The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, July 21, 1910, Image 1
PUBLISHED THREE TD
FLATLY DENIED
.0>
A Reader of the State Ask <?^>ht
im
and Light Is Ghen Hira. ^
ABOUT SOME CHAtGES
Made Against The State and Messrs.
A. -S. Gonzales -and Wm ?. Gon
zeles, Publisher and Editor of
That Journal, by Mir. John T. Dun- j
can, of Columbia.
The following statement, whioh
we clip from The State will he read
with Interest: ? v
The South Carolina political cam
paign is about half over. In most
of the Counties visited, John T.
Duncan, an entry for the Guberna
torial nomination, has spoken, part
of the burden of his speech being an
attack on The State and "Gonzales." j
It appears the attempt is made,
in -more or less incoherent utteran
ces, to connect "Gonzeles" with the j
Seminole Company; to induce the)
public to believe that "Gonxales" ad
vocated the removal of the Asylum
from Columbia so that he and =as-.j
sociales might buy the Asylum prop
erty, worth $2,000,000, for $600,
000, and alleging with more or less
dtrecthess that "Gon'Baies" ?proposed
or planned to sell to South Carolina j
for vtheuse of the ABylum, -his farm i
is Blchland County ffor $200 an aere|
<whea land* as good could be got by
DUacan for $10. It Is alleged also
that 'there were meetings at night!
which were conspiracies for robbing j
the people, in which "Gonzales""took |
conspicious part.
iNteither The State nor "Gonzales"
had* anything to do with the disbarr
ment of Duncan by the Supreme
Court. Nor are they responsible for
the rules of the party governing en"-,
tries in the Democratic primary. Un-|
derstaading Duncan's condition, and
assuming that it was known to the
people of the State, these attacks j
caused neither concern h?r bitter
? ness. Even in this day, one may,
be "arm'd so strong in honesty" that
such allegations from such sources J
pass.-by "as the. idle "wind." It was |
thought that all respektable people]
would understand. ^ ^ f
But xme reader "of The'^Jtate,' T.~
C. Oovington, of Bennettsvilje, stands j
forth in all South Carolina, asking |
for proof of The State's integrity;
he thinks it due The State's readers]
to knew whether those who assume |
to lead can be vindicated. As Mr.
Oovington seems concerned he shall
not be denied, and those assailed j
say to him.
1st: Neither The State nor "Gon
zales" had relations, near or remote,
with the Seminole Company.
?2nd: The State advocated the re
moval of the Asylum from the city
limits of Columbia, suggesting a
bond issue to pay for a new modern
plaht, and holding that the judicious j
sale of the Columbia property would
furnish money for retiring those
bonds. It was supposed by The State
that this ' property would be placed
in the hands of the sinking fund
commission to be sold gradually to
the best advantage of the taxpayers,
Neither "Gonzales", nor, so far as
he is informed, any of his "asso
ciates" has ever contemplated pur
chasing the property or any part of j
it.
3rd: Neither The State nor "Gon
2a'ies" -has any property in the vi
cinity of the Asylum to be benefitted
by its removal; on the contrary re
moving the Asylum from Columbia
and opening to improvemnt and set
tlement several (hundred aicres of
land within and Immediately out of
the city, as advocated by The State
?would have retarded for years every
other suburban development about
Oolumlbia. In several of these su
burban developments the owners of
The State are financially interested.
The .removal of the Asylum which
was urged by The State for the sake,
?as The State saw it?of bettering
the condition of the unfortunate in
sane, and improving a large section
of the city, womld have caused direct |
financial loss to The State*s owners,
with no financial return.
4th: If $600,000 or any other sum
was offered for Asylum property (a
point on which they have no infor
mation) neither The State nor "Gon
zales" had the most remote connec
tion with, or interest in, such offer.
6th: The "Gonzales" farm was
not, directly or indirectly, offered to,
or suggested by its owner for, occu
pancy by the Asylum. It has never
been on the market.
