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TURNER’S REPORT
ON THE COIIYICTS
THE PRINCIPAL KEEPER'S
STATEMENT OF HIS
DEPARTMENT.
FOURTEEN VIOLENT DEATHS
In All These Cases the Camp
Officials are Held Blameless
Mr. Turner’s Views.
The principal keeper of the peni
tentiary, In his annual report to the
governor, shows that the number of
convicts has decreased from 2,424 to
2,357 since last October. There is a
slight increase in the death rate, but
it is still smaller than that in a ma
jority of the penitentiaries of the
United States, and compares favor
ably with that of any community in
the state. There were 14 violent
deaths among the convicts during
■. the year, and after investigations by
I coroner’s juries, the persons in con
trol were exculpated. The names of
the convicts killed and the circura
: stances of their deaths are given by
L the report as follows:
Frank Chamberlin, October 16,
i 1895, crushed by slate fall.
Wiliam. Jones, November 15,1895
rhiffid by coal car.
MarVßrown, November 29, 1895,
killed by. coal car.
! 'Warren Crawford, March 7, 1896,
killed by powder explosion.
Jim Williams, March 7, 1896>
! killed by powder explosion.
Joe Cohen, April 22, 1896 killed
by slate fall.
Henry Kelley, May 29, 1893 killed
by slate fall.
Sain West, June 18, 1896 killed
by car while trying to escape.
SIX OTHERS KILLED.
The killing of the remaining six
was as follows: October 4, 1895,
Neal Smith, a trusty, who was en
i-i'refl- in cirrying water from a
epr’ng about 200 yards from where
,-q tVI of convicts under guard was
oa a railread,' aseauitvd a
... - woman whom he encountered
■ 1 was taken from the prison by an
. . mob and killed. A thorough
> - .’d'r.iation of the facts in the case
-• wad# by this department and
' r port thereon is now on file in
• - ?.«cntivo department.
O. ’. jber 29, 1895, Bill Armor, hav
j ig stolen a rifle from the gaards*
room, made a break for liberty, was
i red upon, but succeeded in escap
ing. Ssveral days afterwords he was
found dead in Alabama from wounds
received when escaping.
December 1, 1895, Charles .Sea
graves made a murderous attack upon
one of the camp officials with an iron
shovel and was shot and killed.
February 8,1896, Gilbert Kendrick
was stabbed and killed by Ed Hart,
a fellow convict.
August 9, 1896, Alex LaConte, ia
making an assault upon the superin
tendent of the camp with a col!
shovel, was shot and instantly killed
September 3, 1896, William Reed
ran out from under the guns in at
tempting to escape and was fired
upon and killed.
In each of these cases the camp
offioHb were exonerated from blame
by the coroner’s jury, and a copy o!
the verdict and evidence on the hear
ing was laid belore the giand jury of
the county in which the killing oc
curred.
The report shows that 870, 36 per
cent of the convicts were sent up for
burglary, and 261 are >n for larceny.
Tie two offenses are the causes of
bringing nearly half cf the conviits
to the penitentiary. As these offenses
are changed to misdemeanor in many
casss by the Jenkins act, the prin
cipal keeper thinks the number of
convic’s is likely to be reduced to
2,000 by the time the lease expires,
April 1, 1899.
YOUNG CRIMINALS.
The statistics of the report show
tha‘ 144 convicts were sent to the
pnnitew.iary at 16 years of age or
at. younger ages. This does not in.
ci.ide a.< many more whose sentences
h .co expired during the last year
’!'m principal keeper says this eon
m -nt of juvanile prisoners in the
••'iilentiary i« barbarous and inhu
•>na and is the worst feature of the
'• sent system. Commenting on the
x rutica of ages, he says:
• From a meral standpoint the table
m instructive and intereitisg. It
► iow that a large majority of the
<on viols become criminals between
tne ages of 16 and 2«,.an4 it a bej
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER, ATLANTA, GA., NOVEMBER 27, 1890.
tween those ages that yonng men and
women need the influence and guard
ianship of education and meral sur
roundings. It is the age during
Which oharicter is formed, and all
the statistics indicate that after this
age is passed crimes are rarely com
mitted.”
