The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 16, 1905, Image 4

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WAVE OMiEVOLT In Russia is Slowly Subsiding And Quieting Down BELATED DETAILS Add Horror to the Late Upheaval, in Which Even the Clergy Barticipaed. Six Hundred Men, Women and Children Burned in a Theater. A dispatch from Si. Petersburg Kussla, says the revolutionary way continues to subside except in the Caucfw-ui. As dotails of what haj nonort t.hrnnuhniit. liVimnnun I^wuvv* v>ti vu^itvuw I4IJ1V|/IVUI1 IVUOOli during the upheaval arrive the stor. grows more revolting. In the Baltu provinces murder, riot and lnceudiai ism prevail. In Poland even the clergy, Cathoh and Protestant, participated In t' manifestations In favor of the auton my of the ancient kingdom, in soutl western Russia hardly a city or towi escaped Jewish massacres. At Tomsk, Siberia, according to th< latest reports received here, the whoU population of 40,000 and the miilo* ?U)i d by wnile 000 ra n, women a children wore burned in a thea r> The court house at T >msk and tl mayor's residence where the slude , and revolutionists took refuge Ir r the mob were burned and those wr tried to ll e wore killed In the street* lu Moscow the siclal revolutionist, and the black hundred and the U s sacks and police fought bloody ba ties. The descent of the butchers of Mos cow with their knives and axes upoi the students whs one of the -lost hor j rlble ohapters but not as pit&ble how . ever, as the attack of the black hundred on a procession of schoolchildren carrying red 11 igs. When the ohlldren sought to escape a Gordon of police barred the way and the youthful martyrs were beaten into Insensibility and in some cases were actually torn to pieces. In the Aloxander garden at Moscow Cossacks lay In ambush In the shrub bery and set upon their victims with whips. Many were beaten to death and others were hardly able to crawl away. The reports from the Cauoas us show there Is no immediate prospect of suppressing the present state anarchy. Battles between Tartars and Armenians continue and the destruction of the railroads and lack of troops make it impossible for the authorities to cope with the situation. At O lessa four hundred and twelve Jews who were massacred last week wore burled Wednesday, the majority of the shops were closed Including many of those belonging to Christians. Too scones of grief were heartrending and almost indescrible as the bodies were placed In tranches, each trench containing 70 bodies. Similar funer b1? will continue for three days About 240 bodies were in Rush oondi tion that thev onuld nnt h? ed. On each grave wreaths were placed bearing the Inscription, "Ma tyrs to the faith, and victims of auto craoy." At Odessa the losses by rioting and strikes last week will total many mi1 lion roubles and at last two bund re' families ruined. Some wealthy m^r chants are reduoed to poverty. Thf newspapers are heeding the governor'* warning and ap eared without a word regarding the greatest disaster In thel story of Odessa. The mobs have com pletely devastated all Jewish house in the suburb of Dilnik, many hun dreds of persons are reported klllec and thousands wounded in other neigh boring villages and towns. The (total i of last week's massacres at Odessa ar gradually leaking out and on'y add t the horrors. Soldiers slaughtered hu dreds of Jews. In a hcuse 4ti railroa men were shot while defending them selves. Many Instances of ruthles pillaging were aco'?mpinled with ho rlble torture bv soldiers and rioters. lteyolt in Brest1. A Buenos Ayres dispatch says: A revolution has broken out In Rio D. Janeiro against the Brazilian goverm ;nt. The entire garrison of the capital has rebelled, and the squadron In the harbor has sided with tae revo iu lion law ana tnreatens to Domoaro the city. Hundreds of persona were killed In enoouatera In tho Btreets. One dispatch says that the trouble began with the mutiny of the garrison of the fort of Santa-Cruz, duo to illtreatment of a sergeent. bv the ofllier In command. Colonel Pedrc Ino was arrested and Major Freire Ian ensign were killed. Troops were sent there to quell the mutiny. A Had Oaae. The supreme oourt of Geo gla Wednesday affirmed the decisions of the lower oourt in the case of the Rawlings men convicted of tne murder of the two Carter children near Valdosta, Gi. J. G. lUwllngs, the father, and two of his sons, Milton and Jesse, must go to the gallows, while another, son, Leonard, must serve a life sentence in th*? penltontUrv. A girl is never satisfied untill the right man oomes along and says the right thing at the right time. n CrueL Ethel?Sistor says you remind hor of my doll. Cholly Why does she think so? Ethol?Well, you know, dolly's boad Is filled with sawdust, too. Peaceful and (Juiet. Mrs. Scribbles.?I have only rented a room at this resort to finish my new book. It la called "The Quiet Home." Miss Auto?Why didn't you write at homo, then? Mrs. Scribbles?Too many nol.