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STATESMAN SHOT WTIIVN IT SPANISH ANARCHIH II STREET. ASSASSIN SHOOTS SELF lUa? Alfonato Hualiet* U> Heme off llie Tr?K?dy? hodiiix til* I'rime Mi?? Mer ?'Three liullei* from HUyvr'n i'lNtui Kniereii Alio Head, Cauhiu){ liittLMul IRatU. A uisyuich Hum Madrid, Spain ay a J Cauelejaa Meudes, the prime miniaier, whom bpaiu uaa r?v gui ded aa one ol the gieaLest oi In r lateamen, waa ahot and kiilei Tuesday by a young auarchiut named ManUul PnrHinuu 'Dim i4.KKii.HKin 141L4?1J1UI ed suicide and it was hist thought that be was dead, but wben he bad been carried to the hospital be was found to be living. No event since the throwing of the bomb at the carriage of King Affonso, on May 31, 1906, while the King was returning from the church after his marriage, has caused sue a general consternation and such public symputhy. So far as can be learned at present the assassination seems to be lu way part of a widespread pollt'cal plot or revolutionary movement, '-nt an Isolated crime for which the exa;t motives remain obscure. The ao.'assin, who was of Spanish birth cr.me recently from Buenos Ayres, by #ay o' Paris. Practically nothing is known about him. The King has appointed the foreign minister, Marquis Manuel G ir? cia Prieto, as premier pro tempore, and the Liberal Government which Senor Canalejas conducted for several years remains in power. After a meeting of the Cabinet P was announced that Gen. YVeyler captain-general of Catalonia, and at one time commander-in-chief of the Spanish forces in (Tuba, or Count Romances might be appointed permanent premier. Canalejas was shot in the back A* At V_ ..Ikl.r, ,K., inrf*e 111HVH an up w?d naiivinn vu iuv ministry of the Interior, in the Puerto del Sol. He had stopped to glance into the window of a bookshop. Tuesday morning he went to the Royal Palace to submit several do creea to the King. He em figod ant ling an*, bappy. As an atten Unt oj>eie<l the door leading to the street a 8l:?ry gust of wind struck tho premier ir. the face, causing Mm to exclaim gaily: "Oh, whit a wind! We are going to have a bal day." About an hour later his unconscious prophecy was fulfilled. As ne stopped for a moment at the shop window a man darted from a nearby doormay. He ran up behind the piejnier and fired four shots ot close range. Three bullets, as it was after* ward found, took effect, Canalejas sank to the sidewalk. A /riend who was passing at that moment rushed up crying: "Don Jose' Don J08e!" this being the premier's baptismal name. The wounded man scarcely had the strength to murmur: "The scoundrel has killed me." lie 'hen expired. In the meantime his assailant turned the muzzle of the revolver on his own breast and tired again. A crowd quickly gathered, while tho assassin was half dragged to the police station. The premier was carried to a pharmacy and then to the ministry of the Interior tthcru hfi WilB l)laced OH a large marble table in the main saloon. The blood flowing from a wound behind the right ear soon formed a pool on the floor. The King waa informed of the tragedy an he was leaving the palace to attend the chrysanthemum exhibition. He sprang into an automobile and motored swiftly to the ministry. As he reached the Puerto del Sol the crowd acclaimed him, crying: "Long live the brave King!" Running up-stairs, four steps at a time, the king entered the saloon and bent silently over the body of his late minister. He was greatly affected as bo recited the prayer for the dead and turned to the assembled ministers to learn the details of the crime. Marquis Prieto announced the as-j sassmaiion in the Cnaiuber ot Ueputies. In the courso of an eulogy he said: "He died between his two affections?his people and his books. The enemy of society will not triumph, for we are all united to defend society. " Marsjuis l'rieto's words occasioned great applause, in which all except the Republicans joined. The premier's body later was transported to the Chamber of Deputies, where the public was admitted to view it. The fdneral will probably take place tomorrow, with all the \ <> A (i nrnn^r!) 1 ivlin il Iiuiioi a iitiiui ucu <? ?v v.v? at his post of duty. Throughout the evening thousands assembled In the streets and other thousands passed through the Chamber to witness the lying-instate. All the diplomatic corps paid their tribute of respect. When the wife of the premier arrived she fell fainting over his body. Political ferment always exists in Spain, but nothing has been reported