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VOL. XXIII MANNING, S. C. WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1909 NO.39 DISAGREEMENT Memorial Criticising the Citadel Stirs up the DIOCESAN COUNCIL Bev. C. H. Jordan Withdraws After That Body Declined to Spread on the Minutes a Memorial, Charg Ing Citadel Offcers with DIscrim Inating Against Episcopalians. The Council of the Episcopal Dio ces sat down on Rev. C. H. Joraai last Thursday at Spartanburg, claim ing that he had not been shown the. proper consideration of respect by the Council, because the Council r. fused to adopt a resolution of fered by him and refused to approve a memorial that the he presented, the Rev. C. H. Jordam. -rector of the Nativity Church at Union, asked to be excused from fur ther attendance upon the sessions of the Council. The following ac count of. the matter we take from The News and Curier: The trouble was precipitated when Mr. Jordan presented a memorial from the Greenville convention, the 1 subject of which was religious con ditions at the Citadel. The memorial f was that there was religious discrim- 1 ination at the institution against ca- I dets of Episcopal parents; that they were not allowed to attend services at the Episcopal churches as freely I as they might; that they are requir- I ed to march in squads to other s churchs, while the cadets of Roman 1 Catholic faith are permitted to at ted to attend the church of their t faith. a The discussion that followed the e reading of the memorial was lively, r objections being made to the adop- r tion or considdration of the memo rial. Judge Haskell said that if the C Councli interfered it would be mixing r religion with politics and advised the I Council to steer clear of the matter; b that the Citadel was a' State institu tion and not under the control of c the dioceses. The Rev. Albert Thomas, of Dar lington, said that he was a graduate E of the Citadel and he knew of his J own knowledge. that the Episcopal e students are not being discriminated 0 against. He said that there are Ave e Episcopal churches in Charleston and C that the cadets attend these churches more frequently than the other a churches. During the discussion it was brought out that the students a who are Roman Catholic were not C required to attend the Protestant churches and Mr. Jordan made the a point that no exception should be' R made. Finally. it was decided to re ceive the memoial as information ' and not spread it on the min-utes off the Council. Mr.. Jordan, presented then a res olution providing for the appoint- 94 ment otra committee to make an in- S i'estigation of the alleged religious discrimination at Ithe Citadel and a report the result of its findings at C the next meeting of the Diocesea I Council. 'The 'resolution provided it for thie Bishop to serve on the com mittee, Bishop Guerry promptly stat- Ih ed that he would not serve. A mG e tion was made and carried, almost 0 unanimously, that the resolution be laid on the table. Mr. Jordan (then addiessed the D Couacal stating that he had been b shut off from debate by the Council. b that he had. not been treated withb a proper respect and courtesy and- ask- a ed to be excused. The incident was a regretted by members of the Coun- f cil. The proposal was almost un animouisly regarded as ill-advised and t as likely to place the church In an undesirable light, and to provoke an unpleasant religious controversy. f The bandling of the subject from a parliamentary standpoint was per h aps a little irregular and this gave ' Mr. Jordan ground for thinklng that ( he had been treated in an unfair manner, although Bishop Guerry as sured him that such had not been his intention. . 1 BAPTIST CON~VENTION. Five Thousand or 'More Delegate Are Present. The Baptist have about captured Louisville. Ky: When Joshua Lev ering of Baltimore called to order the fi'rst regular session of the Southern Baptist Convention Wed neday, he faced perhaps 5,000O del egates. Most of them came froir. Southern States, but there were som from the East and North. *Many prominent Southern writers had places on today's program, 'whicl Includedi the election of officers, th adoption of resolutions and a ser mon by the Rev. Dr. E. C. Dargan of \Macon, Ga. The sensation of the convention so~ far has been the announcement to laymen last night by Joe. N Sestone, a nllionaire manufac turer of Toronto, Ontario, that he would keep of his immense fortuxne only ernough for his future living expenses and would devote the re remainder to the. service of God. Had a Close Call. * Imprisoned by a fall of top-re< for thirty-six . hours, Thomas Buse vage and John Master, miners em ployed at the Morca colliery, near Pottsvlle, Pa., were rescued unin jured late Monday night. They