.Post. SECTION TWO PAGES 9 to 16 BALEIGH. N. C. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1904 No. 75 - J -it- JOLHj XV 1L I y MJSM . it ii ii-ii i f j ri i4 ii f iv-ii'ii i-vxi ri :. v nnrnm i V. WILLIAM ESIDENT HROR 'S GIFT jjiifess Delivered at the Unveiling of the Statu of Frederick the Great in Washington in Response to the German Am bassador's Speech DclivereJ In Washington, November 19, 1904 kinship with your own: a people ow ing much to Germany; a people which, I though with a national history far shorter than that of your people, nev ertheless, like your people, is proud or the gTeat deeds of its past, and is con fident in the majesty of its future I most earnestly pray that in the com j ingr years these two great nations shall i move on toward their several destinies knit together by ties of the heartiest friendship and good will. ,.r MT.A APOR: Through you X' V - K half of the people of the ;.a:, to thank His Majesty, 7.',.., r."np-?ror, and the people ,' v the sift to the nation .'V j- iv- just delivered to me. .'. ai-preciation of the l-.-'-v' ri-cr.-.I v. hich it typifies for ; XJ . ; . t this Republic both on ; Eiv.poror and on the iVr'man people. I accept us the statue of one of we feel that we have the right to be legitimately proud, and. yet "our na tionality is still in the formative per iod. Nearly three centuries have elapsed since the landing of the En glish at Jamestown marked the begin ning of what has since grown into the United States. During these three centuries streams of newcomers from many different cuontries abroad have In each genera tion contributed to swell the Increase routes;, soldiers of all j of our people. Soon after the English :ate ri therefore pecunarty appro fcr plains in this War College, v-n- it as the statue of a 2Teat settled In Virginia and New England, the Hollander settled at the mouth of the Hudson and the Swede at the a- w:; ?e life was devoted to the j mouth of t'ue Delaware. Even In 'cos l -vice of a great people, and whose onial days the German element had Cis h;-. ?toned the approach of the become very. strong among our people .v w iu-r. a united Germany should in various parts of this . country; the -a into bring. foothills of the Alleghanies; French 75 a soldier. Frederick the Great j foothills of the Alieghenies; French very, very small group Huguenots were numerous. Bv the 1 includes Alexander, Caesar and time of the Declaration of Indrpend- r.r.iba! in antiquity, ana r apoieon, j ence that process of fusion which has gone on ever - sinc was well under way. From the beginning of our na tional history men of German origin or German parentage played a dis tinguished part In the affairs both of peace and of war. Jn the Revolution ary war one of the leading generals was Muhlenburg,. an American of German descent, fust as among the soldiers from a who came to aia :tt. day established the mighty Ger- us one of the n... . prominent was the -in Empire as among the foremost of ? German, Steuben. Muhlenburg was rorld powers. We receive this girt at the hands of the present Em rrtcr, hirr.self a man who has mark er added to the luster of his great ruse and his great nation, a man who in mat '-dern times. He belonged to the an-i-t and illustrious house of Hohcn :ern. whkh after playing a strong virile rart in the middle ages, and -:;r producing some men, like the -eat Eitotor, who were among the ,-v?t famous princes 01 xneir time, the royal house of Prussia funded :to centuries a go and at last In our the first speaker of the House of Rep resentatives; and the battle which in the Revolution saved the valleys of the Mohawk to the American cause was foiight under the lead of the Ger- ted his life to the welfare of man, Herkimer. As all the different and who, while keeping -racss hers tsnd rapidly ,, to -fuse to-. gether, it is rarely possible after one or two generations to draw a sharp' line between the various elements; but there Is no student of our national conditkms whp has failed to appreci- r?l ready to defend the rights of trf people, has also made It evident it r:r.;hatic fashion that he and th?y tor? peace and friendship with the 3".l.e: nations of the earth. It is r.ot my purpose here to discuss ate what an available element in our v. lergth the career of the mighty composite stock the German Is. Here King and mighty general whose stat- on this platform," Mr. Ambassador, ti v have just received. In all his- among those present to-day are many t rr no other great commander save, men partly or wholly of German blood r y Hannibal fought so long against and among the officers of the army r: h terrible odds, and while Hannibal an(j navy who have listened to you trally failed. Frederick finally tri- and who now join with me in greeting cr ph-d. In almost every