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, VOLUMB XX. i m i NO. 51. Latest News. BY WIRE. Wife Held For Murder.* New Albany, Tod. ? Mr*. Pearl Ai m. "trong, charged with tho murder ol her hurband, Ccorgo Armstrong, was bound over to the Grand Jury with out bond after a iK'elimjnary examin ation. v Saloon Flement Win*. Hatleton, Pa.? -The voters of Wont Jjazleton held a special election to do c da the nnpstlon of annexation to Ha zleton. The ?aloon element and the polltldrns wcro arrayed against each other, the former winning by a ma jority of Bevcntec-j out of a total voto of r^7. ?rriaeo For Municipal Car TJne. 6 San Francisco, Cal ?After declar ing agHlnst munlclpall v owned and operated street railroads three times In fivrt yearn, voters of this city, at a sppcial bond election, registered their will decisively In favor of tho project. Heading Crazes Mother. Cincinnati, Ohio. ? Tt Is declared that Mrs. Ma'vy Llpp, who set fire to her home and attempted to throw, two of her children Into the flames, and wan herself severely Injured, had sud denly become crazed after reading of a murder. Merchant Dies In Street. . Iloston. ? J. Mason Maresn, presi dent of the Pilgrim Rubber Company, of this city, collapsed In Cambridge while wnitlng for a street oar nnd died within a few minutes. IIo was sixty-two years old. Are Granted Trial Divorce, Hammond, lnd. ? A trial rtlvnroft was grouted here in the case of Will iam and Mary Wohole by Judge V. S. Richter, of tho Circuit Court. If tho couple become reconciled tho couplo must wait five years to be remarried. Fishing Schooner Forfeited. Vancouver, B. C. ? Tho American * fishing schooner Charles T. Wood-i bury, seized April IS, In the Scott Isl and group by the Government steam er Keptrel, was forfeited to the Crown in the Admiralty Court for Qshlng ' within tho three-mile limit. Small Cut Causes Death. Northrmuton. Mass. ? \ sntuH cut accidentally Inflicted with a scissors j bis thumb, on December 19. has i reunited In the (lea'h from li'ood poi soning of Dr. Alfred II. HcaJlcy, a lo cal ohysiclan. J Lircoln's haw Oilice Hum?. Danville, 111. ? The old WPr nu revim where President I.ln?oln had bis ofllce when he was riding the cir cuit a3 an attornev was destroyed by tire. Tho museum contained m&ny valuable relics, among ihem a num ber of shells, which exploded in the fire, Father of Cartel TJyroe Dies. Duf.'alp, N. Y. ? ColonfT John r.yrne, a former Ciiiel! cf Po'.Ioe of ibis city, died as the result c' - ~'roke of apoplexy. Colonel Byrn" ? the father of Eugene B'rnc, t' West Point cadet, who died recenlfy from injuries recclycu in a football game. Colonel Howe Nov; a General. Washing! v.\ D. C. ? Colonel Walter Howe, of the Coast Artillery. v.fas r>ade a brig*dier-general, succeeding Cenoral V/. S. Kdgerly, who retired., ?,*ew Head of Dominicans. Washington, D. C. ? The Rev. Mat. t hew L. Heagon, prior of the Domini can House of Studies here, haw been elected provincial of the Dominican rvder It th<? United Stales, and hia ~ election has bcSn conftrracu r.t Rome. BV CABLE. Dukc's Pon In line], London. ? Karl Percy, elderi nml direct heir or (ho ,Du*:c of Northum berland, < T I c* uni!:>~ peculiar circum stances In Paris, indicating a duel, I ;;* l.'o'h nljyslclana an>' pollco ar.id dcr. !'j v.t.s Cue to natural causca. Taken r.s SJnycr, Knds I.ife. Paris. ? \rrc3t?d hereon the ^'.lar^ft of murderins t *'o persinc In Hussi?. an engineer Guplweirch, e vrd Ing tli? visllcnco of ('no dctec*t!vcp, succeeded in kwo llov:lng u dose of 'jVufs.'c acl^. Ho C.'.oO. slier Jy after. General Kdunvds Tnjul'ctJ. San .Tuan, Po;-;o Itico.. ? Brigadier G-""?ral Olr.renco R. Ectvrvdc, Chief of (ho Bureau of Insular Affair?, wn3 hurt at tbc reception to General Ed .waiv'.g and Secretary of War Dickin son. Colonel llowze took the General outside tho mansion (o show him where a wall was crumbling. In the darkness General Edwards missed his footing and fell down a flftcen-foot embankment. Chamberlain Atrafnst Home Utile. London . ? In an address to the elo* forj, of West Birmingham, JosepS ChamberJMn aazerted that home rule for Ireland oa promised by the Liber als would not only injure tho