University of South Carolina Libraries
VOL.XXXIV BARNWELL. S. <J., THURSDAY. JUNE 29.1911 FELDER SAVED LEADER OF BANDITS Gtrentr Brtwa Tarns D«wn Governor Blease’s Rrqui>ititn FOR ATLANTA LAWYER UHAIUJK MADE AUAINST BI‘ECTEI) I’HYStCIAN. RK- TEXT BOOK LIST A ™' r “w* 1 fc ™ ’GETS HARD BLOW ««« WOOL TAX BILL __ — ■ _ I — ! _ MAY BE THE SMALLEST PERSON THE ELECTION BILL SENT BACK Contracts Awarded for Sckool Bciks by| fV . 11/V „ I I4 |Powder lamb at Declared a Trnst by \ ^ v Brinjo Abtnta CmIUmi Between bsv- Ike Edncation Board IN THE WORLD. the United States Cambine. TO THE SENATE. fedts nd Demerits. In the Daytime a Highly Respected! j U»)l»re<l (.’irl, Two and a Half Years The House IU«fuse<! to Acrept the Citizen and Doctor and at Night | FOR NEXT FIVE YEARS 0,,, ' We, * hs 0n,j FlK,,t i>ou,,ds ORDERED TO DISSOLVE Bristow Amendment aud it Goes NOW DEMAND REYISiON a Burglar. Is Only 10 Inches in Helgrt. The Decision at Hearing in Atlanta Thursday Rased on Contention of Felder's Lawyers that the I’ajyers from South Carolina Executive Were Inadequate. Governor Brown, of Georgia, on Thursday refused to honor requisi-! tion papers, issued by Governor I Blease, of South Carolina, for Thos. i B. Felder, an Atlanta attorney, for Whom a warrant has been sworn out! In Newberry, S. C., charging him with attempted bribery of H. H. Ev ans, a former member of the old State dispensary board. The\contention of Mr. Feldtr's ar torneys, that the requisition papers were inadequate because they lacked] affidavits to indicate that any per-' Hon had sjXecfflc knowledge of the} alleged offence, was sustained by | Governor Brown. The papers merely included a copy of a warrant charging that "one B. F. Kelly, from information presented to him, believed T B Felder, on the of October, J90i>," offered or promised, “certain gratuities or gifts,” to H H Evans'. When Governor Brown told Mr Felder that he had denied extradl-; tion, the latter replied th<ft he “prob-j ably would be going to South Caro lina very soon" on his own accord. He declared his innocence of any at- 1 tempt to bribe and asserted that th“ warrant was merely a subtofifge on the part of his enemies to get him 1 " into the State. “I would like to see your creden tials,'' demand d Mr. Felder, when W A Holman, of Charleston, S C . arose to address the Governor to ar- g» c for honoring the requisition “I want to know who is back of tnese ch t'e* s “ I am here merely as a lawyer re presenting the soverlrn State of South Carolina," replied Mr Holman “As to anything hack of these charg es, I know nothing My credentials, as vou will see, are signed by Gov ernor Blease “ Mr Holman asserted that the Con atitntion of the United States left the Executive of a sister state no disce- tion in the matter, when the Execu tive of one State Issued.a requisition upon tiie oth r for a person in anoth er State “I reeogni/e that 'he Constltu'ion of the United States is the principal compelling power," said the U.overn- rr, "hut the function of a Governor U to proteet the int Tests of citizens of his Statae when that State's laws are not eomplled with" The mere fact that the papers a) leging the crime charged against Mr ] elder w er ■ UaVcom pan !ed bv a cer t (Irate bearing the seal of Governor T,lease, was not sufficient evidence of crime to warrant him, he said to grant the extradition S' veral prominent members of the Go rgia Bar addressed the Govern or in behalf of Mr Felder, and cited numerous pr rodents In which qnnrts In Georgia and o' her States had de- (l:ned rquisition because the pacers did not conform to the laws of the Sta'e upon whose Executive they were issued The alleged cause underlying the request for oxtradition personal an imosity between Mr Felder and Gov Blease, resulting from differences in connection with the winding tip of the old South Carolina State dispen- sarv system was not brought ou' at th ■ hearing which proceeded the denial of the request. It was allud ed to incidentally by Mr, Felder, who declared that he had