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^ . m -M *" 9. iVl ^ Job rrfflbng Job Printing ^OLVMK XXIV. "T"" OAMDKN. SOUTH CAROLINA, l ltlDAV, AUUL'HT u, IUIJ. MR N I Mill: It i <i THREE thousand people greeted campaign party Won From Many Counties Here Forming Largest Crowd Seen in Camden In Year*. (liy A. li. <JoJ??iihelmer.) Watched closely by special police inen, greedy for political combat and forming one of the greatest crowds ever assembled In Camden on such >0 occasion, three thousand enthu siastic but orderly people listened to the state campaigners on. Monu mental Square here Mdnday. Only one small disturbance oc curred, and in this a man from A neighboring county was no doubt thoroughly convinced by one of Camden's most highly esteemed clt (tens, that cursing In the presence of ladles was a thing not to he el lowed. Nothing Htartliug It can hardly be said that there were any startling developments Here Monday. The speeches of the various candidates took the usual form that has characterized them during the entire campaign, Both povernor Blease and Judge Jones were received with hearty applause md prolonged cheers^ though the crowd favoring the present gover nor was more demonstrative. There ?an be little doubt that the hand primary called for by Blease show ed amajorlty In his favor, but it a claimed by' supporters of Jones :hat the numbers were swelled by riaitors from adjoining counties. When the meeting began the landidateg for governor were not ret on the stand and when they nade their appearance there was treat demonstration. In fact, when lovernor Blease was seen by the ?owd the cheering by his follow ng was so wild that the speech hen in progress had to be discon inued until the enthusiasm sub Id ed. Floral Tribute. . At the end of lllf| apeeoh the lovernor, amid deafening cneers? rag presented with a floral tribute ly Miss Teressa Hough, daughter if Senator W. R. Hough, of this ilty, Shortly afterward he wa 8 endered a watermelon by O. L. lyers, of Darlington. > During the course of his speech lovernor Biease read affidavits as o the honesty of his campaign ? hallenging the other candidates to 0 likewise. Judge Jones was the last speaker n Monday. Though less demon tratlve, his following was no less Dthusiastic than that of Biease, nd many times he was cheered to le echo. Showing that many . of Kershaw's most distinguished citi >ns had voted with him in regard rthe separate coach" bill for -which e has many times been attacked, Bp in paying tribute to these men, Specially to J. Thornwell Hay, was peered heartily. He denied bfeiiy: Be aristocratic candidate^ Baylffg Bat he was from the compion peo Be, but that if he were an aristp Bat he- would be .proud of -it. Along Same Linefl.. RThe speech of B. B. Evans can Bdate for attorney general, was, B usual, filled with bitter invective Bd denunciatory attacks on Lyons. Bie lattter, taking advantage of hia Bivilege to do so, arose at the con cision of Evans's speech to refute Be charges uttered against him. ? The meeting was opened shortly Bfore 11 o'clock by Chairman T. 1 Kirkland, who took opportunity B say to the voters that the re Brt to the effect that they would ? denied the privilege of cheering Vs false. He said that 1-t /was Heir right as citizens to cheer and the mayor had employed spe ?M officers simply to prevent an ?uge of the privilege.. ? After a prayer offered by the H. B.. Browne, the candidates ?r railroad commissioner were in ?Wuced, the first speaker being Jamee Cansler, of Tlrxah. Vnnn lor, of Tirxah Cansler spoke of the campaign us the "state honeymoon," ami of him self hh the desert of tho meeting. He said that whenever he came first a lively day. plight be expected. He spoke of ! the fact that two yearu ago the people of Kershaw had glveu him more votes than to the three other candidates for the same office. *>om thin he drew hi* conclusion that as far as Ker shaw Is concerned he Would now he railroad commissioner. He said that he stands for most efficient service for tho people, which, he considers, embraces all' things; that he never had and never expect ed to receive a favor from anyone; that he would not accept railroad passes, and, that - if elected, would receive absolutely nothing except his salary, Cansler's claims are that he will give dividend on every gold dollar Invested by the railroads sufficient ?to encourage the building of every necessary new road. He is not, he said, so much In favor of low rates but tor comparative rates. The contention for a two-cent flat rate, he claims, Is his platform stolen by .the others, with but one differ ence and that is that be does not want the two cent flat rate if the railroads are not able Co sttaud It, while the others favor it in any case. He spoke of his experience as a