When a man has passed the age of 60 years, his best years of action do as a rule lie behind him. There are, and must be, exceptions. Titian and Tin toretto were old men when they did some of their best work. Michael An gelo was at work on St. Peter’s when he ' was nearly 90; Moltke and Radetsky, Bismarck and Lord Salisbury, among soldiers and statesmen, occur instantly; Lord Roberts was 68 when he rode to Pretoria, and, for that matter, the lead ing figures on the front benches of par liament to-day are well past the age of chloroform. But though the powers of action naturally diminish with the weight of years, says the London Spec tator, the real power of old age—the power of criticism—must increase with the wider horizon that each succeeding year discloses. Up to a point, of course, for the wisest of men know the danger of garrulity, and are often most admir able when silent, possibly in contempt. But the young man who, tolerant only of youth, will one day be forced, logical ly, to be intolerant of himself, may per haps remember, when praising the work of others, that he believes such praise worth giving, and that he always, as a young man, thought it worth having. Unconsciously, while he was proclaim ing that a man over 40 was past work, he was anxiously expectant of the praise of men whose opinion he valued above all the immature judgment of his con temporaries. Always impulsive, often important, sometimes extremely dan gerous, he is always, though he may not acknowledge it, doing one thing; he is asking the approval, relying on the support, of the senate. He wants to chloroform those who restrain him, and only" perhaps realizes, when others take up the drugged handkerchief for him, the power and value of that restraint. Growth of Population. Sociologists in recent years have been giving us a lot of views and sta tistics as to the restrictions which society has placed upon the ordinary course of nature, and we have been in structed time and again that the chief duty of man is to multiply and replen ish the earth. On the whole, observes the Philadelphia Inquirer, that seems to be what the race is doing, for every census in civilized lands indicates that the population Is growing rapidly, due not only to a general cessation of wars, but to the fact that people take better care of themselves and live longer. A statement from the life insurance com panies indicates that the average life of the insured man is more than 40 years, which indicates that for thr whole race it must be much nearer 40 than the former standard of 33. Large ly this is due to the fact that more babies reach maturity. Photography, which has caught the Empire State express in full motion by the cinematograph, has also been -brought into use to depict, with equal fidelity, action so slow as the growth of a flower. By exposing a plant every quarter of an hour for 16 days to a cam era it is now possible to watch a bud open gradually; to see the blossoms close at night and reopen in the morn ing; to see the leaves increase in size and the stamens peep out. And all these wonders performed in the space of-n minute or two. The Leland Stanford, Jr., university has the greatest endowment of all the leading educational Institutions in this country. Its productive funds amount to $20,000,000 par yalue. Girard college comes next with $17,715,000; then Har vard with $16,755,000, and Columbia with $15,847,000. AH others are in seven figures instead of eight. And the Stan ford endowment is the gift of a single individual or estate, instead of an ac cumulation of gifts, as in the cases of the other colleges and universities, ex cepting Girard._ The recent completion of some of the gigantic power units in New York re calls a prophecy made by Thomas A. ^Edison in 1878. He declared the day would come when he could light the whole lower part of New York city from one machine. The day has come. A new drug, marrahuana. is being ex plotted by a Chicago university profes nor. It is said to be a substitute for to hacro opium, cocaine and hasheesh and sis deadly as aii of them pH to gether. ; . * ... Jf, GEN, F1TZHUGH LEE HAS PASSED AWAY Death Followed a Stroke of Apo plexy While Traveling. THE SUMMONS A SUDDEN ONE None ot Him Immediate Family With Him, the Final Call Coming la the Providence Hospital, Washington. Washington, April 28.