The Miller County liberal. (Colquitt, Ga.) 1897-current, May 01, 1907, Image 1

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The Miller Ounty Liberal VOL. X. PEACE IS BOOSTED By President in Address at Jamestown Exposition. OUR HISTORY IS TRACED Mighty Task of America's Early Set tlers is Graphically Set Forth. Virginia's Fight for Life , Recounted. Roosevelt oj>eu«a hu ..a dress at the Jamestown exposition by extending cordial greetings to the representatives () f fl , r . igu Cuunll . )C3 present, showing America's intimate connection w.»b practically every na tion and race on the globe, and also making a plea for universal peace. Along this line he said: "We have met today to cel,.l>r ! .t„ .. io ceieorate the opening of the exposition, which Itself commemorates the first pernta nent settlement of men of our stock n Virglnia, the first beginning ot republiT 8 LeCo " ,e th ‘ S m,Shty "Three hundred years ago a handful of English adventurers, who had crossed the ocean in what we should now call cockleboats, as clumsy a; , they were frail, landed in the great wooded wilderness, the Indian-haunted waste, which then s-retch.d dowi, to the water's edge along the entire At- Jan tic coast. “They were not the first men of European race to settle in what is now the United States, for there were ida a aL SPani3h s: ' tt!ei «ents in Flor u) Rio Grande" and of th e . --st Kling up the st. Lawrence were me' wise destined to form permanent et’ tlements on the treat t_ ° f "'T wl «sisKii> , iH now the New e.;™: 1 i *. g>, Ung at Jamestown tu possesses for us of the United States an altogether peculiar significance and this without regard to our several ori ‘ gins. The men who landed at Jamestown and those who, thirteen years later, landed at Plymouth, all of English stock, and their fellow-settlers who during the next few decades streamed in after them, were those who took the lead In shaping the life history of this people in the colonial and 1\ revolutionary days. It was they who bent into definite shape our nation "hile it was still young enough most easily, most readily, to take on the characteristics which were to be o „ 111( > part of its permanent life habit. “Yet let us remember that while this early English colonial stock has left deeper than all others upon our national life the mark of its strong twin individualities, the mark of the Cavalier and of the Puritan—never theless this stock, not only from its environment, but also from the pres ence with it of other stocks, almost from the beginning, began to be dif ferentiated strongly from an Europe an people. As I have already said, ' about the time the first English set tlers landed here, the Frenchman and the Spaniard, the Swede and the the Ducthman, also clime hither as per manent dwellers, who left their seed to inherit our national life. The Ger man, the Irishman, and the Scotch man came later, but still in colonial times. “All through the colonial days new waves of immigration from time to time swept hither across the ocean, now from one country, now from an- other. The same thing has gone o- (ji'p? -oiuce out uiit.il ua u iK.tt... , -<?nd for the last sixty years the tide of immigration has been at the full. The newcomers are soon absorbed i.’j our eager national life, and are rad - ically and profoundly changed there by, the rapidity of their assimilation being marvelous. But each group of newcomers, as it adds its blood to the life, also changes it somewhat, and this change and growth and develop ment have gone on steadily, genera tion by generation, throughout three centuries.’’ He dwelt at length on the enormous nature of the task which the first set tlers of America faced when they set foot on our shores. Especially, said he, was this the case with the plo ner settlers at Jamestown, who were from the start menaced by famine, pestilence and war. He went on to show that other portions of America were not settled until after the James town pioneers had begun to prosper. MACHINISTS OUT ON STRIKE. Employers Refused to Agree to a $3.50 Scale. About 150 machinists and helpers woo t on strike at New Orleans be cause their employers refused to agree to a minimum wage scale of $3 50 per day. Thirteen firms, com prising the ’Rew Orleans Metal Trades Association, are affected by the strike | PICKPOCKETS WERE BUSY Slick-Fingered Gentry Reaped a Rich Harvest at