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*STii(iOW 8. OAKTEB. i A ^i'I. Nmpmpm; tortA*JllwHlliiir ??**" |||| I I' TT? ~ ' ??? - . bm."*""" ' - ? 27 , 1902 ??r? ... ? ' ,==V- I. A N v) A S I" 11 It. 1" ' ' _! ii- WLl'.KliY . ?? Tariff Rerision Without Violence Fur the Husintss Interests of the Kntire U untry is Suggested By Roosevelt. Ligunspott, led., Sept. tilt.? President Roosevelt and party reached Logansport ut 7.15 this morning v\ith the scioechiug of factory whir-ties and shouts of a great crowd a?*euib!od at the Wabash station to greet him. The party was driven to the high school. When the speaker's stands was reached the- ruin was coming down hard. A great tnauy umbrellas were raised and cries from those in the rear who could not see the president induced him to say: "1 will make a bargain with you?I won't have en umbrella over my head if you won't have one over you." The crowd laughed and a great many ofd-he umbrellas were lowered. The president'* speech dealt with tariff revision. lie said that no nation can stand radical readjustments of tariff schedules at short intervals. Continual sweeping changes cannot be but disastrous, but where the industrial needs hliift as rapidly as they do here, where we often live in one year what Europe does in ten, we neod the application of established principles to changed conditions. We n. list readjust without resorting to a violent surgical operation, the dread o'-which Mlone would paralyze the business of the country. Wo must s >lve^ this problem with partisanship us a secondary^ consideration. Con . tinning, the president said: "My personal preference would he for action which should tie takon only after preliminary inquiry by and upon the findings of a body of experts of such high character and ability tliut they could be trusted A. _ J - - 1 ? io cieai wun me subject purely from the standpoint of our business Hnd industrial needs, but? of course congress would hare 1o determine for itself the exact method to be followed. The executive bas at com maud the means for gathering most of the needed facts and can act whenever it is the de sire of coDgress that it should act. That the machinery oxists for turning out the policy above outlined I am vary certain if only our people will make up their minds Men oi Oak * Timbers of oak keep the old homestead- standing through the years. It pays to use the right stuff. " Men of oak" are men in rugged health, men whose bodies are made of the soundest materials. a Childhood is the time to lay the foundation for a sturdy constitution that will last for years. lit a ? - pcou s iimuision is the right stuff. $cott's Emulsion stimulates the growing powers of children, helps them build a firm foundation for a sturdy constitution. Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists. 400.415 Pearl Street, New York, 60c. and $t.OO; all druesiste. ON TUESDAY -ANDTUESDAY NIGHT aiHIMIIIil 41141. that the health of the community will ho subserved by treating the whole question priuci u ily from ttie standpoint of the business interests of the entire country iother than from the standpoint of the fancied interests of any group of politicians.1' The President In A Hospital i Where Surgical Operation is Performed On Leg. Indianapolis, Jud., Sept. 2d.? President Roosevelt's western trip came to an untimely ond in this city today. He .was found to he suffering from a swelling in the left leg, between tbo knee and the ankle, which required immediate surgical attention and, instead of being taken to the train to continue his journey to Fort Wayne and Milwaukee, he was conveyed to St. Vincent's bespital, where ho was operated on. The operation occurred at 3.45 o'clock and lasted only a short time. Then he waa taken to a private room in j the hoapital to rest. After taking: . a light luncheon at 7.30 p m. he! was conveyed on a stretcher to his train, which had heon backed up on a UY" near the hospital, and at 10 minutes before 8 o'clock tlie train left for Washington. Lather Deot Took Drink Of Laadanani. And Now Hit Earthly Tioubles Have Haen Ended, Domestic Worry Was The Causa. Yesterday afternoon at 2 o'clock Mr. Luther Dent died at his home neat the corner of Marion and Tobacco Streets, as the re suit of laudauum poisoning. Mr. Dent had heon despondent for some months on account of domestic troubles and to end si lifo of tr'a! and pain the young man drank a small bottle of lamia- -j num such as is ordinarily purchased at drug stores for 10 cents. He came home about 10 o'clock ] and an hour afterwards weat to sleep in his room. About 2 p.m. "j efforts ware made to awake him, but to no avail. The empty ( bottle was fonnd near his bed. ^ Mr. Dent was 23 years old and married. He was the son of Mr. Thomas Dent of Lexington. For some time ha has been in the em- j ploy of the Virginia Life insurance company. His wife was not at bomtf at tha time of his death, 1 having been absent for three days on a visit to relatives in Lexing* ] ton.?The State 24th. The Old Musket "Went Off." ? < Special to The State. a Walterboro, Sept 22.?Saturday night, about 11 o'clock in i front of Mr. J. M. Pennington's store, about eight miles below ' Greei^Pond, Jacob GiMiard and i Fred Legaro, two negroes, wore scuffling over an old musket when k the gun was discharged. The ] load look effect in the neck of. a negro naiped Edwards who was standing near by. Edwarda died from the effccts^f the wound in about two hours. Magistrate ( Hoggins was notified and will I hold the inquest today. Gillian! and Legat e are both under arrest. Before buying, selling or renting, it will pay you to soe T. S. Carter, tho real estate agon'* - m I LHDIill ->11111. " Will Have Our Annual FALL-OPENING In Millinery, ^ J - ir^ LM't'NN l i UOtlS, ETC. Miss Evans has returned from clie North atter spending weeks posting herself. She has everything in the latest Styles and ^hap?s. In our. Dress Goods and Notion Department, we have the lieest and most eomplete line we Have ever shown. We invite all the Ladies to "1 1 