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THK CAMPAIGN. (Continued from First Pape ) lie bas been In olose loach with tbe affaire of tho State, and while be dove not wonder at tbe howl raised at in creased aproprlations, lt must be re membered that conditions have great ly ebangrd. Tbe Inequalities In tax assessment are glaring. Ile favors the carrying out of tho recommendations ciauo by the finance committee m or der to wipe our those inequalities. He warns the people agalust tbe in cipient tendency to corruption in elections, which has recently mani fested Itself. Jit ia to bo regretted that tho liquor question should have attained suoli prominence. Tuero are other matters wortnler of attention. He ls not tho otiamplon of whiskey, but he 1B deeply lutereHied in thc moral welfare of the State. He IE not a straddler aud he will not seek to befog the publlo miud on any ls sue. He docs not advocate tho d's pensary as run in the past. Whether the allegations of corruption anti graft in the dispensary are truo 01 not, the people of Soutn Carolina wi! not stand for even tho susplolou ol suoh things. Wm rc there is so mud ?moke there ruust be uomo fire, anti the people of the Sr-atc- will not stanti for the dispensai y as it has been con duoteo. If corruption and (?ra?t, dc exist in the diapei Bary, Hun lt musi be purged of the odium or oise tn whole tnlug must g i. Wipe the dis pensary out and woat will you I av left? Men will have wnlskey. Pub Ho seuiimeut does not warrant tin belief thal pronibliion om be en forced. He has studied the quisllou carefully, and hi believes lt can h purged. Ruad the Rtysor-Maunin,v bill and you will lind mat it g es tc the root of tho matt? r, the pinchas lng of tue l.quor. H - does not be lleve in hew option. His reason for tbls will no i;iv. H later. But that tfhoe of Goviruor ls a purely execu tive ellice aud should lo ba muli Governor he will enforce ihe mw a-> li stands ou tho staune books. The Hon JOHN J. Mt MAMA Nj of Columbia, ino next c.wididate for Governor to address the audience, prefaoed his remarks with the state ment that every man is his brother's keeper, and that it folio .vs, thc ref, re, that every citizen should bj alive to his olvlo duties. Thc scope of gov ernment ha* been largely widened lt la no longer cot.Hued tu mere pohoe regulatlou. We aro shocked as we glance aeout us at the evidences of corruption abiOa-d In the land, b ith within and wltnout our Stuto. When we compare the conditions of today with thu conditions which obtained in the past v>e musu be asiamed ano Burprlhed. Dispensary corruption ls nob tho only corruption to ht found In South Carolina today. Cur out> ls imperat ive lo place oiny the best and highest men in ellice. Thc prl mary system ls a great system, bul under it there lias unfortunately grown up the custom of magnifying the duties of the candidate and mint mizlng the duties of the cli.zju. ne favors the improY3ment of the sohoois and com menus the establishment of the Slate reformatory. Ile stands today lor every educational reiorm which he has ever advocated. He urged thc importance of the draluane ot the coastal region and advocated the establishment of every county of a raodol farm. Time dees not permit him to discuss tho dispensary. Per sonally he is opt o jed to the use of liquor, but lie doesn't believe prohibi tion practicable. Ho favors the State dispensary, but not the dispen sary as it now exlais. He weuld first have lt cleansed and the rascals lu it placed behind prison bars. The next candidate for Governor to address the Democrats of Doi ohestcr was th Hon JOHN T. SLOAN, of Columbia. Ho v an born In the shadow of the Blue Ridge Mountains, at old Pendleton. He went in tt e army at 10, and wem thrcuRh the blt oe y campaigns ( f 1804 aud 1866, lu Virginia. He wau ca?, tu red at Ap portai tex, and after toe v.ar he re turned to Pendlet? n * nd wt nt t. BCbool there. In 1800 he entire South Carolina College, fiom willoh im?n nunn he wa< Kiaduaied win. honors. He rt yiewed lils services io the city of his adopil- n, where lu has been eiga^id in the practice ol law fur more tuan a icore of >e.ir? Hewasawtarer of the red shirt In the days of 1870 He reviewed Ms reoord as R/prcseinailva una Senator from R c .laud Ct unty. Ili was par thulariy proud O: his services ie founding Ol? mson and Winton p Coheges ai d in ihe defet o? of the Ci lacie 1 ano S nth Carolina Coll? ge He was pn nd ?,f Ins rte rd as L u lenant G. v n ot. Ile has spent tin best t.fcy?> ol his life in the setv Ct: of bis Mute, ai d i o believes i in sell en titled m pr no.ion to.he Governor ship. II. ,\an s to set a sci, ? 1 ht u on tvety hill and one in evt ry vail- y of ihe I- R e ll? ls not a rm rc ulk r for tducamn, When the M ?li ?? F?. rt alt Ct lit n? v as inn it in C?> nm . n. leeenlly ht K^VO ihen ?v?n v ? ores of lao Gi, tCOhy ? Otth ?2 OOO ll is plainly and nt quivocahy f r the diH pensary. lit b 1 v< s it ls now, ano tuai it always Aili ic, ii e I est solu tion of tm who key que-, lon. Bu> I he la eli cu ciGvV it tr he will purgt it Irem any cortuptlcu which n a now infest lt. He doesn't believe prohibition can he enforced ano in support of his belief he cited his p< r sonal expt riot ces In search of it n on ado in Maine, and Mida waler ?n K n sas. OTU ICH CANDIDATES, Thc Hon. T. C. McLeod, the only candidate for Lieutenant-Governor, made a short speech outlining his p >s itlou on various matters, He favors a reformed dispensary. Messrs. R M. M Cown, of Florence, J. B Morrison, of Charlesten, L. M Ra^in, of Clarencl rn, CtndldatCS fol Secretary of Sinti', v\eio on hai.d ai tl made short spet o ?es, Mr. J. Fraser Lyon, of Abbeville, was the only candidate for Attorn >. General present. lit? went, for the. d s pensary with gloves ? ff, anti was irt quently applauded by the anti-dispen sary part of the audience. Mr. L. G. Walker, of Urbenville, candidate for Ct; m pt roller G ancrai, was next Introduced and ???ave his reasons why the people should vote for him. Comptroller (leneral Junes, who ls a candidate for re-election, was unable to be preaciit on account of of ficial business. Co.'