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V X 3 f GOV HOCH J tJUIXSfc PETER C.73I2ITCnARD BT JOHN 8. HARWOOD. boy with tears streaming- down his face, stood in A the streets of a little Georgia town nearly forty years ago, and with agonizing appeals and frantic ges- tures, tried to stop an angered, drlunk-e- n woman from beating her child Into Insensibility. The boy was Seaborn Wright. Today Seaborn Wright Is probably the best known prohibition leader in the United States ta could have had the Presi- dential nomination this year had ha but signified his willingness to make the race. He is generally credited in " - ! i U ' -- It . - Georgia, by prohibitionists and saloon iV.k ''H TWL'NTY' SALOONS IN TVvO OCKS s doing more than any men alike, with K't'tX "'! v aSV . I XN THE CENTER OF ISLINGTON KY ji' other man to put that state in the XN f dry" column; and throughout the. South he Is looked upon as being largely responsible for the spread In frequently his gubernatorial campaign on the Pro- Carmack, whose periods are that region of the present-da- y re- classi- as glowing as his thatch. " hibition issue. largely, he cannot be markable temperance wave that Is ex- . '""" u "' s as a temperance worker. Broward, Among the thousand of churchmen fied who are now systematically engaged In tending pretty much over the entire of Florida, who has said that he would temperance world, more especially In sign a state prohibition bill If one should championing the cause, of civilized but guidance of the anti-Saloo- n country and the North of Europe. ever be put up to him, is, likewise, In the under the this governors re- Legue. Rev. Dr. Washington Gladden was drunken V Hoke Smith class of as you may It the spectacle of the temperance enthusiasm. Florida, Is best known nationally. He. mother when sober, a charitable and gards recall, was responsible for the "tainted son, bv the way, has been one of Seaborn loving woman trying to kill her of endeavor. money" discussion that convulsed th lasting Wright's more recent fields years ago, fol- that gave Seaborn Wright his Hanly. Hoch. Glenn, earmark and country two or three impression against the sale of liquor, much lowing his denunciation of the accept- pro-.te- ct Prltchard are all men who deserve and from the day that he tried to climbing ance of a Rockefeller gift by the Con- now been credit for their pnrseverance in the child until he has which eventually brings a gregational church's foreign missions prohibition. In cause up that ladder is Anti-Salo- a fighter for its man into the public eye In a more or less body. Dr. Gladden one ef the he has spoken in every state In the can tell you League's Union. For Us advancement he has reputable manner. Pritohard years from actual experience what a printers Temperance Advocates. spent each year for many a newspaper office Titled large part of the income that he re- apprentice in a country "and does to earn the few dollars a week that Two famous champions abroad of CARMACK. from his 20.000 peach trees Ber-nadot- ceives ara placed in his weekly pay envelope: temperance wear titles Prince OF TENN other Georgia farm land and his law Carolina, received practice. And to further Its cause he ,4-- " i he, like Ansel of South of Sweden and the picturesque young man, t only a school education, and not entered politics when a The Civil War left Countess of Carlisle. has been a member of the Georgia F- any too much of that. Bernadotte, you may recall, is that century, CS- the Glenn fortunes impoverished and not legislature for a quarter of a marriage did son of the late King Oscar who for- ways she frequently has shop and a thorn in the flesh of the Cracker until several years after his against "demon rum." and both being her that long. Georgia "Bob" possess enough money at any one swore the Swedish throne and all assisted by their half dozen children, girls as her guests In one or the other politicians for as still won numerous in- country though vividly remembers his race for gov- his eloquence he has i time to make an appreciable jingle; rights thereto that he might wed the now all grown and full of their mother's of her three seats. But is curious to note picking for en- and the Counters view the ernor on the Pronlbitlon-Popull- st cases alnce. It rather deed, the law was mighty hard lady of his heart, Ebba Munck, a fiery enthusiasm for the work. The the Earl he has never taken a case except him until his neighbors began slowly to the cause world through widely different specta- ticket ten years ago. when he polled that :i to his own mother. Queen thusiasm of the Countess in as a lawyer for the defense. His law recognize his legal ability. 