The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 10, 1903, Image 1

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Event* of the Week In a Brief Form. Unionism Appoati. Spartanburg, Special.-? The matter ?of labor unions 4e?ms to bo dno that will confront the people of this city In the building lino In the Imme diate. future. There has been organ? Isted here a branch ot a national or* coaltatlon of bricklayers and ma* sons. Tho membership of the local or ganisation numbers about 90, the , greater being colored workmen. On July 1st they gave notice that on and after that date work hours would be changed from ten to nine hours a day, aiid that cents per hour would lie required, as usual, iQr ordinary p crknien, and prices fcl nkilled la nov els wo?ld range In proportion, so . much per hour. The strike ? of th< union men on the now Baptist chi'feh t?4 Udln? yesterday was not due t *ho contractors failing to grant the ro t action of a day's work, but to the " tick that several non union men were bltowed to work along with then\v-To sAhy tho non-union ifien worked on thl i '? uilding. '"ilust-.what will terminal" from the union of the masons and brlcklaycrs, remains to be seen. New Corporations. * """" A- comvmny has been organized in Chester for the purpose of manufac turing the "Neely Cotton Compress _r w.' Patent." This device was Invented by 8. M. Neely of Smith's Turnout and is evidently regarded ?S a good seller, for the company is to be capi talized at $100,000. The corporators ' " - are S. .M. Neely, Col. T. J. Cunning '?Vr ; liam and Major J. Hardin Marion. The company is to have heatfquar ... ters at 'Chester, and as stated in the application for the commission, will r. manufacture these compresses and .will compress cotion for shipment. Mr. Neely is' q/iito an inventive i geniua, having' devised a hay pr^ss which was a success. The 'Williams-Heath company, of McBee was chartered yesterday. S. "W. hi . K, ?Williams, vice president, and F*M. -^--^Itebleytfe ire^retSry arid treasurer.??.: ~ ; The Consolidated Financial society Of Wadmalaw Island was chartered yesterday. S/lrV- - - ' Younjc Lady Drowned. Camden, Special- -A Miss Trues del, who Uvea on factory hill and was about 24 years < f age, was drowned Jftthe factory pond Friday evening. r9he went In bathing with her two sis .tera "N&ttles' cove," and It Is sup:' poeed that she stuped off into a deep I#**, lost her footing, and not know ?v JN? >sW"to Swim, was drowned. About oar and a half elapsed after the , fatal accident \had occurred before tbebody was recovered. Dr.- Dunn did in his power to resuscitate the un fwriunat* young" girl, but all efforts were In vaJSL XfesL factory jH>nd has been used for bathing and swimming fey generations offcCamden*s residents I and t|?ts is the first time a fatal ac cident like this has taken place. Palmalto Items. ... Qaffnfiy la to have a third cotton roll! to be located north of town, on^ the Southern railroad, near the overhead bridge, just out of town. It will be known as the Louise mill. Mr. E. R. Cash Is the promoter who de serves the credit for this how entor prise. It is an assured thing. Mr. J. C. Jefferies made application several ? dayaagufor a charter toJr t^ Th^ cqr- 1 porators are Messrs. E. R. Cash, J ~C x Jefferlee, P. O. 8tacy. H. D. Wheat, . J. G.. Wardlaw, G, P. Hamrlck. W. L. ~ . f&LtUeniyer Of Qaffney. C. D. Eikin and O. 3. Falls of Kings Mountain, and D. A. Tompkins of Charlotte. The mill la to be eaifttalized at $200,000 and Will be about the size of the Lime Jtma mill. j - Iff- Jajnes Wilson, one of Ander-j son's oldest residents and & most wwfMaj died at his home IMfcf thft city limits late Wednesday ~ ? wight. Mr^ifrllaon wia* in his 70th year and had lived here all nhj life. He entered the . Confederate service Wtih the first volunteers at the 5dt ItfWUcVflf the war and at the reorganl Ration became a momber or the Rdt ledgeMQuntedftlfle* No more raith f?] and no bravfcr soldier served in the Confederacy than Mr. Wilson, the war he haa been a quiet, un it* dtisen, and haa enjoyed the mce and