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' - ' .hi BARNWELL. S. U, THtTRSDAT. MARCH 28.1812 A BOBHIILE ACCIDENT T1UT KANSAS. VOTE Legislative Dispensary Committee . Holds ^ession Tiiursday and Ad journ to Meet April 10. The Legislature's committee Inves tigating the Ansel wind-up commis sion, the Attorney General and any other persons connected with the State dispensary started the third week of its hearings Thursday morn ing. Several witnesses were sworn, but no testimony of a startling na ture was produced. W. M. Edwards, at one time edi tor of The Fairfield News, of Ridge way, who it had been said had pub lished a statement that James Far- num paid a large sum, in addition to his $5,000 fine in the settlement of FIFTY-FIVE DEAD MINERS TAKEN FROM THE MINE. ROPER’S BODY IS FOUND THREE PEOPLE KILLED HY (X)I^ LAljflE^pF STORE. WILSON CONTROLS DELEGATION BY GOOD MARGIN. Two Ladies and Quo Little Girl the Victims of a Most !>istrcssing Ac- I DELEGATES WILL GONTOU cident at Wadesboro. One Hundred and Five Lives Snuffed Out by Terrific Explosion in Okla homa Coal Mine, Only Eleven, so Far as Known, Escaping' of Those la the Mine. One hundred and five lives is ac cepted as an approximately correct estimate of the human toll taken Wednesday morning, when Mine No. 2, of the San Rois Coal Company at McCurtaln, Okla., was wrecked by an explosion. Of the 116 men of the day shift, only eleven are known to be alive, while the others are en tombed behind the debris. In the opinion of Government ex perts and mine officials, they arc- dead, and a special train which brought physicians and nurses from Fort Smith, Ark., returned Wednes day night. Five physicians remained, with the faint hope that some of tin- imprisoned men might be found alive Among those unaccounted for arc an attorney, a surveying party, headed by W. D. Roper, of Clio, S. C., forty-three Americans were employ* d in tin- mine The explosion occurred short ly after it o'clock Wednesday morn Ing. Those on the surface heard a faint rumble and an ea-th tremor When those nearest to the month of 1 !*;, the Governor. the mines reached the opening a W. O. Tatum, at one time com cloud of dust and smoke belched missiouer of the dispen.er y. in charm forth. Then came tense moments of of the stock of the d stensarv, was I • • waiting for those in the emerge. Frank Fields, a miner, was the first to stagger out He was walk ing in an entry and heard the ex ploslou. he said. Lie jumped into a side room and the explosion passed and he made Ills wav to th- Results of Rescue Work Up to Eight O'clock Thursday Night, Following Explosion in Oklahoma Coal Mine, Entombing Some One Hundred and Sixteen I ndergrouud Workers. A dispatch from McCurtain, Okla., says up to eight o'clock Thursday night twenty-six men had boon res cued alive from the wrecked Sans Hois mine, fifty-five of the dead had been brought to tho surface and thir ty-five miners were unaccounted for. cases against him for graft, was first Kescue partte8 continued their explor- sworn, but he denied having pubiish- • 1 any such statement. Henry Samuels, a liquor dealer, who had been ludicted for giving re bates to directors of the dispensary, testified that he had paid to Director Wiley some eight to twelve thousand dollars as inducement for liquor or ders. Col. 11. L. Abney, of Columbia, ation of the debris throughout the night. Fifteen of those who came from the mine alive were found Thursday morning huddled about an air pump in the south thirteenth entry, which had remained intact. The others made -their way out of the mine or were rescued shortly after the ex- t* stifled as to his part *’ losi<,n "‘'curred Wednesday morning. in the graft prosecutions, he having assisted the Attorney General. He sjHike in high terms of the work of the Ansel commission and said he considered the members all conscien tious tind faithful men and that he knew nothing of the charges made >\ith the exception