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THE LEAD STEAL1 t Senator Bristaw Shows How the People Are Plundered by the , \ TARIFF ROBBER BARONS With ?hr Assist?ii<-e of the -*|.u? >!i v 'V 1 " r?*n Party ntid a Few HeneRUfle c tl IM-iikk rals \\ ho Vote With Them . n to I'uxs the Thieving Tariff laiwa o e Thnmcli (Ioiikvcns. j! Senalor J. T. Bristow, of Kansas, s, one of tli Insurgent Republican j Sena'.o-s. in a speech at Manhattan, t< Kansas. Friday night. charged o Speaker Cannon and the "standpat" j f Congress with manipulation of the v leod schedules of the tariff bill in ' 1< support of the "smelter truBt" so- j c called. "A duty not measuring the j s differences In the coat of smelting j ii at home and abroad as promised in ' 1< tho Republican platform, but from | $2.5* to $6 higher than the enti.e a cost of smelting In this country was 1 H Imposed on lead," the Senator said.ic "This was done not In the Interest 11 of protecting a struggling American t industry, but In the interest of a * monopoly controlled by the Ougger.-jd helms, barked by the great Itockefei- ; r ier fiaaucial Interests. I a "Rcoause 1 presume to object '? h this sort of thing Mr. Cannon calls 1 me a Democrat, a demagogue, a inn- : t atic and a pick pocket. Mr. Cannon. I1 holding the ottlce of Speaker of the a House of Representatives, second iu a power and dignity in this govern- , a ment, has been routed over Kansas 8 for a number of days denouncing , a the 'Insurgents,' myself in particular. | Instead of indulging In vituperation, ! ? why dosen't he give the reasons ' why he insisted on ignoring the '3 plain declaration of the Republican 1 v national platform? Why did he ? stand fry tho Senate In the interest ? of tho Cuggenheims? j a "The duty on lead in ore. as the 1 tariff kill passed the Mouse was $3 0 a toa. The duty on pig lead or lead bullion was the same. The bill came to tbs Senate and was referred to the son m it tee on finance, to which 1 ^ Mr. Aldrieh is chairman, and was reported hack with the duty on pig lead Increased from $30 to $4 2.50 a toa, making a difference of $12.50 between the lead In the ore and the lead bullion. Therefore, according to the Republican national platform ? and onr campaign pledges, $13 a ton should measure the difference in the oosi of smelting lead in the ( nil- ' v ed States and in our competing. countries. ' , " dwnrd R. Rush, general manager of the American Smelting and Refining Company, an organization ' '' which controls 90 per cent of the 1 lend nnielters of the United States, a testify? before the ways and means lv committee of the Mouse that the en- 11 tire east of reducing lead froiu ore ! to bullion, from actual figures rung- 11 ed from $T>.50 to $10.05 a ton. No 11 witness before the ways and meant 1 commute* gave as the entire cost 11 of Bia?l!?ng a greater figure than $1 a ton. j v "A in'st vigorous effort was made v ia the Senate to reduce the duties of the Senate hill hack to those provided Jr. t!ie House measure. but without < fTect. To protect our strug- 1 gling Anerican industries a duty, not measuring the difference in the cost of smelting at home and abroad, but a duty of from $2.50 to $b a too or more than the entire cost of I u smelting at home was imposed. v , r TIId31 AN BACK IN HAIiNKSK. 1 ^ a Attend- .Meeting of Hoard of Triesi ' t?*cs of (Tleui.son College. i 0 i Perhaps many people have not j, noticed the fact. but Senator Tillman j is back in harness. He attended s the meeting of the Clerason board,of c trustees, and while t.he reports did j (l not aay that he took an especially i ^ active part, he "was there. " As is j well known to muny of the senior Senator's friends, he takes a great Interest in Clemson College, and he ( was bery much worried lust year ' J nooui ine presidency matter. Now' . thnt things are running all right, it ' , Is supposed the Senator's mind is at , rest in regard to Clemson. v Prisoner Attends Itann'. a John II. Miller, of the defunct cotton firm of Steele. .Miller & Co.. of Corinth, Miss., who was arrested at Decatur, Ala., Friday, charged s wit-h using the mails to defraud, was j taken to Huntsvllle to arrange his ( t bond After his arrest Miller was1 v allowed to attend a dance. He is ( socially prominent, having married i a descendent of one of Alabama's Governors. ; ( t Drown When Boat Overturns. I Harry and Alvln Wlnfleld. hrotli- I