esteem of alt who. Mas. Tfca new battery of kllna at tho lime ' u completed. Thes? kllna are the aonUuJMig made af f%a capacity of . rn- H9r bvrieis pet^-aoq elthar cost* or wood and ? la tha use of <3? A. . , li-i 1> '^lUt B v , " II Matter T nrk PALMETTO CROP BULLETIN Moat Favorable Bulletin Issued By I the Department This Season. Tho week ending 8 a. m., Monday, July 6t)i had a mean temperature of about 81 degrees, which is 1 degree above the normal. Tho <day tempera tures ranged from 8$ to degrees, and the nights from <68"t6c7& degrees, both very favorable for crop growth and de velopment. There was about the usual amount of sunshine. ,The winds were light, and generally southerly. The rel ative humidity averaged above the par mal. At the beginning of the week the ground was thoroughly soaked by the rains at the close of the previous week, and ^here \yere light scattered showers on the 2nd and again on the laat day, but the ground was generally dry enough to permit cultivation after the 1st of July, with tho exception of very low lying lands, and whore the rainsH on the 2nd were heaviest. A few local" lties need rain, but generally the soil is well supplied with moisture. Hail that damaged tobacco fell In Horry county. With the exception of Isolated and limited lcalltie^ where the ground la still too wet to work, the week was the most favorable of the season on all crops, and afforded opportunity to clean fields of grass and weeds, and give them much needed cultivation, al though complaints of grassy fields con tinue to be received from all parts of the State. The warm, humid weather, and the moist condition of the soil, were conditions conducive to growth, and all crops responded, except on light soils that have been leached by the excessive rains of June, and crops that have not been properly cultivated. The hot weather, following the heavy rain fall, scalded corn and cotton in ports of Hampton county,. Old corn has about all been laid by, and is earing well. Young corn ha6 a good color generally. On replanted bot tom lands, corn Is coming up to gcojJ stands. * Cotton continues small, an**6n light soils Ib yellow, but'generall/ It has a better color than heretofore , and isx growing rapidly. Lice have about dis appeared. Some fields are blooming frceely, In the eastern part of tho State, but in other- parts, blooming is not yet general, and many flelds^haVe not put on,, any squares. Clean/fields are tlk exception. ' Tobacco curing is In progress in all sections. The crop has Improved re cently, -except , where . previous?heavy, rains caused Irreparable -damage. RM Is not doing well generally. .Peaches and grapes are rotting exten sively, and the fruit crop is less prom ising than heretofore. Melons . ara small and late. Minor crops, pastures and gardens are excellent^ The hay crop promises to be heavy. ? J. W. Bauer, Section Director. ' People Feel Uneasy. Norway, Special. ? John T. Phillips, lhe,flWsC<Afederato soldier, who was shot five^ times while at UIb supper table by , the negro Charles Kvans, lynched for the crime, diedohejro Sun day morning at 6:50 o'clock, after hav ing suffered mortal agony for ^ hut-lit tle less than a Week. That ho lived ?o long is considered by the physicians of this place but little short of a miracle. Three of the wounds auuiiu istered. jJyp*?lhe negro fiend were said by the physicians to be fatal/aan^hdw ilie jld mutt managed to ttto a!i ttiat time has puseqled jthe doctors not a little. \y Just what effect. thp passing away of Mr. Phillips Vill have on the al ready very much strained situation here it Is difficult to say. Conserva tive residents of .this section have .been .hdijing . against hope that he ^Would liva at least a few days longer, believing that/ Jf, he did not die Just, now tho conditions here would adjust themselverf. Now that the end has (?ome the reeling of anxiety and un easiness has increased and there arc many persons hereabouts who wear more trouble. Tho massing of the negroes at Fond yesterday and their open threats on the Huttos and other persons in this vicinity have mado matters wprBt; and the local merchants . say they will regard it as exceedingly for tunate if they are able to pass iafely through the ordeal necessarily conse quent upon the old man's funeral. The presence of the Richland Volunteers here last night and this morning, of course, acted a?