WERE SHOT DOWN
\ i ', r . ? ? , . c
By Robbers Who Robbed tbe Bank of Foor
Hendred Dollars.
AND THET& ESCAPE
General Manager and Assistant ManV
ager of the Rank Instantly Killed
and a Citizen Passing on the
Pircet Was Shot and Probably Fatally
Wounded.
A bank robbery, with wild West
features, was pulled off by four desperadoes
In McKee's Rocks, Pa., on
Tuesday with the slaying of two
men and the possible fatal shooting
of another. The robbers themselves,
covering their escape of volleys of
revolver shots, got safely away with
at least $4 00 in cash from the officers
of the-Vlctor Banking company.
Samuel Fiedman, general manager
of the company, was killed, his assistant,
Isaac Schwartz, who was
dangerously wounded in the head,
died later on the operating table
while the surgeons were probing for
the bullet, which penetrated his
brain, and Robert King, a passer-by,
was seriously shot In the groin. The
latter is in McKee's Rocks Hospital.
Friedman and Schwartz wene alone
In the bank, which does a foreign exchange
business on the outskirts of
McKee's Rocks, counting the day's
cash, which was spread upon the
countier when four foreigners invaded
the place with guns.
Friedman was shot twice, while
one of the men scooped up the money
but as they esca|? (1 the wounded
Friedman followed them, shouting
for help, only to fall with another
volley from the robbers. A policeman's
face, which appeared around
the. corner just at the moment was
, grazed with a bullet.
With the exception of the lone officer,
who appeared at the corner
as t.he bandits dashed i way, tlucre
were no police involved and no witnesses
of th<? robbery. It occurred
nlK)ut nine o'clock, the hour at which
the Imnk usually clos? s. It is believed
that Friedman was armed and
returned the robbers' fire, for he apparently
tried to dash after them,
but no revolver was found by his
body.
Schwartz fell by the counter and
was unconscious thereafter. King,
V who is a railroad man, was just
I leaving Green's Hotel nearby when
one of the fleeing bandits turned for
a last shot at the policeman. Instead
of hitting the officer it felled
King. He may recover. Both Friedman
and Schwartz were about thirty
years old and neither was married.
WIFE KOI,l> WITH BUSINESS.
Makes Had Bargain, Hegrets it ami
Gets a Heating.
Sixty dollars for a shoemaking
business and a wife thrown in was
the unique bargain made between
Antonio S. Flourers and Cornelius
Pace, in Beverly, N. Y. In the negotiations
for the sale of business
Mrs. Pace fell in love with the stranger.
When the business was sold
she begged that she go with it.
The husband was willing and an
agreement was signed. Everything
went along smoothly for the newly
mated pair. Later Pace, who had
gone to Philadelphia, regretted his
bargain and consulted a magistrate.
He was told to go to Flourers and
make demands for her. Confronted
with the agreement and the refusal
of Mrs. Pace to follow him. Pace
attacked Flourers and was beaten,
and left town. *
DANCE COSTS A LIFE.
Snaps Pistol at Wife's Partner and
Is Himself Shot.
I Enraged at the sight of his wife
v dancing with Bee Holllngsworth, J.
^ t W. Perrell, at Hampton, Ark., a cattle
buyer from Cooper, Tex., leveled
a revolver at Holllngsworth Monday
night and pulled the trigger, but the
cartridge failed to explode. As Hol,
llngiworth saw the Irate husband
pull his gun. lie reached for his own
niotol llfforo Perrell could shoot
again. Hollinggworth opened fire upon
his assailant and shot him twice,
f.;;' one ballet taking effect in the left
breast. i'errell was taken to a hotel.
H I where his wife is earing for him. but
j||| thtr attending physicians say there is
gffij I no hope for his recovery.
Mg A man that's clean Inside and ontK&
Jp sldv ; who neither looks up to the
rich nor down on the poor; who can
lose without squealing; and who can
j|fg win without bragging; considerate
ijg J to women, children and old people;
flu who is too hrave to lie. too generous
v to cheat nnd too sensible to loaf; and
who tak* s l?ffc share of the world's
Bag goods and lets other people have
B|| theirs, is my idea of a true gentle9
GIVES HIS VERSION
PAPAL SECRETARY TALKS OP
THE INCIDENT.
Pope Demanded Assurance That the
j
ex-President Would Not Visit the
Hateful Methodists.
