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m TUt laMitaat OriatizatiM 4 the Far- ^ Bers HeW Meetiif. THOSE WHO ATTENDED H I & Meeting Held In Hall of Houae of Rep re acntatlvea—Important Mat- " ter* Relating to Agrlenltare Re ceiving . Attention—Organization Reported in Good Condition .Bal ance In Treanury. • The South Carolina St^t^ .ifar- mer*’ union met Wednesday night in the hall of the home of represent ative* with a .^ery large attendance of members and delegates. The evening was spent in per fecting the organisation, hearing the annual address of A. J Ar PerriM. president, - and in receiving report*, resolutions, petitions and niemoria.* The meeting was full of Interest. The following officer* of the State union were present. A. J. A. Perritt, l>amar, president, K. W. Dabbs. Mayesvllle, vice pries! dent; J. Whltner Reid, Columbia, secretary-treasurer; W. E. B>die. Wards, chaplain; W. E. Hopkius. Hopkins, conductor; A. F. Valvert, AUbeville, doorkeeper; W. P- Cask ey, Lansaster, seargent-at-arms. Of the State executive committee the following meml>ers were present: 1 ir«t district. L. C. Padgett. Smoak^ Second district, J. Z. Douthit, Pen dleton. Ninth district, J. F. Nisbet Lancaster; Sixth district, J. H. Lam bert, Marlon; Seventh district, B. h Keller, Cameron. Upon, the enrollment of delegates, it was found that the following were present: Abbeville—Brown Bowie, S. 1 Pressley. Anderson—T. T. Wakefield. J, M Broyles. Bamberg—J. P. O'Quijyn. Barnwell—T. F. Hogg. J. A. Jen kins. ^ Berkley—W. Sr Avinger, W. V fiyrd. ' V Calhounr^S. J- Summers. G. Fairey. Cbmer—J. G. L. White, C. C. Me M'ley Chesterfield—J. F. Crowley, J C ifton Rivers, A. F. Funderburk. Clarendon —B. P. Broadway. Ja> Reaves. J. C. Dennis. Colleton—A. S. Varn, L. C. Pad gelt, W. W. Smoak, J. O Janues. Ji Darlington-—S. J. Jeffords, J. " S. nsbury. DHlen—rArch M. It-thea. F. V Psge. S. F. Bailey. Dorcjioster—D. M. Way, I). L. M< Alhaney, T. J. Appleby. Cyrus Ninn Edgefield—O. B. White. Florence-—W. R. Laniston, Jo Parrott. Greenville—C. D. Smith, J. A Fowler. Greenwood—J. H. Quattlebaum. Hampton—J. H. Adams, W. t Davis, W. F. Davis. Horry —A. L. Davis. W. U Mich an, R. B. Glasgow, C P. Stalvey, 1 M. Lundy. Lancaster—C. L. McManus. W. E Jordan. J. S. Wilson. Laurens—H. J. G. Curry. I^ee—S. N. Welsh. I^exlngton—D. F. Efird, S. J Clark, J. K. Haltiwanger. MarFm—J. D. Montgomery, D. M Dill, B. M. Carmichael. Newberry—A. D. Hudson. Dr. W C, Brown. Oconee—1. R Prickett. Orangeburg-- J. H. Clsffy, . W Culler. J. H. Price, T. 'M. Dantiler Pickens—Jno. T. Boggs. Richland—Dr. H. Claytor, J. W McCrelght. Saluda—J. W. P. Harmon V. heeler. •Spartanburg—E. F. Wall, Iturton Sumter—Hugh Witherspoon. K. McElveen. Williamsburg—A. A Brown, W. P. Cause. The following committees were appointed by the president. Education—A. D. Hudson, D. F Efird, E. W. Dabbs. J. Clifton Riv ets, J. O. Jaques, Jr.’ Plans for Co-operation—J. H. Price, T. *M. Lundy. Dr. H. Claytor. T. F. Hogg, C. L, McManus, F. M. Page Good of the Order—Jas Reeves, !>ouglas McIntyre, J. C. Dennis, J W. P. Harmon, W. P. Goss. Revision of the Constitution—B. F. Keller. W. W. Smoak, B. F. Dill. D. 1*. Mc-Alhanpy, L. J. Clark, J. H. Claffy, D. M. Way. Memorials—J B. Banbury, Arch M. Bethea, A. 8. Varn, Brown Bow ie, A. L. Lewia. Warehouse and Storage—J. D. Montgomery, J- G. L. White, T. M. P&nUler, T. T. Wakefield,/J. S. WU- • Resolutions—W. C. Brunson, W\ R. Langston. Hugh Witherspoon, G. W. Fairey, J. P. O’Quln. Farm Demonstration—8. J. Jef- forda, A. F. Burton. S. N. Welsh, H. J. 0. Curry. J. H. Quattlebaum. Credential*—J. ,K. Nesblt. W: 8. D. Aviraer. Cyfwe Mima. J. H. Ad- ains, J. A. Fowled. W. L. Micbau, •J. K McElwr. n Frees Committee—W. W. Smoak, It W. pebba, H. Claffy. Against Immigration. MRS. JENNINGS AT SPARTAN BURG COMMITS SUICIDE. LEAF FROM THE LIVES OV TWO GREAT CAROLINIANS. The Family While at Breakfast Was Startled by Pistol Shots.