6th: As a member of the Execu
tive Committee of the Columbia
Chamber of Commerce the Editor of
The State voted authority to the
President of the Commercial body
to quietly obtain optioins on lands
suitable for the location of the Asy
lum plant, 6aid options to be held
at cost by the Chamber of Commerce
for the benefit of South Carolina,
and to protect the State from exhor
bitant charges for land, should the
Legislature decide to remove the
Asylum out of the city and locate
near Columbia.
If anything derogatory to the hon
etfty, character and unselfishness of
The State and "Gonzales," alleged
or insinuated by Duncan, is true, its
truth can be readily substantiated.
Now if this simple declaration fail
to convince, or the indisposition on
the part of The State and "Gonzales"
dES A WEEK.
HANGED HIMSELF IN SHED.
William Fulmer, Aged Aiken Far- j
mer, Commits Suicide.
Mr. William Fulmer, an old and
respected farmer of the Shiloh sec
tion, of Aiken County, committed
* -icide Sunday night by .banging
self in the .buggy shed of one of
' n eighbors. For some time he
* ^en in a melancholy state of
Wiuci and only recently, it is report
ed, made an unsuccessful attempt to
kili himself. Saturday night, after
a long rain storm, he left his home
and waritered ofj&to some unknown
place. '-i.
Sunday he spent the day with Mr.
Jean Busbee, who lives several miles
from Mr. Fulmer, and towards night
he complained '.of ..feeling bad. Say
ing that he was going to the home of
another of his neighbors, he left the
house alone,? -and until found dead,
was not heard .of again.
Monday morning, some one going
to Mr. Bu?bee's shed to feed, found
Mr. Fulmer hanging over the rear
of the buggy with a driving rein
looped around his neck. Judging
from the surroundings be had run
the line over the .rafter above, loop
ed it around &s neck and jumped
off.
Mr. Fulmer was somewhat feeble
minded and^had at one time been an
inmate of the State Hospital at Co
lumbia. His family is a prominent
I one . in that. section and they have
the sympathy of many friends.
FORTUNE COMPES -UNSOUGHT.
A Train Nurse is ^^in Fifty Thons?
and "Do
m.. .
Despite the unexpected bestowed
upon her of a fortunetfgf fifty thous
and dollars, Mrs. Jf^m; Hollins, ?
trained nurse of AltoUttaJ announced
Monday that sire hadV^ intention of
giving up he^f.^Kprk ^'a^^tg the sick.
Mrs. Hollins' ^ehefaofcp^Hs Dr. Her
bert H. Wyming, u prQ&'fc-entphy
sician, of Los-Angeles, :Cal.^?vhom
she met a little -more * than three
years ago in Savannahs Ga., imme
diately following her J^jj^iatlon as
a nurse.
The doctor wrote .j^^l^^ew days
ago that he had djggped^o 'make
her a 'present of ^B^QQ$ and^ the
money would re$gft' her in- ? \ few
days. Mrpf Ho Hins .'admitted that
Dr. Wymi^fe^^11?-^^16 *?rt
Harry, '^?^p5^tbr 'w1sh^8 her to
;marry.
? **He^?jSfc a^ays liked1 rngJand ;has
offceji-^fowa^^ -4md
better marry Harry and he would
make me wealthy, hut I never had
any idea that he would give* me so
much money."
KILLED FOR HIS MONEY.
Found Dead on a Pile of Fodder in
His Stable.
H. F. Zacharay, aged 50, amiser,
was found murdered on a pile of
fodder in a' stable on his premises
in the suburbs of Roanoke, Va., on
Monday. Two pistol .bullets were
found in the head. The police are
ilooking for Meek Vaden, a negro
suspected of the crime. The purpose
of the killing was dobbery, and it is
believed the slayer tgot a big sum |
of money. More than $600 in cur
rency was found sewed in secret I
pockets in a second pair of trous-|
ers worn by Zacharay.