intended to make a statement baring the entire matter, but the attorneys represent ing him had found sufficient flaws in the requisition papers as to make ft unnecessary to Inject personalities Into the proceedings. "It Is not a matter in which per sonalities ebon id enter," commented the Governor. By day a respected practicing phy- Some Iu< „ ral rhanf? <. s Mftde froIIl About nineteen inches In height, T|l(> |>lI|H , nr rornpan) . (1iar ^, W j tl , sician and mayor of a Minnesota ci ty- By night the brains of an Incen^ diary and robber band and using his scientific knowledge in the prep- araton of explosives to be used in felonies. This the Jekyll and Hyde personal ity the detectives believe has been revealed by the arrest of Dr. T. T. Dumas, mayor of Caso Lake, Minn , . , , . , , „ There was a radical change in the and owner and manager of the Cass I,, . , . , . „ , Lake baseball team. and felonious destruction of proper- The mayor has been arrested, the , , . ... , . ; sweeping and unnecessary changes, warrant charging wilful, malicious ■ * , ... w,. v. , but he was In a minority. The books j adopted are these used In five thous- 1 | and free schools In the. State, but do not necessarily apply to the grad ed school districts that have their { own adoptions. was then anounced by the de-1 p or p ag p fl ve years the Stat two and a half years old, weigh- the List of Publications Now Used in? exactly eight paunds, and par ticularly strong and bright fof a by the Children in Five Thousand chl]d of her age , Krankie May Ford- ham, a little negress, living with her parents at No. 7 Heyward's Court, Is t>elieved to be about the smallest person in the world, with perhaps one or two exceptions, says the Char leston News and Courier. The News and Courier goes on to say: The child is a veritable marvel, e was born in February 1909 ,be- to Conference. South Carolina Public Schools, as Will Be Seen. The verdict in the adoption of the school books of the State was ren dered at Columbia Thursday evening. blnii g to Restrain Trade and Mon opolizing Powder and Explosive list. (Superintendent Swearingen pro- Sh(4 wag born Februarv 19n q tested against what he terms a posse and two men caught blowing! open a safe at Puposky, near Cass Lake. It tng the fourth child of Henry and ^'' mm irs company, :s a combination Kate Fordham, the husband being a navy yard employee. The first three children, who were born away from ''obition of Section 1 of the Sherman Charleston as the family has boon ;ir >G"trust law; that it attempted to here* only about a year, are hearty tuunopolize and monopolized a part and full sized; but It is the baby that of 8Uch commerce in violation of see ls the wonder of the family. The ^ on -- 1 the same law, and decree The house of Representatives Wed nesday by a vote of 172 to 112, a Violating Sherman l-aw by Com- atnek party vote, refused to concur, yin the Bristow amendment adopted, by the Senate to the Rouse resolu tion providing for the direct election of Senators. Business and Ordered to Quit. 1 The Bristow amendmertt leaves ^ with Congre.s* the power to Veguiate uited States circuit court for , the time and manner of holding! district of Delaware Wednesday t j 1PS0 elections, fchlle the resolution wool revision bill'into the senate on hand'd down a decision declaring ] | ia8Be( j py t he House during the early Y’ednesday drove the insurgent Re- thut tiie alleged powder trust, Which d a ys of the session would change the publicans of that body Into an open Dupbnt de; Constitution so the time and man- coalition with the Democrats in a ner of holding such electona will bet demand for a/general revision of the The th The Republicans of the West Declare that if Reciprocity With Canada la Adopted There Must Be General Changes in the Tariff Law Now fas Force. The throwing at the Democratic dominated by the E. I tectiv; fi working on the case and the L de{loaitory> R L . Br , an Comiianyi I child is not a deformity, hut is prob- ‘<>g that the combination shall be