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r ~r rMf ■ ■ '■ r ' '"St ■' .*v* '•« k. . 1-«» * "T • - -'x- SS 1 W VOL. XXXIV BARNWELL. S. C. THURSDAY. SERTKMBER 2t> 1910. i'-il '••• .f«F? STILL RAVING TWms E. WatiM Makes u Uiseedy Eikikitiei sf Himelf. ACTS LIKE A CRAZY MAN THEM HIGHLY NO BRAVI TROOPS WERE EV ER MARSHALLED FOR Bccjidm' Hoke Smith Does Not Fall Down and Worship Him the Great Has been Wants to Defeat Him for Governor and Urges Governor Brown to Oppose Him. To disregard the nomination of Hoke Smith for Governor of Georgia, on the ground that Democrats are not bound by the primary, which choso him, because of the methods by which the primary was conducted, was the advice of Thomas E. Wat son, once Populist candidate for the Presidency, in a speech at a mass meeting, called by himself at Atlan ta * Wednesday night. He urged Democrats to vole for Governor Jos eph M. Brown, for another term, although Brown is not a nominee, dedaring that voters are free to treat the Smith nomination as null and void. What Watson called "Ivossism” and the’alleged use of “money and whiskey In elections, and the secur ing of nominations by fraud and de ceptions" were the reasons he ga\« for insurglng against the regular Deoaocratic nominee. Watson re ferred to Smith's statement of $17.- 000 campaign expenses, declaring that this did not cover more than half of the total expenses from other sources He objected to the use of so much money in campaigns as a dangerous tendency. He claimed that in the nominating committee the represtn-' tat Ives of the 93.000 Democrats, who voted in the primaries for Bronn, were “reduced to silence" by the Convention rule*, and that then the representatives of the 97.000, who voted for Smith, were subdued bv those new rules into a state of speechless Imt-ecllltv “ The uproar, which cut short his previous speech here Watson char? ed. was Instigated bv what ho rill ed the “rule or ruin clique, whlih dominated the nominating Conven tion Speaking further of this int.'rup- tton. Watson said. “Although no such idea was m mv mind at the time, I have been frm- ly convinced that some of the Hot- era had assassination in mind “The situation in Georgia ears a striking resemblance to that whPh •listed in Tennessee Just befoi® Car mark was kill d “When Soi them Congreasown.” aald the speaker, “assist stand-put Republicans to put a ta\ of 17 per cent on the rich men's champagne, after having taxed the poo r man s blanket at 1*5 I>er cmt. what be'.er evidence would you want that the voice of the people is no longer heard In *he making of our la 1 ? Watson charged that vote i'.utPi lug existed in the highe-t legisoiti'e office* of the rountrv. and that “our re>presentctives sell oi t, hetra\ in e their constituents for a mess of Fed eral patronage ' He predicted tha' nnless “this t^pirit < f lawlessnc-s is checked, “our wive- and d. lighters will tie subject to insult when vor tehy appear alone on a side street He advocated remodeling th> Na tional Democr'; tic Convention so as to give full representatt >n to tho c <‘ States which go Democratic and pro portional representation to thoo> which do not. a move which ho 'a'd would tie the South s first a'e.i “ o recover her ante-bellum power in the Union “ Near the close of his speech Mr. Wstson said. 1 am authorUed to •ay that If the people call on Go.e'ii- or Brown he will serve. Tod:-y I had a confidential talk with J. K Smith (Governor Brown's campaign manager.) and Mr. Smith will help In ‘our fight “ Asked after the speech whether Governor Brown had authorized him to make any statement, Mr. Watson said the Governor had not, but that he was confident the Governor would accept if reelected. Mr. Watson did not propose anv plan to place Governor Brown * name on the official ballot. Mr. Batson spoke in a local thea tre. which was largely filled through admission by card before the doors were thrown open to the general publle. Conflict Than Southern Soldiers, Says Commander Samuel K. Van Sant to Union Veterans. With a fine tribute to the soldiers of the Confederacy, Commander-in- Chief Samuel R. Van Sant, of Minne sota Thursday formally opened the business session of the national en campment of the Grand Army of the Republic at