TRIED TO GET AWAY.
Young Man Probably Fatally Injur
ed by a Leap.
At Chicago John Olowski, aged
twenty-five, was probably fatally
injured last night when he jumped
out of a rear window of the second
floor of a building at 849 Milwau
kee avamue. The police learned that
Olow?ki had gone to the office of
Mme. Zoro. After having his "for
tune told" he refused to pay the fee.
Mme. Zoro then locked him in the
room while she went in search of a
policeman. In the meantime Olo
wski opened the window and jumped
into the alley.
Had Close Call.
Mr. Reece Young, of Clinton, had
a close call rt:eartly. He lay down
beneath an oak to take a nap. A
thunder storm approached and as he
arose and walked away, the lightning
struck the tree, tearing it aill to
pieces ami splintering the very root
on which his head rested.
Lost Lifo in Surf.
At Gulfport, Miss., Mrs. Joseph
Dellorens, age 20 years, wife of the
Spanish consul at Gulfport, was
drowned and several other members
of the yachting party of which she
was one, were barely rescued, while
in surf bathing at Ship Island near
Gulfport Tuesday.
to present documentary proof be mis
interpreted, the following course of I
proceedure is suggested:
If Mr. Covington or any other
doubtc* will secuhe the appointment
by any Justice of the Supreme Court,
by any Circuit Judge or by any white
Ministerial Union of any city in
South Carolina, or a committee of
five persont to inquire into the
charges of Duncan, and if any one
of these derogatory allegations
against The State and "Gonzales" Is
substantiated, The State Company
will pay five thousand dollars to
whomsoever that committee desig
nates.
A. E. Gonzales. Publisher.
Wm. E. Gonzales, Editor.
OBANGEBI
WOMAN BETRAYS
AN EMBEZZLER AND HE IS AR
RESTED BY OFFICERS.
He Was A Bank Cashier and Had
Stolen One Hundred Thousand
Dollars. <
Eluding the police of several cities
and private detectives for more than
two months, J. Howard Lowery, alias
James H. Johnson, wanted in Uti
ca, N. Y., on a. charge of embezzling
more than $100,000 from the Utica
City National Bank, was betrayed
into the hands of a detective
at Philadelphia by a woman and tak
en to New York state before the lo
cal authorities were aware of what
was going on. His arrest is the re
ward of- patience and perseverance
on the part of Daniel J. Kelleher, a
detective of the New York office of
the American Bankers' Association.
Lowery was a note teller in the bank
and disappeared last April while an
examiner was going over the bank's
books.
Kelleher. after a long time, got a;
clue which left to several cities and
then to Wilmington, Del. He learn
ed that a woman was in correspon
dence with the former teller and he
spent many days in Wilmington be
fore he learned her address and then
kept tabB on her for nearly a week
before his vigil was rewarded. On
Tuesday night as he was standing in
an alley near the woman's house,
he noticed her leave with a suit case
in her hands. He followed her to
the 'railroad station and then into
a train.
Confronting her with the informa
tion he had, he forced her to tell
L?wery's address in the city. That
done, he took the woman back to
Wilmington, leaving a guard to see
that she should not be able to com
municate with Lowery.
Then he went to Philadelphia.with
another detective. They stationed
themselves near a house on North
160tJi street, where the' woman said
Lowery was living, and were on
guard about five hours, when the
man they wanted came out. Step
ping up to him, Kelleher" told him
he was under arrest. Lowery was
stunned for a moment, but quickly
recovered.
WILL BE IN THE RACE.
An ^E?ipnatiq Statement Made by
Speaker Cannon.
Joseph G. Cannon will not take
himself out of the race for the
Speakership, of the next House of
Representatives. This he made plain
near the conclusion' of his speech at
Emporia, Kan., Monday afternoon.