within a recent period which could in any way be connected with the crime. A strict censorship was instituted by the out horities on the telegraphs and telephones immediately after the assassination. For several hours It was impossible to communicate with the outside world. An eye-witness of the tragedy asserts that th(? assassin had an accomplice who escaped in the confusion. Did Not Want Him. In the United States Court at Savannah Friday Judge Emory Spoor declined to admit to United States citiaenshlp James Moses, a subject of the crime was the result of a conspiracy between T,airra M. Renter, his widow, and McKemle. who desired to msrrr her. Mrs. Renter will be tried fctar. v' < /; >? . 7 ! ; <> < , SAID HE WOULD WIN rilKIHOTKI* KfJECTIOM OF C.'OVKKNOH WII^M>W. CwloBfl AaRliK Kuba In Introducing (tovfrnor Wilson LmI Ve?r H?l(l ll? Would Win* iu May, 1911* Governor Wilson delivered uu address beiore the South Carolina Press Association iu Columbia. Col. August Kohn. who wan i resideut of the Association, in iuuoducing Governor W iisou to a large audience ut the opera house, predicted Governor Wilson a nomination ano election. Here is Colonel Kolin s prophetic speech: '"t hose of you who have been keeping pace with recent eveuts realize 'that we have in Dr. Wilson the highest type of American <iiizenship, a man who is doing thiugs, a governor who has been elected by an educated and critical constitueucy and iu protest of "bossism" and who is appreciated as the spokesman and friend of the masses. Dr. Wilson's independence of thought and action, his remarkable success in dealing with men and situations, his exceptional versatility on the stump and his rae * ' 1 ' 1 *- : * - - * L I I f aoiiiiy nave rnaue 01 uira a reai living hope?the Democratic hope. "In yonder box sits his distinguish' ed aunt?Mrs. James Wosdrow? and the mere mention of that name indicates how closely Dr. Wilson is identified with this community. For four years his revered father lived and labored in this then small community and there are many here tonight who loved and honored his father and mother, the sister of our dear old Dr. James Woodrow. Our orator who writes Greek as well as shorthand, learned neither here, but it was in Columbia that he got moBt of his Sunday school training, so I'm told, learned most of what he knows of baseball, and more than all, grasped the significance of making and retaining real friendships. All of this had better be recorded before Mr. Wilson's early life is "nsythed'' over in North Carolina. "It may not be our pleasure to hear Dr. Wilson speak again until he is elected president, because no missionary work is needed here, but he has promised that if elected Columbia, the home of his boyhood, will be made his winter residence, and that a winter baseball park may supplant the golf links of Augusta for outdoor recreation. I have the honor of presenting to you Dr. Woodrow Wilson." MYSTERIOUS MURDER. ? Killed by Unknown Person and Body Thrown into Creek. About noon Monday, a foul murder was brought to light in Greenville suburbs, when the body of a negro who had been missing since last Sunday night was pulled out of a. small creek. The dead negro's name is Jshmael Newton, and he is said to have mad? his home in Greeuville. A negro boy by the namo of Moore was arrested and is being held as a suspect, it was reported last Tuesday that a negro who had been seen in company with other negroes near Gantt Sunday afternoon had disappeared that night and that foul play was suspected. A search was begun but revealed nothing until Monday, whaa notice was received at the sheriti s office that the negro had been found. Coroner llatson was notified of the finding, and together with representatives of the sheriff's office, went to the scene. Seaching along the creek they found the negro's head protruding above the water among some roots of a nearby tree. The body was extricated and was found to be minus ail clothing but undergarments. Ono foot only had a shoe on it. The body showed evidences of having been badly beaten. I It is supposed that mo negro, who | lived in Greenville went out in the Gantt neighborhood Sunday afternoon to court a colored damsel of the vicinity, fell into the hands of jealous suitors of tho negress and met with foul play. YOUNG MANOR RICE KILLED. ? Hon of tho Chief Warden is Shot While Out Hunting. A very deplorable accident happened Saturday morning near Summerville, which resulted in tho death or Manor Rice, known to his boy friends