—Found" Wife Dying. A apeclaf dispatch ffenT’Spartan- burg to the Columola Record stVs Mrs. Marion B. Jennings committed suicide Thursday mbrning by shoot ing herself In tpe left temple. The shots, two in number, aroused the family as they were at the break- and Railroad Manager. «... "From water-carrier at 50 cents « week to general manager of a great railway system, at a salary of many thousands of dollars a year, is a ca reer one doesn't hear of £very day, }>ut that was the achievement of a South Carolina boy 1 , who grew .up fast table, and Mr. Jennings rushed in Columbia, and who became well M. L. A. F. J. into bis wife's bedroom ahd feund her already dying, lying in a great pool of blood. For four months Mrs. Jennings had been in 111 health and had re cently been suffering greatly from melancholia, but it was not feared that she would do herself Injury. On Thursday morning she sent her youngest daughter out of her room, saying she desired to be left alone to sleep, and the act was evidently then meditated. Within a few minutes two shots’ were heard. Mrs. Jennings secured an old pistol that had been left in the bedroom. The pistol was placed against hei left temple and the head wag practically torn completely off. The family are prostrated with irief. Mrs. Jennings was al>out a year or more ago married to Mr. Mariop B. Jennings, son of State Treasurer Jennings, Mr. Jennings having foiy' merly lived at Yorkville, whern-'be practiced law for several yeapa after leaving Columbia a few years ago. Mrs. Jennings was also a former Co lumbian, Miss Emma Hanahan, a nahan slater of Dr. Hanahan of Columbia She was first married to Mr. Er- neat Beard,, of Yarkville, and by that marriage has four daughters, all of whom are at home except one, whosi home is in Yorkville. About a yeai Tgo she was married to Mr. Jen nings, and they made their home it Spartanburg where Mr. Jennings b practicing his profession. Mrs. Jen tings was 37 years of age. ROUTED THE REBELS. rapturing the leader and Some <> His Armed Men. Gen. Minict, who two days ag« tarted an uprising near El Caney n Cuba, was surprised in camp oi Thursday and captured by" a de latchmeut of the rural guard, unde deiitenant Carrillo. One of Min et’s insurgents was killed. Miuie nd two other* were taken prisone ind the other fied. Lieut. Caiillo and his detatchmen ame upon Gen. Minuet and Iris bar.. >f insurgents while they were et. amped and immediately opened firt The insurgents returned the fire bu vhen tpe guard charged they broke uid fled, abandoning their arms >ne of the insurgents was killed in itantly, while Miniet and two other.- *ere taken prisoners. -The rest o he bard is being hotly pursued b be rurals. None of the guard wai hurt. The prisoners were taken to San iago, whence they will be sent U Havana for trial on the capita barge of engaging in armed rebei ion. Another armed party is stil lelioved to be in the field. AH sec :ions are reported tranquil. How Dr. James H. Carlisle Discover* . ’ . ■ - ed la a Little Boy a Great Maa Head Struck Dost. Norman Crouse, a New York Cen ral engineer, was instantly killei Ahen his head struck a signal post s he leainMi out of his cab windov vhen a s iith bound freight Iran i:.i engine was hauling approach* A illisins Bridge near New York. Made Them Quit. A pest of mosquitoes on the doast »f the Gulf of Mexico has compelle- ien in Texas to quit work. Vora clous swarms attack men aud beasts alike. •lorning against the bringing inti he Southland ef ;‘uai|d*ireble for eigners." ^The fbllowing i# the resi- iution adopted: "Whereas foreign immigration is being agitated again for the South md the diversion and distribution ol oreigners now congesting and com ing into the cities of the northeast is proposed as a means of relief for northern immigration