PUBLISHED THREE T GIYTEJSSDE fiwereor Bitase Answers RcprescotaliTe SmWii Charges. HE OBEYED TBE COURT Hier? Was Nothing Dishonorable in Change Hade in Record in His Of fice?Merely a Fight in the Green ville County Legislative Delegation ?Mr. Blease Statement. Concerning the Greenville County appointments for township commis sioners that have created such a stir in the upcountry, to the extent that an affidavit was made and published " hy a member of the Greenville dele gation, charging the governor with changing names, a statement was Friday giren out by the governor. Here is the statement about the mat ter given out by the governor: "On February 13th, 1911, the rec ommendations were handed in for Greenville county, accompanied by a note signed by W. L. Mauldin, sena tor. Later, Mr. C. D. Smith came In and asked to be allowed to make some changes in the recommenda tions. The governor requested Mm ? to take the matter up with Miss Newnham, who was then a stenogra pher in the office, Miss Newnham hav ing charge of this part of the work. The governor, going into the front room, with Mr. Smith, and instruct ing 'Miss Newnham to make such changes as Mr. Smith suggested. Miss Newnham says a large, stout gentleman came to her and stated that he wanted to make the changes, but did not have the names with him, but that he would get them. He later came back and suggested "that Misb Newnham Insert the names in the townshipi? in her own handwriting, crossing out the names sent in on the original list. After Miss Newn ham made the changes, she asked the governor if he wanted to look at them, and the governor said, "No, go ahead and make the appointments Just like he gave them to you" and the appointments were made. "The following letter explains the changing of the names: *' 'Greenville, S, C, Mch. 11, 1911. "His Excellency, Cole L. Blease, Governor of South Carolina, Co ?-lumble, S. C. " 'Dea-ii'-'Governor: In re appoint ment board of assessors Cleveland township, Greenville county: Your excellency has appointed Ben Ha good, W. L. Morgan and J. D. Drake on the recommendation of Mr. C. D. Smith and myself. I find that we were mistaken in the initials of Drake, and same should be C. G. Drake instead of J. D. Drake. There Is no J. D. Drake in this township. I suggest: that you have an oath sent to our clerk of court reading to C. G. Drake, re jailing the one to J. D. Drake. There is a small kick going on from friends of Senator Mauldin, but they amount to nothing, and didn't support either you or myself. " 'With best wishes, I am, " 'Yours very truly, " 'Wilton H. Earle.' "After the appointments were made, Senator Mauldin came to the governor and stated that the orig inal list contained the names of the parties recommended by a majority of the Greenville delegation and in sisted upon their being commissioned. "The governor, in view of the re cent decision of Judge ? Ernest Gary in regard to such appointments, re ' voked the commissions of those ap pointed, and commissioned the par ties who were recommended by a ma jority of the Greenville delegation. "The governor says that there was nothing dishonorable in the transac tion on the part of any one, so far as he can see; that Mr. Smith wished the changes; that they were made for him, and Senator Mauldin insisted upon the appointment of the original named parties; and, in obedience to the decision of Judge Gary, these par ties were appointed. That it was merely t delegation fight and that he does noc see that anything dishonor able ha* been done by anybody, and that he is surprised at Mr. Smith en deavoring to place the blame for the changes, on a secretary in tue of fice" ? Til!ruau Feels Better. Senator B. R. Tillman in response to an inquiry as to his health inspired by a rumor that he was very unwell said Friday that he was feeling en tirely lit. He spent the day in the fields on his farm at Trenton, and says the country life is agreeing with him so finally thr?t he feels better ev ery day. He is feeling better than he has feli: for months past. ? ? ? ?? Made Fatal Error. Aroused by an unusual noise in his home at Landowns, Pa., Friday morn ing and seeing a figure moving about in the Jim light, Alexander Kerr, age 18, fired a shot gun at the object and then discovered that he had mor tally wounded his 10-year-old sister, Nellie. The girl died in 15 min utes. * Died at His Desk. While seated at his desk in his of fice on the; first floor of the county court house in Columbia Probate Judge Johu T. Gaston was stricken fatally III Saturday morning just be fore