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HUGE BUNCO GAME A SCHEME WURKID I HAT SWINDLED MANY PtUPLE SCHEMERS MADE MONEY V t Indictments Have lieru Pound toy the Gtaiiil Jury Arumim Pive Men Who Are Charged With Operating ? Shady Business That Netted Them Jlig Sums in Three I ears. With the arreBt Monday in six ci ticB ol men alleged by the U ill toe States government to constitute monumental get-rich-quick chain o swindlers, United States secret ser vice men declare they have brough to llie Buriaee an organization ina has mulcted small coi purauons, in vcBloib and piomoteis ol *>1 ,aUU,UUt lu tlie lust three yeais. The arrest were made as the result ol severa Indictments returned at Cinciiinatti by the last United States grand Jury Those arrested were: K. L). Minyard, at Cleveland; Ueo. S. Hannai< ..I /II. 1 ? . II II tlf.. tl?-l luru, icugu, n. n. vvurrnu, uuciica liter, N. Y.; Mason G. Worth, New York; Thomas Kishwick, Boston; A. Rrure Crane, Newark, N. J. Indictments were returned at Cin t-innalli against live men who are alleged to have constituted one link of fbe chain. The five men are Min \ard, llunnaford, Kishwick, J. R Long and J. G. Malcolm. Long an I Malcolm are said to be in Canada 7lie oilier arrests were made on alii i nits of government ollicials. The throe indicted in Cincinnatti will be jeturned there lor trial. A federal I rand jury at Rochester, It is said, will be empanelled to investigate branches of the alleged swindle while the grand jury at Buffalo, N. Y., will convene to take up the case. Much of the evidence which resulted In the indictments, It is said, was given the grand jury by a woman, Miss Clara Kronage, formerly employed as stenographer by the firm of Minyard, Kessler & Malcolm. Uisturici Attorney McRherson held a long conference with Miss Kronage and says she would go to Rochester to testify before the grand jury. The plan of operations, it is charg cd in the indictments, was for members of the firm to advertise their ability to sell stocks lor promoters and inventors. Those who answered the advertisements were told that the s'o'-k could not he sold at its true value unless guaranteed by a reliable guaranty company. The customer r then was recommended, it is charged to George S. Hann?irord, who represented the Chicago rtebenture com puny. Hannatord, the indictment states would guarantee the stock, charging I jm r cent of its par value. The promoter would there be informed that a purchaser tor the entire issue ha been found providing ?ne proposition was found worthy, a charge rating as high as one-third, or sometimes t per cent, of the par value of the 8i?>ck, would he made ror their investigation. Afterwards the promoter w s informed that his proposition had moved to he no good, and was dropped. 1 lit; indictment charges that the proceeds were divided among the members of the brokerage concerns una t ?i rl .him i ii rn cmnnanTes. Xo ef UU \ i I 1 I V- Vl? ?/w.. V . , - . fori was made to soil any stock, it doc*lai os and only a perrunctory invest nation of the merits of the diff( rem enterprises. The individuals and corporations named in tho in dictments as having been victims of the brokers includes me Bitter Root Valley Fruit and Pre mice Company; the Folding Fibre Box company; the Cold field River Bene Mining and Willing company; the Tuscan Consol idated, Mining company; the Derby shire Manufacturing company; the T nited Mine and Smelting company: tne Riurroll Manufacturing company, Bradley, 111.: \V. II. Morry, Rodkford 111., ad J. II. Wissow, Milwaukee Vis. Numerous letters advising prosper the customers to communicate with th Chicago Debenture company or relating to the sale of stocks wore attached to tho Indictments as evidence of their frauds. Sending through the mails to II. F Wissow a pamphlet called "Investment versus Speculation." was made the basis of one count in the indictments. Warren is president of the American Redemption company at Rochester and Worth was charged with complicity in a scheme to defraud in connection with the Rochester concern. Government officials declare that they have evidence showing these and other concerns all were intKn AM A in VUIVI'W 111 LIU; uijv; \_ 11 111 111 Tlio firm of Minyard, Kessier & Malcolm, whose activities are said tc have resulted in the government investigation, went out of business las; April and its members all left the ei^ ty. During its activities the firms nam? was changed several times, tin