evils; and, "Whereas we are unalterably op posed, as set forth in our local. State and national union in resolu tions and our national committees statement before the house Immigra tion committee to the preeent enor mous alien influx from the southeast Europe and western Asia and its distribu ion by the federal govern- ! ment. “Theiefore, be it Resolved, by the Farmer'. Educational and Coopera tive Un! n of South Carolina, this 28t.b da. of July, 1910» that we hear tily endorse our national resolutions, approve the argument of our nation al legislative committee, and urge upon consieaa restriction by means of an increased head-tax, a money requirement, the illiteracy test, such as Australia and other new coun tries have for their protection against vqdesirable foreigners, the defeat ef all distribution schemes aad' legislation that will carry oyt I the recommendations of the United (states Commissioner-General of Im- Ctate Farmars'nnlon want on Migration contained in bia last an- ,U T bur idly ■*£' '/-'-a knowu all over the South. That boy was William ll. Green, who was general manager of the lines now controlled by the Southern Railway system for a number of years.' This statement was made to the \Yashington correspondent of the Spartanburg Herald recently by Mr. S. H. Hardwick, who, as passenger trafic manager, is at the head of the entire passenger business of the Southern. The story of Capt. Green's remarkable success was mentioned by Mr. Hardwick in an accidental way. On the desk of the busy rail way man’s office lies a stack of rath er heavy volumes, whose appear ance indicates that they are the work of printers and binders of many years ago. Closer examina tion revealed the fact that the books were bound volumes of a weekly magazine, printed in London, during Jhe years from 1810 to 1 852. Across the first, page of each weekly issue were ths words, "The Railway Times," a d directly beneath this captain was ■> crude picture of a railway train of that date. Trailing along behind a de.*cate looking lit tle locomotive a trail of cars was repaeneed, the singR passenger ■oach being very much ILs the old- time "carry-all" drawn by horses. Next to this in the train wa a car toaded wRh cattle, while at t • ex treme rear was a flat-car, leaded vith boxes of goods, trunks and nth- t kind of traffic. "The issues appearing during the >eriod mentioned has been bound nto a dozen sturdy volumes, bear ing the mark of an enterprising i>ooks<ffIer of Southhampton, Eng land Mr. Hardwick was asked vhere he ran across these books, vhich were apparantly of much alue and to reply he told the fol- owing story: "Why, about five or six years age —in 1905, T believe it was--l made i talk down at Glenn Springs, S. C.. >n the subject •vhich was all-absorb- ng at that time, not only in South ,'arqltra, but all over the country— he railroad-rate question. After my ddresa was finished, Dr. James H Carlisle, president emertius of Wof- ord College, Spartanburg, who was ipending a while at Glenn's, and vho had heard the talk, oame to me and spoke most kindly of my feeble effort. He declared that lie had been nterested in what I said, and seem- ad deeply impressed with the im jortance of the problem of railroad- ate adjustment. As well as 1 can ecall his words—and they were im- • ressive, 1 can assure you—he said: I feel that it is a great question, and t regret that I * have not given il nore careful study.’ "Dr. Carlisle t v -n told me .that he tad in his librar; *n the Wofford College campus sever-' bound \oi- tmes of an English latlway mag» me appearirj about the middle ol he last centry, which might be of merest to me. as they had been t- tim so far as he, had had time to ead them, and aske 1 me if I would iccept them. Of course I told him 1 ihouid be glad indeed to get them, nd I arranged for him to send hem to me here. Those are thi olumes he gave me. Most people vould have destroyed them as vorthless years ago. but I have no loubt that Dr. Carlisle has preserv 'd them all these years, waiting for <ome such opportunity to give* them o someone to whom they would be f interest and value. I have found hem of great interest, as contrast ing the railway business of sixty rears ago with that of today: and now that. Dr. Carlisle has passed tway, the value of, those books to ne has passed ortt of the realm of lollars and cents.’ Continuing Mr. Hardwick said: "l suppose you 'knew of the close Triendship that existed for so many years between Dr. Carlisle and Capt. Green, our late general manager? Well, it is not so generally known, but they were great friends until the death of Capt. Green, several years ago. ^Dr. Carlisle began his career as a teacher, after graduation from the University of South Carolina in Columbia, and going to and from his school each day, he passed by a Iftle fruit-stand, kept by an old iqdy "from the sand-hills/’ Mrs. Green, in the suburbs of Columbia. Occa sionally, wheffi she was not at the front of the little store, or when Yhe was otherwise engaged, her little son. Willie, would wait on the youug teacher, selling him such wares as he wished to purchase. The teacher soon discovered that the boy was unusually alert and intelligent, and became much interested in him. He persuaded the boy to attend the school he was teaching. The two became great friends, and the boy ^confided to his teacher bis desire to get Into a larger world.. His mechan- ahops of the railroad at Newberry. Hla wages were 50 cents a week. Of course that was aot enough to pay hla erpenws, but both he and bis taa^foar ware lookln; Into the fu ture and atiae means were provided by which he could remain in the shops. Hla duties, at first, consisted In carrying water for the men em ployed in the shops. Continuing in j the shops, he became apprentice, then fireman, then locomotive engi neer. then supervisor and division superintendent, general superintend-, ent, and finally general manager of the great system he had served as a boy carryig water in the shops. His service covered a preiod of forty- two years. Every step of his upward climb was marked by great dilligence and efficiency. He was pointed to as a strong man, a kindly man, and indeed a great man. He was (afth- ful to his work, as well as to his benefactor and always attributed his success largely to Dr. Carlisle's in terest and assistance. “We hear the boys these days talking about the honor,of 'discov ering' a great baseball player. Dr. Carlisle discovered' a great man in the little boy attending the fruit- stand,^and was always proud of Capt. Green's auccesa. And Capt. Green, whenever he found It convenient, would atop off in Spartanburg and go over to the college campus to call on his friend. After he had achiev ed such a position in the railroad world that he always traveled in his own private car, Capt. Green fre quently invited Dr. Carlisle to be his guest on the car, and to travel with him; but he was never successful. He aaid the doctor seemed to th-uk that it was not exactly right for him to ride on a railroad free, while oth- era were required to pay their fares. That is just the idea that has now been enacted into law: but Dr. Car lisle was several decadea ahead of his generation In holding those views. "Yea, those books are valuable, and would probably sell for a good sum; but you may be sure I am uof going to sellthem." TRIED TO SELL GIRL REBl LT, MAN IN JAIL ON ‘‘WHITE SLAVE” CHARGE. THE CORN CROP THE MOSQUITO WAR. Brings Health to a large Scope of land in Italy. As a result of a war on mosqui toes in -»rtain party of Italy, a healthful, 'eerful looking race an,! fat, rosy c» dren have succeeded a population, which a few years a;o consisted of a few miserable peas