battle he you there are many Whose fathers or '.r:zrx gsrair.st grreat odds, and he al- grandfathers were born in Germany, sr. always wnn the victory. When and not a few who themselves first r he rose to an even greater saw the lisht there. i:im trari wne victorious, rne Each nation has its allotted tasks to rr-rr.ry of the seven years' war will ao; each nation has its peculiar4diffl- l--t a lor.j a? their lives in mankind culties to encounter; and as the peo- i. ve of heroism, and its operations -pies of the world tend to become more t:- stu-iied to the minutest detail closely knit together alike for gooa -s I s; r.s the world sees a soldier aruj fOF evil, it becomes ever more im- ' r ry ff tht name, it is difficult to portant to all that each should pros- whether to admire most the vie- per; for the prosperity of one is nor- ' -3 of Leuthen and Prague, Ross- rnally not a sign of menace, but a fe:h and Zorndorf, or the heart-break- gjn of hope for the rest. Here on this campaigns after Ku'nersdorf, whenCOntinent where-it is absolutely es- :w ?r't King.- after having been sential that the different peoples com- ""'n to th" ground by the banded m& to our shores should not remain v Luror-e. yet rose again and separate but should, fuse into one, our ENGLAND'S LATITUDE " Few People Realize How Far North It Is (Birmingham Xews.j "Few people realize how far north Englaj i really Is, although the subject is one of frequent discussion," said the old geographer. "For example the lati tude of London is so high that there is no city on this continent sufficiently In habited to compare with it. The farth est point of New Foundland or the low est end of Hudson Bay are points about on the same parallel. The uppermost point of Scotland is on a4line with the lower end of Greenland, the land of 'icy mountain fame. How many think of Boston being of the same latitude as Rome, Italy, or New York on a line with Madrid, Spain. Birmingham's lat itude is the same as that ot the Suez canal, of Morocco, Algiers, and the up per part of the Sahara desert, but there isn't one man in a hundred who thinks about it in this light. "Of course the reason for England's temperate climate is due to the Gulf stream, which flows up the Atlantic coast, and strikes across the ocean from New Foundland. Passenger vessels al ways take this upper course in going to Europe to acquire the advantage of its current. Without this stream Eur ope, as we now know it, would be unin habitable on account of the severely cold weather. I recall once reading a story of a fictitious war with England, in which some genius drew off the waters of the Great Lakes into the Mis sissippi channel, by way of a canal, thus forcing the Gulf stream south, and freezing up the British Isles. "A visitor to England would never im agine its great latitude, for the climate compares very well with that of New York state, for instance. Porhaps the most striking difference, and one which gives an excellent Idea of the compara tive closeness to the arctic circle, is the length of the twilights. I have been in Glasgow when the gloaming lasted un til -after 11 o'clock ri night. .... Of course street lights were necessary long before this, but there was a perceptible twi light, as It Is in' our own summer, a half hour after the sun has gone down. In the winter time, the nigats of course, are correspondingly long." Petroleum for use in consecration of ores or metals, when brought in by miners or -mining companies for their own concentrating establishments may be imported free of duty Into Canada, NOVEL PHASE OF COLIR QUESTION How an Angry Traveler Re sented being Tagged (Julius Chambers in Brooklyn Eagle.) An entirely novel phase of the "color question" was presented to me on Sat urday. I entered the train at the Cam den station, Baltimore, to go to An napolis. As on most Southern roads, the car was divided' into two sections labelled White" and "Colored". The train which consisted of two cars, was crowded. I could find only one seat, and in it was an elderly man, with a large grip, sack at his side. ' I asked him if-1 might share the seat, and he exclaimed: . . 'Certainly you may; and I must apo logize for keeping the seat; but I am so infernally angry that I cannot be decent to anybody.", "What has annoyed you?" I asked with some hesitation. "Enough to make any man mad!" was tha answer. "A cabman, perhaps?" I suggested. "Not on your life. 