Atlantic City, N. J. The commander spoke earnestly as he expressed his gratification at the In creasing fraternization of the “blu« ’ and “gray.” When he said that no braver troops were ever marshalled for con flict than the Southern soldiers, and that the Union veterans now real ize that no men ever made greater sacrifices for what they believed to he right than their former foes, the commiander was applauded. The Commander-in-Chief express ed himself as particularly gratified at the increasing fraternization of the “Blue and the Gray.” He voiced his pleasure at the cordial reception given him during his recent official visit to the Southern depaUmen 1 s. not only from the former Union sol diers, but from ex-Confederates “In all cities, when possible," ne said, T urged joint meetings of the Blue and the Gray. We had iniuy gatherings of this character, and no more loyal and patriotic sentiments were ever uttered than by the men who fought on the other side "Are you not pleased to learn that our comrades are living in peace and harmony with our late enemies? This is as it should he. Both armies were composed of brave in°n. and they should and do mutually leic-t each other. We Of the Norm or.n testify that no braver troops v. aje ever marshalled for conflict than our late enemies and we now reiNze that no men ever made treater sac rifices for what they believe 1 to tie right than our former foes. “Comrades, we were the ci torg, and we ran afford to be m 'gnani- mous to our foes. Jt is easy for the victor to forgive, but when the >ai> cjuished absolves hlmsetf from all bit terness he has truly gained the ni ist cherished trait of a noble ch.ii ict-T We won they lost We re irned to our homes with the shouts of • ••- tory ringing in our ears our came triumphant. “They were defeated the<r cause lost, and they returned to home; de stroyed, barns empty, money worih- less. slaves free and ruin all about them. Any but a brave people vnubl have yielded fo these advers- con ditions not so with them. It";.ve y as they fought during the wa’\ the; - now fought the battles of l ; f j . an i the splendid growth and d'.elo.i- ment of the South since the < l< se of the war is the South's grand'-t tud most enduring monument. United as we are now our coun try is designed to make a new em of progress We have by our unicd efforts advanced to the highest p nacle of fame, and become a n, g.iiy world power with our influence evnrv where potential Who d<>e« not re joice that our Union Is one and in divisible. and will remain so for ev er “ Many matters affecting tbe welfare of the Grand Army veteran.. wiU come before the encampmen' be question of pensions will cone up the veterans urging that th“ lowes- pensions granted be considerably in creased. BREAKS RECORD Ckame, Peraviai Amttr, FdUws E?> lie’s Rule Acres* THE SNOW CAPPED ALPS Fassea, Safely Over Yawning Gulches and Threateiiing Teaks of Italy's Natural Fortress, Only to Meet With Disaster and Serious Injury Within Fifty Easy Miles of Goal. THE WAGES OF SIN MAN SHOOTS WOMAN FRIEND AND HANGS HIMSELF. CHINESE GIKU REF I SED. CHILDREN POISONED. They Drank Chocolate Milk That 4 Was Not Good. Admittance to White Solnsd Because of Her Race. 'May Ling Soong. a young Chinese girl, has been barred from the Gres ham high school at Macon, Ga , a county institution, because she is not a caueaslon. She is a niece of Bing Chun Win, who is connected vtih the Chinese embassy at Washington, I). CV, Her sister graduated last .Tune at Wesleyan college, which Is located in Macon, and which u a famous Methodist •nsiliutlon Miss Soong went to Macon to enter Wes leyan, but was found deficient of h°v studies and it was suggested that she enter the GresTTam high school to prepare for the next term at Wessle yan. When application was made for admission Supt. C. B. Chapman called a- meeting of the board o* ed- ucition to decide the quest’'rt . The law creating the Bibb county board of education requires that all stu dent* of the Greaham high school must be of Caucasian race and for that reason Miss Soong was dented admittance. At Eatonton, Ga.. three little girls aged 6, 5 and 3 years, respectively, are recovering from ptomaine pois oning as the result of three gl&asaa of chocolate milk drank at a local aoft drink eatabllahment In that city. With their aunt they went in great glee to the soda fount, after being dreaaed for the evening, and were taken violently 111 soon after enjoy ing their chocolate millet. Only her oic efforts of the family, neighbors and physicians saved their live# as they were all desperately 111 for ae eral hours. No other* suffered like reaulta, though It la not recalled by the dlspenaer of the dflnks, Whether he sold anyone else chocolate milks during the same afterneon. 