'oas her to do a cles, they get along famously together three-fourt- of the state's white vote, Sophia, when she finally realized that of temperance caused 1864. by negro practice and his peach groves and his Hoch was a printer in Kentucky, his on marrying as he number of rather unusual things, but and they have been married since being defeated the heaviest her son was bent 21 the bride registration known In the history of farms, by the way, have received from birth state. He emigrated to Kansas, took had planned, became his ardent advo- her most picturesque move by far was when the Earl was and the state. him but little personal attention during up a claim, and lived in a 12x14 shack un- cate before the king, gaining his her destruction, In cold blood, of the three years his junior. years. he has to type" caused him life-lon- g devotion to the cause Wright has attained his prominence the last two But then til his itching "stick consent to the marriage- just famous ancestral wine cellars of the For her years as a promoter of the "dry" doctrine not plenty of this world's dollars with I?IV. DP. HOWARD H to take a job with the little weekly news- oefore she placed herself In the hands earldom and their still more famous con- of prohibition the Countess two by everlasting keeping at it, which to hire competent help, and hto paper published In the town nearest to surgeons for a serious tents, down to very last drop. The ago was chosen president of the world's only his 32USSET.LL, em- of the court the Henry but also by his eloquence. It is to be peach crop this year was exceptionally his claim. In the course of time his operation. The queen was the only Earl, then but shortly come Into hia white rlbboners, succeeding Lady doubted whether the cause he cham- - fine. ployer became indebted $250 to Hoch for member of the groom's family at the title, and not then, as now, in the pro- Somerset, still an ardent temperance force- labor done. He couldn't pay Hoch, and camp, upon worker, but somewhat handicapped by pions can boast today of a more Anti-Salo- on League. meeting, of wedding festivities. hibition looked with horror ago be ad- Man Behind work by calling a union the offered to sell the paper to him for $1000. most pour into the advancing years. The political astute- ful speaker. A few weeks explaining liW object and Bernadotte, perhaps, is the ardent his wife's proposition to dressed, on their Invitation, the mem- H. Russell, organizer of and ministers and Hoch didn't have the money, but he today in the north ground the precious vintages In Castle ness of the Countess has been acknowl- Howard soliciting their aid. Some gave him the temperance advocate politicians as Glad- bers of the Louisiana legislature on his commit- bought out his boss, dismissed the start Of Europe, where, of late years, Howard's vaults; but his wife's desires edged by such great chairman of the headquarters held aiooi ior single-hand- ed countries subject. There was present desired assistance, others of employes and got out the paper gained is a strong-minde- d, stone and Balfour, and the helping hand favorite Anti-Saloo- n League, and as often the temperance movement has prevailed the Countess delegation tee of the various reasons. It was a struggle until he had saved sufficient In very agreeable person she has extended to numerous poor chil- also an personal forces in hopeless one, for a time but price. great headway, especially Finland. though from New Orleans, but before he had such one of the big a seemingly money to pay the paper's purchase not of an Ameri- and himself, that he might not dren and others of the slums bespeaks ar- and today the Marion-News-an- With an income that the Earl been speaking long Mr. Wrlrht had not the present temperance movement, the turn came at last, Hoch still runs this paper the multimillionaire, he still is most be present when the wanton act was her love for humanity and her philan- Anti-Saloo- n League power to be reck- gained can Eng- only the legislators but the rived at his present eminence by the is a through It he largely comfortably financially, and his committed, traveled to London and staid thropy. Altogether, she is one of with pretty much all over the coun- led to his first situated In- standing upon their chairs farm, a clerkship In a Government oned the state prominence that purse is continually being used to ad- there until he learned that his ancestors' land's most remarkable, versatile and de- try, as the objects of Its crusade know as governor. When he was women. and cheering for him l.ke a lot of cattle-herder- nomination also was no more. fluential arsenal, a 's saddle, a any rest of fre- vance the cause of prohibition. He priceless collection of wines lighted college boys. The last two better, perhaps, than of the struggling to pay for the paper he speeches on "this sub- About only matter that the Earl The Countess' two sons occupy seats schoolteacher's certificate, a country us. Russell decided to organize steadily 16 and 18 hours a writes and makes the among body's years he has delivered addresses all lawyer's Before quently worked ject, which now seems to possess him as and the Countess agree on Is that of in Parliament and are that over the South: not infrequently he has newspaper ditor's chair, a the league he and his family enjoyed all day for days at a stretch, and slept In the most earnest prohibition advocates. Of license, political defeat and the min- quite a few of thoroughly as did his old idea of a few prohibition, and on this head both are spoken night after night for consider- the material comforts and office. years ago of going to Africa as a mis- about equally radical, holding that strong the four daughters, two of whom are able stretches, and his audiences have istry. the more ordinary luxuries. For months Carmack, of the famed flaming poll, who physical