1 . " " . " I ' ' 4S& VOL. I.. NO. 47, IT1TSBORO, N. CM FUIDAY, OCTOJUBR 17, 1-902 vv I :i hi in 11 ti 11 i ii S Li 1 BILL ARP'S LETTER. I Rtirainalions tf the Popular Sage of Esrtcw IKE PHILOSOPHER IS REMIMSCEN1 Jle Discusses Events of the Pa.-t In His Uaual Happy Manner Things He Does Nut Know. Wanted In General Henry R. Jantsuu. of Savannah, delivered in Atlanta the nsost notable, Instruetlv and eloquent address that has bu heard Sa G-orgia sirft-e the civil war. The -subject was "The Wanderer." i slave niiip that landed on (be Georgia coast in Ie5. But the whole address was aa historical recital of many poll-- -y. tea- events Cat ld to the civil war aiU f which the generation that has Kiuwn up ntce were profoundly lg iterant .-and stiH . It-was delitered by request of the Young Men's Li brary Association, when Henry Grady a jr$ chairman, and I supposed -wa published in ini;))!'t form ami could b iia'I on ai'piii atjou. But I have ' c?w upaper copy, but it has been worn & to I?..' juik and is airuost l!h-ihle. i I trw- to Jute Pop Harrow, who i. I Outs' Jackson's executor, and he aa find none among the general a 1 !.-;. ('id aay veteran futnish me a -op ? I would also be pleased ti ob tain a copy of lHittk-1 Webster's I pee. It at Capon Springs', which wa.; sjipptesaeii by his publishers and to who Ii General . Jat ksn makes al.ux- , General. Jat kson was a great man. ! won bu military laurels in the war ith Mexico, lie waj assistant at i u.y general under Buchanan when k nr.ah P18' k wss'tho hi f H" was ) vtgi'an.; d-terroitied. coswb n iiJh, prose, lj'.'ir of those who owned an VjUaplH 'j ar.d o:tic-rc.:i th ociy la : ilJ Hi Co: Sou an;i (bat ecr liidd on ti.t a ct.ia.-it He on i man of ?p!f3t .lture and a i.vx of ability and tion. Stranje it i that thi B'iil addrv lins not b':)i ltd in thf appni!ix tt totif ern .history a.i a land ruark for it.' prrht-nt nir-ration. It is Had and uuM.iyiug tbir our yonns and midulu agttd mn and Oiir graduatea from Southern coU.-kos l;nowo little of our aWe-belluri! hiKtory. The Northern peopla are iuai!y ignorant of the origin of iilai'O al the real esuses that preclprtBU'd the civil ar. Most at them haie a. vague id;a that t v ery waa burn and Just grew t:p in the South ame up out f the ground tike Ihc 1" year old loctiBla and wait jur sin and mir curse. Nut one in ten thousand will If-Heve that the South never imported a iave from Africa, but Rt ail we had by purrhane from 9uf tVorthcrn brethren. I would wasr a tiiiniKaiid (lunr against ten that aot a man under fifty nor a school bay arho liven North of the line knows or believe that O-neral t.rant. thi.' great itillltary .he.ro and idol., was a ilavf owner and lived off of their hire and their service while be was fight log up about our. Lincoln' procla mation of freedom came in lSti3, but General Urant paid no attention to It He continued to tine thun as slaves until January, ISM. (See his bography by Ceneral Jatuca (Irani Wilson In Appb'ton'g Knrytlopedia.) General 'Grunt owned theite fclaveg In St. IjuU. Mo., where he lived. He waa a bad mauaiuT and juat before the war be gan lie moved to tlalena and went to work for hta brother in the tanyard. While there he taught the, war fever and got a good position under Lincoln, but had he remained in St. Lou! a ' would have greatly preferred onu on .'mi Hide. Bo said Mrs. (Iratit a few years ago to a newapuper editor in St. AiiRiistiue.' How many of this generation North jr South know or will believe that a. late an November. 