saved ,themselves by improvised props made out of their picks and shovels. Restored Name of Davis. By the end of the present week the name of Jefferson Davis will have been chiseled again into the ston-e In the famous Cabin John bridge six miles west of Washington. President Roosevelt havin-g given instructions to this effect previous to his retire mnt. CAUSED SURPRISE IN CHARESTON WHEN THE NEWS REACHED THERE. The Citidel's System as to Church Attendance Has Always Given Sat isfaction-No Discrimination. The News and Courier says the reports from Spartanburg of the at tempt of the Rev. C. H. Jordaft, of Union, a member of the Diocesan Council of the Episcopal church, to bring about. an investigation of re ligious conditions at the Citadel, al leging tnat the cadets of the Epis opal faith were discriminated gainst and prevented from attend ng Episcopal churches, were. read with astonishment in Charleston, where curiosity was generally ex pressed as to how an impression so irronevus as that indicated could tave been formed by any one. Col. ). J. Bond, the superiatendent of he South Carolina Militay Academy, xad heard nothing of the matter hen'a representative of The News md Courier visited him at the Cita el a few evenings ago, and he read he dispatch with the greatest sur rise. '1 can't understand the matter at Lll,' he said with a smile. "We are ising today the same system as to hurch attendance that we have used or the last twenty years, and this s the first complaint I have ever Leard in regard to the matter." Col. Bond did not think that the ituation was such as to render ecessary any statement by him, but e did not object to explaining the rte-.n of church attendance as fol yved at the Citadel. The cadets very Sunday morning are sent out y companies, he said, a company to church. There are eleven church 5 on the list, which are attended in >tation. Five of these are Episco al churches-St. Michael's, St. 'hilip's, St. Paul's, St. Luke's and race Church; three are Presbyte an, the First Presbyterian, Second resbyterian and Westminster Pres yterian churches; two are Methodist -Bethel and Trinity; one Baptist hurch is included, the Citadel quare Baptist chureh. There are only six or seven Ro xan Catholics in the student body. hese are allowed to attend church s of their own faith. The students f the Jewish faith, are not requir d to attend services at Christian hurches against their will. Once each 'month communicants re allowed individual leave to at nd churches of their own denomi ation for the purpose of taking >mmunion. The cadets are allowed Sunday rternoons off and may then attend ny church they wish to attend. he first elass has Sunday evenings Ef, and members of this class may > to any church they please on Sun ay evenings. Col. Bond also added that relig us services are held in the chapel the Citadel each morning, that iere is 'a Bible class every Sunday mornig and that the Citadel Y. M. .A. holds services every Wednes y evening and every Sunday even "There Is absolutely no discrim ration at the Citadel against stud ts of the Episcopal faith or of any her faith," continued Col. Bond. t is not one of the entrance quali ations that a student be an Episco llan, but as a matter of fact it pens that more students are mem ers of the Episcopal church than of y other, more Episcopal churches e attended than the churches, of y oth'er one faith-because of this act and beause the Episcopal urches are most numerous of the 'rotestant churches in Charleston d at least four members of the eauty are Episccpalianls, while a fth attends the EpIscopal church egularly." Col. Bond is himself a vestryman f St. Paul's Episcopal church, in hlarleston. DIED AS HE SHOT. ell Dead While Trying to Shoot a Man With Gun. At Niagara Falls, N. Y., Thursday 'eath prevented Willis White from fling James Thomas. White armed rith a revolver and a razor, went a barn where Thomas was employ e and demanded money. Meeting rith refusal. he drew the revolver nd drove 'I .omas into a corner. But just as White lifted the weap 'n and fired he was attacked with 2emorrhage of the lungs, and the ullet weut wild. With blood pour ng from his mo-uth. White stagger d forward, several steps and fell BUTCHER MURDERED. Was Found fin His Home With His Skunl Crushed. At St. Paul, Minn., Thursday .,uis Arbogast, a meat dealer, was 'ound with his skull crushed in his 1me. The polies say no arrests iave been made. Arbogast's eldest 'aughter, ~Louise, aged 24, and her ~weetheart, Henry Spangenberg. were aken to the central police station vhere they were closely questioned for several hours. Mrs. Arbogast. who is suffering from prostration. is heing eared for in C hospital. The oliee elaim to be confident that the murder was commited by some of the