'I took a car; but do you see this big sign over my head?" He wouldn't even dare to turn his eyes upward, and he knew nothing about the "colored" playcard at the other end of the same car. Directly above him tacked to the side of the car, was a yellow card on which was the word "White" In let ters three Inches tall. I was about to explain, when he burst out: "Yes, I know what it says! It seems to be necessary down here to be label led 'white.' I resent it sir. Now I sup pose you are a Southern man. I want to say to you that I am 72 years old, and a Democrat who never split a ticket. But, sir, I do not stand for anything like this, and if it wern't for the fact that I am going to Annapolis to see my grandson, who is in the Academy, I'd tear that cursed poster down and throw it out the window. I come from Indiana, sir, where a white man doesn't have to be tagged! We mayn't have so many Democrats there as we thought we had a week ago; but sir. we do not' have to wear labels, as you Southern -people do, In order to be assured that we are 'white I am mighty sore about this. It's no wonder the colored . people resent this sort of thing. They feel about it , no doubt Just as I do. k I've got to be a Democrat can't tA.ariy thing. else; but I'm - not a Southern Democrat if I've ( t to be labelled 'white' when ever L ride in the cars. No sir-ee!" This was not all the words the sen sitive Indiana man used. I was very much impressed with this entirely new aspect of the race question. knowledge, many market gardners limit themselves exclusively to manure obtained from city stables, and stable manure, let it be never so good, it is not a proper balanced fertilizer for vegetables and cannot bring best re- I suits. A good general fertilizer for ! all garden vegetables would be: Acid phosphate...... 150 to 225 pounds 'sulphate of potash.... 250 to 375 pounds Nitrate of Soda 150 to 225 pounds Mix the phosphate and potash and apply previous to planting; apply the nitrate beside and around the plants after crop is up. If the grounds Is well supplied with humus above amounts may be doubled or troubled with manifest advantage. In all cases, we most decidedly pre fer to apply broadcast and by thor ough preparation, thoroughly incorpo rate the fertilizer with the soil. This done, when drouth sets In whenever the application was heaviest there the crop will be the greenest, let the crop b what it mav. As muriate of potash-and cottonseed meal are prepared by some, we sojourn the following mixture: Acid phosphate 700 pounds Nitrate of Soda.... 300 pounds Cotton-seed meal .750 pounds Muriate of Potash ..250 pounds Mix for one ton and apply from 1,000 to 2,000 pounds per acre. For potatoes, leave out 150 pounds nitrate of soda and add 150 pounds more of the mu riate. Correspondence Rural World. Rambling by Rail Prom Raleigh to Birmingham Story of Scenes and Incidents Along the Way Glimpse at the St. Louis Show The . Beauties of the Land scape Viewed From Pullman Windows ! "They say 'love makes the world go round,' " remarked the impecunious lover. j "Yea," said his bride-to-be. ' "But I don't see how love is going to make my salary go round." Phil adelphia Press. The Boss I'm afraid you are not qualified for the position; . you don't know anything about my business. The Applicant Don't I, though? I keep company with your typewriter. Chicago Journal. Woman of the House You're not one of these labor agitators, are you? Goodman Gonrong (with his moUth full of pie) No, ma'am. I'm a rest agitator. Chicago Tribune. AGRICULTURAL TALK V.- -t :V 1- .1 , 1 " ar. exhibition of -skill, tenacity, en- unceasing effort is to strive to keep jnng sucn as naa never an(j profit by the gooa tnai eaua ;f n seen united in one person, brings to our shores, and at the same . y Gristed triumph from defeat, time to uo away with all racial and V't or.;-.- rr.ust the military scholar al- religious animosities among the vari- p'-s tin: to the career of Frederick Qus stocks. In 'both efforts we have h 0 f, r lesson? in strategy and mt with an astonishing measure of r.st only must the military ad- 'success. As the years go by it be- , 7 a or allVaJ's turn to his career comes not harder but easier to live in r :.s in org-anizing success; not pce and good will among ourselves; r'J ll tlie lover of heroism read j firmly believe that it will also T - 'f hi? jr.Uhty feats as long become not harder. but easier to dwell ' r ir ; f " for heroic deeds; in peace and friendship with the other ;; ; t;..--?-. ho ,,re not attracted nations of the earth. A young people, I;, v ': '" ' tho soldier must yet, a people of composite stock, we have the greatness of man, kinship with many different nations. vire the lessons taught but wa are identical with none of 1 resolution, his in- them; and are- developing a separate of purpose, his far- national stock as we have already de- .' lofty ijossibilities, veloped a separate national life. We :h;-r, unyielding deter- have in our veins the blood of the En wing the path he had ciShman and the Irishman, the Ger-. if eminently fitting and the Frenchman, the .Scotch- of this iron soldier, man and tne Dutchman, the Scandina- r of men, should find vian, the Italian, the Magyar, the Fin, ; War College; for when lhe Slav, so that to each of the great -a and soldierly heroism powers of the old world we can claim -rt point of achievement a more or less distant klnFh.