Hazlehurst news. (Hazlehurst, Jeff Davis County, Ga.) 190?-19??, May 13, 1909, Image 2
Mr. and Mrs. Boyle Convicted of Abducting Willie Whitla. She Declares That Life in Penitentiary Wil! Not Be Indured---Mysterious Third Party Sought. Mércer, Pa.~—Manifesting an indif forence to her fate, Mrs, James H. Boyle sat immovable as the jury re-. turned a verdiet of guilty on the sec ond count of the indictment against her, When the verdict was read, Mrs. Boyle calmly drew on her gloves, arose from their chair and went with the sheriff back to her cell. Mr. Mil ler, Mrs. Boyle’s attorney, has an pounced that he will make a motion for a new trial. The penalty in Mrs. Boyle's case is, as a maximum, 25 years, District Attorney Lininger has ar ranged to go to Sharon to investigate the identity of a third party alleged to have been implicated in the ab duction. No one could be found who was in a position to discuss the mat ter officially. It ifi said to be claimed by Boyle that & prominent man of Sharon, of good family, was the insti gator of the abduction plot, that he had been paving Boyle money and when the payments failed the man suggested the abduction to Boyle, and it was arranged that he and Boyle should divide the ransom. “Life in the penitentiary would kill me in a week or ten days and rather than submit to this, 1 would commit suicide,” said Mrs. By, 'R W husband and I are sent to the peni tentiary. we will not go alone. Haif the truth has not been told in this case. Omne other man, who planned the whole affair, has not been ar rested.” “Jimmy has something to say and ought not to be gagged. 1 will not say anything, but Jimmy will, and 1 will aid him. “Seriously, I want to tell you there is going to be a double suicide. 1 will not spend much time in the pen. 1 have made all -arrangements. Jim mie wilil do the same. “Do you think I am going to the penitentiary for many years? No, sir; when my sentence would expire I would be an old women. [ would have no friends and no money. Who wants anything to do with an old woman? 1 would rather die young. “This is my twenty-third birthday, and am I not in-a very poor position to celebrate the event? I am inno cent of crime, however, and maybe God, in' His goodness, will yet allow me’ to spend many anniversaries. But yet there is the shadow of the peni tentiary and the remedy—suicide. Do you see that writing pad over there? In that I will scon write my will and last message.” : Regarding the kidnaping, she says: 1 wish the penalty for kidnaping were death. Innocent as I am, I would -plead guilty if T were sure of being put to death.” A mob of more than 100 women set upon Mrs. Boyle, as she was leav ing the court house on her way to the jail, and only the prompt action of Sheriff Chess, his three deputies and counzel for Mrs. Boyle prevented what seemed to be an effort to harm the prisoner. Cries of “tar and feather her,” “get a rope” and such other remarks were screamed by the women in the crowd, Mrs. Boyle apeared calm through out the disturbance and said: “My! 1 ought to feel flattered Dby this reception.” The cheriff and counsel for the ac cused woman finally succeeded in get ting her to a place of safety. GOVERNMENT WINS CASE. Bucket Shop Promoters Used U. S. Mails to Defraud. Cincinnati, Onio.—The jury in the ease of Louis W. Foster and five others, who were charged with using the mails to defraud in the running of a so-called “bucket shop,” return ed a verdict of guilty in the United States district court here. The defendants were found guilty on the charge of using the United States mails to further a scheme to defraud. The penalty is a fine of from SI,OOO to $5,000 eighteen months in the penitentiary, or both. The verdict is a clean victory for the government, which contended that the defendants did not even play the bucket shop game honestly, but by slow wires and fast wires to Chi cago and New York, took advantage of the market quotations and closed out trades with their customers to the pest advantage to the defendants. The government contended that actual stock was not dealt in, but that the deals were nothing more nor less than zambling on future prices of stocks, ~ WANT MONEY FOR VETERANS. Mississippi Camps Desire $15,000,000 Tax Used That Way. “Meridian, Miss.—Walthall Camp 10) C©. V. adopted resolutions requesting United States senators and represen tatives in congress from the south e¢rn states to make every' effort to have the $15,000,000 or more, of the civil war cotton tax, which was de ered unconstitutional by the Unit ed States supreme court, appropriated for the bemnefit of the former confed erate soldiers. ~ This matter will also be brought .b&tore the encampment of the United onfederate Veterans, which meets in Mppmpms in June, and a general PR : i - ”’." Ak K 8 WHOLESALE EXECUTIONS. 25,000 Armenians Have Been Murdered By the Turks. Tarsus, Asiatic Turkey, Via Con stantinople.