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BRYANTVIEWS. Thinks Result of Election Shows That Democracy is ? GROWING STRONGER. Says That McCarren, McClallan, Jerome and Croker all Contributed to De? feat of Hearst, Whose Heroic Straggle Brought Victory to Rest of Ticket. Commenting on the results of Tuesday's elect-Ion Williim J. Bryan Thursday night Issued a statement, in part rs follows: \ "The election of 1906/indloates a trend in favor of the Democratic pariy. It proves that the Da;nocrv tic party is growing stronger as Ro publican policies are developed. In TCaot Yn?lr t.ha nohi. ? ?/-.? ? V ? W>? ?"V> |>am J li'-o ryyiu Ob .* I K 1 - viotory id spite of the tremendous efforts put forth in behalf of tho Administration. The Republicans had all the money they wauled. They bad the support of all the great cor porMions and at the olcso they had whatever intluenoa the Admloistration could lead. The fact that the Demqcr&ta elected every State officer excepting the G ivernor sho*s that iu the Empire State the Ilapuolio&n party ba .jeen repudiated. The defeat of Mr, |?earst, the Demoo^atio and Indepeuuenee League candidate for Governor, while a grer disappointment to his friends and to the party, 1b explained by facts whiob rob Mr. Hughe's viotory of both glory and political significance. Mr. MoOarrcn, whom Mr. Hearst denounced as a boss, threw his inliu-too to Hughes and cut down Mr. Hearst's votes in Brooklyn. Mayer Nc01*N lap, tht legality of whoso eleotlon Mr. Hearst, hi>d denied, used his influence for Mr. Hughes and out down the Hearse vote in N^w York. Mr Jerome, the prosecution attorney of New York, who had also b?er> attackfid hv Mr Hftarnt. Hiir?nnrf?d t.ho R publican ticket and bis iLiiuencs wsu? felt in Qreater New York. Mr. Oroker, during the last days of the campaign made an attack upon M \ Hearst which doubtless weakened the Demooratlo candidate among the Tamm&nyites. Mr. Murpby, the head of Tammany, while supporting the tioket, could not put much enthusiasm into the campaign owing to the personal controversies which he had with Mr. Hearst. It Is evidert, therefore, that Mr. Hughes owes his viotory not to Republican votes, but to Democratic vottB brought to him by the very men wbom he and the Republican leaders have been do nounoing for years. "Piesioent Roosevelt oannot tin/ very much oauso for rej doing in tin New York returns. To have b\s o^r , State go DsmooraUo cannot b.gratifying to him and to ti id that hi personal attack upon Mr. Hearst hurl little it 11 ienc8 on the result, on. pared wiin the influence exert d by MoCarxen, Murphy and Oroker. win not glsfldcn his Thanksgiving D:>> The PifcsUieht'a porsok&l attack oMr. H?art was iu bad taste, to s?j the 1 ast. "Mr. Hearst is, of course, dlsap foi ilea, ana yes wnen &n ine ihcih are known be baa muob to congratu late himself upon. He made a tremendous fight against great odds, and while he himself failed of election his berolo struggle brought ylotory to the rest of the ticket. His personal enemies have contributed to his de feat, but the triumph of his Ideas till leaves him In a position to con tlnue the fight tor the protection of the publio against the enoroach ments of predatory wealth. "If the trend toward ,Demooraoy continues as strong for tfcfc next two 1 years as It had been for the last two years, New York can be counted 1 among tbe Democratic States In 1908 and Mr. Hearst Is in a position to ao ' valiant woik In scouring a national 1 triumph for progressive, Democratic ' Ideas. 1 "The Republicans have had an effective campaign cry In 'standing by tbe President.' While the record showed tbat the Demoorats In the Senate and House stood by the Presi dent better than the Ropublioans, the admirers of the President very naturally gave weight to his appeal for a J Rjpublloan Congress, although in ; making tbe appeal the President put nAHAnal Hnk/iru BhnnSTho rafrtMmU W l^lli DUUMi YiV?VA/ WVV/ ?V ? V* V/? MM M whloh be has been advocating. Two 1 years from now that appeil will be cf * no avail, for the President will not be * In offioe after March 4, 1908. Even If he were a candidate?wblon no friend of his can assume after his repeated \ declarations?he would have to con ? front the third term