teacher In the ruraJByfohoolB eight years, from which l@^had sent out two ministers; a greater good, he boasted, than Bleasenor Jones haye ever done for South Carolina. Cansler said he was willing to acknowledge that Richards, as the latter claims, has done six times as much work In one year as Wat-j son dfd In' six, but ittat as Watson ! had done nothing the claims of Richards were by no means enor mous. John G. Richards. When John Q. Richards, second speaker tor railroad commissioner,1 rose, cheers went forth from the throats o? practically everyone of his fellow citizens of Kershaw coun ty assembled on Monumental Square. '?Considered in its fullest sense," said. Major Richards, "Che dearest word to man is home. I am .at home. Twenty-two miles north of here in a little house nestling in tthe hills of the village of Liberty Hill, X first saw life, 43in$e ' that time I have lived with the proud, no ble, and generous people of Ker shaw county. I am proud to call them my home people." He spoke with feeling of how, for twenty years, the people of Kershaw had bestowed on him everything within their power, never having forced him into a second race, of how they had supported him for governor two years ago, and of the fact that, in his entire public ca reer, he had lost only' four votes in Liberty Hill. "My heart runs over with grati-. tude," said Major Richards, "and in all these years I have tried to be faithful and true, have always had the interest*^ ^h? people - i? view, and have striven to cast hon or on the people who have so slg-j nally honored me." ,Jj He siaid that he was asking for the most important gift, save gov ernor, in Che hands of the people. In this connection he told of the immense power and control of the railroad commission, ^nd 'of the] linportance of having the freight and express rates reduced to wtyat they should be. He spoke of, the efforts which he and the two other niembers of the commission had made Coward gettin the rates reduced on goods from the mills in upper South Carolina, via Charleston, so that they might be stored there and shipped to the parts of the world, and how, tho opposed by distinguished attorneys, their purpose had, at least to , a partial extent, been accomplished. He said further that the commis sion of which he was a member had given to South Carolina a reduction of from 15 Co .20 per cent; the lowest she had ever enjoyed; that they had secured tho lpwest ex press rate ever enjoyed, but tha he had by no means accomplished all he expected to do in this diMfc tlon. The speaker favored a two-cent fiat rule and not on^y the acceptanc of intUeu&e books on the trains but the accepttauce also of Interchange able mileage. Major Richards said that he was not fighting the cor porationrt, but that wheuever it was a question between the corporation and the people he was with the peo ple. Col. ?J. H. Wharton. Col. J, 11. Wharton, of Laurens, was the last speaker for railroad commissioner. He took very little of his time. Col. Wharton caused considerable laughter when he spoke of his fine run when last la Camden .Sherman at that ttihe be ing behind hint. He said if there was anyone in Kershaw county who did not expect to vote for Richards he would appreciate that vote. Hon, J. Frtuier Lyon. The first speaker for attorney general was the Hon. J. Prasier Lyon, who, upon rising, was well received by the crowd. He expressed his delight In ap pearing once more before a Ker shaw audience and thanked them for their former support. Spoke of his record in the legislature and of his promise, when the old dis pensary investigation showed that things were not as they should be, that ho would prosecute all agalnat whom evidence would permit. Thla, he said, he has done. As a result of which, one man was placed In the penitentiary for five years, an other plead guilty and paid a tine, to RlchLand county, and two other* forfeited bail in Chester. As a result of graft collected by the Murray winding up commission Lyons said that $400,000 had been turned into the state treasury apd that possibly $100,000 more could be devoted to the education of chil ? "I have no apology to offer," said Lyons, "no excuse to make." He spoke of hl? continued ef forts in the courts until it wus fi nally decided in his favor that thev tax he desired on corporations was constitutional. As a result of this he claims that today more than $120,000 is turned into the state treasury, and that this will remain a law as long as the legislature al lows it to remain as it now stands. He told also pf great and Impor tant 'task of refunding the state indebtedness and of his personal appeal to the great bankers and in surance companies of the North, which he expects to result in the lightening of the burdens of the people. Lyons said that his