~a forcible preventive on afty move that the negroes pro pose to carry out-4n- lieu - -of- their threats. It was with no iHtle-rogret that the * 'Wagers saw the troops depart and th*y did not hesitate to say that they feared additional trouble would en sue K Capt: Haskell withdrew his men*. Assistant AdJntant General Pat rick, however, explained that now that Sheriff DOkes was on the ground It looked Uke a reflection on him for the troops to rtmaifo as he was ostensibly able to cope with the difficulty and ar rest the ringleaders among the. ne groes who hadmade the threats. .?$? This explanation did not exactly, sat iirfy the Norway people and they showed their anxiety In more ways than. QWU Assistant Adjniant General PB^tclTdld m* 4fii*k the troops would be required on tt? ground any longer an d ? it was quits a material ex pemt^tc the State It was decidcd tc withdraw thorn. t. ? iwi mmwrn*. at. Lonis, flpeclsl? Wm. Randolph, of Union. Mou, who hes Veen confined In - . ' ? several mont&s on wr Wry dfT^XflhQflK^ tilt ifty 20 PEOPLE DROWNED ? * ???* ? ?? ?? ? Merry-Go-Round and Ojher Amuse* ment Places Tvrt$ted About. A PARK SWEPT BY A CLOUDBURST The Park, t.ocatcd In a Deep Ravine, Was Thronged With Sunday Visi tors. Qreensburg, Pa., Special. ? A water* spout of Immense proportions struck In the vicinity of Oakford Park, at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon, and created a flood that caused great loss of life and property, It is known that at least twenty persona lost' their 'lives and ru mors place the numbery^jLead at more than one hundred, but up to a late hour only three or four bodies have been recovered, having been washed to the banks of the little creek that runs parallel with the park. The names of those known and believed to have been drowned are: Miss Gertrude Keefer, aged 19, of Jeanette; Edward O'Drien, of I^atrobe, an employo of Rrown Ketcham Company; Joseph Overly, of Indianapolis, employed by IJrown-Ket cham Company; Lucy Crum, of Jea nette; Councilman Light, wifo and two children, of Grefensburg. At 3 o'clock rain began to fall in torrentB in the vicinity of the park, and spread over territory covering probably ten miles, A half-hour later the cloud-burst occurred. The waters in the lake north of Oakford Park be gan to rise and Manager Jamos Mc. Grath, believing there wa3 danger of a final break In the great walls of the dam hurried among the crowds of pleasure seekers, who bad gathered under the ^roofs of the eating stands, the dancing pavilion and other buildings In line of the water, should the banks break, and warned them to run to the hills. A half-hour after the bulldlngj had been cleared of the people, the waters mounted the wall of the dam and with in five jninut.es water seven feet deep was flowing over the entire length of four hundred feet of the wall. isi^ jg.gffljyn mSKP*. , fgoggL ?Uk Ik* WHl i? IW ?mnw-i, ?*~^ ' *~J" - ^ j ^ - - ~?M^I'~i~ i Hair a mile down, at the juncture of tbe Greensburg and Jeanette, the park ^car .ba*na m located^- -The fcatraace gates to the park Were lifted and with thelorce of a pile driver the mammoth posts were hurled by tho waters against the basin. Beyond were loca ted the small waiting-room and on the track was standing a car laden with people on the, it 5?y frpm Greensburg and Jean et/te. fra^^j^tric storm had rendered tie power south of here use less and ttye motorman was unable to m4H|i, the car. Tho flood struck the waiting-room, containing probably a dosen people. A number of them strug gled to a point o-f safety, but in the ex citement that followed it is impossible to say how many were lost. The street car was swept into the creek. A num ber oi the people' in the car jumped imd .there are conflicting stories aj to the number of persons who were car ried with