. Boyd, of Greenville, and Col. Haskell, of Richland, the two candi dato* for At)jutant and Inspector General, next ad tressed the audience nQfjj Qoijcitcd their votes non. O.B. Mart In, candidato for Superintendent of 10 location, has no opposition. Ho, therefore, contented himself with telling two or three eapiUi Stories and pledging anew his devotion to the best interests of pub Ho education in the State. He favors the dispensary systom because if the $200,000 ?>. y oar obtained by the schools (rom this source are removed and nothing is provided to take its plano tho result will be little short of cal amitous. Messrs. Jas. Oansler, of Lancaster, 3?iltrs, o? Marlon, J. M. Sullivan, or Anderson, J. A. 8umroersau.lt, of Richland, and Col. J. H. Warton, thc incumbent, all candidates for railroad oommisslonor, wero Introduced and made short specohes. Ord. Wharton was the last of the oandlriat.es for State cfllae and Chair man Dennis announced as tho last 1 Speaker of the day Col. W. W. Lump ' kin, of Columbia, who ls opposing Senator Tillman for eleotlon to thc United States Senate. When Col bumpkin came for ward two or three 'wool hats" Indifferent parts of thc ' audience started to cheering for Till man. The orowd took up tho oall and . for some little time so great was thc , noise that it was useless for tho speak er to attempt to mako himself heard . Col. Lumpkin bided his time patient ly, howeve r, and when Chairman Den nts had finally succeeded In restoring ! order ho started right in to pay baol . tn his own coin the mau who had star od tho cheering for S na'or Tillman. ) MUA?EUEO HIS WIFE Anti Then lian Aw ny With Anotlw i Wo ni mi. Charged with tho murder of nb wife and having mado acorrp'ete om ff ssloo of bis orimoto the looa) policb, William Brasoh of Richest er, N. Y., WSH arrested at. Cleveland, O do. Wltn Brasoh there was arrested M's Miry Gilmoro, with whom he it alleged to have eloped Toe b~dy of Bntsoh's wife was fooi d in thc canal at Rochester laut Tu'.'fed ay and sui picton was at or ct turned to her husband, who disap peared. Brasoh confessed tho mur der to the local police, the lster say, ai d told them that he killed his wife because of 1? vo for the O.I jooro wo man. Tue later is a widow about 23 y ears old. Brasoh told thc polloe how be had lured his wife to tho bank of tin Brie canal, and hurled her in. He said tils courage failed three or four times, but finally ho nerved himself aod struck thc worn in a violent blow in the back with his fist "When 1 heard tho tplash 1 ran away," he .said. "Yes I am William Brasoh," be ?aid to Police Chief Kohler, ' I know what you want mo for. I did it. 1 killed her because I loved Mary GI - more. It seems to me 1 have always loved lier. 1 didn't want to marry R uanna, but I was forced into it, so ? killed her. lt was tho only way 1 could get rid of her." T JO three year-old, daughter of Brasoh was with the ouple when they wero arrested in a r oming house. Both Brasoh and the Gilmore worn sn will bo taken back to Roches ter at once._ Shoot H Two Mon. At Wadley, Gi , Will Smith, an escaped negro convict, carly Thursday shot and killed Marshal Morris ot Mldvillo, and mortally wouuded J. J. Pope, a well known planter, living near lhere. The negro who was serv ing a twenty year so ateno*, had es caped from thc camps. Mr. Pope dis covered that the negro had taken re fuge at his former home and was be h g protected by his wife. Summon li g Marshal Morris the two approach ed the cabin and were mot ?vlth a voiley of shots-whlch c ntinued until the marshal was dyh?g on the ground and Mr. Pope ley mortally wounded Smith then oame from tho cabin, tx an l ied his would bo captors and ells ?pp an d Into the douse woods. Much excitement followed and a peso wat formed immediately at Wadley, which is now in pursuit of tho dei-porate ne gro. _ H-ino Old Story, lu a rear end collision between tr il us on the Atlantic O ast, Line ai Ah skie, N. C . E ighieer O O. King f P.utsmoiKh, V.* , and Brakumai Walter Carter of Windsor. N. O, were k ll lori. Conduotor MOBO tam and an un known while man were in jured. The accident happened while >ne of the trains was shifting cars Tho engine of one train aud six car* *ere badly damaged, as were the ca boose and six rear oars of the othei nain, lt ls im po slbio to place the j responsibility a1 t'ds tim". lt. v. i.u oillo is* U*td A dhpatci from Greenville, S. O , ? ays Dist riot Rt venue Olllcer Sams, accompanied hy Uulted States depu ties, two state constables, and many more sta*e deputies raldtd the ' Dark drier" Tuesday morning, lt viding .ne very stroi goold of the mt u.italn ar moonshiners, cetroying eight ? licit s ills and throwing eur, hun dreds of gallons of corn mash. Dur mg th- raid a few bhots were tx ci.at.ged, but no one was mt. Th?? Omt C ?ni llnok ll ot Louth t f Lek Haven, Pa, ca. nt i s -M ar ihat a eat lias nine lives, cu. he kuo'-H frc m experience mat it . at. at least two. Tue family feline p? t contracted sch ivy and it was ce ii ? ? d at u O'junoil to c dorofurm it Ti Ut it was pm tooealb, and in the vening bnileo 18 niches deep In tin oack yaid. Mex; mon li g L.