The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, October 27, 1910, Image 3
REJECT TEDDY
The Row it the Republics! Party is Gettiaf
Waraer aid Warner.
WHEN ROGUES FALL OUT
The Western Inaurgcut KepubUcuns
Object to RooJiCvelt'H Great tttraddie,
and Bid Uioi Good Bye, Alter
A rotating Out Some of His Double
Face Kfforts West and Kutit.
The row In the Republican party
grown on apace to the great joy of all
who want to gee a change in affairs.
The Des Moines News, one of the
most prominent Republican newspapers
in Iowa bids Teddy goodbye in
an editorial outitled "Goodbye, Colo-J
nel." Here is what the News said:
"It won't work. |
^ "The progressive sentiment that j
has stirred men of all partios in all
parts of the country can not be chained
to any party chariot. Not by
Theodore Roosevelt nor anybody
else.
"Roosevelt Is not the prophet nor
the leader of progress. He has no
monopoly on It.
"Rooaevelt has had New York
wtftte to put an O. K. on the tariff
bill.
"He boa commended Taft, the political
assassin of Pinchot and all
that Pinchot stands for.
"He indores Toft's conduct in us*
f ft
lag llie patronage ciu u itgaiu^i 1.U- |
Fottette and Cummins and Poindextor
and Brlstow and the other reai
iusur&cats.
"He indorses the lawyer cabinet.
Ballanger nod all.
"He tries to obscure all this
1 rcacbory with glittering generalities
about 'graft hunting,' but the people
will feel safer In graft hunting
when they have fewer l>urtons on the
supreme bench, and fewer Oscar
l.awiers tn the department of justice.
"Taft, too, Just now, declared that
he hj for insurgency?but Murray
and Wlckersham and Hitchcock sit
at hie tabel.
"Roosevelt selects as his permanent
chairman Klihu Root, who is
the Incarnation of the doctrine of
dollars in politics.
"Roosevelt, bringing Root, J. P.
Morgan, Tawuey, Lurton, Hitchcock,
and all the motley crew of plutocrjts
and Hessians of privilege, can norenHst
In the army of Insurgency.
"It would have been as sensible
1 * ? mUU T?<*
II 4*V*WOt UUUUUUUU WIVU ?IUU 1/<I V 4H
a ad bia outfit had tried to get luto
the council# of Abraham Lincoln.
"Insurgency got along pretty well
while Roosevelt was in Africa.
'*H? tan not swallow up the insurRcot
movement, and Insurgency will
not swallow him with his Indorsement
of the tariff bill, of the president,
and with his Hoots and Cris<om*
"There can be no stop to insurer.cy
In either the republican or democratic
parties, and no harm can come
to the movement unless undeairauble
?ud eleventh hour recruits are permitted
to fog, its councils and petvet
i& aims.
"Taft isn't welcome as a recruit
and Roosevelt's room is far pret'erar>!e
to hte company.
"Let's cut out the red fire and the
/rather lungs and go back to the
patient, dogged fighting of real Insurgents.
^ "Listen to that T. R.-built. New
tor* pwcrorm: it says: we entnu*i?stteally
Indorse Taft.*** Kacb
month since hla inuaguration has
< onflrroed tho nation in its high estimate
of his greatness of char-actor,'
etc.
"Rot! It may have confirmed
Roosevelt's estimate of Taft, but ?t
' hasn't confirmed the nation's. Liolt
at the record of those Mghtaeo
months!
"Taft ran a fake republican convention
in Wisconsin to beat LaFoilette.
"Taft tried the patronage club ou
Ilrfstow.
"Taft excommunicated Cummins.
"Taft fired Pinchot. 1
"Taft put Lurton on the supreme 4
Trench. J
"Taft stood for Morgan's Wish or- *
sham railroad bill, and tried to club f
Cummins into voting for tt.
"Taft fought Poindnxter at home.
"Taft bargained with Cannon and
Aidrich; helped their friends and t
hamstrung their foes, though the "
* fiv^^MrfTgood party men t
"If that record 'confirms' any 'es- |
Timaie 01 rati, mai was neia in , c
then Roosevelt knew ho gold-bricked C
the nation when he handed it the o
'judicial temperament' package. j ?
"After that New York platform: ?
there is no room in any group of par ty
for both Rooaovelt and LaFollette 1 e
or Roosevelt and Cummius or Brls-jfl
tow or Poindexter. I
"And Insurgency can't get along y
SUBSC
RESCUE PRISONERS
THE J All. IS STORM JED AND A
Ml/KDKKKK IS RKI.KASKD.