of two, who are in a precarious condition, those res- ( ued Thursday are little the worse for their experience. When tho rescue party entered the A special to the News and Courier from Wadesboro, N. C., says at elev en o'clock Wednesday morning tho walls of the Parsons Drug Company's store, a two-story brick structure standing on the public square of that clt'’. crashed with a loud uolso and carried a,number of men and women beneath the ruins, killing at least three of them instantly. The dead are little Virginia May Covington, oldest daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Covington, Jr.; Miss Marian and Miss Ixtra Little, (laughters of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Littlo, all of Wades boro. Mrs. J. M. Covington and _ her daughter-in-law, Mrs. J. M. Coving ton, Jr., and little Virginia May and Mrs. L. D. Robinson were seated at a table In the corner of tho store with the'Misses Little when the crash came. When the bystanders realized what had happened they rushed In regardless of their own lives and suc ceeded in bringing out the two Mes- dames Covtrn-’ons and M'« Robinson The little gill was found p,. mu h-- nenth the heavy timbers, dead. No trace of the Misses Little was found until a great part of the debris had been removed. During the time PLOT TO BLOW UP KNOX flOHT CHARGED TO FRIENDS OF ZB* LAYA IN NICAKAUGA. Tbii-twtn Bombs and a>Battery to Ds- tonate Them Found Uuder Track of the Rallioad. i\ opening. Nine other mint through a manway. A svsteniati mm- i s esi ape 1 toi witness He toi l of the enormous whiskey shipments re- .-.v, d at the ; '.-ip* usury and of his retnons’r itiir-' wi,h the direitors. lie said, how- cv.-r, that shipments cuutinuc-d t.- pour iu. The roovn't"ee adjourned tuit\ April V* Tile !M«*ase * imte’.-.-hvi IS ex per • •• ! to report on \p il J ■- Tho com mi! to* was created to inves- st-arcb of the wrecked tiira'e the Ansel corr. (p issipn, the A' - ■orn-y Georril and other persons connected with the d.spt-nsary. It is no* to wind the affiirs of tin- S'.Te 1:sj . p-cicy; this, by a new law. is the Attorney General It Is thi- desire of the eomtnifee to make th" inM-st ; ga-ion as nnn- ; artisan a- t oss':! !>■ and to this effeet . wrv possible witness will be surn- fooned The llleaso com tsston will be summoned later. mine Thursday morning they heard n ' pn worked like demons and in faint nipplngs on an air pump lead-‘ rin F 10 ' 11, FFie body of Miss I/ora was ing to a room in tho thirteenth en-'F n,in d. It was several hours later try. W hen the rescuers made their before th* body of Miss Marian was way to the room they found the men ( b-cated and taken from the ruins. All ted in a heap about the air chan-1 ^e dead belonged to prominent fain ted Tntn Farrituond. one of those | , rescued, told of th.- cxperi.-nc* s of! 1* f'-an-d that the elder Mrs -itr.seif and h!s fourteen comrades. r "''insrton cannot live Her lower v hn wen- found near the jiirshaft., 'aw bone Is broken on both siles: he- He said: left arm is broken and she Is suffer- WirKs <>l T NINE l,l\ KS. Explosion Kills Two 1 amities Damage Twenty Houses, In a gas explosion, caused, it it- tle u-lr by mine m-iMii gs. nine pei- .-.,118 wre killed and two injure I A *oltie.- 1 ay in Immo'e Pa Two famile-s. comprising two women an i m-vcu children, wen- cttlip- Mown to pieces in the explosion, -r bu"nel in tbe fire that followa 1 ai.l destroyed three houses. More than twi-n’v d-.x- Kings near the jn*-rie of the explosion were ba li> dat"age l by the coe usst'di and 1 be (lying tiinticrs. and scores of per sons were thrown out of their be is and bruised. Imring tiie past week, mine s-• •lings'in the neighnorhood of rlo Cax.uK home c:its«ed a .cm »MiH a ' We !iad almost given up hope 1: a. ,l, e rescue party reached us iP-w v • ever met in the room I or.': A \S Simm as We felt the ' \ I ^ oti we tuslied to the nearest jtri.p. knowing that wa> were too far mi the ei.