\U,n was astonished to lind the cat on the i.ack dooistep when he opened -the :Lor. A i NIKO i ii-?.. A dispatch from Pollock, L*., a it t bering town tells of an all-nigut Irv, wi.mu Tuesday did about $300, 100 damage, destroying twelve mil li u feet ol lumber, part of the Iron Mountain railroad's trestle across Big Jreek, eighteen homes and one hotel ind forty nine freight and ll.it cars. Poe large.st loss was suffered by tho Ju1 Cret k Lumber Outiupiiny. About 000 men were thrown out of em >.o, ment hy the fire. . I Rill i'lM.I.I ?nuil, At Talladega, Ala., in th i presence f ;ioo pei'fiOos at a masquerade hail I'nUiSdav night Dudley Brown and lonry K :dgi,t mught a pistol duel in /niel? both men were killed. Mis, lort was slightly injured, receiving a tray shot In the ankle. IO joh man fOslved four shots in the breast. : ith aro well ki.own and popular lu 'alladtga. No explanation has boen 1 ven oi tho tragedy. A < J. i nn v 11 lo Freak, A reporter on tho Greenville No wi: m Thursday across on old gentle an eighty llvo years old who lias ivor in all Ids life fired a gun, pistol any firearms, and dining lils carter i has spent moat nf bin t.imn in pijy*] mmunitlea. Tho samo man lias ncvor sled whiskey In any siiapo or form, r has he over used tobaoco, BRUTAL RUSSIA. Massacre of Jews by the Offi cials at Bialystok Should SHOCK THE WORLD. Wornt Cruelty Russia linn Ever Ikea Quilty Of. Jewish Pa titer, Moth er, Daughter and Son Lashed Together by Torturers and Beaten to Death. The massacre of the Jews at hlaly I stck the first of last week must have boon something awful. The corres pondent of the New York Amerloan visited all parts of the town, taking evidence from bath Jewish and Chris tian residents. Here ls what he says: Tho massacre was essentially (to olah The polio*, military holUginB and the Blaok Hundred played subor dinate roles In ov<n* oaso. At a parlol wuen a mass of butohorleB ooourred the p dice and solo lera either aotlvoly assisted or encouraged the butohers. Thcro are many autentlcated oases of soldiers themsc.vcs perpetrating slaughter. In the B >yare district, where the worst matsaores occurred, the soldlore of the Cglltsky, Sixty third Regiment, aooompanled by two lill >orn, massacred sevon Jews at Gop eur's saw mill. Full details of this trpgedy were given mo by the survlv int! maajger. Woen the soldiers wore ccup ed with looting, their vlotlms sought refuge In a sm.tll wooden hou.- o on which at 0 o'clock on Friday even ing tuc soldiers tired suddenly Many Jaws of this dlstrlob, especial ly girls, bi came imane. The i llloors ordered the inmates to come out one by ono. Fivo of them wore shot dead as they emerged from : he house and nix were hacked to plect s by sabres. O.?o retrained in the m use, an old woman named K.iutsoh, >ioventy years of ago, and the soldiers burned the house and she perished In the (lames. In other oases the soldiers were merely onlookers. In Souvenir stn eba a prosperous Jow named PodlatobeiT kept a leather workshop. The pro prietor, his relatloes, named First nnrn, and six others were slaughter ,o I Inspeoted the dabbled with pools of blood and fragmeuts of llesh and hair are stloklng to the walls. Flrst mann was tho tirst killed. He was B mt by a gendarme namid Sohultze. then the Hooligans stripped vh^ corpsi ; carved pieces out of the breast and drove nails into the nose. Four frightened employes took shel ter lu an outhouse tho Hooligans broke lb opt n and be'it them to death. The I soldiers looked on, and tho Hooligans were unmolested. The young son of the proprietor was saved by the sol diers who cried, "Enough; don't kill tue boy 1 ' IIOUSK OF 1IOHK0K. Outside this house I saw a younth wearing tho blood-stained olothes of a jsaughterod mother. In many oases whole families woro exterminated. 1 visited a house In old Boyare, street occupied by Alnsteln, a resp ot td teaoher, who with his mother, daughter and two sons, were done to death by Hooligans undcrthe command <<f a disguised police i Ulcer while BOI (hers wero present. At Brat the sol diers tired Into the house and a polioo man ordered tho family to save them selves In tho lit.lds. There after tying father, son, mothor and daughter to gether, they were beaton to death, the police meantime tiring at ran dom. Two witnesses assure me that nails were hammered into the son's face bo fore his death. In the tl dd are pools if blood. Everywhere lum Ct nt children stand atgulrg beside these ghastly pools, talking about whom eaoh belongs to. Ntxt door lives a woman named L vin, with eight ohil dren, whose husband was oarved to pieces In her sight. Throughout town for two days the massacresoontlnued. Fiendish tortur es and nutllatlon of thc o/rp s in vari ably followed the masacres with active or pasbive co-operation of authorities. In many cases the pohes tuoibly au th i rlzed the butnery by ordering the Hooligans to spare particular Individ ulla. I Interviewed two person who escaped hy bribing the soldier*). O.e girl, living cn Alexander street, after her father hud ocen btyonnetted, paid a soldier 20 roubles that she might be spared her-elf. Both Jev.s and Christians agrct. 'hat many < Isguised policemen were among che Hjohgans M .nt of the victims of tho soldiers tried to def end uiemsidves, but while the Hooligan broke down tho doors of their homes, thc soldiers looked on, and if a J?w defended himself or even appeared at a window i hey tired a volley, killing the defenders or driving them luto the bands of the Hooligans Con corning tilt Vladlmlrsky am Cglltsky, <f g m nt H, J )W witnesses alli, m that (J 1 nc! Buk vsky dlr cMy encouraged tu soldiers, crying: ' Ujulita dd-, ffP 0 M ls, kill tlie J- wa. Tjrlure before death repeatedly recurred, and mutilation afierward. tn Nikolai street a woman had a 3rowcar thrust down her throat and iheh twlstsd. She tinnily was hacked lo death with a hatchet and left to Diced to death. Toe hands of B >yar, 1 tailor, were nailed to a table while :ie was clubbed to death. DRAOOIfiD TO ll IS DOOM, A little girl whoso body I saw In ibo Jewish Hospital bad hor leg lawed off whllo she was yet alive. KherB were carved to death slowly, to thc yard of the Jewish II ispltal, ?vhere eighty-six corpses were laid lido hy side, I saw thirty o?8?8 nt i UtllatioD. In some, noses were out, ?ff. In others tho ears were cut ( ff n many oases nails were driven into be iao-j or skull. Ono old man had ils eyes torn out. A olerk named Bernstein was ragged from a bruin and battered to eatn. Hm body was afterward found tl a Held, handless, and with a sharp ned stick driven Into tho stomaoh. 