BigsB on the ollices changing from J. 0. Minhard & Company ro Min ynrd. Kessier & Company, then to Malcolm & Kessier Company and to Minyard, Kessier and Malcolm. Counterfeit Ten Dollar Out. Captain Thomas I. Porter, of the secret service, announced Tuesday that counterfeit $10 gold certificates of the series Tl-1 889-0323 are in circulation in the north. A warning was isued urging every person wit'v $10 bills in their possession to examine them closely, or suotnit them to bank experts to be assured of their genuineness. Rome men who were hard to find when the dollar subscription was becampaign fund, aro now heading the procession of office seekers. TIIK (i/\MK FOWL. Soiim* liitt'icsliiiK iiiK/iiuation It* nil I'oultry hmeth. , i he poultry Department of the Al-f lama oomnal is udiloti u> u man unowii to oui (Ji ungeuurgei s, Mi. J. O. i Ohtfcii, v. ho lor several yeuis was oonine in depot agent in mio city. Mr. Posiell under the name 01 "Uncle isudle}' has made good in hid derailment, and we reproduce lot* mu oenetit of ail pouitiy eiuhuBiabtb one 01 his lucent articles on the "Uaino i'owl." Ins article reads: Every nation, ub iar hack as history goes, except the Japanese and cuish people, have bred and lought game iowls, and among all the uaions of the earth today, except, as .ar as 1 have been able to fin ., the Japanese "light chickens" still. So .ar as 1 have heen able to ascertain' England and the United States, or the J states that compose the union, are tlio( only nations that have passed laws hat prohibit "cock fighting," and the! people of these nations have always .ought them in spite of the laws vhicli prohibit it. The Latin race toJay in Europe and South America are the greatest cock fighters that lave ever lived in the world. Thousnds of dollars out of the South American republic are sent to Europe and the United States today :or pit game fowls and American breeders reap a harvest of good dol uirs in supplying the demand for high class pit games. The history of the game fowl ? I. 1-1 1? * I ... t ,v ? Iinuiiiu I readies prenisiuriu umt-o, iwi uiuu.,h ho Persians and other Asiatic people this fowl can be traced by tradition to over 1,0 00 years before the Christian era. It has been established beyond a doubt that the game fowl of today lias its origin in the Jungle of India, ''hey came down to us through the Greeks from Persia, from tne Greeks o the (tomans, which latter nation listributed them all over Europe. Game fowls, however, are found in he South Sea Islands an 1 the islands of the Pacilic, but they are evidently <>r' different origin. The jungle fowl is a small lightly built, small boned fowl, very active ami quick in its actions. The South Sea and Pacific towl is large in size and bone and slow in action and lacking in energy. Cock lighting began in England about tho time of the (toman invaion and, although it has been prohibited by law several times since 1191, in the reign of Henry 11., it was practised in spite of the law passed against it, for several of the ings in whose reign it was made illegal indulged in the practice. Even .ood King .Mnies I owned game fowls I engaged In cock fighting. The an dent Greeks and Romans used bone orass and iron spurs on the gam fowl? that they fought." I No breed of fowls on eartn nas reeived moro painstaking and carefu Mention in their breeding lhan n<t he frame fowl. This careful breeding >egan in Persia, where cock fighting vas practiced when Alexander the Meat conquered that country, and i 11 unbroken lino continues down tt he present time. The result of thi areful breeding is exemplified in th ;amo fowl of today. It is manifestly impossible to giv i history of the hundreds of differed reeds of these fowls that have from me to time appeared in Hnglar 1 bru \mercia. They have been bred in all olors. Rome of them, like the Pyle md Duck-wing varieties, are among he most beautiful of ail other breeds Hid yet this has been accomplished without in any degree affecting theii tiigh standard as to ganieness and usefulness as fighters in the pit. In England the Earl of Derby games foi vears have stood at the head of all *ame fowls there, and today theii blood courses through many of our American breeds. Prior to the civil war the Rhett game of South Carolina stood first among the games o* ho south. Hundreds of other noted varieties have since come forwar", both in England and America thaT have proved their superiority to any if the games of former