ants, their skins yellow as saffroi and their bodies bitten and suffering This is the report made to the D« partment of agriculture by Dr. L. R Howard, chief of the bureau of en tomology, who has returned frQin t< recent visit to the Italian ('Rmpagna Most cf the visitors recol'ecte' this region as a vast tract of marsh land, where mosquitoes and malari, would breed. The country havin' been drained by the government, nov is being extensively farmed aud h beginning to support what eventual ly will be a large population. The Ital.an government has used the German method of • systematic dosing with quinine, it is known a.- tfflcial quinine and as the govern ment has a monopoly op the tobac co trade, the cigarette boxes art made to carry a printed quinine ad vertisement. The drug is sold cheap ly and to the charitable institutions the soldiers and other individuals »oo poor to pay for it, the medicine is given free. City Police Believe They ' w - - Have Agent of Gang Which Deals in Immigrant Girls. *•«, t- After a chase lasting over two weeks the- police of Atlantic City, N. J., believe they have captured a "white slave' operator for whose arrest the Federal authorities have been looking for some time, and ai- BIG INCHEAMK IN THE ARCK.IGK IN THE HOUTH. May U Ih DU KdiiUc Out Enormous Bums Which Have Been ' . h x f .... Going West for Foodstuffs Will be Kept at Home. With 26,277,000 arces corn plant- — - - - ■ • • ■- • Ms.--—■ ed thia year, being an increse ot I ,- 535,000 over 1 909 and 2.776.000 acre* over 1908, the farmers of Vir ginia. North Carolina, South Caroli na: Georgia. Kentucky. Tennessee. SOME NEW so gotten on the trail of traffic in Alabama and Mississippi are furnish immigrant girls which may cause an even greater scandal than the one which came before the Rocke feller Grand jury In New York city recently. Aa the result of life work of [>e tective Herbert, a man who gives h's name as Geo. E. Nelson, is locked up In jail without bail, while a Slav girl, unable to give her name, is be ing held as a witness. The charge made by the police is that Nelson ing Very substantia! proof of the fact that the South Is constantly de voting more attention to raising its own food supplies. These figures J -vre from the bureau of statistics of tie United States department of ag riculture. The acreage in corn for the pres ent year is shown as follows: Virgin ia 2,1 42,POO; North Carolina, Sp 072,000; South Carolina, 2,428,000; Georgia. 4,532,000; Kentucky, 3.- Highway Robbery, "•v. Thuggism Has Given Way to • ’ V * '• - ’ . f' - w -a Very Large Extent •• the Mltfcer Game ef Pickpocket*. Forgers ami * ■ '• • V. • -- ■ Coatfidruce Mew. Z . j "In exact ratio te the ability at the law to discover aad prompt||| and efficiently punish s certain claaa of crimes, will the crimtna^f who Hr* by them be compelled to seek other fields of occupation.” This is (b* obpnly^ook the girl to a tenderloin | eyg^OQ, Tennessee, 3.718,»«»; Ala- resort in Atlantic City with a price for her possesson. The chaige is made that Nelson went to Atlantic City several weeks ago and offered to sell the girl, whom he said had just arrived in this country and would be "perfect ly tractable." A day or two aftei- ward the girl escaped from her cap tor and went to New oYrk city. Nel son follow ed her aud reappeared in about a week with ils charge whicn he attempted to sell again. Nelson now in a cell, denies that be ever attempted to sell girls, but the police are working on the theory that he is an agent for a "while bama, 3,524,000; Mississippi, 3,232.