University of South Carolina Libraries
VOL. XXVI. > ^ ■■ a.r BARNWELL, S. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1903. NO 80 HS FEARED DISGRACE. General Sir Hector McDonald Com- . raita Suicide jd Parii^ COULD NOT FACE THE CHARGES. The Diatinguiahed Officer High in the British Service. Was to ,be Tried on Seri ous Charges. On Wednesday a dispatch from Calambo, Ceylon, said charges 6f the most serious nature have been brought against Major General Sir Hector Mao.. Donald, commanding ihe forces in Ceylon, in-consequence of which the governor of that island. Sir Joseph West 1 iidgeway; has been authorized to convene a courtmartial to try General MacDonald. The lafer, when the charges was tiled sometime ago, went to England from Ceylon to confer with his friends and superior officers and he started to return and face the etiarges, which it is alleged,, are based on immoral" acts. -—- But it seems he, feared to face the. charges, as he committed suicide at the Hotel Regima on Wednesday in Paris. He shot himself in the right m ■PSTiv 1 " triple shortly after noon and expired - »jw minutes later. The general was i^ie in his small chamber on the izanine floor of the hotel at the ■ me of the tragedy. One of the emaie attendants heard the pistol shot and opening the door saw~'Cffir general’s figure, stretched out on the floor with blood gushing from a bullet wound in the head. She ran scream ing to the balcony overlooking the lobby of Hie hotel, where many Quests, including a number of ladies, were as sembled. The proprietor of the hotel was the first to reacli the expiring man. - ‘ ‘ y. „ The commissary of police was noti fied, and, accompanied by a doctor, proceeded to a preliminary investiga- tlon. No money or papers of anv kind were found irv Sh Hector's baggage. Two notes written in English were found lying otia_table in his room ano these were taken pt»ssesslon of by the authorities, but it Ti understood that their eon tents have ■>- ON GHICCO STREET. . AN EXPERT VIEW:' The Crusade Aualnt Oharleaton Blind Tlgeft are in Earoeat. The ChalrlestotKCorrespondentof The State says Governor Tillman once ordered ti»e dispensary constable to “raise hell on Ohicco street. 4 * - Sub stitute “estebllshmerrtsy^for the last word of the order and then some Idea may be had of the manner of the war fare the constables have begun, start ing first with the East Bay and Mar ket street places of the famous king of thirblind tigers. It was stated that all the blind tigers are to be similarly dealt with and the work wish started With Chlcco’s establishments. —A gallon demijohn of corn whiskey was found in a foom over Chlcco’s restahrant and bar and this was con- sideredample evidence to ra'd andill.s- mantle the places. Chice* indignant ly denied Thursday that “that 10 cent corn whiikey” was his. He said that it belonged to a Ixtarder, and “every body knows that I don’t sell that sort OT stuff.' You get good goods here.” At all evenw, when the dismantling process started, (Jhioe » asked that be be permitted to remove the fixtures and furnishings himself, which was allowed by Howie, aud the sounds of the saw and hammer took The'pfuceof- the clinking of the glasses and pop ping of corks at the well known anti much frequented places Thursday. The fixtures will be stored for future use. Chieeo^ ex pressed his willingness to quit the retail business, provided the other tigers were si milafly dealt with, and he said that CUie;f Howie promised -to -rtismaatto alhthc other In th^^me. way. The Medical News, of New York, on the Race laeae. THE NEGRO VIEWED MEDICALLY places Tothejgijpn Uhicco saief tha that he wQuichbaye left Charleston long ngo if it were not for his holdings of property here. He said that even now he is willing to leave, provided any one will purchase all of his property. He is willing to knock off 20 per cent, of its value-to close out. Chicco declares that he has always condcuted a decent place and he can not understand why the con stables should have swooped down on him In the manner that they did. His fellow violators believe that ('hicco’s trials are largely the result of his ap peal fyr leniency in the enforcement m fro hearing uti Uie suicide, lu the general's coat, lying on the bed, were found .some photo