oeupants of the house, as all of he doors and windows, they assert, ere found the way they had been eft when the family retired. Attacked by Highwayman. Representative William Schantz w&s attacked on the streets of Lans ing. Mich., Thursday night by a highwayman who slashed his throat and Jaw with a razor. He will prob ably die. James Duggan, a man with a bad police record, has been marsed, a re with the crime. WANT TO SELL Meat Condemned by The Green ville Authorities IN VIOLATION OF LAY Dr. C. E. Smith, of Greenville, Re ports Efforts by Agents of Swif Co. to Sell Meats That Had Beei Submerged in Dirty Water fo Two Days. A dispatch from Greenville to Tho State says in a letter to Dr. C. F Williams, State health officer, I C. E. Smith, of Greenville, meat an( milk inspector, states that agents oi Swift & Co. have endeavored to 'ge him to pass the 16,000 pounds o1 meat recently condemned there or account of having been submerged io filthy water for 24 hours. Dr. Smith absolutely refuses to pass the con demned meat. In his letter to Dr. Williams he says: My idea is that they will keep it until they think it has blown over and then try to put it on our market. All the representatives of Swift have asured me -that they are willing to do just what is right and what 1 demand, but I can not believe them, as they have tried every way to get me to reconsider and pass the meat, and when I positively refused to do so they refused to do anything and now they are criticising the city ealth department. They claim that the meat is all right and that the city health depart ment is a set of "boneheads," if you know what that is. I think the mat ter has hung fire long enough and should be disposed of in some man ner. If we have not the authority to handle the situation I will writ, Dr. Melvin at Washingten Tor advice. I think it would be a disgrace to the city and Stat'e if we can not pre vent this meat being used for food purposes. RIDES ON PASSES. Sensation Follows Revelations of Committee. A telegram from Tallahassee, Fla., says charges that many persons of prominence in Florida have accept ed passes on railroads in Flordia. ontrary to the law, have been sub mitted to the house committee ap pointed to investigate the files of the tates railroad eommiesion. The re port was referred to the committee n judiciary. Among those reported as having accepted passes are: United States enator Taliaferro, Representaitive ~rank Clark. Former Representative tobt. W. Davis, A. -C. Croom, State omptroller; W. T. Bauskett, sec etary to Senator Tallaferro; United? tatcs District Judge J. W. Locke, nited States District Judge Alex nder Bowman. While the anti-pass law of Florida oes not affect in any way the federal ficers, it specifically provides pun. sment by fine or imprisonment for iving by any railroad 'of passes to alaried employees of the State, any uch officer accepting pass being sub ject to lIke' penalties. DIED OF HiYDRAPHOIA. his Case Did Not Respond to the Pasteur Treatment. P. D. Dial died from the effects f hydrophobia Monday night at hie esidence, 89 Fortress avenue, in At anta. In February Mr. Dial arose from his bed one night to go out and stop the barking of some dogs n the neighborhood and while do ing so was bitten by a large bulldog. or the next 21 days he took treat ent regularly at the Pasteur Insti tute. He never ceased from his work as' foreman of the repair shops of the Georgia Car Company and was ot forced to take his b-ed until last Tuesday night. The physicians *hen summoned pronounced the dis ease hydrophobia. althou.gn Drs. Browner and Harris of the Pasteur nstitute are of a different opinion. RACING WITH DEATH. Dying Miner Going From Birming ham to Moscow. RacIng with death, which the phy sicians have issured him is; inevita ble, Alexas Laudent, a miner, Is at tempting with a broken back, tc make the trip from Birmingham Ala., to Moscow, Russia. Parents o: the young man reside in Moscow and it is due to an over-weening desire to see them that he has un dertaken the remarkable journey Landent was injured in an acciden1 in an Alabama mine several weekf age, and reached 3ersey City Thurs day on his way to Russia. He wil rest in a hospital there for a fe-v days, and will then sail for home. TBAINED DITCHED IN TEXAS. Three Trainmen Killed and Nine Per sons Hurt in Wreck. Threce trainmen were killed ani nine other persons were seriousi: injured when a passenger train o: the Wichiita Falls branch of the Mit souri, Kansas & Texas railway wa derailed near Bonita, Tex., la: Thursday night. The wreck occui red at a point where a temporar track had been built around a frelgt wreck of th. night previous, the er gine and three coaches going int a ditch when the traini entered th switch at a speed estimated- at 2 ies