The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, September 25, 1913, Image 2
SENT TO IE1IC1N CONGIESS ON
INDEPENDANCE DAT
HAS HOPES OF PEACE
Drclure* the Ore»<e«t Possible
Triumph for Him l« to Turn Oflice
Over to SueccMor Witli Country at
Peace—Hoes Not Kefer to Recent
INplomatic Kxchonges.
In spite of tlio rumors which dealt
Impartially with attacks upon Ameri
cans, an army uprising and the assas
sination of the Mexican President,
the Mexican Independence Day came
and went with nothing to mar the
holiday spirit of Mexico City on
Tuesday.
Politically the great event Was the
reopening of Congress and the read
ing of the President's message. Put
without doubt Pen. Huerta was mov
ed less by that than by the spectacle
of thousands of students, citizens and
soldiers doing him honor as he stood
on the balcony of the National Pal
ace reviewing the great parade, the
feature in which public Interest cen
tered.
On Huerta said the strained d’p
lomatlc relations between Mexico and
the l'nlted States had caused the
M.tu.hi nation to suffer unmerited
sfTIatbin and ha! retarded the pa>
fh utlun of the « . i:.' r v N>'V ert ti<d>- >
lie to;., ! ' . r i n i i r l \ so] u t Ion < ' 11 ••
difTerete's t« ' » • .-n the t w ,, r,a’ im ••
and to -• e Nlexl o « T> ! t *1 e I U ' |
Kmte* on-e more unl’cd In h >nds < '
fMen 1st p
T! e r r o v « 1 o >, a 1
d 1 "f n t 1 o
ttie ff<*erne~ref n 1
srd '^*t o' Me ee
HTtH*l*Kl» THK TR^I\ 1U T MIHhK.D
THK
Could Not Blow Open the Safe lb-
enuse They Had |j**ft the Dynaniite
Behind.
Residents of Homestnke, Mont.,
are laughing over the discomfit tire of
throe hold bandits, who, after hold
ing up a train and preparing to dyna-
mlto the express car safe, discovered
that the explosive had been left be
hind. Firing a few shots to convince
the chuckling engineer and fireman
that they were real brigands, despite
their poor memories, the men rode
off into the forests to hide their
shame.
The train holdup itself was of Hie
regular frontier order. The denoue
ment, however, proved the greatest,
farce ever enacted In that robber-rid
den region of pioneer days. In the
tall grass a mile and a half west of
Homestake, the bandits had deposited
half a wagonload of paraphernalia
when no one was looking. These
were torpe loos, masks and automatic
pistols, but most important of all dy
namite.
Equipped ns they thought for final
action, the nmn awaited the arrival of
a limited train on the Northern Pari-
flo. Torpedoes wer ejdodedx at the
opportune time U hen the engineer
and fireman blithely skiptei] down
the !"-•(,mo* j\ <’ ■Mep the rom.-r-; wo-e
there to me, t M.i :n an 1 give or'!* r^
TV.WH NfU.BOK** \ l<TIM
TRICIC I \TK.
\rrvwte«l on Minor Charge, They
VI ere Cast Into Noisome Cell—In-
• 1 ,
vestjgat ion Colng On.
State authorities In Texas are In-
vasMgatlng what Is pictured as one
of the most barbarous of prison hor
rors in recent times. The allegation
is made that twelve negroes, who
were charged with being lazy at their
work In the cotton fields, were jam
med Into' an underground cell at the
State prison farm building, near
Richmond, Tex. The cell, ten feet
long, seven feet wide and seven feet
high, had metal walls and ceilings,
und only four airholes, each the size
of a quarter.
Fight of the twelves negroes cast
into the cell suffocated In the ight
after onepf the most desperate fights
that men ever made for existence.
Four hoWs the cramped and impris-
oned men fought for vantage of plac
ing their lips to the airholes. Those
w ho were conquered died. One .of
the four survivors was found with
his lips at a crack in the floor
through which he succeeded in suck
ing suffici. nt air to keep him alive.
The four survivors told Police .lup-
tire Fenn and the State Prison com-
*■ P-ioner^ that, until f 1 ,> v grow too
fa’nf. thov had t or-istont!.' yollod to
r f >
fh t i> *!
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\VIM ; n a Hi In uf
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a
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ropi v
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io survivor-*
He 1 lerlarx** Deltaslng Influence of
K«loon and Boad-bouae Waa too
Apparent in White Slave Case.
