The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, September 25, 1913, Image 7
A MASTERCRIMINAL
JEHIBLE RFCIID Of FATHEI
IANS SCHIDT
FOUND
NEWSBOY CONGRESSMAN OF
NEW YORK GONE.
PK1EST LED DUAL LIFE
Served at the Altar as a Saint in a
Catholic Church and Acted as a
Devil When Not Officiating at Ser
vices or Hearing Confessions of
People.
When the New York police ran
down and arrested Father Hans
Schmidt, a Catholic priest connected
with one of the churches of that city,
they seem to have caught a master
criminal, whose deeds of crime may
have extended across the ocean to his
homeland. In addition to the mur
der of the young woman, Anna Au-
muller, which he confessed, the police
have connected Father Schmidt with
several other crimes and arrested at
least one of his pals.
He is known as Dr. Ernest A.
Muret, a dentist In the day time and
a counterfeiter at night. He was ar
rested aftt-r detectives, ransacking
S huiidt's apartments, had uncovered
evidence to show Schmidt was a coun
terfeiter This evidence led them to
ted h\ a man under the
SHOULD GO TO FARMERS
THEY NEED CROP El ND Ml Cll
WORSE THAN IU VEILS.
a "at r<
I itne ef
Vk ere ' 11;
terfet’er
I I
ttlg
.I- XT'
.eorve Miller. In which
.ill ••'--entials to the roun-
ra't The janttre** of the
• 'r ng \1 greeted
’• ’ f 5 M tret unaware of
• S ’ ’. 1 • C Appr.
1 *-n« "ti
r*‘rng
T ’• ’
1 •• r a * • r <• * ■, • •
.an 'nm
r V. • ’ m
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! (■•!,'••! i 1 •■
'’*( ur. 1
*• r ht«
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' • • m
' " ar ! X!
• ” o ,
* ! * r
Disappeared From Home Two Weeks
Ago—Body Lay Unidentlfled for
Thirteen Days.
“Big Tim” Sullivan, the New York
politician, who rose from newsbody
to congressman, is dead. His man
gled body was identified Saturday by
his step-brother, Larry Mulligan, af
ter It had lain for thirteen day* in a
New York morgue.
Sullivan, who waa ill, eluded his
nurses in the early npornlng of Au
gust 31 and a few hours after waa
struck and killed by a train at Pel
ham Parkway.
With no identifying marks on the
clothing or articles In the pockets the
body lay in Fordham morgue for
thirteen days awaiting identification.
Saturday morning it was sent to
Bellevue morgue. There was station
ed Peter Purfleld, a policeman, who
had known “Big Tim” Sullivan and
liked him before his mind became
clouded. Something about the ex
pression of the features stirred Pur-
fleld’s memory. By and by, after he
had pondered an hour or bo, Purfleld
remarked to & reporter: “That looks
a little bit like ‘Big Tim’.”
Peering long at the mutilated and
discolored face the reporter thought
so too The telephone brought ‘‘Big
Tim's ’ Eastslde friends in groups to
th«* morgue, but none recognliod In
the changed features the man they
had know n In jiia prime. Larry Mul
ligan. Sullivan's step-brother, was
summoned H* looked at the face
< nee and turned away. "It's 'Hlg
Tim . ' he said
The picture show* how FullDsn
Headed by Senator Smith a Delega
tion 1-Yom This State See* Presi
dent and Treasurer.
A delegation of well known cotton
planters, in charge of Senator E. D.
Smith *of South Carolina, Thursday
called at the White House and iu the
presence of President Wilson and
Secretary McAdoo niade an earnest
appeal for a more ^i^table distri
bution of the goverfSm&nt's $50,000,-
000 crop moving fund.
In the delegation there were be
sides Senator Smith, E. W. Dalibs,
president of the South Carolina Cot
ton Growers’ association: J. H. Pat
ten, also of South Carolina, general
counsel for the association: R. M.
Cooper of South Carolina and J. C.
Kennett and S. H. Hobbs, the two
latter large cotton planters in North
Carolina. As explained by Mr. Pat
ten much of the money that is being
loaned by the government is not dis
tributed according to the way the
cotton growers would desire. It is
learned that much of this mon^y is
going into the hands of the actual
buyer, w hile a very sin til part of P is
being loaned to farmers who need It
now to get their <ott<>n picked at. I
ready for sale
It Is tliis phase of the M'lia'lun
Mr 1 'atten sail, ah' h 1 - c.e;
leaders in t!
sidera'lon
CRIMNALS CAUGHT
CIICAGO POLICE DISCOVER Ik
PIITANT RECORDS OF
UNDERGROUND RAILWAY
Raid on Chinese Chop Suey Place Re
veals “Black Hook,” in Which are
Kept Invaluable Records of Past
Crimes and Countless Hints for Fu
ture Criminal Intentions.