• ranee to escape if tne • p'osioii w is s.-v*-ro. We had ji.st • up a c irr iin when s big sh---t >' !'. ime, traveling with great speed. ; ...-.M'd our room and sent a sti »l 'f of t-s deadly breath at us The Atnu'es :»*-;ned like hours as v, i ch.t.g to the pump, straining t-v-ty . W-rt to : ibab- every par icle of th- Wo htirdiy Z poke. We ill-' usa tho potabilities (' i • s ue, but 'f n y c,rnr.* b s 1 did they i mutch; I u' their luv *■ 1 OC.1 x . * . o i a; r •i ’I it i 1 i or . i:i h: 1 i • t; whether or not We will'd See *he;r again T here was no food i. >r ■ »'«•: I don tit if we could hav-- t*atfik--n of food if we had had it V * sufli’- d m -Mt ly fi om th<- la V of w ater 1 d -,,.n h sax s amotig the b i '■ >- foui l w is t hat of Mr W I> I’- tier, nf l'l:o, c C . who was chief yni , . nr for the Sans M.*:s <'omp it.' . w h wi'h two '-ss.s'aii's, ui'-t d-'.rh In th, •l.l lie. T !,*' f o t ce of t be explos.ou tiad I low n off tlui head of young Roper. Mr Roper was only t w i n t y si v y e - rs l id, and was a gra luat*- of tl-e (T'a- del at fharb-s'on II* was a ' ab-n'-'d vo-lt.g '• Row and W.-S doing well A dispatch f r r>m Chester. S C . w h-T-- R.-v .1 C. Roper, broth* r of 'lr W I> Roper, is Pastor of HeMie! V. • "4 Cbur-dl. say s th*- body of mine began early W*-dn*-sd:iy nich' under the direction of Government experts and up to y o'clock five bod lea had tief-n r*-cover--d and " o”.cr- located At that hour the rescuers devolved upo had reaeh*-d the eb-ven'h bvel. Put hero their progress was retarded by a mass of coal, earth and twisted tltfibers. The explosion occurred shortly af ter 9 o'clock Wednesday morning, and, according to an official state ment of owners of the property, about one hundred men were em ployed In the mine Whether gas or yxoUtHina KMU Tmo an ,| coal dust caus*'d the explosion has not been determined Klghf of the men w ho esen; ed alive were at work In the mule s' ibles and made their way to th-- surface through the passage us--; for t'..e car a The first party of \oIun'***-rs to enter the mine at noon found ffre others badly injured in a wreck.-1 entry. Mayor Hourland. of Port Smith, has Issued an appeal for aid for the families of the victims. Heartrending scenes were enacted at the mine opening, where hundreds of women and children had gath ered. Throughout the afternoon, while rescue work was halted await ing the arrival of mine experts from the Government station at Me\lest<-r. Okla., they remained about tho open ing. Practically every home in the camp has on*- or more members burtv-d in the mine. The systematic work of penetrating the mine began early Wednesday night, and the first of the half hundred rescuers who tire work ing in relavs, brought four bodies out of the mine. The bearers of the bodies passed between rows of grief Btrlcken relatives who clamored for a view of the dead. The bodies wore blackened and burned and practically unn-coenr/- able. Confusion was so great that it was Impossible to determine definite ly their identity. At eight o'clock It was reported that the rescuing Pkrty had found sixteen more bodies.' • i '- "e- ”■ •■■'•*■■ ■>•* 1 which would be brought out bv mid-j night. This would be the Inst trip of; tbe rescuing party into the mine Grover Grown, Southern Railwav Wednesday night. 'agent at Warren ville. Aiken County, j Superintendent Drown stated that narrowly escaped rough treatment if, Eynch a Slat*- (omict. the force and extent of the explosion; not death at the hands of a mob of, Homer Howell, a negro convict at was such that only by the remotest. infuriated men Wednesday night by , work in a c nup a mile outside of possibilitr could anj*^of the entombed being rushed on a trolley car to Au-j f 'ac uron. Ga'., was lynched Thursday be alive. The mine machinery is op- gusta by Magistrate Craig. ' .iPernoon after he had killed one of erated by compressed air and therej Twenty minutes after the magis- 'he