4 PECULIAR ACCIDENT. Gun Falla from its Resting Place end Kills Child. Eric Boewell, a five-year-old girl met a tragic death at Bonifay, Fla. Wednesday night when a shotgun which her father had placed on some pega nailed to the wail, fell from It* resting place and was discharged The entire load of squirrel shot struck tbe child in the abdomen as she waa lying asleep on a couch. The father had been out squirrel hunt ing during the afternoon and on re turning had failed to take the *bellt from the gun. The great feat of crossing the snow-capped Alpine barrier between Switzerland and Italy in a heavier than air machine was accomplished Friday by George Chavese, the young Peruvian aviator. The plucky hero of the exploit, however, lies in a local hospital bad ly injured as the result of an'acci dent that occurred Just as he had completed the most arduous and nerve-raking portion of a task he had set out to accomplish -a flight from Brig, Switzerland, across the Alps to Milan in Italy, in all a dis tance of atanit 7 5 miles Both his legs are broken, his left thigh is fractured and his body is badly contused; but the physicians in attendance are of the opinion that these hurts will not prove fatal and that unless unlocked for complica tions ensue Chavese will i>e about in two months. The accident occurred as Chav ese was endeavoring to make a land ing at Poinodoesiila, Italy. The Ali>e had been crossed successfully and the aviator was descending with the power of his machine cut off When i •out thirty feet above the ground a sudden gust of wind seem ed to catch the monoplane,' which turned over and fell When crowds that had been watching the descent ran up fllev touild Chave-e Iving twisted and ''deeding’ d^rneatli the tw isted w reckage Fifty miles awa.' lav Milan, the goal for which he was seeking in order to wm the pri/e of Sjo.iomi offered liv 'tiie Italian Aviation so- cietv t'liavese lost the race Tbe weather at Brig was clear and bright when Chavese mad-- lus start Leaving the ground with his motor running at full speed he rose in sweeping circles until he had reach ed an altitude sutfh lent lor him to crear the shoulder to the southeast ward of Zrig T his obstav le having ueen over come. the Peruvian aviator beaded bis monoplane straight toi the snow- capptd lings oi tbe Fle'chein t'oii- stantly ascending. Chav;sc reached the Simplon Kulm where at an al titude estimated at T.-'oo toot, be turned his machine sou'h over the terrifying Simplon pass with the Kaltwasscr glacier at his left and the frozen peak of the ILubschhorn at his right. After crossing 'he divide. Chavese timed to the towering white moun- ain head of Monte Leone, which rises io a height of itl.till fee', and lassed down aoove the tionde gorge. in'T he rca< lied 'he open vallev of Yodro. and then descended eaaitv tn- word I tomodossola which is ss;< feet above sea level It was here that the accident occurred Sonic of the spectators of the flight say that Fbavese, after cross ing the .Simplon pass, followed the short cut route over the Monsecra pass, which is yuou feet above sea level. If thl* be so. it is possible that the Peruvian beat his own world's record for height of s,^7l The _’."