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4 V . ^ v 1 y- . 6 ^ < CENSURE BLEASE Organized Labor Charges That He Deprives Wachers of Their RIGHTS UNDER THE LAW v. ? Child Ijahor Conference Hot woe n I'nioti Men and Gov. Illease Causes a Serious llreucli?He Tells Them to . l.et Women Seek Other Kmploynient If Hours Are Too Lorn;. "'Whereas, {he Rovornnr of this State has, by the exercise of his veto 1 power, vetoed the appropriation for the purpose of employing factory inspectors. thereby practically nullifying the law and depriving the workers of the protection previously af- 1 forded them; "Therefore he it resolved. That 1 this body put itself on record as be-11 ing opposed to this policy of the gov- 1 ertior and condemning any action tending to deprive the workers of ' their rights and the protectiou of 1 just and necessary laws." This resolution condemning thOj1 action of Gov. Illease in vetoing the) appropriation for the factory inspec- !' tors, was adopted by the Columbia : City Federation of Trades and will be sent to Gov. Illease. H. ,1. Hardy, secretary of the City ! Federation of Trades. weiU to see Gov. 1 Mease several days ago concerning the factory inspection law. ' Gov. Illease, according to Mr. Hardy and Senator Weston, got mad and 1 slapped organized labor in the face. ' That Is the statement made. Gov. Illease said Thursday that he 1 knew more about the condition of 1 the factory people and their needs * than any representative of a labor 1 organization. Mr. Hardy said that 1 Gov. Hlease "got hot under the col- 5 lar." |1 F. H. Weston, senator from Rich- ( land county, accompanied Mr. Hardy 1 on his visit to Gov. Rlease for the ' purpose of Introducing him. Senator 5 Weston desired to confer with Gov. ,l nioase to see if some provision could '1 not bo made for the enforcement of j the factory inspection law. M Senator Weston and Mr. Hardy ' 1 aald that Gov. Rlease stated that he j( would veto any measure tending to ( regulate the hours of the laboring ' man. When Gov. mease was asked ( as to the law regulating the hours of 1 ' women in stores he is reported to 1 have stated to Senator Weston and ' Mr. Hardy that the women might get 1 out and hunt other employment. |IT. J. Hardy, secretary of the City ' ^ Federation of Trades, made the following statement in which he severe- ' ly attacke Gov. TUease: "On Mouday T, in company with 1 Senator Weston, viBlted the governor to ascertain his reasons for the wiping out of the factory inspection feature of the law. The governor stated that his reason for so doing was that he considered the factory inspectors absolutely wort', less and a waste of th? State's money. He further i added that he would attend to that feature of the law himself and in his own way. He further stated that he would veto any ami all labor legis- J lation that might come before him where such legislation sought to improve or alleviate the conditions of any man or woman over the age of 21 years. "He said that every man ami woman who had attained the age of 2 1 was a free moral agent and could look out for him or herself. Any man or woman who was not satisfied with their rendition or thn oifoonorHa placed around their employment or their hours of labor could quit their position, but they need not look to 1 the law to help them as long as he was In the governor's chair. "Asked as to how this might work when applied to the working women and girls who might be subjected to hardships which they might be pow- | erlese to avoid, the governor stated that they did not have to work under those conditions as there was plenty ; of other work they could ^o to, though when pressed for the source of this work did not answer. He further gave me to understand that neither I nor any other outsider need come to him with any complaint, that the man or woman affected must i come to him personally or no action would be taken. "This matter was referred to the federation on Wednesday night and the resolution was passed and ordered sent to the governor. To my mind this action of the chief executive in assuming the duties of others where the law does not provide for such assumption is merely In keeping with his announced policy of interpreting the statutes to his own 1 liking regardless of law or justice. This action of the governor's will he .bitterly contested by organized labor and will only serve to bind us closer together in our next election and the ? ' next man will have to prove that he1 is with the workers in moro than i name.'' i Entire Village