single. Lady Dorothy has inherited her Rue-sel- been Influenced has done more to cause way 1000 to Hia failure to secure as league was the ls In newspaper work. sionary. The Prince has drink speechmaklng, devoting numbered all the from after the started also made his first hit In his religious and temperance and moral degeneration in England, than mother's gift of 10.000 people. County Superintendent of Schools out lived in a coop of a house, Mrs. Incidentally being challenged numerous greatly It largely on the "demon early eighties, son views by his wife and in his fight against any other one thing. In politics husband to' attacks As a member of the Georgia legisla- In Iowa proved, in the Russell did all her own work, and the times to fight pistol duels, was the ally. loggerheads; the Is rum." clos- turning point in Russell's econ- ao, when the father the liquor traffic she Is his chief and wife are at Earl ture Wright always receives the the first word all along the line was strict of a minister, and loyally sup- an of aristocracy; the (Copyright, 1905. by the Associated Lit- speaking. career. For several years before the with $1000 his boy had very The Countess of Carlisle is aristocrat the est attention when When he omy. The league began work died, his widow and In battle Countess is so thoroughly democratic In erary Press.) wants to say anything ho rises from voters decided not to return him to pledged to Its suport for each of the first little of this world's goods from him. Car- ported by her husband her his seat, walks to the front of the office, Russell's wife had been begging three years of its existence. Today it la mack, however, did inherit a few good chamber, throws his right leg across him to go into the ministry, his father's suported financially to about the extent books, and through these he became the top of an unoccupied desk, removes profession. When his political disap- of $250,000 annually. Though Dr. Russell with a desire for an education a pair of gold-rimm- spectacles, wipes pointment came to him he acquiesced Is Its president nor Its general He sought out the principal of an acad- neither education, Earned handkerchief, up One Horse That carefully with a In lucra- emy, he wanted an $2,649,665 them his wife's desire, threw his superintendent, he is looked upon as the stated that leans his six-fo- slender frame slight- tive law practice, went to Oberlin with power behind the organization and frankly added that he had no money and not a real bril- over world. Perhaps no ly forwards and begins, with his wife and daughter and, at 29. began Its workings. His right-han- d man Is Rev. was ready to work his way through. Atlanta Constitution. scored in a hack canter the most found all the whisper to disturb his train of thought, begin over all right," responded the kind-heart- are liant nursery performance on record. breed of horses ever showed more many opponents to equip himself to life all P. A. Baker, the general superintendent, "That's thousand dollars They are not for though he has had again. with headquarters In Columbus, O. man, "and don't mind about the EIGHT well laid out when in the Next season he walked over for the marked peculiarities. In the legislature none disputes his In seminary work. Tou can pay me when you do have In- Epsom Cup and won the Ascot, Good- race horses, they are racing machines." It was while he was the course of twenty-fou- r years the oratorical powers. on Gubernatorial Temperance Workers. money." '. , wood and Newcastle cups, after which was once said of his stock, the allusion family., in that he made his initial assaults nearly $2,500,000. so many Wright comes of a noted rum, becoming Interested lit- The first money that Carmack managed vestment returns he was retired to the stud. Originally being to the smallness of of Georgia for orators as the "demon" Among the political leaders, big and lawyer, experience of the daughters, though some of them his section of its in the work through the influence of country Identified to save from his earnings as a This was the happy his fee was $250. but so immediate his far back as the oldest resident can re- organ- tle, of the who have his initial profession, went to square his Portland when the famous and great was his success that in a could go "like the wind." Persimmon, of ancestors were the late Francis Murphy. The more or less prominently with Duke of a very commanding member. Some his izer of the movement routed the themselves debt to his educational benefactor. St. Simon, who died recently at few years subscriptions were difficult however, was sturdy old pioneers of the Georgia that Han-l- y, up horse Influ- St. Simon's daughters the temperance movement, Frank J. Hanly, perhaps, had a stlffer climb to obtain, except by personal horse. Five of ' They were the leaders In saloons from Berea, Ohio, which has Welbeck from heart disease or senile Oaks, them, with the backwoods. kept them out ever since, he was rather Governor of since 1905, ts the traditional ladder than any of his as was ence, even at $2500. His earnings for won the all of brush-fir- e political rallies, and politico-temperan- Is decay probably the latter, he belonging to the up by a saloonkeeper In a upon by prohibitionists generally colleagues. He