—Gen. Fitz kugh Lee, U. 8. A., retired, and one of Virginia's foremost sons, died at Prov idence hospital here Friday night from an attack erf apoplexy which he suf fered early Friday morning in a train while en route from Boston to Wash ington. After Gen. Lee had been re moved to the hospital It was evident to the attending physicians that his case was a serious one, but they believed that his strong vitality and will pow er would assist materially in a partial recovery at least from the attack. His condition remained fair,considering the severity of the attack during the day, but shortly after 0 p. m. he began to grow weaker, his breathing became more rapid and his pulse lower, termi nating in less than two hours in death, The end was peaceful and without pain, the general remaining conscious until within five minutes of the end. Half an hour before death Gen. Lee recog nized his brother Daniel Lee, who came into the room for a moment. GEN. FITZHUGH LEE. A sad feature of the case is that al though Gen. Lee was blessed, with a family consisting of a wife and five children, not one of them was with him at the time of his death. The gen eral was 68 years o? age. Gen. Lee was conscious throughout the day and recognized those who were admitted to the sick room. Necessari ly these were very few persons, and included the attending physicians, the nurses and several relatives who came to visit him. While not suffering any pain, the general was rather uncom fortable most of the time, his breathing being difficult, and his articulation, when hd attempted to speak, being heavy and thick. The Orders of Lieut George Lee, a son, who was about to sail for the Philippines, have been changed, and he will come to Wash tion, and it is expected will be ac companied by his sister, the wife of Lieut. Brown, who also is now on the Pacific coast, and whose orders were issued directing him to sail with his regiment for the Philippines. The news of Gen. Lee’s death was a severe shock to his numerous friends in Washington. This was evidenced by the many inquiries made at the hospital throughout the day and even ing. Gen. Lee’s attack is attributed largely to his activity in behalf of the military and naval review which is to be held in the vicinity of Jamestown, Va. His heart and soul have been in the work and he labored zealously to make it a success. Gen. Lee has been a prominent figure in Washington, and he always was given a hearty reception wherever he went. Prior to the Civil war, at the begin ning of which he resigned his commis sion in the United States army, Gen. Lee saw considerable frontier duty in movements against the Indians. .He was an expert cavalry officer, and on pne occasion, June 16, 1860, he was en gaged in a hand-to-hand encounter with Comanche Indians near Camp Colorado, Tex. His services in the confedereate army as a major-general are well known, and during the inter val between this war and his active work in the Spanish-American war, Gen. Lee filled a number of important positions, including the governorship of Virginia, the presidency of the Pittsburg & Virginia railroad, the col lectorship of internal revenue for the Lynchburg district, and the consul generalship at Havana. Following his honorable discharge from the volunteer army on March 2, 1901, Gen. Lee was appointed to the regular army with the rank of brigadier general, and with this rank he was retired in the March fol lowing. For Lincoln Memorial Monument. Springfield, 111., April 29.—The Illi nois house of representatives concurred in the senate joint resolution petition ing the national congress to appropri ate $3,000,000 for the erection of a Lincoln memorial monument in Wash ington. _ Veteran of Two War* Dead. Greenville, Miss., April 29.—Capt. John W. Ward, a veteran of the Mexi can and civil wars, and a leading edi tor of this state, is dead at the age of 81 years. He belonged to many secret societies. Railroad Merger Bill Vetoed. Denver, Col., April 28.—Gov. McDon ald has vetoed the railroad merger ex pansion bill passed at the late session of the legislature, the purpose of which, as represented, was to enable the Colorado & Southern Railway Co. to extend its lines to the Gulf of Mex ico and in other directions. Killed tor a Live Wire. Fort Worth, Tex., April 29—Henry Williams, aged 25, was electrocuted at the Ladd dairy farm, near this city, while making repairs on a wire. Electrocuted Accidentally. Schenectady, N. Y.. April 29.—Victor N. Yont, a graduate of the University of Nebraska, employed in the test de partment of the General Electric Co., was electrocuted by coming in contact with a transformer carrying 6,000 volts. His home was in Brook, Neb. Charred with Abduction. Kansas City, Mo., April 29.—W. O. Perry, who Is charged with abducting Pearl Farrell, 14 years old, from her home at South Omaha, will be re turned to that city for tridl. The girl wili accompany him. “IBOHQUILL" TALKS BACK Former Pension Commissioner Ware Replies to Commissioner Warner. He Saya If Any Old Soldier Haa Re* eelved a Pension Wrongfully Publish Hla Name. Topeka, Kas., April 29.