Police authorities in scores of bor
der and inland cities are looking up
the record of Chinese residents whose
names are recorded in the Chinese
"black book,” discovered by the Chi
cago police while searching for a
trail of the murderer of Charles Sing,
a Chinese merchant in that city. The
book indicates that there is an “un
derground railway" system to aid the
escape of Chinese criminals, names of
orientals who have been smuggled In
to this country and details the distri
bution of opium smuggled Into the
1 ’n 11ed States through Parifir coast
cities and across the Canadian bor
der
The "tunnf T' plvn c preads a net
work of
t h r, ' ' ; I- I (
TIED UP BT HIS THUMBS CYCLONE HITS CONWAY
ANDERSON NEGRO'S STATEMENT
CAt'SKM THREE AKREHT&.
NO LIVES LOST BUT WIND
ITS STRENGTH.
Magistrate’! Constable and Two
White Men Indicted for a Serious
Offence by the Grand Jury.
A sensation was "sprung In the
court of general sessions at Anderson
Thursday when the grand Jury pre
sented W. W. Adams, constable for
Magistrate J. B. Leverett, George
Smith and John Blackwell for assault
and battery “upon the person of John
Walker, colored.” Wararnts were
ordered Issued for these men by
Judge Rice.
John Walker appeared before the
grand jury, at its solicitation he de
clares, and it is presumed that the
presentment to the court by the jury
is the outcome of the testimony fur
nished the Jury. The case is a side-
issue of the celebrated John Huff
case in Asheville, N. C., for the mur
der of Policeman McConnell.
To an Augusta Chronicle repre
sentative Thursday Walker declared
that he was taken by Adams, Smith
ami Blackwell' from Adams' house,
after t>pintr arrested by a deputy sher
iff and turned over to Adams to he
taken as a witness to Asheville in the
Hu'T ra c e, and that these men tle.j
•m les
a '
K *
'em
<• m 'V.
The !li
New York
e !' r.': - h <' •’ u m b; a.
l r '‘ii't.a See-at S ,if
a s., ut. i>\er•*• 1 and
' t. .it • ti •! .- • \
i;cs around his thumbs, threw
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a tree and he]
promised *
lie • . tell
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• i- • ^ *y»-:
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Storm Bunts Upon Tow* Without
r \yornlng Have for Rosuiuf Soud
and Suckle* I)*rkn«M.
Moving in a northeasterly direction
and hewing a course about one-half
mile wide, a terrific cyclone swept
North Conway Thursday afternoon at
three o’clock and left ruin and deso
lation in its wake. While no lives
were lost, several persons escaped as
though by a miracle. The littlo
daughter of W. W. Russ, while on her
way home, encountered the storm
and was rolled about In the street.
She was rescued by a lady and re
ceived little Injury. Mrs. T. J. Bell
had just left her home when the roof
was torn away. She escaped uninjur
ed. There may be others who receiv
ed injuries about a mile from Conway
where it is reported several negro
houses were demolished. The rain
fell In torrents, causing the property
loss to reach into the thousands.
A few minutes before three o'clock
a tiny black cloud appeared in the
southwest; a distressingly roaring
sound wa* heard In that direction
and In a few moments It completely
rn\•■red the heavens The roaring in-
cre.i-ed and black darkness fell with
■ 'tie '.11 s W I>np
U 1th the fury of a giant the storm
hur-t upon that sortion of town, mov-
h..- a i the rate of approximately
•• . l.tv in.les an hear Butid'nrs were
'!• 1 • h•• 1 warehouses were unroof-
■ ' • ant ah'ng lea were hurled
• *• Oil.lair *re-ea we-e Jw’a-ed from
' •' T.ps and torn from their
• '‘'-re*, fop: let ant the air
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• hen h« returned from Europe whm
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T m. fh» I> SullHan ‘TMg T’tr.''
• «a r.e f t hs best betovsd of ! k e
ft al TaRTW-any lea 1 era wfc ee power
-a-• f-oaj poputsf'fy ta th* swarn-.
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, 1 1 he was alerted te ’he SX*fe sees -
' Vv There he served (<w*t.ai>«a »
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'M-*i ■* a t. ii i-ording to spe-
<' urea received from
S.'.m Its arents, a sister
and three brother^. Jive In nelgEibor-
ing \l!lag*s and are highly respect
ed middle , lass people The authori
ties i'f A - haffenh irg are Inclined to
believe that Schmidt may have been
re^pomdl le for the murder of a tel
ephone girl named Haas whose body
was found near his parents’ home a
short time before he left there.
