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r,-. / ? LnUiau tm> Stats 7i~- ■ / X ''• - * '. , * h Deities sf 8f r liitr ; •£ ' T IN WOMAN’S HOME Both the Families Ineol- ed In the Unfortunate Affair Are Prominent Soeiallj', (lose Neighbors, and Have Iteen for Many Years Most Intimate Friends. Declaring that she had been in- ‘ suited, Mrs. J. P. MeCrea shot and iustantly killed Allen Garland in the MeCrea home at Opelousas. La., on Thursday morning. Both are prom t L.inently socially. The McCreas and . .Garlands are neighbors. , ^ Mrs. MeCrea used a revolver an<; Sent three .bullets through Garland’s back, any one of which it is thought would hpve produced death.* She is the wife of a division superintendent ^Of the ’Frsco Ralroad. Garland’i family is one of the most Influential In that section of the State. Although Mrs. MeCrea alleges thaC Se shot Garland to protect her hon Or, it is stated that the young man was seated in a chair in her room that all three bullets entered his ly from the rear. They were alone It the time, there being no eye-wit leases to testify at the coroner's in- f quest. Mrs. McCie has been placed in jail. Her htbbahd is with her. 'Ac cording to the sheriff, a charge of -murder will be entered against her. will have nothing to say that she killed Garland herself. rland was a student and Of Tuiane University, New is said that he was a hta books and cared for Mrs. MeCrea was fre ft alone in her home be- business calling her hus- On these occasions Gar- called upon to stay in the residence; as a protector to eg and the children, ay about ten o’clock Mrs. telephoned to the Garland M^ed to borrow a spool It was sent to her by land. Garland lived with other, a widow of the late Garland. > KLP KOMK. Formed in Macon, Gn., ft Cotton Crt>p. Will BE IN MCE SENATOR TILLMAN CERTAIN TO ASK RE-KLECTION. I —>-w He Is More Interested In His Operations Than Politics Jnst Now Thongh. The or concern k« ton corpora trolling the of the South on, Ga., Wed Wadley of Iky] wealthiest men senting financial’ extent. Assoclat who will l>e presi Wadley f of Wlaycr tion of a 14.000.000 as the Southern Cot- wit h an eye to con- keting of the cotton announced at Mac- y, by George Dole rooke, one of *the orgia and repre- lerests of great Ith Mr. Wadley, t, are John E. and John T. Moore, Leon 8. DureT e H. Hall. Dunwoody John Mockey and of Macon. ^ The concern will work*!® connec tion a string of banks operated by the National Bank Audit Company, of which William Barret Rldgely, former compTrollef Of the currencyr is president. The Southern Cotton corporation will advance ■ farmers money up to 75 per cent, of the nor mal price on cotton deposited in warehouses. This cotton will be f held, and when the time arrives each year when a correct estimate of the crop can be made, a price will be fix ed and the cotton held until such price ia paid. Organization work, it was stated by Mr. Wadley, has started in 1,000 counties throughout the cotton belt. In each county will be an advisory board, all stockholders in the corpor ation, compose^ df five business men and bankers slid JI0 farmers. This county board w^ll watch the crop and report to th« main offices which will be U My oft (Mr. Wadley an nounces that idHpini capital has al ready beep secured to Insure suc cess. ProitaggMB will start at once TRIED Work of a The Columbia Record says Senator Tillman spent Wednesday in Colam bia on , ^personal business, passim f most of the ime with his frien<Vl>r- Babcock. He returned to his home at Trenton on the afternoon train and carired with him two real pitch forks.' The Senator bought the pitchforks uptown and had them sent down to the union station for him at train time. They were wrapped up In pa per until they were unrecognisable and when he told Dr. Babcock what they were the doctor insisted they oi^bt to be unwrapped and carried openly by the senator, so .the paper waa fakea off and Pitchfork Ben toted the two pitchforks home on the train without any concealment. Two of the Senator’s friends. Con gressman Lever and Mr R. I. Man ning, happened to be present and as sisted ia the opening np of the char acteristic package. It was seen that the tines were tipped with gold and the senator was twitted shout hoist ing the gold standard, against which he used to proclaim eloquently ia the dayi ef “1* to I or bust" But the Senator is very much mote Interested In pitchforks sgricnltorsl than pitchforks political. The news that there will be at least one candi date to oppose h4m for reelectlon, Col. W. J. Talbert, does not seem to have