l?ea?l. I A telegram from Harbin reports the gruesome discovery of a Chinese ; village near there in which the entire population wn? dead from the plague. Many bodies lay in the open air and were covered with snow. Bl v. . - - * ..." * * \ j PLEADS NOr GUILTY TITKN CHAHCJKI) WITH THE Ml'RDKR OF liANIiFORD. nouie nt'uwuiiiiHi irvrvnipmrnui r.vpectcd When the Case Conies tci Trial nt Hampton. When the court convened at Hampton Thursday morning LeKoy B. Tuten, charged with killing of James It. Langford on November 29. was* arraigned and pleaded not guilty and that he was not ready to come to trial. On a motion and argument o! Ma]. W. S. Tillinghnst for continuance on the ground that the loading counsel, Robert H. Welch, of Coluin bia, was ill In a hospital in Charleston. Judge Prince granted a contin nance until next term of court. iMr. Tuten came to Hampton Friday about 12 o'clock with a friend and surrendered himself, while the detective, Mr. Thompson, and other deputies were searching the community in an effort to execute the bench warrant. Some sensational develop meats are expected to be made when this case comes to trial at the ncx term of court. So far the State has not revealed its hand. When Mr. Tuten came into the ourt house Thursday morning to he arraigned he did not appear nervou in the le;?.-.t and pleaded not guilt;, very positively. Mr. Tuten is pos sesscd of a great deal of property ant lias numerous relatives and friend, who own a great deal of the wealth af Hampton county. They are stand In2 by Mr. Tuten in this trouble, a.Lhey do not believe lie committed the crime. Tuten was indicted after the detective, Thompson, had been working an the case for several days. What evidence the detective has is pot made known except what Mary liarpis told him at the penitentiary after ihe had assured the coroner's jury nai mchle Williams, the negro, omniltted the deed. It Is understood low that this negro, Richie Williams, ind this white woman will tell the tame tale at the trial and that Bonie mo else will corroborate the testimony. It is now said they will both testify hat Tuten killed Langford while h? In company with Mary Harris, he white girl who testified at the oroner's inquest that Richie Wil iams, the negro in the penitentiary, ommitted the deed. Williams wa.? yresent when the crime was committed by Tuten. It is intimated that both Tuton and the deceased were on the most friendly terms with Mary Harris, and that jealousy caused the killing. There has been no motion by Tuten's attorney for bail. Mr. Tutei will be defended by the following counsel: Col. R. H. Welch. Columbia: Maj. W. S. Tlllinghast, Beaufort; W Smith, 11. R. Hlers and J. W. Manue of Hampton. Solicitor Gunter wil he assisted by Col. W. .1. Thomas ol Beaufort and C. M. Searsoti of Hamp ton. Coal Chute Burned. Tuesday morning about 2 o'c'ocfc the coal chute of the Southern Rail way company at Branchville was de stroved by fire. The lire was discovered by an engineer and tlroniar ....J ..Viu HUOIIS ru?l. II IM Mil |r posed to have caught front a spark from an engine. There were ahoui 250 tons of coal in the chute, anc when it fell it covered the main lint about 10 feet deep, and delayer t rathe about six or seven hours, un til a track could he build around th* mass of burning coal. A water tunh about 20 yards from the chute which has just been completed, wai also destroyed. llehl for Court. Geor-te Anderson, leader of the hand which held up Southern pas senger train No. 36, near Gainesville was committed to jail there by Judg< Sims in default of $10,000 bail Charles Hunted and James Hanford other bandits, who have confessei their part In the robbery, waived ih? preliminary examination. Kntire City Burned. The city of Aiix Cayes, Hayti, wai almost destroyed by fire. Fanned to a strong wind front the north, the; spread rapidly. There is much suf fering among the inhabitants. Th< momentary loss is heavy. The city's population is 25,000. ' Boy Accidentally Killed. Enbhteen-year-old I>onie Guitir was instnntlv 1H11a/V ^ - , ...... .. nunc iiilllllllP Friday with his elder brother neai Columbus. The lad was holding itii brother's shotgun, which was dis charged, the load tearing out tlx lad's heart. ' The pupils of the high school ai Paletine, a small town in Illinois, re fused to attend school on Washing ton's birthday, and deserted theli desks and paraded the streets in at enthusiastic demonstration of pa triotisni. Front the seniors dowr to the children in the tlrst gride, 171 In all. the boys and