He said he would abide by the will
of the Republican caucus if the Re
publicans control the next Congress,
but that no "muckraking magazine"
could make him say he would not be
a candidate. In other words, he
said, he would not make am effort to
win the Speakership; yet the em
phasis with which he spoke made it
plain that if the Republican caucus
should nominate him he would be
willing to serve.
RUN DOWN AT LAST.
Dentist Who Extracted Fortune from
His Bride.
?Charged with swindling a Brook
lyn woman out of $13,500 and sever
al valuable bonds after marrying
her, Dr. Henry B. Keeler, said on e
to have been a prominent G*> .ha u
dentist, was arrested in Detroit, on
Tuesday, in company with him. a
woman is held at police headquai ten<
who, it is alleged: posed .n his sis
ter, and assisted in getiing the mon
ey. According to the police the au
thoroties of American and Europe
have been searching the world for
the pair. The doctor was at Detroit
for treatmnet. Two years ago, it
Ocean Grove he is alleged to have
?met Mrs. Wilhelmiua Lynch, whom
he married.
POOR, FOOLISH MAX.
Accused His Wife of Betraying Him
and Suicides.
Accusing his wife of bestowing up
on him a "Judas kiss" and of insti
gating his arrest as a fugitive from
justice, William Lyons hanged him
self with his leather beit and ended
his life in his cell in a police sta
tion at Washington, D. C, Tuesday.
Lyons' alleged offense was the oper
ation of a hand-book. He was tak
en into custody on an oid charge -nd
his arrest had no connection with re
cent, raids.
Tornudo Hits Texas.
Two persons were killed, one ser
iously injured and property damaged
to the extent of between $3,000 and
$4,000, as the results of a tornado
that blew through one corner of It
aly, Texas, at 6.45 o'clock Monday
evening. The dead: M. Poach and
son, Charles. Poach and his son
were crushed beneath the wreckage
of their home.
Dispute Ends Sadly.
Following a dispute relative to
the settlement of his father's estate,
Otis Brown, a prominent young sn
ciet.v man of Oxford, N. C, on Mon
day shot and dangerously wounded
his step mother, Mrs .J. S. Brown,
aaid then blew out his own brains.
HRGr, S. C, THURSDAY, J
FIGURES CAUSE ALARM.
Aruong Republicans Because They
Help the South.
The Washington correspondent of
The News and Courier says because
the population figures of a few of
the Southern towns, taken under the
new census, have shown1 big increas
es over the figures of 1900, leading |
men in the Republican party have I
become thoroughly alarmed, and j
have begun a movement to keep the
representation from the Southern
States in the 63d Congress from be
ing increased..
ITwo places in Virginia, Lynch
?burg and Cnristiansburg, have
shown big increases and the same
it true of two Georgia towns, Fitz
gerald and Hawkinsville. In Texas
nearly all of the fifteen or twenty
counties, which have had their pop
ulation figures made public, show
big .gains. The same is true of Ok
lahoma and ? Tennessee.
It is said that these, being wide
ly scattered, indicate that the gen
eral growth all over the South has
been large; in fact, much greater
than any one expected, and that if
the same ratio is kept up represen
tation, from that Bection must of
necessity be increased. To fore
stall such an increase in membership
't is proposed to begin the downward
movement now. i
Efforts made to ascertain whether
or not President Taft was interested
in the movement f aided to disclose
anything tending to show that he
was cognizant of it, but it is under
stood that Congressman Bennett, of
New York, and others, who are lead
ing in the proposed cut, made him
acquainted with their plans before
be went to Beverly. That the move
ment is on in earnest is not denied.
DOPED IN POKER GAME.
Found Unconscious in a Stag Hotel
By His Friends.
(J. J. Powers and Tom Noweil went
to Hamlet, -N. C, to spend Sunday.
They registered at a Stag Hotel,
which is kept by Herman Bohman.