assistant state fire marshal that Dr f nianagerfi hand ] e d $508,212 worth a ^> one of t-hemost perfectly form, Dumas was suspected of leading a! of 8chooI books on the list In U s e; ed ne K ro children in the city. which h<\8 operated in Minn£~ (Jurin^ the flvo yenr Tho present Nothin^ wbs known R^nGrtilly of sota, North Dakota, Wisconsin, and ]j st w j|| re?u ]t in many sales. the existence until Wednes- ,u restraint of interstate commerce decided lYi each Siat« by the Ftate and brought about the threat- in powdei and oilier explosives In j | t . ? | 8 i a t lirpg eued crisis tn the finance committee Representative Dalzell. Republican, In the control of the senate. At the voted against the amendment, while end of a bitter fight the reeolution Mr. Burke, Democrat, of Winscon- by Senator Gore requiring the finance committee to report back the wool bill before July 10 was paased by a vote of 39 ro 18. Western Republcana who have fought the reciprocity measure, tak- other northwestern statee, and said day as efforts were made by the pa- Thursday afternoon Supermte by the police to have been employed i dpa ^ Sw'earingen had the verdict read cents to keep the fact of her dlmin- by merchants to rob safes and set J assembled agents of the put^ utive size secret, as thev feared kld- fire to buildings for the insurance. u a b er8 contracts as awarded 1 rai ’Ping; hut a r l oi ter, li.m:i? r< ' . , It is declared to have included sever-| an( j a8 read follows: celved a mysterious "tip" In the form n ‘ dr '' 0 1 wr exlB,en<e or al men of prominence in northwest-j Awards Announced. P f an unsigned pencil-written letter, ern communities. . | Text Books adopted by the State 'Isited the house Wednesday night sin, voted for it. The resolution, therefore, Is re turned to the Senate for the reconsld- enjolned from continuing this viola |erationl>y that body as to whether It tion and that It shall be dissolved vs ill reverse its former action. The action against the powder j trust was begun by the governnient in 1 907 and was directed against 43 ! corporate and individual defendants ' The suit as to 15 of the defendants! 'vps d'smipsed beennve pome of tiie The mayor obtained his liberty by board of education for use in the free and marvelled at many things he saw. He/was nt doo it two- The motion that the House concur jng up challenges thrown down by In the Senate amendment wa« made! the Democratic leader, followed each by Representative Olmsted, Repub- other In rapid succession In their llcan, of Pennsylvania. Several Re-1 ultimatums to the senate leaders. Publicans spoke In favor of It while ultimatums were Invs.rlsbly i minuter of Demovrats spOite agamst, that before the reciprocity bill is lt - i permitted to pass a Republican aen- The Democrats proteeted that the a te will be forced to undertake a jteople of the States could safely be revision of other schedules of the The court In an Interlocutory de-j entrusted with the p wer of controll- tariff, including much more than the it was not srown that they wee parties to the combination He/was met by the husband at the i cree fixed October IGth as the date ling the elections of their Represen-j woolen reslvlon bill and the free Hat. giving bond He asserted that he! public schools from LS«ptemb^r 1, , . was the victim of a police conspira- l 911, to June 30, 1917: I fron/ door of the house, wrich Is a | to hear both sides in the action as, tat Ives In the upper House, while the which have gone through the honaa cv and declared "some one" should American Book Company—Hunt's suffer He was present when the; Progressive Course In Spelling, Book e d into the bed room, where the granted and consider a "plan for, huatlon of authority would take from of the afflrmatlve T0 te. CMt for safe at his office was opened and I, Book II, Complete; Milne's Pro-1 nether had the little girl In her night dissolving said combination, which , C mgress power which It should re 1 the Gore motlon overthrowing tha found to contain six sticks of