girls ntarchec about the town for two hours. An electrical device has been per fected to thaw out frozen water pipes without opening the ground. SIRES AND SONS. President Taft's mall amounts to About 1.000 letters a day aud 4,00? ; newspapers and books. I I This year's Nobel prise for medicine goes 10 Dr. Albrecht Kossel. professor of physiology at the Uuiversity of Heidelberg. f Pr. Robinson, the new director of ' the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New lorn, is h I'.osIonian by birth. lie t was formerly dinn-tor of the Museum of Flue Arts in Boston, j The Ilev. Zed il. Copp, probation officer of the District of Columbia, be- 1 llevc? heaven has golden streets and a palaces built of precious stones, lie 1 lias prea? lied a sermon to prove tli.it ' this belief Is correct. c Chancellor Roseoe C. Day of Syra- ' cuse university never follows the ' typewritten copies of his public |' speeches which he has supplied In ad- 1 vance to the newspapers. lie says lie warms up to his subject after he be- ' gins to address a crowd. Erich Korngold, an Austrian boy ^ composer, only thirteen years old. had ' bis musical pantomime, "Der Schnce- s man," brought out In Vienna at the e Royal Opera House recently with great r success, and it has now boon taken ' on by theaters in Hreslau, Leipzig and ' Prague. M. Edmotid Blanc Is looked upon an ' the real ruler of Monaco, lie pays ^ $:!"i0.000 a year for the gambling concession lie holds and thus provides the c greater part of the revenue of the | principality, in one respect M. Blatn I' Is a disappoints! man. He ciiinot uaiti admission to the Freuch Jockey ^ club. * i Pen. Cilice! and Brush. Ilolman Hunt spent seven years on 'j tils great painting, "The Triumph of I tlie Innocents." and then was not at j all satisfied with it. while "The Shad jv ow of Death" took liitn three years. Sir Moses Kzckiel lias been uiiaiii I ' i c niously chosen by the Confederate Memorial association to model the monument to the south's dead ttint is 1 to be erected in the National cemetery ,( at Arlington, just outside of Wushlng- j ton. 5 Paul Joliann Ludwlg ilevse, the vet- *1 ernn poet and novelist who has just boon awarded the Nobel prize in lit s erature, is probnlily best known to the 0 general public through ills play "Mary of Mngdnlu" and his novel "Children ? or tne World." ci ! n Town Topics. it \i Between burglaries and violent as- n nulls, Indianapolis Is getting to be a v better town than ever to stay at borne ^ in o' nights.?Indianapolis News. If New York must celebrate its three hundredth birthday next year, why j not u geographical congress to teacb it i something about the extent and loea- ^ tion of the rest of the world??St. I.ouls Post-Dispatch. Boston police are commanded to arrest one spltter today, two tomorrow, a three the next day. and so on until all t I the people are In Jail or expectoration t has stopped. llooray for Boston!? i Philadelphia Inquirer. ,t ! | Sporting Notes. ! < The University of Washington In So < ; attle is t>> raise for crew equip- ( meat next spring. j( In Kngland tleorge Huckcnsehmidt, |( the famous Ilussian wrestler, is re- jl ported to he worth a million. it 1 Miss May Sutton and Miss Hazel ' Hotrlikiss, America s two greatest ! ' women lawn tennis players, are plan- I uing a visit to Kngland in 1011. N The major basehall league magnates ^ have spent S:;.s7.tnx> for youngsters that are to lie given a < Inline Ie> show whether they are tast enough for the 1 big circuits next year. Aerial Flights. ( When his motor stops <>.000 feet up ' in the air the Intelligent aeroplane op- t era tor knows that it is time to cotue i buck to earth. Chicago News. t Aviation is playing havoc with the s ' language. Hangar may be necessary t ml aerofan will pass, but air girl Is too much.?Syracuse Post-Standard. < " Thirty-four aviators hare met with 1 fatal accidents during the last year. 1 Still, some of them might have step- ( ped on rusty nails if they had remained ou the ground.?Binghatntou lie- 1 publican. 1 * c English Etchings. 1 i i London's first lord mayor, Flenry 1 Fltz-Allwin. held the oftice for twentys four yeurs. ' The Kuglish A uti-suffrnge society has t Just published an appeal for a half ] million dollar fund lo be devoted to j ! lighting the growing suffrage party. j It Is estimated that to meet the de- i r maud for the new King tieorge postage t k stainp 1,(KMt,0(H? stamps will have to ( - be printed every hour of the working ( ? day throughout next year. ( Short Stories. The population of the Samoan Islands. according to last year's census, t r was ti.THO. 1 ? Invitations have already been Issued ( by the executive committee for a meet- : > 111 u in r.Hl of tin* International Med- ( ! leal association to contribute to the f I suppression of war. t In eighteen years, with the Increase j In steam vessels and decrease In saillug ships, ilic deal lis ai jiially due to wrecks and other casualties to N ha* ' -'as?