some time averaged about $100,000 a exception of . swept the opposition off their feet by badly beaten, looked among few men promi- 27 years old. Curiously enough, his year exaggeration to of Portland. His Derby win- - assault. To the sympathy that as Its most earnest and forceful the comparatively and it can be no the Duke their oratory. Wright's father was street one of nent In public life today who were born , the Derby winner of say in this way alone he added ners were the brothers Persimmon and noted for this gift. A typ- this attack upon his aroused for hia advocates. Largely through his Instru- sire, that particularly In log cabins. Heavy responsibilities same 1875, died at the same age. quite $1,250,000 to the ducal wealth. . ical gentleman of the old Southern cause Dr. Russell attributes the success mentality, the question of local option will early. he was scarcely more equaled Is no guide to the relative mer- anti-saloo- n to him When off St. Simon No other horse has ever his There school and one of the leading men of of his first movement by play an unusually important part in the in- Both on and the turf , it; on, than a child his father became an never earnings in the stud. Then there is the its of St. Simon and and his town. yet. even at times of the just half a dozen votes. Later approaching state campaign In Hoosier-do- His was stricken totally was a marvelous horse. He knew large sum which his progeny won In Is a matter of opinion which was the saloonkeepers to - valid. mother was greatest soda! or political importance, when the Berea took and it may- have a direct Influence blind when he was 11. at which age most defeat, and his success at the stud stakes for his grace, $500,000 prob- better horse. Most people are agreed he declined to wear a collar over the selling liquor Illicitly, Student Russell, on the state's Presidential predilections. boys are beginning to have the time unprecedented for the number of his more. St. Simon himself in regarding them as the best two that i sparkled In Its cleanliness aa calling his legal knowledge to his as- Just ably, if not shirt that Big, Jovial "Bob" Glenn, the of their lives: and from then on until his great winners and the toal earnings of won only $23,360 in stakes, but he ever lived. St. Simon was an Irritable for as could be seen. sistance, collected evidence against the occupant of the North Carolina wa ref- once he had to be ap- parents died years later he their progeny. would have "swept the decks" if Prince animal. More than ' When Wright made his initial lawbreakers, conducted the resultant executive mansion, won his gubernatorial uge support. his valu- muzzled and some Idea of his temper- - es and won Batthyany had lived and all his pearance In the state legislature he trials, and obtained such heavy penal-altl- by his telling prohibition speeches boy be- In nineteen years his stock the of may be gleaned from the follow- - "Antl-chll- honors As the family's provider, the able engagements held good instead ament declared his platform: d la- that the liquor laws were rigor- before population of wood cutter huge amount of $2,649,565. His best whloh from the Hps of! anti-buck- et delivered the farmer came a ditch digger and a being invalidated. Altogether he ran lng remark fell bor, prison reform, prohibition, ously as long as he remained Singularly seasons were 1892, when he headed the On being: observed the Tarheel commonwealth. for the farmers of Champaign County, 1896 ten times in two seasons. his attendant, G. Fordham, shop, pure food, and all legisla- $280,000; (the ; In town. enough, he and Peter C. Prltchard. the 111., his birthplace. He walked bare- sire list with St. Simon's influence on the thorough- questioned about behavior: "Talk about looking the development year," when hia two sons. ; tion toward Two years later Russell led the Ohio Federal Judge and quondam Federal Sen- foot ten miles to hear his first Fourth "prince's bred Is incalculable. His stock are Job, sir; Job never done a St. Simon." and protection of man. so as to make fight township option upset schooling Persimmon and St. Frusquln, ran first state for a local ator from North Carolina, who of July oration. He got his $200,-00- 0; a clean, incorruptible citizenship." bill. He was put In charge of this plan on state rail- between his hiring and second for the Derby), with platform, and In Glenn's of warfare the in short snatches 1900, contribu- This has remained his work by a temperance alliance. His roads by his injunctions, were head and out to neighbors. He walked to War- and when the chief order to promote it he has appealed open IncL, Normal tor to his total of $275,000 was Diamond Democrat, a Populist, first move was to a headquarters front of the movement which caused the ren County, to attend Derby win- The Fighting "Race to the voters as a In Columbus, the state capital. Then Legislature to place North Carolina in the school for a few weeks, earning the Jubilee, the king's second a Prohibitionist and an Independent. pastors year. necessary money by doing such Jobs as ner, who also carried off the $10,000 ran governor with the he organized the and churches "dry" column In May of this "Aye. aye." Kelly, "the pikes were When he for of the state Into a compact