disturbed him at all. Senator Tillman expects to stand for re-elec tlon to make at least a few speeches. If his heaKh Is no worse than It is now, and if he is better he may make a good many ■ perches. The Senator enjoys meeting the people and only the strict orders of his physician and of Mrs. Tillman, who has always been his chief advis er, have prevented him from going around more this summer. It is his determination to offer for a fourth term in the senate. That may be set down as certain. If Senator Tillman is relected or renominated In the 1912 primary, he will on the 4th of March, m3, be gin his fourth term aa senator from South Carolina. Havjng served as governor from 1*91 to 1895. he was first elected to the senate la 1894 to succeed Gen. M. C. Butler and took his seat on the 4th of March. 1895. Hi was reelected in 1900 and again hi 1906, both times without opposi tion. Col. W. Jasper Talbert, formerly congressman, has announced he will be • candidate for senator next year, no matter who else runs. Governor Blease has announced that he will b« candidate for senator If Senator Tillman la not In the race; otherwise he will seek reelection as governor. HER SON? S/- w ■ Tin fc Ik QwtliM Ikt b hdb| til M»u JSv. LAID TO NO ONE MYSTERY OF MYRTLE HAWKINS’ DEATH UNSOLVED. ' —■ FIEND WILL SOON SWING Days Penalty About One Month Af- T** ter His Crime. At Warrenton. tN. C., after ten minutea of deliberation a verdict of guiRy” waa returned early Wednes day by the superior court Jury in the case of Norval Marshall, the negro who last Saturday night attacked a white woman and shot and seriously wounded ’her father'and the sheriff of Warren county. Judge Justice promptly sentenced Marshall to be electrocuted at Raleigh on October 2 0. The negro bras taken to Raleigh at once and lodged In the penitentiary to await hia execution. The victim was placed on the stand and told the circumstances of the attack. The de. fendant’s only attempt at defense was a plea of Insanity. A VERT STRANGE CASE A Mu Turns Up in a Little Mtchfgu Tow* Claiming to be Geo. A. Kli mel. Who la Supposed to Have Wed Sometime Ago and Causes Much Discussion. ACCUSE EACH OTHER. ICK TRAIN to Destroy Many In- People. A dispatc tardly atte: bound passe; llna & Nort made at Crow the North morning. T1 and 50-feat die of the trea pulled from the feet.^ A crowbar, the ends of the its poMtkm, and his train to a atop Void a fearfu might have rom CNfyfer says dau to wrett the ngrth- irain on the Caro- rn railroad was treatle Just over ilna line Tuesday 0 is 50 feet long and about the mid- fa ad been distance of 60 ■rock between ,*The rail held r brought time to a- people 1 } he friends W. Gage dhndldata for the supreme ^legislature Gage Is he poi oul* like to Two Men iuJail Charged With Mur dering Ones Wife. Each accusing the other, two men are prisoners in the same tier of cells in the little Lee county jail, charged with the murder of Mrs. Etta Rich ardson Childers at Smithvllle, Ga., on August 5, last. On* is the vic tim's husband of six months, the oth er her former sweetheart. R. C. ’Kennedy, Childers and Kennedy were brought face to face with each 0ther Wednesday as the former was being led to his cell following his ar rival from Americus where he was ar rested Tuesday. The erstwhile riv als glared at each other for a mom ent and Childers then passed on to his cell to await formal arrlgnment. Broke a Man’s Skull. Roy and Ben Ghent, whit* men, were lodged in jail at Lancaaler, charged with assault and battery with tuUnt to kill, the alleged victim being ar young man naffted Steele. The trouble occurred Saturday ulght ia the north-eastern portion of Lan caster county. Steele Is said to be ta A critical condition, his skull be- inff fractured. V . .vvji y* Kept liquor in Cfcnrch. Pleading guilty of rnnnlnff a “blinf tiger” In a negro church at LisiUn, 12 miles from Macon. Ga., Walker Hasrthorne, a negro farmer, Wednesday was held for the next Hawthorne la federal tfapd Juu. said to hnvls kopt hia under the pulpit. 