• miles between Brig and Domodossola. which it took the ar mies of Na|>oleon a fortnight to ne gotiate. Chaves*- accomplished by the route of the eagle in axartly forIv minutes From the high point at Monseera he descended 7,nun feet in 13 min utes. his machine gaining in momen tum as it flew, over the jumble of lower peaks, gulches and hills beyond until the speed was terrific as it a|>- proaohed the aerodrome at Domo- ‘dossla. This doubtless caused the acci dent which turned th** cheers of ad miration of the waiting crowd into cries of horror when the machine 'came hurling to the ground just as it seemed tii^it Chavese was aUnn to alight in safety. After treatment in the hospital Chavese regained consciousness but was unable to explain how the acci dent had occurred The generally- accepted opinion is that The accident was due to a slight shift in the rud der while the monoplane was being sent at a high rate of speed. Although Chavese did not succeed in winning the prize of $20,000, hav ing jfailed to reach Milan, some of the members of the aviation commit tee are in favor of turning over the prize to him and erecting a monu ment in commemoration of man's first flight across the Alps (Chavese, .although a Peruvian^ was born tnrParis in 1S8 7. He se cured his licehse from the Aero club as air pilot in February 19 of ibis year. Chavese was able to receive visi tors at the hospital for a few min utes that night.. Although week, be was in a most qkeerful mood. “I mi unable to explain the cause qf th«/fall," saldrhe. “T am delight ed at being th** flm to csoss th* Alpa.” \ • Mysterious ItouTvIe ’TTagedy Is En acted in Cleveland, Ohio, Hotel on Thursday. As the eud df a close acquaintam o- ship of unknown duration. B Yal es, a wealthy Detroit business man, Thursday shot and seriously wound ed Mrs Fred Singer in a Rocky Riv er wine room ami two hours later hanged himself In the county jail at Cleveland. Ohio Thuisday night the womans at torney, Frank Billman, was closeted with Yates' two sons for several hours. The result of the Interview was not given out. and the three re fused to discuss the shooting or its cause. The young men. A W. and H. F. Yates, hurried to Cleveland from Detroit as soon as the news of the shooting reached them, and the body of their father was shortly afterwards identified as It lay in a private morgue. Yates was 4 8 years of age ami quarried. He was chairman of the board of directors of the Business Men's Publishing Conrpany^yf De- triot, was owner and manager of a hotel and possessed extensive lumber holdings near Bradfor4, Out. It is to to this latter place that his body will be removed by special permit of the coroner s jury. Mrs Singer, formerly a resident of Detroit, but lately residing in a Cleveland hotel, is tke wife of a trav eling salesman, and is related by marriage to men prominent in Cleve land affairs The couple spent Wednesday af ternoon and evening in an automo bile At midnight Thursday night they went to a road house at Rocky River, a western suburb of the city. Four ho'irs later a quarrel occurred in a grill room across the street from the place first visited Mrs Singer, according to the barkeeper on duty, ordered a taxicau Io telephone against Yates’ protest, and ten min utes later the shooting occurred Mrs Singer was shot through the back and through both legs A po liceman and the brnkeeper disarmed the man T tired two of the fiv* shots at -iiv self, out missed, ' Yates told Marshal Roy Mat tin, ai cording to that ofli or While the w mian was borne to a Cleveland jai and there he hanged Cleveland pail, .nd there he hanged hints* If to a I* w iro i rod in the wash room tisin ; his h. idkerehief as a noose Considerable mysterv surrounds the relations of the man and woman, who have neen acquainted it is ad mitted, for some tame. She has been estranged from her husband for months Her condition is reported at the ho-pita! as serious but it is added that she will recover She WILL WIN SORE rowMwo.-nuni DeaKrits N*w Fee! Certaii ef Captir-1 iif tke Reuse ud May UAHS AT FILL SPEED COLLIDE ON INDIANNA HOAD. Little i s- CONTROL THE HOUSE | The Crushed nn<I MaiigleM Bodie* of the Uuforluuate Victims Strew the] Track Aim id the Wreckage, SPITE OF x i im _ . . Forty-two passengera^Vere killed. The m*ei>**ve Democratic V ir(Ctrl' iu J , , , y j and seven were serioualy injured in] a head-on collision between two trac tion cars on the Fort Wayne-Bluff-1 ton division of the Fort Wayne and Wabash Valley line Wednesday. The! wreck occurred one and a half miles north of Ivlngsland, Ind , seven miles north of Bluffton, at a sharp curve, j The cars In collision were a north- No Need of li as th« mrnf taf 8«Mjt 1 and Will ■p the Aa Including Guf They Get * Just afteit jeroaaing th* Mountain* Zacb