noqn. He died at 12:10 sur rounded }by a few friends. /' [MES A WEEK. DENIES A SLANDER BLEASE ANSWERS A SLANDER* OUS STORY ABOUT STATE. i The Governor Rightfully Denies the Statement That South Carolina Has Asylum for Illegitimates. Governor Blease received Saturday a letter from Nevada which aroused his indignation and brought forth a characteristically picturesque reply. His correspondent, writing: from Reno, said he and others wer-, trying to "clean up things" at Ren?, in re spect to the divorce industry, and in consequence this State had been op enly attacked In the legislative de bates, a leader in the Nevada assem bly going so far as to way that "the State of South Carolina, 'on account of its public immorality, occasioned by the absence of divorce, had been compelled to erect a large asylum for the maintenance of illegitimate chil dren." South Carolina's standard of mo rality, Governor Blease replied, "Is higher than that of any other State In the union." The governor de nounces as absolutely false, mean and malicious the statement quoted in re spect to a State asylum for illegiti mate children. "South Carolina," says Governor Blease, "has no di vorce law, and her people are very proud of the fact." The Correspondence. The very interesting correspond ence on the subject follows: Nevada Realty and Finance Com pany, Anderson building, Reno, Ne vada. P. L. Flanigan, president; Dix W. j Smith, vice president; D. Ford Smith, secretary-treasurer. March 25, 1911. Hon. Cole L. Blease, Governor of South Carolina, Executive Cham ber, Columbia, S. C: My Dear Sir: We are in a hot fight out here in this Western country concerning easy divorce. We are trying to clean up things out here, organized a coarse of lectures and I enclose card de scriptive thereof. Also send you un der separate cover copy of my lec ture and the attack upon me by one of the newspapers here, all of which Nwill bring good results. An attack has been made by the legislature here upon South Carolina, as I understand, your State grants no divorces. I have timber interests in the South and know the high grade of citizenship and morality that ob tains in your State. One of the lead ers in the legislature told me yester day that the State of South Carolina on account of Its public im morality occasioned by the absence of divorce, had been compelled to erect a large asylum for the maintenance of illegit imate children, and I write this let ter to inquire if that is a truthful statement. Would it be too great a favor to i ask for you to write me briefly if the absence of divorce in your State tends to immorality. Thanking you for the courtesy ofj I an auswer, I beg to remain, Very sincerely yours, D. F. Smith. I The Governor's Reply. Mr. D. Ford Smith, Andersen Build ing, Reno, Nevaaa. Dear Sir: j Your letter of March 25 received, j South Carolina has no divorce law, and her people are very proud of the j fact. The betrayal of the virtue of one of her women means death. The standard of her morality is higher than that of any other State in the American union, and the statement that she has an orphan home for ille gitimate children is absoluteJy false. There may be some institutions of the kind in the State, but the State her self has no such institution, and the assertions set out in your letter as to jsuoh statements being made in your | State are mean and maliciously false. Very respectfully, Cole L. Blease, Governor. Columbia, April 1. * TWO NEGROES BURNED Beyond Recognition in Their Home j at Rlackville. I At Blackville Oscar Greene and his I wife, two respectable old colored peo i pie, were burned to death Friday ; morning in their home. The fire oc i curred about 1 o'clock Friday morn i ing, and the wind was blowing at a I rapid rate, but, fortunately, only one i other residence was burneci. Oscar i Greene was a good old darky, and j his death and that if his wife are de jplored. These old people had ac quired a right nice property, and, ; while having no children of their own, had adopted several, and edu cated them, among them being Albert ?Davidson, the mulatto who served as postmaster there for several yeais, ? until his sudden death in the postof ' flee. * Shot Himself at Sea. Dr. Carl Buck, ship surgeon of the North German Lloyd liner Koeliu, 'which arrived here today, committed ! suicide March 29th for no known j cause. He shot himself through the i heart. Dr. Buck was buried at sea. ? ? ? Abandon Vessel. An abandoned ship riding on her ?beams' ends was reported Tuesday in j the lane of the coast liners about 140 miles due east off Jacksonville, Fla. I Revenue cutters are searching for the 'derelict to destroy it. AFTER A HARD FIGHT BOTH SIDES NEED AND CALL FOB REIXFORCE.MEXTS. Mexican Regulars Are Outnumbered by the Bebels, Who Come Off Vic torious. A dispatch from El Paso, Texas, says a stubbornly fought and bloody battle between 300 insurrectos and 200 federal troops has raged around the little town of Santa Barbara, southwest of the city of Chihuahua, Mexico, for two days. 