- 000; Total, 26,277,000. The total ~wr*aga for 1^09 waa 24,742,000 i. . in 1908 It was 23,- 501,000. The fig/ i indicate’ that each State sh' „ an increase over 1908 in 190' nd an increase over 1909 in 19f* The condition of this year's *rop i reported by the department ,ho' the States of Qie South lead- in • ,e country. Mississippi being fir* 4 ., Alabama second and Georgia tfe rd. This great increase In the acreage devoted to corn ia considered one ou the moat hopeful signs In the South flto statement of Judge William N. Gen- mill, of the Municipal court, of Chic ago, s man who haa made a Study ot crime and criminal* during the leug and honorable career he haa had eu the bench ia the iDtiieta ■etropoBa. There la no other man ia Chicago ■j- m slave" gang deaRng in immigran’Uoday. In a letter to the directors girls, and whom the Federal author! att ties have been attempting to catch for some time. TIDE SETS TO SOUTH. POLITENESS PA Is. While Traveling AnsiNtcd Stranger Now Gets ia-gacy. An act of kindness which he ren lered an aged stranger six years ago has brought a reward of $10,000 t J. Y. Allen. »<young man of Homer. I,a. While traveling in Texas. Allen met an elderly man, in looking out for whose bagsage the former prof fered his services. On parting com pany with Allen, the old man'took his name and address, with the dec laration: "You may son^ day be re warded for your kihdnesaf » stranger. ’ Allen was Thursday not ified by lawyers of his former,trav eling coni panion's, death and that the latter had bequeathed him 810,000 as "the young man who assisted an aged man while traveling several years ago." police KILL TWO. Riot at Sugar Trust ,Plant Results With Fatalities. Two ipen were shot and killed and four were dangerously wounded, one a policeman, in a riot of strike sym pathizers Thursday at l.he plant of< the American Sugar Refining com pany in Williamsburg, N. Y. A score of others were hurt. Crowds of sympathieers threw bricks at the strike-breakers from house tops and When the non-union men started on with their trucks to deliver sugar a rush was made for the wagons The police on the trucks returned the fire of the crowd and two of the rioters were shot. Hidden from Lynchers. Swlnton Fermenter, a young far mer, and two other men, named Cumings and Burfield, are under ar rest in Louisville. Mass., charged with the murder of Miss Jennie Sharp, daughter of a planter. The leal taste and tendency bad been dls- three men were spirited away from /v/WtfhPmrl Kt- as* a to <4 W T a—~ to *4 a AM* tA a«>~« A ^ Ininitgrant* Are Fast Flocking to Dixie Land. The day of immigration Into th South has arrived and with it has be gun an exodus of Americans wb> have tried Canada and the Nortberr Rates and no«’ have^uit that local ity for more profitable farming ii Dixie land. The tide is carryin; with it colonists from Iowa, Kau^ Nebraska and the West and Nort vest, and the influx ia expected f reach its height about next October A recent report to tb* la id an industrial department of the Sou l ern railway shows that since la* Vlay about 50,(Bin acres of land ii -outhern Alabama had either bee • urrhaaed or was about to be obtain id for Northwestern firms and co. •orations for locating settlem. Larg racts have also been taken lu Ueot •ia and Northern Florida since uh irst of the present year. • Another movement is that Of ; •olony of Slovaks from Westen Pennsylvania to Southern Alabama n Northeast Georgia there has beet started the nucieuq of a colony foi Cat ada. Individual farmers from Ohio. Indiana and Ijlinois are buying improved as well as wild lands it Virginia, th* Carblinals. Tennessee md Northern Alabama. German an Memmonite settlers are also travel- ng to the South lands in goodly numbers. ENDED IX TWO DEATHS. IliiNhandH of the Same Woman Each Other. Kill As a culmination of an enmity ot .’0 years standing. B. V. Barger, ol Memphis, was shot and mortally .vodnded 1>y C. M Gaynon, a rail road employee at Little Rock Wed nesday niglit. who in turn was kill ed by Barger. The affrayf-took,place at the Gaynon home and was wit nessed by Mrs. Gaynon and her 18 year old son. The differences be tween the men