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VOL. XXIII __LMANNING, S. C. WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1909 NO. 46 THE LUMBER CU Rcovers From the Panic and 1 Again on Dock INTERESTING FACTS Of the Busiaess That Wil She Where Most of the Lumber Coma From and Who Will Be Be *tted b7 Tas Pat on it by t2 Tarif. During the year 1908. 31.231 sa mills In the United States manuad tured 32,289.369.000 feet of lumbe: according to a preliminary repoi just issued by the bureau of the ce sus. These mils also cut 12.106 000 shingles and 2.936.684.000 latt Lumber manufacturing. like ever other indust-y. felt the efects of th business depression which began I October. 1907. Consequently tb production In 1908 was below tha for the previous year. In 1907 tb cut of 28.850 saw mills was 40.256 154.000 feet. the highest productio ever recorded. Notwlthstandinl therefore, that in 1908 reports wer received from eight per cent mor mills than in 1907. the decrease I lumber cut reported by them we alightly over seventeen per cent. Washington. as for several yea past, still ranks frst among tb States In lumber production. its cu in 1908 being 2.915.928.000 feet a decrease of 22.8 per cent over th cut of 1907. Neadry all the lumbe manufactured In Washington I Duglas fir. the market for which wa seriously afected by the pan< Lonwsiana second, with 2.722.421. 000 feet. a decrease of 250.000.00 feet or 8.4 per cent over the cut 11 1907. Louisiana is frst in the pro duction of both yellow pine and cy pres. Cypress is a particularly usefn and valuable wood, and apparently the manufacturers of It did not suffe as severely from dull times as di< the manufacturers of yellow pine an< Douglas fr. Missnitippi was th' third state in lumber production Ii 1908. with.a total of 1.861.000 fee -a decrease of eleven per cent from the cut in 1907. Arkansas ranke fourth, with 1.655.991.000 feet decrease of nearly seventeen per cen over the previous year's output. an< Wisconsin Wfth. with 1.613.315.001 feet against 2.003.279,000 feet i1 1907. Is Texas, where the lumber Indus try is confned almost exclusively t yelow pine. the falling off was vvet hea'y. The total cut of the State 11 1908 was 1.524.008.000 feet- a de crewe of 31.6 per cent over the cu tn 1071. E~ght other Stats manufacture more than on. bilon feet each o )umber last year. In the order of im portance, they were: Michigan. Ore gon. Minnesota. Pennsylvania. Vir ginia. Alabama. North Carolina an< West Virginia. California an< maine, other States which reportei more than one billion feet each I1 1907. went just below that figure il 1908. The, totals for a few State were great in 1908 than in 1907 but this was chiefly due to the large number of reports secured in the States in 1908. In Georgia. for in stance, a particularly close canvas increased the number of mills rep~ort ed nearly one-third, while the resuli ing increase in reports of total prc duction was only six per cent. I: Maeasa.etts. 610 mills reported cut of 384.526.000 feet in 1908 a compared with a cut of 364.231.00 feet by 518 mills in 1907. In fee in 1908: while in 1907, 230 mill cut 137.239,000 feet. A particular) large gain In mills reported wa made In Oklahoma. In 1907. 12 mills In that State cut 140.015.00 feet. while in 1908. 214 mille et 158.756.000 feet. While there are many very larg saw mills in the United States th small mills far outnumber the larg ones, and it is particularly Interestin to note how many of these sna mills there are In the States whic are not now of flret rank in lumbt productionl. The statistics for Ne Tork were collected by the Fores Fish and Game Commission 0! :h State and show there are 22 mills. In pennsylvania 2.224 mil reported to the census. and in Vi ginia, 1.937 mills. In North Ca onna reports came from 1.740 mill and in Kentucky from 1.530' milJ The number of mills reporting fro Tennessee was only forty less th from Kentucky. in West Vir;:r1 Missouri. Ohio and indiana betw"a 1.000 and 1.100 mills each were e gaged in cutting lumber last y.-a The average output per mill was 25 000 feet in New York. and 5.260.0 feet in Louisiana. these two- Stat presenting nearly the extremes production by small and large mil Tell'ow pine. Douglas fir. whi pine, oak, hemlock and spruce. in order named. wore the wooda. C into lumber in the largest quantil Yellow pine has ranked lrst sit it surpassed white pine in the~ tai nineties. and it Is still far in lead. More recently, white pin* I also been superseeded by Dougi ai so thgt~ow it occupies third pla~co Washington has been the printil shngle producing State sine th'e of red cedar shingles became genam and it supplIed three-fourths of1 taal output of shingl's I--st y e Among the other shinale proddz States. Michigan. LouIh.iana. Mat and California were the most imp taut. The shingles cut in Michia and Maine are chiesy of white ce'l those In L~ouisiana o! cypre5s, thos" in Califonina of redwoo'I Laths. are ;eneritr a p dc l'jmab mannewre and a'e SPREADS TYPHOID SUCH IS THE CHARGE MADE Is AGAINST MARY MALLON Wbo Is Co>nxned to a Cbttages and Not Asowed to AoWdarst With Any Oue. Is Mary Mallon the New York health authorttles have an unusual s prisoner oa their hands. 