graphs. The British embassy and consulate were notified later, and Consul General Ipglis visited the hotel and took charge of the body. Sir Hector MacDonald arrived in -Paris last Friday evening from Lon- _ don on his way hack.to Ceylon, where ‘ it was understood that an Immediate -rotrrtf martial would be held to clear up the charges made against him. On 'reaching the hotel at 11 o'clock at night he .was told that only a snu^l and indifferent room was available. He replied that that waa quite suffi cient. tte was not .accompanied in any - aid de camp or valet. He said he only intended to stay a days or two in Paris: Little was seen of him since his arrival. He was, however, In the lobby this morning about noon and It -Hs believed that a newspaper, printed in English, containing a resume of the grave charges brought against him ~7and emhellisned with the portion imfurll uniform, came under tils attention, lie left the-lobby> -go ing to his room and the pistol shot followed soon after. The general’s suicide has profoundly shocked the British dftidal here. "Those about the hotel who -have conversed with -Sir Hector MacDonald recently say he of the-aet. attracting attention to his own violation of the law. At all events, hA wantii tiie rither dealers to share the same fate, and the constables say that the raid is the beginning of a general dismantling of the bars over the city. n — LIFE OF YOUNG GIRL RUINED. mmr , • > * ^ , r> .... Married Man in Hartaville, S. C. After t' ■ ' - • Few Baya Acquaintance. showed.no-signs of excitement or men tal worev. . *-<* — • < A Wild aged negro orator, Am aged nekro orator, A. J. Fre- mont, of Watertown, S. Dak . a well- known representative of the. colored race, who, at the close of .the civil war, was president ni-tlw society that aent, an,poo negroes back to Africa. The Charlotte Observer.sayg at the boarding liouse of Mrs. JohnJttender son, in that city, a pretty woman and a bride lias waited a week for the re turn of l>er husband. The woman, who Is quite Toung and penRiless, found that she was not a bride, and that the^ real wife of her husband Is stllljhving. The following is the sad story as related by the Observer: The girl Is Miss Mary Mclnvailie of- Hirtsville, Darlin'gtoif county, S. C general 84^^® thought until a day urmagu-that she was Mrs. Julius Manus Four months ago sh.e_mct Manus in Harts- ville and became engaged to him, and when her mother objected to the match she ran away to Kershaw, S. C., and was married to Manus“ _ ThatT ee * €D * t,ion - was three weeks ago. —^: A fortnight ago the young cpuple ^me here and engaged board -a^d lodging at Mrs. Henderson's Manus claimed that he had Deefr a wpertn- tendent of a cotton mill and that ire expected to secure work in Charlotte. Every morqing during his stay here The N>wa 8»ya Unleaa All the Facta ' Are Weighed, the South May be Bone Great Injnaiice. The Medical News, a Widely known journal published In Ne'w York city, is aroused by the recent discussion of the race issue to comment upon Negro Supremacy from a Medical Standpoint/’ In an editorial upon that subject-in its issue of February 28 the Medical News states that in leading papers of the North and South have appeared editorials of great acumen and power, “but none seem as yet to have dealt, except in a superficial manner, with the race problem as seen from a biological, ethnological or medlcah standpoint.” The News continues: One cannot intelligently answer the question whether the negro can take a place in the social and econo mic progress of the nation without being in possession of the main mor phological differences between th’e Caucasian and the-' African, sincef these are the fundament&l bases for mental, and moral discrepancies be tween the races. That the negro more nearly or anthropoid apes is shown by The Emigration from the Houtbern stale* to Mexico Began. Advices received at the Mexican embassy at Washington tell of the re cent importation to that country from the United States of 100 negroes who will be employed along the line of the Vera Cruz and Pacific railroad. This move is experimental ap4 is being watched with 'considerable ’interest. If successful results ensued is said that larj^e Importations from the southern States will follow in the ef