guards and attempted to shout are three small pumps In different | frate left with Rrown in his custody,lj down two other guards. Joseph sections of the mine. These pumps: a mob broke open the box cars used , foody, forty years old, married, and exhaust pure air. {at Warrenville for a station since the'the father of several children, was If the force of the explosion did j depot was burned and made a futile; the guard who was killed, not kill all of tho men, there is a re-j effort to locate Brqwn. mote chance that some of them are: Rrown. who Is a .member of a well being kept allVe by these fresh cur- known Aiken County family and a | tng from Internal injuries Mr. Frt-d tRarsons, a stockholder of the wrecked 'store, remained In It tin'll after the '-rash and helped to brine out the *hr*-e ladies Mr \V. M Morton, a r-iatotner. came out of the ruin* with one of t he la Mes Many hero!*- a<'s were done and --very effort made to rescue the un'or tunate ones The building belonged 'u Hr \V .1 M-I endon and wax being remodelled The cause of the w n k was cx-av .a'lons t*e!ng made under- m a’h. and 'he wet w.-atber probably effe.'led the wall* Tbe building was worth $f>,f"'u', and the loss to the drug |ompan> s st<" k Is about Two-Thirds of Men on Delegation to National Convention Favor the Nomination of Wilson, But The? \\ ill ITny F air and Vote for Champ { lark uu the l irst Ballot. The Kansas delegation to the Dem- cmatic national convention at Balti more, is not for Champ Clark. It is iur Gov. Woodrow Wilson. Such la tin- claim made in a formal state ment, Issued from the headquarters of the New Jersey executive in Wash ington. The statement of the Wilson Tampaign managers says: "Advices received from Kansas make It certain that 14 and probably 15 of the 2o delegates to the Balti more convention favor the nomina tion of Governor Wilson for the pres idency. It has been asserted that Gov ernor Wilson only carried three of tie eight congressional district* In Kansas but Information received at ■ ' ',! I" d'lf a:'i • s s' o a t Vit Go - .- > ritor \\ iIson s sup; oners elected del egates In six of the districts, giving him a total of 12 of the 16 district delegates. In addition the Wilson torces succeeded in electing two of the four delegates at large, one of whom is Henderson Martin, the Wil son campaign manager in Kansas. "There is no doubt that the Wilson fot'ets have two-thirds of the Kansas I'-legation, and acting under the In- .-'•ructions of t he .convention which b-i lan d for Clark as first and Wll- - ei as second choice, the vote of the '• l.ga’i-s will be swung to tho New lersi > executive whenever the opin- :,m uf two-thirds of tho delegation .' is d< 't,nd expedient (O do SO ' It s plain that with two-third* of the lelognMon In favor of the nomlna- 1 ..on of Governor Wilson a perfurc-j "i> vote of the first ballot would en- Aa the result of the ad’eRcJ dis covery, by the Government of Nlca- taugua, of a plot to aunssinato Sec retary of State Knox on the occa sion of his recent visit 4.* the Capitol of that country, it la not improbable that a number of prominent "Llb- erala" will be put to death, accord ing to advices received at New Or leans Wednesday from Rluefleld*. Thirteen dynamite bomba placed beneath the road bed, over which Secretary Kiyjx'* special train trav elled from Corlnto to Managua and connected with an electric battery, were dltcovered by Government agent* and will be a ted a* evidence against the consplratora. Two-*core Zelaylatas, or "Liberala," are con fined in the penitentiary at Managua and are held incommuncado pending the termination of the present Inves tigation by the Government. On the day of Mr. Knox’s arrival at Managua, a bomb war exploded j under the Chilamate Bridge, between I.eo'v’M I arelha. destroy!