Jamestown—Georgia Commissioner a Victim. Returns from the operations of pickpockets during the opening day of the Jamestown exposition are bring received by the Norfolk police. There are many cases of course which will never be brought to the attention of the authorities. The Powhatan Guards picked up many drunks, and quite a bunch of suspicious characters. W. N. Mitchell, a Virginian by birth, president of the Georgia com mission to the exposition and a close personal friend of President Roose veil, was reiieveti oi ms wallet cuu taining $66, while on a trolley car en route to the exposition grounds, bo deftly was the work done that tile wallet was not missed until the ovAier had occasion to go into it for some bills while taking in the sights. R. C. Parks of North Carolina is making loud, bitter and vindictive complaints over having purchased from a stranger, f. r*12,000, the Cit- izen s Bank building, on Main street, the skyscraper of which Norfoil; is so proud. The story of Parks is that he was standing on the street admir ing the building when a well dressed and most pleasant spoken man ap proached him with the remark that he owned the building, which he de sired badly to sell because of his urg ent need for ready money. He ■. <r! that he would take $2,000 for the property. Parks was much interested, and after being shown through the corridors offered to give $1,500. Tin stranger, however, who gave the mime ; of H. L. Holmes, declined to accept < this sum. It was arranged that Parks 1 should pay SBOO down and be accord < ed a long length of time in which 1 to meet the deferred payments. . Parks, having nearly SI,OOO with him, ■ peeled the SBOO oft his roil, and hand ed it to the affable stranger, who '. made a precipitate retreat. It was not ‘ until several hours later that the , North Carolinian learned that he had been swindled. f MISTRIAL IN LYLE CASE. J Two Jurymen Stubborn and to Listen to Arguments. Just after noon Friday onffiß ra S<ii declared in, JX.'i’-fu | E. Lyle, charged with the mu his wife and baby, last Janiffc The foreman of the Jury to the judge that ten menibin the Jury stood for ••- verdict, a'M. two for another, mid that the two members declined to listen to argu ments in the ma iter. The foreman charged the jurors with having made up their minds be fore entering the jury box, and claim: ed that they were prejudiced in favor of the defense. Judge Parker dismissed the jury, and declared that court would hold over until next week, and that Lyle would th<u be tried again. Ten jury * men were for hanging Lyle and two were fur lt"fe imprisonment. CREDITED TO THE "BIG STICK." Honor of Peace Treaty Accorded to Teddy by Nicaraguans. President Zelaya of Nicaragua has given to President Roosevelt person ally the credit of having brought about peace in Central America in the fol lowing telegram: “Managua, Nicaragua, Wpril 25. » President Roosevelt: Peace signed day before yesterday (Tu-'::d;iyi at A/nalapala. I thank your excellency for your great work toward achieving that happy end. “J. S. ZELAY." LABBOR MEN AROUSED. Raising Cain With Roosevelt Anent Haywood-Moyer Case. The indignation of labor men throughout the country at the reiter ntwt evnrossions of President Roose- a tea expressions oi x icbiutin nuuw ’*• n«»ndomninsr Mover. I lav wood and Pettibone was greater Friday than even Immediately after the publica* ' tion of the president’s views. A strong ' statement was male by the executive committee of the New York Moytr- Haywood protest conference. i VAST HORDE OF IMMIGRANTS. Month of April Will Show Total Ar rivals of 140,000. How stupendous is the rush of im ' migration to the New York port this spring is shown in a tabulation which ; makes its appearance this month that the arrivals will total more than 140,- ‘ 000. There are waiting in the harbor 10,498 men, women and children, chief ’ ly Italians. When the twenty-five ’ ships due within the next few days ’ arrive there will be waiting in the 1 harbor and at the piers about forty thousand immigrants. DUEL IN DINING ROOM. Hotel Guests Have Shooting Bee and ! One is Killed. J. M. Thomas, superintendent of ( the Corbett-Taylor Lumber company of Tlcknor, was shot and killed by Brad Suttles in the dinlns room of the > hotel in Doetun, Ga., Thursday. f The difficulty was said to be about ‘ some money Thomas owed Suttles. ‘ Suttles claims self