the car. Among those who vere Fashed into the flood was C. M. McClaln, of Greensburg; Edward O' Brien and Joseph Overly and Misses Krefer and Crum. * The. names of the women are floj kl-own, It 1b believed that ten people, who were in the car were drowned. Standing on the platform ne?r the waltinjg-romn were a man and his wile, whoso names have not been learned. .When the'flood came they were carricd away, it is thought. It is said that the couple redded at Jeanettc... It was tt o'clock when the first messenger bcar . J?g the news of the catastrophe reach ed Greensburg. ..Oftk ford Park is > summer resort, about a mile east of Jeanette. Women and children arc known to have been there this aftepioon. Just how many lost their livee is not known. The re ports are conflicting and rua frcm 2!> to 100. The damage done by the cloud bUTSt Jn . the vicinity of Greensburg will not be less than $200,066. . '4 Pops Leo Dying. Rome, By Cable. ? The condition of ^ope Leo XIII which has bpen critical for several days was reported at 6:30 j Tuesday morning as practically hope less. The a'.tendliyl8^ physicians have kept His Holiness alive by the use <5f strong stimulants. His death is hour ly expected. Elg clood i? Trxas. San Antonio. Tex., Special. ? A cloudburst Thursday caused the death of a number of persons and en talt#i a heavy property loss. No accurate re ports of the loss of life can be obtain ed, as the telegraph wires are down in the storm-swept section, but enough Is known to warrant the belief that at least twe^iy people, mostly Mexican laborers and farm hands, perished In the flood. At Beevllle one Mexican was swept away: NearNormana ten Mexi can* farm hands are reported drowned an? twslre mora are raid to ha vf Wen dro WBUt srr Fett us. The heaviest dam agfvwas ^ustained by the San Antonio it Arkansas Pass Railroad. Several larsre btldyi was swept away. SOUTHERN INDUSTRI AL Ocorgla Wool Orowers. Dispatches from Tlfton, Ua., state that the wool-grower* of Berrien, Worth and lrwln eountle? met In 1".* ton last week and disposed of the clip for this year. Buyers from Albany, Valdosta und Savannah wore present, and for u while the bidding was sylr Itod. Nearly 20,000, pounds were on the market, and it was Anally sold to A. Klirllch & Bro. of Savannah at 21.58 per pound, netting the growers over $3000. This g<Ue of wool did not contain that of the growers of Colquitt county. They were somewhat behind this year in baling theirs, and will not sell be foro about July 10. The Colquitt grow ers have txwiethlng like 40,000 pounds for sale, and will get the bid for the different firms by wire on the date they fix for the said. Text* Wool Shipments. A dispatch from Lampasas, Texas, statea that a shipment of 400 000 pounds of wool will be mado from there riext week, requiring a solid tiain to carry It to Galveston for ship ment to Boston. W. P. Darby made the sale, getting seventeen eonts nV>t for tho ,^tbck ho had on hand. There are still about 200,000 pounds In tho warehouse, and it is expected that this wjll be disposed of within a short timo at about the same price. The anticipated sale at San Angelo las not yot taken place. There seems :o bo some disagreement among the' iwnors a? to the method of selling, .he original plan being to sell tho en tire stooJc in bulk. This stock is roughly estimated at 1,750,000 pounds. Somo of the owrnjrs seem to think they can make betjjer terms by deal ing privately with the buyers, but this Is doubted. The Kerrvllle stock of 400,000 pounds has been shipped, fend tho stock at Brownwood, Hamilton and Encinal have been disposed/ of, and the sheepmen have dopo wen on their spring clip. [ New Woollen mils. Tho large woolen mill to be cstab hed at Spray, N. C., and recently re ferred. to, wW- be built by the Spray. Woolen Mills, organized with B. Frank Mebano, president, and A. E. Millner. treasurer. A two-story building 75x275 feet in.slze Is now being erected, the plans for it havt^been furnished by Messrs. O. A. RobblmTTT'Co., mill en gineers, of Charlotte, N. C. The equip ment will be "a four-set mill" consist ing of 2600 mule spindles and sixty blanket looms for the production of blankets and slasher cloths. It is stated that the machinery has not been pur chased yet. This enterprise Is being lo cated in connection with the various other textile plants controlled by Mr. Mebane and associates. Thp/tonarch Enlargements. Machinery for the additional Instal lations .of the Monarch ? Cotton Mills has begun to arrive at Union. 