*':• »ma jpotnon of the track, but doing ve^y little damage to the bridge. Near this point four sectona of thy tele graph and telephone wire# were cut. The thirteen dynamite bomba, with the battery connections were discovered between Posoltega and (’hlchimlpa, carefully planted be* neath the railroad tracks. The dis covery of these bombs, it is said, was not made until after the Knox special train had passed on its way to the Capital and the failure of the con spirators to get In their deadly work Is believed to be due either to a lack of proper battery connection, or the approach of guards, who had been detailed to patrol the tracka. The" bitterness displayed against Mr Knox by the Lbersls had Its in- reptlon in the 1909 Nicaraguan revj>- lutton, when Mr. Knox handed the ,. , , 1 Nicaraguan minister his passports af- 11." Kansas delegates to go to, ^ ' ter Grace and Cannon. Americans III.EASE'S EAR IK IN' KEt'OltD. lodge .limes lliinks It W rong to Ite- leu.se Criminals. pardi ti p Ti'ii' liiug on I'l'.i?e'B ird. .Imlge .len« s in mie of lii- j v. ■ ; . eeh'-s jtp.»: t .itC'iirg ( '<> int v 4,1 I j ;: to- |'..riloi't i"W' : ii-t an i a fi' ' • • i ,h. :, T :!;.' ■ i\ei:,or Wilson, who is their real j t. •. e tor t h** presidency." 1 ' I t.« re U no disposition on the '.art of the Wilson people to viols'e I he imtrui *ions of ttie Kansas state '•'invention. and unqueattonably s;., ai.'T i lark will receive all 2h • \ o• es on the first ballot if he remains • 'alidid^te, bul the friends of Wll-', I -oti af in (tl»t)olule control of the del- ! I' .I'hin. and will be able to turn to I j^.rion. and will be able to turn to; ! ir candidate should such aTemote 1 ontingciuv as a second ballot be- 1 •• 1- necessary.” \ risas new*psp<Ts confirm the ad- v 1 . s 1 • c< i wd at Wilson headquarters i n f'Tcnce to 1 he complexion of "■ , . . , he cancelled di legai ion elei ted to the Balti- A disphtch from Wednesday, the sigh trial of Ann!« Crawfo: riot in the packed co Lionel Adams, who torneys defending murdering her plster B^ne, District Attorney SL. Clahr the face, aft^r the rene court-room Quarrel bet' attorneys Arller in the Dr. arista re Mena, pert moved toward tornoy, and wm set ed .Severely by brother of the as a spectator In the All four of the p’ari-J under arrest fighting and dietarbing Dating the light the eeorA" tators In the court room benches, one woman te fainted; the Crawford shoved and tossed about Id the and several men benches wers strnek add eMgdss^ by the blades of an slseirle fNi which their heady came la The fight occurred at the the day’a session, whleh had on with the monotonous nation of. Dr. Charles W. thoiggist and medical state, by Joseph Generally, lor the defease. ; - The quarrel whieh led «p to fight came whea Lionel Adaau, 1 although bearing the same to name, te not related t attorney, also began to Duval. ‘ Your bonty," said District Attest ney Adams, addressing the eonft, desire to ask that yon enforsS tfcg rule that only one attorney at g Ha# ■ 31 •Si connected with the revolutionary army, had been shot by order of President Zelays. The Liberals openly blamed Mr. . Knox for the downfall of Zelaya. as-, v _ sertlng that the revolutionists were 1 openly tided by the I’nlted State* Govsrnment. The socalled "dollar diplomacy'' of the State department has com* In for extremely caustic criticism at the hands of prominent Liberals *ide any time you waat to and ran s believed that Mr. Knox was j know , t „ b# hsatedly. The court called the two *1 do not car* to be you. sir.” said Lionel AdaaM to the district attorney. “If like what Eve said we can outside " District Attorney Adams up from his seat. “Well set It li advlaed of the discovery of the actlv- r i\. 11. bt r .1 ' I > a t'.ir'-" 1 la --Ob t*. ,il ..a.! bib f.i.:.;l>. tii" faml.v \ ., •: m it: 1 b'" : y at la:- •: I ,* i bt ■. I'»- b.i i -! co lit,: 1' rial on 11 * ’ 1 ri iii: 1.al and his f in il). ilb 1 •• • iw,'.* 8 .1 bt roT'K apt"- ■! M t* ! 'a >’ tnor*- conv*•!,• ioa Sp-’Sking of ttn- work of t’ *' ••"• v t.»ioti. the Kansas | * T’y S'.1 r an iti b-p. '1 I'-n't T>ew«pa;'»-r. 1 - :vs « 1 a: . 