times. Now, we have been looking at thrs grand bird only as a fighting machine, uid not as a fancy or as a utility fowl. There is no fowl in existence to-day chat surpasses in beauty the game fowl. I have no reference to the fowl (hat is to-day bred in America as a show bird, with its ridiculous long 'egs, its unsightly small, narrow body, its long neck, capped wiMi a long, small head, for this fowl is useless, except as a fancy monstrosity ihat some people think adds to its beauty, but I am talking about th? r,xor>nr>rnllv as the nit game - a fowl of grand appearance that 'onotos in its every action that it is without, a peer on all poultry down, n fowl that for ages has been bred on fbe Darwinian idea, "The survival of lie fittest," with a pedigree that is lost in ant lenit y, but thnt has come to us through all his past generations with its chief characteristics just as they were thousands of years ago. Now, as a utility bird. Where can vou find, nil things considered, their ?qual? Their egg product has seldom been equaled. Their energy and ability to take care of themselves on any range is not surpassed bv any other fowl. Their chicks, if confined with the mother hen until the!" heads are feathered, can he turned out on the range, where they wl" prow orr rapidly and are seldom, wit! 'his treatment, affected with the diseases that are common to other "hhkens. Their flesh is more highlv dnvored, and of fine texture than a1' other nonltrv. Their eggs are richm 'ban those of other fowls. For mangenerations nppt this roval fowl has or>en at the head of all fowls. Wli" other bird has the stately walk. fh< symmetrical form, the hold alertnes? 'he daring, haughty look. Dip er^cn rul nose a*ol Trnlv this rowl is a k'ng among fr>u-i? Those Don^oerats in Sou'h Foro ina who s*rav*d of fnesdov week to the Ttutl Mooso better return to the Democatic fold. JZSUS IS C3D'S GIFT TO ALL IIU.'AAM.T; Salwlioi s oi God's lore. ol Josii.e 01 Hjcjssi.j M isunderttandinq of W*at Conititute? tho Divine Penalty For J>m hDk ivi.* led Us In Respect to Every Peatu-c ?t God's P'oyram Kor Our Recovery | From tne Penalty. Ibiebester. N \ . msmj& ijussi'ii oi i K id l.vii is iii'iv We i .' M,rt "l"'nf "ls ",l I I UPllnl1 to I (jPASTQfc~kUSSElQ ap|ireeiu te the , . / Scriptures on ill* subjects, we must handle the Word ol <JoU honestly We must reeojnii/.e tli:ii our Lord Jesus is one person uud I he Father another person I'be oneness between the Father and the Son is that deelared by our Master i 1 (niseit. say tiiK that lie and the Father are one in the same sense that He desires ah of Ills disciples to be one In mind, m purpose, in will, in effort. iJotin xvii 21. 'J.'Li Our Lord Jesus Is (IoiIh iiii pen KM Hit' t I I I I. The Scriptures declare that the Re deeuier took the nature of a;en it) ot tier to redeem sinners; Put tlnit in II in* there was no sin Only m sinless one could give to tiod n Ransom for Adntn and thus redeem from destruction, not only Adam. Put all his posterity, iit volved in sin and death through him The speaker then showed that Hod set Pefore our Lord a great Joy. the intltieuce of which ted Jesus to endure cheerfully the hitter experiences of lll> earthly life This Joy is intimated to have been: (li His pleasure in doing the Fnttier's will; (LP Ills privilege ol "bringing many sons to glory"- the Church; (3? His pleasure and Joy in lie ing by and by the world's Restorer, de liveriug them from the power of Satan sin and death "Wherefore." St. Fain says, "(bid hath highly exalted Him. far above "angels, principalities and powers, and every name that is named ' An Opposite Course From Satan's. Pastor Russell then contra-sted the course pursued by Satan with that foi lowed by our Lord Meditating am bitious designs. Satan found un oppor A u- 1 - U -? L.HwkLl tti iinr til'ut MUIII.Y III I'rft 11" l J in* iniii-ivi parents m new order i?f beings. design ed to bring into existence a race that won Id till the earth Satan essayed to he ruler or prince over this human ere atiou; and h.v so doing, he not only he came a re he I against (rod. hut brought sin and death into the world Our Lord Jesus pursued an opposite course, and demonstrated His loyalt\ and obedience St Paul intimates thai although the Logos was much higher than was Lucifer, yet He was huinhle. and "meditated not a usurpation." as the (Jreek text declares. (Phil, ii d.i He thought not hy rohherv to tie equal with Hod On the contrary, our Lord willingly