^y children around. , Sclf-Iteproacli. [ "Wus it Kreen. Willie?" "Yep, hut not half as green as I wuz to tackle It!" Ready to Welcome Tliom. Mrs. Jellers was peeping out through her laco curtains. "These people that are moving In next door can't fool me by covering their furniture with burlaps as If It were something flue," she said. "I've looked them up In the commercial directories."?Chicago Tribune. Notlilog to lUck It, Qf% Miss Millions?If you want to suscoed you must have confidence In yourself. Mr. Noah Rocks?How can a man have confidence In himself when lis nnlv CAtu tin n Couldn't See Her. M Tom?You ought not to kick. I don't Bee your daughter a* much aa 1 uned to, Her father?You don't, Tom?-No, air. When I call now I aluraya put out, the gaa. _ DK* ^10. Thoy I ?te Oflicers al ^./iMttnro. Jobr M. Patthon, Demccratfwlll be the next governor of Ohio, and bis party associates on the state ticket bave also been elected. Both bouses of the legislature will be democratic the last hope of the republicans vanishing with the report that the Hamilton cc unty delegation was solidly democratic. Cbaiiman Garber, of the Democratic State Committee, after reading dispatches frcm the county chairman throughout the state, said: The indications a*-e that Pafctlson is elected by from 40,000 to 50,000 exceeding my estimate considerably. We carried both houses of the iegisla- i ture and will have the largest majority there we bave ever Lad. He said be wiuld give out a regular statement later in the day. At that hour Chairman Dick was not at repub lican headquarters, and lu his abser ce no tigures would be given out, but his earlier claims that Derrick vsas elected were still maintained. The republican counties tPre ugbc ut the state show enormous republican losses and the democrats have gained almost everywhere. Bolh chairmen have Fent meisages to the county chairmen urging prcmpt rcporttrgof results, and each hoped to have oetinate figures during the momlrg. The governor has been running aw^y ahead of his ticket almost all over the dlntn Tim rt vatsp ua? i v* (fieri owiDK to the factional tight* tgainbt his reelection. _____ Warsaw's Woes. Warsaw lias been having an exciting time of late, but, according to what is written, Warsaw ought to be used to it,, for that city has experienced many a doleful time iu its long and checkered history. That history reaches far back into the mists of mediaeval centuries. A certain Duki Conrad erected a castle on the site of the present city in the ninth century. Since then wars and battles have been plentiful thereabouts. Warsaw is beautifully situated in a gently undulating, fertile plain, for the most part on the left bank of the navigable Vistula river, 401 miles eart of Berlin, i It is defended by nearly twenty do- i tacbed forts. The main city lies close to the river and is closely built. The streets are regularly laid out, except in the old city, where its ancient houses are quaint and its thoroughfares are crooked and narrow. There are eleven gates, beyond which lie the new suburbs. The old Polish nobility loved display and there are more than ICO palaoes, of which six ty have been coutlscuted by the Itussian government. Today Warsaw is a big town. In , 1897 ils inhabitants numbered G38,208, about one-third being Jews. Germans form a considerable portion of the population and the Russian garri- < son comprises over 30,000 soldiers. ( Although Warsaw has lost its politi- | cal importance, it is increasing its prestige in all other directions. It is still tho gay, active metropolis of Po- j laud, whose litoraturo and art it dominates. Warsaw's industrial impor- ] tanae, though considerable now, is of ] comparatively recent growth. It has ; hundreds of establishments employing thousands of men. It is a groat railway center and the chlof distrlbut- 1 ing point for a vast and fertile dis- j trlot. Warsaw's artisans have always been keenly alive to their national wrongB. They are moat patriotic as a , race and tho result has been succes- ( slvo outbreaks against the rule of Russia. There is turn have brought about successive and wholesale deportations of the workers, which havo tended to retard Warsaw's growth, but have never been able to stop it. ? In 1803 the Russian government undertook to orush the spirit of rebellion that permeated all classes of society. hhcoeutiona, confiscation and extlo to Siberia were in ordor on an unheard-of scale. High schools and scientific societies were closed and the monasteries and nunneries were emptied. Hundreds of Russians were called In to fill up the vacant posts and tho Russian language was made obligatory as far as was possible. The very name of Poland was expunged from official writings and Russian tribunals administrative institutions wero introduced. Work Without Pau In his "History of Coal Mining," R. W. Galloway points out that what appear to be traces of a primitive stato of servitude existed In Staffordshire, where tho laborers employed In the haulage of coal continued to be known as "bondsmen"?a name probably coming down from a remote period; a supposition whioh receives support from a peculiar service required of them, known as "buildasee." This consisted in working at times in the iiiviiiuuB n ivuvuv ivuTjiriug any payment boyond a drink of ale. This custom of exacting labor without pay Is supposed to represent come ancient servlco required from their tenants by the monks of the Abbey of Build> was. In Bhropshlre, wheneo the name was deH^od. Fatal Fire. At SaD*Franoisco fire brc ke out in the Chronicle building last night while crowds were on the roof watch lng the returns. When the firemen arrived Ihcy rescued the imperiled men and women on the rcof with difficulty A feaich c* the burned premises revealed the bodies of three men names uukrovn, who were burned to a crisp. They were evidently employes of the art department of the paper. The building was ten stories high and was erected in 18G8: Loss may notexoeed $750,000. GKMT UPHEAVALS*. f The Moat Noted Political Revolutioi in Philadelphia's Hiatoiy. The Cry of "Turn|.the Ua?o?ln Out' " lletulted In a Orfatt Vicn ry cr fc< m at [1 ?I i l?. Adlspalch from Philadelphia say! the political revoluth n In that city and State en Tuesday of last week was the greatest that oceured In Pennsylvania In nearly a generations. There has been previous upheavals, but this is the tlrst time In years that every cilice for which there was any Bemblanoe of a contest has been lott to the regular republicans It is alto the lirst lime in a quart ei of a century that the regular rtpubii ans have been defeated lur 11 e c -n frol or the state treasury. Memora le contests have been wa^en a^ains he republicans for the (.nice but. without success. The plurality of William II Perry, who wes nominated by the cemccrat.. {ndi pendent party, Lincoln party and prohibitionists for state trrasuirr. will be nearly 100,0J0 and may k shove those iiyuies. J. Lee P.um rr.er, the republican candidate, rar er behind bis ticket In nearly every county In the state. The remainder of the republican ticket was elected by the usual republican pluralities. l)/\< cini?ialf''o r-lnroHt i; iiiti i u'oiuluu x\uioc>giv y*uaou % j <uoi year was more than a million. The victory for the city party, the reform liganlzablon, over the re*, u ar repub acans In Philadelphia as complete and beyond the expectation cf the ae reform leaders. The city party's plurality is 43,333. The reform wave carried Berry along with It, by de featlr g Plummer in the city by 36,035 plurality. The complete vote for the cilices for wtiei there were contests Is as follows: For Sheriff?Wilson H. Brovu, city parly, 148.679; Joseph S. INtff, republican, ]05,346; G. It. Fisher, socialist, 1,267. Coroner?J. M. It. Jeromon, city party, 147,084. Thomas Dugan, present coroner, 104,116; Julius Weber, socialist, 1,270. County 0( rrmlFSlf nerf? Rudolph Blake, Surg, city party, 1( 8 446: E A. Anderson, city party, 148 263; H. A. Chase, republican, 100,156; Williams Kmslie, republican, 99 621; A1 phcris Olbright, siciallst, 