PUBLISHED THREE T] SOME HOT TALK I. B. Felder, of Atlanta, Replies to Goy. Bleast's Alleged Exposure CALLS A SPADE A SPADE The Atlanta lawyer Serves Notice on the Governor That Unless the Com mission In .estimation Act is Signed by Him in the Next Thirty Days He "Will Expose Him. To the Editor of The State: On the 18th inst. I addressed a let ter to J. S. Brice of Yorkville, S. O, a copy *of which I beg to hand you herewith enclosed and which I ask that you publish, as it will, I. think, suffice, at least for the present, as a reply to the last deliverance of the general counsel of the plunderbund, Cole L. Blease, late of Newberry, now of the State at large. It seems Chat the aforesaid "Cole man" is a man of very unique and versatile talents, a sort of "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde," a genius pos 1 sessing a c.ual character and dual characteristics. In the capital city of your State his sign reads: "Cols L. Blease, Governor. Pardons for Grafters' granted while you wait." In Nowberry it is: "Cole L. Blease, At torney and Counseller at Law. Prac tice confined to representing my friends, who have been and are now my partneru in crime." YVhen he wrote, as "Dr. Jekyl," his memorable message demanding the appointment of an investigating com mittee, he was not aware of how much of his record I knew, in addi tion to the fact that as State sena tor he received $100 per month from the Lanaha:as of Baltimore to influ ence busine.ii? for them, but he found out very soon thereafter that I had all the factB and that if the commit tee was appointed which was de manded .by him, the "fur would fly." An emissary from him and his gang appeared in Atlanta shortly after he discovered how much of his record I knew, with the statement that the governor "knew some things on me, and if I would not tell on him, he -wSuTd Bot^sell on ihe;M I bade hfcn convey to his chief and his chief's fellow-criminals the message that 1 had never done a dishonorable act in connection with the State dispen sary of South Carolina and that his governor knew this as well as I did, and that if the governor had any documentary evidence showing any Improper connection with the late dispensary or its officials, they wert forgeries, find that if any of his min ions testified to any improper rela tions, the testimony would be per jured, and he knew it; that in com mon with everybody interested, I de slreri the fullest, freest and most searching investigation, and that he might say to the governor and his allies that my attitude towards him would |be "Lay on, iMacduff, and damned be he who first cries hold, enough." My associates and myself have dis cussed on more than one occasion the propriety of noticing the vapor ings of this mental and moral per vert in the public prints and conclud ed that it would be indelicate and unwise to do so in advance of the organisation of the committee de manded .by him (but the creation of which I knew he would contrive to defeat). I serve him with notice here and now, unless he approves the joint resolution demanded by him of the legislature within the next 3 0 days, so that the committee can proceed with the work at hand, I propose to write a history of the dispensary, with particular reference to "His Fraudulency's" connection with It, from his employment by the plunder bu d as "Attorney and Senator" down to hi3 employment as "Attor ney and Governor." In passing, I shall devote a page or two to a brief history of his campaign and the source whence he derived his reve nue, which was raised to defray his "legitimate campaign expenses." I shall obtain a list of the registered voters of r.he State of South Carolina and mail a copy to each. I assume when this is done, it will be conclud ed by everybody in your State, out side of the penitentiary and the lun atic asylum, that the conduct of this modern "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde,' since he commenced his career of crime by stealing the speech of his collegemate down to date has been such as to create a panic about the habitues of a rat pit and to bring the blust: of shame to the cheeks of the inmates of a brothel, and that instead of wearing the Immaculate purple robes of the governorship, he should be clad in the filthy striped habiliments of a convict. 