accepted the Divine pro posal that lie should he humhied to the human plane for a time, in order to carry out the Lather's I Man To the Church. Jesus is (rod's tin speakahle Lift, lie is indeed a (rift to the whole world, unspeakable in value, hut lie Is more to the Church than to the world To His footstep followers. He Is the "Captain of their Salvation." their bridegroom, their "Khler brother." their great High Priest. Through Him they are prtv ileged to be the (toy a I Priesthood Through the merit of the sacrifice ol Christ, they are privileged to "present their bodies living sacrifices. holy, ac eeptahle unto < Jod " The Pastor then said that Justice Is the foundation of Hod's Throne. In the past, endeavors to harmonize Jus tiee with our great Creator's dealings with humanity have Involved us in dilhculty We were assured hy tin* promjlu'iit creeds that Cod had Know ingly t ?im >11 it I?t mil fi U i lid Into existence under such conditions tfnit tlic great majority would spend eternity in tor ture We perceived no Justice in any such arrangement. Hut while desist lug from criticising the (Yentor. we could not Indorse such n course, nor see it to he in hnrmon.v with the Id vine regulations governing ourselves If we are to love our enemies, should more he expected of fallen human he lugs than of our perfect Creator? The Scriptures declare only the con seem ted Church see the "lengths, breadths, heights and depths of the Love of Cod." which passeth under standing. This class alone is in am sense prepared to give thanks to Cod now for Ills unspeakable Cift Theli thanks go up. not only in words, hut also io actions, which "speak londei than words" These thanks ascend as sweet Incense to Cod Hy ami hy. "All the blind eyes wlh he opened and all the deaf ears will In unstopped" Then the whole world ot mankind, including those awakenee from the sleep of death during Messiah's reign will lie in condition to re? ogni/e Cod's unspeakable Cift and reu dei thanks When wilful evil doe,* shall have been destroyed, then ever creature in Heaven on earth and '? the sol <?i:111 im? heard saving "IVm^ glor\ noiio' dominion and might n unto Hun 'hrn sittctIt on the Thron. and to tin- t t?t forever." through ti unspiMt i; -i m. : ft Jj;U 0.-' HONOR I - I l \| | TO l)K('OK \TK MK II SOLDI Kits. } I ? ! * in <1 ..u'MU'iiuiit Kennedy, of Six*h j an Orangeburg County i l?/.l iu ho 1 11 Ills iiollolt'll. 1 1 lie V\ asiiuigioii correspondent of ;i?e .\Urt X oi K u oriti su.\s ihiee ju- | i<ior u.i.ceis and an euiibieU mail oi ilo- Sixth cuvairy aie speeding across couiitiy nam ITcSidlo, San I'Tuncisco ic rtpoit, by uidor oi Piesidem ialT, .. uu White House at Jido o ciociv Saturday afternoon next. i lit; oiuceis arc* First ldeut. Archie .viiuer ami Second Lleuts. Arthur H. W ilson and John T. Kennedy, an ui of ihe Sixth Cavalry. The enlistee .n.in is e^uartei niasier-Sei gt. Joseph fieimei son, of Troop 1?, Sixth Cavalry. President Taft will pin upon the ?t IT bit-asi of each of the lour men what to the Hriiish soldier is the victoria Cross?the medal of honor bestowed by the President by authority of Congress. Medals of honor art oiny awarded to men ol' the army who "perform speciiic deeds 1 gallantry in aeiion." There are now in the active service only about thirty-five otticers and enlisted men who have been awarded medals ol honor. What the men who are to be rewarded by the medals of honor next Saturday did stamped them as heroes. It was July 4, 19 09 that the ati'liir occurred, on the island of Patian in the Phillippine archipelago. Al o?' the dattoes in 1908 had promised to be good. Hut one turned pearl pi rate. Maj. Gen. Wood sent out strict oiders to the soldiers on the Island oi Jolo to get this pirate chief, whose name was .likiri. It was a long, hard campaign, hut ended in in victory and Lieuts. Wilson and Kennedy and Sergeant Henderson were recoinmende 1 lot medals of hoorr. It was not alone the official report which brought high honors to these four soldiers. It was more the evidence contained in a personal lett.ei iroin one of tho ollicers participating in the fight to a brother ollicer bach in the states. This personal letter only fell under the observation of th< War Department ofllcials by chance It was from a "shave-tailM (a second lietuenant not long graduated from West Point). The letter, the writer and recipient of which cannot for obvious reasons be named, describes the action in which the men who arc to be decorated were as follows: "Then an advance was ordered. 