defense. There were no witnesses to the tragedy. COLQUITT. GA. M s ’-'BSDAY. MAY I, 1907. - w > , 4 A LABOR UNIONS HIT In This Swing of the “Big Stick” By Roosevelt. DETRACTORS ANSWERED He Reiterates That Moyer and Hay wood Are ‘ Undesirable Citizens," Even if They Arc Innocent of Steunenberg Murder. In a letter addressed to Honors 0 £ Chicago, chairman of the Cook County Moye. „ v „ a -<>nfer ence, made public Tuesday President Roosevelt replied to the criticism of his recent letter, in which he referred to Moyer and Haywood, officials of the Western Federation of Miners, charged with implication in the mur der of former Governor Steunenberg of Idaho as "undesirable citizens.” The* nrciclrk>nt •>•>< .. Ine president says he regrets any body of men should so far forget their duty to their country as to, by formation of societies and in other ways, endeavor, to influence justice, or coerce court or jury; that they,’ not he, are trying to influence jus tice and he condemns what he calls their flagrant impropriety in the mat ter. He says that he indicated no opin ion as to their guilt o f the Steunen berg murder, but that it was a sim ple absurdity to suppose that because a man is on trial he is free from criticism as to his manner of life. He said he might as well be accused of trying to influence the suits against ■ Harriman, some of whose friends had < also criticized him. He said that both > Moyer and Haywood stand as rcz * youtatlves of those who habitual' Pea. as guilty of Incitement apot _. for bloodshed v' He added Aat, different • for F' fe.-- io 1- the case Messrs. Moyci . tii\Ty agree with you‘•tatiwn. proper to endeavor to iniluenci course of justice, whether by thre or in any similar manner. For tliL reason I have regretted most deeply the action of such organizations as your own in undertaking to accom plish this very result in the very case of which you speak. For instance, your letter is headed "Cook County Moyer-Haywood-Pettibone Conference’ with the headlines ‘Death cannot, will not and shall not claim our brothers.’ This shows that you and your asso ciates are not demanding a fair trial, or working for a fair trial, but are announcing in advance that the ver dict shall only be one way, and that you will not tolerate any other ver dict. Such action is flagrant in its impropriety, and I .Join heartily in condemning it. "But it is a simple absurdity to suppose that because any man is >ll trial for a given offense he is, therefore, to bo treed from all criti cisms upon his general conduct and manner of life. In my letter, to which you object, I referred to a certain prominent financier, Harriman, on the one hand, and to Messrs. Moyer, Hay wood and Debs on the other, as being equally undesirable citizens. It is as loont.t to assert tnat mis was design ed to influence the trial of Moyer and Haywood as to assert that it was designed to influence the suits that have been brought against Harriman. I neither expressed, nor indicated, any opinion as to whether Messrs. Moyer and Haywood were guilty of the mur der of Governor Steunenberg. If they are guilty, they ought to be punished. If they are not guilty, they certainly ought not be punished.” Both BriStols Now Dry. The local option election in the Vir ginia portion of Bristol last Tuesday, was hotly contested by the saloonists and anti-saloonists, the largest vote In the history of the town being cast. The anti-saloonists won by a majority of 201 out of a total vote of 871. The Tennessee section of the city voted to abolish saloons on the Sth of March. | CASE RESTS WITH ROOSEVELT, Matter of Proceeding Against Harri man Up to President. President Roosevelt proposes to take into his own hands the deter mination as to whether an attempt shall be made to break up the Harri man railroad combination or not, and has come to the conclusion that it i« hi.t duty to study the case from be ginning to end. • MILLIONS /..NEGROES, Philadelphia Qua x as Gives Income 1 from That Anri for Colored | Rudimentary fills In South. A gift of SI,OOO For the establish ment of a fund’ir rudimentary schools for souther negroes was an nounced at Ph olphia Tuesday night. The donor is Mis nna T. Jeanes, a Quakeress of Phidelphla, Booker ! T. Washington, hea of Tuskegee In stitute and Hollis Burke Frizzell, president of the llajton Normal and Industrial Instltut- are named as trustees of Lhe fm . but neither ot the institutions tl represent will share, in Hie gift. The income of o millik doll, is to be used tor n sole purpose ot assisting in the "southern United States community, tountry and rural schools for the greft class of negroes to whom the small-rural and commu nity schools are Hone available. ’ Miss 1 nines, the donor, is about .SO years oid, and comes from an old and w Thy f ani pL she has long been it rest- 'n th. elfare of the negro, and ha* n a contributor to institutions foi ir education. She has known 8001. Washington for a decade. In transferring :he million dollars to the trustees, iss Jeanes states , that "trusting anti believing in the : practical and far aching good that may result from .le moral and elc- ' vatlng influence o rural schools for negroes in the sou k eru states, taught by reputable teach rs, Ido hereby a| point Booker T. '■> asiyngton of Tm>- • hegee, Ala., and Jollls Burke i'r zell of Hampton, jVa., and their sin cessors in the tru.” ■ vpoinuti atxl er ? . ■ appry-cw- , igff , Ul . | in like manner s sly toward the ’ maintenance and tsistance of the I rural, community .: 1 country schools I for the southern trees, and to en I courage moral infl ice and social re- ; finement which sin promote peace in the land and go .< vill among men.’ BARGE L.' 3 MISSING. Supposed to HaviGone Down in Lake Michigan Wil Fourteen Men. The wooden IJ> >< r barge Arcadia, which left Mnijle, Mich., April ]2? foi- Two Rivi ,|!i a cargo of I ! wood, has undo! ’>y b • Lake Mi ' ati I h- i * r and owner, Hairy wf, and about Dili teen others. mJie men have given her up as lost. | A CRANKY ; COMBINATION Carnegie, Low art. t-utier Join Forces ; With Old Lady Eddy. With Mrs. Mar; Baker G. Edd, its American sou ' d Carnegie, Seth J ■ Bur ■' -srfier American pu, cists identified , : ith the movem nt an American branch of the Associa tion for Intentional Conciliation, was organized at New York Tuesday MAMMOTH S IT IS SETTLED. Half a Million D liars Paid to Paine, 1 Webs ir & Co. The $3,000,1” i suit in equity brought by Pair , Webster & Co., against Albert t.'llurrage, Thomas W. Lawson and othrs, to recover on a ! contract involvity 70,000 shares of I stock in the Coper Range Consoli dated Mining pmpany has been ! brought to a seflement out of court ' at Boston. The case was ettled by A. C. Bur- ! rage paying subtanlially the Tri- Mountain debt. The amount of this debt was $540,0(. BROKE 11TH COMMANDMENT. Erring Hutbani Trapped by Wife, Puts Bulletin His Head. Frederick W. <ardner, justice of . the peace, and a wealthy resident of Ridgewood, N. J. killed himself with ' a pistol Monday right. Mrs. Gardner ’ followed her husand to the door of I an apartment ocupied by a young ; woman. When Grdner saw his wife ' be shot himself a the head. TRUNK LINES REPLY 1 . I To Contention of Farmers' Union for Lower Rate. NOW UP TO COMMISSION ! ; After Two Days of Strenuous Argu ment Hearing at Atlanta is Closed and Whole Matter is Taken Under Advisement. After consuming two entire days in i . argument before the state railroad 1 commission of Georgia, the petition ' v-........ ■ - t reduction of passenger r es. was ta l ken under advisement by the commis i sion at 7 o’clock Wednesday night, s at which hour the argument for the - petitioners was concluded by Hooper Alexander. ) Possibly the distinctive feature of Hie hearing was the lengthy report of 8. H. Hardwick, general traffic manager of the Southern, who de clared that if reduced rates were Im- | posed the Southern would be com j polled to abandon double tracking be i tween Atlanta and Birmingham-—ltu- i provements which were now impera- . live. Mr submitted a state- , merit showing that the Southern's av erage rate in Georgia, as lhe result I of reduced rates for special occasions, I was only 2 3-10 cents per mile. Mr. i Hardwick’s address abounded in tig i ures and was by tar the most import ' ant showing by the railroads 1 Charles 1. Stone of »!'* Louisville I and Nashville, also ■ itted a long ■ eport of the coml: sos his road m Georgia. His • s showed a de .' 't along the m for the years I V V. on the fact that It ttTRP® a ’ ow rate in >d as Gcor ’’lh? Vacation. pme i ii J- Jes. /m --..