three oppon ents had offered no good reason i why th?y should be elected * and he turned out, that they stated no reforms to be brought about. Ev ery citizen, he said, knows that* his course has offended those who graft ed, that he was not here to con demn or hound them down, but that if they can accomplish his de feat by lies they will do it. 1 "\Vtll thee people of Kershaw county cast their votes in' favor of the grafters or the one who has fought them?" asked ILyons. *\v At the close of his speech he was heartily cheered, Thomas H. Peebles. Thomas H. Peebles as candidate for attorney general,^ said this was 'thfi .first time. tiiat .he had ever ask ed for a state office; that, he was simply seeking promotion in life, i and that he had been endorsed by being elected to tthe legislature and t othe State Democratic Con vention. * He said -that It was not his purpose to hound d&wn his fel low man^and that he was without prejudice "or abuse for his oppon ents. He promised that if elected the office of attorney general would be run economically, that the graft er wpuld feel the bitter etirig of the law and that appointive offices | within his power would go to the poor and honest men who need them. *. He spoke of having introduced a resolution in the legilature a gainst the teaching of white people in negro schools* and_ Is ppposed to white people being taxed for . fche education of the negro. , He said that he w6uld endeavor to harmon ize, be fair and fearless and prose cute the criminal regardless of who he might be. J. ^ Karlo. J. R. Earle next speaker for the office of attorney general, spoke at length on having been instrumental in bringing about the present di rect primary and of having beeu crit fclsed for certain votea in regard to the dispensary investigation, iio attacked the investigation com* uiUlt^eH for the groat amounts of money which have. been expeuded, and said that when nothing had been brought out hy this committer ho had voted with a senator from this county -to bury it forever, Earle read from the House Jour nal a lint of the present attorney general's accounts and attacked him vehemently on that score saying he disapproved of the payment of bar ber, shoe shining bills and the like from public funds. linroey Kvtui?. 1). 1). Evans was bitter In his at tack on the present attorney gen oral and turned around often to face the object of his wrath on the platform In order, apparently, to lmprt>sa his chargeu on him. Among other things he called Ly ons J. Fraud Lyons, and heaped on hlin various epithets no more com plimentary. ' Evans re-iterated the charge that the money of the school children had been plundered. He produced, and read in parts, a let ter from John Gary Evans, which he claims- to be In refutation of "lien" which Lyons has circulated on .him. "Lies," said Evans, "which he is not man enough to refute himself." He said further that the people were being hood winked and that if elected he would catch the "grandest bunch of kid-gloved thieves ever caged, and that he would land the present attorney general in stripes before a' Richland county Jury. (Wouldn't Insult Yellow I>og. Lyons, availing himself of his Qrlvlloge, rose to answer the charge of Kvans. He said that a man like Eyana couldn't InBult him, that he cwuldn't even Insult a yelow dog. $U> told of his expenditure of mo ney for assistants and explained va rious accounts In the running of his dfflce. Lyons' claimed that If the letter produced by EvanB were read In full it would be Been to be en tirely In hie (Lyon's) favor and en tirely In keeping with his charges. Carter and McLaurin. The two candidates for state treas urer, s. T. Carter and T. W. Mc Laurin, were next to speak. Car ter told of his experience In the office which he BOught, and explain ed In detail the workings of the office and the enormous responsibil ity which rested on the man who held it. McLaurlh was forced for several minutes to discontinue h^e speech when Oovernor Blease drove lip to the stand , so great and ?tremendous was the cheering. When aubwed to eontlnue, McLaurin told Ql tflr *eoord as a. man, a soldier, &nd a legislator, and promised1 faith ful service if elected to office. Oovernor filease. Making a plea that a good hear-' Ing be accorded the candidates for governor, and that no attempt at howling down be made, Chairman Klrkland introduced the first speak er for that office. His Excellency, the Governor of South Carolina. For several minutes the cheering accorded him was so deafening and prolonged that he was unable to . speak. When allowed to proceed he first took up the reports in regard to corporation candidates and mo ney being furnished for campaign purpoafifl. .He. said that lift. had heard it - reported that money was being furnished him and had heard