'According to the dispatch the reb els attacked and took Santa, Barbara, but before they could strengthen Its defenses the federah rallied and at tempted to retake the place. A body of 25 rurales charged through the insurrecto lines and succeeded in reaching the municipal building, buij were cut off from the main federal | body. They took refuge in the build-! ing. The telegram does not reveai | their fate. Finding himself outnumbered. C-*l. Arfieamendi, in command of the fed eral troopa, sent to Parral fo ? rein forcements and the insurrecto leaders are said to have dispatched messen ges in the direction of the camp cf Madero and Orczeo on a similar er rand. It is said both sides exhibited the greatest bravery and the percent age of killed and wounded Is high. Advices from Magdelena, Sonora. by mail, declare that Monday's bat tle reported from Agua Priela as a victory for the federals was really a victory for the rebels, instead of being ambushed themselves, the reb els ambushed the federals at San Rafael and the federals were driven to a mill at Santa Rosa, where the ! rebels surrounded them, says the cor ! respondent. j Mail advices from Hermosil'.o say j of the fighting: "The battle that is ! being fought at San Rafael Is the most important engagement of the revolution in thi* State. Tiere are 700 revolutionists and some 1,000 federals. It is a stand-up fight. The revolutionists knew the federals were coming to the attack and stool their ground. "Friday night the government is sued a bulletin claiming that in the battle 78 revolutionists had been killed and that the government had lost 16 killed and 60 wounded. ? Twenty-six badly wounded federals j arrived here from the front. After i three days of fighting the govern i ment has issued no new bulletin or j claimed the victory. The city is wait j ing. All know the news is bad for) the government. Although reports received at En Paso indicate heavy fighting at Ures, j Sonora, representatives of both j Mexican factions declare the report that 1,000 men had been killed is without foundation. Representatives j of the insurrecto junta here, .n close touch with the war zone, declare the Insurrecto force which might have been engaged numers but 1,100 and that not more than 2,000 men were engaged on both sides. The statt-' ment from Tucson that the town of San Rafael had been destroyed by fire is discredited, as the town consists almost entirely of adobe houses with I mud roofs, which are fireproof. It is i believed the loss has been heavy, J j however. *j MULE KILLED IX A FIELD. I Old Rotten Pine Tree Falls Across Animal's Back. Quite a peculiar accident is re ported from Farrells, in Bamberg county, by which a fine mule was killed. It seems that while Mr. Sam Berry, a well-to-do farmer of that section, was ploughing in his field, one afternoon last week a tree fell on and killed his mule. The ends of the rows went close to a little branch, in which several dead pine trees were standing. As Mr. Berry was turning the mule! around to start back with another j furrow one of the dead pit.es fell dl I rectly upon the back of the mule, i j felling it instantly. The mule died from the effects of the blow in a very short time. A little son of Mr. Berry, who was ? j with him at the time, had a narrow! J escape from the same cause, as he Isaw the falling tree just in time to! j get away from It. j The accident is peculiar in that: , there was but a very light blowing at ; the time. The tree could have fallen j in another direction as easily as the I one in which it did fall. Turned Him Loose. Governor Blease has paroled dur I ing good behavior James Murphy, of j Dorchester county, who in 1907 be gan a life sentence for murder. So-1 licitor Hildebrand, in reporting on ' this case to the former administra tion, said that the man should have ! been hanged. Governor Blease did j not seem to agree with Solicitor Hil-; I debrand, and so turned Murphy loose. Only One Got Away. Revolutionises slaughtered every federal official of the town of Guaza paras, near the Sonora line in Chi huahua, when they . took