—Eugene F. Ware, former commissioner of pen sions. in repuly to charges made by the present commissioner, Warner, of al leged violation of order No. 78, thereby causing an extra expense of three quarters of a million dollars, said: “I do not know to what particular cases the commissioner refers. A soldier might have a right to a pension, and thousands of them had, but under the aid law and under Order No. 78, known as the old age order, and hence it would make no difference under which issued. “It is not a question of whether, technically, order No. 78 was violated, but whether some old soldier got a pension or an increase to which he was not entitled. I know nothing about what the commissioner has found, but in justice to the reputation of the honest and capable men, who are his subordinates in the bureau, he ought, before making the charge examine and see whether any old soldier has got a pension or increase who was not entitled to it, and ought the publish the names of such pensioners, giving the individ ual names and instances. I think he owes it now to the public to print the names and the company, regiment and state, and give facts, not generalities." STORM PLAYS SAD HAVOC. Bridges Swept Away at Hannibal— Serlona Damage at Point* — In Illinois. St. Louis, April 29.—Among the re ports received of Friday afternoon’s storm wero tho following: At Hannibal, Mo., bridges and cul verts were carried away by torrents of water, and the damage from hailstones is reported to be heavy. A number of barns and outbuildings were leveled by the wind or fired by lightning at Mex ico. New Cambria was the center of a record-breaking hail storm. Kintnundy, 111., was swept by a tor nado, which wrecked a number of houses and leveled telephone and elec tric light wires. A storm of similar intensity visited Patoka, 111. Peoria reports heavy damage from a wind which swept the city at a velocity of 40 miles an hour. At Beardstown an especially destructive wind storm pre vailed, overturning river craft. Miles of fences were washed away and many bridges were carried out by the booming creeks and branches, which are far out of their banks. Hail., varying from the size of a hazel nut to one inch in diameter, fell at many points, and fruit trees were stripped of their buds. Early vegeta bles also were badly damaged by the hail, and strawberries suffered exten sively. COMMERCIAL CONDITIONS. -v Summary of Brad*treet’« Weekly Review of the Conditions of Trade and Industry. New York, April 29.—Bradstreet’s weekly review says: Irregularity still characterizes dis tributive trade, while industry is active and outdoor construction ia of unpre cedented volume. The weather has been rather too cool for the best of crop preparation or germination. La bor is well employed, and with the one conspicuous exception—Chicago— where the teamsters’ strike affects trade and shipments, disputes are be low the average. Prices of many sta ples have been weak and unsettled^ and cereals, cotton, some kinds of pig iron, copper and country produce have moved lower. Railway earnings are good, and bank clearings this week, owing to holidays, are smaller than last week’s, but heavily' exceed a year ago. Collections generally are rather tardy, especially at the south. Crop conditions, though the season is back ward, promise well as regards the cereals. A heavy wheat yield is in prospect. NEARLY NINETY THOUSAND. The Total of the Alleged Peculations of Ex-Tax Collector Smith of Sam Francisco Grows. San Francisco, April 29.—Former Tax Collector E. J. Smith’s defalcation is still growing. It was discovered, Friday, that In addition to embezzling large amounts of money, the former tax collector obtained several thou sand dollars by means of forged de mands on the city treasurer, purport ing to come from clerks and other em ployes for services rendered or for sup plies furnished. Some of the names signed are said to have been fictitious. The total of Smith’s peculations, so far as tabulated, is nearly $90,000, one item of $4,000,and a number of minor delinquencies having been found Fri day. Charged With Murder of Father. Shawnee, Okla., April 29.—Minnie and Mary Crowe, young daughters of John Crowe, who was killed at his home at Asher recently, have been placed in the county jail, charged with the murder of their father. A young brother gave information upon which the arrests are based. Knowlea Off the Par Roll. New York, Aprif 29.—President Alex ander of the Equitable has dismissed Henry H. Knowles, former superin tendent of agencies and for 40 years an employe of the company Futthless Wife aad Mother. Monroe City, Mo., April, 29.—James Mitchell and Mrs. William Mosley, of Centerville, la., are under arrest here on complaint of the latter’s husband. Mrs. Mosley deserted her two little girls and eloped with Mitchell. Railroad Station hooted. St. Louis, April 29.—The railway sta tion at Kimmswlck, 20 miles south of here on the Iron Mountain, was looted of everything of value, including $1,000 j tickets. The robbers did their work in the night. Grove Doubts Schwab Compact. Philadelphia, April 29.—Presiden* Henry S. Grove of the Cramp Ship Building Co. doubts the reports that Schwab has secured orders for Russian warships. Mr. Grove hts just re turned from St Petersburg, where he sought contracts. Engineer Bested Negro Tramp. Montgomery, Ala., April 29.