began wben Mrs Gaynon secured a divorce a score of years ago from Gaynon and married Barger. Within a year, however, she secured another divorce and re-mar ried her first husband Barger, it is said, sought Gaynon at his home Wednesday night and thUh shooting resulted, ' Meets Death Under Train. Sacrificing his life by gallantry in picking up a handkerchief dropped on the tracks by a child unidentified, a subway employee was mangled to death under a train at One hundred thirty-fourth street station in New York Wednesday. Man May Die. At Chicago Carver Remington, sod of Samite! Remington, who shot himself after preparing for his bur ial is hovering between life and desth. The motive for the sbootjng was disappointment of several busi ness ventures. English Cattle Barred. Owing to the discovery of foot and moutji diseases among cattle in Eng land. Importation of cattle from that country into the United States has been prohibited until tbs extent of the disease is determied. AAw Fewer Came. Official figures show that 2St. 734 fewer immtgrsau landod in the covered by the taacher, aad V post- t&t Louisville prison to evade lyn-, last fiscal year than in the year pro- Mon waa secured for th4 fioy is the chare. -J ,*■ rtou*. i . f tor'-' - • * -M*W MKV+Y * « •-. . v. •. ^ ' ’, of the Southern Railway company, Prealdent Finley called particular at tention to these figures and said: "The increase in the acreage of corn, accompanied, as It is, by a quite general adoption of Improved cultni'al methods, is one of the most ycouraging features of Southern agricultural progress. It is one the results of a general movetneu- throughont the 8:uth In the dinectioi f diversified agriculture—a- move ent which we are endeavoring to .’ncourago and assist as far us wt •an properly do so." , As the farmers of the lUjuth !n- resse their yield of corn, they will ave enorntqne strttts ihieh they have een s^fhiting in the West for foo». •roducta^nd will consequently them telvbs. re*U«e more from cotton an •fher market crops. Economic au horities agree in declaring th- \merlcan corn crop the bsais of th< ountry s prosperity since lu such t arge measure the production o ther crops aa well as the pork sup ly depends upon it and a greate: Uld of corn in the South consc ueutly means a greater share o •rosperity for this section.* FIGHT ON THE BRIDGE. : V^- Officrr Kills Man Who Trisd Throw Him in River. Police Officer William Caudle whs xhot below the heart and John Grubba. of Barnwell. 8. C., aaid U> be of prominent j. family, waa shot through i U e brain and killed in a Rruggle on the bridge near North Augusta Wednesday afternoon. The vhooting attracted a. »r»a* crowd and ot a time trouote was feared, but the arrival of the police platoon brought quiet. Grubbs, accompan- e by a man named Green, both ot whom were said to have been drink ing. were disorderly on the bridge near the Augusta end. Officer Ci". die was ordered to get away and they attempted to throw him over the railing into, the -river A ight followed iu which Grablt*. shot twice, he second bullfi* taking effect. Cou- dle then fired -gnd fiflled his man. Green was 'srrepi^TV^. • * *&!*.*•' ' ’ * ftD.LKH BY’TRAIN. that knows more about the under world end IU operations in that city than Judge Gem mill, end he is re cognised as an authority QpOM Rare ef this sort. Criminal statistics prove that the crimes have increased or decreemtf ‘ust in the poportlen that the ptife- l&jmenu therefore have been swift and cetaln," continued the judge. "Highway robbery, fbr Instance, la almoet a lost art and one doee not ; have to seek far tor the reaeoff. If ; the robber escapee death at the handa of the victim he become* an outlaw and la hunted like a wild beast. In Chicago arreets for rob bery have decreased from 1.3M in 1906 to 733 In lltf, "Twenty-five year* ago the bar- glar was more