1 89 - L. . • • -< A dispatch from Niles, (Mich., says George Alfred Klmmel, believed by relatives to have been dead for thir teen years, arrived at his old home there from the penitentiary at Au burn, N. P., late Tuesday and was identified by former friends and as sociates. Despite Klmmel’s identification, however, his mother, Mrs. Stella Klmmel, refused to see him. The mother continued to denouce Kim- mel as an Imposter who was attempt ing to deprive her of 825,000 insur ance which ahe had on her son’s life. While dozens of persons positively identified him as the son for whose supposed death thirteen years ago Mrs. Esteila Klmmel received $5,000 In life insurance, an equal number, was as positive that It was not the same. - Then Mrs; Klmmel, 70 years old, who had asserted that the man waa imperaonating her son merely to de prive her of the money she had al ready received and to prevent the payment of $25,000 more in insur ance to other relatives, scrutinized the man who claims her as mother. Bcougth face to face with the wo man, “Klmmel.” Just released from a five-year term in the Auburn (N. Y.) penitentiary, atreched forth hia arma and said; Mother! Don’t you know me your boy? Don't diaown me any longer. You know I am your son." Mrs. Klmmel, withdrawing from the man aa he attempted to embrace her, stood sternly scanning his facs. “No,” ahe said, “I don’t see in you any positive resemblance to my eon.” The meeting took place at the home of Mrs. H. L. Fox, who had al ready accepted “Klmmel” as cousin and positively identlled him as the •on of Mrs. Klmmel. It was made known Mrs. Klmmel has no direct in terest in any money which the Insur ance campanies refuse to pay on the ground that the son Is still living, but that a $10,000 policy ia held by a daughter. Mrs. Edna Klmmel Bons- lett, and another $5,000 policy is held by a distant relative. I would have no selfish motive In denying the Identity of my son if he were alive,” said Mrs. Klmmel. “For years I have felt sure he was dead, and 1 can not believe that this man s he. It seems that some motherly Instlct ought to tell me the truth, yet when I look at him I do not rec ognize him. He only puzzles me. It haa almost prostrated me to look upon this strange man and have peo ple insist that he Is my son.” "Klmmel,’’ on looking at the wo man, said he was positive she was his mother. “I wanted to take her In my arms,” he said," for ahe looked the same as years ago. I love her wjtb all my heart and can’t understand why ahe should Insist I am dead. Still, I will not worry Her, and 4 f aha continues tp ' disbelieve me I shall do as she wishes I know I am Klmmel, for I recognlde every one.’* To test his acquaintance with Niles ’’Klmmel” was escorted about the streets. He repeatedly pointed out landmarks and related instances which citizens said were correct. He called persons by their fml names, but many of them professed not to re cognize him as the real Klmmel. "Now to prove I am familiar with the town,” said Klmmel. "I will tell you that behind that hill there ia a big red brick house, on the south side cf which is a large dm tree, from which we used to swiug when boye.” Every one declared the statement was correct. i There was evidence after Klmmel left suggesting that he had died aid the insurance money was asked for. The Mfe insurance company is said to have expended hundreds of dollars in running down a theory that Kim- mei did not die. He was traced to Arkansas City, Kan., where, so far as hia family knew, he was last seen. Then a man answering the descrip tion of Klmmel was found in a dazed condition in 8t. Louis. He recover ed in a hospital and later left for New York, where, under the name of An drew J. White, he was arrested on a larceny charge. After more warn ings he waa found in an asylum in New York and afterward tfisced to Auburn penitentiary. * Several years .after Kimmel’s dis appearance his mother Instituted suit In the St. Louis courts to secure in- surance which she held on his life A Jury returned a verdict in her far- Or and declared Kimmel to legally dead. Upon this verdict one com pany paid Mr* Klmmel on a 15,000 policy. Another company which car- vied a $20,000 policy, however, fought the claim and carried the matter to higher courts. Tom Fragments of Paper Are Now Authorities’ Hope to Obtain Otoe to Identity of Guilty Persons. A special dispatch to The State from Hendersonville says the testi mony of fifty witnesses has not solv ed the mystery of the death of Myr tie Hawkins, whose body was found in Osceola lake thirteen days ago, but who waa not drowned. , The coroner’s Jury Wednesday found “from the testimony introduc ed that she came to her death at the hands of some unknown person or persons in a manner and by means unknown. Thia differs from the ver dict in the first Inquest by making the case one of murder. Immediately after the verdict was rendered it was announced that the Hawkins family offered a reward of $500 for the arrest and conviction of Mias Hawkins’ slayers. Added to the other rewards offered or promised, this makes a total of $2,500. Dr. W, R. Kirk, coroner, said the