fort to solve the present problem of finding -laborers in Mexico who are alike competent and filling to work. loan Alabama negro named McKel- vin is given fihe credit for inducing members of his race to emigrate to Mexico. McKelvin was ah-one.time employed on a large Alabama planta- ifiorr, but later went to.Mexico^ where ap- the following points: The arm is abnpr maBy 16ng—in the erect position It rOften reaches the knee-pans, and on £n a verge exceeds that of the Cailca- siap by about two h|ches. . The facial angle, which Is grAntefl by all to-have a definite ethnological bearing, even if the function of the frontal lobes is still hut little known, average 82 de grees in the.Caucasian and 70 degrees in the black. Coincidentally with this is the fact that in brain weight, the white man exceeds the negro by fully 10 ounces—almost as much as he in turn exceeds the highest gorilla. Another point of difference anatomi cally is seen in the lower extremity— this is not so well developed as the white rtlllll'li llu font U hrond and ■' aha man's, flat, the great toe prehensile divergent, the heel often projecting so far backward as to merit the term ‘■lark heel.” r- It is needless to dwell longer on the well known cHffereiic6 which ex iste, or to urge that they demonstrate a distinct race of mankind and show conclusively _in the negro an inferior type. Among’ the iair-mioded this is axiomatic. Some years ago we were all alarmed over the . “yellow peril.” Now the “black peril” confronts us. •The article quotes the late Prof. Ogden S. Rood, of Qqlumbiaj as ask ing: “Hew pan there be'any ques tion of superiority or inferiority be tween two peoples ^who develop men tally are separated by a chasm of 20,000 years?” Eugene R. Corson, In his contribution to the Wilder Quar ter Century Book, states that as a re sult of e most.careful study of the census, and dependent upon personal observation in the cjty of Savannah, be is confident that tuberculosis anc alcoholism are madin stultifying in roads on the making negro; poor, weakened product, that he is, of mis- NSGR0EB ON TER MOVE. _ - • ■ .. r ^ Interesting Bait Against the Charles ton and Seashore Railway. he claims to have found better wages. He returned to Alabama and distribu- tecl large circulars among the negroes telling of the advantages of the Mexi can country and of the opportunities it offered poor negroes who wanted work im-the country.' Hl» circulars also contained as an inducement the assurance that the negrOe* Would not be subject to the order of “white- trash.” This last feature Apparently .proved a drawing card for McKelvin had no^trouble in pursuading 100 ne groes to return to Mexico with him, where he found work for them at $1.50 a day. this first Importation have been Employed on the La Junta plantation of George C. Sanborn. So far the negroes, it Is said, are satisfied and are in turn proving satisfactory to their employers. Mc Kelvin has made the claim that he The supreme court lias lately affirm- ed a decision of the circuit court in Orangeburg, awarding a verdict of $0,000 to the plaintiff, In the case of Annie B. Carroll vs. the Charleston and Seashore Railroad company. This case is quite an interesting one aud harf-been tlmroughly investigated un der the law, having been three times brought to trial In the lower court/ and then appealed byjthe railway cora- ^ On the 23rd of August, 1898, there was to be a dance at the Isle of Palms. Miss Carroll left Charleston, attend ed Ujp dan6e and returned when it was over. On the way back she alleges that while leaving the Mount Pleasant wharf to board the ferryboat she fell through a hole In the wharf and into the water and was rescued only with great dittlciflty. The. eomplaint fur ther alleges that though It was at the the accident about 1.30 will be able to Induce a million of hHiigrarso from sickness and fimn shuck, race now in the southern States to ^mlgraje to Mexico and several rail road. contractuES..are endeavoring to artamge with him to return to the States and canvass the south for la borers. McKelvin, it is understood, will make a return trip within the next few months. -— TO-BE HONORED. Holla of ihe South Carolina Troops in the Civil War. Governor Heyward Wednesday sent Hon. Etihu the following letter