Tlie Mountaineer Friend* of a Con*
vie ted Murderer Stormed the I*r?son
and Set Him Free.
Mountaineer, friends of John
Moore, under sentence to be electrocuted
for the murder of Frank Howl
descended upon the Nelson county
jail at I.ovitiKston, Va., at 1 o'clock
Saturday morn in, stormed the building
and rescued the prisoner. It is
supposed he will be taken to the
mountains and liberated.
While the people of the county
were asleep a crowd of 75 fully armed
men from the mountain section
where the crime was committed proceeded
quietly to the county Jail.
Admission was gained to the building
and the guards awed into comparative
non-resistance. . The ceil
where Moore was locked up soon was
found and he was taken out.
It is feared that bloodshed will re
suit from any a tempt of the authorities
to recapture the murderer.
Moore was condemned to pay the
tdoath penalty by electrocution at
Richmond an November 25. lie hao
been convicted of having murdered
Frank Howl In Nelson county last
piay. uVIany of the mountaineer
friends of the condemned man beliovaA
him innncpnf
The only telephone wire leading
Into the section of the country where
the crime wan committed and where
Moore's friends live was cut before
the rescue operations began. This
lends to the belief that Moore uas
been carried there to be liberated."
- ?
KOMK HOT TALK.
?
A CovtM IJ IVoicMior Calls T<kU1j ?ti
liimitlgated I Jar.
Twice iu one speech at Kb lea.
Y , PYid:?> night Prof. H. Woodruff,
of Cornell University, -called
Theodore Roosevelt a liar, once an
unmitigated liar. His attack mad1;
at a political rally over which ae
presided, threw the house into a uproar.
There were cat calls, hisses,
cheers, cl ;ppina with n stent!/ shunt
behind them all of "Parker, Park ?r,
Parker," fo? the next speaker, former
Judge Alton B. Parker.
Judge Parker sprang to in.-* B-?.t
and begged the audience to allow
Prof. Woodruff to be heard,. The
noisier part of the house complied
and quiet was restored.
Prof. Woodruff began by opening
j up the Bellamy Storer episode, which
| Col. Roosevelt only recently declared
! was closed. He charged that the
I Colonel denied sending Bella ai}
! Storer to the Vatican be was an
"unmitigated liar." nnd there were
letters in his office, said the professor,
to bear him out.
The uprour over this attack bad
barely subsided when the professor
took up his cudgels again. Rooseeoit
was twice a liar, he said, when
he denied that tho late K. II. Harriman
had subscribed to a corruption
fund to b+- used tor Roosevelt's election
to the Presidency. v
? ?? ^ .
f,OST IN' THU STOItM.
? ??
Weeek.K of .\ll Insets WIJl Not Ik?
Known Soon.
The total ship wrecks in the recent
storm Is not erpected to he
complete for u week, and In pa**
of rk r?*\ c* t. I1 t K 1 l* 1/ 2 nH I h J iui K/k \ n
D V VS 4 4410 V/4 V?4t-fl IV l?>M | \ un * *' Vf\ II
Instances where nearly two months
elapsed before the last survivor, wuo
had bee n picked up ut sea and carTied
Kurope by some passing
iKeumer, returned to give his account
of elmrades drownded.
Thirteen drownded In shipwreck
Is the n.ost authentic count at band
Including those reported last nlgut
on both coasts of Florida, word
same from St. Augustlue that three ,
dead had been found in th?* wreck ,
of an unknown four-masted schoon- v
>.r near Del ray. j
The misslivg total at least half a ' (
lundred. Including the crew of nine.1,
if the Texan Oil Company's barge
Dallas, whoch broke adrift from hei y
ow during a one hundred-mile blow ' f
>u Tuesday. * , j
Hiought High lrl'ic*\ |<
.Mr. George Rembort, of Columbia. * t
las purchased what is kuown as ta<-> \
'Old Agricultural Hall" property in 1
hat cltv. The purchase price was o
?f?2,500. The place was bought, from s
he McCreery Land and Investment Is
Company. The frontage Is f?0 feel p
if Main street. The price per foo, j
fas more than $1,000. The d*al
. as closed Monday. C
p
without the LaKollettes, Cummlnses, t
Iris tows and Polndoxters. v
"So g<H>dby. colonel; fake keer o' c
ourself." * . p
IRIBE Nl
SURETO WIN
itosevdt aid Hit Mai Friday Will Be
Badly Beaten ia New Yevk.