It stated that $6,000 had been sent to Greenville for that purpose. On that account he sajd he proposed to submit affidavits which he had in hand and requested the other can didates for governor to do likewise. When he had finished reading these Blease challenged Jones and Duncan to make similar affidavits and file them with the chairman of the State Democratic Convention as he said he intended to do. He said that Jones told, a few days ago, that If the Columbia State was supporting him he did 'not knq,w it. At this Juncture the gov ernor produced a letter sent out from the State office in Columbia This communication he described In detail: "Inside," said the governor, "You will find an article by 'U. R. Brooks.", "We done read it," Interrupted on? of the audience. The Governor continued "further you will find 'Speech of Judge' Jones at Columbia,' in another place you will find, 'Part of Governor Blease'a Record' ." The mention of his re cord brought forth great applause ? : from the following of the governor, > Hleuao sneered ut -the idea of Jones t not knowhiK thut ho whh geltlug as Hlhtuiue from what ho (lJleaao) termed a "Negro. Spuniah, uigger loving newspaper." "If you elect Ira B. Jones gover nor," auld niease, "ho will ho kov ernor in name only and (ionsulca will be governor in fact and fur nlsh the brain." In regard to the fact that Judge Jonea in a speech at Heath Spriuga had refrained from making any at tack on him on account of bin ab ttence, HI i'hho said that lie wan k lu<l that he had taught the judge Home manners, cluiming that ho had kouo over the entire atate hitherto at tacking him under Himilar conditions In thin connection he described :th? Judge a? a man net up on u pin nacle of aristocracy and morality as, an angel, aud yet he, ho Bald had to teach him manners. The gover nor further Maid, "The people of South Carolina will teach him a lea son on Auguat 2 7th aud send him to the political graveyard In Lan caBter." ? "If my good old friend Pink CaB key Hhould die or resign ,aald Goy ernor lileaae, 1 would appoint old man Jones juat to help his family out." He said that he would do this because he liked some of the Judge's family, and so would break his rule to give only his friends, of fice on that account. He referred to the accusation by Jones In bin speeches in Sumter and Hampton that Dluaso and the Bleasttes were anarchists, and aajd that when they get through with him on the 37th of August "He will think they is anarchists." "JoneB," he Bald, "is floating on the filthiest wave of political ma chination ever formed in South Car olina. He claimed that this was proven by J ouch h action when King and WutHon were ejected from the governor's mansion. He maintain ed that the men were drunk and that JoneB accompanied them to the State office "when as a Chris tian he should have been at home on that Sunday afternoon Hinging Psalms," He ' said that he would prove Jones as dirtier a traitor as ever wan Benedict Arnold and, charging Mm with having deserted the Till man cau?e, compared him with Ju das iBcarlot. He said that In 1890 Jones got on Tillman's coat ttail and ran for the legislature, that the reason that he had not stayed there waB not that he had fallen' off but that Tillman had knocked him off, unwilling to allow himself tj> .be contaminated by a man who was willing to allow the black* and whites to dtl" terms of social equality. He drew at length a picture of how Qonzales had taken Jones on the skscraper in Columbia and there, pointing out to him this immense country, the ? Governor mentioning in detail .the valrous landmarks, reprimanded hijn for hlB actions In the past; which disagreed with the editor's ideas. In answer to the questions put to him by Gonzales, Blease pictures Jones as giving such answers as, "YW, Marse Gonzales," "Yes, boss." Th? governor went on to say that while upon the skyscraper under the conditions described Gonzales,1 waving his hands toward all those .bfautltul itilnsB 'which he. baflEQint ed out spoke to Jones: "If you will bow down and quit Tillman and worship me, I'll' make you ruler ov er all these things." Whereupon," said the governro, "Jones dropped on his knees and said, 'From this time on I consecrate my all to thee, fjjenpr . Qonzales." ' He said . that Jones had sold out the' men who had made him all and had vot ed for Haskell. In this connection it was that he called him a Judas Iscarlot ready to sell for 20 pieces of silver. "What did he do then," continued the governor, "this great saint, whom I had to learn to be a gen tleman after thirty times. They took him from the pinnacle on whlc ! he had been placed and found him to be a human being with the dirt iest record ever made in the legis lature by voting to make wives, sis ters, and sweethearts associate