A dispatch from Rome says now
that Mr. Roosevelt has made public
the documents which the Vatican had
considered confidential. Cardinal
Merry del Val, Papal Secretary of
Starte, wishes the entire history of
the negotiations for the audience,
which the former President sought
of Pope Pius X to be known. Cardinal
Merry del Val is credited with
the responsibility for the Vatican's
pact in the matter, and the following
may be accepted as his version:
"Following the exchanges between
Mgr. Kennedy and American Ambassador
L/eishman and Mr. Roosevelt's
decision not to be received under the
terms imi?osed, John Callon O'Loughlin,
who was assistant Secretary of
State in 1909, and a personal friend
of Mr. Roosevelt, called ui>on Cardinal
Merry del Val, bearing an introduction
from Mgr. Falconio, Apostol-I
ic delegate In the United States. Im- I
mediately after being introduced to
the presence of the Cardinal Mr
O'Loughlin said:
" T do not come in the name of
Mr. Roosevelt, but on my own .account,
as an American Catholic.""
Cardinal Merry del Val said "Then
what are we here for. It Is useless
to discuss the matter. If you do not
represent Mr. Roosevelt you cannot
make any arrangement or Bpeak for
hint."
Mr. O'lxnighlln replied:
"What I consider important is to
tell your eminence that if the two
dispatches sent by Mgr. Kennedy are
retracted, I can assure you that Mr.
Roosevelt will accept your audience."
Cardinal Merry del Val said.
"I will not discuss Mr. Roosevelt's
right, but give me confidential assurance
that de facto, Mr. Roosevelt
will not go to the Methodists and
the audience will occur."
i.Vlr. O'lxjughlin refused to give
this assurance. The Cardinal then
suid:
"Mr. Roosevelt is free to go to
the Methodists and do whatever he
chooses, but the Pontiff is certainly
free not to receive a man who would
claim the right to insult him on the
day after having been received by
him or perhaps on the same day, as,
according to your statement he may
leave Rome on the same day of the
Papal audience, thus having only between
Noon and evening Tuesday in
which to see the Methodists.
"It is of little consequence whether
he is a Catholic, Protestant, Israelites
or Buddhist. All religions
persons merit the same esteem. The
important thing is to be honest and
sincere. So far as the form of belief
is concerned I believe that all
honest people will he always on good
terms with Ocd."
METHODIST BISHOP'S COMMENT.
Says tlie Methodists Are Not in This
Case.
A1 Cincinnati, Ohio, Bishops Earl
Cranston and John Wale Walden, of
the -Methodist Episcopal Church, commenting
sharply on the Vatican's
position regarding Col. Roosevelt's
abandoned visit. Bishop Cranston
said:
"It seems that the Vatican accepts
nothing short of absolute submission,
including the yielding up of one's
vcial privileges and religious and
patriotic fellowships.
"Americanism is worth more to
the world than Papal assumption, and
it is the spirit of Americans that is
now again put under ban by the
Pope. No honeyed words for the
public can change that fact. The
Methodists are not in this case."
Bishop Walden said that two monumental
blunders had been committed
by th-e present Pope. He declared
that Pope Reo was "far too wise
to have been guilty of the errors of
Pope Plus."
"But," he added, "it is not. atfer
all the Methodist Church which has
its bristles out, but the Roman Catholic
church. Th" Methodist church
has not been injured in the least.
We are more used to the insults and
attacks of Rome, perhaps, than any
other denomination, owing to the fact
that we have been active in many
countries which are peculiarly Roman.
It ia our success which liai
aroused Rome and made her lift
her bristles. If we had not been
successful; if Methodism was not a
vital, powerful force where we hav
planted it, we would hear nothing
from Rome."
Itaby Takes Strychnine.
The baby of Joseph Rrown, living
near Mason, Texas, Monday accident
alty got hold of a bottle containing
strychnine and swallowed some o
the contents. It died a few houri
later from the effects of the poison
i The latest victim of the Roose
( velt endurance test seems to havi
been the Pope of Rome, and hi
stood it vtery poorly.
SNUBS THE POPE
Presided Roosevelt Declines to Accept
Vatican's Terms.
CANCELS CALL ON POPE
While Mr. Roosevelt Concedes the
Right of the Pope to Receive Any
One He Pleases, He Refused to
Accept Conditions Limiting His
Freedom of Action.