HOUSE STILL IN DOUBT
Ohio, Indiana and Connecticut I*ooks
Safe for the DviuocrutN at This
Time. The IHunocrnta und Insurgents
Will Control the Next Senate.
Trend Steadily Democratic.
The New York Herald's Urd congressional
forecast, which is publi.s i
ed by it every Sunday, shows a gradual
but steady siffening of Democratic
cause. The apportionment of
the doubtful districts between the
two parties continues. In the lirst
forecast there were 118 of such districts,
in the second 90 and now 6i.
With each division the Democratic
lead over the Republicans has increased.
The slguilicance appears
unmistakable.
Close attention this week is paid
to the so-called Issue of 'CannouI
ism." It extends In spots all over
the United States, is not strong
enough to prevent Mr. Cannou carrying
the Republican caucus, but there
are probably enough pledged against
him who. w;ould remain out ot caucus
to movent his re-oJectlon as
Speaker of the House In the Sixty*
second Congress, should the Republicans
have a majority In it.
! The tendency toward the election
of legislators which will choose United
States Senators of the Insurgent
or progressive type is so strong that
the Herald at this early day forecasts
a Senate after'March i, 1911, which
will be controlled on all important
issues by the insurgents and the
Democrats.
Here are the figures of the thiru
| forecast in cold type. Of the districts
sure or strongly favoring one party
or the other, 179 are credited .to the
I>eiiK>crats and 151 to the Republicans.
Doth have, increased their
strength aiace a week ago?the Democrats
eighteeu and the Republicans
j eleven.
To obtain a bare majority of the
! House of Representatives the Democrats
have seventeen to go, I he lteI
publicans have forty-live to go.
! There are now apparently sixty-one
doubtful districts. In making cow
I parisons it should be borne In mind
that the Republicans now hold a 17
[seats in the House and the Dem>[crats
174.
Say lfiv Will Win.
The Herald says that Democratic
leaders, with faces agleajn. declare
that nothing but a miracle cau pre
vent the placing of the Kin pi re State
safely in the Democratic column. Rop
obi Icons, with o show of optimism,
assert that "conditions arc improving."
Democratic headquarters bu/.z
with activity. Republican quartets
luck the spirit and enthusiasm of
other years. The Democrats have an
abundance, of funds. Hitherto they
have had in the up-tttate counties
only the rusted ruins of an organization
and a purse, so thin as to be almost
invisible. The Republicans ure
sore and .surly in section* where the
Old Guard holds sway. In other sections
they are. gloomy.
From unbiased observers come the
predictions that if the election were
held now there would be no doubt of i
the election of Mr. Dix and the prop- j
able election ot the entire. Demoor.itic
ticket. This feeling i.s shared by
many Republicans. Some Democrats
assers there Is a landslide coming.
They assort that the Kotger year
is to have a re-enactment. Some ot'
the men who have proved good pro- j
phots in the past declare that they,
do not look for a landslide, but ex-1 <
poet certain victory at leas: tor (no, i
head of the ticket. j \
(Miki S<m?hi.s Safe. <
The Herald's correspondent at Co- 1
lumbus, Ohio, says Judge Harmati is j
as sure of re-election as Governor of Ohio
tonight as any mortal can be j
<u re of .anything except the. prover- c
t>lal death and taxes. The ftopubli- I
;an campaign managers insist they' a
ire going to put Warren G. Harding r
,11 the Kxe.rcutive's chair, but thoy c
ivtll not hazard an ostimute ol the c
)lurality, and their boast in based on j
tope, not facts. <|
The Democrats will make gains in p
3ongrcgg>Vuen as well as members of p
he Legislature, but whether they t
vi 11 elect enough to control the legls-1
at. n re is in doubt. If the Do mo- s
rats win the legislature, they will v
end a Democrat to Washington as v
lenator in place of Senator Dick, Uo-' n
ubUcftn. J t:
f \>iincctlctitt unci XiiHHttoliiiKdls. ; w
In the 'nnor Republican councils of o
"onnecticuti there is panic. The Re- tl
tiblicnn protest afalnst Mr. Lilloy; r
vo years a no cost twenty thousand a
otes, but it was a Shay's rebellion U
om pared with the civil war to the s<
resent disaffection. Representation P
IW TO
HITS TEDDY HARD
FORAKK1C SCXMtKK XKW NATIONALISM
AS TUKASON
Says* It Means Imperielisui, Pure
and Sauiple, and Ibiugeious to
the Liberties of the People.