1,297. Chase is elected as the thhd cemmissiOLer, defeath g Kmslie by 638 vote s. The vote for state treasurer in Philadelphia was as follows: W. H. Perry, fusion 134 797 J. L. Plummer, republican ...97,76(1 R B, Ringler, socialist 1,3)9 E. J. Drugmand,socialist-labor ...183 The proposed $10,000 000 for the abolishing of the grade ciossings was carried by a large majority. The highest total vote cast for any one was that cast for sheriff, the vote be log 255 292. The total vote for president last year was 281,054. The oity party, claims that Inasmuch as the 51,000 alleged fraudulent names were stricken from the voting lists since the fight against the republican organization began last May, (be vote C88t was the highest ever polled In the city. The regulars carried only fourteen of the forty-two wards for their local ticket. Plummer, for state senator, carried sixteen. One of the surprises of the election was the loss by the regular republicans of Senator Penrose's ward. It gave a city party plurality cf 50, but Plummer carried It by 52 votes Insurance Commissioner David Mar tin, at one time the republican lead er of the oity, lost his ward for the first time in thirty years. David H. Lane, the veteran leadeupon whom much of the work of the republican campaign fell, also lost hit ward, the twentieth. TaIch of Horror. Autbenlc accounts of anti-Jewish outbreaks In Russia show that at Klshlneff seventy Jews were killed and a hundred and twenty were wounded. Order is now restored. A mob at Ismail, Bessarabia, burned ahve eleven Jews who bad hidden in the hayrick. Tbe town of Kalarasch in Bessarabia was! entirely devastated aDd burned. Flfty-nine? Jews were killed < r perished in tbe flames an two hundred fled to a neighboring village where the peasants beat a rum ber of them to death with crudgelt and horned thre* Jews, after drenching them with petroleum. Asleep In a Coffin. Anton Rodcnick of Chicago, while in a somnambulistic state, early Wed nnorl a TJ oja 11rnr) n# hie Vaaiiqa 1 r? hie Mvau */ nniAvu nuv vi mn uvuira ?u iiic night attire, broke & plate glass win dow of an undertaking establishment and entered. He was found several hours later asleep in a coffin. He wanromptly taken in charge by the po lice. Vasaar Glil Sntoldea. A dispatch from Pougbkeepsle n Y., ays after a nights search for * la Emli) Consign, the beautiful s*ud of Vassar college, her body wss rr unc eariy Wednesday mornirg in the Lsk< college grounds. She bad been svffering from melancholia. Her hom< Is at Youpgatown, Ohio. Will Be Buns. At Wilmington, N. 0., Artbui Adams and Robert Sawyer, two o the three mutineer sailors from th< Harry A. Berwind, were found guilt: of murder on tbfc high seas in t lx federal court and were sentenced t< be hung. GAMBLING AID TO INDUSTRY. Filipinos Wouldn't Work Till They I Could Get Rid of Money. Victor S. Clark, in his report on labor conditon8 in the Philippines, states that indolence in the interior is usually due to the fact that the laborer cannot make use of the money he earns. He tells of a novel device adopted by an American ofllcer to remedy the difficulty. "This ollicer," he says, "needed labor in order to carry out cer' tain necessary public improvements. He engaged GO natives for this under' taking at a stipulated wage of 30 cents 1 silver currency (12V? cents American currency) a day. The first day all the > men deserted, because a rumor got around that the Americans, liko the Spaniards, would not pay them for pub> lie work of this character. The men were persuaded to return to work and were paid their full wages regularly, as promised. As soon as money began to circulate among them the ageuts of the nearest dattos and sultan came into town in order to get the money away from the workmen on various pretenses. As this discouraged the industry of the laborers, all such agents were expelled from the districts and not allowed to return. This measure resulted in something of a local boom, and two entire villages and many isolated families of Moros at once pulled up stakes and moved into the post in or der to be free from the official exactions of their chiefs. When they had a little money ahead, however, the tnen began to stop work, as they had nothing to spend it on but rice. The commandant, considering the vice of idleness as reprehensible as any other, and casting about to create