*d to a' '* one-third } I * * 1 THtY WORK^VELl 4INDUS ARK BEING USED IN THE COTTON FIKLBS. V California Woman Claims to Have SoIvch! the Labor Proposition to ller Satisfaction. Mrs. S. P. Wiles, a wealthy resllont of I.os Antreles. f'nl. who h*ic leveral thousand acres in cotton hereabouts, has solved the labor irohlem to her own satisfaction by "nploying Hindus. She spends much f her Mine on her plantation superntending the work, and she s?ys the Hildas do their work well and ciicei ully. Mrs. Wiles has already met with lidicultles. not the least of which is he feeling of antagonism among the vhites toward her Hindu cotton dekers. similar to, though not as itrong as. that felt against the Chinise and Japanese. Mrs. Wiles is the >nly cotton raiser in the valley emiloying Hindus, and the result of icr experiment is awaited with inerest by others who are havin. their twn troubles. Robert B. Goepel, of Port Gibson, diss.. whose family has been raising otton for many years on their plinatinn in Caliborne county, Missiasip>i, is at l.os Angeles, arranging for lie building of a cottonseed oil mill le sticks to the old Southern ne:raes and will use them on the big limitation his family has purchase here. "Negroes on our plantation i; ^lalborne county will he brouglv lore as soon as we can begin plant tig cotton." he said. "The boll veevil has written the doom of cot on in Mississippi. The planters art noving away. I know of a nam be if planters who have bought land : mperial Valley, Cal., and they wil' iring hundreds of negroes from tin ild plantations to work the fields. "A few years ago Calihorne count \ ( 'lelded 27,000 bales of cotton in a eason. The last crop was only 4.00 hales. At one time the Port (lib on oil works crushed 4 0,000 tote if cotton seed a year. That ha Iwindled almost to nothinc TP. lassing of cotton in parts of the ( louth is a tragedy which the plnntenlo not know how to meet. The ne ( ;roes know cotton and cotton alone , hey will not tend any other crop "he only recourse is immigration ,nd the planters when they emi;rati will take their negro workers with hem." j ? ? , TWKIAK VKAK Old* ItltlDK. ] l V it It Parents Consent Slie Weds Itir < of Kightccn. The youngest bride ever led to t'.i iltar in Cincinnati was Sarmelia Al innari. a girl of 12, who became tin iride of Frank Stone, a youth of 1 X The license to wed was obtained b\ he parents of the children in New i tort, Ky.,and the ceremony was perortned by Father .lames MeNVrnj. >f the Churcli of the ImmaculaU Conception, of Cincinatl. At first ' Merk J. L. Ilryan. of the Kentucky Jourt refused to issue the license be tutse of the age of the bride-elect >ut tlie father of the girl showed him hat lie was obliged, under Kentucky aws, to comply with such a request Tom the fathers of the contracting arties. 1 tot It fathers were present vhen the license was secured. LI I'll TK ItM Kits l\\ltl>0\Kl>. I'reston Jefferson ami W. < . divers Kree?Petition Kef used. Two life term prisoners were parloned late Friday by Governor 'lease. One was Preston Jefferson. vho was convicted in Sumter couut> n 1 88S, on the charge of rape. In he petition it is stated that Jeffet ion was a very young hoy at the into. \V. O. Rivers, the other man to r< ;eive his pardon, was convicted ii Dorchester county for murder in 1903. tie is 7 7 years of age, and a Confederate Veteran. A pardon was refused William K Perry, who was convicted in Orange jurg county in January, 190.1, on the harge of arson. He was sentenced o six years in the Reformatory and dx years in the State Penitentiary. * Changed Ills Mind. Governor Rlease Friday approved he measure incorporating the Pied tiont Northern Railway with a captal stock of $5,000,000. although he i tad previously announced that he I would veto the Act, because it gave ; on much imn".' *" *? __ iu i iic owners or trie iompany. The company proposes '.o < construct a network of electric lines >ver the Piedmont section of the i itate. l Three Li' cs l<ost. At Donaldsonville, La., a loss esimated at $500,000 was sustained Thursday when flames In the kitchen < >f the