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PAGE TWELVE
X’ (Continued from page 5.)_
6 Than heJ;old the did
?ot <ysnt
£had been made between Haywood
fihtK > 'A<dams- 4 in *the-<> -
killing of claim jumpers in the St.
"Joe testi
fied by ‘Jack*Simpkins.
RichafdSrtn/’fPt'Xhe' 'defense/ «shid:
“We may put some witnesses on '
de
will. * ’ - ®“»fi
—* Upon ‘rdAotn’men datwft »of»‘Mh< Rich
-hrd&rYjWitlibnr Dewey/iiihe<»*mWer
who testified that “Bigcsßill?’ Davis
led the ri6b‘tkdt>Wtfw»mp the'Bufiker
Hill and Sullivan mill, was ordered
’of”tbe couft.
Sheriff Rutan, of San Miguel coun
tj*,h rtvhfri <saido he deported’> feiti
-iWisnWith' jiwarrani of law, < and .D. 7.C.
Scott, railroad detective, »to whom
Orchard'’first,- voljmteered a inferma
ton, were also ordered held.
d* f Dafrowvufmdeo/a-qjle» fai favdr sos
all the evidence)|*<afc stands,
goings before the* jury", - and for a’
blowing!thathody to Shake/its own ih
ference. He asserted that’.the court
had »B®rWed-*the,State the«widds>t c'lat
itude in the attempt to prove a gen
eral conspiracy, and that even wider
latitude shoiMdHfe' 7 aTK)Wed a man on
he
bfttfdeW #»*’ W? s
C?aPPte> Colorado
c 9W tte< U>V
il h£ £gid,Ji3d f$WW?d
rt 3hat» Ti QocJpd
was in the
other than Orchard’s own testimony.
Mr. Darrow then analyzed tWe _ "e\T _
that i fIkW.T
ird was/iif employ of d
tWr=f the *nfirfe‘ owners,
and that the first time he met Hay
wood he was given transportation G
Denver and his expenses paid by a
detective. He cited the evidence re
lating to the bloodhounds that one of
his witnesses had testified were called
off Orchard’s trail by K. C. Ster
ling, a detective for the mine own
ers. He closed by pleading that if
any Colorado evidence be stricken
out, all be stricken oulyrffid
State, he said, would hfivAWo-easeAi*.
all.
■w an hour
Jud A
that a general conspiracy to wipe
out the Federation had been proved.
Even if proved, he said,-the State
was not 1
<wf,lha
that Pinkertons were members of un-
/Sfmt eeu
*-4*e- - peeve W Ceftspkacv.
Friedman, the former Pinkexton
clerk, had testified, he said£Mfrfit
an organization the mine <Twrrers'"Wer’e*'
°f U ie Pinkerton Agency
Vjh3< div g i ?R'‘ n t e
clients. aSked that evidence fe
jating to the Vindicator mine explore
JIQTD S tn{,
tion explosion and the Bradley ex
plosion should stand, but that all
other Colorado matters should be
eliminated.
Mr. Richardson argued that the
Stale’s case was made up of isolated
incidents of violenaejp r*l* ado,
•Been mVntiodeu to* the trial two*
weeks, If there was to be at
. WATSONS WEEKLY 71 JEFFERSONIAN’.
out except that directly relating to
of T4 e e
sa4d, had' po . specie \
of a genera! conspiracy? Thpre was
Steunenberg murder, except Orchard,
t l -been 'ddr
roborated. The ■ defense . should not
be cut i!Mty‘<hd<»sa!djl filin'»shying
“iHkt Oreh'hrd’was the tobly not'bf’Me
Feder at 6f'>Bota4‘on‘e else.
‘‘ Whbre 'is* fhero a particld of ’evi
dence that Orchard was working for
’MR -WKhaW him
self f” he asked!?
The hontinUe ' this w'eek.
f’imm/ mm * ’wqcpnb imw
-M iiilit;<4.l. aw-J \ * *h»
FARMERS’ UNION‘OF MER
IWETHER COUNTY.
p’Wnhada ’nuuxj—.fjodt hn/
By Ar'X'toer; ''
jp pfi.t pu f„f /
itesolvecl, ttliat we are unutterably
opposed to tpp state of Georgiy ? im
porting foreigners,’ and hereby re
f our s .to
the General Assembly Jo their
tfie/leg
r» FWiaiing ~ ,ajjy
money to aid or ej}Qourage, emigra
tion to GnwW- A
Second, That these resolutions be
utnade pnblic.ißi.flie paperSi . u rr
Yours tyiily| U :<’p m 1 *
B. “Secretary.
fetters, ff /to
Watson’s Weekly Jeffersdntan, and
Watson’s' ‘ Je/fersOhlah"’ Magazine to
rHOMSON> GA; -
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w "' ' /SSW x -
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v ■ ••( < ’ **■
■
. (S *® Bdltor “ °“ PW «•) ~4 -., . , -
"TromTCafiii iolKrCaiSlSl
XrVe the Boy A -Who
'FoifehS His Way Up From the
..o-. .Plcw. Handles, and .Bitter • ■ o
Poverty.