as "lluddie," son of James Henry Rico Jr., chief game warden, white I cut hunting with a companion. On crossing a field their dogs attacked several little pigs and in trying to beat them off with the nutt ena of their guns the gun Manor Ittce was carrying in some manner was discharged, both loads entering his abdomen. Ilis companion ran for asto tho chief of nollce, Mr. Waring, who happened to be in the neighborhood, and the chief immediately put a man on his borne and senr for a physician, but on his arrival t.ie lad was dead. Death evidently was almost Instantaneous. Manor was the third son of Mr. Rico, lie was 1 1 years of age, a bright and dutiful boy and the pride of his home, lie was in tho fifth class of the graded school. Baby Hums in Fireplace* While playing in front of an open fire at their homo in Atlanta, the two-year-old child of Mr. and Mrs. .1. L Cash fell into tho flames and was so badly burned about the head and chest that It died. He was playing in tho room with his four-voar-old brother and plunged head first inro ho fire before the older hoy ceuld stop him Boy Fired Baby's Ootlies. An alleged Imbecile boy, 14 years old, is blamed for the death of th^ two-year-old child of Mr. and Mrs. .1 Brndel, of Leipzig, N. D.t as a resul' vi* ooftlng fire to the clothes of the bahy. r ' r. . ' ^;v?# ' s 4 ' 1 mkTxIimd GOES TO HIS HEATH WITHOUT MAKING STATEMENT CONVICTtl) llF ASSAULT i ^ ii Criminal Prom St. George Mm* Oeatii I iilliuchiiigly, ICepcNtiui: Lord's 1'iaycr Just liofoto the Cm* rent \V tts Turned on no u in Oii? Minute Mini Three fcieeomln. Making no mute went either of ud mission or uua?..t u, ?,*?** * on.? clover, convicted in Dor^heete. County oT attempted ciiwinai as jouii, was Tuesday wormug eiecm cuted at the Statu Penitentiary. The execution, which was witnessed b> ibout thirty-iive people, was wlthov. unusual incident. Alter the negro had been placed in the chair and had stated that he had nothing to s.jy, he repeated tho Lord's Praye in concert with three Catholic priests, he being of the Catholic faith, and then said that he was ready to die i'he current was turned on at i 1 and passed continually through his* body for one minute and three sec onds. An examination by Dr. Jen nings, the prison physician, and thre? other doctors of the city, showe that death had resulted. Throughout the period of his detention at tho Penitentiary the negro was frequently visited by Fath er Hegarty, rector of St. Peters Church of Columbia, and the Rev. .) 0. Abney, the prison chaplain. To both of these divines Glover professed a belief in his salvation. The negro slept well Monday night, according to the guards, and ate a hearty breakfast Tuesday morning, being apparently unconcerned about hi fate which was to befall him within a few hours. The witnesses to the execution, at (he direction of Capt. Griffith, proceeded to the death house at 10 minutes after 11 o'clock, and Immediately arranged themselves around tb room where the execution was held. At 11:17 the negro was led from his cell by two guards and advanced with a firm tread to the chair. He was immediately strapped to the chair and asked by Captain Griffith if he had nnv statement to make "Nothing at all/' was the reply and Father Heerarty, Father N. A. Murphy, of the Cafhp^re] Charleston, and Father J. T. McElroy, of the St. Peter's Church Charleston, repeated the Lord's praver with the condemned man. The momnnt rtroo na Hi A VOlfAH Of I III lit TT UO U 1 (tkllHtiV %?.(/ ?,?* v ?? * v w w the three priests blended with the I'nfalfeHntr tones of the negro. Throughout th? entire period of the execution one of the priests read with scarcely audtble accents a prayer from a book which he carried. When the prayer was concluded the copper helmet and leg clamp | were adjusted and at 11:20 the current was turned on. There was the usual contraction of the muscles throughout the short time that the lethal current hurled hrough the man. After one minute and thre* seconds had elapsed the switch was thrown out and the examination bv nhysicinnR followed. Tt was found that death had resulted Instantly. Thp hody was removed from the chair and an autonsy nerformed. as Is the esao with all who die bv the chair, unless relatives rennpst the body. ti'Mi 11 rI<-wi jfj the Penitentiary burying ground. CHARGED WTTH RORRERY. - ? Society Woman of Nashville Charged With Robbing the Mails. A capias has been issued for the arrest of Mrs. M. N. Parker of Mcj Minnville, Tenn., daughter of the oatmaster