1 shall not be provoked to further trespass upon your valuable space during the next 30 days. I trust that during that time I shall be able to force this man to sign the joint reso lution. If I fail to do so, I shall en lighten the people of your State as to the record of this man, by furnish ing evidence which will be entirely satisfactory to the most skeptical, as to his criminal connection with all of the State's affairs during the last 16 to 18 years. Thomas B. Felder. Atlarta, March 20, 1911. LETTER TO BRICE IX WHICH FELDER SCORES BLEASE HOT AND HEAVY. Makes Many Grave Charges Against the Governor, Which He Says He Can Prove. Hon. J. S. Brice, Attorney at Law, Yorkville, S. C. My Dear Mr. Brice: X own receipt of your valued favor of the 16th inst. I congratulate you most heartily upon the fact that the governor of your State has recognised that you and your associates of the winding-up commission are gentlemen of unsul lied reputation and ' irreproachable character, and has testified thereto by decorating you with a badge- of honor. I feel that the unselfish, pa triotic and distinguished services rendered your State in connection with the winding up of ?he affairs of the late lamented dispensary fully entitle you to the very great reward which you have received at his hands. You would be untrue to your self if you did not preserve sacredly the written document which evidences j your dismissal from the commission, to be handed down to y ur children's children as a prize of inestimable value. When the history of the great ser vices which you and your associates have rendered the StaLe, the sacri fices which you have made in con nection with the thankless position from which you have been dismissed, Is made known, as it ?.hall be, and that, too, in the not distant future, I feel sure ^at you and each of your associates will receive Crom a grate ful, though outraged people the wel come plaudit, "Well done, thou good and faithful servants." Yes, the time will come, and that too, very soon, v. hen the people of South Carolina will be raade familiar with the motives and purposes which1 i'have prompted the ?o-ernor of the State cf conth Carolina to do the thing? which he has done, in his mad. insane and misguided efforts to shield his associates of tho plunderbund from merited punishment. He has done nothing which has surprised me.. I know when he wa*> a candidate for office; when he was elected and when he was inaugurated, that ho would "leave no stone un turned" to shield and protect the criminals of the'-State. ;if South Car professional, political ...---id personal intimacy^andtrWf.^^SstiitioB of-the great office which he disgraces to the service of these people is but the re ollna, with whom he was on terms ol demption of pre-election pledges made by him, which t ire based not only upon a good, but a valuable con sideration. ' ?Indeed, the obligation that he Is under antedates his candidacy for the governorship, being coeval with the inauguration of the dispensary system in the State cf South Caro lina. During its existence his re lation to this institution and the men who have conducted it, personally, politically and professionally, have been of such a character that the I course that he has pursued in rela-j tion to them since his elevation toj the governorship has been absolutely; unavoidable, and can be explained j upon the theory that "The ox know-j eth his owner and the ass his mas-1 ter's crib." I see that he is further gratifying! his malevolence by slurriug your dis-j jtinguished and faithful attorney gen-i j eral, my law firm, my associates and j myself. It is passing strange that this i creature who has been, by fraud, ac ; cident or mistake, or a combination j of the trio, elevated to the chief mag istracy of a once glorious State, who ! personally Is sans the instincts of a gentleman, professionally the ethics and attributes of a la wyer, and who j politically is a hireling scavenger of filth and falsehood, recreant to ev ery principle of honor and lost to every sense of propriety, should es say to slander and befoul gentlemen, "the latchets of whose shoes he Is unworthy to fasten." I shall await (I fear in vain) the appointment of the investigating com-i mittee that he demanded, to reply to: so much of his recent message as re i lates to me. the absurdity and falsity I of which is abundantly established i by the fact that during the four j years of my activities in the prosecu ; tion of your goverr or's associates, i not a word has been uttered before i the Insinuations made touching the i matter referred to by him. When the time comes for action, as come it must, I would have it understood that in my treatment of your gover nor I shall act strictly upon the ad j vice of the late lamented Rev. Sam ! P. Jones, given in a notable sermon j preached by him to Ms congregation, ,to-wit: "If you shave a gentleman, use a razor; if you shave a hog, use a brick." Assuring you of