Do Thou Liberty Great. Inspire Our Souls find ?ik? Our Lives in Thy Possession Happy, or' Ourpeaths GlorioW in .Thy 'Just Defence." ''v*b?<)S -j-. ..-,-? . -r B?NNftTTSViLL?'j 'S? C., FRIDAY, MA VI I 22. 1901. ?^TV* ****** NO 12 wi 8MDD lie udora OD, tho negro whoout ra?c?d and, murdered Mrs. YouDgor sov ; ?rftI; dftjl) ego, after making confession, Wft(j bumed to tho stako at Oor.io?na, y T?icap, Wodnoaday by a mob in the Woo. of moro than 5,000 portons. . . ^ o?mmitt?o that bad boon appoint ?^?t'o fioo tho aoouacd aooUred tho fol fflffl'wS bonfoB?ipn from ' Honderon, SV^.^i^tv ' n ab * signed ' and attested . by too o? the Poaoo G. G. lluborts: John Henderson, . oolorod, 22 yeais old, murdored an unknown whito ?o?es north of Oorsioana tho' >$$vpf Marob, 1901. Thoro waa no ono | tprp?ont but mysolf, tho woman and two -littlp ohildron. I murdored hor and ;,;,l^f( hoi in tho houeo without any in ?t ?osti?n of robbing hor. I don't kn>w why I did it. 'Varied) "JOHN HENDERSON." $M Tjio ?rpt tT"1 ^n*9 morning on tho '^''^i?rTkn'''- T?..1 ; f=.-.r- f???lcl- an. ,yyieo?,?.- uoib no "t that it oould oarry no moro.' .y: ,^\i\niiorn woro Bootovor the oounty an * . jjQ?n'oitTg tho arrival of Hondorson hero H i|?n4 tbov people had boon swarming to ".jtbo city to tako part io or witnoss tho ^?xecution of tho pon al ty to bo infiiotod j $in tho ?n^gro. . ; Af?ftpr hm confession it was dooided . .< Xq^bSAm bim at tho etake at 2 o'olook, jau? iowa'was red?ivod of ran gore . and . jrootfo eurHrouto from Dallas, duo thoro at 1$ o'olook, and hurried preparations jwp??jinaue to antioipato ioterforoooo ". A railroad rail, was drivon into tho ri groind in tho oornor of tho oourthouao lotend-boxes and wood pilod around it i gstvuatod with oil. 'hoWowd had inoroased to about )f^0O at ll o'olook. About 40 made a \ from tho jail across tho stroot to m m ;tf? o?d I ?pv? bandouffod. Tho mon 'tormea' jf?ip, folding toa dhain wbiohoom, ?jy Burroundod. Hcndoreon to ira vpit;ari'attempt of tho/onraged pooplo " io.|(olt at tim and toar him to piooos. Th?V irushed to th? pilo of wood and fafl|o?bd.'tho negro to'tho.iron rail with "Twir?'and'?bainB. "Oat?s'pf' oil.:woro . dashed ovor his v . ;olothos ,?nd dezons of lightod matohoa ./ ^pu?hod to tho inflammable matorial. - At-that time tho Uro alarm bbll was ;rurjg and tho storoB of tho oity wfro do . ?oytod n,nd tho ftrcotH wero full ll;.'M) Leo Fronob, husband of tho victim .of. tho negro Anderson Morris, ?;who boat;her to death with a piooo of iron pinei last Novcmbor, and who -waa taken from* tho j iii horo laat week by . ? tho oflicOrfl and cai ried to a placo of tmfoty, climbed a troo and mado au im .., paflfliohod ?pooob to tho orowd asking . ? thom to help bim get tho murderer and ' di ?1 with hi sn ai) thoy had just doalt with Hondorbon. - ' The. orowd yollod back that they would assiBt. Tho northbound Oontral train whioh airiying hore at 12 o'olpok was oro ?doo With peoplo from tte southern part of i.i.i-'/rthe'-eouttty, who expressed disappointed at boiag; too late. There was no militia on tho (rain. fTobn Hpridorfion, tho negro who mur d?rbd Mrs. Conway Youngor, noar this ?Uy'.Wedne?d^afiernoon, wasbroug'it : to this city ibis morning at 7 o'olook a?d.landed in jail for ssfokooping. Six of tho leading ? oitizons of this county ofloottd the okpturb, noting on bnhalf of tho oitis}on?..of Ni>var>o ooun ty* Hendorson-bbd b^ou coi.lined in . Bilton Junotion and cfiioors w.oro tak ing hito to Fort W.oi th, Shoriff Bakur, of Waco, rofusi^ig to, rtqeivo him.. Telegraph wiroa bud-boon tappod at Hillsboro and tho oitiz ma' posse WAS constantly informod of tho movomonts ?f tho offioers^with Hondorson. Tho train wan boardod at Hillsboro and no Attempt madu to oaptuio Honderson un - til near Ithaoa. Whon tho party star tod to on tor. tho oar the bonduotor triod .to prevont thora ' ?>jind triod tp run to Fort Worth without topping, l?o was treated; roughly / ?.)id tho mon cntcrod tho oar and scour Jf . ?td, ?tho pxloorjor and otboora in ohargo. ,'\ A Johnson oounty ofilocr pulled a re '...'.'.' plvor on th? oommiti?o, .but waa d?a ?tmod before hp could shoot. After a P te0^??^1 tho oommittoo oompollcd , tho offiooM in dbargo pf Hondorson to vi- ttpoompany thom aeroBB tho oountry 45 . ->'iuIoB to f Oorsioana, changing r horaoa ?nd teams at 1'rost. . . Hpridorson mtido no attempt to rosiat ' ^/Hen o^pturcd, and although ho know : at; ?tir? death aWaitod him, gavo no > f Mti'bt tQM. ' vj '^'hoiboKro 'rxiadp a t\x\\ oonfotslon ivT^Uer'arriving hero, telling how ho wonk ' tovtlio Youngor homo and attempted to ^BOauH; bow Mrs. Younger fotifeht for Ijov bonor; how .filially angered at hor rosiatarioo bo attaok'ed hor with his ? knifo;hew^ tito ohildron Bor?>bi?d ,in. >;>fT8?^t??'iK?V' ?aw their ?mother'? blood brhiiHOning the walla'rftitltfloor ifcrid'; , how'M^Yotingor fol,! acfcoM Uio do'pr " ?.v'otep,. ? Ho tb.en flod, buV-ldokiog baok 8*w bia viotim staggering down (, tho rond aimloaaly, laltorhigly,' 8ho fell and *y still, thor? no turned and ran.: . THB NBXT COTTON CROP. Somo Good Advioo to tho Mou Who Will Moko lt. Mr. Martin V. Galvin, of Augusta, Ga., writes as follows to the Maeon Tomograph: Tho .wholo world is busily ongagod conjecturing tho policy whioh tho cot ton growors of tho Uni tod Sf a toa will pursuo this yoar. Tho world is solac ing itself in tho boliof, whioh is boru of a wish, that a largor aoreago than in 1899 will bo planted in ootton and an extraordinary crop produced. I believe that an 11,000,000 halo crop may bo grown this, yoar without so ri moly affeoting tho prioo which now rulos. Tho largo ineroaso in thc num bor of cotton mills noar tho ootton fiolds, tho larger