investigation would be continued, and if any additional evidence is discover ed a special grand Jury will be em paneled to consider It *» - There remains three possibilities of new evidence. Torn fragments of paper bearing an unfamiliar hand writing were found in Mias Hawkins’ room and have been sent to Washing ton to be put together. On the shore of Osceola lake, near where the body waa found, there haa been discovered a piece of raanila paper, blood-stain ed and bearing finger printa. The finger prints may be identified as t;>ose of somebody concerned in the crime. It is expected that Mrs. Bessie Clark Gulce will be arrested as she is thought to know something about Misa Hawkins’ death. A warrant haa been issued for Mrs. Guice in another county, accusing her of having per formed the same kind of criminal operation, as It is said was attempted on Mias Hawkina. One of the prin cipal efforts of the inquest waa direct ed toward finding who was responsi ble for Mies Hawkins’ condition. Testimony thst she waa seen with George Bradley, a recently married man, after she disappeared from home was contradicted, aa waa the testimony concerning other suspi cious circumstances. CUT WITH HE ■ 1 m Sti PmpIi Batctafi ai fitr 9<pt ■ fttir MiVTva Inks. KY CRUSH THE LARGE STEAMER ■Ad\a OLOSE GALL. V tp A MST BRUTAL CR1NE of the Unknown Victims Discovered by Neighbors Three Days After the Crime" Wss Committed With Their Crushed nod Fearfully Mutilated. IMXTOR SOLD OWAINE Well-Known Laurens Physician Con victed and Fined for It. A dispatch to The Stale from Laur ens says Dr. C. L. Poole, a wed known physician of that city was Tuesday af ternoon found guilty In the mayor’s court on a charge of selling cocaine. Mayor Bal>b imposed a sentence of 1 $100 fine or of 30 days in prison. Dr. Poole gave notice that he would pay. The mayor announced that the de fendant would be tried tomorrow on a like charge. The witnesses are ne- gioea who are alleged to have bought the drug from the accused. The conviction of Dr. Poole caused a mild sensation. It comes aa a climax to a long series of efforts on tha- part of the authorities to place responsibility for the sale of a large amount of the drug to negroes ia the city. - A -package. -aL the duat which Dr. Poole is alleged to have sold to a ne gro who was arrested as he was leav ing the premises of the defendant a few nights ago, was analyazed by a Columbia chemist, who testified at the trial that the sample submitted was cocaine hydroefclocate. CAN’T KISS IN PillLIC. Kansas (Tty Judge Fines Husband and Wife For Doing So. —— Kissing one’s wife or husband in public places ip Kansas City Is Ille gal, according a decree issued Wed nesday by Judge Carlisle of the mu nicipal court. Judge Carlisle fined Ben Shannos and his wife $100 each for kissi&g each other in Shawnea park Tuesday night. I always thought a woman could kiss her hus- ban whenever she pleased,” Mrs. Shannos said, “What is the use of be ing married if you can’t love your husband? We haven't any home, so we go to the park when we finish work.’’ One of the moat brutal crime* known to that section for many years has come to light at Colorado Springs Col. Butchered in their beds by ■ome persons as yet unknown, who used an axe, the bodies of six par sons, three in each of two neighbor ing bouses, were found there Wed nesday. The heads of all victims bad been amaabed in and the Appearance of the bodies Indicated that they had been dead several days and that death came while they slept. A re port says that the murder has been caught and that he has confessed, but this is denied by the police of ficials, who, it Is Intimated, fesr a lynching might follow such an an nouncement. An axe which had been loaned to Mrs. Henry F. Wayne, one of the rlcUmf, by J. R. Evans, a neighbor, last week, was found, blood-etoined by (Mfi. Evans on Monday near the back door of the Wayne heme. No attention was paid to ibis fact, how ever, as It was thought the axe ImuI been used In killing chickens. The dead are: Mrs. Alice May Burnham, wife of A. J. Burnham, cook at the Modern Woodmen’s Satitarium. Their two children, Alice, aged 6, and John, aged three yeni®. Henry F. Wayne, a consumptive, until recently a patient at the Wood men’s Sanitarium. Mrs. Wayne and their one-year-old baby girl. The Burnham house Is situated at Dale street and Harrison place, and the two houses next to it on Dale afreet are vacant. Directly in the tear ia the Wayne home and close to «t is that of Evans. The discovery of the bodies was made by a neighbor, who called at the Burnham home. Not getting