"TO THINE OWN SELF BE TRUE, AND IT MUST FOLLOW AS THE NIGHT THE DAY: THOU CANST NOT THEN BE FALSE TO ANY MAN." .a? By STECK, S HELOR & SCHRODER. WALHALLA, SOUTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1912. Now Serle? No. 04?.-Volume LXIV.-No. 31. : ANNOUN Thc semi-annual dis A and Winter suitings by * The Globe Taik Cinci A will be given at our es fy AUGUST - Make this one of ) merits. Call and trials measured by an expert Orders taken for itv .?. livery-woolens will t drapes. C. W. & J. E. Walhall fy fy fy fy fy fy fy .J LITTLE ZADIE ABBOTT DEAD. i Death (hists Deep Gloom Over Com munity-Local Nows. Coneross, July 29.-Special: Last! Wednesday at 11 a. m. the death an-! gel entered the home of Mr. and Mrs. ? J. S. Abbott, of this community, and conveyed from earth to heaven the ; spirit of their daughter Zadie. The : entire community is overshadowed with gloom in consequence of the sad and unexpected death, which was due to typhoid fever. Zadie was 12 years of age. Although sho was young she had given her life into the keeping of the One who has taken lier away, and was a loyal little Bol dler for her Saviour. It does not seem poaniblw that our little friend is gone, yet we have to realize that God in His infinite wisdom has seen fit to call her to that beautiful city above. She was the only daughter and youngest child of J. S. Abbott. She will be greatly missed, not only in her home, but in the church and Sunbeam work, and especially in the Sunday school, in which she was a devoted worker. More especially will her loss he felt by her Sunday school classmates of twenty little girls, and by her teacher. Her place in her class was seldom vacant, lt was a beautiful yet sad sight the day following her death when four of her little girl friends, dressed in white, entered the church, hearing the many pretty flowers, mute tokens of love, followed by the lovely white casket, borne by six of her uncles. A deep gloom fell over the largo audience which had assembled to pay the last sad tribute of respect to their dear little friend. Funeral services were conducted by her paBtor. Rev. L. D. Mltche ', who just about one year ago buiied her in baptism. The re mains were interred in Coneross cem etery. The bereaved family have the sympathy of many friends in their sorrow. Lesley Morgan, of near Central, was a visitor to his cousins, Messrs. Barker, recently. He was on his way home from Double Springs, where he accompanied his sister-in-law, Miss Ethel Jones. Sho will open school at Poplar Springs school house this morning. She has friends here who wish her much success. Mrs. Louisa Abbott, and daughter, Miss Annie, spent tho week-end in Westminster visiting relatives. J. M. Hunnicutt, of Seneca, Is on an extended visit to his son, S. M. Hunnicutt, and wife. Mrs. Robert L. Gllstrap and the little son of Mr. and Mrs. Duckworth are on the sick list this week. We hope they will soon he well again. Mrs. Sallie Cox, of Westminster, spent Thursday and Friday with Rev. W. Abbott and family here. ' Misses Selma and Lola Crumpton entertained . a number of their friends with an ice cream supper re cently. J. M. Abbott, an undertaker of Co lumbia, arrived here yesterday and will spend tho woek with his par ents, Rev. and Mrs. W. Abbott, .lay has a host of friends herc who are delighted to see him again. We regret to learn of the death of Miss Lulah Phillips, which occurred at her home near Pleasant Hill last week. She has a number of friends here, as she once lived in our com munity. We extend our Sympathy to thc bereaved. Our pastor, Rev. L. D. Mitchell, spent the greater part of last week ? with us. He ls quite unwell. His numerous friends here regret to learn of his illness and hope ho will soon be restored to perfect health. He left for South Union Saturday. Insect Bite Costs Log. A Boston man lost his leg from the bite of an insect two years before. To avert such calamities from stings and bites of Insects use Buck len's Arnica Salve promptly to kill the poison and prevent inflammation, swelling and pain. Heals burns, bolls, ulcers, piles, eczema, cuts, bruises. Only 25 cents at all druggists. * * * .+'.. 4? 4? 4? 4 CEMENT iplay of high class Fall ty1 ty ty >ring Company, * nnati 4 tablishment on 4* 9 and 10. . * four positive engage- . z your selection and bc '* 4? ttnediate or future de >c shown in full length ty BAUKNIGHT, + . with a rock while both were working in a peach orchard. Next day the girl's father came to town and was severely beaten by hot-headed white youths, who warned him not to come back. Ile heeded the warn ing, but his brother came to town Saturday afternoon. Ho was attack ed by whites, and there negroes came to his assistance. The four were stood In a row against the depot and lashed with buggy whips. Finally one broke away and fired as he ran. This brought on an exchange of shot? among the excited people. This oc curred just as the Southern south bound passenger train from Chatta nooga passed through. Amid wild excitement the blacks, who outnumbered the whites, fled from the town, and took refuge In the section houses. Sheriff Owens, of Calhoun, arrived with a posse to arrest the negroes. On the way to the negro quarters a volley was poured into tho posse from a negro section house, which was quickly surrounded. The wound ed sheriff, Ernest Johnson and Dock Miller were carried to a white home and aid asked from nearby