friends of England there whose Interest* wire safeguarded by the present con trol, but the danger to all would 1>? greater since Great Britain was now threatened by foreign Rations as nev er before. $180,000 to Krljrtaen Par In. Paris. ? The Chamber of Deputle* voted authorisation to Iho TarU Mu nicipality to contract for a loan of $1"80,04>0 for tbo demolition of un sanitary quarter*, thr construction ut new strcc.c, sardens f.sd schools. r*rJj? Tancera WJ.it Clrlkf. - - strr.ro cf C*o facers *ln - tie oytni'a knllcl ! r.i tudrj by t ie promlae of r?o directors (o ro*?t the majority c>: the ilalnu pel up by th?? WORST MEAT EATEN HERE; DESTPROBUCT GOES AWAY Fau'e;al Inspection Drives Die ecseii 0ntl3 to Local f/larkat., MANY CITIES NEED WORE PC.UF Over One riiJIlon An!mnli Com Oemncri During Wur An??>i?fz tlx HO, 000, 000 IimpuctrA ? Sanit urj Conditions Un<l "Washington, D. C: ? That half <h< meat eaten lin the United Statei Is uninspected, and that a real and serious danger to. tUo public as u result, la one of the conclusion! reached by Dr. A. D. Melvln, Chlel of the United Statofc Bureau of Ani mal Industry, In his annual report to the Secretary of Agriculture. Inefllclency of the Government In spection beeaaa^ of Its lack of author ity to reach business done entirely within a State Is given as one of the causes, and Dr. Melvin points out the great need of supplementing the Gov ernment lnspectlos* of nit'ats with 5taiv and munlciual Inspections. One result of the Federal Inspec tion Is to cause the diversion of dis eased and suspicious looking animals to the unlnspectod establishments, where they are slaughtered for the local mar 'Krt; tho best meat goes away, rays tho report. "Many cities have tin Inspection eer vlco, but vary few have an adequate force, and tho Inspection often con sists of merely examining the meat as altered for sale In the markets, when It is usually Impossible to detect, dis ease, tho evidence of which may have been removed with the vlsc:ra or or gans," Bav(i Dr. Melvln. 'As a rule, sanitary conditions are eery bad at -uninspected slaughter houscr. and in order to provide real protection against diseased or un wholesome meat a competent veterin ary and sanitary inspection at the time of slaughter la essential." Notwithstanding the efforts to give 1 competent Jnsnectlon, the service ias been unjustly rttaoked, the re port asserts. Thp incident at East 5t. Louis Is recalled and Dr. Melvin ?ays the charges there had their foun Ir.tlou <n animus and not in fact. "Such Instances." says D\ Melvin, 'should be sufficient to show that jredence should not bo pVacad in ve oorts reflecting against tho meat in ipectlon." In a force of 2f>00 perso"i en gaged In lnsr>ectin?: meat, D \ .Melvln ?ayp, it would not be unusual if eom6 jna were found unworlh'*. All men ire liable to ^rrora In judgment, and" ;onsidorlns the immense amount of meat Inspected, If It should happen hat meat which 3hould ,be condemned were passed, the amount W3s such an nflnlteslmal nart of the ent're quan :lty that It did ;io^. affect the valuo: ind the Integrity of the c:rv!co as a whole. , More than CH. 000. 000 n~lmal.; ^'ere inspected at the time of slao-jlite" luring the tlscal vear just closed, and nore than 1,000.000 were r ihdemned in whole o-1 in. part. On reinspection nore than 23,000,000 pounds of meat !ind m^af products were condemned vhlch had become unwho'psoma since ! inspection at the time of slaughter. The Jnsuectlon aerv'ce had an ap propriation of SS.OOO.OOO to do busi ??ess on during tho year, and cpsut IS2.8S4.COO. XlfiTlT I?I DEXl WITNESS* r.LWX. Wnn Xecdrd in a Cape flrt Tor Trial If SI>ot From Ambush. Mobile. Ala. ? Jr.mr-, Mh'dietop. n 'arn-.er D"d c. witness in r. nieht rider trse s^t fev trip' in the Federal coirt, jit s shot md killed from nmbur.".: UC2V ii? I'omo in "Raldwln Coi>r>t'\ The case ia which Middlemen was :o he r. witness was ntairst sir p-om ;:iea4 ?