'ho complicity of olllolals, soldlors nd polios has been established by un* introvertido ovldenca, and will un uestlonahly he confirmed In tho i fil ial report. St. Chepkln, a member r tho Durna Inquiry Commission, as established boat the massacre was Dt Inspired from St. Petersburg, but / local oilljlals, who believe that the Etti ? guVc?UUi?uii ?uniiu? i<?ut uitttwm 0 as a counterweight against the volution. 1 have established tho faot that --?- . , f. bhe mamore waa pinn ned djfya lp ad fauoo. jror InaVauoe, wbeu'fcue Jew lah deputation on Tuesday eatred a1 police officer named SheremjtMeff for permission to lay a wreath on the g<rave of a murdered polio* : master' named Dergatohoff, 8heremetMeff oyo ioally answered, "You'll coi- an an Bwer on Thursday," whioh waa the first day of the killing. Dapgatohoff wan ja olever and humane .man, be loved W Jewa and Ch?iiiUus. tils murder by the Jew bal tere, gave hie subordinates freedom to execute their plot. \ LAID TO T1IK GOVBl?l<y? Tho Governor of Grodno Province ls equally guilty. He arrlvep Thura day evening and stayed qnly two hours. Ile did nothing tojstop the massaoro, and worse violence follow ed his viHlt. Tho appointment by tho Durna of an Inve-Uglying o rn mission oausnd a cessation nh ?hi ugh tor. The small proportion of. wound ed to killed shows the Impunity with whloh the murderers were allowed to finish their vlotims. Some of these were thrice killed by bullet)), kn v, ? and oudgels. Every ravaged house 1 visited shows that the raiders were left in possession for houri. A re markable feature of this msssaore ls the abseooo of outrages ou tho wo men. Though thirty were klUed, there ls no authenticated case of out rsge dlsooverahle. This ls ezplalnee tu cause the Hooligans and troops got their orders only to ''kill." The preolse number of deaths oan not bo learned There are eighty-six dead now In tho Jewish hospital and seven lu tho Christian hospital, but the oorpscs of those draged from the train and killed were burled without being counted. Tho material des tructlon ls enormous. In four im portant streets nearly every window, door and shutter ls broken, except in the Christians houses. M ny of the wealthier Jews cRoap-d, owing to the iron gates of their ocurt yards, but the soldiers flied through the win dows. In one bouse I saw thirty rillo bullet holes In tho windows, though there was nobody within savo an old lady and a woman servant. Tho hon cen Into whloh tho mob broke were lltterally destroyed. Even ihn wallpaper was toro down Too rioters stole everything portable; even children's toys were sraabhed. Tho heavy furniture and tho uusmasnable things were thrown out of the windows. The merchants' acoount books wore burned, and only the bare walls were left. In a bakery, whero the owner was killed, tho mob soaked the loaves of bread in a pool of blood, leaving be hind an Ironioal note. In Levin's mill, where Christians and Jews work together, the mobbltes cut tho oloth and yarn belonging to the Jews leav ing the Christian's yarn untouched. It is estimated that the loss will amount to two million roubles. The relatives of the vlotims have been de prived of everything and are afraid to rc-euter tho houses. They arc begging In the streets of the town. SENATOR TILLMAN X Will Not Cn'l un tho VrcalC nt Until j Ho Ano'oKlzoa. "I have bsen insulted there once and I do not propose to pl&oe myself in this position again if I c*n prevent lt." Theso aro tho words .used by Senator Tillman Thunda; w*s made acquainted with ho presi dent's rcoent utterances tending to indicate a desire for a reconciliation between himself aud the seplor sena tor from South Carolina. Tho unpleasaut ditlloul'.y a few years back between Senators Tillman and McLaurln, and the subsequent withdrawal of Tillman's levitation to thc reception at tho Wolta IIouso to meet Prince Henry, then paying a visit lo this country, are still fresh In the minds of the people who have fol lowed Senator Tillman's oavecr sine he entered the senate. There ls no notion on the part of Senator Tillman of bringing about a reconciliation with tie chief tx cu live, unless .uci'. reo mediation is ao companied by an unconditional apolo gy from *he president, and aa there 1? little urobabillty of this, the matter of a love fea >t, between them is still In the air. Those who know Senator Tillman well, know that noth'ng short tf au ipology will satisfy him. While the president is credited with having re .ontly .. .'.lil that ho liked Senator Till nan, and while tho senator ls like vise quoted ai having made a s1 ate neo i to tho i licet that he behove .no president to bo straight, and all lght, theso aro taken only as pa-sing emarka, made withou t serious con ideratlon, and hardly worth romem >erlng. Tue utterances of Senator [''liman that ho would not allow him elf to be again Insulted, are believed 0 represent his real feelings toward he president. While he admits he 1 as ready to forgive a man-whether e is president or a prlvUo cltlzm jr a wrong, he is not willing, accord ig to his own words, to place him >lf In thc ?w.tlMI lo of being wllfullv ?sulted a second time, even though mt mau ho the presidont of the 'lilted States Wanted to Lynott ll T. Mrs. ICmraa K uff.naun. wife of a calthy Sinus FAIIS brewer was re light Into o mri Wednesday for the inclusion of her preliminary hearing i a charge of h&vlrg omiscd the >ath cf her maidservant, Ague*, olrols. She was hissed when she eut 1 tito the oourt room and when ie oame out an angry demonstration as made and cries of "Lynoh her" ere heard. Mrs. KaulTmann was dd on a ohargo of murder. The .se will be called for trial In Noiem ir. MISH Polrols, who was IT years d, died June 1, and was burled at irkston, this State. The body was ter exhumed and was found to bear separate wounds. I ri |>l n HUlOldO. A suicide pact, hnt.wenn MI-R. Mary dirons, a widow, and Edward ?an r, who had a wlfo and live oh I ld rou, ?ultod Friday In tho death o? both 0 man and the woman and Peter ihrons, the 12-year old son of Mrs ihrens. All throo wero found dead tho woman's apartments in Dekalb enuo, Brooklyn, with every gas mer turned on. M rb. Gauzer had lently asked Mrs. Bohrens to give 1 7.ir up, threatening at tho same ne to prooure warrants for tho ar it of both. Two lcttors were left tho Bul?les, one by Mrs. ttohrrns to r "frlonds," and tho othor from nz ir to his brother in-law. Itrymi Noodod, t3v. Sam Jones says It losovolt has du ? r." .