an hour. SCORE OF UVES SNUFFED OUT IN A NEW YORI STONE QUARRY. The Accident Was Caused by a Premature Explosfon of Blastin; Dynamite. At least twenty men were killee * Wednesday by a premature blast o t dynamite in a stone quarry operated by the Callanan Road Improvemeni Company, near South Bethlehem, 1] r miles southwtst of Albany, N. Y. The dead: John Hoyt Callanan vice president and general managet of the company; Charles D. Callanan a brother of the manager; LeRoy icMillon, assistant superintendent; *n H ndrickson, steam driller; kred Snyder. master mechanic; James Maloney, Backsmith; Wil liam Baum., firema.; Fred Zappert, agent of the National Power Com pany, New York. Twenty Italian workmen. One thousand pounds of dynamite exploded and the bodies of the vic tims were hurled hundreds of feet by the concussion and so badly muti lated as to be almost beyond recog nition. As' darkness -came -a wag on drew up to the engine house load ed with bodies that had been picked up back on the quarry hill. A crowd of grief stricken relatives gathered around eager to identify the dead, only to turn away at tne sictening sight. Italians with shovels found here and there portions of bodies, and brought their gruesome-loads in box es to the engine house, which served as a temporary morgue. The workmen had placed heavy charges in six holes and were work ing on the seventh, when a percus sion was prematurely discharged. A terrific explosion followed, which hurled tons of rock into the air and scattered the bodies of the vic tims in all directions. The officers were standing nearby at the time direeting the work. DATES ANNOUNCED. Gen. Boyd Arranges Time for Na tional Guard Manoeuvres. Assistant Adit. Gen. Boyd an nounced today that the dates for all three encampments this summer nave been definitely arran-ged. They are: *t ' Second Regiment-June 28 to Ju ly 7. Third Regiment-July 12 to July 21. First Regiment-July 26 to Au gust 4. The Second encamps in Columbia; the Third at Aiken, and the First either at Spartanburg or Greenville. Each of the regiments will have one company of regulars at the en campment with it. The following is a list of the field and staff officers: henry T. Thompson, colonel, Co iumbia; Edwin R. Cox, lieutenant colonel, Darlington; Julian W. Cul e;, major, Orangebuirg; Lewis W. Haskell, major, Columbia; Calder B. Yeadon, major, Sumter; Sidney C. Zemp, major surgeon, Camden; Christie Benet, captain, adjutant, Columbia; George W. Hutcheson, captain, quartermaster, Sumter; Alexander C. Doyle., captain, commis sary, L-vangeburg, Edw in M. l-ight foot, captain, chaplain, North Au gusta; Jas. E. Poore, captain, assis tant surgeon, Columbia; Chas. T. Lipscomb, captain, inspector of rifle practice, Columbia; Henry W. Cope land, first lieutenant, battalion ad jutant, Bamber-g; Cotesworth P. Sea brook, first lieutenant, battalion adjutant, Columbia; Joseph E.-Bask in, first lieutenant, battalion adju tant, Timomnsville; - Clarendon W. Barron, first lieuteiant, assistant surgeon, Columbia; Jno. G. McMas ter, first lieutenant, assistant sur geon, Florence; Patrick J. Galligher, second lieutenant, battalion quarter master and commissary, Sumter; John G. Smith, Jr., second lieutenant, battalion quartermaster and commis sary, Barnwell; Hagood 'Means, Jr., second lieutenant, battalion quarter :master and commissary, Columbia. BARREL OF PITCHERS. Wil IBe' Sent Senator Tillman by Senator Scott. Zach McGee in his letter to The State says Senator Tillman will be fore long, have a barrel of glass pitchers. Te could have had a car load if he had wanted them. Senator Scott of West Virginia owns a glass factory and he gave the senate a lecture the other day on common glassware. He said he sold pitchers at wholesale at 90 cents a dozen, but that retailers sold them for about 60 cents a piece. Senator Tillman, who was inclined to sub scribe to Senator Rayner's doctrine that there was something about the tariff which made ;liars out of all people interested in it, threw down a sort of dare to Senator Scott to sell him some 60 cent pitchers at 90 c ents a dozen. - "I'll send you a carload," said the West Virginia senator. That was too many for Tillman who said he would not know whai to do with a carload of pitchers an3 more than he would know to d< with a West Virginia coal mine. "Wll I'm going to send you barrel, anyway," said Senator Scott So if you want a nice glass pitch er cheap just let Senator Tillmar i know. He may have some to sel 2 when he gets back to Trenton thi: summer. Took Carbolic Acid. -At Savannah Mrs. E. E. Behnke3 y took carbolic aeid in a local hospita t Friday, and when found by nurse ewas dying on the floor of her room o She entered the hospital sev'eral day e ago in search of rest. A negro wo 5 man