the town. All were placed in jail and shot. A young telegraph operator alone es caped. He fell with others beneath the dead and crawled out 12 hours later and made his way barefooted to Chlnipas, 40 miles away. I JKG, S. CU TUESDAY. AI FATAL JOY RIDE The Chauffeur Was Killed ;ind Several Otbers Severely HorL THE AUTO WAS BURNED Cat Becomes Unmanageable and Strikes Tree?Steering Post Torn Away andl Driver's Neck Broken One Young Woman Thought to be Dying and Another Fatally Hart. Felix Faust, a chauffeur of New York, was killed, Misses Bessie Mc Donald and Gertrude Pfeiger, of Boston, badly injured, and Miss Em ma Lucid, of Boston, hurt internally in an automobile "joy ride" accident on the Port Orange road, near Day ton, Fla., early Sunday. The car was the property of R. A. Warner, of New "York, who left for his home last Friday, after spending the winter Beason here. He left in structions with Faust, his chauffeur, to ship the car to New York Sunday. Saturday night Faust invited a party of his friends to take a. fare well "joy ride," and they were on their way home when the accident occurred. While the car was pro ceeding at a high rate of speed, it is said, it became unmanageable, and left the road, ploughing through a ditch and grazing a tree. The tree tore away the steering post, broke Faust's neck and crushed his skull. The car ran a hundred yards and col lided with anoaher three, throwing the occupants in every direction. Miss McDonald suffered a broken jaw, broken shoulder and concussion of the brain and is said tp be dying. Miss Pfeiffers injuries also are ex pected to prove fatal. Wm. Thomp son, of New York, and Clyde Spring, of Dayton, who were also in the car, were thrown out, but their injunes> are slight The car took fire after the accident and burned up. Miss Bessie McDonald has no known relatives, but was to have been married next month, it is said, to an officer of one of the steam boats running out ot Savannah. DR. SEAMAN A. KNAPP DEAD. Well-Known Agricultural Expert Expires at Washington Home. Dr. Seaman Asahel Knapp, one ofj the foremost experts of the depart-; ment of agriculture, who has made investigations in many parts of the' world, died at his home In Washing-! ton Saturday. He was 7S years old. J The news of the death of Dr. Seaman ! A. Knapp was received in official cir cles in Columbia with sorrow. Col. | E. J. Watson left for Washington Sunday afternoon. Dr. Knapp first visited South Car-j olina with a view of putting into op-: eration the farm demonstration work here in the summer of 1907. He went' over the rice fields of the State with Ex-Governor Duncan Clinch Hey-1 ward and Commissioner E. J. Wat son. In the fall of 1907, at Commis sioner Watson's urgent request, Dr. Knapp put United States farm deni-| onstration work in South Carolina and sent Prof. D. N. Barrow here ?s : first State agent. Last fall, when Dr. Knapp was1 here, he said that "he hoped to live] to make South Carolina the object lesson State in up-to-date agricul-i tural methods among all the States of the Union.'' iDr. Knapp was a speaker at the University of Columbia on Founders' Day, January 12, 1911. RAT ENJOYS MATCH FEAST. However, Mischievous Rodent Starts! v? Fire in Show Case. Rats and matches came very near) causing a fire in Aiken the other night. On Wednesday night the cigar case in Hall's drug store was not well closed and during the night! a rat entered the same and seemed to like the flavor of a certain kind of! match. Just before he had satisfied his appetite the box caught on fire and the blaze caught a box of cigars. After burning for a short time the blaze went out, possibly because there was not sufficient air for circu-; lation. This prevented what might' have been a serious fire. No par ticular damage was done, except that the heat cracked the top of the show case. * Shock Was Too Great. At Spartanburg when Nathan An derson, a negro about fifty years old, caught four aces in a poker game, Saturday afternoon he dropped dead. Several negroes were playing cards in a barn and the cards must have been running "cold" when four of the big gest ones fell to Anderson and he gazed upon them. The shock was too great, and he died of heart failure. Killed in Machinery. At Yorkville William Lindsay, a \ negro laborer in the employ of the York Cotton Mill, located In the out-,1 skirts of this place, was caught byj the shafting Saturday afternoon and; so badly mangled that he was deaa I In less than two hours after his bodyj was discovered in a room where hej had been sent for a piece of