Mr. Turner gays the pardoning
board has done good work in reliev
ing the penitentiary of prisoners who
ought to have bssn pardoned, and he
thinks there ar# other prisoners who
are worthy of clemency. He recom
mends the creation of a permanent
board of pardons.
The report shows that the daily
cost of convict hire to the lessees is
less than three cents a day. The
principal keeper says concerning the
disposition of the convicts:
•‘I am still of the opinion embodied
in my last report about the final dis
position of the convicts, and that it
would be dangerous and unwise to
place them upon the public roads or
congregate them within walls.”
To reach a wise conclusion the
principal keeper recommends that
the legislature create a commission
to examine all the penal systems of
the United States and report to the
next session of the legislature with
suggestions,
Mr. Turner, in speaking of the in
spection of convict camps, highly
commends Assistant Keeper J, C-
Moore.
Dairying and Fertility.
“In Europe,” says ex-Secretary of
Agriculture Coleman, “they have the
finest pastures the sun ever shone on.
The grass is thicker, I was going to
say, than the hair on a dog’s back.
There is always moisture there, and
they feed their stock well. They buy
our linseed meal by the ton, by the
hundred tons, to feed their cattle,
and say they get two results—first,
they get value received in the milk
and in tho growth of their animals;
second, as a fertilizer in the drop
pings of their animals. Ia pastures
where they were fattening cattle 1
saw tubs filled up two or three times
a week with cotton seed meal, so that
the animals could go and help them
selves whenever they felt like it, and
it was good, both for the pasture and
the animals. That is one reason
why I have been so earnest a ohana
pion of the’ dairy, because it keeps
our farms in heart in lino of fertility.
It is not robbing and debilitating
them as the general system Os farm
ing is. Last year ever 8300,000,000
of fertilizers were taken from or.r
farms and carried abroad to enrich
that country, at the expense of our
own.”
Poverty a Crime.
Henry Labouchere, the plain
spoken editor of the London Truth,
touches on the Castle affair us fol
lows:
“On the morning of Mrs. Castle’s
tienteiioe a seamstress and a govern
ess were sentenced at the same ses
sion to nine years and six months
hard labor for stealing a fur neckle', i
and neither had ever been previous
ly convicted. The governess fainted
at the sentence. No medical experts
testified that they were kleptomani
acs. No eminent counsel suggested
that they would suffer in health by
confinement; no one pitied them and
no one signed a petition to th# home
secretary to shorten their sentence.
What matters how a poor, fainting
governess, or a half-starved seam
stress suffers? Give them hard labor
and plenty of it. What if their
health is injured. Let them die.
Let Mrs. Castle out of prison, Sir
Matthew White Ribley, she has
moved in the beet circles and she
had no need to steal; but do not re
duce the sentence of the seamstress
and governess by a single day. The
best circles know them well. They
arc poor and helpless, which, in the
opinion of self-respecting persons, is
in itself a crime.”
Bradstreet’s on the Situation.
New York, Nov. 20.—Bradstreets
tomorrow will «ay:
Jobbers and other wholesale deal
ers in genera! merchandise do not
report the anticipated increase in the
volume of goods distributed this
week. There are increased purchases
for holiday goods and the tone es the
market for staples is one of enoour
agement. Relatively the heaviest
demand has been for dry goods, shoes
and groceries, but even in these lines,
particularly dry goods, tho volume
has been smaller than expected, and
disappointment is a result. The
many industrial enterprises which
have storied up continue a feature of
each day’s news bulletin, but there is
reason to believe the significance of
these exhibits has been over empha
sized in some instances.
LIFE SAVED BY A DOG.
Barked Until He Attracted the
Attention of the Police.