Issue, and who t would say that that issue alone would , not lose the President enough votes ] to make his race hopeless?" , i Killed bv Burglar. ( Henry Firth Smith, 25 years old, c son of Joe Smith, a prominent and s wealthy business man Pittsburg, Pa., was shot twice an^almost Instantly killed at 4 o'olook Sunday morning by a burglar, whom he sur- t prised In the dining room of his fatb- t er's residence. In the east end of sec- c tton of the city. Hundreds of dollars a worth of silver plate had been gather- i ed together by the burglar, who ap- i parently had been In the house some t time before being heard by young t Smith. ( i , lUl'u WlLb TllfeOK. / I Panto Caused by Inoendlary tires In New York City. At New York one woman Is dead, a man is In a b< ipltal siffirlng from severs burns, two thousand parsons hid from their homes in panlo, and thousands more passed a sleepless night as a result of a series of IdcendUry tires In the two blooks bounded by Sixtieth and Sixty- fir?t streets and Oolumbus and West Bad avenue early Friday. Soorea of pe*-. sons whose lives wero endangered by the conflagation were rescued by tiremen. In all there were five fires, every one of them iroendiwry between midnight and 3 o'olook this morning. The rapidly tuoceedlng fires, the crowds of evloted tenants and terrifying rumors spread through the neighborhood, with the oo r-tant xppeararo aud reappearance of fire engines, an-* the big squads of police raised the people throughout the vlolnldy to high pitch of cxoltcment whioh did not lessen until daylight brourtit a measure of assurance, that t' e ltv oendiarism was stopped for awhile. The excitement p.prtttd ev* n tv Broadway and In the Marls Anticnettr 1 Ansonla, Bhle Claire, Euplm and other Mg hotels, in the neighbor hoocl of Llnslon Square, the guehf werearouied bv the ehmcootlou in the Sr.. Paul hnfcpl unci t.h? Hot. 1 VIn-?snr> both oUm.o to the tires. All the gwe.it,' wore rrou ed and few slept any mo't All the houses where the tiros oo ourred wee flit houses, three of then-* ccoupled by whites and two by ne /roes, most of tbo tenants wore in bed when the tires broke out, and escaped to the strcots in the scantles of olothing. Frank Morris, of Boston, a vaudeville performer, was arrested on suspiolon cf setting the tires. The police all?ge that in eaoh of the tires >be tenants reported that when they tiid from their appartments, Morris ' was the 11 -8t person they mot. When Morris, whose heme !s in Boston, was arraigned in the poller court, Fire Marshal Prlal expressed t.he op riion that he wis mentally ir responsible and at:ktd the magistrrt,o commit the boy to Bellevuo hospl %1 for fivo days for (urination T e magistrate refused and hold ttorris in $2 000 b.\il for a further examlna* hn o? Sov-dav. Myntorloun Killing. What led to the shooting and kill ing rf Dr. H H. Aldrich at Baton Rnige, La., Wednesday night by his i life long friend and associate, Judge George K Favrut, is still unknown. Dr. Aldrloh's friends offer no exola nation for his death, and Judgo Fav- < rot, after spending tho night in UP, ! said nothing to supplement his explanation that ho had "sutBjlent cause." It is reported that Dr Aldrlch harl I eon warned that Judge Favrot would I shoot him on sight. Judge F*vr< t is one of the leading figures among Loulblaua's demooiat'c congrepBlnu ?1 nominees and was on Tuesday l olec'f-d by a'mrjority d",moD?-rathn i uuusual popularity. Both men were < married cud were leaders In t i? soaial and pr. feisioual life of Bator Rouge. i Judge ltOAHtH JU'V. At. Dnthan, Ala., when the trial cf W a. Crockett, a white man. c' ? g r ith the n urd' r of Lum Hondo son, , negro, md?d Friday. Judge H nrj , P.a^oo, In di ni'sslpg the jury, d el r d that it h d acquitted Ut'ocr.etj be e&use he was a white man an" had klued a negro. In oonoluding Judge Pearce said: "If the deed mm hie oeena white citizen it would not have j taken you two hours to have returner a verdict Of guilty, and I don't so* how any mptnf er of the Jarvoan go from this Court H >uso and face Lis , feJlow eltiZ ns In the street." , Kills, iter Sister. At Bilfcimore because she believer her hut oand and her sister, Ida G' ff were t >o attentive to each other, j M:s. Jt <?phlne Kelly