<*?:?, siid to havx killed sheep 3e'r,nsl,,~ to A. Comstock. Com^lrpk wr.s visited rne n!e;ht by i sir^U hand of rrs!;cd men. who :o!d bin to l~-ve the community or le would he hilled. ron-.'tofl: reported tho visit to the red0"?! authorities. Mlddletcr, r.t> !OVd''"t ! o (ho Fedcrrl DMriot Attor ney, i(!t;;l!IiC'J th 2 r.l!cg:d night rid* us. DTUVKH ONCE: r.icn xow. W.lliar* MrC ov, Chicago Hold ICcrpcr, Quits IlusinesK. Chicago, 111.? -From driver of a t>i';ery wagoa at 510 a week to re i ? Millionaire is the transition of \V i 111 ?? m McCoy,* who hsi just turned jve ? the hotel property that for twen qp-fve years boro his name to the Victor'* Hotel Company. On his arrival In Chlcr.go T.om Ire land about forty years ago Mr. Me- I Hoy obtained employment as a driver. \ few yen-s later ho engaged in the llverv business, which gave him his start c \ the road to wealth. About thirty years ago he went into the hotel business an3 V/S3 succasBful from IJie start. ? ? . ? EIG T our. LIMITED WRECKED. ?r>??Vrr r nnfl Fireman Tnjpre?l Fatal* ly on Knickerbocker Train, Mnncle, Ind.-? Big Four train ffo, 1S, the Knickerbocker Limited, was ?v*cked by strlkinga defective switch itear Anscnla. Ohio. John Myers, the tnglneer. o I Bellafoatalnev Ohio, and 1 he fireman wero injured fatally \loco of the passengers was hurt. Judge Found Dead Hi Bad. Wartia Bell, reeldent Judge of the Blair County courts, tr?s found dead m bed at his home in Holiidaytburg, ] fca. Dealh was caused by a heart af fection. Judge Bell ft-aa alxty-tw<? Tears old. - 0 Lyir ? u v i 11^ ^ ItKflrfay Em nTo/civ' Demands. j > Di-.naadj c2 the eraylayes for coa* foreu^es > on wage increase* weri ?] jerved 03 Ihlfly-itro Er^Uffr *all Mm and J 9 rears* ?t a* ? lats :<& tho official* to agree, ii : TMX KILLS SPENCER TRftSK Flying Freight Crashes Into Montreal Express. Vlcdm Was or i Ills Way (o Ne-,v York Oily From ilis Saratoga Estate ? -Pullman* iimlly Smashed. Croton, N. V-.- Spencer Troik, ?>t Saratoga, tlio banker, philanthropist and natron n* art, ::r>nlor partner In tho firm of Spencer Trask ft Co., In William street, Nf.v York Oily, was killed instantly, orunv>lcd up in the drawing room of tho Escort, the end car of tho Montreal IS*; proa:-. Mr Tragk was tho only person killed. Three wero ^hurt? two Pullman car porters and Charles Slmu jon, a young man from Brooklyn. The Pullman cars wero smashed He was the flnt financier to recog nize tho commercial value of electric ity aa applied to transportation. It was to him that Thomas Ed'son came when struggling for reopgnltlo". At first, like other?, Mr. Trask failed to see the future of the new motive pow er, but once convinced of its utility ho gave to Edieon the needed financial backing to make his dreams a reality. Once the connection was formed I the irventor and the banker became partners in many other enterprises. ! Mr. Trask assisted in establishing the Edison business in New York and Brooklyn, and he was also intrested in the Edison illuminating business j throughout the country. He wbb one of the original trustees and for many years one of the Ececutlve Committee of the General Electric Company. Mr. Trask was well known as an art connoisseur. ... He was an active member of the Municipal Art Society of New York City, a former president of the National Arts Club, and his home In tjavntoga contained many art treasures His estate. Yaddo, is con sidered one of the most, beautiful in the country. Upon its site once stood the famous Dutch roadhouse of Meln herr Barhydt, a resort near Saratoga Springs favored by- the presence of Presidents, Daniel Webster, Edgar Allan Poe and other celebrities. It is modeled after Haddon Kali, tho his- , toric English residence. TO STOP FOOD GAMBLING. New York Cotton Exchange Inquiry Has Dcc.'dcil President Taft. ^ Washington, D. C. ? Gambling in futures formed the subject of a conference h??ld at the White House. President Taft proposes to arrive rtt a means of preventing an unnecessary amount of stock market trading in future deliveries of wheat, corn, cot ton and other products. The President has invited a num ber of officials to confer with him on the subject, among them Secretary of State Knox. Attorney-General Wlck ersham. Representatives Scott and Covering, and Commissioner of Cor porations Herbert Knox Smith. The Cotton Exchange in New York City and like bodies in othor cities have been subjected to a close in quiry by the Commissioner of Cor porations. Incidentally the Federal authori ties have made inquiries as to Ram bling in futures as a general propo sition. with the result that decision has been reached that the Federal Government should dqal with thlB question. PITCHIILENI) MASS IN COLORADO Runs J?."