>/* ,(’*«*♦!> ph! ■zrb hO
rrnW • n gy* ■. Harvey Allison. ’• v <
Ti is' a common 'fenia’rk dfc tittle
will? dd' iiof'gloji to <6 ey-
'bdy has hn equal cliim’de in’ this
“is ti<Oue/”’” n<
”’ ’ Soihe ‘ iave l, to facd conditions ’eo
hiTd a§‘'fb raise barriers’in the way
b£ ad^arffeeinent'' w’ell 1 inSur-
Vndtfrithb’le, and h it 4s only bdy
' ih°te’n r ' th’diisAnd wfio, iif spite of the
T’daiT df * adverkity,’ ’tikes • ’to
tfi’d Weight which drags him’’ Stead
ily batfkWffrd? s bin; n J*
’“’BlkWtt ma’n is Governor James K.
Vardaman of ’Mississippi, who is now
putting' up’ a magnificent fight as the
of' the great ‘ v mass of the
plain people in his race for the Sdh
fiteV'HiS''opponent being John*'Sharp
Williams,‘Congressman from the Sih
<■< ■ : -’-
A ''greater contrast between two
men Could 4 never'be' imagined. '’lt-is
Mr/•Williams’ boast that he treats
from a 1 ‘‘philosophical’’ ’
standpoint. ‘ Governor « Vardaman
knows little of the German Univer
sity brandof., “philosophy,” but
treats all questions from the stand
point of horse sense and knowledge
of his fellow man: a sympathy with
his conditions, f aqd a feeling for him
qs r he tj’ies tq better lais environment
for himself and
only philosophy Vardaman d
has been while he has been in at
tendance for about forty - years- -in
‘‘UviVersify" oX^ 1- 4 linock^’ ’
' James -R? VSrd&nan wak raised
U. ftff
from the railroad, situated on a poor
wornout *hiU? itrl Yaiubfi9frfi r county,
Mississippi the nearest towns to
"Were be ‘lived ; being iSeob<s ‘iHM Til-
m> ; - IH ,!!rn>.baD 1r
’ father returtihd from service
in the 'Confederate btbkeii ln
health frdtti' ‘WoXinds, Jiii<T ’iinitblb to
■dd mdCh’ mote thah k&p body "ah d
soul together until 'boyfi,’ Jbfih,
; James K'. and Will;
their Shoulders to the' Wheel' fin'd UMlp
take CarC of 'thems'elVesf thtfih mbtli
' dr“khcl twb little
the Oldest/ Jiih nbxt,'
niuch younger than dilfier ‘df themi p
” ,! These ’’boys, assists W’iiiuolf
possible*by their father,
tlie poor little hill fiafm/' clefirdd
' sbme new gfouh'd, find Wofkecl efifly
aiid Ifite. In the fall sis soon
got*' through picking ttidif
’ crop ’bf cotton, fiiey Wdht* about the
neighborhood picking cOttOri Oth-
4 er ’people, giW’th ■ thte
”'mofidy? Mahdy 'WocrdWaM;* l J fin v *fcfld
n'egress' Who riOW itl’’’fhtP* 1 bld
Vatdafhfih 15 h<5tife’, ‘ in' difiduSSirig mthe *
' early days' fif-Thfi Governor, «aidt ! '
‘ ‘ ’Course t knows delft Vardfiinan
boys. MistOY ’ Jihiihy^—he’fi' 1 ' Guv-
Mister Joliri’/'bfi
reftkoh I does ’ kftdW ’fefiL ’DpidkOd
cotton’ ’ldftg Side of ’eift/fim'ichopped
cotton wid ’etn many’s dß“day.n,Mis
te? Jimmy,' he could 'oderfr 1 all
pickin’, heowuz onst k Os
workin’ boys I ever seed. De 1-ole
-inan wiiz kinder played out, en dem
b«ys had ter w/^- w S%p
tle bottom down yaudw? f Mister
Jimmy cleared dat, en dat hillside,
too. Made the wood up inter cord
wood en mauled rails outen a lot of
hit. Dey aint a lazy bone in dat
man’s body, he wuz *jes always a
workin’. He sho did have a hard
time of hit all his life. JJem Varda
nians wuz as por as they could be.”
Mr. John W’lburn, of Scobey, who
runs a livery and transfer business
there, was a boyhood friend of Gov-
Vardaman and talked enter
tainmgly regarding thg uyhilffigbt
that Goverqcw Vardaman
Jp es > 1 4<new Jim Vardaman
juftlAciuch all his life,” said Mr.
\\ ilmirn. ‘ife "baa a mighty**b<n*d
time of it, and deserves a heap of
credit for what he has done. I was
in sepool with him i&, the three
■ Ccafs OrfTXyn two of the old
field’ sCh6<>hs ;ft)d‘ thfit’s the only
ychoqling he «venr ba<p Jim w*s
seribils, ‘’ semued OeflYx?
that* he" duln’f Tiave* **fo
studied hard.
Qtis ki_»>w fyasjjt
any different from any other coun-
JFork, except that
vjim ulwaysk Jiaiu wmething to read
in his pockets and. read everything
-l<nrf, too,- and’-whsn’t
expressing them. He powers 1
sfid'flXn’n wkTV ynrryl
—tfiuHie gfhirrMiy halk*Wi«bJ|i|Cs
“He had to get down to it and
work mighty hard. Os course, John
and Will helped, but Jim was the
old he was the time be-