obeyed her- request to smuggi SENT TO JAIL GOOD WAY TO BREAK UP TI UNLAWFUL TRUSTS. Prison Term for Violators of t Trust Law Imposed by a Jud at Savannah. Judge William B. Sheppard kno' how to break up trusts. At Sava nah on Friday he overruled the m tion in arrest of judgment offer by the defence and sentenced t] five men found guilty of violatih the Sherman anti-trust law, and f< the first time so far as is know jail sentenced in two cases, were i posed. The sentences follows: Spencer P. Shotter, chairman i the board of directors of the Ame ican Naval Stores Company, thr( months in jail and 'a fine of $5,00 Edmund S. Nash, president of tl company, $3,000 'fine. J. F. Cooper Myers, vice presidei of the American Company and pres dent of the National Transportatic and . Terminal Company, thr( months in jail and a fine of $2,501 George Mead Boardman of Ne York, treasurer of the America Naval Stores Company, $2,000 fin Carl Moeller of Jacksonville, Fla agent of the American and genern muanager of the National Transpoi tation and Terminal Company I Jacksnville,, $5,000 fine. , Shotter and Myers were sentence to terms In the Chatham count jail. Judge Sheppard imposing tb punishment upon them because the had been before the court two year ago, entering pleas of guilty. A that time Judge Emory Speer, wh was presiding, stated that a term I prison would, be imposed if the should come before the courtagair Nash was excused on the former o ca-sion when the grand jury return ed a "no bill" as to him, as he wa a witness before the grand jur3 Moeller's sentence was made heav because of his connection with th terminal yards in Jacksonvill( where regrading and regauging wer allowed to have taken place. The case will be appealed to th United States court of appeals jus as soon as the bill of exceptions ca be prepared and certified to by th court. In the meantime a motioi or a new trial will not be made be fore Judge Sheppard. A writ of er or citing 51 grounds was filed b; the defense immediately after sen tence was passed. Council attackei nearly everything the court permit 'ed to come before the jury to whic] the defense entered protest. It be gins with the court's indictment an ends with an exception to the jury' verdict. Bonds in the sum of $20,000 wa given for all the defendants jointl; and they were discharged pendin the determination of their appeal. The costs they must pay if th conviction and sentence stand will it is said, reach $17,000, which I: :he event the sentence stand, will b apportioned among the five convict ed men. The defendants were sen tenced separately. Judge Sheppari made no long address, but merel: gave them an opportunity to sa: why sentence should not be prc nounced, a privilege of which the; took but small advantage, and the: passed the sentence. Shotter wa che last to be sentenced. Judge Sheppard made his long est speech then, probably 100 word! The defense was represented b W. W. Mackall, Former Judge Sam uel B. Adams and Gen. Peter W. Me: drim. With Mr. W. M. Toomer c Jacksonville, the government wa represented by Assistant District A1 torney' Alex Ackerman. The cas will be fought by the defense unti Ihere is no power to which the de fendants can appeal further befor the jail terms will be served or th fines paid. SIXTY CARS OF MAIL. One Firm Mails Six Million Piece at One Time. The Chicago postoffice has- juz broken the world's record for ma handling at one time from onl source, according to James N. McA1 thur, superintendent of the Centre station. - "The Chicago office has just hans led 6,000,000 pieces-of stamped ma from one Chicago firm," said M McArthur. "This represented an e: pense of $60,000 to the firm I stamps alone. The matter was hani led under the new canceled stamr arrangement by means of which firm buys stamps. already cancelei so as to save that work being dor at the postoffice. "The mailed matter weighed 12 tons and filled sixty cars. I unde stand that this is a world's postoffit record. In the last year the receip of the Chicago postoffice were $14 000,000, and the expenses $5,000 0000." COUGHS UP TEN MILLION. Deposed Sulatn Wants to Save H Hide Whole. A dispatch from Belgrade sa: Abdul Hamid has authorized Env Bey, one of the young Turk l'eadet to darw $10,000,000 of his deposi Iin foreign banks. The agreeme came after a long csonference at ti former Sultan's prison palace Salonica. It is understood th Abdui was promised immunity frc the death sentence if he surrender the greater part of his fortune. Ends His Life, A physical breakdown due, It Sbelieved, to overwork, whild empl: -ed as a clerk at the White lcon Scaused Thomas H. Netherland ommit uiider by shooting HELD UP TRAI Six Murderous Bandits Cut gine and Mall Car ; FROM REST OF TR, s Take Them Several Miles A