Newspaper Page Text
' 11
i * Bin i
I It J
IrMHl THLl
.aii.ri PEoH Eg. r8L._ ■ V' -
fHE .
New* Cates and Additional Heaths at
Ocean Springs/Wtwarda and N#vt
,«iari5W«;s' I ll.
”
The announcement of eleven new
cases of yellow fever at Mobile, Ala ,
Sunday, foll owing so cl osebr on a sim
ilar number Saturday, and the fact
«••»**. w*
one victim, combined to bring the
panic which commenced in the -middle
of last week to its zenith
depopulated, Monday ,, . found , , the ,, cpy.practically closed, ,. and ,,
many stores
Jdpilesale retailer8 bwaAtm«»taY«l apprehensive of
™ are
to remember them. The out ook now
is gloomy in the extreme nothecause
of the present fever aspect Jmt because
of he entire suspension of Comme.cv,
and partial stoppage of business
xuvery one who can atiorcl it, with
‘
.. - , ,,
U ^) 6 01 10 ^ 5 1 le ' a p- " '
People in , the city now do not fear
the fever, but ibey tremble tor it# 600
seiptfhe^s, * *
<y »: Major left t!i» Town.
Even the government bead has refn
gaed, aud if a meeting of tbe general
council were to be called no quorum
would be found tp/espond.
’There is one courageous band, of
which Judge - I’nee Williams is the
leader, city in Tier vyhieii^emains hour of trial. with the They stricken have
fought epidemics before.
Some of them went into tlie front
ranks against the sontnern scourge in
1853 and are lifekiy headed now,
and the constancy and heroism which
they have former ly e xhibited is still to
bf .witaefsed These spdi tan# are en
couragingkby all means in their power,
those who* consider themselves unfort
‘unate in not haying the means to de
sert their homes
There Were two deaths from yellpw
feypr at J^dwamls, Mi^s., ; tBntur4«y ju|toiit
inbrniiSg, one qf them 1 icing,
siUe of town.
A total of thirty-nine cases are pro
nonneed yellow fever by the doctors,
The rapid spread of tho disease is re
markable, and it is now well dig tribuL
ed through the town. Four new enses
were reported Sunday. Siw ;
The fever situation at Of leans
underwent little change Sunday.,J The
record liOok in the board Of health
office showed a total of six new cases
and one death. m a » C,
A special from Cairo, Ill., states
that Dr. Giiiteras, tbe yellow fever
expert. arrived there from Mobile
at noon Sunday, and announced two
suspmious cases at the marine kospi
al to lie yellow fever p f a mild form,
but oWnigtk the proffiTW measure taken
there is no danger of. the pest spread
P “ tU ° r0Ughly
guarded
ROAD CONGRESS ADJOtTtNS. *
Tlie Parliament Will Meet In Omaha
Next Year.
At the national . , road^ , parliament .. in .
session, at Knoxville Friday, convict
labor in building roads and govern
meut aid were discussed. Lxperuueu
tal road bedding u as advocated. Reso
lutions recommending state aid an<
aid l>y tbe general govenment and a
restricted i^^eonvict labor jrere
adopted. re-elected
* General Roy Stone was
president; E. Rosewater, Omaha, vice
president, and the following state
presidents:
Alabama—W. Geiwciat-Gfor*#’*'. J. Kernocban.
Harrison.
Kirftueky -M. JL,Cramp.
Michigan —Sk Campbell. . >
Minnesota—William M. Hayes.
Indiana—Governor James A. Mount,
Nebraska—G. U. Turner.
."Hduth "Carolina—W.'C. Cain. ’
Virginia—B. Wisconsin—Thomas Chambers.^ B. Blaekstoek.
Tennessee—Governor B. L. Taylor.
The next meeting will be in Omaha,
subject to Hre call of the executive
committee.
i •
“BAD POLICY,” SAYS BACON,
Is the Appointment of Colored Men to
Office in the South.
Senator Bacon, of Georgia, has a
signed interrfeV in the New York
' Herald, in which he says in part:
“The appointment of colored men
to office in the south will certainly
lead to rage antagonisms and estrange¬
ments which would otherwise not ex¬
ist. Such appointments are of small
.benefit to the few negtoes thus ap¬
pointed) ’and are of very great'fnjiify in the ill
to the masses of the negroes
feeling engendered between them and
the whites, upon whose friendship
and good will they are wholly depend
ent.”