18G1, Nathaniel (birdon. master of a New England Tlave ship called the Erie, waa con ft vleted in New York city of carrying ' on the slave trade. (See Appleton.) Juat think of It and wonder. In l8Gt ur Northern brethren made war upon tia lHaue we etmlaved the negroes we bad bought from them, but at tle lama time they kept on bringing more A from Africa and begging us to buy them. How many know that England, our mother country, aever emanci pated her alavea until 1S4S. when twelye million we,re set free la the DaW Indies and onu hundred million ' f dollars paid to their owners by act of parliament? It la only within the laat half century that the importation f alaves from Africa has generally ceased. Up to that time every civilized (Kiuntry bought them and enslaved them. English tRlefimpa..an(i flergy " wen said it waa better to bring them fe.-nv thnn to have them r-nnlhinn In their barbarism and eaulbalium. And It -was better. I believe It was Ood'a rovldenee that they should be ' brought away and placed In slavery, but the way it waa done was inhuman and brutal. The horrors of the mid dle passage, aa the ocean voyage was called, la the most awful narrative 1 -ever read and reminds me of Dante's I "Inferno." About half the cargo sur I vlved and the dead and dying were tumbled into the sea. The owners said we can afford to lose half and still have a thousand per cent profit. Rev. John Newton, one of the sweetest poets who ever wrote a hymn, the au thor of "Amaalng grace, how sweot the sound, that saved a wretch like rr-?" "Savior, Visit Thy Plantation," "3oiy Through AuotUt-r Week." au.l many others, was for many years a il -ck hand on a slave ship and saw all i! horrors. He became converted, but a after became captain Qf a alaver j and for lour yeais pursued u aui I gvutly and tuitigaied its. cruelty, Thda he jult and went to preaching and says In his'. autobiography, that it never occurred to him that there was anything wrong or immoral ia the slave trade where it was humanely conduct fd. '-Tho Savior said: "Of fenses mut nderts come, but wo unto them by whom they come." In Appietou'u long and exhaustive article on sia-.ery it 1s said that Slav cry in ome form has existed fivi sinre bnman history began. And it apivears to Love bee under the sanc tion of Providence aa far back a the days of Noah and Abraham. The latter had a very great household and many servants whom he had bought with his money. The word, alare appears but twice in the Bible. It is ayoonrraout with servant and boadsn-.an. Therf has been on time since the Christian era that the dominant cations Lave not uwiH slaves-r-somef imes the bondage "was l.ard but as a general riiie the master found it to his interest to be kind to bis slaves. As Bot Toombs Bald In bis Boston .peeh: "It is not' to our interest to starve out lates any more than it U to starv our horse and horneJ rattle." Shortly after the little cargo that the Wander er rurht were secretly wattered kround I saw some of them at work in a large gardn in Columbus. Ga.. and was toid that they were docile an 1 quic kly learned to dig -and to hoe, but ; that it was hard to teach them to eat rooked meat. They wanted it raw and i ruuti. "Guinea negroes." with thick i Hps and Bat noses, but they grew tip j f into better shape and made good ser- j l vri mmt 1 Lnnm' far ltter i.fT ( than ia their native jungles, the prey of stronger tribes, and made food ior tanibals. No. there was no sin in slavery 'as Instituted in the South by our falh cr and forefathers, and that it why I write this letter perhaps the Ixst I fcUail ever write on this subject. I j vi.sh to impress tt i Rirls ho that they i willing to defend i cestors frorft the ' buffering now for I faf.iers. ; A Northern fr , jileae 1 ! 