—were commerce oe and in many stry. He also crit tne maun htcb Atlanta , discriminated a: ihe inat- 'T ter of freight rates, I > imed i any political intent and saiu 1 I acting purely in a business capac ; R. F. Duckworth, for the Farmers’ I Union, concluded with a brief denial • that the union was inspired by mo- I fives of politics. i FIREBUGS RUN TO EARTH. Three Negroes Caught in Crime Are Chased by Bloodhounds. Caught in the act of seeing fire to the stables of Mr. S. M. Garrison, who lives near Charlotte, N. C., in . 1 Steel Creek township, three negr -s, i i„. .~j .rnreton and another by' the name 'f Pettus, down by bloodhounds and arrested by ■ Sheriff Wallac ■ and itizens of Steel ’ Creek. FAKE R: ’O T IS NAILED. Barrett Will Sail for Europe in Comr y With Jc dan. i National i':- 'lent C. e Barrett, of ' th, Farmers Union wil. cot sail for i-j, ...,■ :■ company wi i President . t 11.....: i , .t_ cv _ . i i Harvie Jordan of the Southern Cotton I i Cklffr ft. eio, ••np/litod, nor hH VO ' I there been any steps taken looking | to any sort of a combination of in- > terests between the Farmers’ Union and the Southern Cotton Association. A SHORTAGE OF $92,000 Revealed in a Circular Letter Issued I by “Buncoed” Company. A shortage of about $92,000 in the accounts of the Woonsocket Electric I Machine and Power company at | I Woonsocket, R. 1., was revealed on ! Thursday by the issuance to the stock ! holders of the company of a circu lar letter announcing that a heavy shortage had been discovered. The letter further stated that the resig nation of Levi Cook Lincoln, secreta ry-treasurer and general manager of the company, had be n accepted. JILTED WOMAN USED GUN. Killed Recreant Swetheart and Then Committed Suicide. Thaddeus S. Ross, 35 years old, a clerk in the postoffice at Oil City, Pa., was shot and instantly killed Wednesday by Miss Isabelle Stroup, ' 28 years old, a former sweetheart, who ' immediately shot herself through the ' heart. Both victims of the tragedy were of prominent families. TOO MUCH WALL STREP E f Permeates Plans tor Dealing In C. ton ar*d Farmers' Union Will Hold Aloof. That the Farmers’ I nion does n ndorse the mo.cm m b.gnn at Btr .imgham, Ala., to er-'.ai.ize a plan - t . ot.oa war.h. uoes and a gmtr.uit'. e oiupany, is stated ;,np'..:tl< ally G. Euitnks, G.0.g0: -tale bu .csa agent of the t'"" rs 'mm resident R F. I '.U of tie t ecr..;la divi.- mn it '. ' ni> ' i mon, n.d- rat'd Mr. ml state- j 'We w< r in 'I 'I thi- hieetfng, I ,aic i Mr. rj-.ib ni "in or - r tba- I >e mi; fit he.ii is -pit t.'.n . fe v othet !■ 1 h-o' *'' , nt.i’.ive;, " I lie aniiour,cement ias gone out, , onllnued Mr Eubanks, that a p'o vas agreed upon m this morning . . ■ nat it had the endorsenu nt of bot tie Farmers' Union ami the -touil lotion Association. Nothing coiil m urthet from the truth. Alalama S’ .gent Parker has already sent. .cmi'. of rhe statem.nt pub.'bb* m Atlanta paper and makim: i' hat the Farmers Union ha;, n> ■ i ■ uorsed the plan promulgated. "1 may as well be frank, said State j Agent Eubankiv "and say that a 'on liat the meeting was *- 1 > >-e. , r lied by the "ouititru Cotton ?...■■> ..,*oon. The invitation we received t-ain«‘ not from it, but from others, the Southern Colton Association evidently fearing to take the lead In the move i ment on account of its odorous con : met on with Mr. Hoadley of Wall -treet. So we were invited by others, :tit we did not take the bait From til we could see, one end f th Hah i .ng pole was in Wall street nd we nave no doubt that Sp ey was eager 1 tremors i at the han <e whether or llo t ii- .it the other end of | ! ,ii- uiiun' business. \Xe must make it plain now that we cannot, and will not, co-operate I ’ •-b the Southern Cotton Association ng as It is officered by men v i/i h/ 1 Wall stlvet as are BOm ‘ oi NlNlkent head officers. Less than virHLm ' ago Mr. Hoadley in an PV touch • c ’’ "Fl on development in the south 5 » ■ 'st daily communication with ; i-■ tent Harvle Jordan- that Mr ' ißShlan let him know in- what was jf-goifig on.' That . while after the time when ■ ern Cotton Association endeavored ’< force the Farmers’ Union to make , a stand for 10-cent co’ton for lust season. We would not do it. but i made a straightout fight for 11 ent cotton, and largely as the results of our est- most of the 1. ■> . o ; crop has *old at ne.it' . in cents. If we had agreed to lu-v nt '♦on. not one bale of cotton in the . ; so" would have brought more than igure. ■A.- to the Birmingham arehou.-.