-p by horr, thoy are displayed blood; and to each strain of blood we ' r.ot mere'y to the na- ovve some peculiar quality in our ia- ; 1 ho sprarg. but to ail tlonal life or nation 1 ch-r c er. s of shnwinr. and there- SUCh is the case it Is nat iral ih ;t w. ' ' appreciating the virile should have a peculiar fueling or near- i virtue s which alone ncss to each of many p-op e a, r-vjs r-. those dr-ad Ftrurg'e the water. We most "esme-tly wsn i at iast had to the ar- .r only to 'vV unbroken our frlsna- -rrrs. sMp for each, but so far as we con. r ba-s-dor in accerfnT without giving offense by n appe r- rv n us to-lay through alKe of meddling, to seek to bring Oerman Emperor. I ac- about a better understanding ana a r r,lv because it is the broader spirit of fair dealing and toi- -5?hty and terrible sol- eration among all nations. it n " lt it 'as a symbol or bcen my great pleasure, Mr. Amtoassa- friendfrhip and good will dor. in pursuance of tnis ?V u JC it Ii.. ia with you the first steps jS-r e American m the negotiation of ttreaty of " - aihv 5 ti H 1111 peoples. There is lv arbitration between - k'ood between the two na- the United States. . -i 'h- united States are of m closing, let me , thank you and !m our veins runs the through you the German eror-ind ' - 'I the peoples of mid- the German people, for this l., western Europe . which I accept in the name of theAmj hv u a history of which ' erican people; a peop-e claiming blood Manurlal Value of Wood Ashes ! A large per cent of our farmers live on the prairies and have not the slightest concern in the value of wood ashes. Quite a per cent, however live in sections of the country where wood is the only fuel, and still others where large amounts of wood are burned in log piles and the ashes go to waste. It may be worth while to say something on the value of wood ashes. Like most other products, they vary greatly, the ashes of hard wood be ing worth much more than those of soft wood, and all of them vary to some extent with the manner in which they .are burned, whether in fireplaces, in grates, or in the open air. The sub ject has not been very fully investiga ted, but so far as investigations have , been made they show that the ashes of beech and hard maple, and to these we presume might be added oak and hickory, have a value of about 50 cents ner hundred pounds, or $10 per ton, computed on the current price of the potash and phosphoric acid which they j contain. Exchange. pect of consumers for agriculture. The subject of inoculating soil with nitrogen-gathering bacteria went the rounds of the farm press some time ago, so.lt is by no means a new one to those who keep posted in this line of literature. Lately, however, other pa pers and magazines have given space to this important discovery and It has : taken a new start. Many, who, have perhaps, read and forgotten all about it, are now wondering and inquiring what this new discovery might be." It is well worth investigating, as it bids fair to become a very potent factor in the agriculture of the future. That farmers are capable of directing such vital forces as this as well and suc cessfully as they would guide the plow handles has been of Inestimable val ue In turning the attention of the pub lic towards the farm. Exchange. Application of Stable Manure In other series of experiments ordin ary open yard manure is used on the corn and wheat crops in a five-year ro tation of corn, oats, wheat, clover and timothy, the manure being applied to one plot at the rate of eight tons to the acre for each application, or six teen tons in five years, and to another plot in half that quantity. This test has been running for nine years, and the result is that the larger applica tion has brought increase of crop to the value of $1.35 for each ton of man ure, and the smaller one at the rate of $1.83. This test has been duplicated in several ways, and the results all agree in showing conclusively that where manure is scarce or expensive it is better economy to spread it over as much land as possible. This test further shows the necessity for thor ough distribution of the manure of the best results are to be obtained.