? Vor Cent. In Urnnium, T.arg-' osi Proportion Ever Known. Denver, Col. ? The largest known hody of piinhbleml *t:a in thp world has been discovered in tho German mine, at Centra! City. Assays made by Hermr.:i Pleick, processor of chem istry of the Colorado 3?hool of Mines, run ps high as eighty-flvo per cent, in uranium, which la almost treble tho highesi percentage of any uranium ores ever discovered. Tho'strike means that the demands of the scientific and medical world, backed by -bequests and donations of rich men. for tho urcclous vadium, which sell': nt S2,">ftQ.OOO an ounce, will nrobably bs satisfied at an early date by Coloredo. FORGOT MIS SPEECH. Kcni.;:cky Jud.2"' Thereupon Commits Suiri?2p. Ccorsctown, Ky. ? Eccrutso ho could no; remember peri of .an ad dress which he waa to deliver at a dinner Judge John C. Vovis com mitted suicide by flhooiing himself through the brain with rv revolver. When Judgp Vovie, who was a con spicuous membo: of the Kentucky bar, 'And well known as an after din ner speaker, aroso to address tho au dienco,his -memory failed him, and after several aUemnis to continue, ho abrupty lofj. 11 13 body was found in ! his room by tho janitor. n ?. I Thomas AV. Carmlcharl Dead. At "VVellsburg, W. V*? Thomas W? , Carmichael, banker and oil producer, ! died following an opcratl6a for perl-l tonrtls. Information of Fnpci- 31*11 Trn?t. Evidence o' a combination nf mills to fix the price qf news print paper was filed with linked Spates District Attorney Wt*3 at New Yort: City. . v No Conceition* ow Clieeif. Holders of fall mado cheeso are still strong in their vlows. and refuse to grant concessions. Me\lco Accepts J^cspottelbillty. Before Zslaya ".eft Corinto on a Mexican warship the Mexican Min ister called on :hc commander of tbe America* expedition mad accepted for Mexico res\ cnsiblllty for convey- ' Ing Belaya awsy rrom Nicaragua and for His nuar* uo> exeats in that | eojatrr> - ? -~$r-Sr ~ - JUDGE FINOS GRAFT IN ALL PUBLIC WORK i . ? .1, ? ? Justice Howard Assails Ashokan Condemnation System. CUTS COMMISSIONERS' PAY Declare* That the Dollar Mark Now Top* the Flag-r-Feoplo lOxpec* <iraft, und Are to lilame-? Hon esty u Freak. Troy, N. Y. ? "The age of patriot* Ism has yielded to the age of couuner ci&llsm. Uppermost In the human mind Is not the Stars and Stripe*, but the dollar mark." Such is the declaration of Supremo Court Justice, Wesley O. Howard, of this city, in an opinion fixing the com petiBAtion of the members of a com mission of three appointed by him to appraise damages to property along highways resulting from the construc tion of the Ashokan reservoir in Uls ter County to furnish a water supply for New York City. Justice Howard reduces the com pensation of tho Commissioners from $3650 each to 12200, declaring, inci dentally, that "if expedition and in tegrity, instead of slothfulness and rapacity, were the law of tho Asho kan Valley no fault would be found with the dally wages paid." "While commissions furnish ave nues for tho reckless waste of many dollars, there are other channels of leakage and waste fully as appalling," said Justice Howard. "It is greatly to be regretted that no public enterprise can be projected and consummated without this ap palling loss called 'graft.' Graft 1a not necessarily an illegal expenditure of money, but It Is that unnecessary, wasteful use which characterizes the construction of every public venture. At least forty per cent, of all the money appropriated f9r public use is lost In graft. All things could bo pos sible if this frightful leak could be stopped ? roads, canals, libraries, asy-i lums and hqspltals ? all these coulrf be built out of. graft could it only be saved. "By what I say here I do not seek to charge any particular individual with responsibility nor to direct pub lic attention to_any Buch source. In deed, I do not believe that any partic ular Individual or