erw, and well-known young men, i wore drowned in Krie harbor tPn.l I 8unday when their sail boat rapgiz- 1 ed. They had just taken a picnic party safeiy across to the penirsula and were returning for another Imtd ; t of young people, when a gust over- 1 turned theru. < PAYS PENALTY AT STAKE TKXAS MOB BURN'S WOl'LD-HK N'KGIIO ASSAILANTS. Vhen Pursued By Mob, Shot Countable from Ambush.?Surrounded in f V>rn Field and Lynched. Henry Gentry, a negro eighteen ears old. paid the penalty of his rimes, murder and presumably "inunded assault, at the stake Friday ight at Helton, Texas, while two tbers, a brother of the man lynch* d and n companion, charged with mplicatinn, missed a like fate, only y plea-lings of Sheriff Burke and everul citizens. Karly Friday the negro attempted t> force an entrance into the home f Mrs. I.amh, a widow, but was Tightened away with a shot by the toman's daughter. Several hours iter, while (Jet try was being seatbed for by a posse headed by Contable James Mitchell, the man, firng from ambush killed the posse ?ader. Then the mob formed and after an 11 d: . search, surrounded the fuglive in a corn held. As the mob lotted in Gentry tuade a dash for Iberty. but was brought to earth by we well directed bullets. A rope ras quickly brought and the man ragged to an automobile and buried to Helton, where several thousnd frenzied men and boys awaited is coming. As the public square was reached he rope was tossed to a man on iors?back and bite negro dragged bout the square to the pyre. The pplyiug of a torch was the work of moment and while several hundred hots were fired into his body, the lready dying negro was incinerated. When the work of the mob was nded there, a dash was made for lie city prison, with the Intent of filching the two others charted rith aiiliug Gentry in the killing f Mitchell. Pleadings and a show f force stopped the mob before an ttempt was made to storm the jail, he crowds then dispersed and furtier disorder is not anticipated. * AKIISTA liAHY MISSING, upposcd to Have .1 uiii|n-(I Into the irom snip. Mi*. Marion Mayo, of Augusta, a., reputed to be wealthy and of octal positoin, who took passage n the steamer City of Columbus rom Savanna.h. was missing when lie steamer reached New York Friay. It was feared that she had | ren lost overboard. Captain Johnson, of t.he City of olumbus, said he believed Mrs. layo had stolen out of her state- i noni during the night and thrown I erself into the water. He said she ppeared to be melanc.holly anil had ept to her quarters nearly all the inte during the vovnge. Capt. Johnson said Mrs. Mayo was 11 interes'ed spectator of the burial t sea of a negro eook and after lint sh*? went to her cnldu and was ot seen again. As soon as Mrs. layo was missel Friday her cabin nas examined and all of her dothlng ins found to be i tact. TKCKIKK' STCIOI. "hilts IUmIi IHII Ml Night Ihling Serious Damage. Not in veats has such a terrific term struck Hock Hill as the one rhich broke over that city Thursday light about eleven o'clock. The ightniug was of an awful character nd t ic thunder sounded like the inivene was being split. The elecrical display was oontinuous for iver nil hour and ruin fell in vertable floo Is. Lightning struck t.he Kline of J. S. Stowe, in Woodland >ark. nnd knocked a hole in the ide of the building large enough t ? raw 1 through. Strange to say no mo v as injured, nor the house urned. * Lost ?. ?i?l I >i -?I. A telegram announcing the loss r a $10,000 h"t that Jim Jeffries could wn in the prize fight with at k Johnson was the reason why tarry Michaels, secretary of the liehaels Furniture (tornp.my. ChicK<>. shot himself deail at his desk chile his brother, a New Yorker, waited him at a hotel there. Koys Stone ltiilloon> to Kartli. Ohio hoys who ran throw stones o swift and high as to piiaeture bilious have become a serious menace o aviation. I town came the Drifter, villi Walter .1 Collins and (leorge toward, of Cincinnati, in its basket, ast week, because hoys, thrown g tone., from a (milling at ilam.it m, >., where the crowd had assembled o witness me ascent ami chrfstenii? or the aerostat, struck the sas tatjj and tore a hole in it. TJte uas tad escaped slowly, ami the halloonsts were forced to land in iess than 2 hours after starting. Te hly s promise t ? make a speech or Iteveri'lpe In In liana is said to five made the standpat Republicans ?f that State very mad. COTTON BIGGEST ITEM COI'PKR. OIL. WHKAT HOI.O SKCONO KAXK. 1 i lliimui of Statistics Issues State- , ii 'Vit ??t Things Sent Abroad Our- 1 I ing Fiscal Year Just Closed. t Cotton, copper, illuminating oil. , wheat--these articles in the order ' named formed the most articles ex- 1 ported r.v.ai the United States dttr- 1 ing the r.aeal year just closed. The j value of the cotton exported was $450.0o0.000 of the copper $33,500,- t ! 