Monday a freight conductor, a flag
man and a yard switchman awoke in
their rooms without money and sick,
having no recollection of their
night's work* except the memory that
they were sitting in a 6tud poker
game in the Stag Hotel with Powers'
and Nowell and Bohman dealing.
The case of Engineer S. L. Brown
is worse. Upon ids ?don-appearance '
at home, one of his^ftiends-Applied<
at the Stag Hotel and was denied .'
entrance. W. H. Tant heard of it!
and accompanied by J. E. Irenhart I
and C. D. Bradshaw, all brother en-!
gineers of Brown, forced an entrance >
at 11 o'clock and carried the un- j
conscious form of the engineer
to the waiting automobile of Dr. H. j
F. Kinsman, then the machine was.
driven, to the Brown home and, sev-j
eral hours later after hard work, the I
sick man was better. The matter was j
reported to the police and Powers.
and Nowell are now in the city jail.
COTTON BEING RUSHED.
The South Being Drained of All
Available Cotton.
As a result of the scarcity of spot
cotton which the so-called July
squeeze has- brought about in New
York, the South is .being drained of
practically all available cotton.
Coastwise shipments from Savannah,
New Orleans, Mobile and Galveston
have been heavy for a week or more,
and with the jump of July opti tvn
to 16.53 in the New York market
Saturday, the highest price recorded
since the Sully campaign in 1903,
telegraphic orders began to pour in
to Memphis, New Orleans, Houston
and other spot centers calling for
the shipment on special trains of all
cotton that could be bought.
RUN DOWN BY TRAIN.
North Carolinian's Body Is Found
Horribly Mangled.
The remains of a white man
supposed to have been those of \V.
M. George, of Charlotte, were found
on the Southern railway Tuesday
by a section foreman a mile and a
quarter south of Lexington, N. C.
It is thought that the man was .beat
ing his way on a train and fei'. The
head was battered off and portions
of the body scattered for more than
100 3'ards up the track. On ihe
clothes <.f th ? roan were found a
gold watch, smashed flat, a post card
signed by W. M. George, a prescrip
tion whitten for Mrs. W. M. George
by Dr. J. W. Summers of Charlotte.
Shot His Man.
?Asked to return a borrowed pistol,
Tump Ellison, returning at day light,
drunk, from drinking and gambling
all night, Monday shot and killed
Will Moore, in Newberry County,
near the Laurens couuty line. Both
parties are negroes.
Saved by Trees.
An aeronaut named Andrews fell
100 feet when his balloon burst at
Lake Manawa, five miles south of
Council Bluffs, Io., but was saved
from death by falling into the
branches of a large tree. Aside from
scratches and bruises he was unhurt.
Child Drowned in Tub.
Hazel Best, twenty-one month's
old was drowned in a water tub at
his parents home Tuesday. The
child was playing about the tub and
lost its balance and fell in.
ULY 21. 1910.
KILLED AT CROSSING
FATAL CRASH OF TRAIN TNTO
WAGON N'KAB GAFFVEY.
Mr. S. W. Wyatt Lost His Life, One
Son Fatally Hurt and Another
Slightly Hurt.
A most distressing accident oc
curred at Beaver Dam Church, three
miles south of Gaffney, Monday,
when No. .37, the Southern's vesti
bule limited, ran into a team of
mules and wagow at the railway
crossing, near the church. The wag
on was occupied by S. W. Wyatt and
bis two sons, Hamlet and Luther.
The father was killed instantly.
Luther, the eldest son, was fatally
injured, and-the other boy was only
slightly hurt. Both mules were kill
ed and the wagon was torn Into kin
dling wood. Both of the hoys were
taken1 into Spartanburg on the train
and an inquest is being held over
the dead man.
The crossing where the accident
occured is near an abrupt curve,
where the engineer could not pos
dbly see any distance in front of
his train. It is said by some that
the engineer did not whistle nor
rtoig the bell for the -crossing. Frag
ments of the. mules were carried a
distance of five hundred yards.