A little wandering, homeless, com
mon dog, dodging everyone it met
on the street lest a blow should bo
aimed at it, used to nothing but kicks
and curses from the great animal
called man, has at last shown its
worth in away that will assure it
hereafter a permanent home among
fr ends, says the Louisville Courier-
Journal. Louis Carr, a painter, was
painting the rear of a vacant house
belonging to L. Store, in Clay street,
between Green and Jefferson streets,
one day recently. He was far up
the ladder, just under the roof, anl
painting vigorously to finish up by
noon. Rather than go all the way
down to move the ladder to another
place he was reacting for out and
painting. Suddenly he discovered
that tho ladder was slipping, and,
having no time to descend, he
caught the aaves of the house with
his hands. The ladder slipped from
under his feat and fell to tho ground,
leaving him helpless, hanging about
thirty-five feet in mid-air. He called
loudly for help time and again, but
no one heard the cries, and being at
the rear of tho house could not be
seen. The little dog heard him,
however, and sneaked around the
house to see what was up. He saw
there was a great deal up snd began
to bark loudly. As he would sit be
neath Carr his barks would ring out
sharply for a momsnt and then end
with a long, passionate howel. He
would then run around the house
toward the Clay street police station,
which is directly across tha street;
give a few sharp barks there and run
again to his old position under the
dangling man, where he would send
out his plaintive appeal more des
perately than before. This attract
ed the attention cf the police, and,
although not understanding dog lan
guage, they they easily guessed
there was something wrong. Ao
cordingly several of them ran over
to the house, and Patrolman Frank
Haffnsr opened the back gate. They
lock in,the situation, and tha ladder
was soon under tho man’s feet, so he
descended with safety. Carr said
that he had been hanging from the
eaves for about ton minutes, and ha f
not help arrived when it did h
would surely have fallen from sheer
oxhausii n lie declares be wiii
keep ard raise the dog with care an
tenderness and hereafter if anyone
wants a good fight on his hands ail
he will have to do will be to hit
Carr’s dog.
Pistol in His House.
CONSTAXTINOI’LE, Nov. 20.—The
Turkish special tribunal has sen
tenced the Armenian bishop at Hm
sekein to death. He was condemned
becsuduring the late riots in Cm
Rtautinople a loaded revolver was
found in his house.
The bishop was absent from home
at the time, and upon this ground an
Appeal was taken against the jmlg
m;nt of the special tribunal, but the
court of appeal has confirmed the
fcateuce imposed by the tribunal.
Tha Aimenian bishep atßitlisand
a nurnbar of Mussulmans have been
arrested in Constantinople for plot
ting against the sultan.
(More of Weyler’s Inhumanity.
If Weylor were as valiant at fight
ing as he is cruc-l in his administra
tive practices, the war in Cuba would
in all probability be near its cud at
this time, for he would either have
defeated the insurgents or be himself
driven from the island, more likely
tho latter. His latest order is tho
very refinement of cruelty. He io
operating at present in the province
of Piuar del Rio, Maceo’s strongholl,
and he has commanded the entire
rural population to move into the
fortified towns. All who fail to do
so will be regarded as rebels or rebel
sympathizers, and death is their por
tion. The inhumanity of this decree
will be appreciated when it is re
membered that these people have ab
solutely no means and that their only
livelihood must be derived from what
they can grow on their little patches
of land. If they leave these and go
into the towns they have nothing
with which to buy subsi dance; even
if they had, tho scarcity of provisions
in the towns is such that the people
now residing there can gat barely
enough to satisfy their wants. Wey
lay’s order, therefore, means nothing
less than a condition bordering on |
famine for the whole population Os
the province, as tho government has ;
declared its inability to render assist-I
ance.
It is the brutality of this butcher i
of men and the horrible deeds of the j
so diers under his command and his I
generals that calls for interposiuuu (
on the part of the United States. We
have raised our hands in holy herror
over the outrages in Armenia, yet
they are scarcely worse than those
that are perpetrated under our very
nose in Cuba. Nothing more in
famous has occurred in Aria Minor
than the murder of Dr. Betancourt
by a Spanish soldier, who struck the
physician down as he was in the act
of administering to a patient in a
hoipital. The doctor’s head was cut
off and carried about on the point of
a bayonet, aud, of course, all the sick
and wounded men in the hospital
were put to the sword. The knowl
edge of acts like ihese, whieh are cf
daily occurrence,' make the blood of
Americans boil, and well may they
wonder how long the Cleveland ad
ministration will stand by and per
mit them to continue.— Washington
Times.