8. C. within Sixty days 14,000 spin dies nnd a7c looms *111 iiin jisiltJjjn and ready, for operation. This equipment is a por tlon of the 2^000 ? spindles and 640 looms announced last fall as to be added, and for which; with additional buildings, etc.," the capital was*,, ipv creased. This new miff structure^ is 135x400 feet in size, and when entirely filled with machinery will hold 40,000 spindles and 1000 looms. Contract for the electrical wiring of tho addition has just been awarded to a Southern company, Messrs. i/ockwopd, Greene & Co. of Boston, Mass., are the engineers in entire charge. tj** ' Textile Notes. ' The Marie Mills of Gaffney, S. C.. Incorporated, with capital of J^-000, nnd privilege of increasing to 5200,000. The Incorporators are Messrs ?* S?6 * F- ?- Wheat, J- G: Wardlaw, a. P. Hamrlck. J. C. Jeffries and W. L. Scttlemler of Ottff r v?S' Cia ?* Fafls and C. S. Elam of Kings Mountain, N. C.'; D. A. Tomp kins of Charlotte, N. C., and R. B. Hopkins of ftaltimore, Md? in accoraance wun tne pian rexerreu to last wee^r, the Lowe Manufaeturing Co. and thfc Eastern Manufacturing Co. of Huptsvllle, Ala., have consolidated ind will continue as the. Lowe Manu facturing Co. It was reported recently that extensive additions are planned for th* two mills, which have hereto fore been under the same management in <J ownership, although separate cor porations. The new organization has placed It* authorised capital at $2,000, 900. New Eng\and capital controls the enterprise. The Augusta (0a. V factory has de clared Its usual semi-annual dividend >1 8 per cent. Strickland Cottpn Mills, Valdosta, Pa.. haa declared a 3 per cent semi tnnual dividend r ' ? .7?"* C? Manufacturing CoJ Its usual Mml-annual M Mil. A GOOD TALK Booker Washington Says Lynching is Not Se^lionalj SPEECH BEFORE \JJEGRJ)) EDITORS Noted Mrgro Educator Addresses An Immrnae Audience and Counsels tils People to Patience. IjouIw vliio, Special. ? Bofore iui lm mouse audienco Hooker T. Washing ton, head of tho Tuskeege.i Institute, Thursday night delivered an addreaa. He said that rocent regrettable events In connection with tho race question went to show that lynch law is not confined to any ono section of the country. Those events, he said, load to sympathy with tho raco problem by making it nattonnl. He appealed to the negro to bo calm and exorcise self-control. Among tho othor speakers was W. H. Lewis, assistant district attorney of Massachusetts, who was appointed soveral months ago by President Roosevelt. Principal Washington said In part: "In tho present season of (tnxioly and almost of despair which poBse-sses an element of the rare there are two things I wish to Ray as strongly as 1 may: "fc'irstj let no man of tho race bo discouraged or hopeless. There are In this country, North and BoutBfc men who mean to see that justico is' meted out to tho raco. BucJj^ji man Is Judgo Jones, of Alabama, to whom more credit should bo gly*n for blot ting out tfre Infamous system of peon age than to any other man. "Second, let us keep before as tho fact that, almost without exception every race or nation that has ever got upon Its feet has done so through strugglo and trial and persecution. ^ "No one should seek to close eyes to the fact that tho race tb pass ing through a very serious and trying period of Its development, a period that calls^/for tho- uso of our rlpost thought find sober judgment. "Ijet iwthlng lead ub into extremes or utter jmee~ or '~ficlloh. Tt'TSTS "ITie*1 long riiij the race ; or the Individual I that exetcises the eiost patience, for* toearancdytinfl eelf-cOntror tn tho midst of tryltVg conditions that Wins its cautte. Let nothing ttiduce