to Root, secretary of war: “Absence from my office has pre vented my replying earlier to your communication of March 16th. I note with much pleasure that it is the In tention of your department to compile and pubhshT^ as a continuation of the publication known as “The Official Records of the Union and Con federate grades,” a complete list or roster of the officers and toen who served in these armies during the Civil war. I ffcel sure that this ac tion on the part of the general govern ment will meet with favor through- out the entire south, and that those who served in the Confederate armies and their descendants will appreciate tills opportunity of having their names handed down to history r 1 shall be glad to glve^tO-TOUr department whatever cooperation lies in my power." _ ■' ■ “You request that I should desig hate some one from this State to com mimicate with Brig. F. C. Aissworth,- -, - mattertif ~i Problem,” and on Crnigreaxman- leetured on the “Race while there called Tawney and asked for a private inter view. He statwi he had a communi cation which he desired the congress man to convey to the president to the effectl that he bpd come into posses sion of Triformation that a plan had been made to attempt the life of President Roosevelt oh'-his western trip,L>ut that it had now been aban doned and instead the plotters were planning at some favorable point in Montana or Colorado to capture Sec retary of'the Treasury Shaw, Secre tary of War Root and Attorney Gen eral Knox and carry thpm , v to the mountains to be held for suitable ran som. /"Freemont refused to divulge the sohree bf bis Information, hut in sisted that it was correct. —■ A Mud Accident. At Cocoa, Fla., at a Charavari par ty given Mr. and Mrs. Leddon, an old cannon used in the serenade burst. Mrs. R. B. Holmes’ leg was so shat tered that amputation below the knee was necessary. Arthur LSpham’s leg was fractured. The knee of W. M. Jfrtanmn, and the thigh of his wife # were Injured. George Whate, Will Ransom and Hugh Connor were also hurt. The cannon was an old one rescued from the 'Wireck of~ the Brifr ish steamer off Sebastian. Bet a Church Burn. St. Joseph Italian Catholic Church in Hazel township, just outside the city limits, Hazeltown, Pa., was burn ed down earlx Wednesday morning. Mayor Renhardt refused W permit the firemen to extinguish the (lames owing to the residents 5 refu«tf te joln in an anexation movement some time ago for a Greater Hazelton. The loss is $20,000 and the eanse Ipnendtory. he would leaveTheTiouse early, taking his dinrer with him. and wouliLnot felurn until the late afternoon. A" week ago—Saturday, the Hth inst,— Manus disappeared. Prior to his de- parture he had taken from the wo man he illegally married all the money she had, about $25. 7 In a conversation with chief Of po lice Irwin and an Observer reporter Wednesday-afternoon Miss Mclnvaille stated that she would leave Thurs day morning for Hartsville, her former home. Her motherjiad wired to Mr. J. IL Weddingtonrfihairman of the county commissioners, asking that her daughter be sent back home; and the young woman said she would never have another moment’s peace until she again saw her mother. Manus not only left her penniless, but failed to pay any part of the hoard bill due by the couple. .rr “I want to make Mr ManuSBUffer,” said Miss MclpVallle to the chief of police. “He must be arrested. He has ruined my life completely.” “ ' “And I want my mother,” said the young girl, with a wail. . 4 . r V 1 . Sir Spencer St. John says of the in habitants of Haytl: “After a resi dence of over twenty years in this island 1 am forced to the conclusion that the negro is incapable of hold- shows no sign of improvement—-on the other hand, it is constantlyretrograd- ing, and without external influence stage of the dwellers of the Congo.” The Medical News thus continues Its Comments If ft Ts well sale recognition of the negro, In subsUnce W jn be compiled ahd^uhtlsheclTs-a rather than in theory, earnest-thought continuation of the publication known chleT of WreCofa'ancI' pension office of your department, relative tojthe details of the work. I would respect fully suggest Col. M P. Tribble of An derson S. C. I will request Col. Trib ble to correspond with you.” The governor also