lumber! lax 4.1911. WINS TUE FIGHT THERE WILL BE NO NEGRO OR DER OP THE PYTHIANS. They Will Call Their Order the Knights of Hannibal in This State Hereafter. The troubles between the Knights of Pythias and the three Charleston negroes who wished to establish a lodge in this State and give to it the same name as '.bat of the white lodge, have been brought to an ena, says the Columbia Record. Mr. J. Walter Doar of Georgetown, who Is grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias in this State, announced Fri day that a settlement satisfactory to both sides has be^n had. The negro lodge will be designated "The Knights of Hannibal" and according ly will the charter be issued to the organization. This interesting fight as to the re tention of the name of an order ex clusively dates in this State to the passage of an act at the session of the general assembly two years ago. In this act an order is given the right to keep other proposed organizations from taking a like or very similar name. Several weeks ago three Charles ton negroes sought a charter for the negro knights from the secretary of state. The grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias protested, under the terms of the act passed by the legislature. The secretary of state refused to grant the charter upon the showing made by Mr. Doar. When the charter was refused un der the name "Knights of Pythias," the negro organization sought to se cure a charter under the name "Knights." This, Mr. Doar also op posed, on the ground that it appeared that the negroes were still not with-! in the law because the Knights of i Pythias are called "Knights" gen-i erally and this would still make a conflict in the names of the two or ders. It appeared that the case would get into the courts and the secretary of state so wrote the Charleston law firm representing the negro organiza-i tion. 'Mr. Doar and the negro organlza-j tion finally agreed that if another word other than Pythias were addedj to "Knights," the change would be { satisfactory. So the negro lodge will be called the "Knights of Hannibal j of the Kastern and Western Hemi spheres." * MOB WREAKS VENGEANCE. Lynched in Alabama for Assaulting White Woman, Abberdin Johnson, a young negro,; was lynched on the outskirts of Union Springs, Ala., Sunday after-1 noon by a mob, which came from1 Goshen, Pike County. The lynching followed the storming of the Bul lock county jail here. The sheriff of Bullock was handcuffed and tied : in the jail, after which the mob dis appeared with the prisoner. Johnson was charged with the as-1 saulting of a white woman, who lived j near Goshen. After being strung upj io a tree his body was riddled with! bullets. The crime was committed j a month ago. Johnson was captured j ?unday morning about 8 o'clock,! near Union Springs, and placed in I the Bullock County jail. News of the capture quickly spread 1 and a mob was formed early Sunday! morning at Goshen. They took the) Central of Georgia train to Union Springs, arriving there about 101 o'clock. The mob was slow in form-) ing their plans and the sheriff of Bullock county called up the Gov-j ernor at Montgomery over the lon&! distance telephone, asking for troops. | The Governor had the riot call j sounded in Montgomery immediately, I but while the soldiers were gathering in their armories the mob had stormed the jail and secured the | prisoner. KILLS HIS UNCLE. Voung Abbeville Man Claims Shot in Self-Defence. Contending that he had shot in self-defence, Trunan Ashley, a young' white man, living near Donalds, sur rendered himself at the sheriff's of fice at Abbeville Friday, and is now in jail, having killed his uncle, lra: Stone, Thursday evening. Sheriff! Lyon went to the scene of the shoot ing Friday morning on the train, and young Ashley came to Abbeville through the country, and In Ibis way missed each other. Little is known, here of the particulars of tlie killing, but it is understood that the two men j had a row, when the killing took place as above stated. * Death of Jim Tillman. A dispatch from Asheville says with only his physician and a young nurse with him at the end. Col. James H. Tillman. at one time Lieu-; tenant Governor of South Carolina,] died here tonight at 9.4."