any response and notic ing a strong odor, she forced an en trance. The bodies of Mrs. Burnham and those of her two children were found in their beds, which wers cov ered with blood, and the wall and celling were also spattered. The woman rushed to the street and gave the alarm. Immediately a dozen persons went to the Weyne house, where there hid been no signs of Ilfs since Sunday, and the same ter rible scene was presented. In the beds were the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne and her children horrfffly mangled, as in the case of the bodies In the Burnham home. That such a crime had been com mitted In a thickly settled neighbor hood and left unrevealed tor three days la regarded aa incredible. Not even a footprint is to be found on the floor of either house and no one could be found who had seen any one about the premises since Sunday, when all the murdered persdns at different times were In a neighboring grocery. Burnham, who lives at the sani tarium where he is employed, about lenTfirrtllrfmintlrrTfr:^;- wee-wrrssta J s"on after Uie diceoevfY of 'he crime, but there seema nothing to implicate him in the tragedy. His employers say he was at work when the crime must have been committed. He'was last seen at his home Sunday after noon, and is said to have left there about 5 o’clock. Little is known of the Wayne fami ly except that Wayne came to the Modern Woodmen’s sanitarium about ten months ago from Indiana as a patient. One month ago his term In the instituiton was up and he brought hta wife and ■MM hsr* and rented the bouse in whch they #e#» akurder- ed. When brought into the morgue the bodes were almost unrecognisable. The heads of all the six victims were either out or smashed and Iff almost every case the number of wounds In dicated them nrderer had rut and •lashed until certain that Hfe waa ex tinct. S JS u • - -Y ' • V , n - -w. -t n oprtcnjT Wofford Cuts Out Hazing. The Spartanburg Herald says the student body of Wofford college be gan the new school year Thursday by adopting a resolution not to en gage In hazing of any character this tolr. The meeting was presided ov- <fr by Dr. Synder. Wofford has had a splendid opening. Three Girls Drown. _ 7: Mary Henderson, Rese Ferten and Ellen Lumberg were drowned at hts stock of liquor Houghton, WIs., Thnrsday night The £1*1'f canoe capdsed. Tramp Comet A Chicago astronomer has sighted a tramp comet, the toll of which may be seen with opera glass**. The head of this comet Is much larger that of Halley’s or others ffBtod ta re cent year* It is visible between I p. m. and dayll#bir~ ' ’ ‘ — f - IritoS • 1* Designed Ram, Great Ocean Ida. er Survives the The great steamship Olympic of the White Star line which left Sonth ham pton, England, about 1,3 o'clock Wednesday with a large crowd of tnrnlug luuiists, lies off tie at the entrance to Southhampton waters with a gaping hols In her side aa the result of a collision with the British protector cruiser Hawks. No hives were lost, and of the 2,- 000 or more passengers and crews of the vessels, not one was even injur ed. There also was no panic. The accident took place a few miles from where the American liner St, Paul and the British cruiser Gladiator col lided nearly four years ago. The Olympic left her dock at 11.31 o’clock Wednesday morning, steam ing at a moderate rate eastward on her way to Cherbourg to pick up the continental passengers. She already had on board nearly 1,700 persons, •xclndlng the crew. The first cabin passengers were Just answering the csll to lunch when attention was at tracted to the Hawke which was un dergoing steam trials. This warship, ’ moving at great speed, followed the liner, but appar ently was quit* clear of her but sad- denly She swerved and before the passengers could rssllse whst Wst happening, struck ths liner on the starboard quarter near the stern, tearing through a section about 40 feet In extent The miracle Is thst the Olmypte was not sunk, aa ths Hawks Is fitted with a ram especially designed Is sink s vessel In spite of Its water tight compartment*. The liner's frame stood the shock well, and the watertight doors, Whtd' automatical- . y closed, held the compartments metically sealed. The Olympic listed slightly to starboard but not to n Suf ficient angle to cause say serious alarm. * Z7 ' - ’%v- So far as emu be learned the Hawk* suffered no more severely. Curiously enough 13 feet of her upper deck was twisted out of all recognition. The stem appears to be completely gone. The engines of both ships were stop ped Immediately, and ns soon as the watertight