'tip on thi j are tired of him. ttpon o:r boys ami may be ready and their Southern a:i baseless charge of the sins of their ir'-nd . wrkes : ' tif-r. Give o. W e up bi re us - niore of of domestic i your pleasant pictures Mi", etc.. but let the negro R dead." il" ities riil know that the negro and what in to become of him in a question of tremendous moment with us and H must be written about. But I, will refrain as long as it is prudent. Just now I would like in hire a man to cus the. black rascal who tame in to my back yard the other night and stole my grind stone. For five years I have let every darkey grind his ax iwitii Ui,. e..iiditien thnt they are to he who wanted to. and now I can't grind J preserved in tli( t"oti(:res-'l4!a Li my own.. The fart is I. have no as th. t brary. .. . ' :.l -r.-', t,r'nd, for they stole that, first. -Bill The twentieth annual convention of Arp, in 'Atlanta Constitution. !.. Women's Belief Corns, whbdi was I .hid I .'tt tin Church of Our I'ather.-wm Kay xeat.area to Nt. Frauk lliggins. the boy convicted of the murder of Willie Imherty near Bockwood Park, N. If., was sentenced to Ik hiiimed on .Itecetiilier 1M in St. John, N. B. The boy took the sentence rotdiy, Slioot. Wlt asd CouimlU Hulci.l.. Harry W. Patton, tweuty-turee years old, shot his wife Florence, twenty years old. at Philadelphia, Pa., and then killed himself. The Pattous had been married about two years, but sep arated three mouths ago. 170.000 MINERS ORDERED OUT. " relic Federation 1'erUr. a (leneral Ntrlka In the Coal Field.. Purls. Tbo Frencli. National I'etloitt- ion of Miners has decided to order a geueral strike In nil the mining i-entres, to begin Immediately. At present Hie strikers lu the three northeastern departments number (. (KH). If the orders of-tile Federation are obeyed there will K 17l,0W meu on strike. (.'ermanla (iuaranty UeHrlt, :ts.'i,00n. I.eeeiver George Keefer has filed in the Kehlon ..Circuit Court at Coving ton, Ky his report on the condition of the Gerniania Guaranty Company, show ing the' face value of the assets to be i(r.374.(M aud the liabilities $r,io.!i)st.ti;t, leaving a deficit of 5Mti, ?- rarueg-le'. Gift. Accepted . Andrew Carnegie's gift of $75,000 to Belfast and J3t.(KX) to Limerick, Ire land, for the establishment of libraries have been accepted. School Teacher Itao Amuck. A school teacher named Towes ran amuck at Altoona Village. Manitoba, and shot six jiersons. IL I. Ebert and J. Bempel, school trustees, and two of Bempel's daughters will dle Torres 'committed suicide after the crime. Worried Over Cuba's Attitude. The situation In Cuba causes much concern to ofllclal In Washington, the State Department having thus' far failed to secure the adhesion of the Cubau Government t. the treaty re quired 'by the Piatt amendment. f ive Killed Maar Gibraltar, The compulsory closing of a socialist club within the Spanish lines at Gib raltar resulted In a riot, in which five of the rioters were killed and several wounded. "Tie mob fired upon the olvil guard, who were temporarily driven back, but who returned the tire of the rioters and scattered their as sailants. A.k U-J.OOO.ooo ror Ponttoni. The total appropriation the Interior Department1 nsks of Congress for the next fiscal year Is $IG7,(XX.0(H. Of this $HJ.20O,7OO U for pensions. . NEVVCOMMDER OFG.A. H. General T. J. Stewart, of Pennsyl vania, Elec'.ed Commander-:n-Chiel. RECEPTION FORVETERANS' WIVES Mr.. liooif-reU Held t uarl In .rM-corau Jirt '..llrj Woman'. Krlter urjn Kviinxl.t 4';,OVO During the Vv t Mrrtir.l l)ivlii ! i he I'aiiu llu r scorr.t by trriat Coiuuilitr. Washington. I. ('. The new Com-jii!U.ler-i.