tts to d? Bcend .to the level of the mob. In ad* locating tnis policy I am not asking that the negro act the coward; we are not cowards. The part we have played In defending the flag of our. country is Bufllciont evidence of our courage. "The outbreak of the mot* em phasizes two lessons, one for our race and one for tho other citizens of our country, South and Worth; for it la tor mr noted that the work of the lyncher is not confined to one section of tho country. Tho lesson for us la that we should see to it that so far* as . the influence of parent, school or-pttJH pit Is concerned, no effort be spared | to impress on our own peopl? that Idleness and crime, should, ceaaa, We should lot the world know _ on all proper occasions that we consider no legal punishment too severe for the wretch of any race who attempts to Outrage a "woman. "Thewlesson for the other portion of. the nation to lean. l? that both in the making and In the execution the same laws should be made to apply to the negro as the white man. "There should bo meted out equal justice to tho black roan and the white man. Whenever the nation for gets, or is tempted to forget, Its basic principle, the whole fahric of govern* ment for both the white man and the black man Is threatened with destruc tion. This Is trtie whether It relates to conditions in Texas, Indiana ' or. Delaware. It la with a nation as with an individual; whatever 'we sow, that shall wo alao reap. If w? soar crime we shall reap lawlessness." Y, A r reigned For Trtfcl. Washington, Special.? August W. Machen. a gal net. whom three indict' ments have been found -for accepting a irlbe jn connection with government .| contracts for letter box fasteners, wa? arraigned before Justice Prltchiard in Criminal Court No. 1. He waived the formal reading^of the indictment, pleaded not gul\ty*4?4k was given, until July 20 to file a demurrer, should La 1 wish to do so. The Qroff Brother#, who were indicted with Machen. ap peared In eourr and pleaded gnmy~Tt was snnounced that Machen and the Groffs would be tried at the fall term of the court, their cases being taken up In the regular order. The fall term begins in October and contlnuea sever al months. > -v Utttt WtvUli Arrest* d. Washington. Special. ?General Cor bln baa received a telegram from Gen eral Bates, commanding the Depart ment of the Uakes, saying that Ueat. William P. McCmre had b?*n -placed aider arrest ai BhseU dan. His investigation ? of-thr ttm thus far tends to confirm the cfcfj'cee of bigamy made .against McCure. but he alao says there arc WIKiKiiH tMt McCure Is not sane. The dlepaUh la# been aent to j&eaeral Cfcaffetfar W lWff|cM?w^er; ? N*w * - Or leans LIVE ITEMS OF N^WS, ' Many Matters ol General Interest in Short Paragraphs. Down in Dixie. A number of persons, mostly Mexican farmhands, are reported killed by u i loud-burst in Southwestern Texan. A large force of negroes was reported ab surrounding tbo village of Norway, S. C., threatening vengeance for a lynching and troops wero hurried to the a pot from Columbia. While crossing Mobile river In a Hklff, G. 8. Orndorff and throe ne groes wer?* drowned by a squall over turning the boat. Other workmen In the Hklff had narrow escapes, , Orn dorff was a natlvo of Nashville, Total. These candidates for the Naval Academy have passed the mental and physical examinations and have been admitted rb midshipmen: William T. Smith,, Virginia; O. O. Dlekman, Georgia; H. C. Fry, North Carolina; W. II. Ia?o, North Carolina; C. J* Wright. Georgia. At The National Capital. Members of Congress theaten to t>rlng up before both houses tho Kis eheneff massacre If Russia refuses to, r-ecelvo tho American pctlttqj). British North America Imported ibQUt $12(5.000.000 worth of goods from Ihc. United States last year. The Federal grand Jury indicted A. W. Machon, Dlller B. and Samuel A. IrolY and George K. and Martha J. Ix>ren7. for alleged conspiracy to de fraud the Government in connection with the purchase <jf fasteners. President Iloosevelt has removed Daniel II. McMillan as a judge of tho ftfew Mexican Supremo Court