- In spreading manure by hand It is prac tically impossible to so distribute it that there will not be greater inequal ities than that shown by the four-ton rates above r oned. Our first man ure spreader' ' the "experiment sta tion was bought for the purpose of se curing in our comparative tests a more uniform ' distribution of the manure than we were able to obtain by other means. We were accustomed to hand ling large quantities of manure, and believed that with a gang of five men and two or three teams we could move the manure more cheaply than with the spreader. To our surprise, we found that this is not the case, but that with the spreader we distribute the manure more uniformaly, and at least quite as cheaply as can be done in the old way. One of the advantages of the manure spreader is that It is always ready for work, and thus man ure will 'often be gotten out at the proper time, whereas it would be neg lected if a wagon had to be prepared to haul it. Everything considered, the manure spreader is indespensible. Charles E. Thorne, Ohio Experiment Station. The Vineyard tr- E--t V. St I -- -"..ran Big Yie'eer It is the large yields that give the most profit, and it is the specialty far mer who gets them. When a farmer ?ives his entire attention to the pro luction of a single crop, whether It be grain, fruit, cattle or poultry, he is better prepared to and does give bet ter care and more thought to this spec ial crop. It costs very little more to double the yield of a crop of grain or fruit, and the resultant benefits of much better quality, bringing the best market price to the specialist. There Is one objection to the method of farm ing. In an adverse year the specialist is liable to lose his entire crop, if It should happen to be grain or. fruit. But two unfavorable years rarely come In succession, and the wise far mer always has some other crop as re source in case of failure.Exchange. Foreign Grain Trade One of the most surprising occur rences in the history of the foreign gruin trade has been the heavy de crease in supplies from the United States since the 1903 harvest and the additional fact that this harvest pro- ; duced no serious results in the world's markets. England is the largest im porter of breadstuff s in the wond, and the United "States has been for years her chief source of supply, sending over half the wheat and three-fourths of the flour for the British people Last year our percentage , of wheat dropped from 54 to 27 per cent and up to the present date this season his decline has taken art additional mo mentum. We are now sending only about ten per cent of the total Imports. The deficit has been made up by Ar gentina, British India, Canada and the Australian even the latter country, in spite of its remoteness, having sent more than ourselves. It predicted that j the supplies from Hussla will this year exceed those from the United States. Exchange. Question of Soil The question of soil inocculatlop has done a great deal to increase the pros- . A Balanced Fertilizer ' We have this much to say about pot ash for the reason that to our certain It is a curious fact that a seedling grape is seldom of the same type as the grape which produces the seed from which it is grown. A dozen seeds from the same grape, if planted, will probably produce as many different kinds of fruit, ranging all the way from white to deep purple. More than likely, all of them will be worthless, either for eating or wine making. Viti culturists declare that if they get one valuable type from ' a thousand seed lings the?- are quite satisfied. When a good type is developed it is propagated by cuttings, which always remain true to the parent type. It was by taking advantage of this fact that the pres ent great varieties of the American grapes have been developed. Ex chanse. This is the time of the year when hundreds of tons of grapes are being pressed Into wine throughout the country. It is a fact, not generally known that, next to California, New York is the greatest grape growing State in- the Union, and so far as quality is concerned, it is claimed that the Eastern products is superior. Quantities of wine are annually pro duced in California and much of it is of high grade, but in the trade as a rule, the California product Is regard ed as cheaper and less meritorious whether this be due to lack of capital or to impatience to put the wine on the market before it is properly matured. Some idea of the relative ( quality of the output of the two States can be gained from the statistics as to quantity and value. New York produces every year about 500,000 gallons of wine, and California some 2,000,000 gallons, and yet the value of the Eastern output is $3,000,000, while that of California, with a quantity four times as great, is only $5,000,000. The Dairy Making Butter at Home The Illinois State Buttermakers' As sociation, organized by farniers' wives (Continued on Page Ten.) . Birmingham, Ala.. Nov. 18. To the Editor: Our little party left Raleigh on the 10th. Our route was over the Southern via Asheville, N. C Knoxville, Tenn., at which place we tarried a sufficient length of time to stroll about and to some extent In spect that