D. Rfle the Mails of an Unce 'd Amount and Send Car and Ei ie Back to Train on Wild Run, I >r ing Several Persons. D- Followng the hold-up of a 4 Northern passenger train b, bandits between Colbert and 3 f Wash., Sunday night, twelve r- sons were injured when the e motive and the mail car, cui from the rest of the train, run back wild by the bandits, t they had rifled the mails of az i known amount, and collided n the rest of the train. The conductor saw the wild w coming back at 25 miles an I n He and another trainman plac - tie on the track, but the cars, thi partly :topped, plunged into . coaches, throwing passengers n their seats, cutting them with br< 7lass. A trainman sprang ab d .he locomotive as the collissiom uirred, and shut off the steam, i y ping the havoc. s - Wh.n the train reached Col t ate in the night, while the crew - )usy with some switching, two s sprang into the cab and thru. revolvers against' the breast of engineer and fireman, ordered t to do as commanded. The engi and fireman complied, and the s cars were cut off from the res the train by four other robbers. y locomotive and mail car then a up the track a few miles. Then engineer and his fireman were fo e to leave the cab. Two of the hers went to the door of the -ar and ordered it-opened.. 7 t command was obeyed by Benj2 1 F. Stumps, mail clerk, who was Sried away from the cars 'with engineman by a dozen revolver s . Manning the locomotive themsel . the outlaws took the mail cars d i the tracks and looted the regist mail. Then they started the I motive back toward the rest of crain and cscaped. - Conductor C. L. Robertson -cu a - telegraph wire to sen.l wor Spokane. While he was telegrap: about a half-hour after the locc tive and the mail car had di peared, he saw the powerful I motive careening towards the co es in which many were as] Many of the passengers knew n ing of the hold-up until awakene the collision. As soon .as Conductor Rober Srealized that a collison was Immi: he called on the brakemen and .ters to aid him. While the con tor and another brakeman s Sready to board the cab as soon as shock of the collision checked - mpetus of the wild locomo 'None of the passengers was fal Shurt. STwo special train-loads of d ties and doctors were brought Spokane. No trace of the rol was found. While is Is reported that the fdits obtained as much as $20, railroad officials and mail inspe< jsa the amount is not known. sof the bandits who entered the -was more than six feet tail, and edently an experienced engineer. the two robbers entered the cab man said to the engineer: e"You have heard of us befi indicating that they had been ,volved in similar hold-ups. FOU~R BISHOPS HAVE DIEE a The Southern Methodist Have With Big Loss. t The Columbia States says- the II thern Methodist church has suff e a igreat mortality rate amonj .bishops. The next general col L ence, next year, will be called upt elect successors to the following have died since the last conferi Lthree years ago: rW. W. Duncan, Spartanburg Coke Smith, Norfolk, Va.; Jni nTigert, Nashville, Tenn.; Chas. SGalloway, Jackson, Miss. All of these were well belove aColumbia. All had spoken here, a preached here on occasions and visited here. Bishop Coke Smith ebeen pastor here. Bishop Tigert visited Columbia several times fore he became bishop. rBishop Galloway has long beel emired in this State and death ca smuch sorrow. '~DIED FROM BLOOD POISO0 Ran a Nail in His Foot 2 Caused Death. is Mr. A. J. Howe. of Marion, at the Highsmith Hospital at etteville, N. C.. Friday night is o'clock, after a lingering illness. e Howe had the misfortune to st ', nail in his foot last fall, and ts that time he has suffered fron at effects of the wound. A moni 2e two ago his foot was'amputated in it was thought he would thenr at er, but for the past several m he has been growing worse, at Bd. wife left Marion on Thursday to Fayetteville, intending to him to -his former home in: sylvania for .treatment. A few is Iutes after her departure from M y.[ her daughter received a telegra se, Inouncing ais death. Mr. How< to been living in Marion only s yarsa nda wa an architect. IN LUMBER LOBBY HAD BIG SUM OF MONEY TO En SPEND TO CARRY THEIR Scheme of Protecting Lumber in the AIN Tariff Bill Through Congress in Washington. Zach McGee. the wide awake head, Washington correspondent of the Columbia State, says it develops now that the lumber lobby, which has mgine been operating with considerable energy during the present tariff-mak Eurt- ing session of congress, has been sup ported most lavishly by the lumber manufacturers. areat An assessment was made on each . sawmill in the various associations r six of $1 for each $1,000 feet of daily fead, cut. The lumber manufacturers of per- the State of Oregon and Washington