1 suppose theso were about forty men on the firing line. The rest wore in the rear, or carrying ammunition. Some of my men got up into the line with only their revolvers and we started crawling forward on our bellies. "Capt. Hvram was overseeing the whole thing. Holdcrness ('04) and Turner were looking after ammuni X"' unnnlino Q 11 H \fi]ll?l* TOl* IIUI1 iinvi n 11 |/ J/ l l uo, uun minui I ?/ w> Raer, Wilson and Jolin Kennedy weia with the main part of the line on thf right. There was another entrance on the left, so 1 took command at that part of the line. "My this time the outlaws seemed to be out of ammunition, for they began rolling big rocks out at us. Then a big spear came whizzing out from the cave and gave one man an ugty wound in the shoulder. Finally the right of the line was right up against the entrance and my part was up against a stone barricade about ten feet from our etrance. It was impossible to go in, for the entrance was only about two feet square, an they were waiting inside to cut of! the first head that showed itself. They were firing through the door from outside but couldn't do much damage owing to the construction of tho cave. "Well, just as we got up to the barricade there was a shout from our door and a big Moro jumped straight for us with a barong. ( Rarong is the lighting weapon of the Joloano Moroi I had grabbed a rifle from some man when wo started tho advance, and four of us tired at him and got him in the middle of his Jumps. lie hit the ground once, turned ?a somersault in the air and rolled over dead just inside the barricade. ".lust as we finished him the main rush began on the right, where most of the men were. Eight Moros came rushing out, swinging harongs right' and left. I will never forget it as long as I live. For a week afterward 1 had night mares-and saw the whole thing in my dreams. Every of'icet who was there said the same thing. Raer said lie scarcely closed his eyes for a week without seeing it. "Kvorv jump, it scorns to mo, they wont three feet in the air ntui povo"ed about ton foot, first to one side and then to the other, and with earn , jump the barong would come down with all a man's weight behind it. Wilson was right beside the door and onught the first flash in the back o the nock, under the jaw and down to the back. John Kennedy got the nex ?a slanting blow across the back of he head and nook. Miller caught thflat of a barong on the kidneys which laid him up for a week. If i' had goon the edge he would havbeen cut in two. One man's hand was slashed off and several others cut more or loss seriously before the h. . t>.i .vere kined. 'I do't. suppose the whole thin? 1 sted ten seconds, but I never wat . see another like them. I saw on oro's head opened nn like a crackc g shell from a pistol bullet. Thi : one of tlio many sights crowds ?to Oioso ten seconds." Voeording to the onorts ftr*nish< Copt. Gooree K. IJvvom S:xfh C" 'vv. the oTcer commanding th nn"s in the fleht. ' 'outs Mitlc v*'lcon and Kenncdv aod H?.' ?*?ron rushed abo^d ef the "no a" go^od in a hand o ho?d firM wit' 'k'ri and his seveu fo'ton'nrq. ' q bv r"isn? of the"* thforo chief opd h's *uoo 'bat the 'n* i \\'o V |* w a q du^iuo *Mq pnnd-t" hand fight, sabre against barong DESPERATEjiOBBER iKUOTS DOWN FIVE PURMUREKS I.N A NtW YilKKHUrEL. j KILLS WUMAN AND SELF +. . . Louder ol' Conspriuc,\ to Loot Mouses Proves IK'sperate When Cornered by Oilicers of the Law anil Shoots l-'ivo .Men Who Were in the Art of Arresting Him. A man and a woman stood in a small room of a Haines law Hotel in! the Hionx, Now York 011 Monday ni^hi and deiibei aiely biio.. no ?> 11 1 .hioe deiv.cnves and two other men who were trying to place the pair unher arrest. Aiter enipl)iu& Hie 11 chambers ol a iaige uuioaiultC ieo:\i.r, reinioiced u> shots Horn an ordinary letoiver in Hie hands ui mo aoman companion and probably iu?v 11 N WOUliiiii.g luvll 01 l lie 111 ell tillot .own. the man j hot an. kined me woman and then put a bullet through uis ov\!i neati, oynig Instantly. This is the outline of one or the .nooi. uiua snooting affrays which .he detectives of that city have run into ior years so tar as tno contlici.ug stories 01 the shooting hah been silted. rim dead man was known by several names, having regisuiio .uiii n.i (vjo'. \ ogei. The police declare that lie was a Bole named (.lures Doi agicskis. i'he woman wiin i;m luul legisieied as Louie vogel. v'ogel