('hlef of ;he (.r.nid Army of tile Republic i ticncral T. .1 8tew an. of Norristovrn, Ph., who " was a b-ad:u; Ks:tJi':tie for the houtr a year a. so. --lIi"'UPiettors at the 'deet'en of oiticeis v ere Genera!- John V. Black, of Hliuois. former Corouitssiocer of Pensions, and Colonel John McElray. of tjii ;ity. The nanie of General It.iiiiel dickies, of New York City, was I't-estnled to the convention, but In: iihdn w from the r.i'-e. The ilr.M ballot resulted in tho e!ee-tb-n of General Stewart who was i:oi in.-tted I'V -'linm.-ti S: ! ut l'ivt vatiia. the vote beiug a follows: Ktt w- art, 4" 7; Black. .'T'.'; MeKlroy, S3, W Hii!!!U M., Oiin, of Mas:i1iu'fe(xV, vt;s- elected vice eoiumsbderdn-ehier nu-i James M. Avciiil. of Georgia jun ! ior vii-e commander in-chief. i Aidc froai the ebvtlon of these e)f!- i ecrr. the tnot iuteresiiug feature of j the encampment- was the -report of the t Pension 'cuuiuittce of... t lie . A. It. Thin ei'imtuittee seventy worvl the ' sui.iie.il division of tin-' Benisio!! Bu j r an, declai ii.g that it wnn a dead line, j vt here tvere executed tiie cbtlius of ! veterans weking i.endom.'- It act-used j the 'jverwmtiel of this division of :tp i p.oacbin-.' reptvetit.'itives of exaniiu it.!.- surfjee-us fiuvjiichout the i-oimtrv Bofv,-;:.ii supfcion .'Mel disirttfr, "and as 1 ti!.i.!c in had faith. It denounced the i reHrt thsit extensive .frauds - were j ii'eieed In pension claims unVo I lutely iiat les-i. , i A I'psoltitioti tvax adopt'oil expresin; the crief of the cituv! tititut over the ' death of 1'retiident .McKiniey ;itnl Its I' Sjet over Preni-V.ul l:oeeveit's iu ; tli.-'i-iii-K ion. 1 A collection of t)!iotO!:rapik of tyot rof the past nntioitn! otfieers of the or I tier whs prcsi-ntei! t.j the 'contention i by f.degatr Be.-ttb.' of IVnnsvlvnubi.' , )tio of the atires. in tho hi-i,r n tlu. organization. Mrs. Calinta N. Jones of Vermotif, the narlonnl president, presided, ntid was the recipient of sew era historic gavels. The order was shown to -be rn a flourishing condition. Over $42.fl0 was expemletl iluilng the year, leaving a fund of over JlLOiM) on hand. Mtft, Clara Barton, of the National Bed Cross;-the only surviving honor ary member-of the organ iiation. was escorted -lo the platform. Her feeble health Mould not permit her to more thnn murmur her thanks. Amid classie setting, surrounded by lhe " masterpieces of Miehatd Angel'o ami ltonatlli, standing between liutcd marble columns with ornate Corin thian .capitals. Mrs. .Boosevelt jin.l the bulie.of tiie ('linnet received the la dies of the Grand Army of the lb-public fit the rorcontn Art inHery. The reeepiion lusted for two hours, from 4 to tl o'clock, and wa attended bv loon of Hie G. A. B. ladies. The Ma rine Band played at the -reception to and as the afternoon advanced the pbte'e was brilliantly illuminated With electricity. Prominent .-niuni; the .callers wire Mrs. John A. Loi:iii, Miss Clara Bar ton and Mrs. John C. Black. DRIVEN INSANE BY OVERWORK. l"otir Naval Officer Have Killed Tlieni. elvr. 1'mler Cip.t Strain. Washington. 1. ('.