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BY AN ANGRY CROWD DftNfettHMtjr Two OUktb for 'Nt Uttetrd Threat. Thwarted Him, a Hfr Oefendent, aad Mob, Led by ■ ' Womaa, Fight* for Reveage. One of the most determined at. tempts ever made to lynch a prison er in theatreets of New York was witnessed in upper Second avenue, near One Hundred and Fifteenth street Wednesday night, when a for eigner shot one man to death and desperately wounded two of the vic tim's brothers, The following ac count of the affairs we take from the Ameriean: The slayer’s only motive was re sentment because he, with four of his countrymen, had been interfered with when the tried to bold up and rob a man in front of Mrs. Anna Kaufraann’s dry goods store at No 2256Second avenue.. Mrs. Kaufmann heard the cries of the victim, who was beaten and kicked by his five assailants, even while he protested that he had no money. Mrs. Kaufmann ran be tween the assailants and their vic tim. They fell sullenly back, and she rushed the man into her store. He was bleeding from cuts on the face. The five Becker brothers, who keep a large hardware store at No. 2250 Second avenue, heard the noise of the struggle and they came running up just as Mrs. Kaufmann had res cued the mahrShe is a powerful wo man, and tiie holdup men had receiv ed ample evidence of her ability to hit hard. But they still hung about and linstened while she told the Beck ers of the affair. *Tt is too bad we were not here,” said Henry Becker, who did not no- wfeuTaig nave punched their ’‘You would, eh?” exclaimed one of the foreigners. ”We’ll soon fix you,” and they darted off intb the darkness. ^ The Becker’s returned to their store, where they were joined by their mother. Mrs. Lana Becker, their sister, Mrs. Annie Postlensack, husband. ”Wfl would aces for them ” ENDS MS LIFE Mb PrBfMTBd D««th to TwMity Prison. Kaufmann his name was not learned. But it was not ten minutes after the disappearance of Hie man’s as sailants when all five suddenly reap peared in front of the Becker store, and, singling out Henry Becker, at tained him with dube. The other Beckers started to aid their brother, and the two woman also jumped into the melee, when Francis Sica, one of the five assail- ants and the smallest of the party, suddenly whipped out a revolver and shot Henry Becker through she breast, killing him instantly. The uthw’Becker brothers ran to the store to f k then it hatchets, and axes to avenge, their kin, but Sica followed them, firing as he advanc ed. One shot struck Samuel Becker in the abdomen and he fell mortally wounded. Then Sicaahot Isaac Post- koaeck in the right ear and turned to flee. .v>~ But he ran almoatoirectly into the .anna of Detective ffiggins, who fol- lowed by Detective Naughton, had eoma on the run when they heard the shots half a block away. Sica, the moment he saw the de tectives, pulled the revolver and aim ed a shot at Higgins. But the lat ter knocked the weapon from his hand and, though the man fought ly, he was speedily subdued, detectives were about to him into the street, where a r, including many foreign- tad been celebrating the of St. Rocco, were gathered, Hr*. Becker and her daughtft 1 with hatchets. cut him to pieces!” ex- Mra. Becker, as she I to get near the prisoner. Twill i the county from trying him. He shot down my son.” Advancing on the other side of the now cowering Sica was Mrs Postle- neck, also armed with a hatchet. She, too. cried for the blood of Sica, and had not policemen, - who rushed into the store at this point, ''seized both women, they would have chop ped the man down. But the mob outside had under- ] Stood. They saw the dead form of Becker on the sidewalk and there was a rush for the store entrance, while hundreds took up the cry. Kill, him! Kill him!” Men <fc*ew pocket knives as they rushed toward the narrow store en trance. But the doors were Hammed shut by the detectives and the re serve* from the East One Hundred and Fourth street station, arriving at this moment, charged the mob with drawn daha. r The crowd gave way Mowly. The foreigners in the throng seemed the more determined to get at and Hay It took a hand to hand fight ! ten minutes to clear a space about tM door so that