quantity of cotton that will bo roquirod for tho manufac turo of spcoiallios in ootton goods, otc , authorizo this boliof. Tho ootton growors need to havo an oyo to' tho oost of producing tho ofop. This is as important to thom as tho minutost item in tho cost of tho pro duction of ootton goods is important to manufaoturore. A vory large num bor of farmors havo aoooptod this as a faot and will govorn thomsolvos ao oordingly. Tho number of this class of farmors has boon inoroasing tho past twoyoara-slowly, but stoadily. This yoar many moro will fall into lino. Labor conditions will oompol' thoso who aro disposed to regard o vory pro posed innovation on old customs as a vagary, to ooDform to tho now ordor . of thinga. Tho losaons taught us hyi] experience ought to ho troasurod. Wo neod to look backward as woll ns for ward. Largo orops of ootton havo boon produood at too groat ox pens J. TOO many auroa havo boon cultivated and too litt lo mado p( raero. Somo progross in production por aoro has boon mado, but not a groat deal. Heroin Georgia, for oxample, in 1893 and 1894, tho av?r?go yiold of ootton! per aoro was 33 10,0 of a bale; that is, it took thrco aerea to mako ono balo. In 1895, wo mado 35 100 of a balo por sore; io 189G, 36 100; in 1897, 38 100; in 1898, 39 100. Tho record shows that ootton growers havo boon buying largo quantities of fertilizers; tho results provo that thoy havo not usod thom wisely. Too many apply too small a quantity por aoro. Ono hundred and forty pounds of tho host ommoroial ft i tili/,or on tho markot applied to the avorago aoro ia practically wasted. Bot tor twioo tho quantity. Glvon twonty-fivo acres of avcrogo land, throughly prepared and troated Wini ri iuuni/.'ji iu\i>|n-j?, Vv, 'A.v .nnt.trm ! plant-400 pound j por aoro-tho boat socd obtainablo, though thoy oost $1 por bushol pion tod, say, oighto?n inchon apart in rows four foot apart, oarof tilly oultivatod, and st von ty-six bales will result, aa against twenty-six halon on oighty aores under tho policy whioh usually prevails. Smaller aoroago, good sood, a liboral uso of oommoi'oiul fertilizers and bot ter mothods in cultivation ffill moro than moot tho labor problom. What ov. r tho aggrcgato of tho crop produced, thoro will bo muoh oloar monoy in it to tho produoora. [ waa talking today with a larmer whom I havo known for years. Ho usod to gathor twenty-six halos, some timos a smnlior number, from oighty acron; tho pa Ht yo?r, following some what tho plan outlinod in tho forego ing, ho mado forty-oight halos on tho eighty aoros. This yoar, moving for ward sovoral stops, ho purpoBos to mako fifty balos on fifty aoros and havo oom and wheat, oats and hay in abun dance Smallor aoroago. a freo uso of high grado oommorcial fertilizers, rioh in tho food tho ootton plant roquiros; tho best seed aud tho boat mothods in cul tivation, will minimizo tho oost ofjpro duotion. It was domonstratod by tho South Atlantic statos in 1896 that tho farmer who applied fertilizers por aoro at a oost of $1 40 roalizod and inoroasod profit of 10 2 nor oont, whilo tho far mor who appliod $4 ll worth por aoro roalizod an inoroasod profit of 34 7 por oent. I ropaat and omphaoizo tho statomont -just any kind of fortilizor will not do for ootton. If you would havo tho bost results you must supply with a wisely liboral hand tho food tho plant oravos and demand;). ' \ Failed to Cure. Thoro is a good doal of excitement in Raid avilie, N G., ou aooount of tho doathof a 15 year-old daughter of Dr. O. A. Romingor, a wollknown dentist. Tho young lady had asovoio at aok of typhoid fover and nu ff o rod and died without rooeivirg modioal attontion. Dr. lt .minger is a divino healer and ro fu&od to call in a physician during his daughter's ill noss or to allow to bo call cd. Ho olaimad that she could bo healed by jira j cr, and prayed n?tfatantly for hor res.oration to health Ula said that ho persuaded his daughter to MB way of thinking to such an cxtont that abe did ! desire tho attention of a physician. Tho oioarronoo has oreatod a gr? nt deal of excitement in lloydsville, and th?ro is muoh fooling against tho fathor of tho doad girl. Tho local papor has takon tho mnttor up and o ill ed on Dc. Rom ingor, in tho namo of tho oitir zns of tho town, for an oxplanation of his! con-) duct. Tho mattor mw ho ropofttfd to' tho grand j'uy for investigation. |f Murdered on a Stoamor. . Thcodoro Jaokson, a nogro dook hand, shot Eogin?or T. B. Rivors of. tho steamer J. W. (lir?n' in tho hoad, kill it g him instantly Thursday af tor noon, wlu.'.o tho boat was on tho Ohattabooheo river, not far from Omaha, Ga. Rlvor?' body foll into tho river and has not' bron recovered. Tho negro WA* takon oh to Omaha, whero ho was plaocd in jail. Rivers was from WowahUobka, Kia., whero ho leav-na family. The Roason. It is said tboro aro fowor casca of bigamy in Kansas than in any other stato in tho Union. But tho statement will hardly oauso any surprise, for it is a bravo man who would havo tho tomori ty to marry moro than ono Kansas wo man at.a. timo. ?'??AdHimTrood.'' { i In southwest Goorgia a book agent waa (reed for six hours by au infuriated? buli, Tho farmers in that'sootion, oayu #rank Stanton, know just how to train oattlo? TUE NEGRO MUST GO Jv ??.<..'.? H e 4* . I n th? Way of Preo^enj McKinlay'? Pian? REOAROiNQ THE SOUTH. T^6(Atl.ant? J mroal Says All the F?deral Officials In South Oarotina Aro to bo ?. Removed. . . J :, . ' . ,< ?'.!' \"i y\> ? 