The audience which it was believed
ex-President Roosevelt would have
with the Pope on Tuesday last did
not take place, owing to conditions
which the Vatican had imposed and
which Mr. Roosevelt refused to accept.
When at Gondokoro in February
la9t. Mr. Roosevelt wrote to Ambassador
Lelshman saying he would
be glad of the honor of an audience
with King Victor Emmanuel and the
Pope. The audience with the king
was promptly arranged. Before an
arrangement could be reached relative
to an audience with the Pope,
several telegrams were passed, and
the negotiations were ended by Mr.
Roosevelt refusing in any wav to bo
limited as to his conduct, and announcing
that an audience with the
Pope under the circumstances was
now imi>ossIl)le.
The history of the negotiation is
about as fhllows:
While at Cairo. Mr. Roosevelt received
the following telegram irirn
Ambassador Leishman, dated March
23rd:
"Monsignor ennedy. rector of th^
American Catholic college, in reply
to an inquiry which I caused to be
made, requests that the folloving
communication be transmitted to
you.
" 'The Holly Father will b? delighted
to grant an audience to Mr.
Roosevelt on April 6, .and ?h-*t.
nothing will arise to prove* t such
as the ranch regretted 'ncident which
made the reception of Mr. Fairbanks
impossible' "
Replying by cable to Ambassador
Leishruan on March 2f>, Mr. Roosevelt
said:
"Please present th' following to
Monsignor Kennedy: "It wou'J t?e a
real pleasure to me to be presented
to the Holy Father, for whom I entertain
high respect, both personally
nnd as the head cf a grea. church.
I fully recognize his entire right to
receive or not receive whjnisoeve"
he chooses, for any reason th it seems
good to him, and if he does not receive
me I shall not for a moment
question the propriety of his ac?.i??n.
On the ther hand. I, in my turn,
must decline to make any stlpula*' >ns
or submit to any conditions which
in any way would limit my freedom
of conduct. 1 trust that on April n
he will find it convenient to receive
me."
On March .28, Mr. Roosevelt, al
Cairo, received a cablegram from
Ambassador Leishnran giving a message
from Monsignor Kennedy, which
concludes by saying:
"The audience cannot take place
except on the understanding expressed
in the former message."
The following day Mr. Rp.osevelt
sent another message to the American
ambassador, saying:
"The proposed presentation is, of
cotirse, now imjiossible."
The determination of Mr. Roosevelt
to forego an audience with Pope
Pius X rather than subscribe to the
conditions imposed by the Vatican
uits created a sensation. 'i nis incident
overshadows every other feature
of the distinguished American
in his visit to the Eternal City.
HATPIN DEADS TO ARREST.
Brooklyn Woman First Victim of
ChicsKo Ordinance.
At Chicago the first arrest under
the aldermen's hatpin ordinance was
made Wednesday. Mrs. Maud Rollins
of Brooklyn, N. Y., had just
alighted from a train at the Lasalle
street depot when she bumped into
, John F. Slater, a countryman from
Harahoo, Wis. The hatpin, one foot
three inches Ions and sharp, jabbed
him in the cheek. Sinter gave a yell
and Detective Russell went to his
rescue. Mrs. Rollins was taken to
the Harrison street police station.
She was indignant when Judge Gemmill
fined her $1 and costs. The poi
lice kept the hatpin.
Should 1 * 1111 Together.
Faction spirit is the curse of many
' towns. It causes ill feeling, divides
! the people into hostile camps and effectually
prevents progress of any
kind. Doubtless each faction sincerely
wants to see the place flourish,
? but the spirit of jealousy and oppo
s'tion is so keen that whatever one
r olde proposes, however good the
f proposition itself may be, the other
a side is sure to oppose It. The on*
, thing needful is to bury all such bit
ter and irrational feeling out ol
- sight, to consider every plan for bete
terment 011 its merits, and for all tc
51 work with an eye single to the welfare
of the community. I..
i'lyi
GOES FOR TEDDY
SENATOR TILLMAN GIVES HIM
A GOOD ROAST.
the Rought Rider Han Bamboozled
the Public Long Enough and
He Must Re Still.
"All this hurrah about Roosevelt
and the manifest effort to make him
a presidential factor Irritates me so
that I do not like to discuss It."
said Senator Tillman, as he was
leaving Atlanta for a visit to his
home on Wednesday.