—In a deseparte fight in the cab of a loco motive, Engineer Will Reynolds over came a negrh tramp and threw him from the tra'ih, klU’ng him, just below Montgomery. Greater Mississippi Devoted to the Industrial, Commercial and Agricultural Development of the State’s In comparable Resources A Items of Interest Picked Up Here and There A A A By H. E. BLAKESLEE, Jackson. ■—-------- --- ■ ■ . 7 By Invitation of the writer, Hon. H. L. Whitfield, State superintendent of education, contributes the following thoughts upon educational matters pertinent to Mississlppians and a "Greater Mississippi.” Mr. Whitfield is very enthusiastic In his work and the items are well worth the p«riffial of all: "That Mississippi’s great natural resources have been discovered to the outside world, there is no ques tion. Every train that comes within our borders from the North brings men who are investing their means In our lands, men who are to promote great enterprises, and skilled men who are taking the responsible places at large salaries. “We are permitting these great nat ural resources to fall into the hands of outsiders. We, by failure to train our boys for the higher work of this complex age, are permitting most of the skilled and high-paid work to be done by people who come from places that have put a premium on prepara tion for work. If the names of all the civil and electrical engineers, architects, and, in fine, all the skilled men who are doing work in the State could be secured, it would show that by far the majority of them are not our own boys. “Some say let us offer every in ducement to encourage the capitalist and skilled men to come into the State for the purpose of developing its great natural resources. While we should cordially welcome any good citizen who wants to cast his lot with us, yet should we rely on foreigners to do .this work for us? What use will a developed-State be to our people if it is owned by oth ers? Do you want .your boys to be satisfied to do the drudgery and mus cle work for low wages, while the profit on the investment and the high salaries paid for skill go to outsiders? What is it worth to our people to stand off and see such great activity without being participants in it, or without receiving any of the great profits derived from the work? “No, my friends, there can be only one true, genuine prosperity for Mis sissippi, and that is to have Missis sippi resources largely developed by Mississippi blood. Old sensible peo ple will agree that it is the people and not the_physical State that should be considered. How can this end be at tained? There is only one way under high heaven, and that is to dignify the training of the individual. First, we should make our common schools the peer of any in the land. It mat ters not what calling a boy may final ly adopt, it is in the coipmon schools that he is revealed to himself and is made conscious of his possibilities; it is there that he can view the great world and decide for himself his course in life. “The common school Is tbe neces sary basis for ail other training, and if the future of the State is to be determined by tbe character of train ing we give our fine Anglo-Saxon blood, then it follows that the first work to do in the great scheme of the State’s proper development is to make better the schools that aff“o»r people first attend. "Because children have to work in the fields is no reason why a county should not have a regular school term. In the first pLace, the training of their children should be a parent’s first duty and highest responsibility. That person has a very low concep tion of parental responsibility who would only look to his child’s prep aration for life when there is nothing else to be done. No one has ever said that children can be properly reared and trained without expense. To do so often means harder work and greater sacrifice. But is there any other worthier motiv’e, or greater compensation for increased toil and self-denial, than to see the beautiful children God has given you daily in crease in usefulness to their family, to themselves and to God? Fathers and mothers, when you see your chil dren, through the results of your toil and self-denial, being raised constant ly to a higher plane of life, do you not feel that you have been paid a thou sand times over for all the extra work and sacrifice it has occasioned? “But, unfortunately, there are some who look on their children as they do their beasts of burden—value them only for the service they can get out of them. It is especially to such peo ple I want to make an argument; Let us take it for granted that even the most indifferent parents to the wel fare of their children would like to send their children to school when they are not of material service on the farm. In other words, if you want to