'Now that tho Inauguration is a thing of tho pa?t and Prosidont MoKinloy has settled down on a second torm, thoro IB a growing improsBion that a well dircotod effort U to bo mado to build up a wbito Hopublioan party in tho south, Bays tho Atlanta Journal. This is in lino with tho policy ad vooatod by Ma j jr J. F. Hanson, of Maoon; Colonel Robert Lowry of At lanta, and othor Bouthoro Irionds ot Prosidont MoKinloy, who bavo for a long timo hold out to him alluring promineB of what tho aoandonmont of tho nogro by tho Hopublioan party arould bring foi th in.tho south. Mr. MoKinloy himaolf has long ohori?hod tho idoa that a whito Ropub lioan party oould bo built up in tho Bouth, and it is behoved ho would havo mado a oonsidrablo off ort in that politi cal oxpodionoy diotatod othorwiso as long as thoro was a Booond torm in sight. But now that euoh a oonsidora tion ia no longer involved tho rumors aro porpiotont that Prosidont Mo Kin loy will apply himsol.f assiduously to tho task of building up ft *'r?Apoatablo" Ropublioan party in thio ooo tion of tho country, lmmodtntoly after tho oleo . tion ho intimated to somo' o? his "truat od advisors that auoh an idoa was in hie mind, and thoro hap boon confirm M iou of his purposo pinoo that timo. Tho ? Hohomo of tho prosidont, as outlined, is a very simple ono. Tho old haoks tho southorn party will no longori food sumptuously at tho FodorAl orib. Thoy will bo among tho "also rana'J, in tho ourrent national patronage hand.otp. In othor words, tho city postoflicoB, custom houses and United Slatoa court buildings will kuow thom no moro, and in ihoir Btoai will roiga Re publicans who havo nob horotoforo figured oxtoimivcly aa loadora arid gold Domoorata ?ho dosortod thoir party in '96 and ratified thoir own ?otion last November. As indicating just how muon in oarnoBt oirtain elomonta?aro in , lAitt '.onnoonun," ? jU'lvmV?.o^iV: uuuiviv,-^ j man ?aid the (itber day: \ "Rusihoss mon of tho aouth. have ofton wondered why something of this kind was not dono. Tho aobomo might not have bcon foasiblo so long as tho nogro was a faotor in local politics, but einoo all fear of his dominating stato affairs in South Carolina, North Caro lina,, Louisiana aud ' Mississippi has boon removed by constitutional limita tions of tho franohiso, tho building up of a southern Hopublioan party-a party that will bo worthy Borlou* con sideration-has bcoorno a mattor for doliberato thought at Washington." "Say what you ploaso about it," con tinuod this business man, "but not only in Prosidont MoKinloy him'aolf personally popular wi .ii oertain ole monts already, but thero is a strong business sontimont in tho u out li in favor of oertain policios of whioh ho is tho oxponont. For instanoo a great many, if nob tho majority, of cotton mill mon aro enthusiastic aupportofs of hi? Philippi no policy ; tho ba uk ors and wholosalo morchants aro with him in fi nance; many gold Dom?orats, or, a? somo of thom profcr hoing called how, 41 tho MoKinloy Democrats,'.htivb grave doubts as to tho poasibiUy. of their ovor again gotting in touph with thoir own party, and would iik?" to seo suoh a oliangc brought about. Speaking on tho samo lino a promi nent citizen of South Carolina, in d?J- , oussing tho political affairs of his atato-1 in connootion with the dosortion of Senator MoLaurin. Baidl "in South Carolina many woll known mon aro urging suoh a movomont, and tho old-tiino party leaders who havo boon wont to hold all tho offioofl aro well nigh in a Btato of panie. "It ?B now Btatod in my Stato," oon I tinucd tho S.iUih Caio.raian, "with a degree of conddonoe thai, io int.resting, to eay tho leaat of it, that within six months South Carolina will have as" a United Slatoa disiriob attorney, a ol looter of ousto.ni at Charloaton, post maaters at Columbia, Groonvillo, Spar tauburg and elsewhere mon who wore no vor on tho floor of a Ho publican con vention, and who if thoy wero ovor ?ti booistod with tho p JV ly a -, all have never bcon rooogni&od aaoffouswoly partisan, lt is oponly deolan:d by many lt pub lioAns that a woll known young gold Oomoo/-?t, no* in Washington, who BUpp?rtod McKinloy very warmly last yt ar, will bo tho next oint riot attornoy of my Suto and that a politician of like proohviiioa will sucoeeu Lawson- Moi ton as Uniiod States marshal. ' SODJO of tbo mon in my Stato." ho continuod, "who aro taid to bo ?lated for jro mp val aro E. A Wobator, oolloo tor oi, intoral rovonuo, and tho rooog ni?,,d.bos8 of bho old machino: P atriot ' Atti racy. Lathrop and bis assistant, B ;A. HagOod; Postmaster C. I. Cunning? h MU of Ch.?rionton and LswBon Melton, United Siatoo marshal, Colonel William WalUoo, who is collector ol tho port of Charleston, msy (soapo tho ax. Ito ls' ? mau of moans and character ai d his' retention in ofljoo would nob joopardieb tho suooepsof tho movomont.' No ooo is Of eourao ready to givo bond that all thoso thing will como to pss*, but they aro boliovcd hero to bo oertain do volopmont of tho early days of tho now administration. Consequently tho?o is mob Another excitement m tho rank?, of South Carolina iiopublioans as has nob bcon .known sinon Wad o Hampton and bis rod-shirtod bo'rsomon ovor throw oarpot bag power a quartor of a oontury ago." r -, It wilLdo no good to ?rv to ignoro or dony what is yoing on. .Tho thing ipr Domoorats is to rcoognizb and dofcat iho; effotk. lb* rcquiroi only a oaaual investigation to uhow that, ProBidont MoKinloy.;-moans to ti'y to lri^kojtso jtb,ab;it will no longor bo a ropr-noh.to 'ho'?hllo? a ltopublioan in tho south ?nd. ?t?