N'icliolls Hotel spread rapidly i ind almost totally destroyed the busness district of the city. Three Uvea I ire reported lost. It is understood i hat the fire was started Uy an i ilosion of a gasoline stove. An international exposition of in- i out ions will he held at St. Louis the tecond week in April. ,1 WIDOW'S CLAIM DISPUTED. Heboid, Another Arises and Complications Follow. The St. Matthews correspondent of The News and Courier says .he otllce of J. C. Redman, Probate Judge, Calhoun county, presented an animated scene Monday afternoon and remind eu vine 01 a immature cnicago Divorce Court. Frank Simpson, colored. a holder of considerable valuable real estate near Gaston, died about six months a.-o, without a wilt. He stood high among the whites and there was no evidence of the slightest ripple upon the domestic waters. He left a snug insurance policy to 'my wife. Vicey Simpson." A lawyer appeared upon the scene and forbade Mr. S.vmmes, the insurance igent. paying the money upon the ground of a newly discovered wife by right of priority. The company unsympathetically proceeded to pay the money as directed. The wife, of old, then instituted legal proceeding.to oust the late widow, in showy veeds, as administratrix and heiress if the old man's broad acres. The lawyers concerned in the cas?.ire: A. H. Moss, of Orangeburg, ind A W. Holman, Mann and Stabler. of St. Matthews. The case was tard fought and the judge feels keenly the responsibility of being in arbiter in such affairs; he his reserved his decision. Such cases is this is somewhat unusual in these parts, but they bob up occasionally II.WK N A It I to tV ESCAPE. Fire Ikvlroys Many Buildings, Including Hotels. White Strings, Fin.. as mall re sort city on the St ance Kiw i, v. ;ir | practically destroyed by tire, wblcl started in the Baptist parsonage ami | spread rapidly through the iius'.iu s. district Friday afternoon. A total of twenty-eight structures, a itiajort ty of them mercantile establishments and including four large hotels, weia destroyed before the flumes biirueu out. A high wind was blowing all afternoon and the fire spread with such rapidity that the guests of one of Hit hotels were threatened and several slightly burned before they could reach a place of safety. The ubsenn of a fire department made the town helpless. Although the Lake (.'it.' department was rushed to the c ity bj special train, it was of no help on account of the absence of a water supply. The residents and visitors of White Springs have been panicstricken all night, and it is with rii" flculty that shelter is found. Manj left for adjacent cities to get accom tnodations. The damage is conservatively placed near $300,000. SAVBI) IIY SNOW. Woman .lumped Out of Window itoi Fscnpeil Injury. 'Mrs. Mary Schrader's three clill ilron, (leorge. five. Minnie, seven, and Margaret, nine, built a snow fori in the back yard of the five-story ten ement where they live. No. ISS Tenth avenue. New York. Tin i mother, of whom her neighbors say "she has be? n a hit out of her mind lately," jumped from the roof of tin tenement, struck two clotheslines it her whirling descent and landed on the yielding roof of the snow fori There she left the deep Impressfor. of her body and outstretched arms l>r. Par.lie of New York Hospital could not find as much as a hniis.. on her. Muii't. Head Cut Otr. The bod> of Willis Howell of Cam; Creek, Va , was found several mil.? from his homo iti a secluded spot b searching parties that had hoop scouriit. the mountains for him. Ii< was last seen alive two weeks ag<. when he l<-!"t home telling his wilt lie was going alter moonshiners. III.? head was completely severed from his hody and only pieces of the trunk were found Pour .\?? Dead. Four persons are dead and one dying as the result of drinking wood alcohol i y mistake at Horton, X Y. The dead are James Kelly, aged, 56; Thomas Kelly, aged 38; Mis Thomas Kelly, aged 34, and Thomas Harvey, aged 4 0. The beverage was partaken of freely at a fanii'" reunion. The liquor was flavored with peppermint. I tenth of /nicli Mctihec. Zach MctShee, Washington correspondent of tlie Columbia State, died there on Thursday of anemia, aft-r an illness of six weeks, lie was ; magazine eontributor and the author of one t.ook, "The Dark Corner.' He was ? years of age and was ome assistant Kiincrinlondoiii i\f ...i..? For the State of South Carolina Caused hy Itooa1. At N? w Orleans Andrew .1. Cum llch, aged -?