class of Individuals is responsible. Graft is a product of our times and Institutions. It is the people who are responsible, for, by prescription, they seem to have lost, or to believe that they have lost, their title to Integrity. They expect graft, and even spoil and booty, to deplete their resources whenever any great undertaking Is ventured by them, and they look with complacenco and toler ation and Indifference at ravages upon their property. Graft Is as much an element to be reckoned with In com puting the cost of a public structure as is cement or lumber. It has come to bo a matter of course ? this rake off ? a loss recognized by all who make estimates. of cost In such cases. Figure out what a private corpora tion. like a railroad, can construct a public undertaking for, then add forty per cent, for graft, and you have the cost of the enterprise. A public structure built honestly would bo a freak." Justice Howard declares that the "whole project of the condemnation of land in the Ashokan Valley is char acterized Hy waste, disorder and con fusion. TheYo is no system and no plan for doing anything. Nobody seems to be in charge of the matter, and the result Is an endless muddle and mix-up." The commission whose compensa tion w as rfdi'ce'l by Justice Howard was composed of Sidney Harris, New York, lawyer, chairman; C. Gordon Heel, of Kingston, civil engineer, and Dr. James T. McKenna, of Troy. SKVKX CHILDKEN KILLED. Powder Explodes in House Occupied by Miners nt Sykcsvlllo, Pa. Dubois, Pa. ? Seven children, rang ing in ago from two to twelve years, were burned:to death and three othe. persons fatally injured when fire, fol lowed by an explosion of powder, de stroyed the home of Stenhen Brono sky, a miner, at Sykesvllle, Pa. All the victims are foreigners. Six of the children were members of the Bronosky family and the sev enth belonged to a boarder. Mr. and Mrs. Brcnoskv and the boarder jumped from nn upstairs window, sustaining serious injuries. ^ The fire started from an overheated coal stove,' j HUNTSMEN FROZEN TO DEATII. Probably Fell Exhausted After Reach ing Shore From Overturned Boat. Wlldwood,'. N. J. ? -Tho bodies of two well drnssnd hunters who had been frozen to death were discovered on the bank of Swayne's Channel, near here. The dead men were identlflad by gunners' licenses In their pockets as Julius W. Uber. thlrtf-three years old, of Camden, N. J., and J. \V. Mc Farland. nineteen, of Wlldwood Crest. Tho men had been dead evidently for at least two days. An overturned boat was found float ing in the channel near by. - An Explanation Froui Mexico. The Stat* Department, at Washing* ton. D C,, demanded from Mexico an explanation why James A. Cook, an American, Is hald in prison without trial. The Da? of the Hojr. Ilogs brought the unusual price ol 18.60 on the market at Kansas City, Mo. This Is the highest mark at tained there since 1882. Packers did not explain the high price, except to say It marked another step In the constantly increasing value of hogs. * Midshipman iHsqeMgM^ . Midshipman B.W. Bragg, of Malnfe stai" dtamissed from tho Naval Acad emy at Annapolis for ran maun 11 Tobacco Kings Put Porth Big Enterprise. THE TOTAL LENGTH 657 MILES, Commission Granted in Columbia For an Extension of the Anderson Bya Um to Spartanburg. Columbia, S. C., Special,? -The en terprise hacked by J. H. Duke and ]1. N. Duke, llu* tobacco king*, which proposed to extend the Ander son interurbun trolley system from Ho) (um through Williamston, Pelr.er and Piedmont on to Greenville and thence MO miles to Spartanburg has been commissioned by Secretary Stile. The initial capilul is $300, 000 with an idt.iuuilfi I wo million. The name ol' the corporation is the Green ville, Spartanburg and Anderson Railway Company. The corporators are J. li. l)uke, ii. N, Duke, F.llison Smythe, *\\r. J. Thnckstou, II. J. Mavneswortb, Lewis \V. Parker. From Greenville the line i^ to be built to Taylor's Creek, Pelbam, Duncan, Heidsvillc, Wellford. Lock hart, Fairforest, Spartan Mills. The total length of (TTe line will bo 057 miles. MERGER OF TRUST COMPANIES J. Pierpont Morgan, Thomas F. Ryan and Levi P. Morton Link Hands. New York, Special. ? J. Pierpont