^lif? ^nd ho doBit?B to wlno '?ut tho %t4v^rai?ifai? to a vojcy ^onsido?ablb ox tonfc, got rid of tbo nogro altogothor and gonorallyjrovolutionii?o tho party in tho jfrjgfrpropogcn, so tho roporto al" agcoo, lo put tho nogro out pf pohtios as oompiatoty 99 ovon tho moat pro nouuood advooato of'whlto Bupromaov could dos'iro. lio b?Uov?o that tho tjmo isipropitioua for a ooup, aud thoso who olftiin to ho'pu tho iuaido pay ono is going to ho attonaptod. AN HONEST MAN, Paris Gibson, Senator-EUot from Mon tana Hus a Great Comoioiico. A dispatch from Minneapolis, Minn , says tho annouuaomont that Paris Gib son, formorly of Minneapolis, had boon oleotod Unitod States sonator from Montaua was roooivod with moro than gassing intorest in this ottvand brought aok to tue minds of many old HO ttl or s an ooouranoo whioh shows his honesty, Mr. Gibson started tho first woolen mill in Minneapolis, whioh w?e oper Ktod on Sixth avonao. south, near Sec ond street. Ho omployod moro than 100 hands, and for many years did a thriving business. Gibson wont down with tho panio bf '77, and whon tho mill was oloBod down every omployo had wagoo coming for ono month and too days. Tho aggre gate wai oloso to $10,000 No judgmont I woro scoured against Mr. Gibson, aod as times beoarao botter tho matter soon poasod from tho minds of tho om ployos. Mr. Gibson wont to Montana in 1879 and from tim start appoars to havo mot with sucooss. . In a doeado ho had fairly woll rotrieyod hie lost fortunes and thon proparod a surpriso for his old omcloyes in Minneapolis. Ho had tho old aooounts in his posaoasion and know exactly what every omployo had duo him. It was thirteon years after Mr. Gibson failed that tho formor om ployo s-through a Minneapolis attor ney received notice to tho effect that if thoy would call at his offioo and es tablish thoir identity as tho porson Mr. Gibson pro mined him or hor to bo, tho wage s for tho month and ten days would bo forthcoming with interest nt tho rato of 7 por cont. It was not possible for Mr. Gibson to pay' all tho baok wagoB du >; as many of hia formor om ployos had loft tho city and 0 mid not bo found. Thoro aro ?till in,tho oioploy of tho North Atar Woolein oompany many mon who worked for Mr; Gibson during tho '70s, and all havo tho kindliest fooling for him and aro pleased to loam of tho groat cst oom in whioh he is hold by tho pooplo of Montana. That ho had- a porsonal recollection of his many form er omployos waa shown in tho oase of Mrs. Carlson of South Minneapolis. Mrs. (Judson was 16 yeats of ago whon tha ft ill oloBod and had $23 nomina* ho added tho following: } ""OC feupp?sc you aro married; in that - event tnko this money and buy yourself a woddlng prosont." Sho expondod tho monoy for a silver toa scrvioo. Jewish Population.' Tho Jewish population of th? United Staten is now estimated at 1,000,000 Twonty ^eais fgo tho numbor of Jows in this country WAS notmorothan about ono-fourth as many. But in conse quence of tho ^ Russian prosecutions: whioh bc came intolerable about tho year 1881, tho influx of Jewish immi gration sinoo that, period han brou vory larg). Bottvoon tho yoars 1884 and 1889 there arrived 401,393 Jows at tho port of Now York. Siaoo 1890 91, when 63, 674 jows landod in New Yotk, tho Jo wish immigration has boon decreas ing; but, counting tho arrivaient other ports than Now York and by way of Canada, it is . 00inputed that 500,000 Jewish immigrants havo ontorod tho Unitod States sinoo 1881, Thoy aro for tho moat part, an industrious, thrifty and orderly poopl?wand?will bo .B?ro to prosper in a freo oountry. y_ ? In a Bad Way. A ?Upatoh from Fall River, Mass., says thc demoralized condition of tho ootton goods market continuoi to eauao uneasiness in mill oirolo?, and tho gloomy fooling was intonsified today when it was announced that 25,000 piooos of regular gooda for Maroh do li very had boon sold by tho soiling oom mittoo of tho Fall River Manufacturers' assooiation at 2 7 8. It 6aid, however, that tho regular prioo still 3 conti, tho temporary roduotion having mado to moot oompotition foioad by a southern oonoorn and a Rhodo Island company. Tho transaction, however, has givon a no iv impotuH to a movomont to bring about a roduotion in wagos and a cur tailment in production, whioh had boon partly ohookod by a strong influonoo to prc vont snob a slop. Ho Had Many Victims. , Post-offioo Inspector Jere Connolly arrived at Wilmington Wednesday from Laurinburg, N. C., a small town on tho Seaboard Air Lino, 95 milos from Wil mington, whoro ho caused tho,arrest of H. T. Allen alias Dr. Allen, a printor on tho loaal nowepapor. Tho ohargo against him is fraudulent u?o of tho mails in that ho advertised extonoivoly tho salo of oortain rooipos and offorod as a pr'zo with oaoh ordor fad-similo bills to tho amount of $15 which ho said woro printed on "B N papor and oould not bo told from tho gonuino artiolo." Tho bills in roality woro Confederate notos. Allen numbered his - victims from Maino to Mexico, sovoral ordors having boon roooivod from Now York State. Ho was givon n preliminary ex? amination and committed to jail for fault of bond'in tho sum of $500., A Little Hero. Robby Ray, a si^-yoar old boy at Kontuoky, W. Va., ontorod a burning houso in ordor to rescue tho baby of his family. Tho lad was ovoro uno with (.moko and burnod to doath with tho infant whoso .lifo ho sought to save. Tho littlo fellow's body was found near tho-baby's oraalo. All of tho horoos of the world aro not mon and women. Lovo for our follows and affection for thoso who ato tied to tisby blood ofton assort themselves oarlior in lifo? and real heroism, whothor it bo displayed on tho patt of matured mon and' wo men or.on; tlio part of a .Blx yoar;old Wost Vlf ??bia child, furnishoa food for thought For thoso inolin?d ! tu posaim iam. , ; ? prc?U/ tion. Pfosidont Hadley of Yale, flays will bo an hmporOr io . .Vyashtngton loss than 25 year* if tho pooplo aro OUR TRUE FRIE Tho Lat? O ?nor al Toomb'a; Trib ut? to Northern Democrats, THEY STOOD BY THE