a constant demand for money among his workers, took his cue from what lie saw going on about him, and licensed two gambling houses at $ 100 silver currency ($12 American currency) a month each. After that he had an ample supply of excellent laborers, who worked regularly without persuasion, and required little supervision, except for directing their work. When their engagement was finished they came around to the commandant, asking that some other paying employment be found for them. The officer who related this experience remarked in all candor: "It only requires a little diplomacy to make these people industrious.' " Tagging Marine Animals. Ingenious government scientists have devised a novel and curious means for keeping track of the movements of marine animals?such, for example, as the edible crab, whose perambulations in its native waters have been found worth studying. The United States fisheries bureau wants to learn whether any migration occurs, of males or females, and, if so, at what season of the year. Information on this point might be useful in the experiments now contemplated for breeding these crustaceans, which are threatening to become O/io t?nA netHlnlnlKf ci i 11 illicit ij It is proposed to catch a few dozens of both sexes, and fasten securely to each specimen a small copper tag bearing a number, thereupon restoring the animals to their freedom. Each tag would also bear a request for its prompt return to the fisheries bureau at Washington by anybody chancing to capture the wearer. This method has been practiced with considerable success in the case of lobsters, 479 of which were liberated recently in Buzzard's Bay and adjacent waters. Notwithstanding the fact that the Greek and Portuguese fishermen who own most of the lobster pots in that vicinity wore disposed to retain the tags in their possession for use as charms, 7G were returned. When the data thus supplied were reckoned out, much useful knowledge about the movements of the animals was secured, and incidentally it was discovered that these crustaceans are much more rapid travelers than had been supposed. Some of those released were found to have journeyed ten miles or moro within 48 hours. It used to bo supposed that shad made an annual migration up the Atlantic coast, entering the rivers successively as they proceeded northward; but now it is known that they spend most of the year, like the salmon, in the deep sea off the mouths of the rlv- | era in which they were hatched, feedi Ing on the bottom and never going very ' \1TU-- XL.? I * inr nwuy. vyucu mey are oia enougn thoy enter the rivers to spawn. Perhaps some more facts of Interest and 1 value might he ascertained about the 1 shad by utilizing the tagging plan with 1 them. 1 Eyes in the Darkness. A French writer In a scientific magazine tells of the great ocean depths of 28,000 to 30,000 feet, the temperature tending toward zero, with perpetual darkness reigning below depths of about 1,280 feet. At that level plants , deprived of light cannot exist, and the ' animal life musi be carnivorous. The . organ of sight, not being used, has disappeared, and yet there Is light even in that sightless world. A German exploring ship found a fish with enormous eyes at a depth of 8,400 feet. Phosphorescence Is common in these hollows of the sea; sometimes special organs flash light. A Moulting Lobster, j Recently a lobster In one of the aquarium tanks cast his skin. The process lasted about half an hour. A split appeared in the thin skin Just in front of 5 the first joint of the tall (abdomen), and through this opening the lobster * slowly withdrew the forepart of his body, legs and feelers. Then with a jerk the tall was withdrawn. The old r skin was left intact and absolutely perf feet.?London Mall. a St Catherine's lighthouse. Isle of Wight, has Just been fitted with a flashlight, which is estimated to he equal to 16,000,000 candle power. BLOODY RBCOBD. I Of a Desperado v\ ho Committed 8ui- fl olde Whtn Cornered. ^ Milton Franklin Andrews and his I ccmi-ort, Ilulda Petrie, who has fled 'f* after brutally attacking and rohbirg at Berkeley, Wm. Ellis, a horseman B whom they bad lured from Australia, were found dead Wednesday night in their rooms at James Meagher's house B 748 McAllister street San Francisco, Col. lite police had surrounded the place, fl Andrews was hidden