shot and killed ' her sieler in the rear of the saloon 3' uduolad by her husband, Frank K dly. Miss Gcff was a pret .y girl o' nineteen. Mrs Killy told the pilloe ! that on returning he mi she found hei ikter there, S io took her husband ko task for the girl's presence, but ho 1 laid she had goue to the house wltb hfo lat'.a an/1 arf af. V> I a tinll' ft l> Ia.i JitS BIObU 1 auu uV*II nw ivia ownvvii^iviVU ^ llan Dawn and Killnd, At Baltimore, Md., Guorg* Stro < looker and Piul Meyer, broth^rs-lr. aw, while walking on the traoks o ihe Pennsylvania railroad, on their ( pray to a oemetery to visit the grave* < )f relatives, Sunday were struck by ar 1 express train,' Stroheoker being in c (tantiy killed and his body horribly nanglod, and Meyer dying witbou- S regaining consciousness about an hou> < tfter the acoident, which occurred i ' ihort distance from Oaroll station. 1 Two Fonnd Dead. At Chicago two girls, Ha:.nah Hoi* t yer, aged 20, and Rose Stuper, aged \ 10, are dead and two others are dy. ng, as the result of a mysier'ous gas d taphyxiatlon case at the Girman i Hospital. All of the young women were employed in the hospital as ? lomestios and slept in the same roo u c >n the top floor. ilarly Saturday rmployee of the hospital smelt ga? i md broke op^n the room. ?????????? ^ They all Qalt? Every member of thefaeulty of Con- 1 enary College at Jaokson, L? . xcept Prof Monorlef, resigned F-i lay ss a oonerqu^noe of the recen tabbing of the Riv Dr Mlllor b kfonorief. Two days ago the eotlr* itudrnt body loft the College for , ihelr homes on aoo^unt of the rate n- c .'on of Prof Monorief Centenary tallage la a Methodist institution. \ 0 THIS THOLLBY LINE PROJECT FOR BUILDING HUNDREDS OF MILES OF ROM). From Charleston to Augusta, Columbia and Charlotte Via Orangeburg. Mr. 0. R. Van Etten, who is developing a plan for organizing the South Carolina Publio Service Corporation, was in Charleston recently and gave an Interview to The News end Courier. Mr. Van Etten in part said: "Engineers in the employ of those interested in building the railroad projected by the Scuth Carolina Public Sorvioe Corporation have been making Investigations through the Carolina# for some/^e. "The railroad, i^.i'iginally planned, was a system of bn.eei lines to eciufofc xtbo mwuufactaring town* of ul e State with. OoJumb4*; .'rem too c Wie line would r> v-o i Siva-ma' v a A ugu&ta, with a branch tuinuy f om August* to O/augeburg. After iv . sider&b'e hai b"! n mr/.lr *1 ng theae linos M1. nee M P ockney fint Uy suoe'jfcded it b; r, rirg -u ftislena iniluenoo to be\r through olfcrts hoi? And a visit to New York, ao k'J* parties iutercsr-ed to on teria'n. z piopoaifclon to run the rruvn 'i\u >'.v?qi Columbia to Ctovlivt., ), oouaecy.ug with the to..do feeder hnes w .jcm IuxhicWkI in the original propj.iltioc at. Ooiuu'ola. and %l?o building a lino from Augusta, Jutr.g the main line at or near Orangeburg. "After visiting the different com mubltice with che representatives of the new road and carefully iuvcsbtga ting their relative values it was finally decided to adept Mr Pinokney's suggejfcion. Two corps of engineers a.id other workiug officials of the company are already at work on the new looa Hon. "This road will be electrically equipped, in strict' acoorbat cj with the highest modem staudards, and will bo adapted for high speed operation, ..andling bath passenger and freight oasiness lu train loads, giving the ad vantages of cleanliness and o< mfort to oho riding public and placing cars at the dcors of factory and industrial ufcerprisrs for the delivery and shipment of freight. Tiiis line will bear the same relation to sOha'l^&ton that the Central of Georgia Hallways bears to Sav&uuah. All of tne other in poi t&nb railroads in the State run parallel to the coast, rheir interests necessarily lie in gathering business from the inland and j^aport towns aud carrying It to their Northern termini for reshlpmcnt. But his new company must, because of lis geographical position, handle its businoss through the port of (Jnarlos uu, whioh will bo the principal terminus of the railroad. 