SOUTH 8om? Historical Political Facto that tho Pooplo of tho South ?hou'd Always ' Hemerobor '.;\ Mr. Jamo9 Galloway writ?a'as follows to tho Atlanta Journal: From an editorial in ono of tho load ing dailios of Qoorgia tho following con toneo is takon: , 1 Tho suspicion has boonoo wing for: somo timo that tho aVorago northern Democrat has no further uno for south ern Do moorul H than to employ thom aa a convenient stopping steno to omeo ". Tho last pooplo in tho world who should oomplaln of tho fidelity of nor thern Domoorats are tho Domoorats of tho south. From tho point of viow of moro effioo getting wo .o&hnot oritioiso thom, Wo Domoorats of (ho south got all tho stato offices from governor to coroner. Wo got all tho' eon gressin on. What do northern Domoorats got ? Vory fovr of?oos. fitato or federal. From an office holding standpoint it is to thoir interest to quitB^moo'raoy and drift into ihr Republican party.""^ From 186 Ho tho pio?ont timo tho northern Domoorats havo boen truo to us. Road thoir rcoords in congress. It is ono of heroism and fidelity. Against all "foroo bills" thoy havb voted. Whatever tho quostion of whito supro m?oy for tho south was at stako thoy havo stood solid. Indoed they havo opposed Republican "rooon?truotion" and tabored for "restoration." It waa H?ndrioka and Thurman and Tilden and Bayard and Vorheos who held "ral lies" throughout tho north and pleaded for thoir brethron of tho south. Sena* tor BAOOU rotnakod to tho ?vitor that "tho scut. Hd no truor frionda than tho northern D.moora,ts now in eon gross." . It is interesting to quoto from Kolort Toomba on tho fidelity of northern Domoorats. Now theories wcro spring ing up and now planks offorod in out platforms from 1856 to 1860 pertaining ; t? elavory io tl o torritorioa. Tho oani paign of 1859 boro ia Qoorgi? was ox citing, spmo Dcmoor^ts. boeomlng ex- I ' ; - -fr Y?nont. ? Daring thia warm I .campaign. . "J -V ft.K l of Soptonibor,"T ' ! ': dolivercO ;J? ot j hie groat'Bp?eol'o's in Augusta and ho 1 palo thia tributo to tho loadors of north ern Demoorao'y : : "No; ? shall proscribo no now test of party fealty to northern Domooratfi; thone mon who havo hithoto stood with honor und fidelity upon thoir engage ments. Thoy have maintained tho truth to thoir own heart. Thoy hove die played a patriotism, a' magnanimity moly equaled in tho world's history, and I shall ondo?vor, in sunshino and Mn storm with your approbation if I o?n got it, without it if I must, to stand by thom with fidelity oqual to thoir croat *do8orts If you stand with me wo shall conquer faotion in tho not th and in the south, and shall pavo tho ooulry from tho ourso oft hoing ruled by tho combination now calling itaolf tho opposition. Wo dill leavo this country to our ohildren as wo found it-united, strong, prosporous and happy. While thia great southern man, in tho ?oar 1859 was thus addressing his fol ow oitizons of Georgia, paying highost tributo to northorn Domoorats, and still hoping to profiorvo tho union-"united, strong, prosporous and happy," it is ourious to noto what tho Republicans co th were doing at tho samo timo and same y oar. From Greg's history tho following is takon: "On Maroh 9, 1859, tho loader of the Ropublioan party, baokod by sixty eight raemhera of oongress, with Spoak or Colfax (?ft or warda Grant's vioopros ident), at thoir hoad, pu? forward on bohalf of thoir party a manifest? tho liko whoroof ia only to bo found in tho annals of tho Jaoobin olub sud the Commune. "It is* a siDgaal rovolation of tho pol itioal morality, tho constitutional loyalty, tho regard for positivo obliga tions, which characterized tho RopubH oar.r; of tho bound los s unoxamplod vituperation, tho monaoos, tho outrages tho imultu whioh goaded tho south to fury; whioh abovo all rondor sober dis cussion, compromiso; oonfidono? in tho most solemn assuranooa, honooforth impossible Through this manifesto tho Ropublioans printed, reoommondod and oiroulatcd by hundreds of thousands a declaration of war. proscription and spoiliation against tho slaveowners of tho south, 'ineligibility of olavo owners to ovory cilio o, great and small; no oo-oporation wuhthom in roligion or sooioty; no patronago to proslavory mer oban tn; no guestship in si av owaiting hotols; no foes to pro elavo/y l?wyors, physicians pr parsons oditoxs; no hiring of slaves.' Suoh was tho doolavcd polioy of mon liko Soward Chapo and Colfax toward fif toon sta tos of tho Union," . "v A Wrong Righted. Tho govornor Thursday granted pardon to Will Williams oonviotod in JVuurons: in,; February last of: houso bronking and. larcony and sontonood to 13 mouths ort tho county bhaingang Tho boy was oonvioted sf breaking into a houso and stealing oortain artiolos Binoo tho trial all tho ar.iolcs were found in tho possession of another no gro who has oonfossod that ho alono did tho aot and that Williams know nothing of it. Tho HUthorltioH at onoo asked tho pardon thus oorrooting tho m ado. i Suicido in Porto Rico. Two momboVfl of tho Porto Rtoan ro gimont. Boltrjm and Arroyo., oommitt ed suioido Thursday, Beltran had b ?opiimand?d by an omocr^for untidi noni) and ordered to do kitohen duty Ho wont to duartors and biow off iop ?fhis htU with his rlfio. Whil 'tho body of JJoltran Vas boioff buriod Arroyo, who was a oloso friona of Bol tran, kUjoa.tprttBotf in tho sarao fashid rhow have Mon ; sovon suicides in th nativo roglnjprifc during tho HM CARNEGIE' RETIREES From Activo Jiu Bin CB a Lifo. Hie Lust Kind Words A diapatoh from Pottsbory saya two communications from Androw Carnogin whioh ato officially mado public Wod ccBday toll of tho stool kine's rotiro mont from aotivo businoss lifo and of his dp'riation