-Overwork has been reported to the Navy Department as responsible for the death, probably the suicide, of Lieutenant Frederic B. Ilolman. United Slates Navy, who was lost overboard on August 13, "On, the morning of August 14." re ported the Hoard that made the In vestigation, . "careful inquiries aud a close search of every part of the ship was made and there' Is no possible rea son to doubt that he. Is dead; and clr cumstances lead us to believe that he took his owu life during a temporary tit of insanity brought on by weakened condition of the nervous system and worry because of his physical-Inability to perform his duty;" " ; r Lieutenant Ilolman is the fourth of ficer reported to the Navy Department In the last wo months as haviug com mitted suicide. t : USE 1 OF X-RAYS BRINGS DEATH. 8urgeon Thought They DLrover.d Mil Ibr He Teeth la a Mao'. Throat. Cleveland. Ohio. Frauk Buettner, a well known contractor of this city, died as the result of an operation performed to remove a aet of false teeth which It was supposed he had swallowed while asleep. An X-ray machine was used on Buettner, .which, the surgeons de clared, showed the teeth to be In the oesophagus, Just as tho latter had been opened Its entire length a rela tive of Buettner's rushed into tlj op erating room with the missing set of terth. which had been found lu Buett ner's bed. It was learned that Buett ner was suffering from a severe case of acute laryngilla. The pain In his throat led him to believe he feat wl rawed th, teeth, ... , , , t. BODIES IN COLD STORAGE Hiirt Founi ia a Warehouse in - Louisville, Ky. fu.,i t Hare V.rrn Moln I row la. tiiaoaimtis Ontntcrir Wsji t.rp Hp to th ruiic-. Louisville, Ky. The police of Louis ville found Ihirty bodies in eo'd snnnra lu a wniAdiouseidirectly across an alley from YViheu's ice t'i"fau factory .'.NTlie Hdies Wing kept cold by ttites run underground from the ice cfeam factory. The discovery w made on a tele gram from the Chief of Police" of In dianni'Hdis. saying th;t in a letter from Sir. Mary June Smith, of Louisville, she bad told him that all the bndies re cently stob-n from Iielisnsf.olis ceme teries could he. found in the wlww. Tbe Louisville polk-e went to work once, and after snine difficulty forced their way into the warehouse, inhere tiie- bodies were Nmnd.,1 They were nude, and a majority were in a fair state of preservation The Chief of Polie of! Indianapolis was tjuiekly notified of the discovery.' snd lie telegraphed tlw atthoritieS Hint he would -cohuMo Iuiisville. accotu panied by ridativt-s of -he dead i-r-sou mid vliotoeiit'dis. nod would niske nn effort to identify ;the bol:es!. Mrs. Smith says she knows the bodies were brought from Iudianapolis. Members rf the faculties of the va rious Ilieiiical eoiieges here deny ll knowledge of the presence of the bod ies, and" say there is no occasion-for them to steal bodies, the Sta1 turning over to them all (hose of persons who die in the ptihlh institution of the Commonwealth. The owners and s-tat-hes of the ice cream factory' refuse to ta'.U. except to .-iv that the bodies were not stolen, pud (bat titeir presence In the warelmise will le HicoutiTed for It! a Jegal n ay. BL,0W KIILS JOHN KENSIT." Antl-nitualiM Lender Iie. Frmu Injui-T Iteoelred After One of III Mewling.. London. John Ivensii. the noted .in'l ritualist, is dead. About two week ngo Kensil attended an nuti-rittinlUt mee;iii at Birkenhead "'l iuveiirlcd .I7a!n?t tiie Ksfablished f'hurili in hi itstial style. After the meet ins K'enslt was fid lowed by'. a crowd of hooting young men, one of whom threw n chisel ;t bin). The mitsijo struck him in the 1 ft rye ntid inflicted a d:trceroiis wound. He was taken to the Liverpool ludrm aiy. where tli phyicians pronouneejl i hisrcon.dit.ioj!. cr.it iea!. .