1 k' - 'ark vi’ s'l tho , c < - , » pt two 1 hi••d'* of • tu in ! Gat 'hi- il'iipat'"* wn- '!i«'ri|it- ,i to \ n .■ fir Mr (’ ia: k until Go\ ••: or W s-on w atits t in 111 to rot*- for t.,tn. ' | I a i • 8 8 , or\ o' ili*- mu \ ent Ion the '■ ,r. a t . h i> it,,' 1, ading newspaper • f • i ■ u: ill.<• wi s', ki)* a much iti- • 1 ■ - • a . ■ 1 ' >1 "i.t "!i 1 orroc mg falb>' : 1 - ol, - 1 • .n) < • * I iu il ;s; at« h* - it lea of the con.plr.tor. during hi. : to ord|?r and ^ th# Cf visit to Managua, for at the •«**! tlon of I)r . I>U¥a , nation of Pre.ldent Dial. It 1. said. whrn court or<ler#<1 his plan, to stop at DUtrlct A(torn#y Adams, Grenada en route back to Corlnto 0T „ r to LloDel AdM 'rom the Capital. Certain Liberal. Well, do you want U ratttotol who reside at Leon, where a • ,rn "K ' „ kf ^j ’ rn'i American spirit has long existed, j .., f you are ^ for hav,. been charged by the Covem-, ^ UoDpl A Ja uh ^ i| no n. with being the principal. In th. hiiVR (o ^ ^ h\i<\ if Is uawite to ! ,, * have Mr Knox visit that place. you me , n to ^ fight a duel with me?” asked tnct attorney; "me. the ehief officer 0 fthis pariah, and she Had Hccn Arrested In New York: enforce its laws? Beeldes, duello allows a gentleman tg WOMAN EOMMITH HUICIDE. 1 of HinuKgling. liar dro ed o'.' aid" of a cl:•:.?( let dow lew days ago :he c oj a house on tile oppos,!* th" street and sever.ij •> ,n,"« el", t. • I io the suri'ai e on lad Brn ‘,v the women of th" house. The Dun,ore poll.-". :i r ti r .111 ! n\e- • "a* ion of the e\ :dus 1 1 in. s t\ t'i o •a« from a broken main, causpil pro'' Gdy by the mine settlings, foiHid iis ay into the cell . r o r the Gav el ; .1 erne, where it Ulihert'd in a detl.'i volume an' explo led w hen it c:iii;e •1 eon: aet with an oil lamp that w 1- ■".iruitv.r in the house WANTED TO IA Nt H A (.ENT. He Was Accused of Instill ing Young Married Lady. ' 1. *• V)»Mr'ir n in has ti. '-n ship' 1 1 from 1 j. . • t' 'll' S III* • • ■ >tt '• ! n « in h ? M '' in :t .n. 1 )kla . to Ins old b"!!." a‘ 1*^ s .1'.’ :• '’la- k. t > 1 C 'll V 1 r t • ! 1 graft - 1'' in irlbo-o G 'nutv, w b* r.- P ' !\ 0 ! Yv i 111: •it. W n k !!. 1 a \s 1 ill '•<’ int- -ri-d \\ hen b" w as k 1 -. a* 1 1,1 • ■ 1 1 01 , 1 and and v\ * .0 was <! it ? u- I that he was in th" mill-; ' ■ it ; 1 s" s own 1 ' :* ti* HI- ts >• 'i- f**'i ,* >1 1 ^ his ri-vul ir d'iti*-s as a j i UJ i• v -r in th" I'M ’8 1 h ; " a *!h MV.' ll ■. :! 1 ruMni , r o f "li" con:; any. 1 a Is. h r fail, d •' a s 1 V" b Af!*” ” r. W H R • i"- w is t»i*ntv-si\ ’ : » 1 . as*- b" a ni" Go . • - r o •• In ‘ i’:» rdon J ■ v , , rs of a g*-. 11 - L'-a 1 uat'-d frntti , ' s rich rlii-ut w i - il.UJt b ■n.:! , y bin . V, 1- C11 a ’» -' 1 in Charl'-ston in 1 !"G. i • ft , *■ 1 da\ iu jail V ' 1 -r t<-aiT 1 inv for thr.-" v.-ars, par: : 1 dpt* Jones ini" '; 1'0 n " 1 t hat P. 11':1«" t t *'*> t i mi- lii-: 11" aS.801 i.atod wi’h tho "Ml eveivist'd OX"' •11' ■ ' 1 *rti» ■tl.oy in f :i ultv at tho Staunton Milita-y •! \ •; a- 2 'i odd i las s 1, i.v ft '•.irto'-n \, • * r»L t > r n y , at st a union. V;» . ho do- J '■ ()! i:hs of ullioo. Hv. bid:- .- r •' 1111*1 I) s (1 al to U" d-Ttak" his chos.-n profas- , it ■• had oxoroisi'd t h" ' X"' 1 1! !' ('l"i!t- "i of i-iv: 1 otr-iio-'-ring. Ta 0 years , !J« > iti arlv onto : 1 d tv >:• M'i* hiM'o m- ! « •ii lie iii i i 'ptcl a ni 'st t1:i'!i-rin< Xif- governor. \\i ona- ' 1 f to put S r from th i- Sans Hois Coal company 'own ori'iiinais," sai i Hi .iotii's. M " had been Kiicct-ssful ever since hisj ,t n d have a count ry 0' 1 ; \v ; i ml ord < ■ < 'nn*-rt ion with this uroai mining T. : 0:100 a mi f ri* Tidship. w\:< 1ro Lh" rO!l!!»:HlV ;i nd had airoady roceivod i ri! iiiiuil is not in rout ml. 1 I .;•■ h !i*"ti. Kan. al the time y rs Blanche Carson, who was ar- ' v irion was in session r (, 9 p t( j i u .New York for smuggling • L 1 ! " •''Gar says: several ttiousand dollars worth of Lam is d' 1 cai'g to the ns- welry on her arrival from India, ir aGe conven'ion were .,omujuu-d suicide early W ednesday • i ,r ' I 1 'dark, first . y j iar ,King herself out of the window at. 1 w iis..