the prisoner could be led forth. The mob followed dose on the heels of the police and when the detectiv es took refuge on a Second avenue down-town oar, filled with women and children returning from the pic- He Declared That He Was of tl# Crime for Which He Was to Be Paalshed. Rather than spend twenty years in the North Carolina penitentiary for kidnapping Kenneth BeaHey, the little son of State Senator Beasley, a crime of which one of his last sets was to declare himself guiltneas, Joshua Harrison shot himself in the New Gladstone hotel at Norfolk, Va., at 5:30 o’clock Tuesday after noon, dying eight hours later. arrived Tuesday and went directlyto the hotel. He came there from Elizabeth City, N. C.. where he had appeared in court to renew the bond on which he was at liberty uending the deciHon of the North Carolina supreme court on a motion of a new trial in his case. His bond was raised from $3,000 to $5, 000 and he had no trouble in furnish ing it. He immediately left for Nor folk, . and the supreme court almost as quickly rendered a decision ad versely to him. The Norfolk police were asked to arrest him, as he had threatened suicide. Harrison made no effort to conceal his identity here, and no trouble was experienced in locating him at the ho tel room, and a little strategy was resorted to get him out. A bell boy was sent to his door by Detective Wright, who went to'fnake the ar- rest, with instructions to tell Harri son that he was wanted at the tele- g one. Harrison told the boy that would not answer the phone, say ing that he was not to be easily trap ped by the police. Detective Wright remained at the foot of the stairway, as the bell boy went up to deliver the message, and as the lad returned to report to the detective, a pistol Hiot'was heard in Harrison’s room. The door to the room was fo open. Harrison lay across the with a bullet hole in his right pie. Besides Him was a pistol. as still Alive, hut an towed that there was no chance his recovery. In Harrison’s ’room was found a letter Hgned by himself, in which he declared that he was innocent of ths crime of which he was convicted and knew nothing whatever about it. The exact wording of the letter, the police have not sera fit to reveal. Harrison was convicted in Eliza- N.«€., February, 1906, for the young son of State Senator Bettley/tf Williamson, Pas quotank countyT'T'tevboy disappear ed while on his way has never been seen Hnce, although a score of detectives seerched tor him for months. Harrison was an enemy of Senator BeaHey and it was charged against him that he kidnap ped the boy and that this was his method of revenge. He denied the charge to his dying hotuv ■ F ■ FEAR THR PEST. they start out to get his. Very late Wednesday Boll Weevils Here Would Be a Na tional Calamity. * Because of the relief existing in Laurens and other counties that cer- BRAT AT HTS GAME. A Farmer Robs a Hard Battle. Robber Alter T ' - Swwphv tt. Ctmtay. near Caldwell. N. J.. will please take this warning from this tale and leave their valuables at home when ery late Wednesday evening Aaron sat on the front seat of his wagon going home singing s natches of "Rjly Round the Flag,” Boys while {Dobbins and Charlie plodded alongtn front. In Farmer Kent’s undenshirt poc ket reposed a wad of $200 in yellow bills, the proceeds of his peach crop, which henadsold at Newark Mar ket* Two masked men leaped from a brush heap at the roadHde. One grabbed the horses’ bits, the other clambered up on the wagon step and pressed a gun to Aaron's ear. “We want that $200.” he hissed, ‘‘Shell her out er crook.” ’ Fanner. Kent quit the-‘‘Rally’ song in the centre of the stirring re frain. Also he dropped tjje 1 duckediua head to miss the bullet and in the same instant caught the road agent About the neck in the erbok of his stalwart arm and threw him clean into the back of the wa gon. Kent flooped over after and fell on top. He closed the prised highwayman’s windpipe, then raised his head and Cried: “Scat, Dobbin!”