there, A. A. Faulkner, and a prominent society woman. Owing to a physical condition ot Mrs. Parker, the execution of tho capias has been temporarily stayed. Mrs. Parker was indicted at uie October term of federal court on a chargo of robbing the mails. The evidence was procured by postotlice Inspectors. Systematic robbery of the malls was reported at points between s'ashville and Chattanooga. The field of operation of the alleged thieves was finally narrowed down, the postoffieo inspectors say, to the branch lino from Tullahoma to Sparta. The postofilce inspectors allege that a pile of letters which had been opened and V"*own away were found at MoMlnnvillo. EXPLOSION KILLS SIX. +. . Dynamite Explode* in a PowdeT Company's House, Six workmen were killed by an explosion of 2,000 pounds of dynamite in one of tho pack houses at the / etna Powder company's plant near Gary, In*!., Monday morning. The men who lost their lives had arrived at the plant for the day's work anl were repairing one of the packing machines when the explosion occurred. Tho dynamite was loose in 100 pound lots 011 the packing trays and but for this the damage would have been much more severe. Woman Commits Suicide. The dead body of Mrs. J, C. Montcnniorv \vn? found dnnirliner from the end of a rope In the smokehouse near her homo at Madisonvillo, Tenn. Worry over financial affairs is believed to have Induced her self-destruction. Tier husband, who was wealthy, died about a year ago. Widow and Pot Cat Hurnod. At Nashville, Term., Mrs. Adelle Ttaveneau. a widow. 70. was burned to death Fridav morning while seared before the fire In her room. The charred body of her pet cat was found in ber Ian. It Is supposed her dress was ignite from the fire. A ' . I J ' ? hDRIANOPU besieged Tl ItkR' 4-!IK/l I . KONt.llOLI) \?*. I'KAKS t;KKT?i\ TO I*'AI>L. Artillery lUius i i ??joeii4?*M oh K?r(?* le|h' l-orl. VViiilt* I'ui km Hi rive It* I 'ruwiii i(<? 4 ?pi lire. A graphic iloBi ripuou of the sioi iumg by in: limgn <iin& uI Hie iwu i ui kiah foils til ivni talepe una i'upain thy oui? 4 tin*. 01 luruiiOuuons uroan . Aairiauopio it> iorwaidcd by a correspondent 01 a he .viutiu. tie declares thai thuii capture scuts li?? (loom of the Tui Ktsii all ougltoid. Alio operations Ooguu ai du) ot'cak all i hut oua> . i' ui.invii^; ilie*ij* usual oriiiiunuy succcb-svui <.*v. ic*>. tue ifuieiaiauu iulun.iy advanced in me ai. ectiou 01 tut- mi it uiuKr cover 01 i iiu. derous lue oi shrapnel. The i turkish troops in their turn sullied ut Horn the lulls to deliver u countr attack. It was then the turn of the liulgurian heavy siege artillery which trom every point on the surrouiuiiu, Dills rained a terrific hail of projectiles ou the lines of the Turkish troops. Every moment saw fresh companies of Turks marching out from the city and the lorls towarti the Bulgarians who continued linperturbably to draw their lines closer around the forts. The accurate fire of the Bulgur tuns' big guns began to tell at about 10 o'clock in the morning when tin cannon in the fort on Mount Kartal began to slacken their reply. The fort had been swept by a heavy storm of shells for several hours, the great projectiles bursting right over th? works. The Turkish infantry had mean it/ ti 11roMiutod Hf n h horn 1 v th? Hill garian advance, but their lines gradually began to waver. Suddenly tin command "fix bayonets" rang ou. from the Bulgarian officers and then cheering wildly, the Bulgarian Infan try dashed forward and the Turks broke and ran toward the city. At about noon the Bulgarian colors floated up over the fort of Kartalepe, but Papaztepe still held out. Nightfall found the Turks and Bulgarians still fighting. Suddenly in the dense darkness a long dazzling ray of light shot across the sky fron. one of the crests held by the Bulgarians, bringing the fort on Papaztepe clearly into view. Then from the fort itself another brilliant ray shot out. The cannon and rifle Are which had been Blackening, Immediately became more brisk while above the combatants the searchlights flashed their rays around, on which little , balls of white smoke caused by thr bursting of shrapnel floated like fl.es ir a sunbeam, making even deeper the surrounding blackness which was punctuated here and mere by flashes from the muzzles of cannon. The roar of the siege and field guns dominated the rattling of the rifle volleys and the screeching of shells as they hurled through the air. As had occurred at Kartalepe earlier in the day the fire from the Pazaptepe fort