dyna- gressive Arithmetic. Book. I. II. Ill;; gown, just ready to put her to bed.J shall be submitted by the petitioner I tain. finance committee, sixteen were Re- mitp and four dynamite caps. He Brook’s Vvnplish Composition, Book As the reporter entered the room., and the defendant or any of them, , Representative Rucker, cf Mis-' publicans. Trey were Sen a tort Bor* had hasten' d from the bedside of a 1: Maury's New Elements. Maury's/the child, catching eight of the fath- to the end that thle court may as- j n charge of the resolution, de-1 ah, Bourne, Bristow, Brown, Clapp, patient to give up the combination of Complete Geo/raphies: White's Bty 1 ex, exclaimed in a sweet and child-1 certain and determine upon a plat., ( , 8re( j that It was “the demand of the I Crawford, Cummins, Dixon Gronna ish voice, with pe - *—' » 1. ji 1 — v-'-*- 1 - . . i ’ ' , ■ ' the safe,, so that an expert who had tinner's History of the United State/ arrived from (St. Paul would not have to blow the safe open He jok ed at the discovery. "The worst is tey to comev” was his comment. The opening of the safe was pre- ceeded by a chase through the woods near Pupoeky after "Mike" Davis who with "Billy" Bean, was trapped by detectives at Puposky Bean was wounded and raptured. Davis is also wanted on ch antes-of having killed a policeman in Chicago and another at Minnetonka, Minn . during rob beries several months ago Pinkerton detectives have a sten ographic report of what they claim were the plans for the Puposky rob bery. as given the two rob1>ers in the John Larson saloon by Mayor Dumas Peareon’s Latin Prose Compositic/n: Gleason's "A Term of Ovid;” M/eb- "Hello, Papa." erfect enunciation: or method for such discussion, which] \ m erioan people that the election of! Jones, Kendon, LaFollette, N«l»on, wi]] r»nt th*» HpfA'nHnnta nf i _ i * _-i rw _ * _ _ .1 _ i. ^ 1 _ . . * _ * . \ Thf* reporter Klanrod to see who it the opportunity to recreate out of not deprive the defendants of , i.'ted States Sena'ors be '.ak*n out i Poindexter, PerrV's Writ ster’s Primary, Common School, /ligh was talking and really had trouble School and Academic dictionaries in locating the owner of the voice, Atkinson Mentz^r and Grfver - in locating the owner if tiie voice, supplementary drawing, applied arts finally espying the tiny tot on the drawlne hooks. B D. Berrry & Co Ing System. / _ Educational Putilishing^ Company, Auesburg’s Cours in Drawing Ginn & Co Supplementary Read ers. the Hill Readers,/ Fourth and Fifth; 'Montgomery's Jbeading Facts of Fnzllsh History, First Year Latin floor She was playing around in high glee at the prospect of staving up a fi \v minut~s later than her reg ular bed-time, and danced and sung at a great rate, showing unusual pre cocity for a child of her age. Her eyes which are dark brown, are ex (optionally clear and piercing, and ilar & Daniel’s her hair is silky and rather long, ab- Supplementary solutely unlike a negro's Yet she is f the ra- A (XH.l MR! A MYSTERY. Body of a Negro Man Found in an Unused Well. The Stat" says Columbia has an 'ther murder mystery which will probably never be solved Well clean er* descending in ah old well in the r< ar of a house at 18 14 Hardin street Waverly, Wednesday found the hod' of Edward Patterson, a negro about 40 y ars of age, who was employed bv the Palmetto Ice Uompanv as n driver until December 1° of last year when he disappeared. it was generally supposed that he had gone t' PJrmlngham and no In vestigation was made at the time as to the cause of his disappearance The well is 1 orated just hack of the house The house has not been oc cupied since last August. Coroner Walk t made a searching investiga Classic; >'nvder's Selections from the very dark, and had many Old Testament. / rial rraracterist hs It C. Heath & Woolley's Hand The child weighed five Pook of C 'm posit ion. Thompson's birth, and ga Unit'd States Hls/or>‘. Well's \lgebra for Secondary s/li >ols. Part 1, Part d Mire new pi me and compiet/; W and solid geonybtry Houghton, ill in Companv Sup- idenientarv ^nglish Classics, to be selected. Su/plemontary Reading for sixth grade/ami seventh grade, to be selected ftfom Riverside Literature seri's B U I/hnson Publishing Company Basal /iraded Classics, third reid- er. four/h reader, fifth reader. Bay nes Uo/nmon Words Cammonlv M s- nelled.t Supplementary Classic, the ! mentary Re tdiug irs in Southern Hts- torv./ W. H Jones Spelling blanks ■pie McMillian Company Kina r d pYither's Grimmar. Book I, Book Agriculture for Sonfh- cient His- pry fer beginners, Tarr's New Phy sical Ceography. 