- Dobbin leaped forward with a bounce threw the burglar at his bit into the roadside biisnev, and then dashed on, while Kent and the rob- ber tough it out in the box of the wagon Behind. - T - i jaent was easily victor. At the farm up in front the discomfited robber Wormed himself out of his coat and vest, squirmed out the back of the box and and fell with a thud into the sand. After stalling Dobbing Aaron Kent examined the rear of his dou ble wagon. In.the discarded coat of the Burglar man he found $33.50 in cash. The discarded vest’s kets yeilded a gold watch worth him sur- and HE AUBE WRECKED. jflin Broken I p by the Horse Run- ' — ning Away. The State says two horsqg attached SEES THEIR FATE # Tbfl Prohtottton Movemmt 1$ More Than Hall the Population of the United States U Claimed to Be Living In “Dry” Territory. - Prohibition is sweeping the coun fry. Its fecent advances are throw ing liquor producers and dealers into panics in many ptoses. A of the Liquor League, states the sit uation in these words: “The onward march of prohibition in some sec tions of the country is advand; like aprairefire, and no hand raise to sto; statement it.” He concludes his saying that five years ago a united liquor industry might have * I FRANKUN m r m Has Bnk Appealed to Um State Sopreme Court This Will Postpone the Rxecntion of the Murderer for A Duly. Short Time The Columbia Record says Judge Brawley’s recent decision, holding un constitutional the state labor contract {jus, will figure largely In the argu ment beforq the supreme court on the appeal, taken by the defense, from the action of the clrcnlt court At Orangeburg, which found Pink Frank lin, colored. Indicted with hit wife. Sad Franklin, for the murder, July 29, of Constable Henry Valentine, and sentenced him to be hanged Oct ober 25. .4; . ' u John A^ams, colored, lawyer of the C Dvsa ited liq kept back the Htuation, but. might as welfbe made^to kip^back LJ onn Aaam8 ' colored. lawyer of the the Hudson river with a whisk broom. “ More than half the nation is said to be under prohibition law. Maine, North Dakota, Kansas and Georgia have statutory prohibition rules. More than half the territor territory in 17 other states is dry, and in-16 remain ing states little intoxicating liquor is sold. The tour prohibition states have a population of 5,500.000 and it is estimated 25,000,000 others live in load prohibition territory of 33 to the hearse hearing the/remains of Margaret Martin, colojfed, became frightened near Randolph cemetery Wednesday and the Jesuits are al most too grewsom&Tor publication. The horses were Mng driven slowly down Elmwood avenue, near what is known as the ‘‘overhead bridge,” in charge of S. L-> Lopez, the colored undertaker. S Near the/bridge they became fnghtenejrat something and dashed the walls, almost wrecking uahlthe nearse at this point and throwing off the driver, who was run over afterwards and badly hurt. After running on-down the steep hill in front of the colored cemetery the hearse turned completely over and was qjlit in half, the coffin being thrown out and broken open One of the horses Hfes so, badly hurt that it is. not thought the ani mal will live and it was necessary tor some colored men, who were passing at the time, to help put the remains back in the wrecked coffin and carry it to the grave.- There were only two carriages with the funeral and no pall bearers, The state prohibition movement is spreading rapidly in at least 11 states, especially where local option has already driven out the open dram shops in large sections. These states include Oklahoma, where the prohi bition constitutional amendment is voted on Sept. 17; Delaware, and three political divisiong of which vote separately on license or no license Nov. 5; North Carolina, Florida and Mississippi, where state prohibition campaigns are under way, led or warmly endorsed by the governors themselves. Popular movements fhr statutory or constitutional state pro hibition in Alabanur, Tennessee, ^ - South Carolina, Texas. lowg^ law requires, specifically, that braska. In addition to Hva, it is said 1 0^1 * tna, recoea-must be filed with that Arkansas, Kentutky, Nebraska the c,erk of court w,th,n 1611 South Djkftfcfc/^ew Hampshire and and mu8t 58 ,nto a b 00 *- Cl »yferifiont may adopt state prohibpf^ the tKK,k of inquests, which university, was the leading counsel for the defense at the trial in Orange burg and It was he who brongh up the