'Typhoid Mary.' as she is known. because of her alleged habit of communicating a the fever to others. although Im mune herself. is a prisoner in a email cottage which she occupies all by herself on North Brother Island. where contagious diseases are treat ed. She is now seeking her freedom through the courts. t About two year ago. when Miss Mallon was a cook in the family of .J. Clayton Drayton. the tutler and two maids sulered from typhoid fe ver and in investigating the case the health inspectors reported that Miss Mallon. although. herself Immune. had spread the disease to the other servants. Following her case farth er back they declared that typhoid fever had appeared at nearly every I place in which she had lived. On this eridence the woman was seized and sent to North Brother Is land, where she has since remained in the strictest isolation. although not at all ill. Her meals have been passed through a window of her cot tage to her and she Is permitted to Sassociate with no one. t Miss Mallon. through her attorney. - declares that she does not communi cate typhoid fever and that her case r is somewhat similar to that of John A. Early, whom the Washingtgn au thorities have isolated under suspic Ion of being a leper. ADOPTED IN KANSAS. Bryan's Guarantee Law Endorsed by RepubUcans. The bank guarantee law originated by Bryan and frst adopted in Okla homa has been put in effect in Kan sas by act of a Republican legisla ture. While the law will effect only such banks as elect to comply with it., it is expected that all of the TTT States banks in Kansas will place themselves under ILs provisions with out delay. - The banks under the new law are to be partners in a sort of mutual in surance company. They will have to put up a million dollars in State and ational securities to guarantee the payment of depovts, and the-dues or nsurance premiums will be only one twentieth of one per cent annually. In self-defence the national banks have started a movement to organire an Insurance company among them selves to Insure deposits In their banks. Eventually. however, it is ex pected that many of the national anke.. especially those in the smaller towns will deede to denationalize and become State institutions in order to participate in the guaranty law. TILLMAN SEE THE TEST. The Senior Senator Among the Spec tasors of Aeroplane Trial 'A dispatch from Washington says Senator Tillman stopped discussing ootton bagging and tie. lumber and Stea long enough to witness the trial -trip of the Wright aeroplane at Fort Myer Wednesday afternoon. In comn -pany with Senator Elkins. of West Virginia. Senator Tillman quit the SSenate chamber to study aerial nagi 'gation. He was close to the air ship. Sand when someone told the Wright Brothers who he was he was allowed a to examine it carefully, and asked r many questions regarding its con struction and manipulation. Edgefield folks need not be suar 0prsed to see Senator Tillman arrive * from the National Capital eome day in an air ship. Automobiles never e were to his liking and trains are too e slow and out of date for these e modern days. AIr locomotion is the gproper stunt. hRKINITED BY P1CI'URE-. Brthr n SstrMet Under Pe t t lia CircWnntancs s A dispatCh from Atlanta says the .publicaton of a photograph of Edgar -Alle3. *'De. which had been an h'ir r. loom in a Virginia family. resulted s. in the reuniting of two members of n this family, a brother and sister. who a had been separated for reneteen , ears. The photograph was pub. n lished by A. C. Snyder. Mrs. D. S. i. Webb. his siste-r. living less than fout r blocks from him. was struck by the ). remblance of the photograph tc 0 the old picture wIth which she was e familiar, and after becoming con of viced that her brother was its pos s. sessor. sent for him without lettini t him know her identity. He did no be recognize her when she met hi: u at the door. but asked for her husi y. band. 