Wayne Z Coa«ty J News
- J " '• ' . '
■
•i ilSUP. GEORGIA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER ‘24, 1 SOT.
gBS PROGRESS.
New Industries FstaMished in the South
Batlatth; fust Week.
Trade conditions, aocording_ to re
received the past week, continue
Correspondents located
at the important industrial centers of
the south report a steady increase in
all dines of trade-showing
activity .than for several years
patfe - s.-s*—“~
‘A practical evidence of improved
conditions is the increase in the
her or inquiries for machinery received
by the Tradesman during the week.
Among the most Hlie important
tribs reportM are Hollowing - A
300-ton copper furnace at Ducktown,
Tenn.; the National Development Co;,
capital $50,000, Norfolk, Va.; the Pearl
F“dler Mills, capital $100,000, Handle
tSX^S.
Ky.; the Ennis Light and Water Co.,
capacity $50,000, Ennis, Texas; an
iron foumlr v at Jessup, Ga., and the
.
Newlin Steam Generating and Smoke
Cfjnmmh: Manufacturing Co., capi
tal Si> 000,000, Augusta, Ga. The Oak
Hili MiningUo: B ’. ■ capital $50,000, has
beeu chart ered at Parkersburg, W.
c eJnuloid ;ta , $10 (HM) , Harriman, Tenn.;
a plant to cost $25,000 at
^ L au,bort’s Point, Va.; the Ennis Oil
Manufacturing " Co., ’ capital jf $50,
() ^.,7, at EuuiS) Te as; tl le ew South
Oil Co., capital .. . 4f SoO,000, , n Helena, Ark., A „.
Woodworking plants will be establish
ed at DecatU r, Ala.; Pensacola,' Fla.;
AlmliieaUr-fiy (Chattanooga, ■ and Athens, Ten a,-*
Tradesman Tenn.)
SILVER CAUSES EXCITEMENT.
The B<u»M auv««,c of Itypc^o in India
Causes Heavy Deipaml.
The London Standard publishes a
financial telegram received Tuesday
from Bombay which says tliat.tlie sil
V er market there is-very much excited
yud iti strong demand, consequent on
t) ie up-country bazaar’s anticipating
•that’the “Bank of England will bu a
probable buyer at an early date, while
it i s also believed that a further im
port duty is imminent'and that possi
b ly the Indian mints will be reopened,
The telegram further 'hays’that the
pr j C c has risen in Bombay 7.14 rupees
per 100 tolos within a few days.
The Commenting,rnpon this intelligence,
Btandgrd says; “All ;thi# serves
to iiglinftbe.what incaloujalile mischief
comes by exhibits of humor in British
affairs, when the directors of clearing
house* could be relied upon to draw
up a strong and emphatic protest to
the government asking that steps be
taken to end these amateur efforts to
desfroy confidence in the wfoifch stability is slen- of
qxu* monetary system,
derly enough supported by gold, as it
jg."
X TARIFF SECTION VOID.
jm„ Discriminating Duty on Good* Im
ported rirougn Canada,
Washington dispatch says: Attor
jJ _o,neral McKenna has announced
iukm iu the matter of section^*
t be new tariff law. He.holds intf
go „d» coming directly, co^
the United States from foreign
tries through Canadian ports are dot
subject to the discriminating duty 'of
ten per cent, and also holds that- for¬
eign . goods shipped from countries
other than British possessions* “in
]} rd j s h vessels are not subject to such
a discriminating duty. .. •*'
.
Two questions were asked the .attor
npV .g pn p Tal> the first of wtrtvh -fffts
e g ec j, whether the discriminating duty
r provided for in section
<&ollld bg Assessed against yh}c%.l»ad an in
voite tea - from China,
arrived from Vancouver in British
yegi . elg anJ then shipped ‘ thriohgh
Cauada to Cb i cag0 . The second ques
tion wft „ whe ther the discriminating
duty should be assessed against a
cargo of manganese ore from Chile,
wfeich recently arrived in British ship
Bjoth these question^
the attorney-general answers in the
negative.
-
ACQUITTAL FOR DR. HUNTER.