my very high re gard, believe me, Yours very truly, Thomas B. Felder. Old Man or Trial. The trial of A. A. Truskett, aged 70.. a wealthy business man of Can ley, Kan., who shot and killed J. D. S. iNeeley, 65 years old, a banker and oil man. of Lima, Ohio, at Inde I pendence, Kan., wbp tried Monday. [The shooting occurred in a hotel at j Caney on January 7. Mouse Bite Proves Fatal. Blood poison caused by a mouse bite caused the death of Conrad Bregdorf, a farmer living near Evans ville, Ind. #1f ORAKTGEBTj CAUSE ALARM A Sleepless Night for the Population of a Large Illinois Town MINERS FACE MILITIA Foreigners With Shot Guns Drove the Americans From the Mines Three Companies of Illinois Na tional Guards Arc Rushed to the Scene of the Disturbance. One thousand strong and well armed, the foreign-speaking coal min ers of Benid, 111., conducted a sun rise demonstration Tuesday agains: their English-speaking brethren of the town of Gillespie, commanding those who stood upon the sidewalks to get in line. The procession came from Benld, stopped at mine No. 1, passed through the main street, of Giiiespie, thence on to mine No. 3 and back to Benld. Caution of the older citi-j zens and business men of Gillespie. against violence probably prevented j .bloodshed. Throughout the night vigilaot cit:-j zens of Gillespie patrolled the streets; of the entire town. They had been warned that the Benld miners wtu marching on Gillespie. Y\rhen the first music of the de- * monstratlon from Benld was heard the citizens were prepared for siege j Some had sought refuge in the rooms: above store buildings along the ma'n! street, declaring they would shoo: if | the marchers came into the town. Nevertheless, the procession passeo through the village and not a shot, was fired. An hour later Col. E. J. tang, commanding the Fourth regiment, II-! linois National Guard, arrived from Springfield on an Interurban car and took charge of the situation Thej Effingham and Paris companies were the first to arrive of the troops or dered out at 1:30 o'clock Tuesday morning by Governor Deneen. The other commands arrived before 9 o'clock, nearly all of them coming in on the interurban line from Spring field. It is Col. Lang's plan to march hie troops from Gillespie to Benld, 2 1-2 mil es-.by wagon road, and disarm the belligerents, many of whom are in a disagreeable temper. If necessary, Col. Lang is prepared to proclaim martial law in Benld to enforce hi* plans for quelling the disturbance. Citizens of Gillespie insist there will be bloodshed in Benld when the troops attempt to disarm the foreign ers. The 700 foreigners who left Benld early Tuesday paraded to mine 7 of the Superior Coal company and drove the Americans from the shaft. They then returned through Gillespie and continued to mine No. 3, where the Americans left the workings on the approach of the disturbers. The miners were headed by a fel low workman, who beat a drum. No move will be made on the foreigners by the militia until the arrival of all of the troops. Besides the Infantry and a Gatling gun platoon, troop D, First Illinois cavalry, is expected from Springfield. The trouble started at Benld a week ago when the foreign miners became dissatisfied with working con ditions and induced the Americans to quit. The local union officials, how ever, ruled against the move and or dered them back to work. The Amer icans returned to the mines and since then the foreigners have been trying to persuade the Americans to quit. The trouble became acute Monday night after deputy sheriffs of Macou pln county were driven from the mines. Governor Deneen after receiving a report from Col. Shand of the Nation al Guard ordered the militia to 1 proceed to Benld. Benld is a mining ! town less than three miles from Gil lespie. Early Tuesday morning several shots were fired in the vicinity of : mine No. 1. This aroused the whole Itown. Watchers soon afterward re 1 ported that the Benld miners were I marching upon the town. When iupon the outskirts of Gillespie the * marchers switched off and traveled I to mine No. 1. To the foreigners' Isurprise none of the employes of the [ mine appeared for work at either I No. 1 or No: 3. The marchers then ; paraded through Gillespie. The arrival of the State militia ! at Benld early Tuesday morning i found this mining town quiet. The ; miners who have been bearing arms : for several days suddenly left for one ; of the nearby mining camps. Their i departure was heralded by the beat |ing of drums, shouting and firing oi 1 guns. The troops from Springfield ? were first on the ground and these j were followed by the militia from I Danville. When the whistle blew for work J in mine No. 1 Monday morning, how ever, the American miners were pre j vented from, going to work by 500 ? foreigners, who marched from Benld ; and defied the local authorities. Sev eral fights occurred and one man was j hurt. I In view of reports that the for eigners were preparing to march j upon Gillespie and apply the torch ! the citizens in a. meeting directed an I appeal to Governor Deneen for aid. (Scarcely a person in the 2,400 pop ulation of Gillespie slept Monday j night. BG. S. C. rjlBBSUAY. > COTTON (SINNED ALMOST TWELY2 MILLION BALES GINNED. -.