—Authentic detalls of the atrocities committed by the fanatical Mohammedans in the villages and farms in this district are now com ing into Tarsus with sickening abun dance, The worst particulars of these narratives cannot be mentioned, but they set forth without doubt that at leaslt ten thousand lost their lives In his province, and some estimates even place the total casualties at 25,000, Villages like Osmanieh, Bazsche, Ha madieh, Kara, Kristian, Keoy and Kez vlook were actually wiped out, Each of these places had populations of from 500 to 600 people. In one town of 4,000 people, there are fewer than 100 left, nearly all women and chil dren., It was the same thing with the hundreds of farms that dot this wide and fertile play. The slaughter was unsparing, even Greeks and Sy rians were struck down with the Ar menians. Entire families were burn ed to death in their homes. Hundreds of girls and women were maltreated and carried off to the harems, Sixty men who were brought down into this district from Hadjin are now l?e,ld as slaves, Young Turks around Tarsus are trading Armenian girls for horses and modern repeating rifles. The entire ten days seem to have be2n an in sensate orgie of lust and violen®e in the name of race and religion. In the massacres of fourteen years Aago there was no such desire to kill wom en and children as has been evidenc ed in the last days. Now, however, there have been numerous instances of the murdering of women and chil dren with deliberation, and there are other instances where women were brought out one by one and shot down, the bystanders clapping their hands at each frash execution. The local authorities are giving to day 4 cents a day for each refugee in Tarsus. There are about 4,000 ref ugees, and this sum does not suffice. The government allotment i 3 being supplemented by the funds of the American mission. The local officials say they are soon going to discon tinue their contributidon, ard if this is done there will be a tamine. The vard of the American mission house looks like a prison pen. The men wander around all night on the floors of the school rooms. Very few of them have beds. In the day time the men sleep, usually curling up in the sunshine outside, SOUTHERN STEEL WILL REORGANIZE. Petition to Prevent Same is Denied by New York Supreme Court. New York City. — The Southern Steel Company is gloating over the denial by the supreme court of the petition of Louis Mardeau, who applied for an injunction restraining the re organization committee of that com mittee from proceeding with its plans for the reorginaztion. The company was unable to meet its liabilities during the recent panic, and in order that its assets might not be lost, it has arranged to form a new company to be known as the Southern Iron and Steel Company, which was to take over the plant and other assets of the old company and form the new corporation, with a capital stock_of $29,000,000. PLANS FOR THE A, B. & A New Road May Be Put Soon on a Firmer Financial Basis, Boston, Mass.—The appointment of a reorganization committee compos ed of Boston and New York financiers marks the preliminary step to place the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railroad, now in the hands of receiv ers, on a firmer basis financially. The members of the committee are allied closely with interests identified with the company’s securities, The exact course which the campaign of reor ganization will take has not yet been announced, but it 1s believed that it includes a scaling down in the bond ed debt. So far as possible, it is be lieved that the first mortgage under lying bonds of the subsidiary compa nies will be undisturbed. NEWSY PARAGRAPHS. According to the figures of the New York customs officials, the lux uries imported into this country dur ing April indicate a return ,of pros perity. During the month, diamonds, pearls and other precious stones ag gregating an appraised value of 82, 418,242.14 were imported into this country through this port. This is six times the quantity imported during the same month last year, and is more by nearly half a million than the val ue of the precious stones imported during April of 1907. In the same month one hundred and seventy au tomobiles of the appraised value of $315,662.57 were imported, while in April, 1908, there were only seventy one automobiles, It is stated an inventory made at the Yildiz Kiosk shows that Abdul Hamid holds at least $2,250,000 and great quantities of costly jewelry. One rosary is worth $375,000. ‘'He also had $5,000,000 deposited in for eign banks. ‘ A large crowd of half-clad men and women. watched a strange fight in Los Angeles, Cal, when Joseph Gay ner, son of Dr. J. J. Gayner, knocked out a burglar while the doctor acted as referee. D ayner was awaken ed by the bur sed and captur ed him, thre the sidewaix and sat on hi son, aroused from his sl - Whiteca home Suffered 14 Years from Piles— Tetterine Cures the Case, Bellaire, Mich,, Nowv, 19, 1908, Mp. J. T, Shugtflno. savannah, Ga. Dear Sir:—About sixteen years ago I had a case of itehing ptles, Like many others I tried first one thlng and then another until I had tried all the remedies I had heard of. Some of them eased for A few days, then they got worse, They seemed