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“Pig Killer” in Slaughter House
Became Suddenly Insane.
With Maniacal Shriek Man Turned From
Pig Sticking to Man-Killing---He
' Terrified 300 Men.
Saomerville, Mass.~—With a maniac
al shriek, John Murphy turned from
plg-sticking to. man-killing in the
North Packing and Provision Com- |
gany"s slaughter house, and, drivmg!
is fellow workmen before him, slew |
seven of them and wounded WO
others, .
According to some of the work
men, Murphy had been acting pecu
liarly for some days.
While at work, he suddenly uttered
a blood-curdling scream zfl sprang
at Dr. Hayes, waving his 18-nch ra-|
gor-edge knife in his hand. He cul |
Dr. Hayes a deep gash oun the neck,
stabbed him over the heart and prac
tically disemboweled him,
The terrified workmen rushed for
the door, but Murphy ran after them,
slaghing right and left. Kvery mau
whom he struck went down with a'
groan, The crowd plunged down
stairs, with Murphy after them, andl
at every landing he cut somebody.
On the second floor, one of the work-l
men, an Italian, seized a heavy bar}
of iron and felled Murphy, but he
was quickly on his feet again and
wounded another.man,
On the street floor, he was given
another heavy blow on the head, and
his knife was wrenched from his
hand. Two police officers came in
to assist the workmen, and Murphy
was given a fearful beating before he‘
was finally overpowered and taken
to the police station. i
Murphy is 50 years old, weighs 200
pounds, and was regarded as one Of |
the strongest men in the plant. He
bhad been employed at pig-killing forl
some years by the North Company.
He is married and lives in Somerville.
Murphy had worked for the North’
Company for five years, coming to
Somerville from Jowa nine years ago.‘
The witnesses of the slaughter said
that more than 300 employees were’
driven from the plant when Murphy
started on his wild rush through the
six floors and basement of the build
ing, and not a few men escaped death
by narrow margin,
Murphy is in the padded cell of the
Somerville police station. When City
Physician C. C. Towne attempted to‘
examine him, Murphy sprang at the
doctor and attempted to kick him. 1
WOMEN BOUND AN TORTURED.,
Shocking Outrage by Five Maskedl
Robbers. ‘
Pittsburg, Pa—A brutal outrage,
perpetrated by unknown robbers at
Belmont, Pa., near here, has aroused
the community, and a lynching is
threatened if the men are captured.
Five men, all masked, broke into
the home of Mrs, Minnie Ashe, aged
90, in the outskirts of the mining vid
lage, and ransacked the place. With
the aged woman were here daughter,
Mrs. Mary Ober, 60 years old, and
her granddaughter, Miss Minnie Ober,
23 years old. The men found only
$3.50 in the house, and, believing
there was more, they bound the three
women and subjected them to merci
less tor,;ure. |
The men tore wires from the pic
tures hanging on the walls, and fas
tened thle three women to chairs.
They then bared their feet and held
lighted candles to them. Partially
unconscious, the women were other
wise abused. Before leaving the
house the burglars released Miss
Ober, who recovered sufficiently to
summon help. |
COLUNEL M’CLURE DEAD.
Veteran Editor Was Notable Friend
to the South.
Philadelphia, Pa.-—Colonel Alexan
der K. McClure, prothonotary of the
supreme and superior courts of Penn
sylvania, and for many years a prom
inent figure in politics and " journal
ism, died at his home in Wallingford,
Delaware county, aged 82 years.
Colonel McClure was a veteran ed
itor, for a long number of years, hav
ing been at the head of the Philadel
phia Times. He belonged to the old
school of Greeley and others,
Though a northern man, Colonel
MecClure was a notable friend to the
gsouth after the war and during the
reeonstruction period, and his sage
counsel was of great service to this
,?ection. He devoted much of his time
n writing about the @pportunities in
the industrial development of the
gouth, and for yéars was an unceas
ing advocate of this subjeot, '
HUSBAND FIGHTS WITH NIAGARA.
Louis fiq'hen Leips Tnto Swirling
Rapids to Rescue His Wife.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.—Louls Cohen
of Buifalo saw his young wife leap
into the swirling rivers between Sec
ond and Third Sisters’ Island, only
150 feet above the brink of the cat
aract. A
Without a moment’s hesitation, he
followed her, caught her hand and
struggled desperately to save her, but
Mrs. Cohen died in her husband’s
arms.