State an interesting letter da Maine Has liaised the Ho|m‘» of | the Party leaders for an Ove*-.J whelming Victory for the People] in the N'ovemlrer Election. Satisfied that the next house of representatives will lie democratic, party leaders now declare that there ia a chance, although remote, that the Democrats also will control the Senate The flop in Maine is the cause of this new hope Thirty senators will retire March I cau>e( j by the misunderaTaBdlng of | vln*tnm'in 3, 1911. Six are democrats. In all I orders regarding the Southbound I d . nominaitad John F six Instances Democrats will be re- •extra" cara taking a awitch near | JL-- turned. These seats are those of KIngsland, so that the NbnhboundL rt JoT ‘ Culberson of Texas, Swanaon of Vir- car could pass It. I ° XT . ° * Demoeru c. ginia. Money of Mississippi, FrazlerJ There were two physicians on the 1 other Aar did of Tennessee. Rayner' of 'MaryTahcT; j cars at the Time snmrwrwfc! I ShafrothT*^ •f them escaped aerioua injury »od I j tnflW k e w ith the other, who had himself j j, ero ^ mind* of the painully hurt, rendered assistance to' i0%3 ■•rym bound local car, crow ded to the steps, ] which left Bluffton at 11.15 o'clai and a south-bound "extra " car. from j 8<lo uyt , ^ Fort Wayne. They met while both paperg thlt> taornlng ^ - were running at high speed. ,. , . . , tain station, after traveling all The collision is said to have been | and mort of ^ and Ta'liaferro of Florida. - In Indbma Albert J. Beveridge is fighting to be returned with the chances against him. In Connecticut Senator Buckley faces bitte.r opposi tion. Gilbert M. Hitchcock In Ne braska expects to swamp the divided {(•publican organi/atiow, whose can didate is Senator Burkett. In Missouri Senator Warner le ai a*da himatlf , gnd tfc«r therefore those who survived the colUaion. Re-l the|r atUntloa ^ lief care were hurried from Blufftohl tioQ . In U* coaveatfcm »0 M to i and physicians went in automobile*. T Manv of the dead had|already lieen 1 removed from the debris of the care and the gruesome wmrk of taking out the mangled remains of the wreck- most certain to be succeeded by a | w ;t g taken up by the more sklll- Democrat. Senator Nixson does not f u ) hands of the company’* wrecking expect to return and the Nevada leg-1 crewa. | inate him. They could get up nothing him, but that Colorado | never been ateottomod to do aaffebm 1. I is objecttonohlo to been islature probably will elect a Demo crat. Maine has elected a Democrat-) ic legislature In Montana the Democrats and In surgents are expected to combiae on a fight on Senator Carter, New Yo'k may elect a Democratic legUla'u-e and a l>emocratic successor to De- jUnga t» (Most of the people on the u 01- !! 1 -j bound car w ere enroute to the fair J ar# ^haiygtm j n at Fort Wayne. Help from nearby pubHetn residences was rendered to such as K f lau could be removed from the wreckage. I | ow# BOW ^ The motormen of the two cara did ’ not have time to set brake* when they sighted each other. The heavy pew in Ohio a landslide may place|| oaded northliound car waa crushed a Democrat in Senator Dick's seat In addition New Jcrsev, Massarhu- J set's and North Dakota may flop, and turn over In West Virginia is a posi-ibilitv Should the thirteen states referr ed" to return demorrats that party would control the senate -Vr./ona at her final territorial el •ti"ii has giuie 1 leiu x-rat ir Sh mid she repeat I he pel forma m e next v ea i aft**r sii*' has enien'd the sisterhood • f States .vhe will have t»o Dem ocrat* in 'he senate within two year* New Mexico al.-o on the threshhold of statehood is about an even bet ( X >1,1.A USE OF TAFTISM. and the bodies of the dead and injur ed were strewn on either side of the track amid the wreckage. The screams of the injured following th# crush brought the neighboring far mers to the scene. Conductor Spiller, of the aoi bound car was unhurt and ran back toward Klmtsland and bagged a car fiom Indianapolis, which was ap proaching the wreck at full speed and ot lie w ise would have plunged Into It adding to the list of the killed and injur* d in tbe collision. Wrecking cars and physicians were lushed from Fort Wa>ne and Muff- ion and the bodies of the dead and in jured were