Brawley decision, doing so in one of his motions for a continuance, all ■of which the court overruled. Adams and Moorer raised three constitutional objections—two based on the federal constitution and one on the state constitution—and also moved to quash the Indictment, on the ground of irregularity in keeping the coroner’s records. a One point raised was that the fran chise clause in the state constitution Is In violatloh with the act of con gress of January 15, 1868, which pro vided that after reconstruction the states should remain in the union with their franchise requirements un changed. - v The main motion for, a contin uance, however, was tipon the alleged irregularities In keeping the coron er’s records. It was discovered during the trial that the testimony ^glven aC thv In quest’ had not .*jen kept in « public offipfeAt the court house, although the the FATAL SNAKE Mlroatf Station Hand a Huga RaWar/J BEATS GOLD MINE d by Sonth’t Cetta* Crop Worth Ntar- ly Ona BHffon DoBan. The Unfortunate Man Die* Honrs After He Was Bltt«t Few the V A Snake. A letter from Florepct • News and Courier says one ( week Section Master Matth the s , Mount Holly section. Northeastern Railroad, had h of hands at wore cutting bushes on the right of way swamp three miles south of berry. One of the hands. John Jbi negro, was cutting some sma gum bushes the stumi old tree. All of a sudden something strike him on the as he looked he, saw the he monster rattler lying about tb from him. Knowing that he had beeiftbttten, he rushed from the bushes i lowed “snake." The other rushed from the bushes and kina’ assistance. It was soo that Jenkins had been leg and be was placed on car and hurried to Mount Holy, f d hal- egroes o Jen found blttenlod the hand -fAkmpoKor within significant straw from Ohio comes in the shape of a dispatch from Cedar Point, where, at a recent gathering of political leaders, 72 out of 86 members of Hie Ohio legislature there present, declared informally for ultimate state prohibition and immediate county option. call- la red^w-be kept-Nr the etrrotrafr office at the court house. - Adams made an affidavit that he had searched for the. record and it could not Ihs TohndT also that on the eve of the trial he had an Inter view with the coroner and that offi cial admitted the book of Inquests and the original record were both in Montana. Nevada, Utah. Washing-1 hl8 residence in the country, ton, Tennessee, Arizona and New Mexico are “wet.” They have license with little or no restrictions. Cali fornia, Idaho, Delaware, Michigan, Minnesota, New York Pennsylvania and District of Columbia, have li cense, with restrictions; each state. All obaerve a Sunday closing law. Local option laws have been passed in Colorado, cut, Illinois, Massachusetts. Nebras ka, New Jersey, South Carolina, Texas, and Wisconsin, and many of their towns, townships and counties have become '“dry” by popular vote. In the states claned as ‘‘dnr” more than half the counties and cities have not more than one saloon, and they have become “dry” through the ex- pression of the voters at the poles, though not through a local law. These states are Alabama, Ar kansas, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, K< In all his motions to quash the in dictment and for postponement, Ad ams was overruled by the courts Af ter sentence had been passed, ho serv ed upon Solicitor Hildebrand notice that the case would be appeald to the supreme court. There is a pos sibility that if the highest tribunal in this Mate should affirm the judg ment of the lower court, and the de fendant and his friends can raise suf ficient funds, the case may be carried to the supreme court of the United States, upon the constitutional ob- ectlons raised. The case Involves some exceedingly delicate points. The state’s whole cheme for the registration of electors questioned, and for the first time Judge Brawley’s recent decision, which threw consternation Into the ranks of the planters, by taking away the state labor contract law and leav- tain looHidaaare infested with the *he family having iject is [conduct the funeral pest Una cotton boll weevil the subject is lie- coming of vital importance to ex perts and scientists in the depart