<> picsiduuii, but oiiatj dugs aro now rips for Bryan to ooed him, as wo need Bryan In our lincas. An Arch Murderer Walled Up la a Living Tomb \ND LEFT TO STARVE. A Yelling Mob Sits In the Market Place and Watcb the Budding Up of the Walls Around the Slay er of Thirty-six Young Women. A cablegram from Tangier Moroco, tells how, with such details of fiend Ish oruolty that they cannot bo fully realized, Mohammed Messfewl, tbs arob murderer of Marakesoh, has been walled up alive. It was this same Mesfewl who was to havo bren oruol?cd for bis tremen dous or 1 mes-lt ls known that he murdered not fower than thirty six young women-and who was saved from that fashion of exeoutlon hy tho outcry of tho resldout foregln cnTolals. It would have been better had thc ne name ( lllolals not interfered with Moroccan Justice, for Mosfewl .icforo he died undorwent lingering torturo comparod with which cruci fixion would have been merciful. TIIJC A KC1I-MURDER'S CRIMES. Mesfewl was a cobbler and publlo letter writer. Associated with him In his crimes was au old woman seventy yoars of age named Annah. Many girls of tho city disappeared In thc last days of April aud tho parents of ono young woman traoed her to tho cobbler's shop. Annah was put to the torture and confessed. She told that tho girls, who oame to dlotate letters, wero treated to drugged wine and then beheaded Twenty decapitated bodies were found lu a deep pit under the shop and nix teen more In the garden. Annah died under the torture and Mesfewl confessed. By au ancient Moorish custom ho was oondemned to 0?? orucllled. His oruoitlxlon was set for May 2, but this form of punishment was given up becauso of thc forelgu dam or, and lt was announoed that Mes few! would be beheaded, nis death by the still moro awful process of Im murement shows that tho Morccoan authorities "blludcd the eyes" of the foreigners. Mesfewl was kept lu tho Marakesoh jail until outside attention was dull ed, and then, on May 15, his torturo began. Daily ho was lcd into thc market place and whipped with switches of tho thorny accacla. The cobbler was stripped to the waist, and while two assistants held tho vlotim's arms out stretched, the olty executioner laid ou the spiked rods. Ten strokes wero given each day and eaoh stroke drew blood. The number of strokes wai kept down be oau3c Mesfewl was an old mau and the people of Marakesoh had no ldoa '?f letting him die too easily. MOST MERCIFUL CRUELTY I After'eaoh Hogging tho oobbler's baok was tougnenod and anolutod with vinegar and oil, so that ho might be tit for tho next day's ordeal. So tho dally whippings weat on, and when it was been that despite all ere M.sfewi was falling lulo exnaus tion lt waa decided to oarry out the supreme senteUOd. This wa? that he be wal ed up alive lu thc public market place. Tue currier who brings this news from Manikesoh to Tangier assorts that the order of execution before thc Sultan's own signature, and the fact that LI e semence was carried out lu tue great square or tue olly aud in full view ? f the populaos, shows iliac ?UC e Ul ;.als of Maraketc ; knew the awful programme would nut be inter fered with. Tue day of execution was set for M unlay, June ll, that being the Maraki sch market day. The news ot ? ho execution bau been spread and toe market place was thronged with ihousan s of MoreoJans, who squat bed in the bli. zo g sunlight and wait ed for the ghasuj show to commence. A deatn by walling up alive had not been Seen in M*raxe8Ch for many years, but there was tuose who told otheis mat vlotims had been known sometimes to llvo for a whole week, and so the good no*?i spreid, and thc people brougot their provisions arid che oaravanserles were crowded. Tl IK LIVING TOM ll 18 DUO. Just outsiae the jill where Mesfawl was confined stands the chief bazaar. lt has very thick walls and In ono of Ju ii.-, faolng tho market plaoc, two masons dug a hole tdx feet nigh, two :oct Ide and two feet deop. Meifowl ivas very thin and these dimensions ve the doomed man eiuite a free .paoo and some little air, for just as ,1s fellow townsmen would not let Um slip away by too much Hogging, !0 they did not Intend to smothor dm too quickly. About tnrcc feet up two staple? vitti chains were tlxcd in the back of .hu rt oct,s lu the wall aud two more tapies with chains were attaohod. L'nc purpose of these was to keep the ictlm ereot so that ho might not unidle down out of sight of thc rowd. Mci,fewl had not been told of his atc and when he was brought o;*t of he prison on Monday morning ho bought he was being led forth to his ally whipping. As soon as no saw tho cxpeotant housands, however, and heard their owl? of hate he knew that hi? day ad como. Then ho saw tho hole dug i tho wall, und, being an old man, 0 knew what that meant. Ho had ?ken nh: wnipptngs with fatalistic irdtudo, hoping he might die under ne thorns, but when he wa? dragged >ward the upright tomb ho ?truggl 1 with his jailer? and sorcamed for leroy. Soroamlng ho wai thrust into the ionss in the think wall, and, t cream ig, ho was ohalned up. Thero he aa left for a whllo, for there was enty of time. Tho mason? stoud tide and the orowd struggled ano uglit to get In the front rank, "liing In derision at the creaming d mau and polling bim with the ightful filth and olfal of tho market ace. r?RY Diet.HIERATIC EXECUTIONERS, Then the masons came forward and iry deliberately i?ui un mo nrso urscs of tho masonry. Tue stones id mortar rose to Mcsfowl's knees id then the chief Jailor oame for i ward and gave him bread and wa tor. Phd masons agaiu stood asido aud ?gain the crowds Jeered and no-slab bored the victim. 