- / South Carolina One cf Five States to Traduce Over One Million Bales of Cotton. The census bureau's reports given out in Washington ehow the cotton crop of 1910 to be 11,9*1,563 bales, counting round as half bales, and in cluding Unters, compared with 10, 396,209 for 1909. Included in the statistics for 1910 are: Linters, 397,592 bales; sea island cotton, 90, 368 bales; round, 112,887 bale3. The average gross weight of the bales is 501.2 pounds for 1910, com pared with 496.6 for 1909. Ex pressed in equivalent. 500 pound bales the 1910 crop is 11,969,757, compared with 10,3i5,3S2 for 1 909. Cotton estimates by glnners and de linters as remaining to be ginned and included in the statistics for 1910 amounts to 7j,169 bales. The 1910 crop by States is re ported as follows: Running 500 pound States. Bales Bales. Alabama. . . 1,217,399 1,120,507 Arkansas. . . 821,235 844,850 Florida. . . . 6S.295 59,916 Georgia. . . . 1,865,890 1,818,582 Louisiana. . . 256,9S7 256,333 Mississippi. . 1,250,479 1,303,379 North Carolina 771,185 723,467 Oklahoma. . 954,433 957,004 S. Carolina. . 1,237,036 1,166,187 Tennessee. . 336,206 346,189 Texas. . . . 3,071,263 3.170.09S Other States . 91,148 91,295 TRAIN SAVED BY BOY. Young Wrecker Repented in Time to Prevent Terrible Wreck. Eleventh-hour repentance by a boy averted a wreck of an express train bound from Kansas City to Chicago, at a tretle near Holt, Mo., this week. Roscoe Townsend, the boy who did not repent, was so furious when his chum, Walter Carpenter, appeared with the poBse that, instead of sur rendering when called on to do so, he "showed fight. "Sure, I meant to wreck the train," he said, pointing significantly at a big iron crowbar and chains that had been used to fasten it to the tracks. "A lot of passengers would have been killed, and then I intended to rob the ones who were dead in the Pull mans. They would have had the most money." He was taken to Holt and locked up. Carpenter, as a reward for his action in saving the train, was re leased. Both are the sons of farm ers. When the posse reached the trestle young Townsend had just fas tened the crowbar to the tracks with chains. Those who saw the way the work had been done say the obstruc tion certainly would have sent the train into the ravine. PROYED HE WASN'T AFRAID. Boy Dies When Lone Cartridge in Pistol Fires. "Watch me. I'm not afraid," cried Robert Harrison, aged 14, as he placed a revolver to his head while playing policeman Monday. lie snapped the trigger as his playmates yelled and the only cartridge left in the magazim exploded. He died in a few minutes without speaking. The boy's playmates, including his smaller brother, were armed with toy pistols. Robert slipped into the house and secured a 32-calibre re volver, belonging to a brother, wno was asleep. The other children were afraid of the pistol, and in an effort to reassure them Robert placed it to his head and fired, with fatal results. CHARGED WITH KILLING. John A. Odom is Shot to Death in a Row by Two Others. John A. Odom, who was shot at Brightsville school house Friday night, died Monday morning. The coroner's jury rendered a verdict that his death was caused from gun [shot wounds inflicted by Geo. W. Bul lard and William Barrington.. Con flicting accounts have been given of the homicide and it is impossible tb give details that are not contradict ed. Odom was shot several times, first by Bullard and last by Barring ton. Odom cut Barrington after Bul lard had shot Odom. Barrington is regarded as being in a very serious condition. Bullard has been arrest ed by the Sheriff from Bennettsville. Aeronaut is Killed. j The balloon Dusseldorf IV, which i ascended at Krefeld, Prussia, was carried over the Zuider Zee, an arm of the North sea, and because of loss ' of gas was obliged to descend. The ' basket struck a breakwater violently land the balloon pilot, Paul Kaiser, was instantly killed. Made a Wrong Diagnosis. I Two children of'Mr. and Mrs. Win ! field Cox, of West Point, O., played 1 "doctor" and "patient" with the re sult the "patient" is in a critical : condition. Thelma was the "patient" and her fo?r-year-old brother, who was the "doctor," told her to drink some "medicine" from a phiai. The medicine was corn-cure. [AUCH 23;, 1J>1 I. HUB TALKS OUT Reiteites His Atseilicris Coccinijf lilt: Felder bt(ers AS TO THE LIQUOR DEAL Hub Evans Says Correspondence Re fers to Attorney and Says Eugene Blease Has Letters and is Willing to Verify Statements -Made by Gov ernor Blcasc. "My first grain of sand out of a mountain." That is the way, says Joe Sparks writinr from Newberry, (Soy Blease characterized the letter! which he claims to have in.possession I and which it is alleged to have been written by T. B. Felder, thp Atlanta1 ? attorney, to II. H. Evans, former j I member and chairman of the dispen-: isary board of control, now under in- ] dfctment for rcc-lvi;.'; rebates. Tne i j letter alleged a (600,000 deal. Gov.' j Blcaso meant by the.' first grain of sand," the evidence, he cars, he has l m his firssssi-ion ts substantiate his jside of the situation. If. IT. Evans said Monda.v* that he; I had known all alonr what sort of; ] man Felder was. He added: "I have ! just waited for two j'eara to let bim I , rob the State. V.n. could net do it in! ! an underhanded method, so I just let ; him do so from a legal standpoint." j When seen today Mr. Evans said that he did not wish at this time to 'give any more correspondence, but that "everything will come out at the I proper time." He said that he did not have any official statement tc make and that any statement made should come from Eugene Blease, his attorney. IH. H. Evans is a former member of the old State dispensary board of di rectors and at one time was the chairman. His attorney i3 Eu?ene ! Bleas, a half-brother of Gov. Blease. H. H. Evans said today that his at torney, Eugene Blease, had had the much-discussed correspondence with Tom Felder locked up in his private desk for two years. The other day when Gov. Blease announced his first shot on the dis pensary situation he stated positively that he knew the letters had been written to H. H. Evans by T. B. Fel der offering to frame up this alleged deal and that he had been "working and praying" for two years to get the" one letter that was printed in The State on Sunday morning. Gov. Blease is a strong friend 01 H. H. Evans. He made mention sev eral days ago of his warm admiration for the Newberry man. He also praised several qualities possessed by H. H. Evans. ?Hub Evans is confident that ht will not go to the State penitentiary or pay a fine. The most that can be imposed under the present indict ment is a fine of $1,000. Taking the j friendship of the two men into con Uideratlon and the position of Gov. j Blease with reference to the dispen isary situation, most persons believe ' the pardon power vested in the gove jrnor of South Carolina would be ex i ercised if there were a conviction. ' While Gov. Blease has stated that ; he has "a mountain of testimony" on ' the dispensary situation is it. proba ible most of his ammunition is the i correspondence between H. H. Evans |and certain persons in connection j ! with his work as chairman of the i State dispensary board. Mr. Evans stated that Hull, the general manager of Clark Bros. & Co.. the whiskey firm, had never vis ited Newberry with T. B. Felder. "You must write to John Beb Towill and Boykin. They received a similar proposition from Felder," I said Mr. Evans. H. H. Evans talking Monday said and again vehemently reiterated that the letter printed in The State last Sunday was written to him by T. B. Felder, the Atlanta attorney, and that he had many others from Felder. He said that they were signed "T. B." and "Felder," and that they of ? fered to go into all kinds of deals. "Handwriting experts have testi fied that the letter signed "T. B." Is j in the same handwriting as "Tom I Felder." This statement was made ! by Mr. Evans. He denounced T. B. Felder in vio lent language and said he was a grafter. He said that Felder had visited him in Newberry and talked ! over the proposed deal whereby Fel ! der said the two would clean up '$210,000 each. He 6aid that Felder ! was "a liar" if he had stated that he i had never been in Newberry to con fer with him. "Why," he said, "1 have living witnesses that Tom Fel der came here to see me." "You must write to John Bell Towill and Boykin. They received a similar proposition from Felder," said Mr. Evans. Tolls of the Winter. About 125 persons perished in ac cidents which befell New England, Canadian and New Foundland ves sels or craft which met disaster in western upper north