began gradually to slacken. There also the Bulgarian Biege guns had caused enormous ravages. Abruptly the searchlights were extinguished at about 11 o'clock at night and the Bulgarian infantry began to storm tne fort at the point of the bayonet, bhortly before midnight they had become masters of the position und tne Turks were in flight. They left their dead and dying by hundreds on the field. The fort on Papaztepe is one of the most important features of the defense of Adrianople. It commands not only the city itself, but all the other works. Throughout the operations, Bulgarian aeroplanes flew back and fortb over the Turkish forts, bringing valuable information to the Bulgarian generals in command. FROZEN IN FAR NORTH. English Missionary Nearly Ix>st His liifo When Ho Ivoft Ills Guides. Rev. Percy Ilroughton, missionary, of tho Anglican church among the Eskimos of Balflnland, reached Sydney, N. S., Sunday still suffering from hardships which neany cost his life in tho far north. Ho strayed from his guides while on an expedition from the mission station at Lake Harbor last March. In trying to make his way back off the coast, the ice was broken up by a strong wind. He Jumped into the water and made shore, but with two nights spent in the open his feet became so badly frozen that he had to crawl on his hands and knees to an Eskimo village. There some ill-advised nativo applied heat to the frozen feet. The missionary lay for tnree months in agony. His cook probably saved his life by cutting off all the toes of the i right foot. The mission ship arrived in August and a doctor aboard performed two more operations. Threw Baby in Hivcr. Disappointed because their tendays' old baby wns a hoy when they wanted a girl, Fred Kipp and his wife, each 2 2 years old, of Cincinnati wrapped the child in a shawl and tossed him into the Ohio River. They . were arrested Tuesday night and the husband confessed, blaming his wife .1 - -V M l for wanting to dispose or uio caiiu. ? Newspaper Man Killed. Franklin It. Dorr, formerly proprietor of the Douglas Daily Dispatch, was shot and killed at Clifton, Ariz., by William Allendor. When surrounded by officers Allendor committed suicide. Dorr was 45 Itoll Weevil In Alabama. The first authenticated case of boll weevil In Hale county, Ala., has been reported to United States authorities Id Greensboro. The farmers are ni?nning a vigorous fight against the pest. / 1 ' ; ^ . * ' >< > k Of < on wa rUi taffirt c?pnl tmd Nvyip el 4 ?fow ?K* rmmkmmd cepiftel m4 mm| Jiri-ue a JABiUTW or mm ^t'BlTT or MPOfn 1)1 KM .?!,? * I i K > if'tMtfMml), * v. ' ) I !*!< N , We odrt out cuetonicve every *cc will juttiiy* eoJ we kihiomi We continue to pey 5 pe HAKHJL WRECK FOURTEEN PtUILE KILlID AND MANY INJURED | TRAIN TRASH IN REAR I The Accident V\ ub Caused by the luiluic of a lirukcitiuii lo Obey Order Ait> Ia> Movement of 'I'rauiH.? ; Many or hilled Were Cremated iu ' Ourned Irani. A uioa&u'uub wreck, in which 14 or uoie pei&ouH weie killed, 42 seriously mjuied, and at learn oU slightly | nun, occuircd on the Yazoo <v. Mia[ lobippi valley tailroad near Moutz, I La., 27 miles norih of New Orleans, | at midnight Monday, when a through ireight train crasliea into the rear of un excursion tiain of ten coaches. The dead: Mrs. Monteaud, white, Zachary, La. Mrs. Jennie Comeaux, Zachary, La., white. Two white women, unidentified, one from Zachary, and a white baby. Of the negroes' bodies which were recovered from the wreck, throe women, one a girl 14 years old, and five men. Five of the coaches of the excursion train were burned and many ol the bodies of the victims are believed to have been cremated. Fourteen bodies were recovered from the wreck Tuesday morning. Five of these were white and nine were negroes. Most of the injured are white. An official statement Issued by the railroad company places the blame for the disaster on a brakeman named * ?