1 So lt went on, oourse by course, itono hy stone, water and bread, until only Mesfewl's screaming bead was . seen. The last stones were thrust In \ plaoe and Mesfewl's living tomb was . aomplefd. But tbeorowd was not y ot satisfied. . M un to wi was not dead, an . the throng j pressed forward and kept qulat to ! hear the mtfll:d screams for mercy : that oamo out of the wall. Every ; time Mcsfowi screamed the crowd yelled Night -.arno, braziers woro lit, coffee was mado and still Mesfewl screamed and the crowds yelled. Tuesday, j June 12 came In, and the market place was as crowded as ever, aud Mesfewl was still soreamlng tor , mercy. So lt went on all day and all night. Only Mesfewl's soreama were growing fainter. When Wednesday broko those close up to the wall reported ' that the dead-alive was only moaning Ifipally the moaning stopped and the 1 orowd oursed Mesfewl for dying 80 ' soon, and the delayed business of tho market was resumed. So HadJ Mohammed Mesfewl ex plated his crime. i The first njW8 of the terrible off)n- j ces of tho cobbler of Marakesoh oaoae | in a special cable to the New York i American April 29 It was reported i that Haf'J Mohammed Mesfowl was to be oruoified on Thursday, May 3, for an extraordinary series of murders. Twenty'six oorpses ot women had i been found under the cobbler's shop, i and ten in bis garden. i All of Meafowl's victims wore mu- | tllated with dagger outs in order to ! stimulato fanaticism, and it was prov ? ed they had boon murdered for money ? -most of lt in trilling sums. The Koran provides or uol fix ion aa . the punishment for terrible orimes. and though ?hat form of exeouttun has not been used in Morocoo for a generation, it was decided that the cobbler's orimes deserved that classi cal punishment. The next nows oamo in a cable of May 2, saying tho execution by cruci fixion would not take plaoe. Tho rest of the story and Its tragio de nouement ls told in the present dis patch. KIDNAPPED A BOY And Will Sorvo Twenty Yours In Prison for lt. "Had I the disposition of this case, I would summon a largo number of mothers here and turn you over to their tender meroies, but as tho law fixes tho penalty for orimes like yours, I can do nothing but commit you without bail for tho action of tho grand jury on tho oharge of kidnap ping." Tnesa words were addressed by Magistrate Elsenbrown of Pniladel phla, Pa., to John Joseph Kean, ab ductor of Freddlo Muth, 7 year old son of Charles Muth, who with his captive waa discovered after a elxday search, lu a vacant house in West Philadelphia. It is thu Intention of the police department to railroad the prisoner to the penitentiary and Im mediately after the hearing Captain of Detectives Donaghy went bet?re the grand jury with his witnesses and ai-ked for an indictment. Freddlo Muth was brought to the court room by his father. He was a fliff rent boy from the child who was found dirty and huugry in an unocou plod huuse. He was atttircd lu a neat, blue llannel sailor suit and a pink rose was pinned to his lapel. Mr. Muth said the child was none tho worse for bis experience. In strong ontrast was tho appearonce of trhe abductor. After a sleepless night in his cell lie wat* haggard and wan. lils eyes shifted nervously and bis whole frame trembled visibly. He ?till seemed to fear bodily injury and .yed speitators auspiciously The police say e pao d tho cell all night, lobbing atid meaning, his wife anr dil dren bel?g uppermost in his nind. When bo was placed in tho dook lisan nodded to Freddie Muth, who tit beside bis father, and smiled. Pointing to Hean, the littlo fellow nil: '"There he ls, papa, see " tCean app ared to exert a strange in lueuce uver tue ohlld wno showed a ee'iug akin to friendship for thc nan. Kean made a statement dooy ne be bad restrained the ohlld in .ny way, but said on the oontrary freddie had opportunities to leave dm several times. Ho said ho had lot ill treated I ha boy and in this ho /as corroborated by the Muth ohlld. The grand Jury found a truo bill gainst K'.an and was given immo late trial and oonvioted in less than n hour. Judge Sulzberger sentenced bo prisoner to twenty years. From ?ie time of Kean's arrest until he was it his way to the penitentiary to be in hontenoe less than twenty-four curs hud elapsed. Hon UutH Fut her? A dlspatoh from Wallalla says: Dr. J. Thode was seriously cut rlday by his son, Fred Thodo. < is reported that tho trouble ?rose lout whiuh should use a buggy, i ter thc cutting young Thodo wont f on tho 1 o'clock train but after aching helton ho returned and gave mself up and is no lu j - ii. There e several wounds in tho neck, side id back of the elder Thode, but uu >s some complications arise they aro it looked upon as necessarily fatal, oung Thodo was at one time a stu nt at Furman University, and was eof thc teacher students at tho turner school now In progress at aballa. What lt Cost Ulm. Twenty years ago Adam Spies, at at time a prominent manufacturer, o Koformod Mennonite Churoh of arllng, Ul., because he could not bo Jhrlutlan and be heavily in debt. ie reason for his Indebtedness was 0 to the destruction of his immense gon plant, and, owing to tho rulo the church, he could not insure lt. r twenty years ho struggled. Ho ilt a plant in Clinton and later wont Abingdon, Ul. At the end of 20 irs he paid elf a debt of $50,000and lay rejoined tho church of ids carly ). Ho is