'Then she called him by at a old boylsia nui2m ho stared it er surprise and then knew her to be hIs be sister. rGood P'lace for Thema. At Chicage~ Wednesday 5 S alI .weapons which the polIce have con se icated in the last sIx months wer east into the lake. The city tui eetok the poli'e departmenlt cast' ar.!da: beyond the thron-mite limit an< e ggIhe droppe'd o'erboard the revolvr'n odlrks. slung-sh.ots. kniv's and othe pr sdy weapons in thirty feet of wa ndd wood that is cat into lumber. Amnon the kinds of lath which are moe of ..o..ent =ara nht ine. rDorias fr ISHOT THEM BOT Young Indian Kills Englishma and Persian. ASSASIN CAPTURED An "At-Home" Ervenin for Indta Students Brought to a eudden Ter mination by a Terrible Tragedy Which Seem to Bare Been Pwe meditated. A dispatch from London rays i startling double assassinatioz of political character occurred lat. Thursday night towards the conclu sion of a public gathering at the Im arial Institute. An Indian student whose name is not known, shot an< killed Lieut. Col. Sir Wm. Hut Curzon Wyllie and Dr. Caias Lalcaca of Shanghai. Wylie. who had held importan Indian appointments, fell dead or the epot. Dr. Lalcaca showed signi of lIfe after he fell and was hurri to St. George's hospital but on arriva, there it was found that he was dead Those near the assassin seized and hold him until the arrival of tht police. He had two revolvers. 9 dagger and a knife. All were new and It is believed the crime was pro. meditated. The gathering at the Imperial In stitute. a building devoted to Indisa and other colonial functions, was :a "at home' to Indian students. D. W. Thorburn. ono of the guests. thui graphically describe, the scene at tending the murder: *'It was near 11 o'cock. and the musical program was just conclud ing when I saw a middle aged Erg lish gentleman conversing with a young Irdian student dressed in a dark jacket and wearing a pale blue turban. "Suddenly the native drew a re volver and dred four shota with the greatest rapidity full at the head of the Englishman. The shots were fired with the muzzle of the weapo close to the victim's face. "Then came another shot as 41. Englishman fell and a sixth whi.h struck an elderly Indian gentlema.n standing a few yards off and who fell, shot in the side. *I rushed at the assassin. and others sprang forward at the same time. We peized him but he strug gle<d. and wresting one hand free, placed the revolver to his forehead and pulled the trigger. It elicked harmlessly, as he had fired all of his shots. "We shouted for doctors and the police. Meantime there was a ter! rible scene and a commotion and the folding doors were fnally clos*ed tc prevent the people from looking on the fearful sight. --A doctor in th'e hall enally came~ forward and knelt at the side of the Englishman. After an examinatiot he said 'nothing can be done tot him.' --At this moment some one se claimed in a horror-strickenf voice 'why it is Curnon Wyille.' then a stately woman in evening dress camt upstairs from the cloak room to die cover what had happened. L~ookins at the recumbent figure and not im mediately recognizing it. she said: --'Poor fellow.' She then knel down and as she looked closely al the disfigured face a look of hor-ol leaped into her eyes and she ev claimed: '-t -Its my husband; why warn'i wih him' .It was Lady Wy1ie who ha'd ilef her husband only a few minutes5 be -OthAr doctors cam'e but the: could und no wound on Lalcaca' body until the clothing was removed when a tiny stream of b'ood ?ron the side revealed the position of :h injury. Screens were plac-d aroun th vIctims and the awe-stricken peo pie quickly left the hall.'' The victims were placed in ambu lances and removed to a hosplta: Dletectives searche'd the assassin. The attack on SIr Wiilliam oc curred on a wide square landing lead ing to the staircase. Sir Wiiamn an Lady Wiie were just pr.-parin;t depart wh.-n the fo:.r was a; proh-d by the Indian student. On bull.t shattered the face just belo' the left eye Dr. Lalcaca was a Parave. and trot present evidence it would s.eeml tha e vwas shot accidenltaty. The at easin. who !s also a P'ar''e. !s a twny-r years of a;.. !!' wi cool and self-possessed after his a: rest. ie has maIntained an obst nate silence. The' IdentificationC the man so far has bee.n inipossibi as a great number of vIsitingt .art bearing dIfferent names were foun on him. He will be arraigned a police court. It is reported that ! had in his possession written dcl muents setting forth reasons and ju ItIflcation for the e-?in'-e Liut. Co!. Sir William Hutt C'u zn Wyilin was born in 15 C. eIr the youngest sen of the. late G" SSir Wilam Wyilie. G. C. TD- f was political aide de e-mp to tI scretary of State fo' India sin 19'). In 1896 he enteredI the I dan staff corps and served Bteluhistan during the Afghan we in 187.