prosperous town. The country between Knoxville and Lexington, Ky., is hilly, the little val leys between the numerous hills hav ing the appearance - of having been well cultivated, but shorn of its green vegetation which must have made them beautiful earlier in the season. This . was made up, however, by the autumnal tints of the forests on the hillsides. Nowhere, except in the famed' White Mountain section, have I seen such an exhibition of color. Ev ery variety of brown from the softest sepias, of the many varieties of oak, to the darkest of brown tints of the gums. The bright yellows of the hick ory intermingled with the scarlets or the maple, the gray moss covering the rocks and ledges, interspersed here and there and everywhere with Troad patches of beautiful pine green, pres ent a thousand scenes worthy the brush of the finest landscape painter. I heartily commend this route to young gentlemen who are traveling with their sweethearts, not only on account of the great beauty of the country, but for another season. There are no less than twenty-seven nice, dark (very dark) tunnels be tween Knoxville and Lexington, each affording ample time . in 'which to "steal a kiss and allow the sweetheart to recover her poise." It was dark when we reached Lex ington, so that save getting a very nice supper at Seelbach's in . Louis ville, wo saw none of the glories of the state famous for Its beautiful women, brilliant men and strong bev erages. Arrived at St. Louis - at 7 ; 30 a. m- Saturday morning, as advertised, our train being "on tlmeV. and after securing a habitation, which we. ac complished without any great loss of time, we took our way to the expo sition grounds. We , made the trip around the grounds first, and then visited the varied industries and strolled up the Pike. The weather was so Intolerably cold, however, that we did not "enjoy ourselves" to any superlative extent. So much has been said and written about the 'fair that I am sure nothing I can say will bo of Interest to you. Monday afternoon we were assigned quarters for our trip to Mexico. Through the kindness and friendship of Mr; KIrkpatrick, tho madame and I were assigned a state room, so we shall make the journey under very favorable circumstances. Assembled at. our train we met many old and valued friends whose cordial j greetings warmed our hearts an3 ' made us feel that life is worth living. Left St. Louis at 5 p. m., reaching this busy town at 8:30 Tuesday morn ing. Our convention met at 11 a .m. Tha mayor in a nice speech tendered us a welcome and the freedom of the city. After the reply to the address of wel come and a speech from the Presi dent of the Association the convention adjourned, with notice that at 3 p. m. cars would b in waiting to take ,us to Ensley, to visit the steel furnaces and rolling mills, where we saw the pro cess of converting iron into steel and rolling the steel into rails. The pre- ( cess is most interesting and im-; pressive. The iron is put into large- mortar shaped furnace ; swung on a trunnion exactly like a mli tary or gun mortar. The coke, dolomite and such other necessary ingredients , are added, which being ignited, is sub jected to a powerful blast. At first dense black smoke rolls out of the mouth of the furnace, gradually getting less In quantity and lighter in color un-1 til the . smoke disappears and a bright flame shoots, up. As the heat Is in creased, sparks of molten metal appear, and shortly, under the intense heat, 2,800 to 3,000 degrees, and the increased force of the blast, a wonderful and brilliant pyrotechnic display is given. If you can imagine a huge willow tree, with trunk of flame, and forks and limbs, and- drooping twigs of minute sparks, varying in color from dull red to the brilliancy of an electric spark of molten metal, changing in form every instant, you have some idea of the spec tacle presented. This great heat and blast is supposed to burn and force out all the impurities from the iron, the steel, being heavier.remains in the fur nace. It is then put into another fur face and subjected to a similar process, when manganese (and other substances, if necessary) is added to give the steel tensile strength and also stiffness. These second furnaces, when the heated metal is ready, are lifted bodily by Im mense moving cranes and the molten mass is drawn off from "the bottom into moulds. These moulds are made of some .sort of fire proof clay, j& re about four feet high and 12 or 14 inches square on the inside open at both ends. They stand on end on cars having heat proof floors (small platform cars). This is called "jacketing." After the steel cools the "jackets" are removed. This is done by hydraulic power, and takes an immense force. The force is applied to "the jacket or mould,' on the outside, to pull