ment of agriculture, Should it be fidmittod that this crop destiroving had taken a hold in South Caro- the result could be short of. a national calamity, for the reason that up to this time it has not been discovered east of the Mississippi river with the exception of the state of Louisianna. W. D. Hunter, in charge of cotton boH weevil investi- gations, has prepared some interest ing information on the aubject. The boll weevil problem still re mains, he says, a most important one for the cotton industry of this coun try. The insect continues to spread. Climatic barriers have given it tem porary checks, imt they have been successively over come. The prodie 1 tion that the pest will eventually reach the limits of cotton culture in this country has repeatedly been ntade, but an important considera tion connected with the future spread has received less attention, largely because it has more recently become evident. This consideration is that damage in new regions is likely to be more severe than it has been in the terri tory infested up to this time. The experience of the past two years has rather tended to obscure some of the features of the weevil problem. The large crops produced in Texas have given an enormous impression of the prospects. It is true that very re markable results have been obtainec in the work of the department of agriculture. Making due allowance for this important work, it must be stated that the recerffi large crops are largely due rather to a combina- i of con owned by the McCartha and one of them may have ed. Lopez was brought back to his undertaking establishment on Wash- ingtoi lybri v 611 , tucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Missis- tn * them no hold upon their laborers sippi, Missouri, New Hampshire. I is used as a defense in the courts. Orefon. Oklahom., SkSStS J' v KT 1 f 1»nd,Sontl. Dakota, .Vermont, Vir- ve to be kill- md West Virginia . little money to The horses are >n street and is said to be severe cruised. BOLD THEIR CHILD To .a I'hlnanmn. 'WTio Adopts Him As * — His pare Chir Somewhere out on the Pacific is a little American boy born of white ents who has been sold to a inaman, who will bring him up as his own son in the land of the Drag on. Tl^is case is said to be without parallel in the history of the United States immigration affairs. It is the fiTfit’taseTif-lihfe'ctiaraictCT ever re- corded and is absolutely without precedent. When Sing Lee, a Chinaman, boarded the steamship Chippewa at San Francisco with his adopted son, Samuel Edwards Sing Lee, an Amer ican boy, with only the rights am priveliges of an alian, there ended so far as this port is concerned, such story of deliberate heartlessness on the part of dissolute parents that hardened immigration officials were viribly affected. At Fort Wrangell, Alaska, Sam Edwards married Jennie Ed wards in 1898. On the eighteenth day of October, 1899, a baby boy was born to the couple and Edwards, who was still a drunken dissolute, lounger, with no appreciation of ifested ‘ THE ROLL WEEVIL No Longer Feared by the Texas Out* ton Growers. Dr. S. A. Knapp, special agent of the United States department of agri culture. detailed to take charge of the fight agiinst the Mexican. boll weevil, and stationed at Lake Chkrles La., has been ordered to Washington This change is made on the ground that the fight against the*l>oll weevil is over and won, not that the H^ltruc- tive Insect has been eliminated—fbr on the contrary. It is still in evidence In Texas, the territories and Louis ianna, and has just been discovered in Catahoula parish, Louisiana, with in seventeen miles of the Misslsai] where It will undoubtedly exist next season—but that the department of agriculture has finally perfected the plans by which the cotton grower can raise just as much cotton if he has weevils on his plantation as he could without them. WANTS TO GO BACK. There Is no dodging the fact that, were the case not complicated by the fact that tt is based upon the killing lof a white man by a nvnvthe ^delegate to rongr^s^rd R Me | would have little trouble In arriving World's Product of Prectal Metal for a Year Would Fail to Equal Value * J * , ’ of This Year's Cotton Crop. ——„‘h-y+‘——..i'. ■. v.,'*■ 