>. son of a well-known commission nien liant committed suicide at his I one by Inhaling g?i-\ (lis body was found Thursday morning. Cneulie'1 had been drink.ir? ?nd was despondent over busiiie.-matters. The variou .Nrnian states maintain To s< t ( ds in horsrshoein : ivpn i-oiir-cs of iron one to six months. i ~ ~ ' CURBING CR'MF. * SOUTH CAROLINA NOT SO TKNI>KR\C1T1I CRIMINALS. i.; Many More of Them Are Cunvietisl ?\ nntt l'unighed Than is (ieiicraily Supjio^ed#., Notwithstanding the charge brought against this and other jSouthtrri States without dim consider it'on. that convictions are rare, especially in murder cases, the reports in tljq otlice of Attorney C.enersil l.ymi do' not bear this out by a great d? :i,l.. j On tin- other hand, convictions in | murder cases are frequent in this j State, and by comparison viih other Southern States, South Carolina is way in the load. As pointed out last year in this .correspondence, the peioentage was about f>" per cent. This year the number, in murder cases, hds been about 4 0 j> r rent. In the case* of manslaughter t lie re has been but .one verdict of "not guilty." according to the record and there were'5J. convictions in the year 1 910. . There .were,,,20r> murder eases in 1910 in this .State. Of this number It", "no OiiHq" were returned; t n.t .ere deelarqd t.<> he not guilty and V. were < on viewed. For man&juughter there were >2 cases, inciudiu,'. one acquittal and l convictions' Thirty cases' were hroagb' for arson. at <1 -of this' numb r o:ght convict um , were had. The convictions in cases of assault and battery, with intent to kill and aggravated assault were large, Phero | were brought 1X1 cases and 2'.M were declared "guilty:" x.l "not guilty." ant! 1 no cases were di?continued or "no bills" rendered. Tliero was tuie conviction under the Cotton Tare Act of 19 in. This was the case that went up to the Supreme Court from this county. Housebreaking convicted 2:'?r> out of 311. The good old practice of larceny caught 219 out of 2Til cases and convicted them." Out of :12 cases of criminal assault 11? convictions were secured. For violations of the dispensary law, there were 4u? cases and 2ib convictions were had. It is dangerous to disturb religious worship In (his State, for out of eight eases eight convictions were secured. AHHKSTK1) FOK Mt'ltllKlt. Two Negroes l/odged in .Ini 1 in For Killing Two Women. Two negroes were brought to Orangeburg Tuesday evening and lodged in jail charged with the murder of the old woman and her niece found in a tenant house that was burned on Mr. \Y. L. Del-lays' place in the Providence section last week. It will he renjemhered that the charred remains pf the two women were found in the ashes of the house. It now turns out that they were murdered and the house set on tin to conceal the crime. Wo do not know what proof there is that the persons committed tb?# nturd r. Or.ingeourg Times and Democrat. H i-. \ oted it Out. The Circus Owners' Association has voted that hill hoard ad. rtising is no good ayd that its members wiir use the newspapers exclusively hereafter. If tlie. hi 11 hoard dors not vivo the eircus satisfaction, wh; ! value can it have for anv on. n* ?u*> i? emphatically Is ;.n e oxne ami a public nuisance, in vari < ? other Wiiys. When the average person became able to read i'S end was near at hand. . ? ?.??. Don't* hliuiic I tiem. necause the chief of the Spartanburg fire department Ivthes his ball papa in the tiibiprovii'el l?y the ciiy for the firemen, a spir't ot discontent exists' in 'the local tiro department. .Members of the department, alleging that the dogs are dirty, noisy and a general nuisnn o, havo filed a forjnfll petition with the city council asking that they be removed. Veteran Coachman Killer. Edward Quade, for twenty-five years coachman for the Secretary of I War, w as killexl' in a runaw ay accident at Washipgton on Thursday, lie was driving Secretary Dickinsons two-year-Old ftiliriddaughtor, ilele.i I !{? (/ i no/\n 1 -J % ; ? - .... n.imuii, mm' miss minning, her governess, .both of whom, to-etiier with the footman, escaped injured. Ti-allt Wreck. More than twenty passengers wero Injured, geveynl. seriously, in the wreck of Southern Pacific train No. lit, east-hound, near Palisade, Nev., Tuesday evening. Seven of the cars left the rails and were tumbled in a confused mass of twisted s'.e< 1 and iron. liock I ell on Tlieni. At Tlirmlnghani. Ala., Frank V'hat!ev, boss .it th< Son go ore Mil. <, and Hlley Dumas, a colored r iractcr wre instant1'* killed Tt?> lay when a rock fell 011 them wh1 o hey were at the bottom of a slope.