in a closet when a policeman, by a subterfuge, entered the room. Realizir g thai their bid- I ing place was discovered, the young woman persuaded Mm policeman to leave the room. She locked the door, I and immediately afterward two shots were heard In the apartment. The poice broke In the door and the buries of the fugitives with bullet boles In .heir heacis were found. Andrews' pistol was clutched in bis right hand. lie was lying on the il ;ur. The wc m in rested on a bed as if in sleep. Andrews was charged with he murder of Eugene Bosworth at New Britain, Conn., with the slaying of a woman at Troy, N. Y., anu with the killing of Bessie Boughton at Colorado Springs. He returned with Ellis o this country last mouth, having selected the horseman as anotner victim for his rt markable re.ord of crime. A statement signed by Audre ws was subsequently found in the stool ing if the dead woman. In this he says that on November 3rd be fired to give himself up for trial cn t'he three murder charges pgainst him, provided less serious charges against him were squashed. Andrews then goes at length into his relations with Bessie Bouton and assorts that he v.as 1,000 miles a *ay from the scene of her mur der when she was shot. He says he was in Denver when Mrs. B.isworth was killed in Connecticut. Out rag*! Nttnr <*? fl'ncy. A dispatch from Gaffuey to The State says a patitiou la being circulated in that city asking for siguers for the purpose of forwarding It to the governor of Scuth Carolina with a rrqmst that he * lT^r a reward for the apprehension of the parties that tired into the he use of \i ash Lips comb, a negro living near Gatfney, Wednesday night. Wash Lipscomb is a respectable, hard working nepro. He thinks that about a dczen shots were tired through both sides tf his house, in an i If irt it is said, to drawWash from the inside. No one was injured by the (-hooting. In addition to shooting with shot guns around the pren ises, the maraudt.-rs by the use of axes, knives or some other kind of an instrument cut a buggy belonging to the negro entirely to pieces. J'he buggy was a new one and was entirely cut up, being a c mplete wreck. The petition had no lack of (igners arid it i? probable that the reward wili be ( flared. It is thought that the shooting and cutting must have been done by quite a number. Death on the Hail. A passenger train ou the R >me, Watertown and Ogdensburg railroad bound for Watertown N. Y. Wednesday, collided head-on with a locomotive drawing two freight cars, nekr Liverpool, six mil s from here F ur men were killed and one serh u ly hurt. Milton F. Toms of Lyndonvllle, mall clerk is one of the men killed The other dead were m .mbers of theeogioe crews. No passengers was hurt Dropped Dead. A man believed to be 11. E. Gartrellof Dodge, Walker county, Georgia, dropped dead on one of the principal streets of Birmingham, Ala . Thurs day. In his pockets was a letter addressed to MB. E Gartrell " Memphis Tenn., and signed 4 Sister Mary^" It was written from Dodge. He al^-o ad $124 65 in cash on ids person. lie seems to have been in bad health. A lik>K?iii One Golden Etgle Buggy $65 OO quality; one excellent set harness, quality $12 50, total 77.50, sold without dealers profits direct to you at. $53 90. Ycu can g-;t the same goods through your dealer at $77 50, butwhy? See our adv., In this paper. Golden Eagle Brggy Co Didn't Turn OAT G?n, Pasqual Sero and his wife, Josephine, were found dead in bed Toesday morning at their home, 44 Fast Sixty-third street N^w York ,It supposed cither one or the other rail ed to completely tuinr IT the gas when they re.lred. Must h? rvn H nr? iic\ A dispatch from Columbia s&vs that TrvVtrt - ? 1- - ~ - -- - u vcu f ? aiui up, who snot H. L<' Madden id Greenville county a year ago, an the latter was leaving Waldrop's house, wi ere tliey had quarrelled, musk serve his life term, a rehearing being refused. Four Men Hilled. The press house of the Phoenix powder works at Pnoenixvllle, 1111 nuta ,1??1 * ??|/tuuou weanesaay arternuon killing (our men, several oiheis were ii jured. A friend to whom you have told secrets holds a drat mortgage on your peace of mind which he many foreckeo any time by disclosing. ?- \ A boon to travelers. Dr. Fowlbr'a Ec tract of Wild Strawberry. Cures dy sentery, diarrheal, se&sikness, nausea I Pleasant to take. Acts promptly.