and ap pointed C. C. Smith, of Michigan, In displace. ? ? ?? - At The ^jMorth. Tl.ie Philadelphia Mint the last fiscal ccar broke all records for coinage, Many lives were lost and vast dam ige was done by n cloudburst and flood it Jeannette, Pa. George P. Hossey, colored, charged with the murder of William G. Danzc, was put on trial in Philadelphia. The Hammond packing plant at St. Joseph, Mo., valued at $8,000,000, was burned, with nearly a total loss, / ? John Donehue, a sculptor, of New Vork. committed suicide at- Whitney-4 vllle. Conn., and his body was Identi fied by a friend. A British naval Bquedron, under. Ad talhed at IJar Harbor this week. Mrs. Warren Thorpe and her daugh ter, Pearl McDonald, were arrested on a charge of murdoring Warren Thorpe it Jackson. Mich. Judge Klrkpatrtck heard testimony It Trenton, N. J., on tho application for a receiver for the United States Shipbuilding Company. Wtldoa <J*, From Acrot* Thf 5fS, Violent debates coucernlng the canal treaty took place in the Colombian Senate, at Bogota. W* JC. JVanderbilt, Jr? while repair-. Ing bis automobile on a road neat Par is, was badly burned by an explosion 07 gasoline. f%; ? The last sacrament of- the - ehurch were administered to Pope Leo XIII, who Is critically ill of pneumonia in Rons?. - - . - Benor Augusto F. Pulido, Vehesue land Charge d' Affaires at Washington , was appointed secretary of the Wga- , just been appointed Minister.*' The European Squadron of the United States will visit Portsmouth, England, this week and an elaborate prggram of entertainment has been ar ranged with the idea, as reported, of outdoing the Germans in hospitality. Miscellaneous Hatters. ? - Five hundred tons of exhibits for the St. I^ouls World's Fair were ship ped from Manila, P. I. Dr. M. L, Margolin advocated hefq the conference of Jewish rabbis adoption of s-new creed - Jews. Senator A. J. Hopkins, of Illinois, declared it was a shame that , the Southern States sent no m&ro negroes to Congress, and that they would stand disgraced until they sent thep. The treaties granting the United States naval and coaling stations and giving Cuba the Isle of Pines were for mally signed In Havana. . i A Chinaman and & negro carried o$ the highest honors at the commence ment of the Yale Law School. Two of a party of Colorado convicts who Trae-ir the warden'^ wtro as a shield to break from prison were mortally founded. ?- r " ? , The trustees of the McKlnfey Memo rial Aasociation met In 8enator Han na'a office in Cleveland and announced that of tin $000,000 needed for the memorial ?t Canton, Ohio, about $500, 000 ifod been raised. The Mississippi Election Board has ordered a primary for August ? to A*- , eide upon a Senator. Ummtm. Money | 111 <3 iAmliDO Wlflf U*8 CTOuuaAUW, : - ? ? - - j * ? ? rr -? - - 1 1 n i i ,ii ?? The Canard steamship 'Hne Issued a Statement giving iu mwos for wit** 23 PEOPLE KILLED Passenger and Freight Collide on the Southern Railway ? FEARFUL WRECK AT ROCKFISH,VA. freight Conductor Overlooked Hhi Orders and a frightful Crash Will the Result. Washington, Special. ? T wenty three personafyero killed and nine Injured in a boat! -on rollluion on tho Virginia ? ? Midland division of tho Southern Rail* way. at Kockflsh. Va. at 12 minutes af ter 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Pas- ? - "rvn scngor train No. 35, (or Atlanta* daHhod Into loc-al.freigM W9r W*. M Btanding on tho main lino of tho road j r.t that point, wrecking both ongines :r and tho baggage and express car? Of ? -? No. 35. The baggage car and the uecond-elass coach Immediately fol lowing it teloacoped. Tho coach wis /jS;" occupied moatly by colored people. Tho casualties tl^is far reported |p detail aro aw follows: - ^ Killed: Kngincor J)avls and Kin* ginecr McCormick, who was riding aa a pasHcnger on No. (58; a colored fire man on No. (!8# 'rr?X. -is ? ' V ? ??>. Cotton Improving. " Wa fill ?ngt on, Special >... mmx+ri Bureau's summer repo lion of crop# says: 0 jrU*d growth throng] belt, an Improvement all dl?tric|g; thefetffiWS Unas and Georgia l*tt icdded advanffmeat. ivrvw