Before it was possible to bring effi
cient help an hour had passed, during
all of which Cohen held to a tree
‘gtump. He was finally rescued and
his wife’s body recovered.
EXPENSES EXCEED RECEIPTS. l
United States Spent in 1808' 108,312,
056 More Than Received.
Washington, D, C.—A comparative
statement of the receipts and expendi
tures of the United States for the fis
cal year ending June 30, has. just
been issued by the treasury depart
ment, It shows the following re
ceipid; Customs for the month of
May, 1909, $27,872,095; since July 1,
1908, $272,829,790. National revenue
for May, $19,295,029; since July 1
last, $222,8%9,463;, miscellaneous for
May, $6,165,186; since July 1, 1908,
$50,641,048,
The expenditures for May, and the
fiscal year, since July 'l last, are:
Civil and migcellaneous, $10,642,524
and $145,5615,095; war, $10,230,8999 and
$120,338,614; navy, $10,414,0056 and
$106,789,869; Indians, $888,324 and
$14,789,009; pengions, $14,887,107
and $149,955,423: public works, §9,
359,367 and $85,173,5620; interest, $2,
364,039 and $21,647,972.
The totals for May, 1909, and for
the fiscal year to June 30 are: Re
ceipts, $53,332,311 and $546,360,301,
respectively, Expenditures, $58,786,
266 and $6444,218,402.
National bank deposits, during the
month amounted to $944,290 and the
redemptions to $4,186,460.
~ The public debt statement shows
the aggregate, including certificates
and treasury notes, to be $2,636,992,-
527, on April 30, and $2,633,550,7887
on May 31, a decrease during the
month of $3.4441,740. The cash bal
ance AprW 30, exclusive of trust and
reserve funds, was $127,433,835 and
on May 31, $119,901,309, a decrease
during the month of $7,532,526.
CHINESE BUYING LOT'TUN GOODS.
Exports in Past Few Months Show
| Heavy Increases.
~ Washington, ). C.—ln a statement
issued by the bureau of statistics of
the department of commerce and la
bor, it is shown that exports of cot
ton goods to China are increasing.
The report says that China, i,s, as a
rule, tHe largest purchaser 6f Amer
ican cottons, but in the vears of 1907
and 1908 the exports of cotton cloths
to that country fell to a small fraction
of those of the immediatly preceding
vears. This large failing off was due,
chiefly, at least, to the fact that the
imports of that country in 1905 and
1906 were abnormally large and far
in excess of the actual consuming
power of that market. The statement
of the bureau of statistics shows that
in April the quantity of cotton goods
exported to China was 16,000,000,
vards, against 7,000,000 in April of
last vear, and in the ten months end
ing with April 1909, the total export
of cotton cloths was 100,000,000,
against 30,000,000 yards in the corres
ponding period of 1908.
’ REMAINS IN ASYLUM.
Thaw’s Application for a Writ of
Habeas Corpus Denied.
New York City.—Harry K. Thaw
must remain in the state asylum for
the c¢riminal insane at Matteawan un
der a de®Psion ¥éndered by the appel
late division of the supreme court
in Broaklyn. Thaw"s application for
a writ of habeas corpus releasing him
from the asylum was dismissed by a
justice of the supreme court several
months ago. He then appealed to the
appellate division, which sustained
the lower court.
WILLIAM PENN'S BODY.
‘ —— ——
Plan to Bring It to America,
Launched in Congress.
Washington, D. C.—To bring the
coffin containing the body of William
?Penn, which now repocses in a prac
tically abandoned cemetery in Buck
iinghamshire, England, to this country
‘and have it interred on the banks of
'the Delaware river ‘is the object of a
'movement just launched in congress.
1t is declared that considering Penn’s
!distinguished career, his grave is not
'appropriately marked. .
JEFFERSON DAVIS MEMORIAL.
’Plan to Raise $50,000 to Perpetuate
Name of Southern Leader.
| Louisville, Ky.—“We are going to
raise the $50,000 we need to make a
|suitable memorial for Jefferson Da
ivis on his Kentucky birthplace,” said
Captain John H. Leathers of Louis
ville, “We have all the chapters of
the Daughters of the Confederacy,
the 60,000 veterans who still remaia
of our armies, the Sons of Veterans
and the people at large to draw
Ifrom.”
Cyclone in South Georgia.