Two years in the Federal peniten
tiary on McNeil Island, Washington,
and a fine of $2,000 is the sentence
imposed on Maury I. Diggs, former
State architect of California, because
of his flight to Reno with Marsha
Warrington, a Sacramento girl.
Fighteen months In the same prison
and a fine of $1,500 was the penalty
given his friend and companion, F.
Drew Camlnetta.^-for like offence by
Judge Von Fleet at San Francisco,
Cal. Caminetti eloped with Marsha
Warrington’s friend, Lola Norris.
Diggs and Caminetti seemed un
concerned when sentence was pro
nounced. A few minutes later they
laughed and chatted with the news
paper men over their flight. The
moffier and brother of Cominetti and
the wife and father of Diggs were in
Court. The two parents of the pris
oners listened with bowed heads to
Judge Van Fleet's words. Mrs.
Diges stared bldnkly at the judge,
giving no sign that she realized what
his wi-rds meant.
"Th s was a crime of opportunity.”
sai l Judge Van Fl*-*‘t in passing s*-n-
tt'To
* ial
■'I im-an that Mo- laxity of s
: !i' on-* *nd * be !;yk of pare-
• - rol i- a lo : * [ -pblo I w!
•'.at '' '
♦ \ ' 1 .
: g In'
After KemwHHng That They Would
All I He Ttogether Hurla an Explo
sive on the Hoot.
At Bloomington, Ind., Mack Hurst,
a stone mason, dynamited his house
Friday, killing himself and one
daughter and fatally injuring two
other daughters, in addition to de
molishing the house. Mrs. Hurst, in
a remarkable manner, escaped injury.
Hurst is believed to have been in
sane. • The dead:
Madl Hurst, fifty years old.
Maud Hurst, sixteen years old.
Fatally hurt:
Fannie Hurst, thirteen years old,
one leg blown off and body mangled,
almost unrecognizable.
/ Elizabeth Hurst, six years old,
body mangled.
Put little is known of the tragedy
beyond the results. Mrs. Hurst, who
escaped injury, how, she says she
does not know, says that the man
awoke the family at two o'clock Fri
day morning and told them all to
gather in his bedroom. After they
had all entered, he closed and locked
the door and spoke only these few
words: ”We will all die together ”
Then he picked up a stick of dyna-
n .ii- Mib b was lying on the floor
Ti* ar
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ei**** til-
o ?’ at drink *
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■rrlV" d.
and threw ir under the bel.
a d*-;: fetiir: _ ro i r a nd M rs
. ••M),-r---l n*>* h : n c more un-
i- •* -.ns. i ’u-nes- at the
T . h i.i-ar’ v an hou r
Man Whoa* Life Wa* Saved by Sher
iff White’s Stand Against a Mob
Acquitted.
In the face of the positive state
ment of a respectable white woman of
high intelligence that he had assault
ed her, Will Fair, a negro, was found
not guilty Saturday afternoon at a
special term of Court held at the
Spartanburg Court House. The jury
were out twenty hours. The verdict
caused no surprise and was quietly
received. Fair’s advisers thought it
would be well for him to leave the
State and he has gone to Virginia to
accept a job in a railroad construc
tion camp. The woman who accused
the negro has gone to live in Atlan
ta. She is believed to have testified
in good faith, but to have been labor
ing under a delusion.
Ten minutes before the jury re
turned their verdict they reported
through their foreman, Joseph Lee,
of Landrum, a hosiery manufocturer,
that they were hopelessly deadlocked.
From authenticated information, it
seems that six of the jurors were for
absolute acquittal and the other half
dozen, while they were agreed that
the negro was innocent, desired to
place the n-sponsibilitv of his ue<j nt-
ta! on another jur- They wer** ev -
d*-n;l> of the opinion that the au-
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t|,.n of tie ro'intry ftf th*' hnn '
| l on oioi .io imtitor:/*-il In Ms-
French bankers took $'’.n,Aoo non at
90 Out of tlie Spexer Fo hxd re
paid $20.ut)0,uo0, half of which w a-*
a loan to th** national treasury and
half to the monetary commission
For-1he army r. t’.oO horses ond l'.'! 1 '"
mules had been pun based during the
year. The National Cartridge fac
tory, he said, was turning out $'.’bf'.-
000 cartridges monthly.
Besides a great number of earn >n
of various descriptions, machine
guns, rifles, carbines and ammuni
tions, the government has contracted
abroad for ten aeroplanes, 77 armor
ed and 50 unarmored automobiles.