was about 18 years old and he woman uooul 2b. The detectives were on the trail of the pair, suspecting them ol having been accomplices in a dianion ( roi. u. o *o? ui.iii isophio Beckendor a domestic had been held lor the grand jury today. The women win had lost the jewels traced the girl o Vogels house and told the detective of her discovery. After the taxicab that the Vogels had sought lodging at the Elsmere hotel, at Cortland avenue and One Hundred SSixty-ttisu street in the Bronx. Martin F. Fay, central oftice detective, and John Allen and Louis CJerade, private detectives, went to the hotel in search Louis Moendschein, the proprietor, told of the couple having arrived in a taxicab early in the evening, and ordered William Butler, a waiter, to show the detectives to the Vogels' room. Vogel opened the door in response to a summons and as Allen forced his way in, declaring that the couple were under arrest, Vogel struck the detective over the heact with a blackjack and then grasped a magazine pistol which lay upon the bed. His first bullet struck Allen in the head and ho fell probably fatally hurt. Fay and (lerade rushed into the room, followed by Moendschein and Butler. It is declared that they did not fire a shot, but expected to seize Allen's assassin. They were not luiok enough. Vogel let go 0110 shot after another, nearly every one taking effect. Fay and Moendschein hotli received probably latai wouihis in tho abdomen. Gerale was shot in ilie lag and back and Butler received a bad wound in the hip. The woman, also armed, had fired several shots, some of which it is believed hit the detectives. Yogel turned on his woman and shot. She was shot through the abdomen and soon expired. Vogel made quick work of himself by "Mttirg the last bullet from his gun into his head. At tin4 hospital to which all of tho wounded were taken it is sal ' probably all except Butler would die. At a late hour the two trunks and two suit cases, which the couple had taken to the hotel were removed to a police station hut the stolen jewelry was not. found. Tho police say that in trailing the Yogel pair the detectives were probably running down a completely organized scheme for robbing residences throughout the upper West Side. The Indictment on which the Precken lorf girl was held, charged her with numerous robberies of jewels. amounting to several thousand dollars. * According to tho police the girl broke down Monday night and confessed that the Vogels were with her. and it was to them she had given the stolen articles. The plan of operalion was for the girl to advertise for a position as a domestic and as soon as she had obtained it to rob her cmnlover's hoi >e. that the three officers and Henderson ere seriously wounded. The remainder of the personal lot 'or follows: "When if was all over we collect >d all their arms and charms, am "xatnincd (ho cave. Meanwhile th voutided wore dressed and hurrio(own to the launch and back to .)? 'o. Rifle8, revolvers and equipmen -f all kinds was scattered all ovo ho ground and had to bo picked u >nd sortod out. "The fight lasted about two hour \\ro finally got evervthlng collec.nd down to the boat and all to hack (o .Tolo about 6:3 0 p. m. W nought homo two killed and twent I no wounded two of the latter di? '"tor. Kennedy and Wilson are o> j vnlking around now. and all but fo? ! or five of the wounded are out of th hosnital. Several will have to 1 'isoharpod for disability. It was a *?wful price to nav for eicrht More* but it couldn't be helped. It was a' lately the only way the thing con ho done. "Thor was one kris and five b ones taken, as well as six rifles. > >< "rtfi v'f a" <% ?> oft o rr*n <? Ca P.ryam gave each of the wounded of fleers the harong that him." r -i i, | - ? -???? ? WILL SHAKE PLUM TREE ? <;<><>l> JOIJS AWAIT SOMK FAITHFt li DEMOCRATS. ? I'illzeiw of This iu U iudiiBgUHl W mulctii?