Atlantic waters during the fall and winter season nDw ending. The financial loss is esti mated at $1,000,000. India's People. The final provisional census re turns give the total population of In dia as 315,000,000. This is an in crease of 20,500,000, as compared with 1901. HUB" EVANS' CASE DEATH OF WITNESS RESULTS IN DELAY OF TRIAL. Governor Blease Exults?Says It Was Never Intended That Evans Bo Tried. "I knew all the time that they were bluffiing. They never intended to try Hub Evans. They know that Hub will tell too much. I knew that when the death of Charles was an nounced, and I so stated to several that Lyon would make that an excuae for putting off the trial." This statement was made at New berry on Monday by Gov. Blease, when informed that the trial of H. H. Evans^ under indictment for re ceiving rebates as chairman of the old dispensary board of control, had been postponed until the next term I of court in Newberry county. Gov. Blease seemed to be exultant overi tho announcement of the postpone ment. He smiled and seemed elated over his opinion as to why the trial had been postponed. The case against H. H. Evans was continued on mo tion of the State. Solicitor Cooper represented the. attorney gener" Fr?ser Lyon, and asked Judge \. ... s to postpone the trial until the next term of court, lie said that he had been requested by the attorney general to state that the case would have been ready for trial except for the sudden death of G. II. Charles, former clerk of che old State dispensary board of control. Mr. Charles died a few days ago at; Birmingham, Ala. "They will not give me a trial. They deny me the right of being tried." This statement was made by H. IT. Evans following the postpone ment of the trial. The attorney for IT. H. Evans Is Eugene Blease, a half-brother of Gov. Blease. He was in the court room and protested against a continuance of the case. He said that H. H. Evans had demanded a trial at the court at which a true bill was founu and s.gain at the succeeding court and the defendant demanded "his constitutional right to a speedy trial." Eugene Blease declared that it seemed to him that the attorney gen eral or some one else was trying 10 hold the indictment over the head of H. H. Evans as ablush. Judge Watts ordered a continuance of the case with the condition that there shall be no more orders for continuance on the State's motion. SEVERELY BURNED. Woman's Clothing Caught From Fire in Room. Miss Kate Freeman, aged 23, of ?Montgomery, Ala., was probably fa tally burned Monday when her cloth ing became ignited from a fire in her room at 122 North Lawn street, Atlanta, where she had been board-' ing. The young woman has been ill several days and the accident hap pened while her nurse was out of the room. Maddened by the flames, Miss! Freeman ran screaming through the I house, and it was only after a des-' perate struggle that the nurse finally succeeded in tearing the burning gar-! ments from the girl. Miss Freeman! was removed to an infirmary, where j her injuries were attended. DIES A HE ROE'S DEATH. Man Gives Up His Life in Effort to. Save Life of a Boy. At Cleveland, Ohio, an unknown hero died in an ambulance Monday afternoon after he had snatched Er nest Baker, a child of six, from in front of a moving train on a grade crossing. The man's attempt to save! the boy proved fruitless, the lad dy I ing in a hospital Monday night. The 1 man, a Hungarian, saw the child i standing apparently bewildered on I the tracks. A train was coming from each direction. He ran forward, j picked up the boy and escaped one i train but stumbled in front of the I other. Nothing was found on him to i establish identification. BOTH PARENTS DEAD. Father Killed Mother and Son Thet: Killed Father. i At Ansonia, Conn., Thomas Fitz I gibbons. Sr., and his wife, Nora, I were found dead in their home late , Monday with their skulls crushed in ; and the house on fire. Their son, , Thomas J., is under arrest charged with the murder, though according ? to the story told by him to the police, j his father killed his mother and he in turn killed his father. The son has two slight scalp wounds wh'ch '? he said he received in the struggle I with his father, but the medical ex aminer thinks the wounds were self i inflicted. The matter is being inves ;tigated. Caught by a Train. Early Mack, colored, was run over |and killed by a train at Mayesville jon Saturday night. Mack tried to j pass between cars of the train, when ! the train moved, catching him, mashed the life out of him. He was discovered shortly after being missed, and the cars being moved to release him, he fell out