it off, and at the same' time pres sure Is applied to the end of the steel to push It out of the mould. This mass of steel is called an ingot, and Is taken to the heating oven, where it is heated to the proper degree for being rolled into rails. This process ; is most Inter esting but must be seen to be under stood. The superintendent tells me that no finer steel rails are mads In the world than are sent out from these works. It requires 15,000 coke ovens to supply the coke for the steel furnaces. He told me many things of interest, Il lustrating the difficulties to be met and overcome In a mammoth enterprise of this sort, but I can not devote too much time to this one branch. We passed a very pleasant and interesting afternoon at the plant. Wednesday morning the ladies of our party, . with as many gen tlemen as chose to go, were taken over the city by the various trolley lines. The trip was much enjoyed. There are many fine residences and some fine streets. In the afternoon a reception, by the "Country Club" from 3 to 7 gave all an opportunity to meet many of the ladies. and gentlemen of the city and to enjoy a spread of good things to eat and drink. Birmingham has had a phenomenal growth and . deserves mention as the "Iron City" of the south. Some of the statistics given by the mayor In his welcoming speech are fabulous almost, to-wit: The coal and Iron tonnage of the "Birmingham district" 1 equal to the entire wheat crop of the "west, ?nd during the past year was four times the tonnage of the entire cotton op of the" south. Birmingham has more than 75, 000 wage earners employed in mh,es and manufacturing concerns, who receive nearly $3,500,000 monthly. How is that for a pay roll for a town really but a score or so of years old? The Individ ual deposits in one bank alone are six millions. Birmingham has 106 miles of street railroads. In 1890 the population was 80,000; 'tis now 180,000. Many other interesting facts were given. I give the above because they are so surprising to me. There are other lines of manufac tories quite as important and more profitable, invested capital considered, than the steel works. This Is a city well worth visiting as an example off what can be done in the south.". We leave .this afternoon . for Montgomery. Will write you again from Houston or Sah Antonio, Tex. V - ' D. H. A. WHY IT IS EXPENSIVE Peculiar Conditions About New York Hartjor (From the Wall Street Journal.) The New York port and Its f acilitle differ from those of almost any, other port on the Atlantic or Gulf coast. At other ports the physical facilities are such as to make the transfer from boat to rail at the least cost. The railroads either own or are directly connected with shipping docks where transfers are made directly. The freight passes through very largely in unbroken con signments on through bills of lading, so that the functions of the port are little more than the physical transfer ot freight. New York, on the other hand, Is a. break bulk port, where ownership1 changes very largely, especially on west-bound freight. The ships Carry freight at berth rates Instead of In car go lots at cargo rates. Their tonnage is of a more diverse character, and the freight is assembled from different rail-v roads and from many points to the ship's side. There is not direct connec tion from the rail to the ship. This sys tem of assemblage is very expensive, requiring an immense fleet of harbor craft. These craft are barges having an average capacity of 250 tons. The largest is that of the New York Central, which, in the case of a few of Its boats, reaches a capacity of 600 tons. These barges are propelled by tugs. The har bor fleet of barges, perhaps, number 800! to 1.000. ,We find the mere cost of barge ser vice is about 25 ents per ton, By a fair estimate, the power to move these barges, costs for 'ttages, fuel, supplies. Interest and depreciation about 50 per cent, of the cost at the barges.-' This brings the cost pei ton up to 87 cents to 40 cents. If we dd the expense off second handling inoWental to this spe-" cial service, we have a -cost per ton off 10 cents more at the minimum. All told, the lighterage Impost amounts to about 45 to 50 cents par ton. This Is a direct charge against all tonnage hand led through New York harbor which has no offset at porta having direct rail and ship connections. ! Elderly Party Doitt you think au tomobiling a poor for mof exercise for young men? Miss Quickstep I don't know. It it seems to be good for "the arms Chicago Tribune. - . Dr. Jaques Bertillon, the famous chief of the statistical bureau of Paris has written a volume entitled "AJco holism and the Way to Fight It" Drink, he declares, is likely to prove the ruin of the French , race, unless something is done to ovweome. the habit. i ; i : ."