of $5,000,000 for tho on dow mont of a fund for superannuated 'and disablod employes pf tho Carocgfo Company. This bonofaotion if by far the largest of tho macy oroatcd by Mr. Carnegie, and ia probably without a counterpart anywhero in tho world. This fund will in no wiso interfere with thc contin?anoo of tho savings fund established by tho company lr) yosrs ago for thc bondit of ita employee. lu this lattor fund nearly $2,000,000 of tho om pl ey on* savings aro on depo nit, upon whioh tho oompany by contract pays six per oont. and loans money to tho workmen to build their own homos. In a letter to the prosidont and man agers of tho Oari'Cgio company Mr. Carncgio sots apart $5,000,000 in Carno to company hondo to bo held in trust Or tho following purposes: "Tho inoomo of $1,000,000 to bo spont in maintaining the librarlos built by mo in Braddock, Homostoad ann Du quest o. "Tho inoomo of tho othor 4,000,000 is to bo appliod: "First, to pr?vido for omployos of tho Carnogio oompany in all its works, minos, railways, shops, cot., ie j ?rod in its sorvico, and for thoso dependent opon fiuoh cmployos as aro killed. "Second, to pr?vido small ponsiona or aids to snob omployOfl as, after long and creditable Borvioos, through ox ooptional oiroumstancos nood Buoh holp in thair old ago and who make a good usc cf it; Should these uses not re quire all of the rovonuo and a surplus of $200,000 bo loft af tor ton yeore' opor ation, tuon for all ovor this, workmon in mills othor than tho Oaraocio com pany AUoghony county shall .booomo eligible for participation in tho fund, tho mills noaroBt tho works of tho Car negie Stool oompany hoing first om brrood." Mr. Carnegie suggests that if in tho futuro it bo poBBible to establish a pen sion systom tho fund may bo used as the foundation of auoh a system. In concluding his lottor Mr. Carnegie ftiys: "1 niado this first uso of surplus wealth upon retiring from business aa an acknowledgment of tho doon debt whioh I owe to tho workmen who havo contributed so greatly to my sucqoia. hopo tho cordial relations whioh exist botweon omployors and employod throughout all tho O&rnegio oompany T<,v unvor bo disturbedj? both employers ana uaiiuv/b^ ,v.^^ ., . what I said in my last spoooh to tho mon at Homostoad: " 'Labor, oapital and business ability aro tho three leg's of a three-legged stool, noithor is first neither is second, noither third, there is no prooedonoo, all boiog equally noooBaary. Ho who would sow discord among tho throe is an enemy of all.' " Tho Looting of CJhinas. TIK f tddont oonBoquonooa of tho militai, operations abroad in whioh tho so o al led Christi An nations havo boon indulging in recent months is tho faot that they havo laid what is known as Christendom open to oritioisms on tho part of what havo always boon con sidered ho a the no and pagans. Howe vor muoh wc may hopo that tho war in tho Philippines, South Afrioa and China may result at least in a widor roach of Christian influonoo, it is hard to mako tho viotims of tho prosont slaughtor un derstand that theoo precesses aro tho work of a moroiful dod. Prom inter views with tho loading Oriontals Of lato it appears that they have takon Gospel mosBago quito litorally, and why hhould thoy not do BO? When they road tho in junction that wo should lovo our ono mios, and should not covet, and should not steal, and should not boar falso witness, thoy naturally conoludo .that thone to us aro divine commands whioh should bo litorally oboyod. It in difiioult for thom to roooncilo thoso to their gross violations, whioh aro soon in for oign parta of tho earth today. Tho so* oalled punitivo expeditions in' northern China oarriod On by nomo of tho Ohristain pow or? aro mero oovors for grand looting ontorprisos, which loavo in thoir trail murdor and misery, and a a pre judioo against Christian civiliza tion whioh will not die in a thousand years.-Tho Ram's Horn. The Bitterness of Exile. Ono of tho features of our roign in Ibo Philippinen that is not pleasant to tho road about is tho banishing of Filipi nos to tho Inland of Quam, whioh has boon made a. military prison by our govommont. Here is tho pioture as drawn by a Manila papor: Tho soonos woro pathotio in tho extremo, Many friends of ; tho oxilos fearod to show thoir Bympathy and remained away, but wivos, ohildron and nv/oothoartn followed tho ambulanoe to tho wharf, wooping, shrieking and toaring thoir way in afronzy of griof. Gravhoadod womon, mothors of some of tho pri nonors, ran barefooted in tho duet of road, tears streaming down thoir ohooks Gonoral Pilar hore t hone-partings have ly until ordored to go aboad. Tl en ho too, a votoran, wept. Somo of tho ox Hos woro insurgont uniforms, but thoso of highor rank woro montly in civil dress Just' an tho li one oran a wan roady to loavo a Filipino, not an oxilo, waa discovered in cl jso consultation with his. country mon. H.o.waa arrestoct and oont ashoro for investigation,* A Good Work, An appoal for funds to furnish for tho establishing of industrial schools in tho Southern States has lately boon issuod over tho name of Anno S G roon at Culpopjper, Va. In tho appeal is fount the following roferonoo to tho children of many Southern pooplo: "Lot the lit lio ones not poriah or booomo baso, eiti zona with blutai instinotri, fitting for poor*houses and penitentiaries Many of thom, girls and boys,.at early age of oighi and ten, aro boiog placed by . .thoir poverty-str parents in the milla and factorios aro springing un in tho country, have publie schools, but they do moh tho evil, or oxtond tho ho hand ; of homo, fireside, food or cloth inc; for tho taok pf th?eo thoy oro un able to avail themselves o Half the inhabitants