Wyatt was an inlustrious and hard
working man and leaves a large fam
i'y.
Luther was then taken to the hos
at Spartanburg Monday immediate
ly, after the fearful accident. He
went to sleep at 8.o'clock and was
perfectlly conscious at the time. He
is 30 years of age. His injuries
are as follows: Three broken ribs,
upper teeth kniockel-^ut, skull frac
tured in three places,''lower lip cut
off and is supposed to be internally
injured. Physicians do not believe
there is any hope for: him.
1 0 0 0
LANDLORD SHOOTS BOARDER.
Alleged that Victim Resented Insult
to His Wife.
Because he remonstrated with his
landlord for having, as he claimed
slapped Mrs. Lawson's face, James
H. .Law^pn, a boarder, was shot and
killed in a-,Boston, .Mass., boarding
ho.udia Monday night. James F. Gar
rell, the proprietor of the house, was
arrested and charged with murder.
Lawson, who was 28 years old, and
hailed from Nashville, Tenn., had
been stopping at the house with his
wife for several weeks. Sunday a
quarrel took place between Farreli
and Mrs. Lawson, in which Farreli
is said to have struck the woman.
Monday night when Lawson spoke
to Farreli a.bout the matter, Farreli
it. is alleged, drew a revolver and
fired two shots at Lawson, both of
which took effect, killing him in
stantly.
HAVE NARROW ESCAPE.
Family Just Vacated Porch When
Lightning Struck.
A peculiar freak of lightning is
reported from Belvedere, in Aiken
county. At the home of Walter Har
ris, a well-known citizen at that
place, the family were sitting on the
front porch, when a small thunder
storm came up. As the storm ap
proached, the family got up from
the porch and went into the house.
Just as they were closing the door
the lightning struck a tree in the
front yard. The bolt ran from the
tree to the porch, and knocked over
the chairs, which had been vacated
only a moment before. Had the
lighting .been a moment earlier, they
would have been struck. The es
cape was a very narrow one.
Attack on Depot Master.
Sympathizers with the strikers
?made a demonstration in front of
the tenth street union station at
Niagara Falls, N. Y.. Tuesday night.
Two men were assaulted. The men
injured are depot master Smith, who
was beaten and is in charge of a
doctor, and a conductor named Lew
all, who came in on a train about
9 o'clock. He was struck in the
face and knocked down.
20c Cotton Says Hudson.
Twenty cent cotton this fall was
predicted Tuesday by State Commis
sioner of Agriculture Thos. G. Hud
son, who addressed the Farmer's
Union at Union City. Ga. He pre
dicted that there would be only half
a crop, and that this, combined with
business conditions and a holding
movement by farmers throughout the
South, would reduce the high price.
Prize Fighting Killed.
Prize fighting in Los Angeles is
at an end. Without a dissenting
vote in the city council Monday in
structed the city attorney to prepare
an ordinance to prevent boxing exhi
bitions and sparring contests. The
ordinance will be presented at the
next meeting of the council and its
passage is virtually certain.
Negro Girl to Teach Whites.
The appointment of Mary Malison
a girl of negro and Indian blood, as
teacher in a primary school at Eliz
abeth, N. J., has aroused the white
residents and protests are being sent
to the members of the board of ed
ucation.
LIKED BY A RASCAL.
Warning to Young Women to Be
ware of .Strange Men.