doom were secured the en gines were set astern and tha drew apart. The Hawk* seat messages tor tags sad alongside until they arsfysd to vcy her to Southhampton, where anchor. ’ A vi— SUB K B 'Wr- Gtve* the < IX» •** *»• tkw Mftri ta Next ParHamaat. Canada slapped the United squarely la the face and plainly said she wsatsd no« relations with US, bwsiasts or cal,; Ln the Thnrsday OTsrwha Liberal party which tovoreg trade pact with the United 8ta A dispatch from a veritable polltleal Liberal majority of 43 away and the Conservative cured one of the heaviest —upward of 56—that any Pariiamsot has sver had. Sevan < inet ministers, who have served Premier Laurier. ware among tha de feated candidates. •• The Liberals lost ground la fleally every province of the Where they won, their tremendous. Ontario, the provtne* of Canada, fiocta red win t, wUl be supported ta woffcfcg majority of far for hie parpens. dropped Many theories art advanced the cause of the collision, but erally the warship la blamed. It ia suggested that the cruiser's steering gear fstleiil to aeh" and the officers of ths Olympic arc withholding comment until the in quiry which the admiralty will Insti tute immediately. The cruiser pro ceeded to ’Portmouth under her own ■team. — ♦ ♦ W M AVIATOR ROSENBAUM KILLED Chicago Air dim Falls Fifty Fast at DeWttt, Iowa. At DeWItt, la., John W. baum, of Chicago, was killsd Tuesday, when his aeroplane fell from a height of fifty feet. He had been ta the air only twenty minutes whajs hs Rosenbaum was makiaff a trial flight when he met death. He waa using a Curtiss biplane, which had been at the DeWItt Fair last week. At that time Ludwig, an aviator, failed to make a flight. Rosenbaum this af ternoon declared that he would prore that the machine would fly. He had just started a descent when he lost control. The aviator waa to have giv en exhibition flights at Clinton, la., later la the week. rati fled by the extra session, will net ha whan the ISt* next month hod that of trad* with the Ual ing to closer will not be possible la the future. The mined to a poHcy 1 within the Empire mf Although tneadea ia. party t from public Mfe Laurier. who, tor nearly t has directed the minion, better* election, the that defeat of j meant the end 1 U*iiL •• "MM acy of tho party, lo that tho great victories, peal* to patriottem 1 reciprocity was for m That province. Parliament was Liberals and 51 •end a delegation to the M posed of 13 Liberals and TP vatlves. A notable feature of feat was the oppoattiQh's two hitherto Liberal seats Ip chewsn. The results at tea 6*eloafe day night, with a few of the distant •• 36 otla.. •. .. . • 36 6 unswlck .. .. I •/ I Ontario., Quebec Nova Scotia (New Brunswick Prince Ed Maaltobia Saskatchewan.. Alberta. * , • British Columbia Totals.. HELD UP A NEGRO. ■■■■■■■ _ II 111 - Opposition majority, 16. Head Senator Smith says thst If the cotton men of the Soifch are content to sit down after six year* of ’fight ing and let the speculators dictate the price of eottota they deserve to ttimant He is dead right. Seta Sister on Fire. A tour year old son of B, ,0. Fri day, a prosperous, farmer of Iredell, N. C., deliberately Ignited a small torch and applied it to the clothing of the baby sister, the latter dying shortly after. Whqn asked his reas on for committing the act the child replied: “Just because.” - Why Prices TelL A dispatch from New Orleans says new low price levels wers brought about in the cotton market Wednes day by heavy and general selling, vrt of which was tor speculative short accounts, part from liquidat ing longs, and part (foil spot firms sad large receipts. White Man and a Negro Attempt a "tv • . ..r '■ to Commit Robbery. Near Allendale two men one white and the other a negro, made s bold attempt at robbery about throe o’clock Wednesday morning, tbsy drew revolvers on Richard Bry ant, a negro, who lives on W. F. Googe’s plantation, near the ceme tery, aa he was going to town to mar ket a hale of eotton. Just as B was passing a thicket the two waymen stepped out In front wRh revolvers and demanded halt. They then proceeded to search him, bat found nothing, and ordered the negro to move on. Tho robbers are still at large and there seems to i > Slue as to who they are. 1 A Young Convict. . . M be no Willi* old, houaebreoki general Wednesday traced to serve pahltentlary, as ahe might be Millions of shrimp and fish _ killed ta a toko near Haw Orleans as S result of g diet of molasses found Ms way into tho Lake tho city sewers when 666,660 w«ro recently tot loose In the whers n storage tank burst.