Homeless, Food Supplie? Deatioytd. Io tho biting air of tho oarly morn ing boura tho oitizons of Olovornort, Ky., loo ko d on, al mont po wc ri oatt to net Thursday, whftofirO,destroy od 1500,000 worth of jproporty and loft 1,000 per sona-half tho population--hum?losJ. JSvory businoas ho'uso was burriod. Tho distross of hundrods of women and ohildr?n waa rolioved only whop trains loaded with supplies arrived hom J? min villo and Henderson. ; At noon'tho Oro was still burning in spots, but tho remaining sliuotures were, aoattored and no furthor spread was anticipated. By tho blunting of a natural ga* pipe in the kitchou of a privato houso short ly after midnight tho building was sot a?ro. A high wind was blowing and tho burning ombors were oairled to tho itnmouBO tobacco warehouses ownod by tho American Tobaoao oompany. Thoso buildings wero soon wrappod in ll anio it and efforts ? to savo thom were aban doned in ordor to fight tho fires which ?oro springing up, on all side. Tho to baooo oompany's plant, consisting of two atommoriofl and 1,000,000 pounds of tobaoco was soon destroyod and tho tiro ooniinuod to aproad. Tho looal fire dopartmont waa totally inadequate to oopo with tho fire and Louisville and ?ondorson ? wero ?akod to send assis-' tanoo. As Louisville is 75 milos dlo tant, hov/ovor, no holp arrived until 4;30 o'olook and by that time tho Uro had about oxhauutod ita matorial. "Every businoss houoo waa gone, togother with ali previsions and olothing. O vor half of tho rosidonooa, too, had boon don troy od and 1,000 po opio wero wan dering aimlessly through tho stroots,. staring at tho ruins, . Hero and choro on tho outskirts Of tho town firoB woro noon, in somo small framo ojttngo, but thoso gradually diod out and by noon \>ho fiamos had boon almost ontiiolyoohookod. iloliof trains wero made up .at LouUvillo and Hon d?r?on and brought 5,000 loavoa of broad, a largo supply of clothing, otc. Tho ooaohos will boplaood at tho'dis posai of tho homeless until thoy oap find other temporary homoB. Adju tant Oonoral Murray Thursday after noon shipped 500 tonts from frankfort. A numb or of persons woro slightly in jured infighting tho Uro. Tillman. As a Locturor. Senator Tillman has rcooivod a flat tering oifor from tho lyooum bu'?au to appear for fifty nights in fifty different placeo and lecture on any topic ho may choose. Ho in inclined to oonsidor tho proposition favorably, aod thero in no doubt Of his suoooss. Tillman is a man Vif ?rainal ideas and niothods, Ho has a Keeu Roubv y:-? kilian. phy and a pietUrOBqUo pori.tyfy ^ will attract and ontertain tho'public It would bc diflioult, h? wovor," to imagino him dolivcriog a sot spoooh, Liko nomo thro?ghbred horaos, he vail not work to harness, but must' hayo plenty of room and af roo rein or ho will not run at all. Under ordinary oirotamatancCa. oxoopt whoo ho lonoo hin te mp or, ho is an on tottaining talker, but his speeches havo always boon oxtomporanoous and ho could notstiok.to manuscript ovon if ho had tho disposition to proparo ono. His languago is often unoouth, but that adds to tho foroo of his addrof-s. Even, so cxaot a man aa Thomas Jefferson onoo wrote to John Adams that it nomo tim?n strengthened am?argument to de part from tho rulos of syntax and drop into tho i vernacular, It is tho vernacu lar that Tillman usos. Ho says what ho means in ordinary, overy day English, and his liko has never boon noon upon tho looturo platform--Ohio?go lloooxd. Robbed tho Mail. W. R. Koys, postoflloo inspector has returned from StoCkvlllC, Oampboll oounty, whero ho otrestod Minn Mary Bollon, assistant postmaster at that placo on aohaigo of rifling tho mail. For some timo ar ti olen havo boon inion in g from tho mails at y lockville. LIB poe tor Koya waa sont there to loo?to tho trouble. Ho know an inspootbr would'] bo expootcd at tho ornoo, BO ho wont to Wella Springs, five milos from ?tock villo, whore no registored as.adrutomor for a*surgioal instrument house Ho found that over 100 letters and pack ages had boon taken?. Bevoral doooy loiters wero -acut out and ho Boon had enough ovidonoo to warrant tho at rent of Mino Bolton. Hbo oonfoBBod all. Hor father, Hov. John ll. Bolton, is pastor of tho Mo tho di nt ohuroh at that Slaoo and is also tho postmaster. Minn, ?alton has boon bound to trial nt ; tho next term of tho United. . Statos court. Bond wan mado for bor. S ho ia , the .second womuq o vor , arrested . in this atato for a lik? offons?.' Base Ingratitude. Tho Oubann continuo to display ono dospicablo trait-ingratitude Think of posting up cards all over tho island with' this anoiont suggestion printed thereon, after all wo havo dono for thom: . "To tho pooplo of the United Statos? "Do not'mako anyfcpromisos that you aro not ou rc 'to koop and novor go back ori tho word you have glvon. , / - "(Signod) . GEORGE WASHINGTON." This is rooommondod to tho oonsldorA Hon of ?'all worthy, compatriots of the groat Amorioan." ?. lt M too bad to remind up of that ex ploded old timor, G.' WM aVariopboh in eur history whoo wo havo outgrown all his foolish, not/ion^'of truth and honor. Why. tho next thing wo knott.they will bo asking us to pay somo attention to tho Tori Oommand?ie'ntfl.-'No^po?t Nows Herald. Tillman Won. :\i Senator Tillman has triumphed. Tho ponsiori bill which, ho sworo, in lan guago pioturoequo and foroiblo, must bo ac tod upon by tho nonato hoforo ho would allow a singlo othor pension bill to pass has hoon signed by th proni dont. It io a constituent in Bouth Caro lina who fought in tho Mexican ^ar, and ?vf I or wa vd lost hi? woll-.oarnod pen sion for fcavlng giffen, ''aid and com fort" to tho OohfodoraW causo., But this now WU S? virtually a roncad of tho law which dobara from pensions Mexi can votovam? who ttcr? aftorWatd ac tivo ?onfodorato aympalhiKorfl. A raft of nott pension ,domand? may now,' ioxpooteu, for tlxoro ave many,' 1 Morana MtV . , iV CA ?k ? IR M ?l?