dead. WO CENTS PER COFY WAS TO SEE H?B Despite Hid Statement to the Contrary T B. Ftldtr Did Pay That VISIT TO NEffBERRY As Claimed by Hnb H. Evans, For mer State Dispensary Chairman?? Newberrians Say They Saw Him There on the Occasion Referred to by the Latter. "So Tom Felder vows he has never visited Newberry, does he? Weil, Tom will have his little joke," said Mr. Eugene Evans Tuesday, discuss ing a statement cred'ed to Col. T. B. Felder of Atlanta, in regard to matters brought up by the alleged Felder-Evans letter given to tne press Saturday night by Governor Blease, says McDavid Horton, in the Columbia Record. Mr. Evans is a brother to Mr. H. H. Evans, formerly chairman of the directing board of the State dispen sary. Mr. H. H. Evans himself, act ing under instructions from his at torney, Mr. Eigene S. Blease, refused to talk to newspaper men, except with the understanding that nothing he said was to be published, at least as coming from him; but for infor mation as to Folder's alleged visit to him at Newberry, he referred inter viewers to Mr. Eugene Evans. According to the latter, Col. Fehler came to Newberry for a conference with Mr. H. IT. Evans, about a year before the latter retired from the dis pensary board. There was sickness in th j home of Chairman; Evans and accordingly he asked his brother to entertain Col. Felder. "Tom Felder came around to my house," said Mr. Eugene Evans, "with my niece." Col. Felder is said to have met a number of Newberrians during his visit, in cluding Messrs. Chas. J. Purcell and Nat Gist and Senator Blease (now governor.) Genial and jovial "Hub" Evans talked freely and breezily,. once hti had received assurances that his re marks would not be quoted. "Noth ing you Jiay will be used agalnBt you," his Interviewer laughingly said. The hearty Evans laugh is as nearly continuous as ever?"Man, I've been laughing ever since I got off the board,*' he said?and Mr. Evans still wears the famous dia mond horseshoe in his red tie and a big soltaire on each plump hand. It was Mr. Evans' automobile that carried Governor Blease to the train for Columbia Monday night. Maga zine writers still try from time to time to interview Mr. Evans. Only Monday he had a message from Will Irwin, who write for Collier's an un forgettable page article, after a day spent in Newberry as Mr. Evans' guest. Mr. Evans has a warm liking for Will Irwin and for his brother, Wallace Irwin, with both of whom he has chummed in New York city. Mr. Evans, they say, is writing a collection of reminiscences or mem oirs and has already accumulated a mass of manuscript, which many peo ple would greatly like to read. When this matter will see the light of print the writer himself does not as yet know. "But the real story is goin& to be known one of these days," said 'Mr. Evans, "and it won't be long. A lot of good people have got some aw ful jolts coming to them." Monday night Mr. Evans and sev eral friends, with a visiting news paper man, foregathered in an of ! flee in Newberry and had a conver sation lastin? several hours, whlcn j would make exceedingly interesting [reading if it could be published. Mr. I Evans of course did most of the talk ing. Afterward, at the Newberry hotel, Mr. Evans talked along the same 1 lines?on dispensary affairs, past, present and future?to the newspa I per man. until past midnight. "But [ no notebooks and pencils for me," ! said Mr. Evans; "this is no newspa j per interview. If there's to be any ! interviewing, you'll have to see my j lawyer, Eugene Blease." And Mr. . Blease said there was nothing to be 'said for publication on Mr. Evans' j behalf, at this time. "Just ask the governor," said Mr. ? Evans. "He has a lot of crackajack ammunition. He'll give it out at 1 psychological moments." - FIVE PERISH IN MINE. Explosions of Black Damp in M:ine at Mineral, Kan. ' iFive men, one of them John Jop ling general superintendent of the coal department of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad, are dead as the result of an explosion of blacK jdamp in the company's mine at Min eral, Kaii., Monday. There were three explosions, the first just after Thomas Cheek and John Burgham, ' shot-flrers, went into the mine. Both were killed instantly. Tae second came when William Jeffreys, another I shot-firer, went underground to res cue his fellow workers. By lying flat Jeffreys saved himself. As soon as he reached the surface a rescue party composed of Jopling and two miners, Samuel Watson and a foreigner, rushed into the pit to search for Cheek and Burghan. Less than 30 mini'tes later there was an explosion which killed Jopling and his men.