S4T* i * uiiu our uinerent lines. Old ladies, young ladies, little ?irls, big girls, bachelor girls, old maids and all. If you can't come yourself send your "old man," so that he can tell you all about it, I Don't forget the date, TUESDAY and TUESDAY NIGHT, SEPT. 30th. Wdi. Hooper Young Maves A Statement. Man Accused of Murdering Mrs. Pnlil vn.. A ? , _ Kjnjo miuiuer Juan Killed Woman and to Save Himself from Disgracfe He Tried to Cut up Body Kow Yerk,Sept. 23.?The train from Derby, Conn., with Win. Hooper Young on hoard arrived at the Grand Ceutral station ut 9:30 o'clock this morning. There was a crowd of 400 or 500 at the station when the train came in. The crowd was orderly and no demonstration against Young was made. Young was led to a closed carriage and accompanied by Detective Sergeants Hughes and Findlay and William F. S. Hart, the prisoner's counsel, who came down from Derby with the party, was driven to police headquarter*. The prisoner plainly was in a condition bordering on collapse wheu led up the steps into headquarters. Shortly after Lawyer Hart appeared and said in reply to inqiiries: "Young is an innocent man. The police believe they have got him on an alleged confession which he made before he had legal counsel. It will be proven that \r?ung was not even an accomplice." At the close of an intervi?w lio tweon Detective Ctipt. Titus uud Youug, Capt. Titus said Young had made the following statement: "About three weeks ago 1 met , a man named Charles Simpson Eiling in Central park. lie ae costed me. Wo talked and got < acquainted, though ho was a do- I generate. After tliut he callod on t 1110 several times at my tlat. "On the night Mrs. Pulitzer died Eiling anil 1 met her at \ Broadway and Sixty-fourth street ? by appointment 1 had made. Wo J went to the flat together. I went i out for some whiskey after we got t there, and left Eiling and two men t alone. When I got back I found \ Mrs. Pulitzor lying across the bed j with a gag in her month. Eiling 1 had gone. 1 "1 ripped open her clothing and moved her hands back and I forth over her head to induce J respiration. When she did not I breathe I put my hand under her i waist and felt her heart. It was not beating. Then I decided to notify the pelice but thought that instead of calling a policeman, to go to police headquarters, which I thought was in the city hall. 1 got on attain and started down town and on the way I got to thinking what a lot of disgrace tho affair would bring on me and my father. That made me decide to get rid of the body. 1 took a long knife and cut into I the body, intending to cut tho I body up so I could get it into a trunk. When I made the first cut the odor wa6 so-awful that 1 could go no further. Capt. Titus said that tho prisoner described Kiling as being a man about k2.'? years old, smoothe face, five feet seyen inches in height, with a "bright, clear look in his eyes, pale face and wearing dark clothes with a straw hat when last seon.'" Youpg was arraigned on an alii davit made by Detective Sergeant Hughes and tho hearing was set for Sopteml>er 150. The prove d * . < uuriniriU ino2 % I itig^ were brief and without any in. it so ul incident Young was placed in '.he hospit d ward of the tombs, and l)r. C lUibell, the tonbs physician, a' closely observing the prisonei lor three honrssaid that ho had not * en any signs of insanity. ('apt. Titus today said that Young had sold Mrs. Pulitzer's diamonds for $8.50 to a person for whom tho detectives were looking. The Captain said that ? search would be made for tbo "Cluis. Simpson Filing,'' named by Yoking. ? O A Fiendish Negro Brakeman Swung From a freight Car and Brutally Shot and Fatally Wounded a Colored Boy 13 Years Old. Special b> The State. Spartanburg, Sopt. 22.?A 13year-old boy diei"! here this morning from the effects ot a pistol shot received Saturday afternoon *?t Melrose on the Spartanburg and Asbeville railroad. From accounts the shooting was an net of wanton brutality and the pistol was tired by a negro, presumably an employe of a freight train. The boy, Yank Dooley, and his brother John were walking from Melrose towards this city on the railroad tract. They stopped at Melrose and seated themselves on a piece of sewer pipe about 1 p. i. Saturday. Whilo there a frieghttiain passed by, coming this way. As the train passod, according to tho testimony of John DooUy at the coroner's inquest held hero today, a negro brakeman brandishing a pistol in one hand, swung from tho side of the car ?ext to tho cab and tired, the hall striking the hov Yank. The negro then tired twice more. Tho boy wus picked up and it was discovered that ho was dangerously wounded. Tho agent at Melrose telegraphed to Tryon, ind further down the line, to have ;he negro on the freight train who O ^ lid the shooting captured. The 1..-1 I 1 i 1 iuuuuuixM u!i(i inane ins escape prior to tho train reaching Tryon. Lie has not been scon nor hoard from siuco. Tho wounded boy and his brother were carried on a train to Saluda, and from there they were brought to this city on the passenger train Saturday night. Yank Dooley lived until 1 a. in. today and died fiotn his wound. Death of a Dispenser. Choi aw, Sept. 22. ? Mr. ^?d. Redfcarn, the county dispenser, died at his home in this place this afternoon of typhoid fever. Mr. lied fearn leaves his wife and three children, lie was a man of strict integrity and was a valuable citizen. His remains will be buried at Plains, this county, tomorrow. A k''ARSON'S NOBLE ACT UI want all the world to know," writes Rev. C. J. Budlong, of Ashaway, S. I., "what a thoroughly good and reliable medicine 1 found in Electric Hitters. They cured me of jaundice and liver troubles that had caused mo great suffering for many years. For a genuine, all-around cure they excel anything 1 ever saw." Flee trie Hitters are tho surprise ot' all for their wonder ful work in Fiver, Kidney and Stomach troubles. Don't fail to try them. Only 50 * cts Satisfaction is guaranteed by Crawford Bros* and J. F. Mack-> cy & CoV drug store.