body for Carolina, too, has a gubernatorial sawing wood. Then he became a and St. Leger. Joseph I. C. Clarke. said backing of the Prohibitionists and the South pro- was through the death of Prince names!" and Burke sat back. great strong drink circulating petitions for and literature of prohibition Martin F. Ansel, school teacher and followed that It "Read out the When the word was 'clear the way!" Populists, prohibition of years. years Batthyany the Duks of Portland Kelly dropped his head. ninety-eigh- y. arguments in behalf of the fight against of fession for nine Five that And We were thick on the roll In t leasing of convicts was his battle-cr- and other who led the the retention equine gold Jack-W- ent and local option bill. The pressure that Tillman's pet state institution, the later he was one of "the gentlemen became possessed of this While Shea they called him Scholar Kelly and Burke and Shea." Today Wright Is a Democrat, and "Ben" of prince expired suddenly ac of dead. to sword and Demo- this organization brought to bear on dispensary, with the result that the from Indiana" in the National House mine. The down the list tha "Well, here's the pike and the It is Interesting to note that the youngest man Newmarket just before the race for the Officers, seamen, gunners, marines. the like!" "dry" House caused it to pass the bill by Carolina has a local option law, Representatives the ' cratic party has made Georgia a the neither sent to Washington $10,000 in 1883, and, according to rule, crew gig and yawl, Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. death-blo- w majority. days county county voting out that Indiana had The of the state and Is striking the to a small Several before and after is the in his name were in- in hia teens. system. plat- vote was to be taken on the bill In saloon. In the meantime it fares badly in 40 years. In the meantime he had all nominations The bearded man and the lad And Shea, the scholar, with rising Joy, convict lease The the explains St. Sim- re the govern- poll majority of Gov- become a lawyer, by studying at nights validated, which how Carpenters, all. Said. "We were at Ramllllea; form on which Wright ran for the Senate a showed a with the traditional remark that the came to miss the Derby. He could out pipe, one in Georgia to de- one for It. Just before the 11th hour ernor of North Carolina once made to and served in the state Senate. on Then, knocking the ashes from his We left our bones at Pontenoy or was the first One of the old-tim- e formulae of suc- not run. Sir John Willoughby's Har- Said Burke in an offhand way: And up in the Pyrennes; of whisky one of the Senators, yielding his fellow executive Immediately to the dead-heate- clare for the abolition the arrived -- closely, though vester, who d at Epsom and by Crlpe! Before Dunkirk, on Landen's Plain, traffic. pressure from the other side, con- south of bun. cess Hanly observed "We're all In that dead man's liat. and the convict to unconsciously, as a boy. About the divided the stakes wich John Ham- Kelly Shea!" Cremona. Lille and Ghent, "It is all over, Seab." said a friend, fessed to Russell that he could not Edward W. Koch, whose second term as family library was reckoned some- and Burke and We're all over Austria, France and Spain. Wright Is draw- only books that the mond's St. Gatlen, "Well, here's to the Maine, and I'm sorry Wherever they pitched a tent. when it became known that stand by his first pledge and vote for Governor of the Sunflower State boasted were the Bible and a history thing like twenty-on- e pounds inferior was a defeated gubernatorial candi- the bill. No sooner said than Russell ing to a close, has been a big card for pored over for Spain," We've died for England from Waterloo temperance workers for a number of of the Civil War. The child to the "saint." Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. To Egypt and Dargal; date. got busy, and the Senator was flooded the these books time and time again until seems strange to read now that And still there's enough for a corps or Is all over?" asked Wright, personal letters and telegrams de- years, and he always tries to arrange It sub- trouble," "What wagon. with he knew them exceedingly well. The St. Simon fetched only $8000 when VWherever there's Kellys, there's crew from his seat on an old lumber manding that he vote for the bill. public and private business so that he can history of the war shaped his political to auction with the rest of the aid Burke. Kelly and Burke and Shea." your Governor," was respond to any call that is made upon mitted fighting's the game, "Well, here la to good honest fighting for Which he did, and saved the day for beliefs: the Bible training that he thus horses. TVherever a prince's Chet-wyn- in a grown man the answer. local option. him in the name of temperance. A more gave himself has been pretty much in the sale," Sir George d Or a eplce of danger blood!" may be over, but the of organized, systematic recent arrival In the lists against "demon "Before work." Said Kelly and Burke and hea. "This election The lesson evidence all through his latter life, and writes, "somebody told me that Said Kelly. "You'll find my name." fight is not," responded Wright. appeal In behalf of temperance that