%0 and accompanied Ge ISir Rbert Phayre's~ force to the lief of Candabar. tor which arv'i fhe was decorated. Sudden Death. -Aken was again startled and s' prisedi Tuesday moruinlg by the~ s - dien death of Mirs. Julia B. Kenned gwho dropped dead while comi ther hair i'arore a looking glass bor -esdence there. This is .4 th'dden dagh of prominc '.%W~ A~~ Ino * SPIRIT GUIDES MAN IELARKABLE STORY OF GOLD SMITH WHO TURNS PAINTER. Widow Shows Sketches That Lee. to Ivestigatiaon--Psychical He search llxpert. Tell of Results. The strange story of the spirit o a desd artiet taking possesslon of th4 mind of a living man and impellin. him to carry on the artast's uninish e'd work is related by Prof. Jame, H. Hylop. secretary of the Americat Society for Psychical Research, of N.-w York. who in connection with Prof. I-aac K. Funk. recentiy came Sto t! c.nwlusten that the spirit o! man lives after his body is dead. R.&.:rt Sw ain Gifford. the artist, died in 19G-, at his summer home near New Bedford. Mass. Freder ick L. Thompson. a goldsmith. had met Mr. Gilrord only twice and knpw him but slightly. Thompson had never indicated any ability as an artiet until six months after the death of Gifford. when he did not even know that Mr. Gifford had died. He was suddenly seized with an im pulse to paint a picture. and going to work on it. be was surprised at his ability. While he was painting the voice of Mr. Gifford seemed to tell him to continue his work he had started. Mr Thompson continued painting pictures. always psessed by the spirit of Mr. Gifford. and found a ready market for them. Many pur chasers commented on their f-imi larity to Mr. Gifford's paintings. Fearing that his mind was giving away in 1907. Mr. Thompson called on Prof. Hyslop. By arrangement he made several sketches for pictures at the instance of what he considered to be Gifford's spirit. Prof. Hyslop looked these up in a safe and then Thompson went to New Bedford and called on Gifford's widow. where he had never been and whom he had never met. One of the first things Mrs. Gifford showed him was a ketch which Mr. Gifford had made a short time before his death and which had been locked up and seen by no one until a few days ago. ien Thompson called. The sketch was exactly similar in every detail to one of the sketches Thompson had left with Prof. Hyslop. This fact and other equaly sur prising features in the case prompt Prof. Hyslop to L -a a stronger be lief that the spirit lives after death and that the artist GIfford's spirit Is in communication with this world through the medium of the gold smith Thompson. FIGHT FATAL DUL. Encounter Between Two Gennan Arwa Offces Although dueling is nominally Il legal in Germany. details of a most remarkable encounter in which the preliminaries were arranged by ths State. are given in a cablegram from Berlin. which states that Lleut. Granier shot and killed* Lient Zwitz ers near Bjankenburg. Zwitzers, although a married man with a family. tried to kiss Granier's iancee and a military court of honor sanctoned the duel and arranged the fight. Two companies of infan try kept the grounds. A locomotive and an ambulance car were provided by the State railway to carry the expected victIm to the nearest hos pital. Graniers second shot pierced his oponenta tungs, and the wounded man died in the hospital soon aftet -the special train tot him there Liut. Granier will probably no' undergo a few months comfortabl< tetention in a fortress, the mnessag' ,declares. AFTER STANDARD OIL. Mi~1sa.ppi Attorney Would Oust * - from State and Colleet Penalties. Application was made Wednesda! -in the Chanenry Court of Clay coun - ty.. Miss., by District Atoreny A. L Lamb for a perpetual injunction rs strirning the Standard Oil Comnpan: --rm operating in the State of Mis ssippi rand seekinag to collect penal ti.s aggr*-gatinlg $t1.000.000 for a: leged violations of the antitrust Ia' jof the Commonwealth. Th.4 Injunction bill recites In detal the history of the Standard Oil Com Spany and the methods by which is aileged to have stit!ed comapetitlo: I n this State. Under the MlassiSppi code a m ended by the legislature In 190' the State is entitled to recover statutory penalty of $5.000 a da d Ifor each specinc violation of the ant< trut laws, and the penaltion soud! to be recoveredI in this case cove three years. The hearing. it is ut derstood. will take plato at Wei Point during the November termC he Cbancery Court. .Three Fatally Injured. e Aneigh-yea-old ncesboy. a e e-leven-year-old office hoy and1 a fo - y-night-yar-old cripled