1 'Charleston needBa lire tint will build up the business of toe port anc nod to the prosperity of theoUy. This u.tii be clout oily by a railrt ad rescuing the inland manufacturing and apiculture communities a ?d carrying li Klr products to Cbaries&on h r cju titration, warehousing, export or re iipment to the N, oh r.nd other arket*. Such a lino will m.ki (J :ar e$tO/V a gre&, whol^s^le *nd j ?bbl noarket, supplylug the staple commo lilies of l.vl g and manufacture, t/o?t ill be consumed by the merohau.t id populace of the inland oommuni its. * Every student of o mmercial de Vilopmcot now realizes that the v el fare of auy municipality 1b lurys'v in oho hands of its transportation 11 <es. LKd the greit traos continental rail road development to the West centred At OLarlestOa Instead of New York 3iby the commercial history of the North and South would have been dif ferently written. It Is too late to m ike Charleston such a commercial metropolis as is New York, bub It mr.y nooome me commercial metropolis of he Sou ma and check the present practice of sending all Southern prouuo&s -xd receiving ail Southern supplies jver transportation lines that must, from their geographical location, work io the bin.fib of Northern cities and <he detriment of their own. "Mr. J. J. Tlncmis, who lathe per* oual representative of the financial ate rests oehlnd the enterprise, and as charge of all financial and legal a altera, will after November 10 re oaln permanently In the South. Mr. fi acmes has extensive real estate and jommercial interests in New York >i&y and for a number of years has .cen connected with large finanolal operations. "All r/iat.tf?r? unnftrtslnlnnr fy* on. jlaeerlng construe ion, traffls and op .ration ^ill be under my chrKitlon. I h.veloptd the freight trafHe of the d.'Ockly:i Rapid Truntil t Company and od been in charge of subway and ,ther extensive construction work of ,liat lino. Prior to his connection with be B. R T., be bad the management it ileocris and stcpm raliroada and teamboat lines In New York State Kid New Jersey. "Thelooatingengineer, . T. Jones, vas formerly assistant engineer in iharge of the extensive improvements n the Long Island division of tbe Pennsylvania Kit read. ''Mr. W. W. Wells resigned bis poll tlon as agent in charge of the survoe freight business of the Brooklyn iipld Transit to assist in the devel pment of similar business here. "The wonderful development that as immediately followed the construeIon of similir lines elsewhere delauds the oonoenttation of ad busl less interests of Oharloston to the immolate construction and operation f this road. Charleston ought not ail to grasp the significance of this JL t t . . opportunity, the vast advantages of whloh oannot be overestimated. All possible assistance of every nature 1 vbatover bhould be extended to the 'Dterprlae, particularly aa Mr. Plnok* aty was Informed that the only condl ton in obangtng the route plaoed by the parties at the head of this undertaking was the securing of a broad cooperation of the various communities to be benefited. "Mr. Plnckney deserves the gratitude of this community for the work he has done in securing the termini of this oompany for Charleston, as ttuoh a road is the mjst important factor toward the development of the great natural advantages of our city, that have so long laid dormant." M1 &95ES AKD F4ATAB&S. Applied by Women to a Neighbor woman Thej Lidn't Ijtkn. Four married wemin of the village of East Sandy, four miles from Frank lin, Pa., on Tuesday treated a neighbor to a coat of stove polish, moia*u&? and feathers. Tho were arrested, pleadod guilty And paid fines of $10 each. Tho four women arc rcipooted mombtrs of tho community. They arc Mrs. Verda Lcw.-y, Mrs. Bertha Brlnkman, Mrs. Nellie G.ai.. nod Mrs. Hilda Pharton* Their viothn rr&i Mm. HaUie Low ry, a mister in-law oV Mrs. Verda Learry, their husbands b&iog brothers. The four women called at the home of Mrs Lowry and told hor they in fcrnaed to humiliate her before Sh*3 community. Two of the womou selz cd her while the other two daubed stovo polish on her faoo. Then mo lKs?en poured over her head and feathers were applied. Thus adorned, the women was marched from her home to a railroad camp, whore 200 men are emplovtd There was a suspension of work untb the self-appointed vigilance commit tee took their vlotim to tho outskirts