1 ; Commenting on an interview pub- 1 fished in New York with Mr. E. H. Harriman, in which he refers to the prosperity of the South and South west on account of the cotton crop, Mr. Richard H. Edmonds, editor of The Manufacturer’s Record, in an interview with The Baltimore Sun said: “Mr Harriman’s optimism in re gard to the effect of the wonderful expansion of the agricultural inter ests of the South is justified, but he is far short of the reality in his state ments as to the value of the cotton crop. He credits Texas with a pro duction of cotton of 4,000,000 bales, worth he says at present prices, $180,000,000, or about $45 a bale. Whereas cotton is selling at over $60 shale, and if to this be added the value of at least $70 a bale, or just $100,000,000 more for the cotton crop of Texas than is estimated by Mr. Harriman. Mr. Harriman also says; ‘Think what that crop alone means to the country. A $6000,000.000 cot ton crop means prosperity for the South.’ “It is not a $6000,000,000, but riore, nearly a $900,000,000 crop vhich the South is now getting ready to pick. Last year’s cotton crop brought to the South about $800,- >00,000, or more, by far the largest .mount which that section ever re vived in sne year for cotton and I'/CwMOMs •• - -‘But WiEu cotton now bringing twd ents or three cents a pound more nan at the same time last year, it is tfe to estimate that the crop which s now beginning to move will bring o the South from $850,000,600 to >900,000,000. It is difficult to exag- .erate the tremendous importance •f such an inflow of money. Europe /ill pay to this section during the iext twelve months between $600,- ik, Wi. i' *1* s r not far from $2,000,000 for every orking day of the year. “The world’s total production of old is now at the rate of $435,000,- 00 a year. If Europe could gather •gether every ounce of gold mined a earth during the next twelve tonth and dump it into the South, would still be from $75,000,000 to 150,000,000 short of paying its in- ebtedness to the South for the raw >tton with which to operate its nil*. " -*" VlENDI^H HAZER8. Some whiskey was procui d and poured down the negro, who n that time, Just seven minutes, wa begin ning to suffer agonies from t e pois on. A physician was sent f ' from Summervljle, but it was soi s time before he could reach the si t naan, and the result Was that he dvd sev eral hours afterward. Mr. Matthews, the sectkln as soon as b© reached Moun and after baring' the ner* measured the place where t&i had stuck hl/fe"4gs in the below V oper and by actual meas urement it showed that the two fang* in the upper Jaw measured two in ches apart and the distance between the upper and lower Jaw, where the fangs entered, was just 4 1-4 inches showing that it roust have been r monstrous snake indeed to tiave such' a very large mouth [faster, Holly, s leg. leg, just was bitten no one had presence o» mind, or took the time to kill thf snake, and when the party returned the snake bad moved away and could sot be ftmfid: ■ 7-^^— Where it lay in its bed and when the negro stood were Justs two anr one-half feet apart, showing that th' reptile was of unusual length or It would have been Impossible tc have struck his objpet so far away. Where the reptile had lain in th< bashes he had made a bed some five feet in diameter. An effort Is to b( made to capture this monster reptllr by a party of snake hunters and 11 secured be will be placed on exhtbP tatlon. THE DEMOCRATS WIN. They Carry Everything in the SUtr of Oklahoma. _ Returns from Thursday’s election in Oklahoma indicate that the consti tution was adopted 3 to 1, that pro hibition was carried by at least 30,- 000 and that the whole democratic state ticket, headed by Charles W. Haskell, of Muskogee, was elected by 20,000 plurality. In the congressional election, the democrates seem to have chosen four of the five representatives, according to the returns received. The candi dates elected are: First district, for- tion of conditions favorable to the growth of the plant and unfavorable to the weevil than to a lessened ca pacity for damage on the pvt of the insect. ' The work of entomology has shown that in Texas, except in unusually wet season^,_a full crop can