*?' ?i? i- ? i -.in. running nam, who la cuaiguu wim I failure to obey orders and signal the, freight train, I The excursion train which left New , Orleans northbound at 11 p. m. was diawn by two engines. On approaching Montr one engine broke drown and the engineer signalled to the brakeman, it Is said, to go back and signal the freight train, which was running 25 minutes behind the excursion. This ord<h, it Is declared, the brakeman failed to comply with, and the freight tore into the rear of the crowded passenger train at a speed of about 30 miles an hour. Relief trains were sent from New Orleans and Baton Rouge. Thirty of the injured, all negroes, were taken ro Baton Rouge. The dead and the more seriously injured among th' whites were brought to New Orleans and placed in hospitals. Almost as soon as the collision occurred the two rear coaches, which were telescoped by the freight engine, caught fire. The passengers who escaped injury rushed into the wrecken coaches and dragged dead and injured from the reach of the flames. Several of the occupants of the front oaches who escaped injury were badly burned in their brave efforts to save those less fortunate. White men risked their lives to save injured negroes from the fast n ,<? a J I n o fl n m no nn,l novrn .n All mail. JJI ^auill5 linitiva uuvi v/ M?v>n i mwii ed Into tho steam and flames to rescue white persons as well as members of their own race. The excursion train was In charge of Conductor Stlnson, with Engineers Montgomery and Wright on the engines. The freight was In charge of Conductor Rodney and Engineer Drehr. j The majority of tho excursionists were from points south of Woodvllle, Miss., 30 miles north of Haton Rouge. Tho scene at the union station there when tho relief train bearing tho dead and Injured arrived was one of confusion. Practically every ambulance In the city had been summoned to take the injured to hospitals and police patrol wagons worn used to help move the dead to undertaking establishments. The rear coach of the excursion train was demolished and it is said practically every occupant of this car was either killed or seriously Injured. One of the badly wounded victims brought here stated that two women and several small children In the rear coach were killed. Proved Story Teller Insane. Charles Suems, a St. Louis business man, was declared Insane upon the evidence of an associate who tes titled that Suems kept tolling the same funning siorioa over and over, repeating one of them do less than 50 times ( ? Gambler* Are Rohbe<l. A bandit held up and robbed nlae man In a gambling roam at Staunton, 111., Tuesday and took naarly $1,oo em* the teMee aed the gleyw' ? i i i : - - ?^ ' HOKKY, j. a, c. ' *4.444 ^ UMMM .... M.Ht mmm itt.iM ;ioks w. 4. W ill r> ti>*? ocmmodnhoa which their accoMh oiicit your buna?. ' K V. Richardson, triKJL a. nniuB VfCB HtlPIOfc*! Ouiiii 1 r cent, on yearly dopomto. 1 | ai> iahi% *. ?. noonnAM( **? Qmiiiin At u% iAAIkAk, ftt 4J. * <f,. <4. IAAMK4UIVA OA ?% A k , Mk. 4 4i??rM| * Lav* ta ft. H rtl ?> M< <41? ?UU nu/^dl/* N. Up w>. 11 * WMk' ? .ii * <4* WMTMI ?M 4A <<*?* *? Mwrr) 'jyMWAk, ft. 1 MNS UA\mhUL ? mmd ftur??yum | aptvtff IftvildlMft (Wwfty, M. 01 m imnmtAimismnmam \ blffJ'Srt ftfntnotoltbfri VI nmting Shuttle IMfflft WtmUim or * Hi ng Is Th rm<1 (C'Aoto WMi ijj / Bowing Muchlue writ* to I (Oft ?? BIMI tcwiat MACHIHI MM Orang*. Mass. itat wmt BMkirxi ar? made to aeHNprtM^I mmthm m th* N?w llento It ?*S a ??s I (Js guaranty mret raw OS O HI HHMl Mi v *?4,|AlSt* ><)*, <<nasay, H. O ?V ENTIRE FAMILY JAILED. ? Anderson Negroes Arrested Charged With Arson. An entire negro family, consisting of Sylvester Gambrell, his wife, his 6-year-old son and an infant about four months of age, have been lodged in the Anderson county jail here on the charge of arson. On Thursday afternoon a large barn belonging to Thurston Martin, a well-to-do farmer living near Pelzer, was destroyed by fire, and tins Gambrell family is. charged with firing it. ' When seen in his cell Sunday Gam broil declared that ho was it leant a mile away from the barn when the fire was discovered and that when ho arrived on the scene the roof was falling in. Dora Gambrcll, his wife, stated that she and her little son were in their house, which is situated about thirty-five yards from the barn, site, and they declare they kno/ nothing of the fire until the flames had made some headway. NO CORPSE FOK POLICEMEN. Unrequited Lover Does Not Swallow Poison, Preferring to Live. When two policemen Sunday went to tho home of John Carricciolc, of Richmond, C>d., to take care of his body, Carricciole met them at tho J 1-1 Al A V uuur unix oxpiainru mm no wan nui dead. Tho Oakland police department had received a telegram from VV. J. Carricciole, said to be a wealthy business man of Cleveland, Ohio, informing them that he had received telegram from his son at Richmond, saying that because of unrequited lovo he was about to commit suicide. "Pleaso take care of the remains,'* said the message. Carricciole, who Is 23 years old, explained that he had Intended to t*ko poison, hot bad changed hit mid.