send your children to school without losing their services on the farm, it is necessary that they have as nnjfih opportunity as possible to go to school before they are old enough to be of material help on the farm. There is a gap of from Jive to seven years between the time when a child is old enough to go to school and be fore he is old enough to do regular farm work. Now, if you want to send your children to school, and intend to keep them in the field when old enough to do regular work, then -it follows that you should have as good schools and as long terms as possible during this time. Let us illustrate: •If a fchild can go to school for five years before his services are required on the farm, he will get twenty months schooling in terms of four months a year, while he would get forty months schooling with eight month terms. He would not only get double the months of school without losing him from the farm, bufr he would get better schooling each month, as one month of a long term is much better than one month of a short term. Then, again, longer serv ice each year would procure a better teacher. “Agricultural people should, more than any other people, have a long school term. If they educate their children it must be when they are young and during this time when they are not of material service on the farm they shou’.d have just as much and just as good a school as possible. “If the children of Mississippi could have the, advantage of good schools for full terms only for the time that they are too young for regular farm work they could get the foundations of a good education, they could be pointed to higher service to the State and to God “Jt is the universal experience of those who have been engaged in the effort to get longer terms, that one ar gument that the opponents of better schools always make, Is tnat If the children do not go regularly to a short term that they will go less regularly to a longer term. "This argument has been made In each of the forty counties that have lengthened their school terms by county taxation; yet in each instance it has proved to be untrue. Our ex perience has proved this to be true, that the longer the school term the better the average attendance. “This is not strange when you think just for a moment, a longer school j term means a better school senti ment, which results in having better schoolhouses and teachers. Educa tion is thus dignified by the people, and each parent makes greater sac rifice to send their children to school. Teachers who work in their profes-1 sion for from seven to eight months a year can afford to spend more on preparation for their work than they could when they taught for only four or five months a year and had to sup port themselves for twelve months on a few months salaries. “Let us look on it from the stand point of a child. When a boy sees that his parents are so indifferent and place so low an estimate on-the value of an education as to be unwilling to pay a small tax to improve education al conditions, that they are satisfied with the indifferent teachers that us ually teach the short term schools— the long term counties usually draw the best teachers of the short term counties—he gets the idea that the school is not of much Importance: the consequence is, that he has not much faith in the school as an im portant factor in his life, and as one cannot get more out of a thing than he has faith in it, he takes very little interest in school, staying at homo for the most trivial reasons. He starts to school and goes for a few months when the school is out, he is out of the school for about two-thirds of the year, comes in contact with things that do not raise his idea's or stimulate his ambition, gathers a head full of rubbish which displaces practically all the information he got during the short school term. When he returns to school he finds a differ ent teacher, but of about the same grade, is started about the same place in his book. Going to school this way is not business. There is no hope in it. But when there is a school taught by a competent teacher, which is long enough for him to finish a set of books in one year, he soon finds out that the school is a necessity for his proper preparation for life, he is made to feel the thrill of progress, ambition is born, he has had a soul awakening. “The school is the State’s greatest institution set aside and devoted to the grand work of training her chil dren, and it matters not how superior their natural endowment may be, the character of training which they re ceive cannot be any better than are the schools. It is in the common schools that- the basis of this work must be done, for the great number of children it cannot be done else where. It is in the plain school of the people that a child is revealed to himself and is made conscious of the power with which God has endowed him; it is there that he will learn