Rus- rum" is that from Tennessee became politically run) was Burke, getting "Oh, godsend especially since he the colt (who had not then "And do we fall short," eald the fighting racea don't die out. Wright is still fighting, and. like the sell learned while conducting this cam- whose flaming poll has been a to prominent. It was his strong sense of a 'flier;' that he had his leg dressed to mad. If they seldom die in bed, Rev. "Billy" Sunday, who also is arous- paign ultimately led to the organization the newspaper paragraphers Edward WT. duty that study of the good book un- like a blister and that I must se- "When it's touch and go for life?" For love Is first in their hearta. no doubt." Anti-Saloo- ago, look thirty-od- d years, bedad. Said Kelly ing Prohibition fervor wherever he of the n League on much the Carmack. A few weeks with the doubtedly gave to him which caused A friend had asked me to Said Shea, "It's Burke: then said: averse organiza- element of the state at his back, a per- cure him. Since I charged to drum and fife "When Michael, the Irish archangel, stands. speaks, he is a man who is not same lines of his local option "dry" him to force the resignation of him a horse for about $5000. There my old canteen .angel with necessary, to became of to secure the gubernatorial office of-- state buy Up Marye's Heights, and The the eword. 'to fighting physically. If tion. But before he the father he strove sonal friend from the was no time to communicate with this Stopped a rebel ball on lta way. And the battle-dea- d from a hundred lands himself. In the fight for Pro- the league he went, first to Kansas City, nomination at the primaries held to indi- auditor for a serious breach of trust; I went to a relative of were blossoms of blood on our sprlga Are ranged In one big horde. defend people's choice for Governor. on break- gentleman, but There hibition in this state, he was the leader where he began preaching In a tent on a cate the he has waged war Sabbath his and we agreed to go beyond this of green Our line, that for Gabriel's trumpet waits. in House. Dur- vacant lot. later moving his big congrega- His defeat is the first big blow that the ing and race-trac- k and other forms of were, believe, the last bid- Kelly and Burke and Shea Will stretch three deep that day. of tha "drys" the lower price, and I "Well, here's Jehoshaphat to Golden ur fol- building: second, to prohibitionists have received in the South more or public gambling, and he And the dead dldn'tbrag." From the Gates ing the filibuster that was tion Into a fine and less ders against Mat Dawson. It has since Kelly and Shea." passage bill, a Chicago, at the solicitation of the late since the present temperance wave got has not hesitated to remove officials my Dawson, while to the flag!" and Burke lowed by the of the way. come to ears that Said Kelly and; Burke and Shea. "Well, here's thank God for the 'race and leader of the opposition and Wright Philip D. Armour, where he directed the well under for neglecting to enforce the laws looking over the horse, noticed the the sod!" encounter work of the famous Armour Mission. will be noticed that four governors against illegal liquor dealing. Like leg. stooped down and in Ireland, for there's the Said Kelly and Burke and Shea. engaged In a personal that It temperance he is a devout Meth- dressing on his "I wish 'twas set the Howe on fire, and out of which It was while he was on a sick bed that are prominent advocates and Hoch, of Kansas, licked with his tongue to see what.it place," exec- him, too, he is one of we'd die by right. Austro-Hungarla- n Wright did not come with the lesser Russell determined to give all his time workers. There are other state chief odist; and like was made of." Said Burke. "That The consul at Buenna cause of temperance, whose names have been identified the ablest speakers of today V the In the cradle of our soldier race, Ayres. South America, has succeeded In or- to promoting the utives St Simon made his debut in the colors atand-u- p fight. honors. he was In full health again he more or less prominently with the temper- cause of prohibition. Indeed, of the won sev- After one good ganizing ft commercial company, with a lawyer Wright dis- and when lv of Portland. He on Vinegar Hill, 1400.000. purpos It wu as a that politico-temperan- champions he pro-bab- of the Duke My grandfather fell capital stork of for the quit active ministry, once more sought ance movement. There is Hoke Smith, of old, the last be- hia trade; developing commercial relations be- covered of a surety that he possessed the example, though the most gifted all-rou- eral races as a And lighting was not of the weapon used so effectively out Oberlin. and here practically began Georgia, for but he is ing a mile nursery at , In But hls rusty pike s in the cabin still. tween the dual monarchy and the Kepublio the he has signed the bill that put the Cracker com- speaker, with "Bob" Glenn easily the blood on the blade." of Argentina. In of Prohibition. His speech his career all over for the second time. excepting. which he carried 9 stone 2 pounds and With Heaaian the cause 1S93. in the "dry" column and made most oratorical, not even won the first case he took, and through This was In He started his new monwealth-