Dr. I. N. Foote of Argentine, Kan
may be considered the most remark
able product of this remarkable state.
In brief, the doctor has musical in
sides. He hears “in his midst,” so
to sneak, soft, sweet sounds that form
regular musical notes. He is never
aware of having swallowed a music
box or anything of that kind either.
He used to be a sad dyspeptic, and
ever since he got better of that there
has been “a tinkling sound” in his
stomach. Ho cannot account for it,
and he cannot, very well dissect him
self during his lifetime to 'find out
the cause of tha phenomenon. He
has accordingly provided by will that
after hie death any medical institu
tion willing to do so shall take charge
of his remains and investigate the
cause of his musical stomach.
McKinley’s prosperity has struck
Indianapolis, we are informed that
a large factory employing many
hands told their men who were
“laid off” before election that if Mc-
Kinley was elected they should re
port for work at once. They report
ed and were put oa the force at 25
per cent redaction, worked a few
days and were put off again indefi
nitely. Another firm served its men
the same way on a ten per cent re.
duction. “Rah for McKinley.”—
Nonconformist.
The progressive inheritance tax,
established by theLberai Ministry in
England in 1894, has yielded an even
larger revenue than Sir William Har
court estimated. The Revenue Corn
tniesionere have just published an
analysis of the returns for the lari
fi <oal year. Theso show a total re
ouue of nearly 8'50,000,000, as ag’-inst
Isis than C3‘ ■ 000 from similar
sov.rc s under the old law. Tha only
disappointing feature of the new act
is the relatively email roturn from
real estate. Under the old law
I'rame‘d by the landed aristocracy real
estate was practically .exempt. When
Sir William Harcourt’s act of 1894
I u-> an end to this unjust discrimina
ion, the conservative landlords
pleaded for a concession in the form
of a grant from the National Treasury
to less n tho local taxes resting upon
their property. They have obtained
a grant of $10,000,000 a year, and
this turns out to be more than all the
taxes paid by real estate, city snd
country, under Sir William Harcourt’s
act. Only one-fifth of the property
in the estates admitted to probate
last year was realty; four-fifths was
personality. This disproportionate
amount of personality was probably
due to the vast aggregate of foreign
bonds and stocks held in Great
Britain. Despite this one disappoint
ment to the friends of the new act, it
w perhaps the most Bticosnsful pro
gressive tax ever levied. The Com
missioner’s returns show the amount
of property subject to the different
rates of duty, which vary from less
than one por cent on estates less than
£IOO to eight per cent on estates ex
ceeding £1,000,000. From this table
the tax psi 1 by each class is easily
reckoned. In a condensed form the
results are as follows:
Size of No. of Total Total
Estates Ebtaies. Value. Tax.
Under £1,000...... 34,795 £14,400,000 £ 14-6,000
£I.OO> to £l» .090,.. IMtiO i>],b.;o,ooo 1.5>4.0iK)
to X'5;,003 2,995 G\S9>,OiO 2.745,0110
£50,00 and over.... 612 82,210,000 5,13),000
52,862 £212,509,000 £9,825,000
In other words, the estates of less
than £I,OOO (or $5,000) contained
seven per cent of the property, yet
paid but two per cent of the tax;
while the estates above £59,000 (or
8250,000) contained forty per cent
of the property and paid fifty-four
per cent of the taxes. The new
measure has the approval of Mr.
Balfour and meat of the leading
Conservatives, as well as that of tha
entire body of Liberals. Inasmuch
aa the class of families having loss
than $5,000 constitute ninety-two per
cent of the people and pay the bulk
of the indirect taxes, tha conswence
of the nation anprovts of th . heavier
burdens n t --vrgo property
uwuoia oy xiatuburt act.