1 Newson A Co Buf-hler’s Modern ing the first six Since Miat time s! an ounce, and s doctors \v ho havt pounds at minds dnr months of her ilf le has not taken on everal we'l known ■ examined her, ac the elements now cotniicxving said combination a new condition which shall he honestly in harmony with and not repugnant to the law " This follows to some extent the de grees issued by the United States su preme court in th the tobacco cases There are 13 corporate and 15 in dividual defendants declared to be in the illegal combination. A major ity of the Individual defendants arc members of the Dupont family, all of whom except Edmond G Duckner. are each director of one of the Du pont companies. The corporate defendants are- The Hazard Powder company, Laflin A Rand Powder company, Eastern Dyn- Townxend and Work*. (■ r the market. This Included the full Insurgent ■ I have no fear of the people,'' he strength of 13 and In addition Sena- said. "hut of the combinations be- tors Joinee. Nelson and Townsend, hind closed doors which trample on Senator Myers was the only Demo- tre most sacred rights of the oral voting with the Republicans people. Give the States Just a little against the motion. more power aqd we will take the Standard OH and lumber trust, the sugar, and all the other trusts out of politics.” Representative Mann, on the oth- • r side, asserted that this was an at tempt of the Democrats to accom- ording to the parent' h a v i fated Yemapee, Supp Hall sf Half Ilou 11/ Duggar's Agriculture fi c/n schools. Bothford's Am that sh<‘ will ]ioY**r iraln an ot her Inch in height or a not 1 ier three pound h i n wo ch t. H* •r ;>:\r <*T1 t S Tiav. ree th '! U*<1 t iif-n ! M'l \ 4 to this. a n d lavish t In el r off **rt ion on t ho little girl, vv h o is ctrt nln To ni ak< - a f riend of ev • > r y n ne *:h>' no’fT R S' he fi ances pro*! i 1 |V. ! look s Intolli K:ont and talk? f 1 uenf ly. being ;i h 1 f* T o st r: ng words f ncp f 1: ier ini o short sent neoa al- ready Thf > prt ren ’p Rt 'itr that 1 th ev ha ve alronc ly r •eeel ve il ma! ny off' rs f roni . nud 0 vilh > and sitlo s h (> w man; igers some h av inir all •fT' re ] as high \\ ANTS ms SHARE. Has Wrong Idea of the Farmers Free List Rill. tion as to the cause of the death amy English Grammar. found that Patterson had been mury dered His head was crushed by /a heavy blow. The shirtwaist of a we man covered his head The body was decomposed almost beyond r p< " ognition. An examination determined the fact that the m a negro Coroner Walker the ne. to had about $150 pn his person the night that he was killed Heard Five Miles. A dynamite explosion in the con duit of the Commonwealth Edison Company, at Chicago, broke the win dows in buildings for several blocks around, causing a panic in several hotels. The detonation waa heard five miles. There were no casualties. Rand, McNally & Co Supplemen tary, the Story of Cotton, RoMmon's Commercial Geography, Teller & Brown’s Business Methods. Benjamin IT. Sanborn * Co.