towns. Sheriff W. G. Dunehoee and his deputies from Rome were rushed to the scene in an automobile. They were armed with rifles and riot guns. Not knowing the location of the house, they were fired upon as they passed in an auto, the tires being punctured and the lights put out. Securing places of vantage, they kept up a steady fire on the house for several hours. Tho hillsides were fast filled with farmers, who hurried into the town, and several thousand shots were fired into the shanty, the weatherboarding of which was punctured Uko a sieve. After a four hours' hattie with tho negroes it was noticed shortly after 2 o'clock that they weie not return lng tho fire. Capt. Donohoe and his party made a rush to the house in tho face of a heavy fire, which seem ed reserved for tho last moment, and broke down the door. Deputy Sheriff Gaines was blt by bullets in the head and side, but not seriously hurt. A sickening sight was the interior of the negro hut. Ton negro men and two women were lying around the room, all of them more or loss seriously wounded. The room re sembled a slaughter pen with its gore. Hundreds began crowding around the disarmed and wounded prison ers and heat them Into lnseslbillty with gunstocks. A lynching was averted hy the offi cers, who guarded the negroes with drawn rifles against the mob. All of the prisoners were carried to jail in Calhoun, and early reports to-night from that place state that a lynching Is improbable. ' -?-1 EUGENE GRACE FEARS ATTACK. Appeals to Detectives for Protection Until Healing 1H Over. (Atlanta Constitution.) The fear of death, swift, Bllent and relentless, clutched at the heart of Eugene H. Grace yesterday as he lay helpless on a hospital cot la the to bacco-laden court room of (he crimi nal division of the Superior Court, listening to the sordid details of the crime which he has charged to his wife, Daisy Opie Webster Grace. The sting of a bullet or the swift pierce of a knife is what Grace fears, lie says that ho saw himself being assassinated in a dream, and the halueinat ion has become so fixed in his mind that he has appealed to Chief of Detectives N. A. Lapford for protection during his trial. "I don't trust, that woman, and I fear her friends still more." he de clared .Monday as he was being lilt ed into the court room. To ease his mind and dispel any i fear of danger. 'I'. G. Partner, Jr., land Tom I'lsher. both boyhood com I pantons, stand at tho hoad and foot, j of his cot. At tho slightest bit of ex ! ci temen t in the court room Monday I morning, or whenever a strange per son approached his side, lie would j clutch at tho bed covering to attract I his friends. "Watch mo close, boys!" lu- ad ! monlshed them. The Jury Complot cd. The tedious task of selecting the jury to try Mrs. Grace for shooting with intent to kill her boyish lius : band was completed at t 1.30 o'clock, j and immediately after both sides i plunged into the examination of wlt ? n esses, which will last un ttl Wednes j day afternoon. Five witnesses were heard. The State began tracing the ' movements of Mrs. Grace from 0 I o'clock of the morning of Mareil 6, j the hour which she was first seen by I the servants, until she reached New j nan at 3 o'clock that same afternoon. Up to 4.30 o'clock Monday afternoon, ! when the hour of adjournment had j b?en reached, the Stat had failed to ! show that Mrs. Grace had actually j fired the shot into the side and : against the spine of her husband. Policies Suggested ns Motive. (Atlanta Constitution, 31st.) The crucial moment In the trial of j Mrs. Daisy E. Grace came at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon when the Solicitor began laying the foundation to show that the snug little fortune of $2f>,000 was the tempting morsel which caused the woman to attempt the murder of her boyish husband. "lt is but one of the links In the chain," said one of tho attorneys. "This link will hold the chain to gether and make lt complete. It will show motive.' Those policies were suggested when Gene and Daisy, yet on their honeymoon, paid their first visit to the Hill home, lt was Mrs. Hill, the mother of Grace, happy because her big boy had brought his bride home to see her, who asked Gene to take out the policies. "1 told them that It waa a duty they owed to each other," Mrs. Hill said on the witness stand Tuesday. As the tragic, sequel of the wed ding passed through her mind, Mrs. Hill wept, when she was questioned as to what prompted her to make the suggestion. ") was just happy then, and I thought that lt would he i good idea for them to be protected. Had 1 known that this great trouble would be the sequence 1 would have died rather than breathe a word." Grace Collapsed when his gray-haired old mother stepped down from the witness box, fagged from the trying ordeal of ex amination. His condition was such that Dr. Goldsmith advised that he be removed hastily to the sanitarium. A bulletin at 2 o'clock was to the ef fect that Grace had a high fever and that his pulse was high, almost as high as when he was shot on the af ternoon of March 5. "Grace is very sick," was the news from Piedmont Sanitarium at eight o'clock last night, and there was no encouraging news thereafter. The physicians decline to discuss his condition other than to state that he was very sick. *'?? ?J??J??J??-J??J? ?J? ?J? ??.??> ?J? .J. .J? >J. ?J. ?p .J? MEETINGS AT SENECA. ?f ?J??J??J??J? >T