easily be produced, due ti> 1 returning from * Theo McManuatat I mry Harlem Miter Park, the mob bnkt through the police lines and car police The possibilities of pro- uction in a favorable season are shown by the fact that in 1906 the infested area produced about one- third of the total crop of the United States; but the same success will by no means necessarily follow in other regions where the conditions are dif ferent. Therefore future develop- meats must be awaited with some solicitude ami he began to shoot, were being hnnt- Wedneeday night by plain clothes . At toeHartem Hospital it was ‘1 Samuel Becker could not home life, m&miested no apprecia tion of the responsibility which had come to him. The child was healthy and large When little Salrnny was three years old, he was sold to the Indians for a small sum, with which the father purchased whiskey to continue his riotus life. For five years the little fellow lived with the Indians and was then sold to the Chinaman. Mother, father, child and China man appeared before L. A. Sloane, United States commissioner and ex Wrangell, were signed _ Just what status of the child will be when it is of legal age is a mat ter which immurration officials are discusjiDg. Wifi the American min c »naent to remain a Chinese subject? Will he be able to Awnsqd his citizenship should he care to return to America? uniiea a tales commissioner an officio probate judge at Wra where the papers of adoption made out and signed. _ . Senator Latimer a Candidate to Bar- * ceed Himself. Senator Latimer, who has just re turned from Europe, announces that he is ifi the race to succeed himself in the United States Senate. When asked if he was afraid of the Cllnkscales senate boom, Senator Latimer said that it had died out In the last ifew days and that he had not the slightest fear of it whatever. In speaking of Congressman Lever as a possible candidate for the sen ate, Senator Latimer that he did not consider Lever a force to be taken Into account. If he should enter the race. When asked If he thought Ex-Gov. D. C. Heyward would be In the sen atorial race, he said that Mr. Hey ward had expressed himself to hi friends throughout the -State as hav ing- no desire tq enter tfte race, gnd that he considered him a man of honor who would keep his word. I at a decision. The question the at torneys for the defense are by Impli cation asking is, will the supreme court decide the matter upon the con stltutlon, or will they be guided whol |ly by expediency? 7—;rz: The defense also is confident that thesupreme conrt must either hold that'the warrant, which Consta ble Valentine was killed in trying to serve, was invalid, and that Franklin was, therefore, justifiable in killing one who tried unlawfully to arrest hisu unde& it. or must disregard am defy the decision of the United Sti Court, Judge Brawley presiding which held that the labor contract law, under which the warrant was Is sued, was unconstitutional. It is, therefore,'one of the possi bilities of this most delicate and troublesome case, that there may de velop in South Carolina shortly condition analogous to that which has lately agitated other states; direct clash and a resulting deadlock between the state and federal courts Undoubtedly the federal authorities will be heard from In case the state courts attempt to set at naught the decision of Judge Brawley. The Record is unofficlably but re liably informed that the representa tives in South Carolina of the United States government already have their eyes upon this case and will keep themselves posted upon Its successive developments, with the purpose of re maining quieseht and allowing the state courts to handle the case In their own way, so long as they do not conflict with the federal authority, but of stepping In at once, should the prerogatives and the dignity of the United States tribunals of justice be impugned or attacked. DEATH IN A MINE. |The us* of dog flesh as fisdfi appears to 'tovs originated In Saxony, and Is la tost cart of tbs emplre'that the M Eleven People Killed by an Explosion t—- in Mexico. A special from Toluca, Mexico, says: Neglect of duty on the part of an employee resulted in the death of Tsn Florence Timet M told by