Morgan, Thomas F. ltyan and Levi I'. Morton have linked hands in New York in a trust company rnergor which unites resources of $150,000, 000. It is a triple combination, bringing the Guaranty Trust Com pany, the Morion Trust Company and the Fifth Avenue Trust Com pany, all of this eilv, under one head with the title of the Guaranty Trust Company. The merger is perhaps the largest :>f its kind in the United States. To Investigate Reedy Fork Wreck. Raliegh, N. C., Special. ? -Chairman McNeill of the Corporation Commis sion announces that on the 12th of January the investigation into tho v? i vclv a i liAicUy Fork i*eek, on liit; Southern Railway, near Greensboro, hint month, in which a dozen or more people lost their lives, will be investigated. -The witnesses will include all whom the railway of fers, the coroner's jury, etc. This investigation will be full of interest. Qovernor Haskell Wins. Washington, Special. ? The case of the Prairie Gil and Gas Company, which attracted so much attention in Oklahoma during the campaign v of 1908, because of the intervention by Governor Haskell in the interest of the company, has been dismissed in the Supreme Court of the United Slates. The effect of the dismissal is favorable to the Governor's con tentions. Boundary Line Dispute. Washington, Special. ? An order has been issued by the Supreme Court of the United States in the i boundary line ease between the j States of North Carolina and Ten nessee giving each of the States ninety days to take testimony. The order takes effect immediately. ?As complainant North Carolina will be 1 the first to proceed. White Enumerators For White Set tlements. Washington, 8|>eeia'l. ? Directors of the Census Duraud Announces that he lias notified his supervisors in the South to avoid having negro enumer ators call on whites. In- ease colored enumerators are named white men should also he named to see white persons. In other sections colored enumerators will not ho appointed unless at least twe-fifthp of the pop ulation is colored. Ray Lamphere^Murdcrer cf Mrj. Bells Gunno~s Dtes in Prison. Lnporte, Ind., Special. ? A great crowd assembled about I he I.umphcre home to attend fhe funeral of li ay Lamphere, w I o burned the lome <<t' Mrs. Belle Gunnels, near l,n)orie. on April 23, 190J, and iiuineiated the owner of the "murder farm" last week in Michitruu Ci'lv prison where ho was serving time for arson. Lost Bey Found. Louisville, Ivy., Special. ? A search nearly three months for Otis True, son of . wealthy parents of New Albany, Ind., wair ended by the find ing of the body in a forest near his home. Beside it was a note saying that he intended to end his life and a box marked "Paris green.'' Ho was 2Jt years old. Sipee his di?apj>earetice on October 15, it has been the belief that lie was run over by a train and tvery accident reported in the entire country was investigated by order of the family. 2Co motive has been as signed for the a??t. Ml* giftnonVon Suffrage. New York, Special. ? Mrs. 0. 11. P. Belnont has issued a statement in behalf of wojpA&'a suffrage, declar ing that the greatest strides in its history were taken during the ycai just past. "Thia is evinced," ah? declared, "by .tha g wide _jmblit?$v tfiven by ntw*MX?s?, ctc/'jfcShe ex acts a aucewfm caipj^rn for in North Dtkola and Oklahoma year PALMETTO HAPPENINGS Ni?wh Note* of (Jfneril Irtar(*?t From All 1'urU of thv htnte. BARKER AND FULLER HELD. Coroner Ghargoa Them With Murder of J. E. Llddell. ( J reenvillo, Special. -Tin* jury of injuest into (ho killing of J, K. Lid* doll, tho iv u I estate operator whoso body wjiu found Christmas Kvu in tho suburb, brought in u verdict Hint ing that "tho deeeiiKod came to Ins death from wounds indicted by Jejss Fuller and Joe Marker, " These two white men eillne: near being lynebod hero Saturday afternoon ami a mob wan only held back by prompt action in ordering out the militia and later spiriting the prisoners away in auto mobiles. Fuller is now in Spartan burg jail and Barker is held in La u reus. Now that the coroner V jury has fastened the crime upon these two men, it has come to light that Fuller was arested through tho -evidence of u