LAWMAKERS MEET.
Several Important Bills Were
Introduced Last Week.
The legislature has at last got
through with the election of judges,
solicitors and United States senator,
and have settled do wn to law-making.
Among the important bills in .ro’
duo-id is a new election law by Repre
sentative Tom Felder. While thi B
bill professes to be built on the
model of the Australian ballot law, it
places the entire election machinery
in the hands of the dominant party
and is designed to keep that party in
power. If the bill passes in its presnt
shape, it will add immensely to the
cost of holding elections.
Senotcr Turner has introduced a
bill to abolish I zrooms and prohibi ■
the manufacture and sale of intoxi
cating liquors in the State for bever
age purposes.
The bill is very similar tc the Bush
bill that failed to secure a majority
m tha last legislature.
Mr. Turner’s bill is bound to fo.i'i
the eyes of quite too many Democrats
were opened, during the recent cam
paign, to the beauties cf “local
option” to give it a ghost of a chance.
Senator Strother has a bill before
the Senate, requiring the State to
furnish school books for the children
of Georgia at cost. The book trust
will hardly allow the bill to become
a law.
Senator Carter is on the war path
against free passes. Ho is tha father
of a bill prohibiting railroads from
giving free passes or o-.her special
privileges to public officials. It is an
important bill and aimed at a great
evil, but there are too many politic
ians with said free passes in thsir
pockets to suffer the bill to become a
law.
Ucc'e Bob Hardeman has 3 bill
before the house to place a speck!
tax for school purposes.
The purpose ci the bill is to pro
vide better gohool hc.uie?, better
teachers and longer terms lor the
country echoois. Tee bill does not
apply to those counties which now
have special local laws.
The ."ent:e<'.?an from Chattahoo
chee, has mido himself i-o'.td with;-i
--colored brethren by infroduc ; ng a bi:
to protect the savory “pos-sut-u.
O wing to tha scarcity of “possum'
hunters” in the present assembly th
bill was turned down.
Travel £o Europe Increasing.
N -ver before, probably, have so
many Amsricsns gone to Europe at
durieg the last summer. The annual
hegira of Americans to Europe has;
in fact,become an eventof far-reseh
ing importance io Europe itsi-k'
maintains the New York Tribune.
Its tradesmen grow prosperous from
th# patronage or wealthy Amerioane.
Its health resorts find their beat cus
tomers in Americans who have
wealth, but not health. Its railwajs
are able to declare larger dividend;
because so many thousand Americans
travel on them as first-class passen
gers. Os course, if it wore not for
Amerioins many flourishing hotels
would have to close their doors and
a smalt army of guides and couriers
would have to go into some other
huriness, while last, but not least, the
somewhat unconventional ways of
a few Americans are an uafailing
toarce of amusemant to our European
cousins. Not only are there flourish
iag American colonies in the ‘larger
cities of Europe, but- they are found
in its most remote corners, so that
many of them return home knowing
much more of the Old World than
they do of their own country.
Nor is there any prospect that thia
preference of Americans for Europe
will die out. The Daily Messengar
of Paris estimates that during the last
summer Americans have left SIOO,-
000,000 in gold in Europe; and there
is every reason to believe that this
enormous expenditure will continue
to increase in the future.
Henry Ward Beecher once re.
ceivad a letter from a lad, asking him
to find “an easy place.” This was
his reply: “You cannot be an editor,
do not try the law; do not think of
the ministry; let alone all ships, shops
and merchandise; abhor politics; don’t
practice medicine; be not a farmer
nor a mechanic; neither baa soldier
nor a sailor; don’t work; don’t study;
don’t think. Neither of these are
easy. Ob, my son, you have come
into a hard world. I know of only
one easy place in it, and that is the
grave.—North Carolina Advocate.
Fort Smith, Aik., has ueaied to be
the principal hanging place in- the
United States. Darisg the past
twenty-five yaara nearlj' 100 men
have been executed on tho gallows
of the old military post ia that city,
while perhaps 1000 would not num
ber ihoaa sent to the penitentiary.