eent Col. Tribble a letter as follows ‘H have been notified by the Hon. Elihu Root, secretary of war, toname an official from South.Carolina to co- opejate with Biig. G£.. F: C, Ain. - wor$h, chief of the record aud pension office of the war department, in com piling a full roster aud list of the offi cers and enlisted men who bore anus SETTLED AT LAST. NX THOUSAND DOLLARS Damages Awarded Miss Annie Car- roll, Who Fell Through the Company's Wharf and Was Very Seriously Injured. A Little A GRAIN L0C8E Into And Not tho Hoasiaa Fly it \ Thing That It In an open well, SO feet deep, for hriiini wit.hnnt unv mx>una rtf fifteen hours, without any meant of I escape, was the harrowing experience | of Henry Miller, the seven-j son of S. C. Milier, a machlnt the National Furniture oompany, lives at 42 Ponders avenue. The child ffell in the well about o’clock Saturday morning, and was | not found until II o'clock that night, cold, Injured and almost unconscious, tteirad made desperate efforts to get DESTROYING THE OAT The Little IVst Has Dona Much Damage to the Growing Oata, ZD Bat Its Days Are Numbered. steps in surface. time of the accident about 1.30 a. m that there was no light on the wharf, and thus. It was that she failed to see the hole in the planking. Miss Carroll claimed that she suf- caused byTrersuddehTrtwigeand from remaining in her wet clothing until she' got home, that she was practically incapacitated from evefearolffg her living again./She asked from the railway company for'her disability $10,000, and in addition $250, which she had paid the physician who at tended her. Five thousand dollars was also demanded because of the negligence of the oompany. In answering the complaint the rail way company said that Miss*,Carroll had left the regular passageway and climbed over-a-pile or lumber, placed especially for the purpose of guarding the wimrf. persoM from TTRniUHi lu pjq»e was brought up in Charles ton in November, 1899, before Judge Gage, but resulted in mistrial. . It was again brought up in November, 1900, In Charleston, before Judge Bu chanan with the same result.—Itwas then transferred,-on motion- plaintiff’s attorneys, to Orangeburg, where it was heard in May, 1902, be fore Judge Gage. The jury at that time, after bear ing the evidence, rendered a of $9,000 for Mias Carroll. The de Prof/Charles E. Chambliss of Clem* son college, an experieoued entomolo gist, was in Orangeburg for a few hours Wednesday and has encouraging tidings for Chefarmeniof Orangeburg, Bamberg, cWendon, Sumter, Flor ence, Darlington, Marlboro, Lee, Richland and Salqda counties, where the so-called Hessian fly has been playing wild havoc with the oat$ other small grain c In some sections of these counties the crop has been Almosbytotally de stroyed, and the plague is of such a te, the boy fell into gerious nature that the State board of i running backward | entomology sent Professor CttAmblbs out to study the destroyer and, Bible, to advise some means of m I natl ng ft;, has been ful in hls'Tefcearcrr. Professor bliss has visited Darlington, Florence, and Orangeburg counties so far, and finds the cause and conditions the same In each. Professor Chambliss sayS that the damage has been not by the Hessian fly/but out of the well, having dug the dirt half way up to the only to fall hack again- The well Into which the boy had fallen was on the property.of the Ware Furniture oompany, on West Fourth street, aliout one hundred and fifty yards from the residence of the boy’s father. A building of the com pany was burned some time ago, and since that time there has been noth ing on the property. About 8 o’clock Saturday morning while flying his ki the well/ He was tunning backward at the^tlme-and did not know of the opening; He stumbled hackwanLaod fell to the bottom without anything to brake the force of the fall. There happened to he no water In the well, and tiie hoy’s fall, on the hard bottom was one which rendered him uncon scious. Nothing was known of the boy’s fall, and his father-reported the matr ter to the police and aske< them to .V help him in finding the lad. He stiaied that the boy had left borne io see the cadavers which had been deserted on the river line and had not been seen since. When found the hoy was in a semf-COnscious