of tho town, where they tied her to a tree and left her. A man came along half an hour later and released tin captive. Mrs. Lowry came to Franklin and hsd warrants issued for tho women Sheriff McE ihlney went, to K.fft Sandy and arrested ad but Mrs. Pheruon, who wai not at home. Whin the three were arraigned be Mre A'derman Henderson they pleaded guilty. Mrs. Glaze said they had no regrets for what thc^y had doco. She ??ald the wc m m's actions wore intolerable. Mrs. Lowry, the vlotim, said there was no justification for such treatment and that she will continue tt live at East Sandy. KIKIH 111H Lift), Cornelius Cidmus, of Otldwoll, N. J., committed suicide Thursday nigh? at the homo of his brothor in-law, Lorenzo Conklln, inRoseland. Cadmus left Caldwell several years ago fcrCalfornia and remained there until last August, ^hen ho returned to Ms old home. For tho last week he had been otlng strangely. All of Ms pDrnoja; lTccta ho had given to one or : o oev member cf the Oonklh. family. The family heard a sbcu the hi his bcclroom about l) o clock, and ho man was found lyiuft unconscious The man died before a phyblclan reached hi? mMo. . t il. A mob of seyeral hundred whiti oi< k oh from the northern pirt of Miulson County, Fla, went, to M id leOQ, the county Beat, Friday night, ma after disarming the jailer, secur ed a negro prisoner charged with assault on MIbs Orambllng, a young white woman, near Hanson. The orowd took the negro a short distatce from jail, where they hanged him to a tree and riddled his body with bullets. The negro bad been identitied and oonfes8ed his crime Kxploslon Of i'owcier. A powder magazine owned by the B. I. Dupont Company and situated at Tlnley park, about thirty miles from Chicago, exploded Thursday with such force that wlDdo# panes were broken In the home of the Midlothian Club, three miles distant. One man employed to watch the magazine was killed, but no oVher lives were lost. The causa of the explosion Is not known. Served Him Kighr. At Westminister, S. 0., Jdff Keith, a drunken negro on the street, slapped a lady off the sidewalk. The town authorities immediately took the ne gro Id oharge. party of men, unknown to the authorities of the town, { took him out a mile or two from town and whipped him severely The no- 1 gro is now free and seems orderly. Died. on Kieotrio Tr?ln. As a result of an aocident Thursday afternoon at the Waocamaw Land and Lumpur Oomp in., 's plant at Bolton, Columbus County, at North Carolina, a young Italian died on an eleotrio Coast Line train near Wilmington Taursday afternoon. Death overtook the stranger while on his way to Wilmington for surgical treatment. Majcaztne Fired. A powder mag?ziue of the ?. I. Dupont Co. and situated at Tinley Park, about 30 miles from Chicago, xploded Friday with suoh force that wlndowpanea wore broken in the home of the Mldolthlan Club throe miles dlstacoe. One man, who was employed to waloh the magazine, was killed but no other lives were lost. The cause of the explosion le not known. SHOOTUTO At BXATH 8P&1BKS. Dr Mo Dow Shot And Badly Wounded by Vr BrldgAa. A special to the News and Courier from Heath Springs says J. A. Bridges shot Dr. ? S. McDow. of Ltnoaster, at 12 o'clock on the street there Thursday. Three abote were tired, taking effect lu both arms and In the left leg. No words passed between them before the shooting. Dr. McDow started to a buggy to go out In couutry when Bridges opened tire. Tbe first two shots hit Dr. MoDjw In one of tils arms and lu hU left leg. McD^w turned and ran towards Duncan & Hammond Compiny's etorr, and as he reached tY* irons door Bridges reloaded his gun and shot him iu the arm. If MoDow had not turned the load wouM have bit him In tbo abdomen. It all toik plaos so quickly that no one was able, to assist the wourd'd man. D . Moore, who dv wed the rmu^d!, h ie not caid anything oonoornlrg tjhr-m but the general opinion Is th*t Dr. MoDot* will llTO Bridges walking down the street whtn Mo Dow started toward? 