000; of the illuminating oil. $02.- 4 500.000, and of the wheat $4 7,000,- 1 000. 1 Other articles of export rankeu in 1 value as follows: Flour, lard, to- 1 hacco, lumber, upper leather, corn, ! bitimiuous coal and lubricating oil. 1 In nearly all of the articles ol' uat- ' ural prod tut ion there was a marked ' decline in the exports of 1910 as ' compared with'previous years, wnile 1 In certain manufacturers the figures for the year are larger than for any previous year and the total for all ' niantilaci urers probably w ill exceed that of any earlier year. The bureau of statistics, which has 1 given out these figures, has not y?-t 1 completed the total value of the manufacturers exported. 1 The falling oft' is most marked iu corn, wheat., flour and meats, wheat j ' falling ftom $161,000,000 in 1892. t.he high year, to 147.000.000 in 1 1910: corn from $85,000,000 la ' 1 900 to $.5,000,000 in 1910; flour ; from $7 5,000.000 in 1893 to $46.- ' 500.000 iu 19 10; lard from $60,000,- ' 000 in 1906 to $43,000,000 in 19 10; bacon from $4 6,000,000 in 1898 to $18,500,000 In 1910; fresh beef frem $32,000,000 in 1901 to $7. 750,000 iti 19 10, and cattle from $42,000,000 in 1904 to $ I 2,000.00c | last ye-.r. * SAKKTY FA 11,Ml) TO OI'KUATF.. Ilrn. Ciu/.ipr's Conclusion as lo Ait tilery Accident. i To the failure of a sa'etv nicch anician to cperate when a sudden ' and poweiful pull was given by an ; artilleryman in attaching the lanyard. is now laid the responsibility ' f()r f h norJilon* ?? !?: - *' nuiuu iu?i tne 11vt* f eleven men at Fort Monnii-, Va. ' during tin* buttle practice Thursday > Such is the conclusion of lien. (!io- i zier chief of ordinance, IT. S. A. who attended the practice and w ho h s 1 been in touch with the inquiry made t by the in vest igating hoard. i Never before in the history of the ' army had the service failed to work t The possibility of its occurrence was 1 demonstrated, however, by Geu. Cr< - ' zier himself shortly after the acct I dent, by a test made of all guns *. which participated in t.he practice i In another gun in the ill-fated l?e Russey battery, the service w.s found defective v. hen Gen. (Tozie ' applied unusual force, such as was * never deemed necessary intests and ' ex-.nunatio ns. JuM before the accident the 2\tn was ptonounced by the officers to o? in p ropey condition. In April a coast artillery officer on inspection duty reported that Its pennutue explosion was hey sud the range ol possibility. Steps will be taken at once to improve the device. II\S ATTACKKII GF.OKGIA. Hugs Have \ttarkcd Cotton and Ace Thought to be Werv ils. A peculiar variety of bugs have wj> ugiit much damage ii the lielu of cot'on owned by tl. T. Anthou> near Washington, Ga. To fact wus i-n ir.i ?? iMuesiu'.v aU'l special' ' f 1 sent to lion. T. (5. lludao 1, coiiuuis sioner of agriculture in Atlanta. Parties who have seen tiie Irseo1 :unl notice I the damage to the boil, and squares on the cotton, deeia*"* I them to lie the genuine boll weevil, i which lias proved such an enemy to J , the cctton planters of Texas and otii- t er western states. * ISank Clerk (>oiic. I Minor Winchester, collection . lerkj of the Citizens' First National hank J | of Albany, Oh., f r several years ' past, disappeared from liift home at jfltnt plaee Friday of last wed. and i > all efforts l?y bank officials cud j friends to ascertain his whereabouts i j lime been fruitless. i I tn 11 ('ill 11 iitge Among P.lniiks. While plnving the leaditr: part i' ;t local ta!?'Ul "Wild West" pla> at 11 St tie HltilT. near .Muskogee. Okia ; Friday night. Jacob Winkler wai> shot end instantly mi inn i.e ir. ulden, nl-o a member <?f Mie east ' A ball cartridge which had In come ni'xed with lie hi.inks was responsi f folo for tho tragedy. I'l i/.e Fighting Killed. Prise lighting in l.os Angeles is ' at an end. Without a dissenting vote in tho city council Monda> instructed the city