—Cae sar's Gallic War, I to V Johnston & Sanford—Select Ora tions of Cicero, OOoge; Virgil's Ae- neaid, I to VI. Chas. Scribner's Sons Scribner's Supplementary English Classics, to He had be»n robbed. Many theories be selected; Supplementary Reading, have been advanced as to Aho mo-. Mims & Payne's Southern Prose and live No announcement bas been Poetry. made by Coroner Walker a|( to when Silver, Burdette & Co Supple- the inquest will be hel^. He is mentary Stepping Stones to Litora by a physfei ) de map was foun/1 that 5 0 pn his as fifty dollars a week and transpor tation for the mother under a five year'con'met. Ml these offers the parents have turned down, hoping for the ultimate dev lopment of their little one to her full .Mature although they ivave now become al most certain that their hope is vain The father ami mother now S'-em to think that they will keep and edu cate the child until it reaches the age of seven or eight years at least, be fore thinking of any vaudeville de part tire. unable to do directly. "You are afraid,” he said, "that your grandfather clauses will be declared unconstitutional ” Tiie Resolution, when it is returned to the Senate, is expected to cause a lively discussion, but it is antlrpat- .unite company, Fairmont Powder ed that it will go to conference wtth- Company, International Smokeless in the immediate future. Powder and Chemical company, Jud- ♦ ♦ ♦ son Dynamite and Powder company: Dolawar- SernriotteH company, Dela ware Investment company, California Investment company, E I Dupont de Nemours & Co of Pennsylvania, Dupont Indernatlonal Powder Com pany, E I Dupont de Nemours Pow der company, E. 1 Dupont de N'em ours & Co, Th' only member of the Dupont family mentioned in the suit who is not Included among the found to be violating the law Is Henry Dupont. •ne of the United States senators from Delaware The decision written by Judge Wil liam M I.anny and concurred In bv Judge George Gray and Joseph Buff ing, goes Into the history of inter state commerce in gunpowder and other explosives back as fsr as 1 872, wh n the government charged the first trade agreement of manufactur ers w a« entered into. The court re viewed the evidence in the case and found win n the suit has begun that Notable speeche* on reciprocity were made In both branches of con gress. Senator Root, announcing that he favored the amendment, ad vocated and explained hie amend- , , , ment to the wood pulp and paper pllsh Indirectly what they had been ; provlglon Qf the aroond whlch \ amendment the reciprocity fight haa centered and which amendment Prea id ent Taft opposes on the ground that it might Jeopardise the whole agreement. Republican leader Mann in the house attacked the Root amendment ae a violation of the Ca nadian reciprocity agreement. Wednesday's fight began the In stant that the wool revision bill ap peared from the courae of representa tives. Senator Gore, apparently with the approval of Democratic leadera, moved that the finance committee be Instructed to report the bill back to The Washington rorrespondent of the senate on or before July 10. The State aays there is much mlscon- HI* admitted purpoae waa to prerent ception in some sections regarding the finance committee from bolding the true meanln? of the free list bill, the bill Indefinitely or from falling to recen'ly passed by the house. A 1 report It at all. member from South Carolina recelv- Thp re8U i t 0 f the Gore motion waa ed a letter from a constituent saying ( 0 disrupt so completely the lines that he had been waiting patiently that have formed In the senate that It many years for the Democrats to get n0 ( ^ foretold now when a TOto ( ontrol of the house, so that every , ran b e reached on the reciprocity bill thing would be "free. ’ 1 or whether enough votes can be mna- He had read of the bill and was tererd to pass It without amendment, glad that hereafter he would not. Senators Cummings, Nelson, Craw- have to pay for anything. He asked ford( I a ro ji eUe> j one * and ot her his representative to send a horse. {Republican insurgent! from North- to take the place of the one that re- we8 t e rn States, who have opposed the rently died, a dozen dinning room reciprocity bill because of alleged dla- chairs, some new chlnaware, a new crimination against the agricultural cari>et for the parlor and a few jnRpr^,,^ declared that before a vote other incidentals. would be permitted on the reciprocity After closing the letter h- added a bIU they would demand that the other / STORIES ARE l VTRl E. Confederate Veterans Condemn Them as Misleading. Atlanta Camp, No. 159 the Duponts had acquire drontrol of! . 