'dm irom tho upposlto > de ana he, U is m.l*3, thcurrhht t>at MoDow wan go lag to shoot ao he ooened tir? AfVir >10 had had sho'4 ore time McDow eld up one arm as though to ward i IT a blow and Bridges shot agpln. McD >w then fell and some of the bystanders tried to keep Bridges from shooting again, but he, It Is alleged pushed them aside and reloaded. MuDow cried for them to keep him from being shot again, but they seemed iialpless. It is aald that McDow had a pistol In his pooket and so those who were M l?-ld -i <1 A- A wc?.i jnriugua wurv airam iw go up vo him, as they thought McDjw would Bhoot alao. Both of his nrms wer? broken and one w?i scattered all to pieces. It will be amputated and probably the other also. IT? was carried on the 8 P. M. train to tho Rook IIUl lloa plcal. II(h wlfo came frcm Laiicas tcr 1m mediately a'tor tho shooting ocourr?d. The shooting Is said to have grown out c f a long standing feud between them. DR. MATTHEWS 8UI0IDBS. Convicted of PolMontnK HIh Wlfo ShootH HlniHOlf. In a cheap lodging house on est Baltimore street, Baltimore, at some time during the 24 hours paocecdlng 2 o'clock on Monday afternoon, Dr. J. Baxter Matthews of Gieusboro, N. 0., blew out his brains with a shot from from a 32 -oalbro revolver. Dr. Matthews was convicted Maroli 9, 190(1 at Greensboro, N. 0 , of tho poisoning of bis wife D^o 1 1905 He bal been ont rf oustody uua^r uall pending tho deokiisn Of niy ap poal for a now trial, which was defied lilm, uad lelatlves a id bond? iicn hive been s&r.rching for htm for som? weeks thi.t be might be *akeii before the court to be resentenced. Id the absauoe of any be Unite re v mn for his taking bfs life it is supposed that bo did so rather fchau nerve the BfilltenfiA. }<alrl tn hf 9.0 i., *>1*. penitentiary, to be Imposed upon him At tlodging house where he fncu d ills 11 fo he gave tue niimo of E J. Graham. Immediately after hie conviction, which W&9 of murder In the second degree, Dr. Matthews became a pa fcicut at Mount Hope Retreat, near this city, and was there under treatment for the morphine and liquor habits for some months, finally being discharged as cured. DERAIL MAIL CAR. Band ol Daring ltobbori Uro Bombs In Poland* At Rogow, Rueian Polcnd, tho Ooenoks have thus tar been unsuccessful in their pursuit of tlie revolutionist train robberj numbering a hundred well armed nun who at 9 o'clock Friday night surrounded their station threw three l ombs at the mail oar of a mail traia ?-hlle Inej ware being changed, d? railed the oar, robbed it, and fled wia sum of money now said to amount to 9650 000. The station master declares the rev* olutioni&t hid in neighboring forests and were excellently dUolpllnod, their oommander giving orders through k..~U ~1 -1- w? *-? - - ijukiu aiyuaib. vvuod wie robbery wu sompleted the revolutionists transported their booty V> two wairons and tn.\uhed off In military orde mnglnt Socialistic songs. When the train stcpn d cbe men armed with rifles spr*. .ipou all sides quickly executing o;d* oonveyed by t>ugle. Gendarme stanalug in front c' the station ware shut and killed and the revolutioni tts placed sentinels at til the approaches and out the telegraph wires. While some of them overpowered ?he trainmen others attaoked the escort of the mall oar. Of the three bombs thrown two exploded with terrlflo forot, blowing the hits into matohwood, killing five solHers and mortally wounding eleven others. The revolutionists then ran it oksd the mail oar, transferred bank notes, gold and silver to their own bags and unfolding a red flag formed up in military order, marched out of the station and enured the wagons which wsre In waiting in the forest and drove iff. detaotment of Ooalaoks sent for is now in pursuit. - -n ~4 OUR NISW citizens; THE 1MM1UKANI HHIP WITIEKINO AIlltlVE* AT Charleston from Germany With Hearty Five Hundred Passengers Who Come to Stay, The long expected and muoh talked of Nor?h Gorman Lloyd steamsr Witt>klnd arrived at Charleston from Hremen on nut Sunday with 475 passengers on be ?rd, being r he 11 rat. of at least tvo vess Is which the big steamship corporation In to run to Charleston, in the movoment inaugurated by State Cjmmliik.rer Watson to divert the t^e of Immigration from northern ports to Charleston, that these people may he distributed through S.juth Carolina, supplying muoh noeded ag riouhural, rufchaaicU and labor nndfl, whero they are most desired I*j Is probable that the WitUklnd will prove tno flnt of a regular and permanent Hue of steamships for both prjsengers ar d freight between C lari?ton and r.remen, the permanence of the lluo belag in a measure depend nt i pon hhe suocess of the two tirst i The i econd ve(?H Is due to sail from hreracu on 1)20. 