On the subject of the approaching
elections the President said he had
promulgated the law enacted by Con
gress complimentary to the electoral
law under which the government will
hold election In October.
He declared that the government
would continue to make efforts to
ward the pacification of the country
within a period relatively short. In
this spect he could Inform Congress
that the situation already was domi
nated by the government in a major
ity of States, only Sonora and Duran
go at present being totally beyond
authority.
♦ ♦ ♦
Tragic Ending of Parade.
At Cleveland, Ohio, Just as the last
section of the Perry Centennial cele
bration parade was passing an Impro
vised balcony outside a restaurant
Wednesday night, the balcony col
lapsed upon th© crowd on the side
walk below, killing one man and
Mrloualy Injuring three other men
and two Mttlf girls. Several others
rt;
I<H*K 1IKK <>\\ N 1.1! I!
1 \\ K*ft IN \ \DK ^*1 TH.
Wiunjin l.ft-rtn-ft Nut** Pi.hling 1'nrc-
xx ell to Hu* \\ nrhl.
\ dispatch from S; artan’ urg to
The New* and Courb-r sa\s when
Frank W\mbs, a paperhanger, re
turned iiotti*' from work Wednesday
nighr, tie found his wife's bed room
door locked. His little children told
him their mother had entered the
room early in the afternoon, and Hint
they had been unable to get any re-
-ponse from her sinee.
Mr. Wymbs forced the door open
and found his wife lying in bed with
a sponge soaked in chloroform press
ed to her nose. She was dead. She
had written a note, bidding farewell
to the world.
It was given to Coroner John S.
Turner, hut he declined to divulge its
contents. He said it indicated a de
ranged mind.
< Imttmu>ftigix ‘'urrendcrx to Blue H<*«>t
of lU-scigers.
IVnt upon tin-'.r tir.-t peaceful
vashm of the South, thousands
Has an Entire Silver Jaw Bone.
Elizabeth Nemanich, seventeen
years old, of Joliet, 111., has had a
solid silver lower Jaw put in her
mouth, ast the result of an operation
for “phossy Jaw”, contracted In a
match factory. The surgeons say that
she will retain her beauty and that
she will he able to use the metal Jaw
as well as she could have used the
original one.
♦ . .. , -
Corset Steel Saves Woman’s Life.
A corset steel, which deflected a
bullet aimed at her heart, saved the
life of Mrs. Marie McDonald, of Sac
ramento, Cal., when A. E. Carey shot
at her. Carey, as soon as he saw the
woman fall, turned the pistol on him
self and InflleUd a fatal wonad In
in-
of
I'nmn x.-tcrans have arrived in Chat-
fanooita to att.-nd the 47th annual
encampment of the Brand Army of
the Republic, and allied organisa
tions. Th*' encampment will con
tinue through Saturday. In honor of
the occasion Chattanooga has pre
pared a great welcome. Citizens’
committees throng the railroad sta
tions, welcoming the veterans. Sur
vivors of the Union army, which
caused the Confederacy to totter in
the bloody battle at Chicamauga,
fought there fifty years ago, are
greeted with the same cordiality
shown the United Confederate vet
erans whose annual reunion was held
in Chattanooga last May.
Stole for Luxuries.
Pleading guilty to assault with in
tent to rob and saying that the desire
to provide luxuries for his wife and
two small children, who stood at his
side, was the cause for his downfall,
Hugo Rolling, 29 years old. a member
of the Milwaukee police force for six
years was sentenced to serve three
years in the house of correction.
Killed by Automobiles.
Miles Z. Overcast, a carpenter, of
Savannah, Ga., wa* struck and In
stantly killed bv an automobile of
Assistant Fire Chief Fogarty in one
of the priclpal street* of Savannah
late Monday. The fir© chief waa re
sponding to an alarm, when his ma
chine, which waa being driven at
breakneck epeed to the fire, skidded
and struck
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r g
•!- -wn th*’ si!\ i-rxft ar*,
itig"t« They b '* the
t.ai *■ b* bin 1 them
4 s
h t!.**v m*-!te<!
tn ron venter,t
Im; rov;-*e,l fur-
Uorpse Sitm l |> In B«*d.
T.a!i1 out nn l ready for the under-
*aker, "Aunt Harriet” Law, an aged
n.-gress, of Ceorgp.ow n, Del . nston-
isl.i d her family by sitting tip in bed
and asking what all the fuss was
about. Medical attendance was ob
tained, as soon as the negroes re
covered from their fright, and the
old lady was kept alive until late that
night, when she really died.