^4 Who- Will i ?e CImimA 1' or v tti'iuus I'cafiul I'luvvb. loo Wusningloii conebpoudent of 1 it e O Lit vC o Willi u 0outi oiiarp i-oiutuu a cieun ttucei ol paI't-i'i anu a ioitfc poic iuui tiiii icaoll tile JU.C.V HUH v. p lOWUiUb the U>D? LiiOiO ?o i.ow man speculation as to Abo will get the oig lui juua uuti ike li< i,V >i ..vv ?Ui l.nidClullUll w lieu the ij.ur cite faiiiiAto in the tut i) bprmg ij111 zt ? ui i y i a. i topic in ilie oouih aie wondering | what lot; t-t'iii lulltlaiitie ol .Nove.uUer : o, wilt ii tiie t?. o. t'. w ut> piu uai of | Ui.tuitaj la i,U> iiB It) LHllig tllelll. W 111 liiL'H |juiKleal biocKiiigb ue uneti with Loo eiiuiceot oi tiailiciob ill tue wuj oi lOcieiai appointments lor dibliLOUuon (o uie laitlnui? Will LUei'e he re w aid ioi an who have waited yarn, uy since liloy witiiObbOu the bad sight oi liiover Cleveland leaving the W tiite House, and when will the cutting oi the pie oegin? Not only thie? but w hat kind of pie is it? What ? its liavor and incident ally, what will be ilie emoluments that go along on the bide. Just a little figuring with peneil and paper will show what the laithtul Democrats of the South will get ? < i oie the year 1913 1b many weeks old. -,v>uiIt Carolina will draw down just about $1 00,000 a year when all the jobs now held by Republicans ure filled by Democrats. A Democrat will succeed Ernest Cochran as district attorney and will receive $4.oou; lik< wise there will be an assistan district attorney. Then will come collector of the port at Charleston worth about $1,800 a year, and postmaster at that same place, which, too is a good job. Add to this about ') small cities in the State whore the postmasters are paid each year salaries averaging f2.ono and 60 where they are paid $1,000 and you will have a pay roll of more than $100,000 a year. It must he remembered that the South Carolinians were among the most faithful of all the Democratic workers. South Carolinians here are won dering who will succeed Postmaster Harris at Charleston, Floyd at Spartanburg, Young at Union, Hicks at Laurens, Huggins at Columbia, Webster at Orangeburg, and ofllclals elsewhere throughout the State. These are all good offices and the pay is attractive, considering that the duties are In the, main most pleasant, i Equally much discussed here is the question of who will he made district attorney and assistant district attorney and collector of the port at Charj leston. Ernest Cochran and his assistant will have to go as will IC. YV. I Durant of Charleston. So far as th^ appointment of postmasters is concerned there seems to bo little hope for any ttcpunncau co bold over, no matter how efficient his services may have been to the patrons of hiH office. President-elect Wilson intends to leave the naming of all such officials to the members of the house, and this shows most clearly that where a district has a Democratic coi gressmnn the future postmasters in his district are likely to be of that persuasion. There are many good officials among the South Carolina postmasteis and doubtless they have most generally rendered faithful service, I but indications point to the fact that they will have to give way to the new order of things early next year. FATAL 1>KKK HINT. ? Mail Accused of Killing Another Man Instead of Game. On the charge of shooting a human being for deer, William Wilding, an jndianapolis railroad conductor, who was arrested after Warren Holden had been killed recently in the woods near the Canadian liue hy Skiwagen, Me., was Thursday held for the December term of court. 11? furnished bail. llolden, according to the testimony adduced Thursday started out deer hunting simultaneously with Wilding and others and was to have kept on another side of a mountain from th'^ Wilding party. Instead however be worked around to a point in front of them, and Wilding seeing something brown moving in the bushes, fired the fatal shot. . ^ FN CLIO SAM AFTFF LB WIS. Charges Hint With Defrauding Peo* .I.. Tliwuirrli Mnilu. 1'IV * l>? ^ At St. Louis, Mo., the jury in the case of E. G. Lewis, charged with using the mails to defraud reported to the federal court Monday that tt found Lewis not guilty of three of l 1 counts and the indictment, and was unable to agree out others to condemn him. The jury was discharged. The three counts reluted to some per cent notes. The jury had been out or SO hours. This is Lewis' second trial on tho indictment. The jury in tho first trial stood 0 to 3 for conviction. It is ol i 11. a i. a i PL* ('11 I [1 Ml lit' (HMiiintHi ll M 11 1 (M i n wi dollars from Investigators by making misleading statements In advertisements in his publications. "Gyp the Blood," "Lefty Louis," "Dago Frank" and "Whitey" Lows killed Herman Rosenthal, the g;?n\bler, at the instigation of Chas. Bi cker. and must pay the penalty oi death in the electric chair. The iury which has been hearing the evidence against the four gunmen so declared it New York Tuesday when It returned a verdict of murder in the flr*t degree after but 20 minutes of deliberation.