-: G." se mnd choice ,, f her hotel. "T. lull' )**r in th" o; :nion of two-1 •jhi, body of Mrs Carson was seen !’ ! J ’h” de! ei;:i' ion, it is deemed , |,y a pedestrian swinging from a I 1 ' d ion t to no so, is the Inst rue! ion j y, i ndo w on the eight floor of the ho-1 Kf *'' ra ^ Persons who werh to n th* > shall leave Clark and t( .j Rroztell. The clerk w as notified! a8i<le and PU nctl « d Dr- Mmi ■A lotia . 1 an encounter with one of yot actor.” Lionel Adams then struck trlct attorney, who struck back. '' cording to statements obtained ^ several witnesses at this ]unc£ur* Dr. Mahn, one of the experts for thfif,4a> fense. made an attempt to strike tfc* district attorney. Sturgeu AdtoMk who was In the court room, kwted - to w go :o Wilson ■'I'.' i * sol i| • ion was added to the 1, : u' r t'i irk mn when it !>*•- 1 :m.e a; pai'-nt Hinf r, was doubtful ••• h*• 111*■ r dark ei'ijlil wlti Instructions it .all. Tiie ri.ioliifjon recites that ”, ilb'in is t! ■ fe ond choice of the Kalis.'8 H. m " '.a's and when the del* < eales |, . ve Clark they must vote for and tho door of Mrs. Carson’s room 1 was fon* i. A rope, securely tied to' f nndemonium reigned radiator, passed out of the window. | f j 0n '™ ta u nt8 "ere separated, it 1 he end of which dangled the body ut ;he woman. The body was (still warm and she had not been dead more than an i ■lour when discovered. Mrs. Carson i e<1 °n their own bonds, pending reached Now York Monday on the! The prisoner, somewhat p^e detail then entered with draw* and cleared the court room. * The four participants wort thorn placed under arrest and wero 1 oral oxeellent promotions. Cji^liier lx>< ko*l in Vault. j V, hon Cashier Knight en''n d th*- vault of the State Bank at Gary, ! Texas, Thursday in quest- of a book, j an unknown person slamnu J the ioor sliut and carried away n pack- lag" containing $2.0101, which bad been left on tho cashier's d'-sk. A passerby heard the c.ushi* r's 11 alls two hours later and released I him. The authorities are without 1 clues. i lie New .1. rsey man. 1 bteamshi i "So the '■ !t, ent .on really instrue's :iS arrested on the charge of gross 1 for both c;,i’k and Wilson, and puts; undervaluation and smuggling after I Mi*- power to dr'.ermine to what ox-, confessed that she had smug- H* d ' jewelry which the authorities rents. To this one slim chance the voting man highly respected, was relatives and friends of the entomb-' taken to Aiken Thursday morning Dro|>s Dead After Fight, Mr. J. H. Gilbert,.^ prominent far mer of Henry comity, Ga., went to ed men cling with pitiful hope and land lodged in jail, charged with as- j 1 ^' 3t * 0C) * "here his children prar. i»»H -iin criminal intent upon . *'«» '»••?•<>• en « ,g, " 1 1 j * fight with the tea* her. Fie returned to his buggy and on his way h6me died from heart trouble. Mr. Gil bert was about forty years old aud The cause of th explosion resulted, according to mine experts, from eith er accumulated gas or coal dust. The San Bois property Is owned by tho Fort Smith and Western Railroad Company. Blease Losing Ground. The Spartanburg Herald skys Blease is losing ground at Inman cot ton mills, where Judge Jones spoke Mohday night. Several of the lead ing men at the mills, who have prev iously been supporters of Blease, openly stated tDtot they were going to work for JoMf ftlfctoforth young woman of Warrenville. Brown protests his innocence and claims that, as agent, he was merely assisting the woman over the car tracks, when she arrived on a train after dark Wednesday night wilh sev eral bundles, and she began to scream. Died From Small Pox. A Mrs. Smith of the Alice mill village, Easley, di«d recently of long illness with small pox. The family moved