Jnry Decides For Him In All the Bribery
Ca<ie*. ‘ m
At Frankfort, Kv., Tuesday th®
jury in the Hunter et al. bribery, cjse
returned a verdict of not' guilty in all
the bribery cases. »
BIG FIRE IN COLUMBUS,
Large Factory and the Southern * Freight
the laming of the^Rankin
block twenty years ago occurred Mon
dav night when the lumber yard, Butts' figslj,
blind and door factory of k
Cooper, together with the Southern
railway freight*depot, went up in
spaokg. *, *. ■
In addition to the factory a«nd -
depot two Louisville and . Nashville
freight cars loaded A ith cotton were
consumed. The loss will . aggregate
$60,000, it is estimated. ’ ' '
.
K I *
RATCHFORD SAYS AN AMICABLE
* SITUATION PREVAILS.
t/
SATISFIED WITH THE RESUIT.
Things Will Be Serene From the Present
Until the BeKinning; of /.
Next Year.
■>
M. D. Rachford, president of ..the
United Mine Workers of Am&Hca,
gave out the following authorized
statement to the Associated Press Tues¬
day: about 7o aA 000 a •„
Today , will ... , ,
see
ers resume work m the
coa fields of the central states
stnke geuoraUy ends today.
the middle of the twelfth week of
duration. Lt. was brought a t •
at our convention held at Columbns
Ohio, on the i th o ie 1 0
present month the ten days time be
mg given to allow - miners and opeia
tors to come together in Illinois and
West Virginia to meet the price
*-65 cents a, ton in Pittsburg, 56 bents
in Ohio and Indian* and the same to
continue until the. end of Deeembei 1
The mining situation is not,likely to
be disturbed again until .the
°{y«>jr, When they hope to be
able to settle the quesHon, amicably
and without the necessity of a stuke.
am well satisfied with the «««*
•griat/st^hJory me gained by
union r in years. WhUe'th^^have
necessaries, without Winch .the
^"tTSSlSTSr trade, and
for - any particular have helped we to
our friends who us
feel that, it is their victory as well as
ours. I feel very “grateful for the as¬
sistance given us by tlie^ American
Federation of Labor, an'd^*!^ all times thfe
kindly disposition shown at
by Mr. Gomplts and the members of
his*exeontive committee.”
•Mr.'Hatch ford w - as asked as to t he
situation in West- Virginia and Hli
,noi«. H(re»id:-' '
“The greatest difficulty in the w ay
of an advance in the Illinois district
is the fact that contracts were taken
last spring, basqd upon a low mining
rate, as they w ere in Pittsburg and
elsewhere. But' this'Is a nibtter that
we caiihot be rdspousible for; it is a
matter of bnsineKs to the operator liim
self. No 'man has a* right to sell a
man’s labor one year in advance with¬
out consulting the laborer,
“While we have always deferred to
the claims of men along those lines, the
time has come when no further consid¬
eration can fee given them, because
the wages pajfl to the miner is below
the living pointand the preservation
of life’takcs precedence over business
affairs. a ft m. ft.
.. My advices from West Virginia are
to,the effect that our miner# „who are
standing firm, are well pleased with
tlie agreement reached a»id evince a
kh# determination end. Their to fight._iheir is battle fo bring to
purpose tbe
the miners and operators of state
together in adjoint convention, that a
nuifornnini aiiig^irice may he fixed aud
paid for tlie same veil; of coal, and a
fair relfftile*' pride for other veins with¬
in the state! In short, fix a mining
rate that-will give to West Virginia
fair competing opportunities . mid
nothing more-. willgive
“Fixing a mining rate-that
fair opportunities is the object of
mrtiers’ organ izations every where.
We are working to.liring operators of
the several statds tbgether with this end
in view.. Though our efforts have been
futile, to will continue .to advocate
Jhat policy, believing there is such a
way to keep down gtrikes and disputes
which are of advantage to neither side
and that is for,tine -miners aud opera¬
tors interested from the various stateR
to meet, annually, mutually fix prices
for each district that are fair and just
anjl each party.to the agreement to ob¬
serve it faithfully until a subsequent
agreement tales its pfkce. During the
eight years'th iu 'system was in *V Ague,
strikes and' 'disturbances of a general
character were unknown, and the
causes which gave rise-,to them can
now ha removed' so that tfee operators
interested will see’ their interests in
this ligur
PASSENGERS DROWNED LIKE RATS
staler ^ka, vith a cr$$ of teii and
carrying fifteen Aunt rum passengers,
was entering the pbrt atx inme, on
the;river;Wumara, - Tuesday evening
wliite a storm - , was blowing hard, she"
collided whieff Vith the-English steamer
Ty/Ta, was leaving.