ruan. we I- probbly all fatally Injured a fe in nighs ago by being run down hy a1 i tmobIles at Pitsburg. Pa. Only n.onue nstance that of the newsbo Idid the drive~r of the machine stopi ceI dnd out how badly his victin ha been hurt. - Killed by Lightning. :-Maffett Parker and Neil Latma d- two boys of No;'- o~rmInsgham. Als V were killed by lightning this afte 2s noon. The bodi.es were found und' atla large tree and the body of the be Ifavorite dlog was lying between them CAUGHT AT LAST CONFESSES TO THE MURDER OF ENGLNEER HOLT. I Negro Arre.ted in Ohio ays He Did the 9iling Because HO Was Put Of the Train. Because he was put off a Seaboard Air Une train on which he was steal Ing a ride. Solomon Shepard. a no gro. according to his own confes sion made at Durhar4. N. C.. Mon day. shot and killed Engineer Holt. The crime was committed last De cermb er, but the negro was arrested only a few days ago in Columbus. Ohio, where his connection with the j case was first learned through his protestations of innocence of it. The police had taken him in custody on another charge. In his confession Shepard said he was returrang to Durham from Ef- e land. 19 mines away. after a visit < to his sweetheart, when the killing occurred. He said he remained in Durham until six weeks ago. Shepard spent a whole day read- r ing his Bible recently and "getting I religion," and when Dr. N. M. John- t son entered the jail to minister to t a sick prisoner he called him to the t door of his cell and laid bare the facts in the mysterious murder. N Shepard says that in the night of s the tragedy he was kicked off a e train by a brakeman and was in search of the brakeman to kill him c when he found him. with several j other men. on the cab talking with If Engineer Holt. Crawling nearer the c engine he raised his gun and fired. the shot striking the engineer. He then walked up the track. and seeing a light in the Greenbe-rg s house. fired at it "just to scare sornm- S tody." It was this latter inciden:t t that had much to do with the arrest s of Reuben Barbee. who had had : trouble with tha Greennergs and who d is now in jail charged with the mur der of HoIL e Shepard says that he was in Dur- t ham at the time of Barbee's arrest t and remained until about six weeks I ago. He deniee that he had a white It accomplice in his crime. | On the strength of the negroe's confession Barbee's attorneys have 1. asked tor their client's release. | HELD FOR CRMiNAL ASSACLC. Man Aested on Charge of Wrung- t t Ing Ycang GirL t When given a hearing in Po:li j, Court Tuesday morning. J. D. c Degarcia. al!as DeCris, was remand ed to the Superior Court on a charge a I of committing a criminal assault on Orrine Massey. aged 14. of Savan nah. Ga. Both parties are white.|e and the crime has shocked all Ba vnnah. The testimony brought out the fact that DeCris. as he is best known. j made' a habit of going among the poore'r classes and ofrering to get positions for the girls in the family. n this case he was on the way to a bogus canning factory to get the young girl a place to work. He took her into a secluded place and hen committed his dastardly deed. DeCris claimed he was nowhere neart the place at the time, but a longi list of witnesses testified to having seen -imn with the girls, one other: having accompanied him on the same( mission, and having been left be hind uder a slight excuse. DeCis is a brother of Mamie Do- I Cris. the diamond queen, who several years ara, made most sensatIonal charges against a Georgia peniten-1 tiary keeper. There is little sympa thy for the man here. and DeCris'1 trial will be awaited with much interest. LAYS WONDROtS EGGS. Picture of Duck on One and of Eagle on the Other. The Aiken Journal and Review has on exhibitIon two guinea eggs. presented to it by Mr. James Wid ener, of the Tradway section. One of the eggs has on it a good likeness of a duck in a sitting posture, while the other has an American eagle em blazened on it. The likenesses are almost perfect. and the eggs are quite a curiosity to all those who have seen them. The eggs were laid by the same guinea. They are normal in every respect except the pictures. which are In white, while the rest of the egg surface is in the natural brown. sMine-Worker Murdered. At Mahanoy City. Pa.. Patrick a Grant. aged 35 years. a miner, was! m iurdered a few days ago on the out skirts ot the city while returning home. with his pay. is body was r found and it was learned his. skull - was fractured and there were half ta dozen stab wounds in his back. f Senra! arrests have been made of persons r'uspected of the crime. ScntTragedy in Alabama. SDec Barton. a