brother Odd Fellow of Liddell to whom Fuller had confessed the crime, at tho same time implicating doe Darker. The only reason assigned for the murder is that Liddell was employed by the Butler Heal Kstate &' Loan Co., which held a mortgage over Ful ler's mother's furniture. It is prob able that the men will be tried at the January term of sessions court, conveneing on 'the 19th. TRAIN STRIKES MAIL CARRIER Only Woman Holding Position in South Carolina and One of Three in U. S. Spartanburg, Special. ? Miss Myra Hicks, the only woman mail carrier in South Carolina, and one of the only three such in the United "States, was fatally injured Christ mas Day, when she was struck by a Carolina, Clinchfield and Ohio train in Ruther ford county. N. C. Miss Hicks is the currier on the rural free delivery route between Cherokee, this county, and Hicksville, N. C. Lator ? She will recover. Penitentiary Making Money. Columbia, Special. ? A greater quantity of cotton this year than usual, will enable Superintendent Griffith of the penitentiary to make a record-breaking financial re|>ort to the legislature. The f report will show a surplus and not profit for the year's business of $80,000, which the superintendent has on hand to turn into the State treasury. It is likely that about a third of the amount will be used to put up a modern brick atoekado for tho De Sttussure and Reid farms, which ad join each other and which together ure located jwirtly in Sumter und partly in Kershaw county. Big Timber Deal. Ivinstreo, Special. ? One of the largest transfers of real estate ever made in Williamsburg county was consummated here last week by J. D. Oilland, real estate broker, in a sale of 2,900 acres of timber lands, for merly the property of tho csfato of Daniel Z. Martjn, deceased, to t he ^ Mallard Lumber company of Greeley ville, for $00,000, These landB abound in a vast growth of large, round long leaf pine, which has never been boxed and stands it) a primeval stuto of uninterrupted growth for many years. It is proba bly the most valuable body of long leaf pine in the Carolines. To Tight White Plague. Lexington, Special. ? The doctors of this county nre preparing to make a determined fight against tubercu losis. At the last meeting of the County Medical Society a temporary anti-tuberculosis league was formed with Dr. R. II. Timmcrmnn of ftates burtr, president, and Dr. O. Frank Roberts of Lexington, secretary. Foundation Bay, Jan. 14th. Columbia, Special. ? The program for 1 ho exercises of Foundation day at I ho University of South Carolina, January 14, 1010, has been announc ed. This date every year is cele brated by the whole of the University ? the trustees, the faculty, the alum ni and the students ? in memory of the foundation of t lie great institu tion in 1801. For Water and Sewerage. Florence, Special. ? This city has just voted bonds for water and sew erage, amounting $100,000. The necessary bonds will boar date of January 1, 1910, and will be payable 40 years after date with privilege of redemption after 20 years, the inter est to be at 5 per cent, payable semi-annually. Work will be begun at once. S. A. Knapp, head of the farmers co-operative farm demonstration work will hold a meeting at Green ville Jan. I'M h. ?oah' Attoitutyi m? Appeal. Columbia, Special.? An appeal has been tiled in the Supreme Court in ihe case of W. T. Jones, who wa? ouarged with the killing of his wife ? in Union ooanty. The case was tried at the February term of Court anu the indietment charged that Jones FtWM'i? prominent tanner of Union ad minis! ej^> poiwft'.fc to hlr, Jones, Motnmiittfi refused * new trial in the case. The i rase will attract mucb jjttenUou. - "Home Grown Oew Peed," It it* necevsary for a milk cow tft have the right sort of Heed, in order to get the most milk for the least cost. The right kind of fead mean* feed containing the right kind of nutri tion* clement* in the right propor tion*. Protein and Carbohydrates are the principal feeding element*. Protein iB thu most important for inilk, and it it* also the most expensive. Peas and pcuvine hay in abundance is u^ost excellent feed for milk production. Hut sometime* the farmer has to buy feed for his cows, and he should know what is the most profitable to buy. lie must never forgot that Pro* tein is the great measure of value. 