feared by the public than ady other criminal. Today housebreaking in the Bight ia at- ’ moqt^ntlWYni. r ngve or had a v single cese of such hoouebroaking ‘ H in the 8,000 criminal caeea heard by ' during the -pa»l three yoor*. ,r ■'In Chicago arrests for burglay have deceased since ifi95 from ' — o 1.2*4, ,a deciesee of 34 per n Aye years. What boqt the cheoge? It ia aot he burglar hae bosom* more tut it is because he baV tusiness more dangerous tonlshment more certain and "CortaLt crime*, how* the increase. We have tot lets than 503 prefee •octets. If the crimiaoligieta tramme their heed* they l taken for bank clerks. They he best dressed aid beet I oung fellows ir ravel in group* hey haunt the crowjj alllnj with ,g akt'l j| nailed n aoy.'xttlprf* their lawyer h/ the year and lim a Christmas present at Chflat- tqas time. V‘\ I "Their u4mher jp constantly In- -- creasing. Why? Because they that they huve .Alnel chances out of ten to escape punishment. Seldom lo their victims discover the loeo cf their pocket boohs before they hgv« Roiled the Baby Carriage in Front «f a Traill. Mrs. Peter Montrelle, failing to see the approach of a passenger train, wheeled the baby carrlage cou- talning her twin sons, one-y. sr-old, off the track In front of it Wednec- day, was unable to snatch it back, and saw the carriage and her bab 1 .** hurled 75 feet in the air. Wfc. she reached them, one of the twins Guido, was playing gleefully in tne fcand, but the other, Joseph, wis dead. The accident occurred 9 miles east of Hammond, Ind.. and *he tiain was the Erie Flyer. Pi yai clans who attended her after the ac cident expressed the fear that shd would not survive the shock. Very Had Case. John Wilholt, formerly a student at the University of Georgia, and a son of William F. W’ilholt, president of the Cotton Oil company of Atlan ta, Ga., pleaded guilty to burglary in the criminal court there Friday; He was ■ sentenced Ur two years in the penitentiary. made good their escape. "CouateYfeiUng waa one# the be setting crime of the nations.* Th* counterfeiter hae become rare, bat ha his place has come the smooth coa- fldence man, The number of these fellows has iftcreaaed 53 per cent ia Chicaga la flve'year*. It is the saf est criming! business outside of that rfi ' Kills Wile Before Child. Ia New York in . the presence of his five little^ children, Abraham Roth, a tailor, after quar/gling with hia wife. Bertha, plunged a halt* into her neck then throat. Th# woman died soog ward la agaay.f *•*»*’• •'‘Vi- .ie «>«*■ of the pickpocket. , "The same conditions apply te for- tery, and aa a consequence the sr- Z rests for that crime have increased , * .•«, 41 pei'’eeaL la the last the years. There have been reformed robbers * ^ and burglars, but so far as 1 know never a reformed forger or confi dence man. "Much that is hopeful has beea ' accomplished in Chicago during this last few years. Of the 203,924 crim inal ccses brought into the courts oUthe county in the last three years : 80 per cent, were tried wlthia 24 hours from their arreet aad 35 pefv 1 ' cent, within ten days from the ar» rest. ‘ t', ' ..-c : "While crimes based upon fraud ulent business tratUactiOfM Jpr* in creased. all of the more s< crimes have decreased. This aot include homicide, which has re- mained almost stationary. Tha aam* ber of homicide* ia a city Is criterion of the crime of a city, are usually commltteed by men sad wonien who had hitherto*b ful xnd law abiding citlsesa.” ^ ;' — — -r. ■ Bhoes Last 10 Years. If all men were like Isaiah Bar] of Milton Grove, tad., I would be forced oat of has a pair of Sunday" shoes he has , worn for 30 years aad hla "every day" shoes have been worn for ti 1 years. ' »W«L. In a qaai . key William id death la Capt.. 4 Ham Rirha Reed waa i hia ‘ - -jg t IbZ* Ha . — ; z*' ! - lr '- .... --i- 4 Sw uy t • .j .. -a**, « V Z * , ,. <4