there only a short while ago, when very soieB, the family was •eixod with the ^dreaded disease. leaves'a family. Bandits Hold Up Train. Mobile and Ohio passenger train No. 4, northbound, was held up and the express safe was dynamited and robbed seven miles south of Corinth, Miss., by four men, heavily armed and masked. After accomplishing the robbery the quartet took to the dense underbrhsh of the Tuscumbia river bottom*. ' Jump Otf Water Tank. v:. tent t'bnrk shell b<-support**! into (lie hands of the Wilson men. Then came the dts'riet e.inventions and Wilson got ten of tiie 1 district delegate*. "The Sixth district delegates, who had been snowbound for 24 hours, arrived earl., in the afternoon and added two na re district delegates, making 12 of the 16 to Clark's four. "The elec! ion of delegates-at-largu resulted in two more Wilson men be ing added to the 12 district delegates. . M. B. Gaitskill, of Girard, and Hen- dersNin Martin. W ilson manager, de- P George Washington. She! the excitement, was led fr«a tte court room. , During the fight a portion nl^thn slides on which Dr. Durnl portions of Elisa Crawfordt' weye smashed. The district in a statement he made 1 fight, charged titot the flxbt'* started for the deliberate purpoto «• valued at $20,000 Eat her Meets Son’s Fate. Felix J. Ellard. one of the b 68 * • having the evidence destroyd4 Jl known men of the Lewisburg section,, the me ] ee> /y Tbe jury witnessed the of Alabama, where many acts of vio- With his face buried deep in th mud and with practically every b >t " *, n *,.d two Clark men as delegates, in his body broken, Benjamin F.; j< j Sheridan and A. M. Jackson, Board, a millionaire manufacturer of lwo prominent Clark leaders, were Alexandria,j Va., committed suicide ,] 10 ojjjer two. Monday at Wake Forest, N. C., by: "Tfio Wilson men on the delegation jumping from a water tank. He had , r , T(> j M Orr and W. D. Kuhn, of the been ih ill health, and had gone to |Firat district; Frank Comlsky, Third Wake Forest to recuperate. j district; W. S. Carpenter and M. A. ♦"*"* j I.imbocker, Fourth district; John Teddy Was Snowed Under. ... : Hnstetter and Mike Fry, Fifth dis- With 1,167 of the 1,800 precincts * trlct: Chasyles Sawyer and Edward in the State heard from in the North 1 Dye of the Sixth; Jerry Fitzpatrick Dakota Presidential prm'fcrenre nrl- and Robert Broadford of the Eighth; mary election of Tiesdav, complete Henderson Martin and B. S. Oalt- returns give Senator 1^1'olleUe 54,-1 skill, of the Atate convention. C. W. 159 votes; Theodore Roosevelt 22.- Green, of tbe Second district. Is 877, and President Taft Sena-1 claimed by Wilson men as the 14th tor LaFollette's plurality -10 these delegate. precincts Is 11,282. 1 “This doe* not mean that the dele- lenre have been co^nmitted in recent months, was ambushed "and assassi nated two miles from his home. His son, Constable Will sEBard, was as sassinrated only a few week’s ago. The assassius in both cases are un known. but it is generally believed this vHt have no effect on the ease. It tojwl improbable that Judge Frank DT Chretien, of the court, any summon the participants to contempt proceedings. 1Meases William J. Bryan, The North Dakota primary result was highly gratifying to Willlajn Jen nings Bryan, who said Wednesday: “I expected LaFollette to carry the State. I need hardly add that I think he deserved endorsement.” gation will violate its Instructions to support Clark. The Wilson men *ay that they will vote for Clark as long as they deem It expedient. But the Wtlsen men are In control of egatlon. They will not be held to th* Clark column after It appear* thgt to vote for him would only work the defeat of Wilaoa.” Train Kills Young At Greenville UImm Elsie was instantly killed at nOOU ,1 day by*Southern Train N#. crossing of Buncombe railroad tracka at Poo girl stepped on seeing the vs her. - FTv.v others- •V "■** *: 1 \ r. ,v^ , - - a V j G- rv/r - •'t* A* --