• Thfe bows of the' Ika were stove in
and.ejke sank in twenty minutes.
- Boats’wfto hfritSly put off and saved
the captain,and seven others, but most
of the pa'sadBgers were drowned.
r~.~ >
PRESIDENT WILE ACT.
|J • —---r
Ji’ht) Shooting of Ijlosttnsri lie's Postmaster
)}’IH Kenult In rioiecutlon*
p, colored The attempted assassination of Hogansville, of the
postmaster
Ga., has attracted the attention of the
hhojq, country.
Tra shooting h»s aroused the gov
hr anient authorities, and President
'M cHinlejr himself is making a personal
fort to have the wonld-he assassins
of Disi thi pamishedft Plrney
Angier announces
that bnj will prosecute ex-Postmater
Hardaway to the fullest extent of the
law for violating that* the postal Hogansville la ws.
It develops the
people had been told by the govern¬
ment tfi’eir authorities that O
> ’pbstpfiice if they did S3 raise
the boycott against Loftin. federal
The general opinion of the
authoritiee is, that the shooting of
^ ilamediftte reBU , t of the
HogansVillo ^ post offiee inspector to
some days ago. The in,
f tor went to Hogansville to inves
t g ^ e fte reported boycott. He found
QU , rr j. T i n g there that the citizens had
^ ^ bo ttod Loftin, but were
running* poetoflice of their own, with
Hardaway as their
postmaster. of
eeting
Hogans
n of the
town responded and met the inspector,
who told them that they were violating
the law by operating a postoffice in
ibpposition to tne regular legal office.
He ^ told them that they must
th( , iv h6fcott or lose the post
^ a H, 1 ,r f qi lf ,r ^ pftld to * the iuBp . c -
“tor’s watning and his efforts to adjust
^ t Jf y * wer f TtHl run““ug the^ppo
A ,lay,aterL ° ,tin
Attorn Angier has re
chived positive instructions from
Washington to prosecute the case,
ATKINSON CRITICIZES M’KINLEY.
fntiinntes That President In Acc««*ory
to HojfanBvIlle Grime.
Governor Atkinson, of Georgia, tel¬
egraphed tbe New York Herald, in
response to a request for bis views on
tbe Loftin shooting, that President
,M‘‘Finley is morally an accessary to
to crime of the man who shot the Ho¬
gansville The postmaster. defend the
governor does not
crime of the would-be assassin, but
ho blames the president for the condi¬
tion which brought it on.
The telegram was in response to a
request from The Herald for the gov¬
ernor’s views, and was substantially as
follows:
“The court will convene in that county
in November and the grand jury wili inves¬
tigate the matter, and if there is evidence to
convict anyone there will bo no trouble in
punishing the guilty party. The officers
are capable men and will do their duty.
The shooting of the negro Is universally
condemned by the people.
“The same spirit of candor in which I
have written compels me to say that our
people are uniformly of the opinion that the
■‘man who appointed the postmaster at
Hogansville over tlie violent protest of
those citizens who furnish ninety-nine one
hundredths of the business of the offloe,
who own almost the entire property of the
community and who represent the forces
which made and constitute the civilisation
of the community, knowing at the tlme'that
the, appointment would be taken as a delib¬
erate effort on his part to degrade and
humiliate them, was himself, from a moral
standpoint, an accessory to this lamentable
crime.
“Even these men, who took this view, do
not blame tbe republican party for giving
positions to the negroes^ who have been
faithful to them, but it'would ; have been
better for the negroes and plcnshiiter for
the white people of tho south if they had
given tijem positions where they;were not
brought so directly in contact with-the peo¬
ple to. whom they are offensive as officers.
“You ask me what is going to be the ef¬
fect of this. I reply that the effect will be
the same it would be in Ohio if the same con¬
ditions prevailed: Leaving out the ques¬
tions arising from prejudice, what would be
tbe result in Ohio if tbe president, in mak¬
ing appointments, ignored f the- ‘views of
property holders and all the best - elements
of the community, and over their violent
protest appointed to office a man whom he
knew to bo offensive to,them?”
The governor concluded with the
statement thati the law would be en¬
forced in Georgia without fear or fa¬
vor.
CONSUL LEE IN WASHINGTON.
H« Will Confer With the President ..Ob
C uban Affairg.