Took His Own Life.
At Augusta, Ga., Thomas W. Bear
den, aged C)2 years, representing a
supply company of Columbia. S. C.,
committed suicide early Wednesday
in a rooming house by inhaling gas.
The body was found in the bath
room. The door was closed and the
window was down.
♦ ♦ ♦
Little Girl Killed.
Lizzie Matthews, the five-year-old
daughter of Wade H. Matthews, a
farmer near Florence, died Thurs
day night from an accidental gun
shot wound inflicted while the girl
and her twelve-year-old brother were
playing with a gun.
pany at Bayway. N. J., on Monday.
Negro Held for Old Killing.
Lem Sandera waa arrested in Pine
Bluffs, Ark , charged with having
killed a negro seven years ago. He
has been taken to Haaelharat. Mias,
where the crime was committed.
L- »
!>*r
r*<KM-n th** Iftiuii’o *<a!*' !•
r f,ir»&rd *l'h int*T*-st ’,> th**
r.itb'ti of this struggle on O.'to
*■ tary Br>an and Governors
Fraig rim! Hooper have already ao-
(t-pt»-d Invitations to '..e present and
■: ik*' addresses Secretary Josephus
DanieN, him-*elf a native of North
I'arolina, will be in attendance, If
possible.
Islands" -i
ink in tl»e <>eean.
Fab on and Hope islan Is, of th*“
Friendly or Tonga group, in the
South Pacific ocean, are reported to
have disappeared from view. The ni
si rum* nts in the Sydney naval station
recorded violent earthquakes in the
vicinity of the islands just prior to
the time they were reported gone.
Several hundred natives and a few
xvh’te men are supposed to have gone
down with the islands.
At r* * . ft r * § •
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1 ’ :. ’ 1 - . ■ g ft a u a n - , ’ •
tin.*- t b a - -a .' t I-* h! .• g.*d • ,.
b. *-n ( * i'M'. r . * ’ *'d ? o su ff "d HU t; a ’
InotnaMnn Th. xoung won •..•
fi. 1 t hat --lie had b*-*-n in :!! • a ■ !i
and **u b J*-< t to fain tin g p**l. ■*
(
Vj
K s< IFNTlsT BFI.IFM n.
Overdose of Morphine.
Wallace Webb, aged 50, a travel
ling salesman of Atlanta, was found
dead n his bed Tuesday at a hotel in
Millen, Ga. A coroner’s Jury held he
came to his death from an overdose
of morphine, which he took to relieve
kidney trouble.
Cost Him His Life.
Sympathy for a dog which was be
ing abused cost Walter Pearson, of
Newark, N. J., his life. The dog bit
him while he was taking care of it
and pearson died of rabies.
Two Scalded to Death.
Two men were scalded to death
and hundreds were imperilled when
a steam receiver exploded In the big
plant of the W. A. Clark Wire Com-the christened the "Mad Fly”," fell
Drops to Death.
An aviator named Vlaicu, who re
cently designed an aeroplane which
during a test Saturday and waa kill
ed.
I leer Starve* to Death la Mire.
A young deer became trapped in a
mire in the Newfleld dlatglct of Coa-
nectlcnt. and unable to releeee Unelf
from the mad. etareed to death.
Foremost Britain Avows Belief in
Future Life.
A presidential address before the
British Association for the Advance
ment of Science seldom has been
awaited with such eagerness on the
part of the general public as that de
livered last week by Sir Oliver Jos
eph Lodge. The leading scientists of
the world were in the audience, in
cluding Mme. Curie, the co-discover
er with her husband or radium, and
fifty other great foreign savants.
Usually such addresses are too
scientific and abtruse to appeal to
popular taste, but it was known that
Sir Oliver was to deal with the mys
tery of after life and the question of
the persistence of personality after
death, and in avowing his belief In
such after life, the speaker went fur
ther than any scientist yet had gone
toward answering a question so pro
foundly interesting to the mass of
mankind. The address was listened
to with impressive silence, -broken
only by the murmur of half-suppress
ed laughter or little outbursts of ap
plause.
Joy Riders Are Shot.
* At San Francisco. Kate Coulson,
thirtyyears u£ aute. was shot in
the neck Friday and George Kovack,
night vxatchman in a garat**, and Wil
liam Acker, a chauffeur, were ahot
dead after the three had been riding
most of the night in an automobile.
A. R. Coulaon. husband of the wound
ed woman, la being sought by the
police Mrs. Couleoa Is believed to be
dually
e