At Marysville, O., on Saturday former
Senator Jos. D. Foraker signalized
his return into active politics by
going after Col. Roorevelt and his
new nationalism, roueh shod. Foi
akor "stood pat" on the tariff, deplored
the activities of the insurgents
urged senator Dick's reelection
and indorsed Warren G. Harding
for governor and the entire Republican
State ticket. Me spoke of
President Tnft's administration and I
said Republican victory in Ohio
means a great deal to the president. '
Referring to Col. Rossevell's new
nationalism, former Senator Forakerj
said: {
"We have lately had a new declaration
of political principled. I
They are politically baptized as the j
doctrine of a new nationalism. They .
are set forth in the nature ot a plat-j
form for h new party. Possibly they !
are intended for that use only in the
event that the distinguished author
be not nominated for the presidency
by either of the old parties.
"However that may be, it is well
to uote that they violate our dual
form of government by arrogating to I
tn? national government me control
of matters so purely local that th<*y j
clearly belong to the jurisdiction of
Tho Statess. |
"Aside from all other objections, '
this new doctrine Is as certainly dr?- f
structlve of our institutions as any ;
Invoked in the name of the Southern
Confederacy.
"Such a preachment is not nation
alism, neither new or old, but im- i
perlalism. pure and simple. It is in
spirit at least as treasonable as secession
itself.
"The power it would give to the :
president of the United States would I
be far more autocratic and danger- j
ons to the liberties of this peop?e '
than are those of any monarchy in
Kurope. 1
"The program has one saving tea- f
ture. however. There is about it a*i ;
such a preposterous absurdity aim
such an insufferable egotism as lo
excite not only condemnation but
ridicule. It is another case of vaulting
ambition overleaping itself."
? ? fil>TS
IIKi I>AMA(.KS.
? ?????
*8 *
KuglDCCi* Who Was in Wreck Awarded
$18,000 Verdict.
L. A. Mills, engineer on train So.
$9. running between Charleston and
Savannah, when that train, on the
night of August 11, 1906, crashed into
a freight train on the Atlantic
Coast Line at Hardeville, just across
the river from Savannah, will get
$ 18,000 from the Atlantic Coast Line
according to decisions hand**! down
Monday by the State supreme court.
Mills was running on the Southern
Kail way and he brought his action
on the general charge that the rivai
railroad had negligently and carelessly
left ? freight train standing
.on the main lino at the- junctional
point, of the two roads. The dyclfjl
4^ i a t ? aI
ions nanot'u aown ni toe supreme .
court refuse the petition for u rehear- [
ing and dismiss the appeal from the .
motion refusing a now trial on .il-l
leged after-discovered evidence.
?? , ,
Met l>eath in Storm.
In a delayed telegram Friday, die. 1
io the reeouf. storm in fh<' tai South,
Mr. W. L. Brown. of Greenville, was (
informed that his sou, Mr. Zeuo '
Brown. was killed in Mulberiy, Fla., ;
an the afcernoon of lh<- iStii, while H
ipaJUng electrical connections during
Lhe storm. Young Brown was ar ; <
deetrlciiin and was employed by
argo phosphate company in Mulberry.
He was 22 years of age. |l
- ' f
i^mil Loos, the German Kopubli- f
an loader of New Haven, says that t
\o will vole against Mr. Goodwin as)
i protest, against fraudulent political t
nethods. But, as Michael Kenealy, I
hairman of the State He-publican a
Vntra*! Committee, warned the Ro-. <'
ublican oHice holders the other t
lay. the open Republican revolt im- J h
dies a discontent which in gre.it s
iart will not reveal Itself except at N
lie polls. | h
Br?w?>nr indications in Massaohu- , *
efts are rhat the Republican ticket a
.'111 nf fti#? ??l?-?i->t! ?-\n ^ tw V
lovum-ber. It also is believed th.u j
\ost ot the Republican Represent;!- ?'i
Iv*?k who are run nine: for re-election ^
ill bo soni Ivaok to Conpres^. Dom- o
crnrie chances of succoss all over n
he State. woro excellent before the!