with dirty niggers and stinking black Wenches." . Blease dwelt at lengtth on his social equality qttaok: * on Jones in other language similar to this, citing as his proof for' charges thfct the judge had voted against the separate coa<;h bill, Baying he Was the first tto vote with ?' ne - -* A. t gro legislator from Ueaufort agalnat separate coaches, and that for five year# straight running, every time he had a chance, ho voted the aanie way, "liu will tell you," said the governor, "that it wuh unconatitu tlonal." "I challenge hiui," ho con* tinned, "to ?how where tho consti tution of 1KU0 dlffora from that of 1880 an far u? the paasing of a wop a rate coach hill 1h concerned, lie maintained that while making thin record Joiu?a had carried a free paas lit hlH pocket an an excuse for which he said the Judge claimed that -the railroad# had hamhoozled him, "I'd he attltunmd to admit it," aaid the governor "Corporation Jones will t,ell you," he aaid, "that he has nevor repre sented a railroad in hia life." "Why?" coutlnued the governor, "Hecauae they want a firat claaa man and never hired a aecond rater in ?their Uvea." The apeaker claim ed further againat the legal ability of Judgo Joiu*a that when in 1892 the papera twitted lien Tillman for not having good judges that the latter replied that he had to take the riff raff hecauae the good onea wouldn't have it. The governor next launched forth hia attack on Judge Jonea'a aon, "Charlie." Maintaining that the Judge had said that hia aon had never had but one caae in the eu- <? premo court, the governor aaid "Nobody hps ever accused Charlie Of being a lawyer." He repeated htg oharge made on otther stumpa that the Southern railroad had at ? one -time appointed the Judgea aon "ao that 13en Abney could mega phone thru Charlie up to Pa on the supreme bench." "When Pn got thru being Judge," aaid the governor, "Charlie got thru being ? railroad attorney." Often (luring hiu speech HIohho re ferred to JoneB us "Corporation Jones" and told of the reveruul of a deciBlon by Judge Jonoa which Joah Klrven hnd succeeded in get ting against the Virginia Carolina Chemical Co., after eleven yearB work. Kirven, he Bald then ap pealed to the supreme court of the Uttited StateB, and it was decided that Corporation Jones was wrong and the deBlred relief was given. At this Juncture Blease was ask ed by J. L. Guy: "Why did you cast your vote for Jones after you knew all, these things?" In reply the* governor said,. "Walt until I finish my speech and if you will Prove that you are. ?*? gentleman I will answer your question. I don't propose to take up my time with cheap Jones hirelings to keep me from giving him the devil." The governor's next attack was on Jone's ancestry v In regard to this he spoke in part as follows: "Jones says Colleton is his hqme, but I have never got him to t^ll wheni his grand dada came . from, or where his great grandada came from. I wish he would tell. All I have been able to get him to tell Is that his father took consumption at the beginning of the wai* as many others did at the beginning of tthatt great struggle. V He next spoke of a case In which a lady had been given $10,000 dam? ' ages . for having been put off a train and thrown, as he expressed ltj among dirty, stinking niggers, and said that "Corpdration Jones" had deprived her of her money on au -appeal -by, ina.. railroads z. . . He said that he would like to make a speech about the n^eds of the state and complained, that he had had a legislature that thpught everything he did was wrotig and wouldn't give him a chance to do ' what he wanted. - Governor Blease danied- vehement- . ' ly that he had ever 4ald that the Jews were no better than, "niggers" or that he had ever attacked^ them In any way whatever, and branded It as a "dirty lie." He said that ho, had made friends among the ' Jews in Newfcerry and all over the Btate and that the report was an ' old political gag to fool them into voting against him. 1 ? . The next tirade of the governor waB against th6 . newspapers. "They have- published;" he said, "slime not fit for the dirtiest negro hovel and yet they have sent it into your homes. Newspapers that will stoop that low will stoop to telling dirty lies on the governor of South Caro lina." Here again he entered on an attack of the family history of the editor of the Columbia State. . "Isn't it strange," said Blease, *" (Continued on last page.) __ ? 1 L ,1 1 J=af=??=- '? ' ' ? ? ? ? ' T""^ *T I Ij '' '1' -I I- 1 r ?? TV . . ? II. ? t -ill ' This is The Guy Who Patronized The Mail Ord?r Establishments iHtttt AT T6B. toy 'fc* m# im i&w ?? vJtu. i root* J6fiedi65 Tip 66NT 1 fOR Thfrbe f><v>0H66l T?I5 ONt TH' I \0K AHUfttVP1 aewt6i6 trfib S NfcVfcQ, 5^OK*0?^ ANYTHING UK* ***, AM' l&tl 0*4 troNtftu Itveat shot I