attorney to pre|iaro I an ordinance to prevent boxing exhi- , lotions and spurring contests. The 1 ordinance will he presented at the' next meeting of t.he council and its . passage is virtually certain. i ANOTHER COTTON PICKKR. Said to Pick Open 0>tton Without Own Rolls. Patents have been recently Issued to Crawford Eliot on a cotton picker or harvester which he has perfected i is the result of nearly seven years constant effort. The basic patent granted covers forty different claims. The machine has been tested for two years in the cotton fields, anil with it one man and team of mules will do the work of forty hand >ickers. Only the ripe cotton is )ickpd. and this is done without lnlury to the green cotton or the dooms. The principle of t.he machine is a louhle row of l)ristle brushes about me and one-half inches in diameter md fourteen inches long, spiuuing rapidly in such a manner that the evolving brushes are introduced in0 the plants close to the ground md drawn up in a vertical line through tlie plants, the brushes ponerating the bushes from both si.les of :he row. The ripe cotton adheres .0 the brushes, while the rest of the ilant is not in any way affected, the brushes travelling to a receptacle " here they are stripped of the cotion and the operation is repeated. It is said that t.he machine lias >een thoroughls tested and demonstrated that it will do the work of 1 quarter ol the cost of hand iabor. which means a saving of $150,000,1)00 a vear to the Cotton growers. The invention, which has beeu pur- j hosed by t.he National Cottou Harvester Company of Chicago, III. j menus much to the growth and ex-' mansion of the cotton industry, and t will undoubtedly add immensely ;o the annual wealth of all the coiton growing state. * HKIDF.K I.ONf; HINT KNDS. tfnii Who Swindled Her After Their Wedding I'nder Arrest. fir. Henry It. Keelrr. said to have icon formerly a dentist in New York i\v. !s under arrest in Detroit. Mich.,1 barged with having swindled a itr- o'lvlvn (N. Y.) woman out of $13.">00 ,,,:?-r marrying her. In his com ?nny w hen arrested was a w man who as his siter. Two years ago, >any when arrested was a woman, ?aid to he his sister. Two years i*v>. it is said, the doctor met Mrs. iVilheltn!:?a Lynch at Ocean drove in.l made love to her. He told her ip h id a fabulous fottune in Mexi an Inn 1 properties and soon marted her. Soon r.f er the wedding he t- Id lis hride that he was in tiouhle w'.t.h he Federa' authorities over his Mexcati land and that it would take 'onsiderable money to stralehten the a itter out. So the doctor, with his iri:'.e and his "sister" went to a M.mlatten hank to get $13,500 of the iri e s money. The doctor and the \ouian who jios.es as his sister went rdo the hank, while the bride wait-) d rut i le in an automobile. The iix ior and the woman with him went mt another riuor and the hride nev?r got track of thein again until 'lie i rrest. * l\IIJ.Ki> l ot: IIIS MONF.Y. i'lium' [lead on a I'ile of Fodder in llis SliiSlo. 11. F Zaeharay, need r>o, amiser, won found ?i ordered on a pile of; o! >i in a stable <;n liis premises u the suburbs of Loanoke. V:t.. on Monday. Two pis <>1 bullets were found in the head. The police are oohiug for .Mack Vaden. a negro *mvi ? ted of the crime. The purpose f th? killing was do' bery. and it is >eii? ?e' t'.ie slayer -oi a l)i<? sum i nu.nev. More than *iioo in cur. <-rc> was found sev ed in secret pooj.ets in a second pair of trous>.s ?or i l?y Zae.hara". An Kn;r>ne ItuSI e<l. > i 'imi pas erger t.:?in on the; rieoi h> and Florida raihond spent I Inst vi-ht u the woods, three miles north Valdoata. (?a.. because the nginr ' a'ked. An official mi his private ear was on the train ami kept he pasj-ngers supplied w'th food.! t'he engine be^an moving .> iout sun-( rise. (living Them Away. 1'nahle e\en to give awa\ the fitie Klhertn p aches with which the pencil trees are loaded, and unable to ship ' lie hi aw:i> on account of the scareitv of cars, orchardists at An ericas, ' it.a. are ploughing the peaches under tin ground, to he us d for ie>ti!izi-j -.ina purposes. Kverv one was in-' v i;? I to come and take as many of the peaches as thev a?-.> u.:m???