A speciaJ to the News and Courier
from Richmond, Va., tells a sad sto
ry about a young girl from this
State. The dispatch says a young
woman, 17 years old, said to be the
daughter of a cotton planter near
Cowpens, S. C, is detained in Rich
mond by the police and is under the
care of the Associated Charities
there, until such time as she is sent
for by her parents or earns enough
money to buy a ticket back to her
home. She wishes to get back as
soon as she can, according to her
statements. The story the girl is
alleged to have told Is a pathetic
one. According to the police, she
went to Richmond in company with
a man, whose name the authorities
do not divulge. He was a atanger
to the young country girl, and they
met when on a train, and she was
en route to her parent's home, from
Spartanburg. She is alleged to have
been lured away by smooth and false
talk of the stranger. She says he
proposed that she go to Richmond,
and she followed him, after arriving
living as his wife at a boarding
nouse there.
iThe man left Friday night, tell
ing the girl to come to Petersburg,
but the landlady became suspicious
and called in a policeman, and the
girl was taken to the police station,
where arrangements were made for
her care. There is no change against
the gin], but the officers are search
ing for the man, who will be charg
ed with an ugly offense when found.
The girl -is pretty and unsophisticat
ed, and has evidently 'been imposed
upon.
THREE CHILDREN BURNED.
Ix>cks Her Children in House "With
Fatal Results.
.if"
?A negro dwelling on the plan
tation of Mr. J. E. Privett, in the
3ack Swamp section, about six miles
north of Florence, was destroyed by
fire about 10 o'clock Moffday night,
in which three children lost their
lives and another was so badly burn
ed that it will probably die. Mitt
Kely, the mother of the children,
locked them up in her house and
went to church, leaving then}, im the
charge of the oldest (girL' about 8
years old. Not long after the wo
man left, the house" was seen to be
on fire and assistance was given,
but before anything could be done
the three children were roasted
alive. The oldest child managed
to get out of the house and being
frightened, ran to a neighbor for as
sistance, forgetting about the other
four in the house, one of which es
caped, after considerable effort, in
a horribly burned condition.
SOLDIER SHOOTS NEGRO.
Shooting Ascribed to Strong Raciul
Feeling That Had Developed.
The authorities at Fort Myer, near
Washington, are aiding the Washing
ton police in an effort to apprehend
a soldier, presumably of the post,
t.ao Monday night shot a negro on
the bridge leading from Georgetown
to the fort. The negro, Wm. D.
Smith, Is in the hospital in a dying
condition. Apparenatly the atack
upon the negro was unprovoked. The
soldier, who was unknown to the
negroe's two companions, first struck
the victim with his fist and then
fired unon him as he lay prostrate.
Then the soldier fled. The shooting
is ascribed to strong racial feeling
that has developed among some of
the soldiers at the fort.
MAY HAVE BEEN MURDER.
Peculiar Appearance of Corpse Leads j
Coroner to Hold Inquest.
Because of suspicious circumstan
ces surrounding the death of B. A.
Jackson, a farmer of Cedar CreeK
township, near Fayetteville, N. C,
reported to the Coronet since the
event. July 10, a coroner's inquest
was held Tuesday in order to ascer
tain the nature of Jackson's death.
Evidence was produced that Jackson
sevLMi months ago married a widow,
Parker, whose children strenously
objected to the marriage; that one
son, Grover Parker, who recently es
caped from the county chain.gang
made threats against his stepfather,
who died suddenly, without apparent
cause, last Sunday during the pres
ence at home of another stepson,
who left immediately thereafter.
Suspicions of foul play were aroused
by the peculiar appearance of the
corpse.
Bank Clerk Gone.
Minor Winchester, collection clerk
of the Citizens' First National bank
of Albany, Ga., for several years
past, disappeared from his home at
that place Friday of last week and
all efforts by bank officials and
friends to ascertain his whereabjitts
have been fruitless.
IWes of Injuries.
Charles L. Register, a young far
mer of Warsaw, Duplin county, N.
C, who was assaulted Sunday after
noon by Walter Way, a young white
?man of Wilmington, died there Tues
day night at the hospital from the
injuries received. The difficulty
arose over a dispute concerning a
25 cents bottle of whiskey.
TWO CENTS PEB COPY
DDG DP BONES
Ail Old Cemetary is Dog Into by Ditch
Diggers in Charleston.