(. cent Convention, which ended in!
riot, and the quarrels among the'
*aders, which finally resulted in the' V
olection of Mr. Kuprene N. Kohs, of h
loston, as Cubernotorlal nominee. ' h
THE HO
DK WILL WIN
|
The Outlook is Glootry for the Republican
All Along the Line.
-- -
SOME ACTUAL RETURNS
From the lieguiiiK LcUm Sent Out
In ?w York by the ltepuhlicnn
liCMlers (iive Them the C'oUI Shi v.
?Amusing Stor.v of a Kopiililf*
an Congressman uiul His S|H'ccl\o?
Tint Washington correspondent of
The State says Madame Humorwho
is cousin to Dame Truth is circulating
an interesting report concerning
some of the happenings
around the head(|narters of the Republican
congressional campaign
committee in Washington.
It is well known that the Democratic
campaign text-hook this ye if
contains some able speeches made b*
Republican members of congress during
the last session of congress and
during the tariff extra session of last
year. #
The committee having In charge
the compilation of the book decided
that it would bo good politic* to
condemn the Republican party oiu
of Its niombers'own mouths, sua
hence the Republican speeches In the
Democratic book.
These Republican speeches, by the
way, are tiled, with some good Democratic
doctrine, which has taken poa?
session of a wing of. the Republicans
because they recognize- that the people
were leaning toward the Democracy.
Rut the interesting ratport that
Madame Rumor is circulating, making
the Democrats chuckle over It. if
that certain Republican members of
congress, in their efforts to secure
reelection, have sent out, in bulk,
large numbers of their speeches tc
bo distributed amoug their constitutents
under their franks.
loiter on, however, it was found
that the constitutents iu some case?
we.re beginning to lebn So strongly
in the direction opposite that supported
in the speeches that the members
in question got busy and sent
messages directing their clerks not
to send out the speeches, as they
were likely to help the other fellow
!
Sa far there has been no deiinit*
confirmation of the rumors, as 1)
would be disastrous to the Republicans
if they were to let such a thing
get out, and every effort is made to
prevent its confirmation. It is
positively stated that the rumor 1?
not true; but the Democratic chuckting
goes on; just the same.
Rut some of the "returns," ot replies
sent by Republicans In New
York to the appeal of the eampai-gr
committee for funds have actuail>
fallen into the hands of the l>emocrats
and been made public. On*' of
the speeches is that of Charles C
Cowan of New York. He wrote tb*
chairman of the Republican committee
as follows;
"Your appeal of the tilth Inst, to
my 'patriotism' has been duly received
and read. If 'the Republican
party of New York insists on the absolute
honesty of public oftiekUs.
why does it permit itself to be bossCd
by that sclf-cppvMcd, all-rounq.
fa her and hypocrite. Theodora Roo^uV i
volt? U' Charles F. Murphy and |
Turn many Hall arc 'enlmioc of good |
government' tbcy have Q?v<n- *^V'U[
themselves to be anarchists. 1
"So, you can't count, upon tny aid
The comparison which you draw between
the results that would follow a
democratic and a Republican house
at' representatives may be very satisfying
to your imagination, but rest
jssured that it will be Democrat'
lc and that Dtx will be the next govMnor
of N?*w York and. a Ifemoor.it
:be next President of ...the Untied,.
States." J,
Another Republican. in announcng
that ho is going to vote the Deui
icralc ticket this year for the ri?st
ime in his life, made the following j
eniark: j.
"I nave always been a Republican.
>ut 1 want to make this point plain:
f Mr. Charles F. Murphy is responsible
for Mr. r?ix as the Democratic
andldafe for governor, I ant one of
hose fair-minded Republicans b ivftg
no selfish political interest to '
erve who are willing to give Mr. '
furphy credit for exercising as good r,
udgmeut in this iu-tanee as he did *
hen he picked William J. Oa.Mior
s the mayoral I ty candidate for N?\v '
ork." ^
There is talk now of the organist- *
on of "Dix Republican clubs" In 1
>w York, and they will pix>bably bo j
rgnnizod In some localities between
ow and November H.
i 1
Will Ilitlld Hospital. s
The Tennessee Conference of the d
l?*VA.ll<.t L^..UA.vn..l ri\. .. _.?V. _
iviuuuin v-inimi, nuum, v
as rosolvod to build a Methodist v
ospital at Nashville. t.