to bother me more at night than any other time--I could not lay in. bed for five vears only on my back, and for weeks I never lay down at all, Tho‘\; got g 0 bad till at times they caused my blood to rush to my head and render me un consclous. I moved up in northern Mich jgan three vears ago and the same old case followed me, Last February I went into the Eeonomieal Drug Store, on State street, in Chicago, and asked the clerk to give me the best thing he had for my trouble, He mold me a box of Tetterine, but it smartad so when I put It on till I left it off and got a milder salve. I came on back to my home and finally run out of all the other salves but Tetterine, so I startod using it again, but more lightly: at first I noticed it seemed to do me good, and T did not use but half the box before I was entirely cured, That has been five months now, and there is still no signs of its reappearing. It seems so good to me that, after fourtecen years suffering, T have at last found a cure. Tetterine aid it, It's the best thing in the world., Grady G. Wilson, R. F. D, No. 2, Rellaire, Mich, Tettérine cures Kezema, Tetter, Ring Worm, Ground Itch, Ttehing Piles, In fant's Sore Head, Pimples, Boils, Rough Scaly Patches on the Face, Old Itehing Sores, Dandruff. Cankered Scalp, Bun fons, Corns, Chilblains and every form of Skin Disease. Tetterine 50¢; Tetterine Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by mail from the manufacturer, The Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga. JUST LOOK AT THIS! . $3.00 For Round Trip SO.OO Atlanta to Jacksonville, Fla., and Return via Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantic RAILROAD. The Line With the Electric-Lighted Vestibuled Trains. Tickets will be sold for trains leaving Atlanta at 8:00 a, m. and 8:30 p. m., Tues day, May 18th, good to return flve days from date of sale. Go and enjoy yourself in the metropolis of the Paninsula State. Full information cheerfully furnished at eity ticket office, 70 Peachtree St. Phones, Bell Main 11, Atlanta 223, W. H. LEAHY General Pass'r Agent. CHAS. PATTON, Traveling Pass'r Agt. W. A. STORES, City Passenger Agent. LONG DELAYED PROPOSAL. French Story of Note in Bouauet That Was for Years Unanswered. One of the longest delayed proposals on record is related in a French story of a shy young subalterm who was ordered away to the wars. Not dar ing to speak, he sent a rosegay of yellow roses to the girl he loved, with a little note inside begging her, if she returned his love, to wear one of the flowers in her breast that night at the ball. She appeared without it, and he went away broken hearted. Years afterward, when he was 2 ljame old General, he again met his old love, now a white haired widow. One day his old sweetheart gently ask ed him why he had never married. “Madam,” he answered somewhat sternly, “you cught to know best. If you had not refused to answer that note in the becuquet of yel]ow roses ! might have been a happier man.” “T he note in the bouquet?” she repeated, growing pale. ' She opened an old cabinet and took out from a drawer a shrivelled bou quet of what had been yellow roses, among ‘whose leafless stalks lurked a scrap of paper yellow with age. “See! I never had your note,” she said, hold ing the bouquet up. “If I had I would not have answered it as you fancied.” “Then answer it now,” said the gal lant old soldier. And the long delay ed proposal was accepted at lagt.— London Telegraph. ; NOT DRUGS Food Did It. After using laxative and cathartie medicines from childhood a case of chronic and apparently incurable con stipation yielded to the scientific food, Grape-Nuts, in a few days. “From early childhood I suffered with such terrible constipation that | had to use laxatives continuously, go ing from one drug to another and suf fering more or less all the time. “A prominent physician whom I consulted told me the muscles of the digestive organs were partially par alyzed and could not perform their work without help of some kind, so I have tried at different times about every laxative and cathartic known, but found no help that was at all per manent. I had finally become dis couraged and had given my case up as hopeless when I began to use the pre-digested food, Grape-Nuts. “Although I had not expected this food to help my troudle, to my great surprise Grape-Nuts digested immedi ately from the first, and in a few days 1 was convinced that this was just what my system needed. “The bowels performed their funec tions regularly and I am now com pletely and permanently cured of this awful trouble. . “Truly the power of scientific food must be unlimited.” “There's a Rea son.” Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkes. a ' Ever read the above letter? A B s il _buman interest. = 4 |) £ g LATE NEWS NOTES. General. According to present plans, the of ficers of the United Confederate Vot erans will make the unveiling of the statue of General Stephen D. Lew, late commander-in-chlef, one of the principal features of the reunfon in Memphis, early in June. The site of the statue Is in the Vicksburg Nation al park, but arrangements are now being completed to run special trains to the park from Memphis, as soon as the final ball is over, early on the morning of June 11, and the unvelling will take place at 2 o'clock that after noon, The ceremonies in connection with the unveiling will form part ot the official program of the reunion, The most unusual sentence over served in the state penitentiary was begun and completed at Baton Itough, La., in one day. It was that of El more Willlams, a negro, sentenced to one hour in prison for involuntary manslaughter, Willinms made more meney in gerving his sentence than he had ever made before in his life, being given upon his discharge, the customary $5 in cash, a new suit of clothes and a pair of shoes, Rev, Charles J. Little, president of the Garrett Biblical institute, deliver ed the commencement address to the fifty-four graduates of the Chicago Training school and told them their task is not mere play and requires the best efforts of intelligent women. The abolution of poverty and discase, he declared, is the great work of the twentieth century. “No amount of sobbing and shrieking ever heips any body,” said Dr. Little, “and much i that is in print in this age is merely - that, but there is no injustice in it. ) In no age has there been such a de mand upon women generally as in } our age and in no other age has there ~ been such sensitiveness to the woes - of the race.” ~ C. Jefferson Davis, president, and ~ “Arizona | Bob” Gillepsie, vice presi ~dent of the Cincinnati Unemployed Protective association, are “hoboing” their way to Washington, where they intend to present to President Taft ‘ and congress a petition asking that the government give employment to the nation’'s jobless on the construc } tion of a great national road from New York to San Francisco. The pe tition is signed by Drs. C. L. Boni field and L. S. Colter, of the Cincin nati Automobile club, and by Park Superintendent J. W. Rodgers, who is chairman of the executive committee of the Good Roads Federation of " Ohio. : Washington. | Granite monuments are to be erect ed by the United States government to mark the graves of the unidentified confederate soldiers in cemeieries at Alton, 111., and Indianapolis, Ind. The Alton monument will be a plain shaft with an apex like the Washington monument, and that at Indianapolis will be a hexahebron twenty-six feet - wide, eight feet high, nine feet ten inches deep, surmounted by a plain granite shaft twenty-five feet high. . Declaring that the remarks of Sen ator Martin N. Johnson of North Da kota who said that a staue erected to the memory of Alexander Hamilton, ’ on a government reservation in Wash ington, would be dynamited by the Young Men‘s Christian association, were “futile imbecile, absurd and not to be taken seriously,” leaders in the l association laughed at the North Da kotan’s assertions. ‘ The National Association of Em ploying Lithographers, which held its annual convention in Washington, is agitated at the attempt of Japanese lithographers, subsidized by the Jap anese government, to capture the bulk of the lithographic business of the United States. Mr. Meyercord the president of the association told how the Japanese are getting lithographic business in the United States. President Taft has promised Sena tor Culberson of Texas to visit Gal veston at the first opportunity. If he makes a trip west this fall the presi dent intends to return through the south. A story of President Taft's visit to the home of Representative Carlin, at Alexandria, recently, has just leaked out. The congressman is a hospitable Virginian, who had heard that the president was on the water wagon, but took no chances. He is said to have had on ice plain and vin tage champagne, red and white wines, whiskies, brandies, beer and malt beverages. Also, he had sparkling and still waters, Jersey and Holston buttermilk, ginger ale and sarsaparil la. pop and lemonade. “Would you like some refreshments, Mr. Taft?” the host inquired. “That hot ride has made me thirsty,” said the pres ident. “I would like something to drink.” “What can I serve you?” asked. Carlin, brightening up. “I would like a cup of hot tea.” As the story is told the climax came in the discovery that there was not a bit of tea nearer than the grocery store. The government has filed in the su preme court of errors at Hartford, Conn., its brief in the case of Edgar G. Mondon, plaintiff, against the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail road company. The case was brought‘ under the employers’ liability act of April 22, 1908, and the government, by permission of the court, is allowed | to intervene and file a brief in sup port of the constitutionality of the act, which had been challenged by the defendant company. It is stated that King Victor of It aly, in telegraphing his congratula tions to the sultan/ appealed strongly for'clemency for yhe deported sultan, L, AR, 5 K;&g"‘ R SREU AW aeta 50 &‘fl LMR AR N o '“_;‘i&:kz}s‘iifwwzéwm%fii} By LydiaE. 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