now 70 years of ago. KVIIB of Divorc.) \t Los Angeles W. F. ICotrlngshot 1 probably fatally wounood bin di .o -d wife and her niece, Miss Hcsslc Day, at tho homo of the former ly Thursday. Ketring had boon larated from lils wife for two years il night he asked her to roturn to Q. Sho refused and Mhs O'D&y pped to tho telephone to call the ice. As she did so, Ketring thrust > tolcphone from nor hands and >t both women. ?BOu? COITO? SJOBE. Jome Wondrfrfu' Urion to Wbfo'i thrj j Are libing l*u?. Tho recent meeting of the >tt . ?eed Oruo'iers' association, at Atlanta Sis., brought out some Interesting Tacts In regard to the unca of cotton teed, both for domestic ?od export pu??p >8oe. Governor Terrell, who wa* In early hf? a ot ton grower, said that he remembered well when ootton leed was burned to get, rid of lt. but sst year there were 4.500 OOO tons of Mitton ssod bought from the South- j >rn planters and the sum of 975 ooo - J0O wts paid for them, thus aading j piaotloally 25 per oent. to the value ; in that way of the cotton crop. This bas neon brought about principally, through the cotton seed oil Indus tries. There are probabilities of s .111 fur-. thor developments lu the u*o of oot* ton need winch will increase the value of that proluot. Prof. J. H. don nell, of Texas, In speaking of cotton seed meal as unman food made a ?triking presentation of its value foi suoh une ri. Be gave a good lesion in the shapo of biscuits and oakes made from a combination ot cotton seed meal and wheat flour. They wen pronounced as del loste and tasty a>. my produot of tho flour barrel by tht roo m i,om of tho convention who wen. Kl von an opportunity to partaken the food. Another use of tho seed if that for fertilizer in the shape c meal. The use of raw seed to enrioh t land was pronouuood a waste wh the meal eau be used tn muoh bott* Qnanclal advautaiie. Professor 0< noll said that within a short time , behoved cotton seed crushers of t South would be able lo announce t lotual discovery of 4 500,000 tons it now produot flt for human oonnum , Hon. II? stated that he had user , uotton oil as a cooking fat in his home I for six months, and that lt was equal ID all respects for cooking purposes to tho best lard. Hy an invention of comparatively rooent times ootton oil is freed from the old impurities which ?J ive a a rank o lor. So-called olive oil whioh reaches Amerloa from southern Europe oarrles a large por oentage of ootton seed oil. Ootton seed meal is use>d in making oom a:id Hour mullins, hUoulbs, panoakes, gin? Ker bread, together with cakes of all kinds, and for various other similar uses. /iiiv nut 'i'mtu A dispatch from Washington to tho Brooklyn Eagle says 'he ramrod - aoenco of William Jennings Bryan has not boen lost upon President Roosevelt. The president believes bhat tho Nabraskan ls oertain to get the domooratio nomination for presi dent In 1908, and be is of tho opinion bhat there is only one man lo the re publican party who oan boat Bryan, provided there should bo no pronouno sd change In the temper of the publlo between now and eleoMon time. The mST'yfeOj. In the Judgment of Mr. Roosevelt stanb^^ween Mr, ^Bry an and tho presidency, iff' WitHdiQ Howard Taft, seoretary of war. Deadly lOloctrlolty. Eleotrlo light wires aro dangerous ind tho greatest caro should be exer cised In their erection to see that they fcr> well put up. Ovor in Augusts, .Ja,, one night last week Mr. J. E. tarlton, a young man, stumbled into iwo electric wires on tho corner of Cherry alley and Gardner avenue. His iries for assistauoe attracted the at cntion of those who lived near by, iut all efforts to resuscitate him when raohed woro In vain. The wires were Intlly out and pushed out from under he body and it was removed to a ne*r ?y house where he died. Crt w I,ont. The Danish schooner Bertha was unk near South Goodwin lightship Ti u rad ay as a result of a oolllslon /1th the Dutoh tank steamer Araerl an, from Antwerp, to Now York. Sight of the schooner's crew were rowned. Peter Norham, the cap ain's son, was the only survivor. Mu-, American sustained no damago ..GAN cattish fall from the clouds?" > a question propounded in a head inc by The State on behalf of the poo le of Aiken, who arc considerably ivlded over the question because of he Unding of a cattish In Malu street n Saturday morning after a heavy tin. Vv e do not know about cattish, ut we remember on ono occasion dion we were a boy that hundreds of mall frogs appeared right, after a lin and it was said they had fallen om the clouds. If frogs, why not attlsh? _ LAST year Secretary Root described ie Penrose-Durham gang of Pennsyl tnia asila corrupt and criminal com Inatlon masquerading as Republl- I ms." . It is now said that President ' oosevelt has promised to make a few , leeches In Pcnsylvanla In favor of 1 (Storing that "corrupt and criminal 1 imbination" to power In that State* 'o have come to the conclusion that oose /olt ls nothing moro than a and stand poser. Tbere are BO many different kind* \ prepared food stuffs on th? shelve* the modern grocery, that lt almost ? ems as If olty folks must live out ot . iHteboard boxes. How thankful thc ( rmor should bo thal he, day by day, ts his living frosh from the earth B at bore lt. No better place to live, 0 all the world, lhan on the farm. t The man who is determined to do I raethlng for his fellows must make i his mind not to ho discouraged by lng called "grafter", or a " ohomer". Opportunity knocks at avery man's ; or but a lot of men ara so busy do- v ; a little "knocks" themselves that t ey fall to hear opportunity | The longest life ls the ona of which c B most Is made. . Insurance At Al T. S. Sease, President. PAI.ME?TO MUTUAL PIRE Spartanbur V home fl rel Insurance company that magement Capable and Conservativo. Write for particulars. We Have Ft o 25 liorao power Talbott, second har boon ovorhaulod. This Engine is i