IRRY HE
ECHOES OF THE STORM
MANY LIVKS WEJtK M)HT AT HKA
DlitlXG ITS PKIUOi).
| Two Steam unci Sixty-Four
Mon Wore Drowned mid Mmijr
HslieniH'n Were Ix>s(.
That two steamers plying between
New Orleans and Central and South
American ports sank probably in the
Yucatan Channel duriug the recent
severe storm, with a total loss of t?4
lives, is the beief in shipping circles.
These vessels are the British
steamer Crown Prince, Capt. Klrkwood.
with a crew of 35, and the
Blueiieltfs, of Norwegian register,
( apt. C. M. Lunge, with twenty nine
souls aboard, including Capt Lango a
wife.
The Crown Prince, which sailed
fiom h'amos, due at New Orleans ten
days a- o, with a cargo of 7f?,000
bigs ot coffee, was last reported on
October 7tli at Barbados. She
owned by the Prince Line, Limited,
Newcastle.
The Bluefields salli'd from Ceil)a,
Spanish Honduras, on Friday, of
week before last with a cargo of
bananas, valued of $14,000. Slie. was
chartered by Vaccaro Brothers, of
New Orleans.
I
The steamer Crib, which was t'oor
hours ahead of the Bluetieids when
the height of the storm struck her.
was blowu three hundred miles oul
of her courise.
Advices from Tampa, Kla.. Kay
more than a score of small HsbiUK
vessels were sunk In Tuesday's hurricane,
according to advices bcougftt
from Boca Grande, Southern Florida,
by a sailing vessel.
Fishing camps on Che exposed key#
were also washed away, in some instances
leaving no clue to the
ot' their occupants. The loss of M>
will not be known for days.
The British ?tearner Celtic Princess,
Capt. Williams, five days overdue
from New Orleans, arrived at
Norfolk on Saturday with oniy seven
tons of coal in her bunkers, after a
severe experience in the recent sforru
off the coast of Florida.
The steamer, heavily laden with
phosphate rock, was awash a povt of
ten days, and came in with a portion
of her rail and superstructure badly
damaged. Chief Knglneer Dryden
and Seaman Dablsfrom were Injured,
the forme* narrowly escaping oeing
washed overboard.
*r;
>IAN V LJVWS A KM LOST.
. + ' kv*-w ...
IJlrboatfi Orwvfly Strive to Kvsvmi
lUriucrs Who Are Imperilled.
At London. Fog.. tfi? Fogiinh
coast is strewn with wreckage as \
result of the storro that has con tin tiled
for two days. The casual I ty list
laireaoy reported Js Joi^.
Kriday morning the bodies of ftvo
[seamen from the <x>usting steoxunr
Cranforti were picked up oft Hartlepool.
It I* believed the vessel, which
carried u crew ot' twenty, foundered
and that the men were attempting to
reach shore in a small boat when
they were lost. Somi- of the wrec.ilcoming
a shore indica-toa that
a sailing ship met a Ufce fait?, L4f*V\
'boats thorn many point* Wcfe out all
Thursday night, and in some instances
affected rescues. In other
cases they were unable to reach distressed
crafts. *
* 1 1 ?
WAS A lil<* KKIL.
Cleitafd tn>u.scrs With <*?soiine him!
Si t uck m Match.
Kdwurd Thomas, an employe of a
Mobile, Alu., met with a most
peculiar accident Saturday morning.
Thomas cleaned h^s khaki trousers
with ga-soline while Wearing them
und a few mdnutes afterwards struck
i match on the seat to light a clgirotte.
In a moment the man was a
ivlng blaze, but wis rescued by com>antous
who disrobed him and he es aped
with only minor burns on t hm
lands and lefts.
?
IHed tt*om Whipping.
lT?*nry Bennett, formerly h prosK-rous
* former of I>ykesburK. K>.,
lied at Metropolis, Ills., from complications
believed to have result***
rorn a whipping: administered fo him
>y night riders In February, i9u<>.
\l that time Bennett entered suit for
>f>0.000 in the federal court against
he alleged nlghtrldcrs, which has
tot vet been decided.
... ? ^ ?
? ? it ituui a aurxi #
At Atlanta, Ga., Willie Tifcon, aged
I, foil backwards out ot' the third
tory window of his home there Frilay
and the only injury he sustained
i'.is a fractured arm. Thinking ta?*
window was down, young Titfon aterupted
to lean against the sash,
m
RALD |