General Lee, United States'consul
general at Havana, arrived in Wash¬
ington Saturday night.
He proceeded immediately to the
Shoreham, and declining to register,,
retired at once. General Lee was
thoroughly exhausted by the dAY's
travel and refused tp receive any Cill¬
ers. i 1 I I 1 I 1 *•
It is his intention to stop in Wash¬
ington for several day*, and he will
probably have an opjjprtunity in the
meantime to eqpfer Aseiitgat witjh Hie president
as well as with' 4is kome Secretasy
Day before he goes to in Vir
g>u ia V 2 i_
FANIC FOLLOWS DISCOVERY OF
FIRE IN BELLE ELLEN SHAFT.
FIVE MEN KNOWN TO BE DEM
There Were One Hundred Miners nt Work
In the Slope When the Catas
troplie Occurred.
Shortly after the men went to work
in mine No. 2, of the Bessemer Land
and Improvement company’s coal
mines at Belle Ellen, near Blocton,
Bibb county, Ala., Monday morning,
fire was discovered far down in the
main slope.
About one hundred men are em¬
ployed in the mine and an alarm was
at once given. A panic followed
among the workers and in the little
town of Belle Ellen.
Hundreds of men, women and chil¬
dren gathered at the main entrance of
the smoking mine, while rescue par¬
ties were at once formed to relieve the
miners.
More than fifty were got out, from
the various entrances without harm.
Others were overcome by smoke and
fell by the wayside. These tho brave
rescuers found and dragged out, while
those at the entrance restored life to
'their unconscious friends.
A scene of wildest excitement pre¬
vailed at the mine's mouth. Women
and children were screaming and
shouting for help, and a fire brigade
was at work endeavoring to overcome
the flames.
Five men who were working about
the slope where the fire originated,
could not be reached, and it is regard¬
ed as certain that they are dead. The
missing were: . Hubbard
Herman Framer, white;
Foley, white; Henry Reeves,' colored;
Frank James, colored; William Fair¬
fax, colored, It is possible that two
or three others also may be in the
mines.
The fire brigade battled with the
flijmes all day in a vain attempt to
reach the entombed men, but at night¬
fall the fire was ejtill burning fiercely
and efforts were abandoned. A later
telegram from Belle Ellen says the fire
is thought to have originated from ignited an
overheated steam pipe, which
gas in the mine. A careful check is
being mode of the list of miners in the
mine where the fire broke out to ascer
tain if possible if the death list will
exceed five. So far it is not positive;
ly known that any others are missing.
NO REFUGEES WANTED.
Governor Bussell, of North Carolina Acts
Cautiously.
Surgeon General John Hey Williams
of the North Carolina state hoard of
health, telegraphed Governor Russell
from Asheville Monday as follows:
“If it meets with your approbation, I
should be pleased to telegraph Marino Bur¬
geon General Wyman offering the mountain
plateau of western North Carolina as a
refuge for refugees from the yellow fever
stricken districts,”
Tlie governor refers the matter to
the state hoard of health. He says he
does not like to net regarding it, as,
perhaps, a number of the refugees
might become destitute and have to be
supported and finally sent home by
the state.
BOUNCED NEGRO BOSSES.
Charleston Cotton Mills Experience More
Trouble With Employees.
The managers of the Charleston, S.
C., cotton mills, where negro and,
white labor is employed, undertook to
put in half a dozen negro bosses over
the white operatives Monday and the
latter hands went out.
They left the mill, making threats.
A squad of policemen was detailed to
prevent trouble, but things became so
squally that the colored bosses were
promptly taken out.
STEEL COMPANY RESUMES.
Works at Beilaire, Ohio, Give* Employ¬
ment to Many Idle Men.
After a two months shut-down and -
expending half a million furWcc, Alars for
the erection of a blast steel
plant and plate mill, the Bellaire Steel
company at Bellaire, Ohio, started the
machinery of the plant again Monday
morning, giving employment to 500
men.
MORE CHILDREN BURN.
N«ero Family Lock Them In a House
Attend Church.
KiiSrH children, four of their
their house six
own and two visitors from a neigh
bor’s.
The youngest was eighteen months
of age and the oldest seven years. The
parents went to church.
An hour later neighbors heard fright
ful screams coming from Smith’s house,
the interior of which was in flames.
Negroes made heroie efforts to save
the children, hut it was impossible to
reach them and they were cremated.