"I think the Idea of Roosevelt becoming
a candidate for the presl
u* tn j ui au IUI pwi L til 11 luciur in
straightening out the Republican
party is absurd. In the first place,
Taft would be more than human if
he did want vindication and a second
term.
"His alliance with Aldrich and the*
money powers will insure him the
support of Wall street, whose captains
of finance would give up millions
to encompass the defeat of
Roosevelt.
"In the second place, the Idea of
Roosevelt straightening out the Republican
party is absurd.
"He is not so clean and straight
himself. He has bamboozled the
public *lme and time again.
"Roosevelt is the creation of the
newspepers and little else. They
lent themselves to his making in the
most remarkable manner this country
has ever known. No, I do not
think Roosevelt can be resurrected.
What will be his future? That
is hard to forecast. Doubtless he
will have to adjust himself to the
difficulties of private citizenship.
"This will be hard, and it will be
a pretty physchological study for
the country to watch. Rut others
have had to tackle It, and why not
Roosevelt?"
HAVE STREET lH'KL.
One Man Killed and the Other One
Makes His Escape.
Two Frenchmen fought a duel early
Friday morning in a New York
street, not far from the East Side
water front. One of them was killed
by a shot fired straight through
his bead. His adversary escaped,
leaving no clue to his identity.
The strange battle was seen, as
far as learned by only one witness,
an antomobilist, who was speeding
down the street on his way to his
uptown home. By the light of his
automobile lamp, though two blocks
away, he saw the two men step out
rrom a hallway, measure off a certain
number of paces and then turn
quickly, revolvers in hand.
There were three quick shots and
one of the combatants fell. The
other, throwing down the weapon,
dashed back into the hallway and
made his escape. The automobilist
quickly called the police, but the.
patrolman found nothing but the
corpse and the two revolvers. The
dead man has not been identified.
SAI bolts Mlltl>i:itKI>.
Accomplice in the Crime Makes Confession.
Retribution for the mysterious
murders of sailors, long a puzzle at
the ports of Puget Sound,seinms now
close at hand. Giving alleged details
of the killing of John Hoffman and
Charhs Hedberg, John Klingonberg
has made a sworn confession to
Prosecuting Attorney Campbell at
Aberdeen, Wash.
Klingenberg says that he, under
threat of death at the hands of William
Gohl, kilh d Hedberk. The statement
charges the slaying of Hoffman
direct to Gohl, who is a former
agent of the Sailor's Union, and is
under arrest at Monte Sano, waiting
trial for wholesale slaying that
t rial.
As in many previous cases two
sailors. Hedberg and Hoffman, dis<1
111 <A 'i t <?11 t'eii ei'voal llA'lhyvHw'n
I'livoivu iiijoif iiuimij. llCTIUCIg ")
body was found, but search failed to
reveal Hoffman.
TilK ATLANTA WAY.
Novel Way for Church to Secure a
Congregation.
Deacons of the Western Heights
Baptist Church of Atlanta have hit
upon a novel plan to induce delinquent
members to attend services. A
prize fluht was advertised to take
place in the church several nights
ago and long before the time the
bout was to begin every pew was
~.i .? ? .1.
nnvu. uiuii uv (IIICI WUIU L WII 111 lilt"
d?>acons appeared gloved for the ring.
The fighters faced each other and
the flght was on. but after sparring
a few minutes, both failing lo land
a blow the bout was declared off
and the regular services held.
( round to Pieces.
In full view of a large crowd.
Sallie Williams, the two-year-old j
daughter of Inspector Williams, of
J the Atlanta waterworks department
. was ground to death under a street
? car Thursday night. The child had
. wandered away from home when the
? accident occurred.
GOLF A SERIOUS STRAIN.
Demand For Almost Inhuman Per
fection on the Links.