>i Ili'ovc Knagy in Water. H..iry Smith, a prominent business, win. A. is Hessie Hiertl. a widow, and i tier inf nit hatiy were drowned in Kandeil reservoir, five miles out from ; 1 lenisou, T?e as. Sunday alieraoiii at ' 4.tie o'rloi'k. No one sa?' the acd- j dent i.mi it is thought they drove into tlie re e o'.r to wat r tlieirl horse, y impost 11 - it to t> shallow.' T.hey fell into sixteen feet of water. I The horse was also drowned . . I 't is siiid the gate reeelpts for the prt :e fight last Monday were uiiout $270,000. It seems to he an industry tliat pays a few people. s ' / KILLED IN CLINTON SliAYKIl Alil.KCJKS VICTIM KUIXEl) HIS HOME. A ff ? ?? jr Sai?l to Ih< Culmination of l/>iin Standing Trouble.?Klajret' Taken to lauireiis Jail. One of the most sensational kill ings that has ever occurred in Clinton happened Saturday, when W. T. Gregory. a resident of the I.ydla Cotton mills village, shot and Instantly killed Cal Furr. who for the past few months has been living at the Clinton Mill village. The shooting, it is said, is the final re-j suit of trouble that lias been brewing for some time between these two parties. Gregory claims that Furr had ruined .his home. Up to about four months ago Furr was living about Lydia. when, it is said, he was forced to leave on account of this fouhle. | At about 1.50 o'clock Saturday afternoon Gregory was standing just Iu front of the store of T. C. Sum-! merell & Brothers, when Cal Furr. leaving the Bee Hive Racket Store, j whie.h is just across the street, and not seeing Gregory, came directly towards him. Fpou perceiving Furr. it is siid that Gregory, without passing any words whatever at once drew his gun and began tiring, the second shot striking Furr in the hip. causj ing him to fall. Furr drew his pistol as quickly as possible and tired three shots, all of which missed except one. whic-h passed through Gregory's ri^ht hand, between the third and fourth lingers. * XKW MOTOIt ( Alt That Will lif Trstrd by the Southei ii Mas (\inif. The first gas-electric car for local traffic to be used by the Southern railway experimentally on . the Green ville-Anderson run reached Spartanburg on Friday. Several hundred people gatered at the depot there to see it when it arrived. The motor car was switched on to No. At and carried to Greenville where it will be used between Greenville and Anderson. It was in charge of A. H. Fleet, mechanical engineer for the Southern. Mr. Fleet said ] his car would carry gasoline suflici-j e: t t'o" a trip of 200 miles. It seats: forty-six passengers. High officials of the Southern met j in Columbia Friday to fix the schedule of the new cars. Those participating in the conference are Assistant Passenger Agent Meek, of Atlanta, Assistant General Passenger Agent Pegram. of Charleston, Superintendent Williams, of the Columbia division and General Manager Anderson, of the Hlue Itidue road. It' this servict proves satisfactory In the Greenville territory it will be extended to other parts f ern system, where the local traffic is heavy. They will certainly prove a great convenience to the traveling public. * J.AI'AVKSK STKA.MKit SINKS. Ol' 'J4K PHssrngf-i-s all hut Forty Air Still Missing. The Tetsurel Maru, plying between Kolie and Dairen. sank Saturday night off Chindo, Korea. T.he steamer had 24 ? passengers ahoard. of whom forty wore saved. The others are missing. Warships have been sent the rescue. Direct reports fvom Chindo state that two of t'.'e Tetsurel's life lioats lauded forty passengers, who tell of harrowing scenes when the befogged vessel struck Six life boats were launched and filled with passengers. There was no panic, and everything was carried oft in the most orderly ma niter. The captain and the majority of the crew were unable to leave the steamer. Six first-class passengers were saved, including W. Cunningham. the Itritish vice consul at Osakik as well as thirteen second-class passengers. Tile)' Die From Heut. Men and animals are succumbing to the Intense heat in the vicinity of Calexico, on the intense heat in the Cult xieo, on tiie bonier of Mexico. Kight tin n ard as many mutes attached to a cane camp are ssiid to have died sii.ee Saturday. There have been numerous prostrations besides. i I SI'll S'lecp I'olie. At NVw Orleans the hone of a sheep was t'sinsfered to ttie arm 01 a patient at the Charity hospital Thursday nignt. The forearm of the patient undt rgoing the novel operation Jiad been shattered by the discharge of a shot nun. The opeiat'oii was prorounmd successful. farmers l-'ed Milk to lings. Rather than sell their milk