NO. 11.
WfMAN- GETS DAILY DEPORTS.
.Surgeon General Keeps Well Posted On
Yehow Yevfer Situation.
Surgeon General Wyman at Wash¬
ington lias receive}! the fallowing from.
Dr. Lindsley, executive officer of the
Tennessee state hoard of health - .
“Our board ..lias State inspectors, at the
following points: Memphis, Grand Junc¬
tion, Rayrner, state line, Chattanooga,
Cleveland and Ducktown. Have ordered
all to co-operate fully with your service.
Please instruct at once your men accord¬
ingly.”
Orders were immediately given the
marine hospital forces to co-operate as
requested. received at
Information ,has been
the marine hospital from Dr. John
Giiiteras that the two cases of isolated yellow
fever at-Cairo, Ill., have been
and every precaution possible taken
to prevent spread. He says that the
cases are Very mild and have caused
little alarm in Cairo.
LONGSHOREMEN ARE OUT.
Strike at Brunswick Assumes a General
ami Serious Phase.
The strike is now general among the
longshoremen and alWdock laborers at
Brunswick, Ga. higher
The strikers are asking for
wages, claiming that some shippers on
the Mallory line and Brunswick Ter¬
minal company have recently reduced
wages. Employes of the Mallory ask
for 20 cents per hour. The cotton
laborers wish $5 per day. The strik¬
ers are circulating petitions among the
business men protesting against
imjiortgtion of foreign labor.
Seven dr eight cases of violence,
committed by strikers, have been re¬
ported. Should foreign laborers be
brought from the north trouble is an¬
ticipated and the city authorities are
making preparations to protect per¬
sons and property.
LATTIMER STRIKERS HOLD BACK.
Hungarians intimidate Miner# Who At¬
tempt to Work.
The strike situation at Hazleton,
Pa., again assumed an uncertain phase
Monday morning. An attempt to
resume work was made at Pardee and
Lattimer mines) but only 300' out of
1,300 miners returned to work. These
were mainly Italians, with a few En¬
glish-speaking Sunday men. night the Hunga¬
During
rians paraded through the settlement,
beating tin cans.and kettles and rais¬
ing a big racket. This was done to
notify those of their race that they
must not go hack to work. Tbe warn¬
ing was observed and Monday led morn¬
ing a band of Hungarians, by
women, were massing and threatening
to march- on the mines later in the
day. Tbe Thirteenth watch for regiment further trouble. is keep¬
ing a close
PERPETUAL INJUNCTION
Against Eugene Debg and Others Granted
By Judge Jackson.
The featu re of interest in the open
ing session of the September term ot
the United States court for the dis¬
trict of West Virginia, at Wheeling
Monday, was the application of ex
Governor A.. B. Fleming, of Fairmont,
to make the injunction against Eugene
V. Debs and others, perpetual.
The governor was acting for his cli¬
ent, the Monongahela Goal Co., and as
there was no Appearance for any.of the
defendants, the injunction was made
perpetual. his
In tlie course of remarks in mak
ing this decision, Judge Jackson said
that if a like case were presented to
him now he would would make the
same kind of order he had made at
Parkersburg, where the temporary in¬
junction was made recently.
NEW ORLEANS’ FEVER LIST.
Monday Broke tlie Record In Number of
Cases Reported.
The largest number of cases report¬
ed on any day since yellow fever first
-made its appearance in New Orleans,
some twb weeks ago,, was recorded oh
the books of the hoard of health Mon¬
day evening at 6 o’clock, although at
that hour not a single case had proved
fatal during the day.
There were eighteen cases in all,
including nine by Dr. Joseph Holt, all
of the latter haring been duly flagged
and put under quarantine regulations,
The most sensational incident of the
^7 Joseph Holt «»? announcement to the board of from health Dr
that he had discovered nine cases
among his practice.
>..
DIAZ’S ASSAILANT LYNCHED.
After th* Deed Wa» Hone Tweniy-ef the
Lynchers Were Arretted.
a,‘ ™ fssssas: ^ched Friday night by a mob.
About twenty of the lynchers were ar¬
rested. The mob apparently had no
organization,, but it was directed in
some mysteribus way.
They broke'into the jail by forcing
the doors with huge timbers handled
by a hundred men. They overpower¬
ed the guards and surrounded them,
while a detail of men ran down the
corridor and dragged out the trem¬
bling Arroyo. . #