The criminal jurisprudence of this
famous court will be transferred to
the courts in the Indian Territory,
ARE YOU
ADI? VATT eubjeetto fainting; spells, diz-
ARI lull zines*, noises iu the b'jad,
*v v palpitation of the hem, heat
flashes, numbness of the
hands or feet, or anj other aympt. ms indicat
ing a diseased heart or paralysis of the biain?
IQP VAH afflicted with any chronic
AllE lull disease of the head, heart,
A\ V tfar lunffs< stO3L ac h t ]j veJ .
bowels?
aDD VATT constipated and dyspettio.
IUH with coated tongue, bad
breath, pi pies on your face
' and back, and a dull languid
feeling in every part of your body? '
mV/ITT the victim of ecme dL'aaea
1V U Which causes you sbasn®?
VAIT tvonbled with a had blood
4il G IU tl disease which every now a«»d
then breaks out on different
parts of your body?
mVfWT troubled with nervous de-
IvU telity, exhausting drai s,
pimples,baahfulncssavcrsion
' to society, stuDidwess. des
pondency. loss of energy, ambition, and self
contldenee. which deprive you of your man*j
hood and absolutely unlit you for study o?
business?
VAU l° siil g you memory and da
ft fl Er IUH yon toss around in your bed
and get up tiri d. despondent
and unrefreshed?
IF AH troubled with weak, aching
w M back and kidneys, frequent
painful urinations and pedi
ment ia urine, impoleney
and other unmistakable signs of nervous de
bility and permai ure decay?
A VmTT afflicted with anv disease of
lihli Ivd tbo kidneys or bladder, ruo
axv tun , t r . les> h < .i ni , ir ! l oidr. fis
tula, varicoce’e, liydr celo,
swelling or tenderness of glands?
AiW VAH »ffl i(; ted with diseased eyes.,
line IvU »•“■» as ,ilion °t tho
< r both < ye-, ulceration, ab
scises, tumors vt lid or globe, cancer of lid
or eyeball?
ADC VUI afflicted with ear troubles as
SKD IVU Ila-n,nation of tho
ulc< ration or catarrh, deaf
lies.- or paralysis, singing or
rearing noises, thickened drum or a puruieai
discharge from tbe ca r ?
ABU WAIT nervous and run down. wlli
11L Ivd thin blood, pac lip-.dragging
potus about the .oin-s Joss of
your natural cheerlulness,
and with me lancholy thought and inclina
tions to get up and run aw -y?
AD V AIT a suffering from persis-
■iL r tent headaches, painful men-
Hviiativm, intolerable itching
or any other distressing ail-
■ ents peculiar to your sex ?
If yon aie troubled with any of tho above
hVi.ipt-mns, tab * n or a idre'Si r. IJaili iway &
Co., the leading I'h i< i.-n«. Surgeons, Spec
ialists ni the United States,
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NASHVILLE,
CINCINNATI,
CHICAGO,
MEMPHIS AND
ST. LOUIS.
PULLMAN PALACE BUFIET SLEEPING CAC3|
JACKSONVILLE and ATLANIA
.. TO . .
NASHVILLE and ST. LOUIS,
THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE
Local Sleepers between Atlanta and Chat-’
taneoga.
Cheap Emigrant Rates to Arkansas and
Texas.
Excursion Tickets to California and Col-
orado Resorts.
fa _ Maps, folderr-. Sleeping Car Reservation and
any information about Rates, Schedules, etc
write _ apply to
C. B. WALKER, J. A. THOMAS,
Ticket Agent, licker Agent,
Union Depot, No. S Kimbnllkouse, )
ATLANTA, 6A. 1
J - H -o L A Tl^ r ?.’ ®- T- p - A, XW. HICKS, T. P. A.,
8 Kimball llease, 8 Kimball Heusa,
JOS. M BROWN, CHAS.£.HAKMaN,
frnlfic Mana J"^ OiT A, GA. < ’° o, ’’ uss -