1I? must inaist on a guaranteed analy sis of Protein. Wheat bran contain* 15 per ccnt Protein, and is a splendid feed. Hut, the cost is too high for this part of thu country, beoaase it must be freighted from the wost. It costs about $-12 per ton laid down. If any one in the cotton growing States want* to buy cattle feed, there i* nothing to compare with "Bolf*! ta, " which is the trade mark adojAed by the Southern Cotton Oil Company, of Charlotte, N. C., for their machine mixed meal and hull food. It is guar-*' unteed 17 per cent Protein and may be bought for $19 per ton f. o. b. Charlotte. It is almost twico as cheap as wheat bran, when feeding quality is considered. Tho feed is proportion ed out by machinery and mixed by machinery, so that it runs tnarvelously uniform. A most important thing for a cotton grower to consider is t lio fact that "novel a" is strictly a home-grown feed, and in buying this feed, he is patronizing himself. It is made en tirely fron\ cotton seed. A Poevish Plaint. The learned writers for the pr?M Are very, very good, At proving how we waste on dress Or furbelows or food. Each writer new who makes bis bow . With othor sages vies To show unhappy mortals bow They must economise. They toll us of the thrifty Frenell Who all excesses shun . . But I'm not anxious to retrench; It isn't any fum I'm weary of this endless song; I wish some seer wise Would show us how to get along And not economize. Boy Tortured by Rcsenia. ?When my boy w*s six years old, bo suffered terribly with eczema. Ho ? could neither sit still nor He quietly la I bed, for the itching was dreadful. Ho I would Irritate spots by scratching, with his nails and tb*t only mad* them worse. A doctor treated btm and we tried almost everything, bnt the eczema seemed to spread. It started In a small place on tho lower extremities and spread for two yiani. until It very nearly eovere& the back part of bis leg to the knee. "Finally I got Cut leu ra Soap, Cutl cura Ointment and Cutlcnfc?Htft~lBtt gave them according to directions* I used them In the morning and that-? evening, before I put my boy to bed, 1 used them again abd the improve ment even in those few hourr. was sur prising, the inflammation seemed to . be -so much less. 1 used two boxes of F Cutlcura ointment, the same ot tho Pills and tho Soap and my boy wan cured. My son Is now In his sev enteenth year and he has never had ft return of the ecxema. "I took qare of a friend's child that had eczema on Its face and Hmbs and I used the Cutlcura Soap apd Oint ment. They ncted on the child Juat as they did on my son and It baa never ? returned. I would .recommend tho. Cutlcura Remedies to anyone. Mrs. A. J. Cochran, 1823 Columbia Avo.? Philadelphia. Pa.. Oct. 20, 1909. ? AFTER A IX) NO SITTING. Mr. Tardy ? Has your father any olb? lection to my visits? Miss Wear)- ? I think he would rather you would make them on th# Installment plan. ? New York Tlipe# After Investigating recently, a Brltj Ish official reports the Kenls forest Id East Africa to be 287 miles long bjt eight miles .wide* and to cont&Ixi standing timber worth $115,000,0004 Blue are the hills that are far from us. ? Irish. Constipation cHtme* many serious die* eases. It ia thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce'a Plennant Pellets. . One a lax* tire, three for cathartic. Let him who is just beeome justi fied st ill more. ? Bible. . ' For HKAUAdtK-HlrMl APimiNl Whether fiom Colds. lUat. stomach of Nervous Troubles, Capudlne will relieve too. " lt'a liquid? pleansnt lo take?act* ImttJoOK. . aiely. Try it, He.. Sic. and 30c. at drus norva. Much would have more and loet all. ? Duteh. So. l-'K>-(7fo) i Allen's Lung By telling our woes we often a#* suage them.? ?Danisli. r ' ? V- ^ -- ? ~~v Perry Dark* t*?tnVfller Ha* been ffcc otm ?eveaty . years * imnh remedy for ln?^ bago, sciatica, pleuriav, ?tc. JX - ?: ' '? ffljSs ' Ood tempers the wind to the ahum lamb.? Laurence Stem. >?& yfSfrf c ~'-i'vr-"r II J.' Big mouiiuuis oi'ioit choke.-r* ?"?"? __1 : ? ? ? ?: gfsp isi ?y!?- 21; 1