- 1 movement, a plan was proposed ' this convention to establish a cot * ■ exchange tor handling warehouse re ceipts, closing contracts on them in- ■ stead of spot cotton Our plan is for Ihe Farmers Union io deal only in I spot cotton and to sell direct to the j spinner, ft'e are > ahlinhir.g "or->- iiie present not be long before i n warehouses are available to the cntlr*- cotton belt. But we i- opesi to retain th identity of : gin to the .- the i ducer the b'-.-i"fit 1 derl TO PASS ON Board of Three Export by Secretary W Secretary Wilson Thurid ■■ ed ian executive order for the L ' ! food and drug inspection whose dmv > 'tv dva.lt v-> - o.toHnl, •■ r th- r i pure food laws. The board cousls : i Dr. Harvey Wiley, chief of the bureau i : of chemistry, chairman; Frederick L | Dunlap, associate chemist, and G >rg< : R. McCabe, solicitor of the departmeu' >f agriculture. REMARKABLE STATEMENT Made in Court by Harry Lyle, Who • Killed Wife and Babe. Hary E. Lyle, the alleged murderer | of his wife and four-nionths-oid baby in Waycross, Ga., on the 20tn of lan uary last, made » statement in his own behalf in Ware county superior court Wednesday, pleading that the killing of his wife was an accident, i and stating that he does not know when or how the shot was fired which killed his babe. Lyle was one of the coolest persons ; in the court room when he made bis statement. "My Heart Lives O’er Again the Days of Old.’’ This is the title of a new populat song, written by an Atlanta, Ga., man, Mr. John T. Pugh, who is a well known writer of poetic tendency. Tne ■ song is published by the Popular Mu sic Company of Chicago, and is re plete with that harmony and senti ment so dear to the Southern heart. 37 FXPOSITSON (IPEHF: ; G.i'Co of Jani" i. v;r Q o' j.v V’ Ap." 10 rIH IC. Df . C \/L. f I Al ' • H r iraugui aticn Emci. Man.. . nousanda t> ‘.endancc. With r’ i | the public Friday. F-> ' - and -'fry train •■euc’:'t■'-' Noil brought thousands ot vis I ingtou Th., l-i. Mayflower, arrived oft Fort Mon eign and American anchor m Hampton H'-.iil; I posing ceremony and a brii t < ! tion to the flag J ! ‘ . Mayflower ended, ' out for the shoe, landing " i position at 11 <-clock. He was o . .u once to the reviewing -u.ml "U ®. ' i.e Parade, a magnificent I’HI skirted by bk-sottitng m pine bloom'-, and then dclivct- tie ; opening end dedicatory address . : the W exposition, which was received amid J I dtafeninr chne’ K Piesld.nt Roosevelt concluded by i pressing a gold button as a ynal for I the formal opening of I depnrt.m me i 'Hie president and his tmmcdlui.a I party then received sever.it hundred a I invited guests in the audio.r' on bol d « [ invueu gio n.o o< i ing. Aftc '■ / ■■ Uc turned to i the reviewing stai. 1 dur!" th a ’ I nouu to withes..-: ♦!; I'"-i ' I soldiers and sailor.--, <■ • i 'lies of the latter being lanuvd liorn ihe I'm ign vessels. This concluded ’ up. -iing cv-remcnii . 'tressed the arrival I tue urns visiting fl i warship sqm. . ■ Sankt George nun A;-. i British crnlsei squadron, composed of ■ the Good Hope, the A ■ ' ’ ’ 9| 1 shire and the Roxborouga pat. . m within a f ' ' each ■■ "non "’•i ’■ , ping flags 'hey ‘ "-v' j Hampton Roa'-. v necic of the A i changi d salt i George aiM ’ Admiral -e N i British ae : ,i tud ■' . lore He j mann Pres ’ ihe »: ■ : roll put ou: n mini: > ■ io v . Hear Admiral >'."bie, I'. on I the Connecicut, They ' *arfla!y I i welcomed and had i.i'-l goue ove r the -‘de . I '•as in his ’ ich .ins' th 'I Oi i ri. whf* had • Of- 1 yt> b ■ • Art,* uiii Ohl P'li i' ’ V t' 1 1 -,< r --a . ..nili ry <t«- ? ; da; mornin. I distinguished pas.erut: ■ - tion grounds I JEPUTY SHERIFFS ARRESTE ; Held for Carelessness in Lett . j SgJ Meh Lynch Negro. Charged with mam "lighter for Hg their alleged carelessm s the negro Charles St. t i lynched, Deputy Sueriffs E gun and J. J. Salmon were am ! Wednesday at Marksville. La., ; placed under S7OO bond each. . Strauss was hanged i; the w< j near Eola, La , where r crowd i masked men met the deputies as tbn S ter were escorting the aegro tu WILL ASK CHANGE Os ‘-cauS. Juriqe Long Fearful of I ml in H,s &| Home County. !' t < Ch nge of venue wil' b- rrmr ♦♦rd ■ by Judge W. G. Loving, ->aef ■ Thomas F. Rvan’s palatial mansion at Oak Ridge, Va., who is charged with ■ i slaying Theodore Estes for drav, i i:g and assaulting his daughter It i probable the trial will t alte plat <• b. Charlottesville ■