loco- belonging to one particular associa tion were assessed $28,000, but so far they have paid only $12,000, and were they are being vigorously pressed to after pay the rest. un- Some of the advocates of free lum with ber here are declaring that the fail ure to pay the assessment is evi dence that the.real pressure for pro cars tection on lumber is not so much iour. from the sawmill people as from the ed a timlber -syndicates, who own most of the stumpage. ough There is plenty of money, how the- ever, for the lobby. ft Is estimated from that $100,000 was raised to main oken tain the special lobby here to try to keep the present rates of $2 a thou oard sand on rough lumber and the cor OC- responding high rates on other ;ton- grades. This- does not include the expens [bert es of special delegations sent here was by - lumber organizations. in various men States and the expenses of individu ting al- lumbermen who have come here the for the purpose of influencing \con hem gressmen from their own State.! A neer nimber of lobbyists have been in and about the capital ever since last tof fall. t of Some weeks ago, while the bill The was before thes house, the lobbyists ran gave a series of expensive dinners the at the Willard hotel, to which they rced invited members of congress and oth rob- ers whom they thought would be mail influential. 'heir Lmin BREAKS RECORD. hur the Sales of Fertilizer This Year Larger lots. [ves, Than Ever. ered The State says the farmers of South, Carolina are becoming more the and more progressive each year. This is apparent from the growth of t in the privilege tax receipts. On each . to ton of fertilizers a tax of '25 cents ing Is paid. The first year that this ino- fertilizer tax was- required the sales sap- were 213,000, last year the sales had-increased to 689,000 tons. co- But all reeords have been broken ach- In the sales- of 1909. Up to May oth- 9 the receipts for this year have d been $169.55 4. against $151,061 for the same time last year; an increase tsof $18,493, or 73.972 tons. tson The receipts so far for this year mtare within $2,680 of the total for pr- last year, and if the business for the du- remainder of this year Is as good thed as for the same remainder of 1903 te(when -$21,273 had been received), the the total for 1909 would be $169, tive. .553.87, already received, plus the tally $21.273 estimated, or $190,826.87. The Income in 1908 as shown by epu- the books of Mr. J. Fuller Lyon at .rom the office of the State treasury was ers $172,234.76. The receipts for eacb year since the tax was created are ban- as follows: 000, 1890-91.... .....$ 53,235.85 tors 1891-92.:.'.. ......36,108.98 One 1892-93....... ..50,248.95 cab 1893-94...--.... 43,423.88 evi- 1894-95...........30,135.93 As 1895-96.. .... ...54,524.37 this 1897.. .. ........59,352.33 1898..............65,494.33 re," 1899.. ............62.123.88 -~ 1900......... ..75,214.34 *1901............84,073.43 1902.. ............81,744.94 -1903.. ...--.......98,909.80 1904 . . .------118,974.15 Met 1905.. .... ....130,439.80 1906.. ......... 167,157.89 1907............150,984.81 So-1908. . ...-.-.--.-.-172,234.76 ered This revenue goes to Clemson col ere itsege, where the fertilizers are inspect afer- "d. A great deal of fertilizer -.waE ntused last year to <grow corn on the woWilliamson plan of inte'sive farm T,"obacco growing has also takens -A. - new start in the State, and in fact. "he- farmers In all of their rlantings 3etts are using the Intensive metho,1, deep tolng and liberal application ci difertilizer. had had STRANGE PARASITE DISEASE. had had Kills Trees by the Thousands In a be- Brooklyn Park. u ad. More than 20,000 trees in Forest uses park, Brooklyn. have been destroyed ince the opening of spring by this >eculiar parasite. Of these 16,000 vere chestnut trees. The Brooklyn >hc ark commission is using thousands 7c f gallons of a bermicide in the hope >f preventing the spread of the dis >ase to street trees and other parks. died The attention of the- Department Fay- >f Agriculture at Washington was at 8 ::alled to this parasite last year. when Mr. t had gained only a slight foothold ick a in this coutry. The department as since signed a number of experts to the the -na'tter, and they reported that the h or oarasite had been imported, probably and from France, and that in young trees ecov- ind shrubs It had been disseminated veeks throughout a large portion of the d his United States. to go So far New York New Jersey and take Pennsylvania have been the princi Penn- >ay sdfferers, but reports from India mn- na, Ohio; Illinois and the trans arion 'Jississippi and the Southwestern' m an- 3tates indicate that the plague is had n its incipency there and that heroic few neasures must be enzployed to save * rhe trees from this pest.