> ? ii w 3/Bank Robbers in Bfpad Day light at Harrisburg. THE ROBBERS CAPTURED. Th? Otfahler Rostered wwi Wae Shot to pe?th by tho Rob bera. Who flan Away, Chas, Wi Ky sn, oaabior of tho Hali fax-National bank, at Harrisburg, Pa,, was shot 'io doath by Honry HOMO and ?Wo&torn Koipor of Lykena at noon , Thursday in an atloinpt at bauk robbory. Tho robbois were* captured by a party of oit?ssouB soon of tor tho oriino and woro brought to tho Harrisburg jail togo thor with P. If. Straloy . of j Ly kons, who is euspootod of hoing an j accomplice. Howo and Koipor drovo ovor to Halifax from JOH z*b o th vii lo Thursday morning hitahing their team on tho outside of tho town boldly on toxod tho bank with revolvers prosontod. ?>Aoh had a rovolvor and they demanded tho attache's of tho bank to throw up their hands and turn ovor tho ruonoy. Ono of thom held in chook' Abraham Fortonbaugh, the prosidontof tho bank; Ltano Ly tor, tho tollor, and ox-Ropro sontatlvo Swarta, of Pittman, who .was in-tho bank ou pr i voto busin oso. Tho othor oovorod Cashier Byan and uudor tho monaoo of tho royolvers tho cashier oolloo tod thocash In tho drawers to tho mount of $2,000 and plaood it io a satohol tho robbor* had brought with tbom. Bown, with tho 0*90, Stuffed--' satohol in his hand baokod Cat toward tho door and Koipor ?lso mov?d to ward tho on tranco to tho bank. Just whoo it aoomod that tho robborn would auooood in gotting away Oashior Byan loaped forward in an attorn pt to >nook up tho rovolvor of-tho .mau With tho money. In tho souffl J soy ural shots wero fired and Ryan foll to tho floor, shot through tho groin by a bullet trow tho pistol of R?wo. Fortonbaugh grabbod Rowe and af tor a short souffl) throw him to tho thor. Koipor rau out tho door. The noiso of tho shooting at tracted J. F. Lyter who ha? a storo noar tho bank building, HA ran out with his shotgun and purou d Kolpur for ono blook and shot him bto< of tho. hoad, when tho robber surronuorod. Somo Costly Wrecks. Tho losfi of tho City of do Janeiro at ?lold?n Gato loada tho 8priDK?<;ld Jto? ? publican to say that'thia Ia neither tho first nor tho worst disistor which cvov ' '-'i n,n Pantie Mail' StoamBhip coin? p?hy. lc roviows tho toporo I that company has had a vory long and varied career oxtonding baok almost to tho bogi.rinlng of stoam navigation. Buring tho past fifty years it has loot 19 steamships, and among tho prinoi-N pal wrt oks oited aro those of tho i Q ol - don dato off tho Mexioan coast in 1862, whoo 200 of tho. 300 patjsoogora on board perished, and of tho steamer Japan Off thc Ubina const in tho carty "/O's, when 400 Uhinofio woro' drownod. But muoh tho moat noteworthy ditas tor tho ojmpan^ ovor suffered waa ibo loss of tho steamer Central Amorioa in a storm off Capo Hattoras in Soptom bor,'1867. Or tho 679 BOUIB on board, only 162 woro saved. Thoro wont down with tho ahip also somo $2,000,000 in gold from California, and aa the.coun try waa thon in tho thick of tho panis of 1867, whon hard oom was "in muoh greater domand than tho prom ino of it, , tho wrook of tho Contra! Amorioa wau especially folt iu financial oirolcp. But tho nowapapoiBof tho day found somo consolation in tho f aot that tho' j naur . anco of tho gold waa mostly hold io London. ' Stopping Trade. A dispatch from Manila says Liout. Fred lt. Payno, oomnunding tho Unit ed States gunboat Pampanga, pm ?nant to instructions, has soiapd and dostoy od 300 vessels of various Bizas, mostly : nativo oraft, oonBtruoted to n?si&t tho insurgents. But among thoso which havo como to grief are a numb or of coasthing vessels belonging to leading Manila firms, Liout. Payno oap) urea a quantity of suppliosand war materials ?hippod?by tho ioBurgont governor of tho Island of Loy to to tho rebol com mander on ; tho Island of Simar, Tho Cobu pirates who occasionally raided tho opposite Bhoro of Negrea island havo boon supprossod and tkoir boat J aro all 'burndt Staggering the British Taxpayer . In tho boginning, tho British Minis try estimated that tho South Afrioan War would coat $60,000,000. Alroady Great Britain has paid $407,000,000 on I aooount of thia war, and tho estimate for the war exponaos during tho oowing year amounts to $350,000,000. It will be romomborod that Oom Paul Bt??d that if Groat Britain conquered tho Boors it would bo nt a cont that would stag ger humanity, Tho cost in human blood has already . staggered humani ty," and tho coat in dollars and cents, now rapidly nearing tho billion dollar mark, io bearing down heavily upon the British taxpayers. Too Busy Maoon Tolograph: A Harrisonburg. Pa,, correspondent expressed himaolf in the columns of tho Philadelphia North Amorioan as follows: "Tho Inst negro convention ld Lancaster, PA., called for tho establishment of a hotel for tho raoo of. that town; y ot a good negro oitiaan, who prosonta a petition ?ignod by moro than ono hundred names, ?B rofusod a liocmae to ran this hotol. Why is this tho c'aeo JjftjM' Country of ours?" Tho North Amorioan does not answer; being too busy trying to fill up half a pago of day on tho &ub jeot of oontraot slavery in Amloreoft oounty, South Carolin?. Making Maryland Solid, Tho Democratic majority in tho Maryland senate, nf tor a 'todions aos Bion, lasting from ll a. m , until 8 by a voto of lt to ll, a si vick party! division. . TliO bill disfr?nohinoa somo Jih}im "and rnpat o? tho negroes in tho ?i0-$t?te,;--.>V?fion/-it becomes a..law labd wUlrb'?tiom?'' aoll^'y' i>00^