27 for Charleston. Ou t.ht Wltt/klnd wore twerty tiva cao-n piiEtwnrors; nineteen adults, five children ard one infant In the steerage were .'191 adults, 45 children and eleven luftiis. There were 112 famtlio?, 75 siiiilo d.cii and two single woicru. 15 Is worthy of nnto that the numbor of nmrricd people grew suddenly in one day, early Suuoay mentug Commissioner Watson marrying no lcs* tbau twenty-nine 0 'uplas, reduoiDg t/> bli extent the number of el gl'olei for baohelnrs and maids at nomo. There were 120 adult Belgians and 22 childreu, fight adult Hollanders and throe children, arid the lest of the party was made up of Austriaus, French, Germans aud other natlonalitlea. Vary few of the immlgrmh; 8pc?al English. The religion of the Immigrants is mostly (JaJvlto, with, however, a goou number of Lutherris. All the cabin pasKcngpra left Charleston Sunday Kfv.eru..o;' for Columbia and tho greater part of the steerage paKsorger?? will also go to the oapitol, and there be distributed by Commissioner Watson's ( dice. The places to wbiob immigrants are tloket^d are as follows: Aiidorson, hester, D.Tllngton, Columbia, Fort Mill, Glendale, Gretnvllle, Harisvllle, Lxno^ter, Greer?, Lockhart, Welford and Warrcnvlllc, as far as can he now stated. The departure of the passengers was facilitated by the Southern railway hr-vlng a lu nber of cars on the East Shore terminal tracks under tho personal direction of Division Superintendent Hunt. The passengers are generally of a fine class. Several of the oabln passtuge.it> are particularly well to do. one of the numbor being a wealthy farmor of 40,000 fr%? c<, who I is gclii i to prospect In thlssfcaie. V ry j f"w of tho passer gors will remain in Charleston, notwithstanding hit large I dcm.rud for tho help. Toe number of immigrants wc.uld have fonen still larger but for the fact th&t toe agricultural p -Ople aro uud r ;i>n tracts aud ecu Id not leave their farms. These centric a will, however, navo Japsod by the linue that the next steamer doparbS. The present law also f >rbld3 the cirrvlng of seoondoIkbb ptuwengtrd from Denmark, which 1 will not bo In effect at the time of I the next nailing. Tl e number of passengers would have been still larger from the northern part of Europe but for a publication in a St. Nichols pa* per of the moat exaggerated accounts of the Atlanta riot. It should bo stated to Col. Watson's oredlt also that he has secured what no other national or state representative has ever been able to seoure?the sanotlon of the Belgian government for the emigration of the people from that country. Baron de Favereu was especially helpful and oooperatlve, as was the Oommessalre D'Emigration Ohapelle in assisting him to seoure the sanction of the government. The Belgian people are especially fine weavers, and Ool. Watson stands committed to return them to their country If they rjre not tatisiled with their lot here; but he Is oort&tn that they will all be well plaoed and will not dc:lr* to return. Married In Washington. Judge James F. Izlar and Hiss Marlon P. Alston were married in Washington on last Thursday by the Rev John B. Williams. This annour cement will b3 a surprise to many of the Judge's friends who did not suspect for a moment that he oonh nplate such a step. He had made fre<jd. at trips to Washington in the past row months but only his lames - - - ui?<? lamuy were fully cognizant of the reel reason for his visits sod bed expected the "happy event' ior six months or more. Mrs. Izlar is a native of Charleston, a member of the old Allston family of this this State, and is well known throughout this State as Miss Nan Alston. She is of quite a charming personality, and will prove a welcome addition to the social set of the city. Judge Izlar and Mrs. Izlar arrived home on Tuesday morning.?Orangeurg Times and Democrat. A Victim ol Booxe. George Tlmmons, a white oarpenter, died suddenly at the Columbia olloe station on Wednesday of oonestion of the lungs, brought on by ong and oontlnued drinking.