?. The end came very suddenly. He had been! here for his health for the past six1 months, and of late had improved. Victim of the Flames. The body of Samuel J. Abbot, the! only victim of the New York State! Capitol fire at Albany, was found Friday on the fourth floor in the southwest corner of the buildings where the flames raged fiercest. * DARK HORSE WINS DEMOCRATS ELECT JUSTICE O'GORMAN, TO THE SENATE. His Election Seems to Give Satisfac tion to Both Factions of the Dem ocratic Party. Supreme Court Justice James Aloysiu? O'Gorman, Democrat, of New York city was elected United States senator Friday by the legisla ture after the most protracted strug gle over this position ever held In the Empire State. On the final ballot? the 64th?he received 112 votes to 80 cast for Chauncey 91. Depew, whose term expired March 4. The result was in doubt almost to the minute of recording the votes, owing to the uncertainty as to how many of the Democratic insurgents, who for over two months had pre vented an election because of their opposition to William H. Sheehan, would enter the second caucus which had been adjourned from day to dny since Monday. At the close of a day of almost continuous negotiations the insurg ents capitulated and Justice O'Gor man was elected. A few minutes be fore the ballot was cast Justice O'Gorman's resignation from the bench was filed at the office of the secretary of state, as a cons?tuional provisional would have prevented his election while holding the office oi the justice of the supreme court. Wild applause marked the end ol the long contest, and the legislature, driven from the State capitol by Wednesday's fire, quickly adopted a resolution adjourning until April IV. Gov. Dix tonight expressed gratifi cation at the result. . "The State of New York," he said, "has elected for its representative in the federal senate an eminent jurist, a man of pronounced ability, of great attainments and of the highest char acter. "The election of Judge O'Gorman can not but meet with the approval of the citizens of this State, regard less of party. He will rank with the ablest statesmen the senate has known, will well represent the Em pire State and bestow honor upon the party that elected him. I am grati fied at this solution of the problem which has confronted the Democratic members of the legislature for the past ten weeks." Charles F. Murphy, leader of Tam many Hall, who for weeks has beeD striving to bring about the election of Mr. Sheehan, expressed himself as highly pleased at the outcome. "No better election could have been made by the party after the un fair and unmerited defeat of Gov. Sheehan, whose position before the people has been greatly strength ened," said Mr. Murphy. "Judge O'Gorman needs no commendation from any one, but the public un doubtedly will see that in the tri umph of the majority rule and that in sustaining the party caucus the power of the party and its opportuni ties to serve the people have been greatly increased." ? GETS LARGE GIFT. Carnegie Gives AVofford College Twenty Thousand. A special dispatch from Spartan burg to The State says Wofford Col lege received Saturday a contribu tion of $20,000 to its endowment fund from Andrew Carnegie, philan thropist and former steel magnate. The gift came In the form of a check to Henry Nelson Synder, president of the college, which arrived in the morning mail. Mr. Carnegie sent no message with the check. As Dr. Snyder said this evening, he treated the matter purely as a business transaction. Dr. Sny der had written Mr. Carnegie, asking him to help the college, and the check was the answer. This gift brings the permanent endowment fund of Wofford College close $200,000. The money is invest ed and the income used for the sup port of the Institution. The princi pal is held intact. Of the present fund $100,000 has been raised in the last five years. Dr. Snyder seeks to create a permanent endowment fund of $300,000, and hopes that other gifts will follow Mr. Carnegie's. He is also trying to raise funds with which to build a large dormitory. * Won't Oppose Tilhnaii. In addition to reiterating his for mer declaration that he will run for the Senate, Governor Blease Friday verified The News and Courier's sur mise that he will not run against Senator Benjamin Ryan Tillman. "I am already in the race, but I won't run against 15. R. Tillman," said the Governor. * He Owned Up. At Chicago Philip Purpurpa, a former commission merchant, Friday confessed to the police that be had written no less than twenty-live let ters to persons of South Chicago de manding money and signing the epistles "The Black Hand." Some of these were successful, he said. * Electric Cars Collide. Rural Policeman Knox, whose I*>g was amputated, and Conductor Kolb, whose skull was fractured In a bad electric car smash in the suburbs ot Charleston on Saturday night, were reported to