condition and almost frozen, the little water in the well chilling him to the marrow. When he was taken from the well the little fellow could hardly speak, and it was some time—before^be was resuscitated. He said that the fall had rendered him unconscious and regained his senses that afternoon. He then began making desperate efforts to get out of the well, digging steps in the side of the well, using only his bands to cut into the dirt. His hands were bleeding and lacerated when res pued. Hi$ efforts to escape, however, had proven fruitless, the well having caved in aboul half way up, and he chuM r^ the-eavefl-ih-plice. ^ Atlanta nal. done, food by inserting Its Jointed beak In the stem and leaves of tbe It suckti lot completely kill the plant, will cause the uraln to be severely Inlaied and shriveled. There is no practical remedy, but tills need not cause alarm for, at preseat, the natural enemy of the louse has checked its faar«W~ These natural enemies will keep the louse in bounds, and if there frere a practical remedy then* would be no need of applying it. These natural enemies of tbe louse are bugs of four species, and not unlike tbe potato bug. These bugs feed on the louse and are rapidly exterminating them. Dry or cool weather retards tbe work Of tbe |1(Ute, so that with favorable weather/ aided by the bugs, it Is not thought their ravages can continue longer. The broadcasting of nlr-slacked lime when it strikes tbe Insoota ndtt IdU i them, but not in sufficient numbers to A Thrilling Escape. A mother, father, infant and ser vant were rescued by firemen from suffocation in a fire which oocurred tlon of nitrate of soda at 75 pounds per acre will unquestionably stimulate the plant to vigorous growth which ed. The household consisted of R. L. Charles, his wife and infant son, and verdict $ servant named Rosa Carter Fire man E. H. Harris reached the third fense then asked for a new trial on' floor by means of a ladder. He found ichmond, Va., last Wednesday I enaMelt to ^ „ morning. The family were all asleep th® louse, but no immefilafe ie$u|ts at the time their lives were endanger- oou 1x5 obtMned^hr, its use nod It the ground of excessive damages, and Judge Gage sustained this-m* recommending a new trial unless the plaintiff should remit $3,000 of the verdict rendered. The attorneys for the defense appealed on the ground HDta place of safety. .Returning, that J udge Gage should have granted a new trial without the option of thei In * quilt and then carried her to the reduction of the verdict. The case ^as heard by J udges Pope, Gary and -ri Jones, and the decision affirmed^ - New Chief Constable*. appointments to the position of chief constables has heen^agiUting a large The governor has received Jiundreds of letters applying for poeitions on the force. selection he Wednesday made the fbF lowing appointments: Tt. L. Cureton, Pickens. J. C- Hall, Greenville. J. R. Fant, Spartanburg. A. S. Osborn, Columbia. S. Y. Delgar, Sumter. the room dense with ‘smoke and the family fast becoming suffocated. Hs snatched up the baby, wrapped it in bis coat and banded it to another fire man, then on the ladder, who carried the first fireman wrapped Mrs. Charles dS for Dre^ f^OTfederacy-durlBg tlve-great| oLthe^okl lQrce_Corfctables Howie, , that the time is ripe for aj This roster and list 1 of names Failt and cureton are retain^, the Another Fallacy. ~ There were 607,000,000 passengers carried by4,he railroads of tiie United States in 1902, which means that, on an average, every man, woman and child rode eight time during the year x notes an exchange. That’s another popular fallacy, like this thing of every man, woman and child in tbe United State having $29,957 As a matter of TacL we know a man who rode only -twiee aod 95^ cent* left,——— A Fatal Trip. The recent flood on the Mississippi Valley has caused great loss of life and property. „ One day last week a should be given by those who would liberally interpret our laws, and they should be well versed In the opinions of such men *of science as we have quoted. They must know and recog nize that profound differences do exist —that one race is 20,000 years behind tbe other. They must know that ethnologically, physiologically, anato mically, the negro and Caucasian must