Sylvania, Ga.—A half-dozen per
sons, probably more, were injured in
a terrific cyclone that passed over
the lower part of Screven county,
and while no life was lost because of
its passage, many persons escaped by
seeming miracles, houses falling about
and upon them, without inflicting fa.
; tali, - TT T, fl’*";
| A Million From Inheritances.
Springfield, 111.—It is expected that
more than $1,000,000 will be added
to the inheritance tax income of the
state as a result of the passage of a
sweeping inheritance tax measure.
This amount will be made up largely
from the estates of Marshall Field,
Otto Young and other wealthy Chica
goans who have died recently.
Mobile Sheriff Impeached.
Montgomery, Ala.—Sheriff Frank
Cazalas of Mobile county was im
peached by the supreme court for
failure to take precautions necessary
to prevent the lynching of Richard
Robertson, a megro, Who was token
from the jail and hanged. @ 1
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HAZLEHURST, GA.
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The World’s Best Sewing
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The only machine which makes abso
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When you are in need of a sewing
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The Standard Sewing Machine Co,,
Atlanta, Ga.
Agents wanted,
THE WORLDS GREATEST SEWING MACHINE
LIGHT RUNNING
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10 Publishers an rinters.
WE MANUFACTURE THE VERY HIGHEST
! GRADE OF
Type Brass Gatleys
Brass Rule in Strips Metal Borders
.Brass Labor Saving Rule - L. S. Metal Furniture
Brass Column Rules Leads and Slugs
Brass Circles . Metal Leaders
Brass keaders Spaces and Quads,
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old Column Rules refaced and made good as new
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Please rememrber that we are not in any Trust or
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’ A copy of our Catalogue will be cheerfully furnish
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We frequently have good bargains in second hand Job
- Presses, Paper Cutters and other printing machinery.
PHILADELPHIA PRINTERS’ SUPPLY CO.,
: ———Manufacturers of——— .
: Type and High Grade Printing Material.
PROPRIETORS 39 North Ninth Street
PENN TYPE FOUNDRY PHILADELPHIA
Georgi ri i
eorgia and Florida Railway.
: : MAIN LINE.
EFFECTIVE MAY 1, 1909.
ARRIVALS.
From Madison, Valdosta, Nashville and Douglas .. .. .. .. .. *9:4opm
From Madison, Valdosta, Nashville and Douglas .. .. .. .. ....*¥l2:43pm
From Douglas and intermediate stations .. .. .¢ ¢¢ oo oo oo .. *7:lspm
DEPARTURES.
For Douglas, Nashville, Valdosta and Madison .. .. ~ .. .. .. *6:lsam
For Douglas, Nashville, Valdosta and Madison .. .. ~ .. .. .. *2:sopm
For Douglas and intermediate stations .. .. .. . .. «¢ .. +. ¥:100m
*Daily. ?Daily except Sunday.
J. M. TURNER, A. POPE,
General Manager. Traffic Manager.
How to Increase the Yield of Fruit
Increased fruit crops are more often the result of good manage
ment than of good luck. Fruit trees and fruit plants need a liberal
supply of
®w° C °
Virginia-Carolina
Fertili
The trees absorb plant foods—that is, nitrogen, phosphoric acid
and potash—from the soil just the same as any other crop. - Experi
ence has shown this over and over again. This truth has become so
well recognized that “ return to the land what the tree removes if you
would expect the best results ” has become an axiom with. the best
growers.
Apple, pear, peach, orange and other fruit trees soon respond to
careful fertilization. But be sure to use the best fertilizers.
« I made a test with other companies’ fertilizers,” says Mr. H. O.
Lowry, of Manatee County, Fla., and yours proved to be the best.
The yield where I wsed Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer, was just twice as
much as where the other two companies’ fertilizer was used.”
Hundreds of users say Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers are cheapest
because of their good qualities—give better satisfaction and quicker
results.
Many facts of great interest and value to fruit growers are pub
lished in the new 1909 Farmers’ Year Book, a copy of which will be
sent free on application to any of our sales offices.
::1"* Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co.
Sales Offices
Richmond, Va.
Norfolk, Va.
Columbia, S. C.
Atlanta, Ga.
Savannah, Ga.
Memphis, Tenn,
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knemiea
Sales Offices
Durham, N.C.
Charleston, S.C.
Baltimore, Md.
Columbus, Ga.
Montgomery, Alas
Shreveport, La.