SKELETONS ARE FOUND
The Bones of a Man of Huge St<it
ure Discovered in One of Se\eml
Coffins that Were Found.?in
Another Place Several Old Can
non Balls Were Dug Vp.
No one would suppose that there
was njU'.u j." mystery or any tinge
of romance in the work of the .hardy
ditch-diggers t\ho are laying the
sewerage piles in various streets in
the city of Charleston, says the News
and Courier, but mystery and ro
mance have a way of turning up
where they are least expected, ai?rt
only the other day one of the gangs
ran into something that made the
negroes who wield the pick and shov
el feel nervous and apprehensive of
what might follow as the resv.lt of
interfering with the long sleep of
those who had passed from earth
many years ago.
The News and Courier then goes
on to relate the following: On
Queen street, between Franklin and
Logan, just opposite the Medical Col
lege, the pickmen found a grave yard'
about four feet benea'th the surface*
and being compelled to stick to their
work, for-the sewer pipes must ??be
laid, grave yard or no grave yard*
and in spite of the danger of rousing;
the wrath of ghosts, they .unearth
ed before Jong seven coffins. All
these were badly decayed and fell
apart as soon as an attempt was
made to lift them to the surface.
Of the .bodies that they had once
contained only the skeletons were
left, and .'these .quickly decomposed
on coming in contact with the air.1
Several of the skeletons were those
of children or -mall women, hut
there'''was one especially that filled
the laborers with wonder as they
looked upon it. It was the skeleton
of a man, and such a man! More
than six feet four inches tall, with
shoulders of wonderful breadth and
big bones that made up a frame of
remarkable strength, he must have
been -well-nigh a giant. ?
? The negroes looked at the white
bones and wondered; and white men
who saw the crumbling vestigeB of
what must have been one of the fin
est specimens of physical manhood
in the South, were curious to know
whether some record of this Hercu
les who had been laid to rest in this
forgotten cemetery long ago, might
not be found somewhere and the his
tory of the man brought back to
mind.
On Ashe street the diggers came
across cannon balls that had evi
dentally been fired during the Rev
olutionary war. They were of a
kind 'unknown during the War Be
tween the States, and were evidently
much more ancient, each of them
weighing not more than four or five
pounds. In addition to these several
smaller grape-shot were unearthed.
HUNG TO A LIMB.
And Riddled With Bullets for At
tacking Ladies.
o
Ending a two days pursuit, a mob
during last night took Evan Bob
crts, a negro, from Constable C. V.
Riggs, in a lower part of Sylvanio
county, Ga., strung the negro up to
the limb of an oak tree and poured
at least 500 bullets into his body.
The negro attacked two white wo
men who were driving along a lone
ly road Saturday afternoon in a bug
gy. The horse became frightened
and ran away and took the women
out of danger, though the ?-.t.gro pur
sued them with a pistol. Constable
Riggs captured Roberts and hid him
from the mob for twelve hours.
Short work was made of the negro
when his hiding place was found.
SENATOR TILLMAX DECLINES.
Unable to Accept the ? tvitation at
? the Present.
Semator Tillman is unable now to
accept the invitation of the board
cf commissioners of Sullivan's Is
land to spend some time at the sea
shore as the guest of the township
board, and Mrs. Tillman asnd mem
bers of the family, who were also
invited, will, of course, not come
alone. In aletter to Mr. Wilbur
chairman of the board. Senator Till
man writes that later in the season
he may be able to spend a week at
the island. Private business he gives
as th'- cause of his inability to ac
cept the invitation at present. Sen
ator Tillman also expresses his
thanks for the invitation1.
Rain Came at Last.
Reports from the farming coun
try between Cheyenne and the Ne
braskaline, state that the heaviest
rain of the season fell early Monday
insuring maturity of crops threaten
ed by prolonged drouth.
Many Cattle Lost
A stampede of cattle at Columbus,'
Ga., preparatory to being loaded on
a river steamboat, resulted in the
drowning of all but ten of the num
ber.