1 902 controlled in the United States ' postscript in which he said that be |gchedulefi of the tarJff be tak,,,, up the trade in several varieties of pow-! ho > >ed the oongreseman would notj and would i n8 igt on an attempt to dcr forget to send the "old lady ' a new tacl{ many 0 f them on the reciprocity ' The court also found that the Du-| s,tw!n K rnafh ' ne to tfie P lace of ! measure. pout company of 1903 and the East j o"' 1 she ha(1 many years | ern Dynamite company controlled by r ' 1 i 1 ' nt ° * et *^ r was : DROUGTH IS BROKEN. ,1,, Imponts had ic,hired ront™ l„t | touched by the appeal, hut had to] DROUQTH B BROWS*. reulv that if the writer got the! United working on several theorl/s and will ture, first reader, second and third Confederate Veterans, lias passed verv probably learn something of a render:. White s "The. Making of, sL.ron.g resolutions sever ly < on.demn- tangible nature. / i South Carolina." ing the civil war articles now running sixty-four different corporations he- , , tween April, 19P4, and September, | thin ^ he wanted he wou,d The Crop. Will Bo Grewtly have to pay good American dollars for them. < n 1907. and caused them to be dissolv- erous companies controlled by the and t.he Dupont company organ-.; ized in 1 903,, and then discusses According to the weather bureaa rainfall has been general In th« last few days over almost the entire cot- )SP 11 t’ran Tillman Has Scholarship. Senator B. R. Tillman has been authorized by Superintendent H. O. Murfee, of Marion Institute, Marlon, Ala., to recommend a worthy boy in South Carolina for a scholarship, val ued at $100. Senator Tillman would be glad to consider applications * 1/ost In Canyon. Five English tourists are believed Barker U Simmons American in papers all over the country. whether the combination it found to ] to be either lost or have perished on 1 ton belt. The South Atlantic States, History Leaflets, Record of My Read- At a meeting held this week the px .j 8 j obnoxious to the provisions Mount •Pan Bernardino. The party east and middle Gulf States and life was de- inP camp heard a paper by Professor B ()f tMVpherrtian anti-trust act. ‘’5ft ten days ago to explore the Frost 1 southeastern Texas reported good sfusion of; Southern Publishing Company M Zettb r, a member, who denounc- court finds that the case in‘Canyon, where tee Is perpetual, and showers. Only in occasional spots t^!nd la obnoxious to the anti-trust | have not been heard of since. The 1 in the territory named does the long law and-then takes up the nature of party included Gus JortVin, Mark drought still prevail. Much of thle the final decree It shall Issue. On Landon, George McDonald and two section had been without ral nfor a of the United ed the series, as unfair, inaccurate Better and Out of Danger. Mrs. Lea, w wife of United States Senator Lea, of Tennessee, whose life is believed to have been saved by the transfusion into her veins of a quart of her husband's blood was pronounced to be out of danger. Mrs. !>«*» Gets Better. , / Mrs Luke Lea, whosj spalred of until the blood from her hu/band, Senator Civil Government T nke ’ ea nf Tennessee on Sundav (States, Civil Government of South and misrepresenting the truth as re- wa. d^ldedly bXr Wsday. whil/' Carolina; Civil Government of South gams the confederate side. Senator Lea greatl/ weakened hv Carolina and the United States. The paper was received with en- the loss of blood, was able to walk YV H Wheeler & Co. —Primer, thusiasm, and was endorsed without about They are both in a hospital at basal, first reader, see-ond reader a Washington. *■ World nook Company-Primer of t I 'Hygiene, Primer of Sanitation, Hum- passed condemning the publications an Physiology. as damning the Southern cause with Bids Invited on a history of modern faint praise, and magnifying every- times and on a Latin .grammar