the lesson of human responsibility, and the obligation resting on him to use his lipwers intelligently for his own good, for the good of society, and for the honor of God. For this reason the common school is the richest jewel that glitters in the diaden) of a na tion’s glory. “The school is but a mockery which fails to impress upon its pupils the great truth that their endowments are the talents which God has com mitted to them, and that their first duty is to deve’op them to the utmost, and that a failure to do so is the greatest sin that can be committed. “Parents, what did 'God give you these beautiful children for? Did He give them.to you that they might be your slaves? Do you regard your children just as you do your beasts of burden? When your final accounting time shall have come, what matters it if you may have a few dollars, saved up, about which your children in all probability will contend in the courts and brothers and sisters be es tranged from each other? Or did Ho give them to you to satisfy their ev ery animal appetite, that they might eat, sleep, drink, breathe, die, and be forgotten, just as the insects of yes terday? Certainly God gave you these beautiful children for higher purposes than these. What does cfar experience and observation teach us that a child might be? Let us, as did the Savior on one occasion, take a lit tle child and place it in our midst; what can this pure work of God be come? We know that if we deal with it as God would have us, if we make it obedient to authority at home, and send it to a school where the teachter understands those laws that must be observed in the process of develop ment of the child, and keep it away from the contaminating things of life, the result is a useful, productive, God fearing citizen; but if we let it grow up like a colt on the waste, pay no at tention, to it at home, but permit it to come in contact wih everyhing low and vile, do not provide for its proper education, pay no attention to what it thinks about or what it does, and give it no systematic training, it will, as effect- follows cause, become a slothful, vicious man—a shame to its parents, an expense to the State and a dishonor to God. “It is not claimed that our schools, as organized and conducted, are equipped to do this work, even to the extent to which they go. We can never hope for our schools to do their great work until thinking Mississippi takes hold of the question, until the school is dignified in the eyes of all. Just as long as a great part of our people subordinate the school to ev ery other convenience, just so long will our people do the world's drudg ery. If we all agree that the train ing of the people is a condition prec edent to the proper development of the State, and that the common school is the place for the beginning of this training, then does it not fol low that in practice the school, should be first? Should we not be more careful about sending, our children to school regularly, in providing better i schooihouses, to secure stronger teachers; have longer terms, and, in [ general, subordinate other things to the school? We send our children to school and stop them to suit every thing else; start, stop, and divide the school to suit our convenience in all other matters; levy taxes for every thing e’se before we do for schools, when unquestionably education is the best and most far-reaching return for their payment; elect teachers because they are poor, or because they are kindred, or related to some frtfmd, political or otherwise; complain more about the conduct of the school than we exert energy and endeavor to sup pHy the means to renovate the school house. In fact, all other duties must be performed and other expenses paid, and other things must be ar ranged, then if there are any re • sources left w« aply them to the school. “Certainly, looking at the matter from the standpoint of vital State pol icy, the subject matter of better schools is of the highest considera tion, and should receive our best thought and first self-denial and ex penditure of time and means. “Very few contests come up to the State Board of Education from dis tricts where there is a comfortable and well kept school house and where school Is maintained fftr a full session with a good average attendance. The citizens of such neighborhoods take an Interest In their schools and re gard them as a medium for the edu cation of their children and not mere ly as furnishing an opportunity for constant factional differences and contests. “Surely, God gave us our children that we should briBg them up in the way that will enable them to give td society their best possible service and be the greatest honor to Him. It is true that this holy work requires the service, sacrifice and self-denial of the parents, but in doing it they become truly ennobled. Of course, it will cost effort and some means to rear and properly