for two and two and a quarter rents a quae, farmers in northern N'ey .leis<>\ counties are feeding It to tIi ir hogs. They say the prevailing price i^i three-fourths of a rent less tJian it costs to produce the inilk. MADE BIG HAUL Eup'oyee of Louisville Back Accused of Gigantic Robbery. GAMBLED IN FUTURES August Itnpke, Assistant Secretary of Fidelity Trust < 'oiiipun.v l?elievrd t?? lluve .Matie Away Wit'i Kntirv Surplus of Institution. Was a llrjn y Speculator. lllKllt'l l-_. _ - ..iv|>nf, ttasisiHiu secretary j and bookkeeper of the Fidelity Trust Company, one of the soundest finanI rial institutions in Louisville. Ky., I is believed to have made a* ay wiin $1.1 40,000, the entire surplus !' the coueern, according to a statement made late Saturday afternoon by J. \Y. ltarr, iiresident of the company. Hope is in the county jail, where j he has been for ten days, unable to furnish the sum of $25,000. Kopke was a heavy speculator am) loss large sums, it is said, on Wall street and the Chicago board of trade. Mr. Barr's announcement was made after a special meeting of the stockholders held late Saturday afternoon. Mr. ltarr also said that the stockholders were told that t.he capital stock of the concern was intanct, hut that the entire surplus was gone as a result ot the defalcations. FOKIHT MAI) t\>\V. Farmer Had \muin Hsc?p? from Death in Teiines^c. Coolness, courage and the ability to handle a hi's stick saved the life I of John Godwin wnen he was atI tacked by a mad cow on a tract of laud near LaC.range, Tenn. Dod; win. with several other men. was j preparing to drive a herd ef 15$ | cattle into a new pasture. With a j companion .he had dismounted and ! together they were trying to get a j young cow started with the herd. Suddenly she turned on them, chars iug straight at Godwin. So sudden and close was the attack that he had no time to turn and the row's horn caught his clothing. She flung him high in the air. j Fortune favored Godwin to the e>tei?t that he alighted on a big jstick just as the animal tinned for j a counter charge. As the cow came ! at full speed Godwin picked up the club and dealt a blow which knock| ed one horn from its socket. This force swerved hhe cow enough eut of | her course to prevent her striking | hint, but it did no' lessen her desire for his death. Just as quickly as ! she could turn she chitreed again, | anl again Godwin dealt her another blow which knocked t.he ether I horn entirely off. Again she wbeei| ed and charged, and this time God' win's club landed so hard across her j nose that the bones were broken. The cow then gave up t!?e fight and was made to join the main .herd. While this struggle for life was in progress Godwin's companion was safely up a sapling. He had estaulisiie.l the Fayette county record for speed in climbing when tbw irst charge was made. j ltKTI'KNtil) A FT Kit 40 1 KAIW. Itible Taken l-'roin Female Institute by I'nion Captain. A ropy of the Itihle takes from ; the Atlanta Female Institute t? 1 S?> t ! hy Capt. Paul Colliacn. of N'orta j Chemung, N. V.. was returned F?"rl? j day to Miss May son, a member of i the class of "tiO, which presented it to the school f he presentation was made at the reunion of uhe Fortysecond Georgia infantry, known as t.he "Fightni?K Kortv-second. Rome time ago ('apt. Collison, w he was a memiier of the Seventeenth New York Volunteers, announced through his home paper he would gladly return the liible to t!?*- proper person. Miss Mayson, who is a sister of Key, J. S. Mayson. founder of t.he Atlanta institute, was located by a local paper, and arrangements made for the preseiitath n. * I'illtH in Cliirnuo. What is sai l to be the biggest an| nual reunion in the history of the Kenevoletii and Protective Order of Klks got fully itndei way M n lav at Chicago with hundreds nf j delegates still iirrivine hourly. Shot a 11111111* Warden. I Mrs. Krai k Si rout is in jail la Springfield, III., on rliar.'c of ki11 i 11 < Deputy State (Santo Warden John O'Connor She declares sin- has no regrets for the murder for the man made objeetioriable advances to Jter. Wife Tiansfi'iiril foe SI. A document has I icon filed in the Onendago County court at Syracuse, X. Y., whereby Frederick A. .loss, a business man. transfers his wife to Harry \Y. lingers a bookkeeper. . for the sum of $1. Holers has been , a roomer in '.he .less home for several years