well known mer rcatat F'orkland. in Greene county. -ea.was fatally shot late Monday afternoon by W. A. Collins, a grocer'. of Birminghamn. who was v~siting n at Forkclaud. Barton saoth r c. ceved on the floor of the Cotton Ex L.. change at Houston. Texas. Monday. r- when the first bale of the season's r cotton sold at auction at $425. The i bale camne from Mercedes. Hidalgo . Iconty. and weighed au pounds. The d. frst b~ale last yar ariv'ed on June ANOIHER QUAKt Wessina Again Visited by Severe Seismic Tremcrs. WALLS DESTROYED [he Residents Thrown Into a State of Terror, but it is BeIeved That Only Two Persons Were Killed. Broken Wals Fall and Dust Cloud Envelopes the City. Messina experienced two terrific arthquakes about 7:30 o'clock "hursday morning. which were ac ompanied by roaring sounds and are aid to have had a stronger and more Lndulatory movement than the earth Lutke of last December. which de troyed Mesaina, Reggio and other ites, laid waste many vllages in :alabria and killed 200.000 people. Although the shocks had no such errible conseqiences, the 25.000 esidents of that city were thrown ato a state of terror. They ran into he streets panic-stricken and nearly he ntire population is encamped in he open. The broken wals of the old ruins ere thrown to the ground and Mes ina was for a few minutes smother d in a cloud of dust. The casualties were few, and the nly persons killed r-o far as Is known rere a young woman and her in ant. The woman :ad gone thare ny a few days asgo and had settled : rooms which the great earthquake ad left relatively undamaged. She ,as standing at the door when the hock occurred and rushed Inside to ave her child. Before she could scape from the room the second h eck threw down the walls, bury ig both mother and child under the ebris. Soldiers and engineer who rush d to the resCue heard the voice of he mother calling for help. and ey work.-d heroically for 4everal ours. when they found the do-ad odies. the mother with her child in er arms. The first shock was followed quick - by a second. and the people fled el!-mell to the American quarter, *hch they seemed to tel was their afest place of refuge. So great was e rush to the American huts that le authorities were unable to check e invasion and as a consequence -en structures which were designed r the moit novedy of the populace -ere takcn posst-on of t~y the first omers. The poL-e, however, drew cordon around th quarter and guard was mounted at the bridge kding to It. Many of the panic tricken people were driven off and rders were issued that no one be ermitted to occupy the American uartsrs pending further instructions. Reggio suffered almost as severe a hock as Messina. LYNCHED IN GEATEMALA. tate Department Demands a Thor ough Investigation. Demand upon Guatemala for a horough investigation into the kill n of William Wright, an American egro citizen, who was clubbed al niost to death and then lynched in iatemala last December. has been nade by American Minister Willam iemake, at Guatemala City. under structions from the State depart net. Reports to the department ntimate that the trial of the man's nurdrers was a farce, and that there as corruption among the local of icials having to do with the punish nnt of the offenders. Guatamala's eply to the representative of this government has not been received. ROBBERS CORNERED. Men Who Held Up C'anndan Padcc Train Traced to .Mning Tunnel. Detective Draper. of Spokane, Wsh., with a pack of bloodhounds, as traced the Canadian Pac~fic train bandits that held up an express traIn last week at Kamloops, into an old mnng tunnel at Red Guleh. six miles east of Ashcroft, British Co lumbia. Detective Draper has sent for help, as the two men trapped are heavily armed and show fight. One of the robbers was killed by Con stable Rucker. He wore clothee bought in Spokane'. A valise full of dynamite was found in a boat de serted by tho robbers. "JOY RIDERl" KILLED. Auto Turns Turtle En Route F'roni New York to Coney Island. Thomas B. McEnro was instantl, killed and four other m.-n were In jured. one fatally, when an automo bIle, in which they were~ riding. wa overturned while on the way fron New Tnrk to Conoy Island Wednes day. The car had been borrowed fo the trip by George Olney from hI cousin. Miss Clara Kreyer. of Brook lyn. its owner. Mc~nroes neck was brke ani John flrohan. another of the par:u sufered injuries from which to ma not revocer. Olrnoy escaped injut and disappeared. Killed by Bandite. Genera! Sytin. chief of the ge darmerie. while returnin~g to Ki'!c' Pand, was amllushed by bandit: who fired severn! vollers at hir The general was shot through tb breast and died of his wound. H daughter who was accompanying hl ws ktilled. A patrol sent in pursuU EQUANIMITY JARRED EXPRESSMAN CAUSES CHINAMAN TO HAVE BRAN STORM. Former Room Mate of Aleged Slay er of Ee Sigel Confronted by Witen A dispatch from New York says the complacency of Chung Sin, once the room mate of Leon Ling. who is wanted for the murder of Elsie SIgel, on June 9. went all to pieces Wednes day afternoon. when Arthur Logan. an expresman. walked into the cell where Chung Sin is held as more than a material witneas. and brusquely shout.