always be widely different. If the negro is advancing, which, thanks to the noble efforts made at Tuskegee and similar institutions, be surely is, what, meantime, is the Caucasian do ing? Advancing? Yes, with his pliant brain case, capable of permit ting progressive development from birth to death, he is thundering ahead with a rush and a speed which no alien race can hope to follow. Unless these facts are weighed in a true balance bitter injustice may be done the South. It Is no doubt true, as Carson assumes that the irrevoc able law of the “survival of tbe fit test” will wipe the negro away. but this will take centuries. There R a real and Ungual _ tor from North'Carolina has we; Science, education, religion, philan thropy may' well focne their bright rays upon it, and unless our leaders the railroad track near Memphis, Tenn., and all six men were drowned. Lovers Drowned. Walter Chism, Luther Owen and Jennie George were drowned In tbe skiff containing lour-drununers and Femisgut Bayou* Ark,, while return- two negro oarsmen were swept under ing from a prayer meeting in a canoe. as ‘The Official Records o^ the Union and Confederate Armies;" In compli ance with the request of S^cretary- Root/l have the pleasure of naming you for this Important work. I feel sure that with you the work will re ceive loving and faithful service, and I am very glad to name so true and triea a citizen for the discharge of this duty which means so much for the history of our State. “Secretary Root<gguest8 that you communicate with Brig.- Gen. F. C. Ainsworth, chief of the record and pension office at Washington, I). C. and I have wrttteo him that yoiLwIll do so.” , D. .„ , w , shot Her Betroyer. Effle Waggy, daughter of William Waggy, a prosperous farmer, of Wes ton, Va., shot Ralph McDqnald son of Ex-Sheriff McDonald Wednesday near the Waggy homestead. Four years ago Miss Waggy alleges that Mc Donald, who studied medicine in a Loutsvihe. Ky., college, betrayed her She says she has been-watching—hev i to kill him. She fired his back and side, hope of his recovery.' not been arrested., There is little The woman has Miss George and Owens were to have been married within a fortnight. Lemuel Borden, lawyer ai tbe Tribune of the People of Wood- stock, \i. r advertised for a wife. She came in tbe person of Mrs. Aman da Deer, from Montazumt, Ind. Frl day. She was fully up to specifica tions and In a few minutes they were married. v S. T. Howie, Charleston. W. window andDanded her to a third fireman, who landed her safely. Mr. Charles was then awakened add de scended the ladder with the assistance of the firemen. The servant, when ^roused, became so excited that she mwmmm first, and would have been diuhed to pieces on the ground below, 4 but for fireman No. 4, who set her .right and assisted her in reaching the street: LoM Her Hair pretty and popular society girl of CarroHton, Ga., lost her beautiful hairTfiursday night through the combination of a lamp light and a celluloid comb. She was reading" and became so Inerested In her book she did notice that her head was nearly against the lamp on the table. The flame of the would.prove a need lees expense, as tbe natural enemies have already $6 grcatr ly reduced the numbers of tbe Iboas as to remove the fear of fortblf Injury. Professor Chambliss says that att volunteer oats should be andtbat in planting next falUfc be done on land not dow Infected. However, full Instructions for future guidance will be given la the bulletin to be issued this summer. Professor Chambliss urges as much publicity la weekly"papers ss possible, so that farmers may be Informed speedily, thereby saving them expense and worry. - Mid Cbeere and Bleee dispatch from Detroit ’ " ■Wv* recently South Carolina was greeted With al ternate storms of cheers and hisses when he delivered an impassioned ad dress on race problem at tbe Light Guard Armory, tbe audience being evidently divided between upholders if his ideas and strenuous oltbem. otheTappoIbtees having never occupi ed such positions before. J. C. Hall has been first sergeant of the police force of Greenville, S. Y. Delgar a business man of Sumter, and W. F. Holmes a farmer of Barnwell county. A. S. Osborn who will have his headquarters in Columbia is a mer chant of Ninety- Six. The appointments become effective April 1, when the officers will take up temporary headquarters at the places indicated and proceed to enforce the law.