train children, but is there any other prize of life' worth as much as a child well prepared for the duties and responsibilities of thiB life and fitted for the life eternal? “Parents, let us consider the pre cious children that God has loaned to us as our talents, and when He. comes again, let us, not like the sloth ful servant of old, bring them to Him undeveloped, but give them back to Him with all their powers for good infinitely multiplied.” * * • Some newspaper in the State has of fered as a motto for the Cotton Plant ers’ Association the saying of Col. Jo Slack, “lengthen your corn rows and shorten the store account.” This is a very good motto and one that has been adopted, in part, by a large ma pority of the farmers of the State There has been a shortening of store accounts for some time, and the cred it business has been reduced to a minimum. With the adoption of the first part, which is now being put in force, better times than ever are ahead for the good people of Missis sippi. The prosperous years just past are likely to be repeated with a greater degree of prosperity. • * * Indianola is another town that has achieved wonders during the past year in rebuilding after a series of destructive fires. After each confla gration and ^he attendant large losr of property the people have begun rc building before the ruins had ceased to smoke, and the prediction is that in a short time Indianola wjll be larger and much better than ever be fore. Blessings frequently come ii disguise, and more especially when backed up by a live and progressive citizenship. * * * , The State experiment farm at Holly Springs is reported in good condition for the first year, especially when the nature of the land used is taken into consideration. Manager Wi’son has demonstrated to the farmers of thai section something already of what can be done with a poor hill farm un der the right management. The sta tion' will be worth thousands of dol lars to that section of the State and Marshall county is to be congratu alted upon securing its location. . The wonderful growth of Mississlp pi cities and towns in general is re flected in the advancement of Gulf port. As an indication of what has been accomplished there since 1900 the following figures showing the pos tal receipts for each year is pretty conclusive evidence that the growth of that city ras been phenomenal: Year end’g March 31, 1900. :$ 2,563.92 Year end’g March 31, 1091.. 3,450.63 Year end’g March 31, 1902.. 4,599.80 Year end’g March 31, 1903.. 8,118.64 Year end’g March 31, 1904.. 13,655.53 Year end’g March 31, 1905.. 17,407.27 This shows an increase of seven fold in five years, which is indeed a highly creditable showing for Missis sippi’s greatest deep water port. • * * Captain Jones, of the Gulf & Ship Island road strenuously denies the connection with the lumber syndicate attributed to him by the newspapers. Ho asserts that he nor his road has any connection- whatever with the Goodyear syndicate, or any other syn dicate which may be attempting .to control the lumber output of Missis sippi. The manner in which Captain Jones handles the subject caries con viction that he is in earnest about what he says. It should be a source of gratification to the friends of Cap tain Jones, and they are legion, to know that he is in no way connected with tho scheme proposed and being put in operation. Nothing would more seriously cripple the timber and lumber business of the State than the successful termination of this pro ject. • • * Hecry Bobbitt, of Velma, Yallo Starkville recently voted to issue $8,000 in bonds for the purpose of en larging and extending the water plant to take in new territory which has grown up since the plant was in stalled. The vote stood exactly at two-thirds of those qualified, hence was not nearly unanimous. It is grtaifying to know, however, that there were enough citizens who de sired to see the improvements to put them through. * * * busha county, sold a home-raised colt last week for $200. Then there are a number of tenderfeets who say that you cannot raise as good stock in Mis sissippi as anywhere in the world. His Wife Henpecked Him. Senator Gorman was talking about a statesman whose great talents are coupled with an unusual mildness and gentleness of disposition. “Poor fellow,” said Senator Gor man. “He lets himself, perhaps, he imposed upon. Tils wife henpecks him. But he told me once that he would rather be henpecked any time than have "a row and cause pain. Then he told me how, when he was governor, he had a page boy, a little, fat page boy in a tight blue suit with brass buttons. One day the page boy committted some crime—stole postage stamps, kicked the cook or something of that kind—and the governor, in his gentle way, set out to give him a lit tle religious admonition. “ ‘Wiiie,’ he said, ‘don’t you know, Willie Pitcoe, that there is a higher power always watching us?’ “‘Yes, sir,’ said the pag' “ ‘Who is it, wretched boy.’ the gov ernor went on, ‘who sees and hears all we do, and before whom even 1 am as x crushed worm?’ *■ ‘The missus, sir,’ said WiHie.” A Domestic Picture. Wife (much excited)—I gave her a piece of my mind. 'Husband (sotto voice)—I should think, Maria, taking into considera tion the mind you had to start on— ; and the number of pieces you have given away— Wife (catching the last part of his remark)—What’s that you are saying about my mind, John— Husbapd—My love, I—er—only said that—er—rf you didn’t quit being so generous that soon we—er—would not have any left for ourselves. That was all I said, Maria! FAMOUS ATHLETES 'Kg PE Mi -NA As a Spring Tonic to Get the System In Good Shape. **1 advise all Athletes •who are about to go in training to try a bottle of *Pc-ru-na/* -J. W. Glenister. John Glenister, Champion Swimmer and Only Athlete to Successfully Swim Through the Michigan Whirlpool Rapids. PE-RU-NA to novates, Regulates, Restores a System Depleted By Catarrh. John W. Glenister, of Providence, R. [., champion long distance swimmer of America, has performed notable feats in this country and England. He has used Peruna as a tonic and gives his opinion of it in the following letter: i New York. The Peruna Medicine Company, • Columbus, Ohio: Gentlemen—“This spring for the first time I have taken two bottles of Peruna, and, as it has done me a great deal of good, I feel as if I ought to say a good word for its worth. “During the springtime for the last few years, I have taken several \ kinds of spring tonics, and have ; never received any benefit what ever. This year, through the ad vice of a friend, l have tried Peruna and It has given satisfaction. 1 “ / advise ali athletes who are . about to go In training to try a bot tle, for It certainly gets the system ! In good shape." Yours truly, |JOHN W. OLENISTER. ATnLETES realize the importance ^ .of keeping in good bodily trim. The digestion must be good, the cir culation perfect, sleep regular and enough of it. If the slightest catarrhal condition of lungs or stomach is allowed to remain, neither digestion nor sleep will be strength-sustaining. Those who lead very active lives, like athletes, with good muscular de velopment, find the spring months especially trying. Athletes everywhere praise Peruna because they, of all men, appreciate the value of a tonic that dispels physi cal depression. The vocation of some men may al low them to endure the depressing feelings Incident to spring weather, but the athlete must never allow him self to get “ under the weather. ” He must keep in the “ pink of condi tion” all the time. In order to do this he must avail himself of a spring tonic upon which he can rely. Therefore athletes are especially friendly toward Peruna. Peruna never falls them. Let Common Sense Decide Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed to dust, germs and insects, passing through many hands (some of them not over-clean), “blended,” you don’t know how or by whom, is fit for your use ? Of course you don't. But LION COFFEE Is another story. The green berries, selected by keen fudges at the plantation, are sictlHnlly roasted at our fac tories, where precautions yon would not dream of are taken to secure perfect cleanliness, flavor, strength and uniformity. From the time the coffee leaves the factory no hand touches it till it is opened in your kitchen. This ♦*»“ made LION COFFEE the LEADER OP ALL PACKAGE COFFEES. Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE daily. There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and increas ing popularity. “Quality survives all opposition.” (Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package.) (Save your Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. TbeFirstStep TWICE AS MANY GOOD REASONS AS YOU EXPECTED when the baby first came why you should watch the “little ail ments. Latte things grow to big things in the baby's life. All ■ M&Scr4isAff«5iai k“pi”<, “A DrMcGee's Baby Elixir It keeps the stoir ach and ^ Dowels right. Takes all the 5 danger away from teething ^ time. Makes LEAN babies fat and SICK babies well. Pleasant to take. Good for delicate women with sick stomachs. 25 cents and 50 cents bottle at your drug gists. Avoid all substitutes. L Mayfield Medicine Manufacturing Co., ^ (Not Incorporated) IT.LOClf, MO, \ DE LAVAL DREAM SEPARATORS Save SIO.- Per Cow EVERY YEAR OF USE Over All Gravity Getting Gystems And S3, to S5. Per Cow Over Ail imitatlngSeparators, Now is the time to make this most important and profitable of dairy farm investments. Send at once for new 1806 catalogue and name of nearest agent. The De Laval Separator Co. *tndotpt» & Canal Sts. i 74 Cortland! St root ' CHICAGO I NEW YORK i jJJMf 8 W ANTED to present a plan where aUiinad b, S80.00 bora Pen»tu»lW,ur»uc« on loine bualnev*. or office em-cta; Ma.00 pros tori eat'b m<ot. 8