No man of Schmidt's varied pur
suits could be insane, the New York
detectives say, and they look upon
him as a criminal master mind—a
man trained in many things which he
turned to account in his operations.
Schmidt’s explanation of everything
■—of the murder of Anna Aumuller,
and of the counterfeiting—is that he
did it at the command of God. These
declarations, the detectives say, are
part of a plan to feign insanity.
That Schmidt did pose as Dr. Mol-
lere, a physician, as he is said to
have admitted, was indicated by the
finding among his effects of medicines
and drugs.
» ♦-♦-
Aviator’s J^atal Tumble.
In the fall«of an aeroplane at the
fair grounds at Rutland, Va., George
^Schmidt, an aviator, was fatally
J. Dyer Spellman, assistant
^^dge of the munetpal court, receiv
ed burns which may cause his death.
*
»• •If'-rw Chlvf a'
an.! '»1 r. r
a! ! f.' • rvata !n which fe •
wax eagerly aought X'
w a
a’ v
irfy*
Bandits Shoot Three.
Two robbers with drawn revolvers
entered Lhe Jewelry store of J. J.
Thompson at Grand Rapids, Mich.,
early Thursday night,
the clerks to throw up their
• *. m
1- .>n
* mr fcla fortun* waa *»tImaged a’
rnor^ than I? eoO.OOO. but h!a aa’»‘l
lltca and penaloncra were conatantlv
Increasing and during the last few
year* hla ventures were lees succt-as-
ful
Worry was the last ailment hla
friends could associate with Sulli
van's sunny disposition, but It was
worry, they agreed, that finally broke
down his keen mind and probably
brought him to hit death. The death
of his cousin, Alderman “Little Tim”
Sullivan, was the first blow. The
treachery of one of his trusted friends
cost him, it was said, $100,000.
Then came the death of his wife.
He first showed signa of breakdown
in August, 1911, and although since
then there were occasional flashes of
his old wit his health steadily de
clined.
- ■ ■■ ■ <e—e—
He called attention to the fact that
within the period treated by the mes
sage the most salient accomplish
ments of the revolutionary movement
had been the taking of Zcaatecas,
which had been recovered later by
the forces of the government, the
taking of Durango, which was still
in the hand* of rebels, and attacks
on the port of Guaymas and the city
of Torreon, which were repulsed by
the Federal troops. The filibuster
movement In the northern part of
Lower California had quickly been
suppressed.
■'
Killed Deer With Pistol.
a * a
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rn«* to ('p« r;
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a- v
Eiad w
at flrat
*'lr..pt
Mr. Joseph Dickson, of Manning,
recently killed a deer with his pistol.
Mr. Dickson was
when he heard a
where I" party ware
so he drew his
of the dees
abort while
with a party
from
that day,
the chance
f!» a
to him
I'.irwun.i * .\nal, hut
bn addcl that thlx Invitathui from
hla dd horn** wa* <<) :i”' iCvc *o him
and Imprca-icd h ni an • -pcclally, that
he would gl\o It aer 1 ■ ua consideration
and would reply definitely in a few
days.
.11 MBS IN M \<. \It \ \\ HIKI.POOI.
Obi Man of Erie, Bn., Coimiiit* Sui
cide by Drowning.
A man, believed by the police to
be John Hawkins, GS years old, of
Erie, Pa., committed euii ide Monday
afternoon by jumping into the Niagra
river from the lower steel arch
bridge which spans the river just
above the start of the whirlpool rap
ids. It is 2 00 feet above the water.
Two women standing on the Canadian
cliff saw the man climb on the railing
and sit asride of the rail several min
utes, looking down at the turbulent
waters, then lurch forward. His body
shot downward and struck the water
headforemost. He came to the surface
once before the white foam of the hlg
drift closed over him. The suicide
was the first from the lower arch in
three years. Hawkins was pulled from
the bridge railing Saturday night, but
convinced his captors that he was not
bent on suicide.
A dispatch from Memphis, Tenn.,
says former Governor Paterson, In a
signed statement declares that he
would henceforth fight for prohibi-
tlon and the strict enforcement of
the Tennessee Liquor law. The for
mer governor in a statement, said he
had lived an evil life, but had exper
ienced an entire change of heart and
henceforth will live a Christian. He
recently became a member of the
Praabytartan church.
a
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p.-nr
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‘ of m* '.. • ’i ar. ! ;>■ ’a’
v M by Mr I'> •: > a r• a 1 v
■ no rf t h• kind who B v.* *' r <
:;•• and In a 1 !:uon to that ;
o a .
> I
!. a i o
Ho
t!y a:
•irt of
tho crop that will bo markolo 1 and
turned into money has lots of other
stuff that he will use at homo, spend
ing only a very small amount for sup
plies ( f any kind. He has made, al-
tngotjier, a record that is hard to
Eh at.