rout bargain for anyone who is in th Wo aro headquarters for anything in o. Writo us when you aro in tho m jot our prices before placing your oi Columbia SopplyuCc, . . * A gar g or laborers in Sew Yoric, .noployf d as hod carriers, went on a ir tike when they wr ro told to carry the brick and oonorete In wheel ber riwa instead ot tn tho hods. They H?phMned t.hat 'the rules ot tbs uoton forbade them to carry brick or e ?norete In anything except bode." and they o ?uld not cons mt to the une of wheelbarrows. Tkelogi? o? tfcx> Bltuath n seems to baye been that tho wheel barrows held two much and the Job would have been finished too goon. liOtiK Xvi ni? Nine hundred and ninety*nine years In the penitentiary is the penalty ina? {Hised upon Snow Williams, a negro, or on.to!iii v a young white woman by ' the foot. The negro entered the girl's room at Bilton Tf x*s, a few nights ago and srfz.?d herby the foot, but her screams brought aid and ho waa arrcRtod. Thc grand Jury was in ses? ?lon and ?n'ek ounlshroent f Tlowart. Are You Sick? If You Have a ni a on H o For Whian You | Are una Mo to Find a Cure Write OB. We Have Been Remarkably ?uocossful In Curing Deep Seated and Stubborn Calen. If you have auy dltoase of a obronlo na I'TO, no matter how imny dootors have I ri i ir? to cure you, or how much other troatmeut you have token, wo want you to write usa letter. We are sp?cialiste with ovor 20 years experience, having been located in At lanta for nearly 18 yours, whoro we nave established a reputation for cur ing our patient? whioh wo bollovs i? ?ooond to none in Uiis country. Our standing both professionally and lilian lally, is ot the very highest, and MHO! H A?HAWAT, H. D. CrUoitt Dart mouth M Col legelSSl. Es.Pr?a,K. Hieb. Mei.Sicitty. Ix. Membtr Soto Med. Xs;, E-srd ? otB?Uh, ?k, ??? I you can consult us with porfeot confldonoe. We do not resort to olap'rap mothod? to soouro patient?, but conduct our practico in a Bt uighforward manner. Our Speciality is chronic disoases of both men aud Wo men-Bitch as Norvous Debility, (nervous exhaustion, nervous prostiation, lost vital ity, otc., Kidney and Uladdor Disoases, Stricture, Rheumatism, Varicooolo, Catarrh of tho diiTeront organs, Speoiflo Blood Poison, Stomach, Bowel, Livor and Heart l)itoa80s, Piles, Fistula, ?ulargodProstate, diseases peculiar to women, etc., eto. We invite every afflicted person to con sult us froe. Soud for examination blank. After you have rccolvod Uioso, together with our export opinion ot your case, and you a'0 not entirely satisfied, both as to our reliability and ability to e rf your disease, you will not evon bo oxpoo'od to take treats mont. Wo Do Not l><>al in Patent M???llolnoe. All necessary mediovnes aro proparod In our own private laboratory to suit tho conditions of each individual case, without extra charge. Address us as follows; DU HATHAWAY & CO., 88-B, Inman Building, Atlanta, Qa. Kidney and Bladder Ailments. _ Murrey's "?nchu, Gin and Juniper has a direct curdive action on the kidneys and bladdei.^ejievlng at once the distressing symptoin&^pajpjr^^ Headache, dat lc colored, scanty, bum Ing urlno, dizziness, bloating, etc., and promptly restoring these Impor tant organs to a normal, healthy con dition. MURRAY'S BUOHUV GIN, AND JUNIPER ls not a "quaok nostrum," but a com bination of drugs endorsed, rccona- * mended by a multitude of leading pla titude of leading physicians. Itflushes and cleans thc kidneys of all poison ous (dogging impurities, and I * ren dering thc urine bland, soothing and antiseptic, is a specific in painful blad der ailments. Of unquestionable vir ture in all Kidney md Bladder die orders, Dropsy, Gravel, Jaundice and Scanty or Painful Urination. Trice $1.00. Guaranteed satisfactory to every purchaser. AT DRUG STORES. Prepared by the Murray Drug Co., Columbia. S. 0, FO?RSAUST One COI!. P. Lldcll Automatic En gine. One 60TI. P. Erie City Boiler. One Drag Saw. One Cut Of! Saw. One Self Feed Rip Saw. One Broom Handle Lathe. One Hoe Handle Lathe. Two Polishing Drums. One Hand Lathe. One Large Grind Stone and Stand. Two Car Loads short lengths of Ash, Walnut, Persimmon and Dogwood. Ono hundred foot of Shafting. One lot Shafting Hangers. Ono lot Pulleys* * y 12? Doz. Btise Ball Bats. Tho above is situated in a two-story' factory building, dimensions 60x100ft., \ with ell attached 30x60ft, two stories, j Lot measuring 200 feet frontage and 524 feet in depth. Rall Road Into the yard. Ina desirable part of the olty I Df Orangeburg, S. C. This property 1 will be sold in part or in whole. It can be utilized for most any kind of enter prise* For full partloulars.apply to JAS. L. SIMS, Orangeburg, S. O. A Planor or An Organ Por You. To the head of avery family who is ambi tious for tho future and education of his ohll lren, wo have a Special Propositiou to maka. No artiolo In the home shows the avidenoa )f oulturo that does a Plano or Organ. No ao )omplishment gives as much pleasure or is of is great value in after life as the knowledge >f muslo and the ability to play well. Our Small Payment Plat s ma koa owner hip nf a high gr?drf Plano or Organ easy. Just a few dollars down and a small paymeat ooh month or auartorly or semi-annually and he instrument is yours, Writ? us today for Oatalognes'and ont 8p?o rd Proposition of Basy Pay mon ta. Addres" Malone's Muslo Go., Oolumbla, S. O. AIM me BY a cb ff i\i\?\ BANK DEPOSI1 T>3aAjlJtJ R.R.F?rePald,Note?T?*? ^ " SOO PURR CCUR8E? WIllillinirflMffTsTI Doird at Cost. Write Owl4 KORHIA-AUBAIIA BUSINESS COkLKQ&lftaaaa. ?to >soIute Cost. v? J. B. Atkinson, Seo'y & Treas. INSURANCE COMPANY, ft; S. 0. ls SAFE, SOUND, .SUCCESSFUL. Agents Wanted. i j?_iUiL.1 '""W "-i-.-r^ >r Sale ul engine in stock which has recent n first-class condition and will ba e market for such a size engine, the way of machinery supplies, and arket for anything, and be BUM rdors olsowhore. ? . Columbi?, S, C.