-d "Hulo.* Logan ii the man who carried the trunk containing the body of the girl down-stairs from Leor.' room on the day of the murder. He had told the police that Chung Sin Is one of the men be saw sn the top floor of the house. Chung Sin, on the contrary. has sworn by all his ancestors that he never saw the trunk packed or moved. *You are the man," Logan said in Chung Sin's presence. "who told me to take the trunk down-stairs care fully. There was another alra fel low with you in the room-the same that came over to the office half an hour before to give me the order to call for the trunk." "All mistake," protested Cbung Sin, "never see you before." The Chinaman's voice broke, and he shook as In fear as Logan was led out, still positive In his identil cation. Chung was not kept walting long before he had another visitor-this time Martin Luria. the chauffeur. who drove a Chinaman and a trunk from the Harlem laundry to a chop suey restaurant in Newark on the mcrning of June 10. The police had a theory that Chung Sin might have been the fare and not Leon Ling. But Luria could not identify Chung Sin. and still believes that it was Leon he had in his taxicab. A letter from Chung Sin, written since his arres., to the Society of the Four Bro:hers. was intercepted and trans lated to the district attorney's of fice. It protests that the murder was done by one man, and that. therefore. only the murderer should be held; denounces the authorities and implores aid of all members in freeing him. The police believe more and more that little reliance can be placed in any of the various rewards and offers of co-operation promIsed by the clans of Chinatown. and accord in gly District Attoreny Jerome wrote John Edincott Gardnar. professor of Orlentlal language and literature in the University of the Pacifc at San Jose. Cs!.. requesting his co-opera tion In the case as a trustworthy interpreter. TO FLY ACROSS CHANEL. Three Aviators at Calais to Make Aerial Voyage to Dover. Herbert Latham, Count de Lam bert and Henri Farman are on the coast, near Calais, awaiting favorable weather conditions to attempt an aeroplane flight across the English Channel for a prize of $5,000 of fered by a London paper. French torpedo boats are being held in read iness to guide the aviators in their fight and rescue them in case of need. Count de Lambo.<. will make use of a Wright aeroplane. Mr. Farman will use a new machine like the one with which he mad6 his cele brated flight from Chalons to Rheims, except that he has intro duced an arrangement by which tne alighting wheels give way and allow skIds to bear the shock of the Im pact. Latham will use his mono. place, with which he recently has made a number of successful flIghts. He purpose. starting from the top of a cliff, near Calais, and heading straIght for the Admiralty pier at Dover. The dista~nce, as the crow flies. is 21.73 mile. A NOVEL EXPERD(ENT Makes a Preacher ChaIef of Poice For On' Night. Mason City, Iowa. is to be policed for one night by the pastor of thi Methodist church. Dr. Will W. Carl tonl. For thIs one night he will b4 the chief. Thle force will obey hii iinstructionls to the letter. Mayor Kirschmanl has promise that he would prosecute all cas': brought before him by the preacher 'policeman. When Mayor Kirschman was elect ed to the position. he. it is Faid tendered the position of chIef of pa lice to Dr. Cariton. Dr. Ca:ltou re fused. Many persons are rnot now please with the general tone of the cit: at night time, so the preacher wa -asked to see what he could unearth There will be no publIc announc ment made of the nizht when tb -minister is to polIce thre city. FO'CGHT ABOrT A WOMAN. IWho Gete K~illed in the Row Betwee the Two Men J. W. Mayes. a locomotive ct gne.r. and Robert Culberron. Not of Norton. Va.. fought a due! i-.tn te-s of Middlesboro late Tue,2 night. Anna Hayes. over wheer a - !etIonls he men were jealou?. wn . ottwtee during the light ai.. .dying. Mays w.i~s shot exce at .cannot live Culbertso~n escaped Wl 0 Ia serious wound in the artm. May' 5 mentally wounded. fled after ! n shootn. and when the police and tprosse overtook hIm. is said to ha 3 attempted s'icide by jabbing l ~ r~ .'1t kn~f SLAYER FOUND Corpse of Chinaman Found In Hudson River. LEON LING'S BODY Amough Comete ........ Was impossible Thursday NIght La Salient Featues the Body Bea a Marked Resembance to the Miss Ing Chinamar A disatch from New York Thursday says, although complete IdentifIcation was impossible, there appeared to be a strong probability that the body of a Chinaman, which was found 2oating In the Hudson River in the upper part of the city. was that of Leon Ling. or William L. Leon. the murderer of Elsie Sigel. The man's height. weight and general appearance tallies with that of Leon LIng. but as the body was nude, except for a silk undershirt. and had been in the water for more than a week, a thorough examina tion will be necessary. Coroner Mo. Fonald. who was the first to Inspect the body. believes that It is Leon's as do a number of policemen. but until measurements and facial char acteristics are carefully gone over the identifcation will remain In doubt. It it Is Leon the cause of his death will be another mystery. although ane theory, that of suicide. would appear reasonable. In salient features the body bore a marked reemblance'to Leon Ling. The teeth were good, as were Leon's; the height about live feet. four Inch es. which was Leon's he'ght, and the weight 125 pounds. which was about Leon's. The age appeared to be about twenty-five or thirty years. Leon's age was given out by the police as thirty. An autopsy will be performed. The coroner's jury was unable to arrive at a conclusion as to how the Chinaman met his death. Early Thursday morning Ung Yow. an inconspicuous, hard working Chi nese laundryman of the East Side. was found by his neighbors strung - between two wash tube with his head beneath the water of one and his feet in the other. There were bloody fnger marks on his neck, bloody footprints on the floor and a knot ted cord about the man's neck. In the cash drawer the police found one cent. All attempts to connect the murder of U-ng Yow with the murder of EAsie Sigel by Leon Ling have failed. nvestigation soon showed that ug Tow was beaten over the head with fat irons, probably by more than one -ran. and then 11ung It the nbs. He probably died by drowlfng chile unconscious. CHINESE DELITEREE. Out law Is Making Much Trouble For the French. French colonial authorities In Up per Tonquin. China, are having no end of trouble In their efforts to check the onslaughts of De Tham, a notcrious outlaw, and his followers. From private advices the government is informed that for hurmantaian and political reasons the offcials are uable to adopt the necessary sharp and ruthlees measures which the forays against villages favoring French rule seem to demand. De Tham's fanatical followers have now spread the report that he Is the diinely appointed deliverer of the Chinese from the French. His men are armed with rifles while the na tives defend themselves only with sharpened sticks. Chinese whom are favorable to the French. when caught by the outlaws, are ca.'ried to the forest, tied to trees and there left to die, after their tongues heve been mutilated. De Tham appears to be guarded by a special providence. He has never been captured, although at times he could touch the French soldiers as they pased his hiding place. On one occasion they pressed so close that the intrepid outlaw killed his wife and child to make certain his es cape. Frequently he has sent mem bers of his band to parley for sur render while he and the rest hay. wormed their way -out of a tight place to theIr stronghold in the hills. BU'RGLAR KILLS POLICJIAi Caght In Act of rorciug Enttrane to Store-8hots Exchanged. At Chicago ?otteem:Ln Henry Schadle wae killed Thursday by a burglar he was attempting toar irest. IThe burglar, who Is thought to Sjbe a negro. was forcing an entrance to a stdre at Wabash avenue and Thirty-fourths street when surpris Sjed by the policeman. IIn an exchange of shots the po lcemanl war, wounded. dyin a few mintes later. His assailant Is also thought :o be wounded. Reveniges Husband's Death. In rev'enge for the alleged mu? dr of her husband years age. Mr Lo tuise Labartia Monday in N~ew York ired four bullets into Domico Ver sgia at Spring and SullIvan etreeta. '. Vrsagia's wounds are probably ia tal. Mrs. Labartia was arrested. High Diier Killed SAt Beaumont. Texas. Charles Har ,' ris. aged about 30. profesiona~l high edver. wa~e killed while making a a dive into tt~e Nechee river from a ,d'fooQ? !adde-r Monday evening. His ,~ neck was broken. His home and