a| e,€ven p€rBon8 “ d ,nJury to tWelve gentleman, who, while not connected mon Wednesday through the explo- wlth the railroad, lain a position to 8 * 0 " ^ 8 j x>,,8r Ferrer • - at Asorradero In the Anguanguoo dis trict of the state of Michoacan. The explosion occurred Just before noon hoar and the two proprietoni a aarobr of werkroen were clustered togethed ir. the vicinity of the boiler doing repairs to the railroad, la in a position to know manv things about It, that the Coast Line has no watered stock. That the objections made to the railroads in general through th* country, which have worked tfe watered stock, Harriman schema, fixing the tc to Guire, republican; second district, E. L. Fulton, democrat, defeating ex- Terrltorlal Governor T. B. Ferguson; third, James Davenport, democrat; fourth. C. D. Garter, democrat; fifth, F«rrt« dimmers!. ’ Thijjjrfiglslature is democratic by a large n MhHty and will elect as Unit ed Stated,auiators. Robert L. Owen, a Cherokeo/dlan. aBd T. P. Gore, a blind orator. They were nominated by primaries in June. t ew Employe at Tube Vv'orfcs Nearly Roasted Alive. The fiendish joke of brutal employ erry, a 1 tnploye, who came from V Wheeling. V. Va. Ringleaders in the hazing •scaped arrest by leaving town. Per- y is charred and blackened by ex- erior burns, and it is feared that he nhaled some of the flames from the furnace over which he was suspend-’ ed by his tormenters. — The hazing occurred justafteRthe midnight lunch hour, when the surrounded the new hand. Perry fought valiantly toward off Ma as sailants, but severaT powerful proved too much for his strength. They bound him wfth cords to a big iron crane and swunr him time and again over a furnace, which the workmen do not approach unless protected by a shield. The cords burned and Ferry fell to the floor, right in front of the furnace. His flesh was shrivelled from the heat when the men pulled him away, and he had lost consciousness. Frighten ed by their deed, the men caued a physician. Should Keep a Scrap Book. Every farmer should keep a scraj hook, cut out from the papers every thing that they may wish to refer to again and paste In the. book. Remedies for diseases of fouls, and animals, cooking receipts,large yields of corn and cotton, and In fact every thing that is worth reading a second time should be thus preserved. In a few years it will be a very valuable book. OFFERED WORTHY i>|- ? - YOUNG PEOPLE. /-I Be waiter bow halted yostneMSMsta- a tion, if yom dsalrr »thorough tatfasat Uato> Mg sad good porltios, write for our GREAT HALF RATE OFFER. flnnnnffiR initaeiSkVidlmAMi nn S HE guaranteed. Don't de » UA. -ALA. BUS. COLL 'is|88njp jtioA aonaetn ts&l •IP Safjepjo ueqM'D '8 ‘aotsoijnqo i 'yssii* iepTrsxsiv 99 P n © *9 ’sdoxj paw sjfijK **°0 9 nosuM H T 9X deog aixs -WLi s.uoshm *»O0 '*}8|98njp Xq peeiawjvns pus ptog ••MO •.uoeilM W* P® jna caw 'sdsqo puv setdmij ‘qjojf 'usj, tunqang ■ n®* *V ‘8HTMD8UA — ■ ■■■ ■ umJ probable FOR. * Wgjta to-day. This is Bealqnarters FOR Pianos and Organs. Ton want a sweet toned and a dur able Instrument. One that will last a long, long life time. Onr prices are the lowest, consis tent with the quality. Our references: Are any bank or ’eputable business honse In Columbia 'Write us for catalogs, prices terms. MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSR, Columbia. 8. C. -7 Welsh Neck High School * HA RTSVTLLE, 8. C, The* 14th session will begin September 18th. _ Literary, Music, Art, Expression and Business Courses. Large graduates of bur leadlng.coUeges^taA- unlvdrsltles. Thoroughness' phasized in every department. Healthy location. ButtiHage with electric lights, hot and cold baths, and heated by steam or fur- naces... Best Christian influences. Military discipline. Write for cata logue. reofot. w, pqrrett, A., if., principal CLIFFORD SEMINARY UNION, SOUTH CAROLINA. .7 A home School of h(gb grade. Through cbn-ros'nf study and lal normal course for those preparing to teach. S* wetor inf vantages Music. Only a. limited number of pupils received . ud given to'each. Healthful Mountain donate. Board and Addrees. Rev. B. G. Clifford, PVD., •'l ’ iit'.patlou Tuition $1X8. President. the asking, ai aad any la every'way 4- -t [ '