QI ININE AS Cl RE FOR RABIES.
Dr. I*. E. Harris Says That He Used
it Effectively.
The curing of rabies by the use of
quinine was the subject of an address
by Dr. L. E. Harris, of St. Louis, be
fore the American Health Association
Wednesday at Colorado Springs, Col.
Dr. Harris submitted the results of a
treatment with quinine in accordance
with the theory of Dr. Virgil H.
Moon, recently announced, and gave
as his opinion from exhaustive re*
search that medical science within a
short time will have been entirely
revolutionized with respect to the
treatment of this malady. He tdtd of
administering injections of quinine
to a patient a short time ago and
said that within a week the patient
was discharged from his care.
Thunder Scared Woman to Death.
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A ■* *
“A Disgraee to Their Sex.”
At Chicago Federal Judge Landis,
In*sentencing Frank Schultz, a vaude
ville singer, and Alec Helrer, a bar
tender, convicted o^ bringing two
girls from Detroit to Chicago for im
moral purposes In violation of the
Mann act. to one year in th* penlten
tlary, characterised them as “typical
paaderert” and declared they
“a disgrace to
A •
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&f)S' ll ut*-'T
H *'r Ho * a ra that on tho nlrht of
tho alloc.-1 offonro ho took Walker
In his hugey from his hou^e because
he did not wish to leave Walker In
hI« home with Mrs Adams while he
had to go off to apprehend a negro
wanted for murder, and who was
said to ho In that section of the
country. Mr. Adams says that when
he went to the house to search for
the man wanted lie left Walker with
Mr. Smith and Mr. Blackwell, and
neither he nor Mr. Smith or Mr.
Blackwell mistreated the negro.
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r»-fr,ird • traeaful fi rm aa I th«
• 1 at'eat but watehfa! praaaad
a*-* T»o p-jl r*^neo tr*«1 to tur*
• •l^rtatora bat wa-a br^ahad
a* >
sT» WIKKHTKMK Ilk XX M Xl.U.
• fm f,a« «< rio.l as con
Ut twentT reara denle*
charges c'a'mlng there
no tru'h »haterer In
PLAYS WITH SHELL.
♦
House I)amage<l and Boy's
Head
Blown Off.
Joseph Pizza, fifteen years old,
found an odd looking shell In the
home of a playmate at New York Sat
urday and took it to the cellar to find
out what it was. He turned It on
the pointed end and by placing ob
jects around It made it stand upright.
Then be got a hammer. In the re
sulting explosion the boy’s right
hand wms blown off, his face burned,
his 'leg badly lacerated and his
shoulder cut. The concrete flour of
the cellar was known to atoms and
the furnace converted to scraps.
Young Pizza probably will die. It
was the shell of a rapid fire gun.
Mr*incT XX a* < rlppU-d and th«* XX Evakr
Waa Killed.
A collision »1th a a hale caused
»ui h nf-rlous damage to the Danish
steamed Yladm lr Belli, that the vee-
■M-l a as forced to put In St. Johns, N.
F . Wednesday for repairs. The acci
dent occurred Monday afternoon
about 230 rnlh-s east of St. St. Johns.
The crew of the steamer saw the
whale approaching at terrific speed
but could not alter the ship's course
in time to prevent the impact. The
whale struck the steamer head-on.
knocking a four-foot hole in the bow.
The accident Is believed to have kill
ed the whale for the monster sank
immediately, Its blood discoloring the
water over a large area. The steam
er left Campbelton, N. B., September
11 for Plymouth, England, with
lumber. She will have to discharge
her cargo to permit repairs being
made.
♦ ♦ ♦
Robbers Work Quickly.
A package containing $4,4 80 in
cash and negotiable checks was stol
en from a brewery jvagon at St. Louis
Thursday within a view of William
O’Meara, who was In charge of the
money. The wagon had stopped in
front of the bank at which O’Meara
was to deposit the money. As he
was attaching a weight to the horses,
two well-dressed young men grabbed
the package from the seat and ran.
Biplane Turns Turtle.
Aviator Max T.llle, was killed In his
first flight at the Galesburg, 111., dis
trict fair Monday, when 1 a gust of
wind overturned his biplane while
several hundred feet high la the air.
and aviator and maeklae fell. Lille
died shortly
to hla
Bryan's Plan Well Received.
Secretary Bryan’s peace plan for
the settlement of Internatlohal dif
ficulties through the fore# of aober
second thought and the good oEcee
of an Impartial oomaleeloa. was ra
ce! ved with arrlAmatloa at
teetlag of tha
Ualoa at The
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