conveyed to hospitals in the two ,-ities SrN was unable to make a statement, was announced. . x:. POLITICAL HEFLEtTlONS. it Record of Taft Is a Bathetic Story of] Failure. ludson W. Welliver gives this re- niarkalde bird's-eye view- of polities at the present time: “M ith insurgency fast building it self into control of the republics party, and with democracy in good GEORGIANS IN FATAL DUEL. Mullets of Each End Lives of Both. Wives Witnesses. abont that, if a*y can b« batlaratf. the State by « Mg The only "klMritunate It Is that the lagislstur* be elected wtHH senator far Todsday a Repubticen chief speaker my old friend Kansas. Ha had s Coloradan n<jr. pr thhs flra^; ever a tor melted gen helm, supposed to be Ougcauhelm'a iocallty. ; ^ . / Rut I trad ftatlflad to see _ Guggenheim paa mtre of a thiaf * contempt right In that self catity where aomtnatly ha than almoat anyi Bristow told his hearers are to be loyal to the hare In wl •Stopping their buggies when they met each other in the public rot d I ers of the Republ near Pelham, (ia., Wednesday, Char-1 ghduld t>e consistent, les Tate and John Marchsnt, both | of the pictures of LlneoUli prospect of carrying the next house P ^orrl * nen, nien of this county, fought l^nd s few other | Trarehng Mon Sny Iteimx-rats Will Sueep the Country. In his letter to The State from the West Za< b McGhee savs Illinois did nothin*: surprising Bontell. one *>f the most scholarly men in th* 1 boils**, and one of the most snbser- vi«*nt atlorers of Cannon, was def<>ai- ed for the nomination in th** Repub lican primary. He be will run as an independent Candidate. That means the strong probability of a Democrat in his place It Is a curi ous thing that these Republicans heretofore so shrewd about suet: matters, should in their quart* forget that there is a Democratic partv. James R Manning, another Can non lieutenant, was renominated beating two opponents at a clip, but that only makes his seat doubtiul for Mann happens to hold a seat which represents a district much in clined to insurgency. He will, how ever, in all likelihood, be reelected, Money will talk Everybody is talking of the some what astounding result in Maine, al though traveling men say it ii not astounding to them,. They say uhe Democrats are going to sweep the country like a tornado in Novemhe and that this Maine business '« but •i circumslance. The Republican insurgent leaders at Colorado Springs heard of the election in Maine after Hie meet the other night. 1 was walking to the hotel with some of them ‘ It vindicates the insurgents' position." they agre*d. “The only salvation for the Republican party is In the Pro of representatives, the administra tion of William How-ard Taft con fronts a crisis. ' Two .rears ago Mr Taft became a leader of a party which he'd al- mo*t n monopoly of public confi dence Todav he is leader merely of a discredited faction Control of the part) is fast passing out of tm* hands of this faction and into the hands of men whom Mr. Taft's ad m'nistn tion was hut recently ’•end ing nit of the partv The record of the Taft adm nis- t> j"oi. is a pathetic story of fa lure in both politics an’ statesmanship. Mr Taft has seemed ineapab'e of s'oi ’M g Ms politics in the course of v l-d*,m and unwilling to support 'be pr giessive measures which ’he a duel w ith pistols, both dropping I should hang <ni their U) the ground dead after half do*er J (urea of Netaon W. AldrMfc snots had been fired. The wives of I mon Guggenheim. aig.nn>u eat In thB buggies wails the 1 The crowd broke oat In * fight w as in progress and saw tbeb I laugh. Thn fact husbands kill each other. | Guggenheim doee not lira la Tate was a bridegroom of two I a (jo and never has, and* months and his bride was the wt’t.w right to be aonator front'! of Frank Man-hant. a brother of the than Henry M. Flagler to Wf man whom he killed and who k,iled I from Florida, or John D. him. The fight grew out of sn old grudge, which at first was Lnneenl Mrs. Tates first husband sad her second husband, later, it is said, be-] ing intensified between Tate and Jno. Marehant. w ho opposed his sister-tn-1 The State ia 1hw‘x marriage with Tate, and tx>k| w ith the exception u]) the old quarrel. solid Democratic When they met Wednesday