- 7 .. mi II -lih II n. ■■Ill 111 Starring in Finland. The Berlin Die Post states that the famine in Finland is more acute dally. The, suffering of the populace is more Intense and has been aggravated by entire lack of meat, milk and po tatoes since October. The people are barefooted and clothed in rags. In Regani and Uleaborg alone there are a thousand peasants said to be starv ing, while the carcases of thousands of cattle and corpses of human beings All the air with pollution. Epidemics of various sorts has broken out7~~Aib- rellef expeditions have reached Haparalda, Sweeden, on the bay of Botbina, opposite Uleaborgs. - He saLOMBSfHD ed majority rale and iritb a neer ad ded that there were 235,000 mors ne groes than white people In flbuttt Car olina. “It will mean that more blood will flow than was shed In tbe jiyil war If yOu persist in trying to eabjeet . . us to the domination of tbe blackn.” p heated the eomb she ffort lnberj ^ ^13 ’’YonLn^hored the Indiana hair and before she was aware of her and gt)ul out the Chinamen, but dangetDae comb had ignited and her , t kll0WI1 by soldier* who head was enveloped In a mass of file, rendered with Lee that it was your She attempted to bruah the 1 deviliah. ioteot^ ^to set up tbe Mgro t from her Half and badly burned her over the white manure would have . s* •, hands. Finally She conquered the flandes, but her magnlflcient suit of hair was gone and one Aide of her face was badly burned. Killed by a Fall. Cbas. Marsch, 40 years-old, died ot|Tbunlday In the yard of the Consoli dated Gas company, Avenue A and Twenty-first street, New York* from the effects of a fall received while wrestling with a chum and lifelong friend, Thomas J. Powers. Powers was detained at tbe police st^ticm, and is heartbroken. The Tillman Trial.' Solicitor Thurmond stated Friday that the trial of James H. Tillman would probably come up Monday April,- 13. The first week of criminal court would be taken up with minor cases, many of which would be disposed of in a day and none of the important cases would be reached until the second week. There were a large number of witnesses in the Tillman case, the solicitor said, and the state would be ready for trial on Monday of that week. ~t Bind Fawning. At Oshkash, Wls., after yawning without Interruption for three entire days despite every effort at’ stoppage, Mrs. Henry Jenner is dead. The phy sicians decided that she was suffering from an obscure lesion of the brain producing larynglal spasms. . Rem- ed tea anti an im the tics were iflminllteij ed without effect. She was unabttrtwl sleep and continued yawning until no longer able from lack of strength. fought you till now.” Upon'Qie sena tor’s reference to some of Sherman*! . army as bummers, chicken' thieves and carpetbaggers, bis northern audi ence broke out into such violent bias ing tbat the speech was interrupted and some of tbe more timid ones in tbe audience feared trouble. Ended Thler Lives At Mila ns.- Texas, because of family troubles D. E. Barmore and S. H. ' Worthington agreed to take morphine to end thler lives. Barmore wae the- first to take tbe dose and when dis covered Worthington was among those who worked over him In the effort at restoration. Barmore died. Wor thington Immediately went to his room and wrote a letter to his Wife from whom be was separated and took a large dose of -poison^ He was found shortly afterwards and every effort was made to save him but the phy sicians say it is hardly probable. t Cat His Throat. I * .9 , A man believed to be Albert Ger- sola. a Spaniard, was found dead In bed in bis room In the Union Square hotel in New York, Thursday morn- His throat was cut and suicide ing is suspected, the n^an/ v" * Little is known about How It Stand* as well States, reports come that traffic highway has bepn practically i ed because of tbe oboditloo of the roads. If railroads suspended traffic they would soon be bankrupt. Mer chants in the towns aud farmers liv ing on these roads leading to the towns, occupy tbe relative poriUon of Off rritwnaAn T^-Syw realise the heavy loeaca incurred by suspended traffic on highways.