* GOOD MAN' DEAD Bishop Galloway, a Noted Metho dist Divine, GOES TO HIS REWARD Was One of the Best-Known and Popular of the Bishops of -the Methodist Episcopal Churh, South, and a Leading Citizen of the State of Mississippi. Bishop Charles B. Galloway. of the Methodist Episcopal church South, died of pneumionia at his home,-at Jackson, Miss., at five o'clock Wednesday morning. The following particulars of the sickness and death of this good man is con tained in an Associated. Press dis patch from Jackson, Miss., -where the Bishop lived for years: Bishop Galloway, Mississippi's most distinguished divine and best known publicist, for the last twenty years held rank among the -greatest public orators of America. - His ill ness, of several days' duration, was a mild form of pneumonia, compli cated with heart-taouble. The Bishop was taken ilklast Fri day en route, from Nashville, where : he had attended the annual session of the College of Bishops. No alarm over his condition was Zlft untl Monday; night, when pneumon'ia.de veloped in one lung. The patient grew worse raprdly. During the Baal twelve hours he was unconscious The funeral took place Thursday afternoon from-'the First Methodist i church, followed bf Interment at. Greenwood Cenetery.. Bishop War ren A. Candler, of Atlanta, Ga;, con ducted the services. All departments of the Federal, State; County and municipal governments were closed on Thursday, and Major Crowder is sued a proclamation asking that all, business houses close for the day out f respect for the distinguished dead., Bishop Galloway was possibly the - most prominent of- the Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal, Chuich. South. He was-a son of Dr.'C. B. alloway, and was born at Kosciuse. Uiss., September 1, 1849. His bby hood days werA spent there and at Canton. In 1865 he *ntered the University of Mississippi and was graduated in 1868-. In 1869 he join ad the Mississippf Conference. He was married September 1, - 1871,- to Harriet Galloway, .and- to them were born two sons and three daughters. The degree of doctor of divinity was conferred -on him by the Univiersity of Mississippi, and the degree of doctor of lays by the Northwestern University and by rulane. Bishop Galloway's writings cover ed a wider range-perhaps than those. f any other person connected with he church and he traveled extensive ly. He was the author of "The Life >f Linus Parker," "Methodism, ~,a Child of Providence," "A Circuit o f - Providence," "A Circuit ~of .tie alobe," "Modern'Missions and Their Valure," and "The American Corn aonwealth." He represenled the Methodist @piscopal Church, -South, at the Scumenical Conference at Washnig ron, D. C., ajid London, England, and was a fraternal messenger to the 2eneral Conference of the Methodist Shurch in Canada. He visited Brazil .wice, Mexico twice and China and apanthree times. Bishop Galloway took a leading part in the affairs of his State and was regarded as one of its foremost :tizens. He was a member of' the State board of trust and of the State astorical commission. For a number of years he took an ictive Interest in the prohibition. :ampaigns -in Mississippi and other southern States. He was president >f the board of education of the Vethodist Episcopal Church, South; >resident of the board of trustees ',f Millsaps College and Vanderbilt Jniversity and was a-member of the ioard of trustees of the John F. Slater fund. SERIOUS CHARGE. Woman Accused of Trying to Kill Her Husband. At Butler, Ga., developments of a sensational character materialized in the, case of the mysterious as .ault committed upon Charles Wig tins, a prominent business man, at he midnIght hour .Thursday night, .vh'en his wife, Mrs. Sarah Wiggins, vas 'placed under arrest, charged Ls an accessory to the alleged crime. Virs. Wiggins had been visiting her narents at Columbus, Ga., it Is said, tnd had communicated to her hue ,and that she would arrive at But er on the midnight train Sunday night. He went to the station to -neet .her, but she did not arrive. -nstead, it is charged, a plot 'war -nade between her and Charley Sm1ith and Smnith was sent to slay Wigt ;ins. Smith was arrested yesterday. rhe woman attempted suicide. Mrs. Evans-Wilson's Will. The will of Augustus Evans Wilson, the novelist, who died Sun 'day, was filed Thursday at Mobile. for probation. Her public bequests -:onsist of $10,000 each to St. Fran ::is. Street Methodist church, Protest int Orphan asylum and the Non Sectarian infirmary, and $500 to the Y. M. C. A. library of Mobile. Special bequests to relatives amount to about $50,000. Killed in Auto Accident, - 2.Near.Salina, -Kansas, A. P. RIddle, former Lieutenant Governor of Kan sas, was killed Thursday in an auto rrohiin accident.