to thing concerning the union side, it be filed with the State Superinten- was pointed out that the harm of on or before July 7th these articles lay in giving the young- The most important change is pr generation of the country an en- the abandonment of Wentworth’s R| rP i y f a ]ge conception of the eonfed- arthmetios~and the adoption of Milne erapy, and doing terrible in justice'to arithmetics and the abandonment R bp brave men who fought for a cause of Frye’s geographies and the use thpy believed In. of Maury's geographies Both these Fatal Boating Party. Lela and Lena/Stewart, .aged six teen and fourteen years, and John Fernhall, aged fourteen, were drown ed In a branch of the Grand river near Eaton Rapids, Mich., when a canoe, which It supposed to have struck a enag, overturned. There were no witnesses to the accident, a dissenting voice. A resolution was Jn the ^ andard on and To b a eeo hen introduced and unanimously casps "To slop the business of the com bination immediately," the court says "might be attended with very dis astrous consequences’ this the </ourt Is guided largely by others whose names are not known, the aetlop/taken by the supreme court » Die From Acid Gas. Two farmers, Silas and Warren Hicks, were asphyxiated at the bot tom of a 75 foot well near London, Ont. Both were dead when dis covered. It was evident from the month and the precipitation of th« past three days haa been worth per haps millions of dollars to Southern farmers Some parts of South Caro lina still need rain. *. Put Out His Eye*. At Atlantic City, N. J., Harry Adams, a wealthy hath house own er, lost his sight by seeing a bolt of llghtnirv? reflected in a mirror. Adams fell unconscious though un touched by the thunder bolt. Bandits In Palestine. In the wilds of Palestine hold-ups Unearth Big Frauds. Frauds amounting'to several mil lion in duties on cutlery the last few years were discovered by secret agents of the customs eervloe who * * * have been working quietly In this Fatal Political Fight, roiyntry and Germany, where most of a reBU it of a quarrel over poll- thd cutlery was shipped from * ties Monday afternoon In Charleston, Hugh Hartnett shot Frank Leonard and the first known of It was when j th ® boat waB f f und down the 8tre am serle's are published by the American | / * • * ' Book Company. Thompson's United Deaths from Cholera. States History was readopted. John- Two death* from cholera and one 80 n's fourth and fifth readers were are pulled of In the most Improved death at sea was announced at New! reta | ned and third reader added to style, according to Dr. Ira Payne of York quarantine. The dead were ; th* basil readers. Other reading of Des Moines, who has just returned known that 18 persons were killed passengers aboard the Dura Deglta-j Johnson's publications were added, j from a trip through Egvpt and the and 25 Injured, some of them fatal- bruzzl, arrltlng from Mediterranean white’s history appears on the list Holy Land He witnessed a battle ly. when troops fired a volley Into alls the first shooting scrape of the ! port*. 'for beginners. ‘ i between brigands and tourists. crowd of election rioters at Dropobcz. i present municipal campaign. •- Fatal Train Wreck. Budd Cleveland and Charles Den- posltion of the bodies that Warren , nis, engineers, were killed and was overcome first, and that his eral other trainmen and paseengsi• brother lost his life In' an attempt seriously Injured in a head-on collla* to save him. * ion, which occurred shortly after 4 . _ . j o’clock "Wednesday afternoon at Mill Central Hall* Creek, on the Tenn way. Fatal Election Riots. three times. The men belonged to A cable from Vienna says It Is now ] opposing political sides. Leonard ls not seriously Injured, the wounds be ing reported to only be painful. It to Fora Great Society. Steps floiflard forming a Young People’s society of Baptists la all parts of the world. A committee of 25 leading ministera and ,tl*e semi nary leaders wore appointed to com plete the work of otganl»tia%