Immediately after playing a game
of golf and making a fairly good
score, a prominent man committed
suicide. Though there is no reason
to suppose that there Is any casual relation
between golf and suicide, yet
the incident calls to mind certain
characteristics of the game at least
as they appear to a beginner. The
serious intensity required far outdoes
that demanded by baseball or
tennis. Good-natured indifference is ,
regarded on the links as an aesthetic
crime. A man who contemplates the
landscape, or enjoys the atmosphere
is a Philistine of the ranxest kind; or
if he indulges in conversation overheard
by the serious ones, he is
looked upon as a common pest. That
? 1 1 ? 0 lUI.? 11
Biunuuaijr live unuj, tuc uhdcuuii
"rooter," does not affect 'he nerves of
the calm and automatic player; but a
laugh, a careless motion, or an trrel- <
evant gesture on the golf links is a ,
sign of moral and aesthetic turpitude. (
Is It because the golf p:ayer begins (
the sport latei In life. %hen he has ]
fully developed nerves and moral (
sensibilities, that the game has the
hair-trigger character?
In golf, there is n certain demand 1
for almost lnbuman perfection, not
only In skill, but In form, etiquette, *
and the minor moralities; and such <
demand for excellence is a strain on '
the imperfect human betng.
Not Instinct, but Habit.
If anything in the entire animal !
kingdom would seem to be a matter i
of pure instinct, that thing Is the tra
ditional antipathy of cat and mouse
Yet a recent study by C. S. Berry. (
made in Professor Munsterberg's laboratory
at Harvard, shows pretty
clearly that a cat has no Instinctive
Impulse to kill and eat mice?nor the
mouse any instinctive fear of cats.
Berry finds that a mouse may smell
the nose of an inexperienced cat. or
even perch on its back, and be quite
safe. so long as it does not run away.
For the instinct of the kitten is to
chase any small moving object?ball.
e pool, tail, mouse?indifferently. It
Is not the mouse that interests it. but
the mouse in motion. Sotne day. often
by accident, the kitten plays toe
roughly with its captive, and discovers
that there is meat inside. It Is
well known that cats specialize theii
bunting, sotne catching mice. Borne
squirrels. some birds. It seems. In
each case, to depend on accidents of
discovery. A good mouser, then, is
not a cat with a strong instinct for
catching mice, but one with a strong
habit of doing so.
Advice From the Bench.
Some years ago many farmers along
the line of tire Missouri, Kansas &
Texas Railway brought suit against
It and engaged a young lawyer named
Brown. Judge Gantt. who was presiding.
was compelled 10 throw many
of the cases out of court because they
were improperly brought. Brown was
mad all over. Swelling with Indignation,
he arose and said: "Your
Honor, will you please fell me how It
Is possible in this court to get Justice
gainst a railroad company?"
Judge Gantt quietly ignored the contempt
of court shown ">y the lawyer
and asked: "Do you wish an answer
to that question. Mr. Brown?"
"Yes, sis," defiantly replied the Indignant
lawyer; "yes, sir, and I want
to know how a farmer ran get his
case into this court so thnt it will be
beard."
Judge Gantt smiled and said: "Well,
first, Mr. Brown, I'd advise the farmer
to hire a lawyer."
Brown wilted.?Cleveland Leader.
Woman Champion Cotton Picker.
The world's record for cotton picking
is held by Miss Margaret Montgomery,
of Stillwater, Okla. In a
four-hour contest she picked 3.r>0
pounds, or eighty-seven and a half
pounds an hour. She defeated crack
cotton pickers from all parts of the
cotton-growing belt, averaging about
five pounds nn hour more than her
nearest competitor. Miss Montgomery
is the daughter of a wealthy cotton
grower and she picks only for her
own amusement. There were men
and women in the field against her.
For three hours she easily led everyKaM
V 1 lion oho hotro n in innr . m
uuu; D..o ucfiitn IU lliK 11 \ J 111
weary nrms unci cramps n the fingers. !
She lacked the training of the others
but showed her pluck by holding on
and retaining her lead uDtil the time
limit expired.
Cultivate Friendliness.
It in the self-centred hero who lays
hold of us?it is ever the comradeship
of heroes. Dumas' "Three Musketeers"
(and the Gascon who made the !
greater fourth, with their oath, "Each
for all. and all for each.' Inherit that j
"kingdom of romance." How seldom
one pauses to think of the Infinite
meaning of friendliness, how little it
costs and how ever-wideuing is its circumference.
Had Sensitive Ear for Music.
A Munlph servant girl has given notice
beeffuse she says her mistress
persists in playing clnsslral music for
a c-ouple of hours every morning, although
she has not the slightest notion
how it should be interpreted.
The Reason.
"One-half of the world does not
know how the other half lives."
"Well", it is gratifying to think that
one-half of the world attends to its
own business."?Puck.
What They Really Are.