Mar-|gress. It is of no | lar to be senator from T* But there are I wot” Republicans ln‘ en mu friend Senator fear does not "atoiy to chant called Tate to his buggy. The against Guggenheim, rv expected him to dv C-p-|i»en exchanged hardly a word when be eleeted^Lgain any genital neapaeity for practical poll-1 Lh® shooting began. Tate fired ihii!e|er was expected to tits mu-ht explain tho 'allure to keep Unies. every bullet finding Its ourk. pi® 0 f Colorado in fhC his party m hand In.t only a more I M'hlie the bullets were cutting into The people of iinkindiy explanation for his appar- his body. Marehant fired twleo. one anything to do ent pur.i: »e to re]iu liate th • m* u bullat striking Tate's hand and the And when the peopla and policies to which hm platform other passing through his heart. The that Is. when they pledged him. ' I widows called aid and the )H>dU»| ar ® going to "As a result of Mr Taft's failure were removed. It was said that Mar- the offices. Whet there is a struggle for con'.r >1 of I chant lived a few minutes after he aggjnst lg to Hie i * publican party. At the sjb»e fell to the ground. Besides his wife the greedjr and i re. the torn and divided p-.r.y he leaves two small children. The intere#ta”'of ‘ fa* eg a democratic opposition which men lived four miles from Pelham, ocratic needs hardly do more than pe miM owne< l good farms, were of promt- “** it .lf to become thq benefica.v «'f|nent families and well respe*',ted in that section. Republican misfortune. It seems scarcely possible that even dernoe- racy -i facility for doing the wrong thing can prevail against tho fates which seem determined to recall it to a responsible participation in the national government." DEAD FROM HORSES KICK. gresslve movement." SERVED THEM RIGHT. Two White Fiends Gets Five Years Each in Pen. Anderson on Wednesday Char- Itwreffd "Bon McElreath, both white, twenty and thirty years old respec tively, were sentenced to five years in the penitentarv. being convicted of assault and battery of a high and aggravated^ nature. -Theae two men attempted to Wow up with dynamite the residence of R M Webb, near Williamiton. A dog caught the dy namite stick and was blown to places. .The bouse and occupants were thus saved, although th# houaa was greatly shakes l Makes Fatal Mistake. Prominent Georgian IHe* From Run away Aocident- E. Pren’iss Peabody, well known I c®® 4 lay-She matter They have eonte. ia well-nigh fmi Republican party, tor i can principle# th« to give special who “need ’them, aa making a tariff. However, it la a fort on the part of m business man of Waycross, Ga., died I people 0 f hia fhrty* It Will Mistaking strychnine for morphine M'ednesday morning as the result of | defe^ tablets, which she was in the habit of being kicked by a horae Monday in a Repabltean taking. Mrs H R. Joseph, a young runaway aeciHent, near there. Itl®®*** t,a * s woman of Galena." 111., met a tragic was while trying to save his nif e th ® ,r not , end Sunday morning at 7:30 o'clock (and little girl that he recelvel his | R®PUbllcan; th^r in room 17 of the City Hotel at Col- injuries. Mrs. Peabody bad » rib •* umhia. Dr. P. V. Milkell was sum- broken by a kick of the-frightened moned by the woman’s husband, but horse, attached to the bbggyIn which! Near Syracuae, N.> she died scon after his arrival from they were riding. Mr. Peabody waal Clifford Judd shot the- effects of the violent poison a well known church worker and wa#! brother In law she had swallowed. |a member of the national board of management of tbo Epworth I#aga* Ruslans Buying Cotton. I ^ Imports of raw cotton in Russia during the early months of the prea ch ild Fond. Dorothy Barrow, 13 year* «Md. ent year havh^been very heavy, the missing from her home la He vilue for the first four months be ing more than $23,000,0(1#., If the demand by the Russian mills con tinues throughout tbe yea^, jit is de clared, the buying record of all pre- ^♦werrrari will be excea Texas, for over a year, haa found, poofly clothed and pent in a hotel in Vincennes. Ind.. end was restored Thursday, to her moth er, Mrs Eloise Barrow, who claims | He wra th# girl was abducted. [ among the Ing him for a ing his mthtelMfe, and to la e result of the — t --- -X • —t -X;'