be doing nicely. WO CENTS PEB COPY BAUS ATNEGRO Yoong Girl Model Draws Color line in Chicago Art Schoo! SHE WINS MUCH PRAISE Refuses to Pose Before Class in Which Negro Man is Included? Hereafter Negroes to be Barred? Makes Epoch in Practices of Art Schools iii; Chicago. Hereafter negroes will be barred admission to the art classes in Chi cago. The climax to the question was brought about last week In Chicago through the following incident re lated by the Chicago Tribune: A beautiful girl model standing on a raised dais before Uoutwood's life class of men students rained her hands to her throat and was about to fling away the long kimono that draped her figure from the nape of her softly curved neck to her bare feet. As she did so her eyes took in the men of the class, one by one. At last they rested on Thomas Downs, a ne gro. Then suddenly the hands which had been fumbling with the cords at her throat paused. A deep flush spread over the face of the girl. Turn I ing to one of the men students in the first room she said in a half whisper: "I'll not pose so long as that? that?black man Is in the room. You must get him to leave if I stay." Downs was on his feet in an in stant. This was the first time in the history of the life classes at the Art Institute that the color line had ever been drawn. A half dozen other stu dents stood up when Down did. They looked at Downs and Downs looked at them expectantly. Then with a muttered protest Downs walked siow ly to and out of the door. An instant later the kimono had been tossed away and the work of the li te class was on. That was all there was to ft ex ceut the congratulations and ap plause that came to Miss Blanha? that is the name of the model?after the class was over; but It marks the beginning of a new order of things in the life classes at the Art Insti tute. From now on no negroes will j be admitted to the classes in which : girls pose. -t There has for a long time been an : undercurrent of protest both among ; the students and the models against i compelling beautiful young girls to I pose before negroes. This feeling j never found voice until yesterday. ! The models were afraid to speak Tor fear of losing their positions, the ,7lri students remained silent in dread of being ridiculed for prudery, and tno men said nothing because it did not seem a thing for a man to talk about. Miss Bianha's action solved the sit uation. She did what every one seemed to want to have done ana what no one seemed willing to do. i Miss Blanha?her first name is Mamie?lives at 812 Southwestern avenue. She had been chosen to pose for the class because of the exquis iteness of her figure, which is fiaid to be almost Grecian in its classicalness. Yesterday was her first appearance before Boutwell's class. "The other girls had told me what I was to expect when I posed before this class," said Miss Blanha, "and how they dreaded to do it. I made up my mind that some one would have to take a decisive stand in the matter, and as I have personally such , a great aversion to colored men that i it would have been almost Impossible j for me to force myself to pose before one of them, I determined to bring j on a crisis of some sort. I am glad that matters have turned out is they have. With the exception of the ne gro student I guess every one is sat isfied." ? WANTS HIS FRIENDS. Reasons Eor Not Reappointlng AH of Asylum Board. Gov. Blease has refused to appoint three members of the commission named to relieve the congested con i dition at the State Hospital 'or the j Insane. He said Saturday that he would : commission Dr. .7. W. Babcock, su : perintendent of the asylum, and Dr. ! Robert Wilson, Jr., of Charleston. I He said that he would not commis j sion George n. Cromer of Newberry, Leroy Springs of Lancaster and R. 0. ; Purdy of Sumter. ! "The other three members of the commission will be Blease men," said : the governor. He said that the personel of In* commission would be announced to morrow, and that he would sign the measure of the last general assembly providing for further work of im proving the asylum and erecting the buildings on the new site acquired by the old commission. "In making these appointments," j said Gov. Blease, "I believe in the [slogan, 'To the victor belongs the spoils.' " * Cruisers to l>c Repaired. J Extensive repairs on the cruisers ! Charleston, St. Louis, Milwaukee, j Chattanooga and Galveston will soon ! begin at the Pugei: sound navy yard i to put those ships in readiness to go ? J into commission. The work will cost I approximately $750,000. *