A good many so-called optimists
are merely cheerful Idiots.
Italian Proverb.
One door never shuts but another
opens.
ea
BLEW UP BANK
five Bandits Who Did It Pursued by Me>
in Automobile and
THREE ARE CAPTURED
Hie Masked Robbers Overpower the
Watchman and Knglncer and Robbed
the Rank of Two Thousand
Dollars, but Were Chased and
Three of Them Captured.
Five maRk^d bandits esraping with
S2.000 stolen from the Hunk of Coal
City, at Coal City, Illinois, exchanged
shots with a posse Thursday, threo
of the robbers being wounded and
captured. Coal City is sixty-three
miles sonthwiKt of fhificm tva
_ M - -w - a Cll"
tire population was aroused by the
?xploBion in the bank and the ensuing
pursuit.
The marauders entered the town
on a passing freight train and began
operation by tieing Barney Ghetto,
the night watchman, and Washington
Frye, the night engineer of the
plectrip plant. They then blew up
the bank building and shattered tho
safie with a charge of nitro-glycerlne,
and after seizing the contents of tho
safe, leaped on a Sante Fe train with
their plunder, which was partly in
st am p8.
As the train carrying the bandit*
pulled out of town, Ghetto succeeded
in cutting his bonds and rushed
to the telephone, notifying Eugene
Miller, the night watchman at Mason,
seven miles south of Coal City,
and he with Dr. E. D. Watts, who
was at t'he station at the time, laid
in wait for the robbers, ^atts was
armed with a repeating shot gun and
Miller carried a revolver.
At iMason the freight train stopped
to switch cars, the bandits leaped
from the train and hid in a clump
of shrubbery near the track.
.Miller and the doctor discovered
their hiding place and opened tiro
which was promptly returned, a>>out
2f> shots being exchanged. When the
train started the bandits leaped on
board and again escaped.
Immediately the sheriff at Morris
was notified. Several automobiles
were pressed into service and the.
-mrsuit began, the machines following
a road along the Santa Fe right
of way
For a time the motor cars sped
directly alongside the train, members
of the posse occasslonallv firing
at the dark objects which were taken
to be ihe bandits. W.ien the
train came *o a stop at Verona, near
Morris, the ens were searched by the
sheriff and his men.
Three of the fugitives were found
In an emnfv Imirwioo 4 "
- ? t'v^ vai . nil wrro
wounded. The other two, hart A-*!.
It is believed that they leaped off
the moving train from the side opposite
the posse and escaped with
the booty.
The prisoners were taken to Morris.
where they refused to discuss tho
robbery. The prisoners admitted
that their homes were in Chicago
and gave the names of John Hoyt,
Rawer Tonaszewski and Joseph
Crow lick.
FIRK AMOVE AND liKIX)W.
Rescued From Perilous Position I'niler
a Itridge.
Fire in the shaft above their heads
threatening thD lives of five men
working in a caisson 125 feet below
ground in the foundation of tho
municipal building under Hrooklyn
bridge terminal. Dense volumes of
smoke poured from the shaft, where
electric wires had become crossed
and had ignited combustibles nearby.
Fearing the men would he suffooat/d,
the foreman on the work hastily
ordered the steel bucket lowered.
The men scramhh into it and tho
car shot them up through the smoke.
They reach <1 tho surface in fainting
condition, hut were soon revived.
Fireman flooded the caisson,
putting out the Are.
- - -
Made Him Rich.
Warren O. Pent of Dayton, Ohio,
a brewery wagon driver, n-ceived
$41,500 for 70 acres of West Virginia
land which he bought 20 years
years ago for $117.25. The discovery
of oil by agents of the Standard
Oil company was the reason for tho
enormous increase- in the value of
the land which Dent had supposed to
have been almost worthless.
Negroes Lynch Negroes.
A mob, composed entirely of negro
s, overpowered Constable Ma4lory
of Keo, Ark., seized his two
prisoners, both negroes, one a woman,
and shot them to death, after
| which their bodies were strung up.
The victims were chared with killing
the husband of the woman and
wife of the man.
C.oos for Life.
Refusing to grant a new trial.
Judge McDonald at Anderson sentenced
Webb Simmons, a young
white nvan, to spend the remainder of
his life at hard labor in the State
Penitentiary. Simmons killed Ifniterl
States Deputy McAdams in 1908.