-. .. : ... i Kensii's son is sefvn? a three Ijmonths' sentence in jail for creatiny anti-ritualistic tlisturu.iinces in a t hni ch In Liverpool. Six years ago John Kensil wn an unknown bookseller in Loudon. H started bl ntitl-rlt'jAlisiie crusade, and. reinforced by converts, he carried his warfare into the cjiurches that were the objects of his attacks. His meet ings -were invariably attended with dis order and many of his followers have suffered arrest and imprisonment. . i CONSUL BRACC .TRANSFERRED. He Goes Front .Havana to Hongkong In the Kauie Capacity. Washington. D.C. Edward S. Bragg, fWsul-Goiiornl at Havana, has been transferred to the port of I'nlted States Consul-General at Hongkong, taking the filace of William A. Bublee, who has been frnnsferred to the Consulate at Havana. The change has been In contempla tion for almost three months. The oltl clal salary of the place is ..iiHSi per an num, but there are fees, attached, much of which go to (lie Consul-General, which WeH'lhe lotal compensation to nhout.STuoo pei'yetir. . '' Cent ral Bragg had made himself un popular with the Cuban Government because of nn adverse criticism he hud made Of the Cuban people in a. letter to bis wife, which somehow found its way into the public prints. SCHOOLMASTER KILLS .PUPiLS. Becomes Suddenly In.ane and "Ituna Amuck 'VI. I inched hy Villager.. Iondon A dispatch from Vienna nn nouuees that a fearful tragedy was en acted at Droysslg. Bohemia. A village schoolmaster, forty years of age, while talking to his class, sudden, ly became insane, 'rushed to his desk, drew a revolver from, it. ami "rati amuck," shooting right and left among the terrified children.' Three scholar Were killed and three were dangerously wounded. ' " On hearing the shots and aeroguns Hie Tiltygers quickly arrived aiJiieschoiiL "aml.lnfurlaretl at the sight which met their eyes,. lynched the schoolmaster. TWO NECROES LYNCHED. A Tennce Mob Avenice. I lie Death of a ' " Whit farmer. Newbern, Tenn. Garfield Hurley anil .Curtis Brown, two negroes, were hanged here hy a mob of .Vki persons. Hurley shot mid instantly killed 1 Flatt, n well-known fanner near Dyersburg, after a quarrel over a horse trade. A posse located Hurley in a negro enhln at TTiirTiunn Ark. While beillS brought to Dyersbttrg Hurley confessed the kUlmir. Implicating Curtis Brown X aa an accessory. Vuiglars Rob a Fo.tofltoe. Burglars took fitMV cash and f S00 In stamps from tho poitoffloe at Tasewcll Court House, Va. Shot Wife and kVllled Blmtelf. After killing his wife by shooting. ElfBaskett killed himself at Atlee, Vs. CRAZED INVENTOR'SCRIME YbuTijr. Wan Kills His Mother and Sister at Homesiead, Pa. Injured Two Other Slater, and Tried ta Twa Brother. Kill XV. ei vovered l.".d an Axe. ritisliurj. Pa While Inhering uiub'r ni-ut)il aU'tration. (be result of the etraiVi of -perfecting an appliance for patents on an air brake, which are pending in Washington. Charles Caw ley, a sevenifeu-year-old boy of Home stead, kitiled his mother and one. sister while they l-pt and injurt'd four other children, who. however, are expected to retover He also tried to kill his two older brothers, but was detected, overpowered and turned over to the police. The wcapou used was an axe. The dead are: Mrs. Hatiua ("awley, aged about forty yerfrs: Belle Caw ley, aged twelve, who slept with her mother. The Caw ley family live in a neat six room bouse. At night all the members retired about 10 o'clock. Mrs. Cawley and Belle occupied one bed. while the other. Joseph. Adeline, Raymond and Agnes, occupied other beds and cribs In the fame room.- Charles, the mur derer; bis brothers. James, aged twen ty, aud Harry, aged fourteen, occupied Some time about 3 o'clock in (he morning Charles quietly arose, ami. dressing himself, but not putting on his shoes, crept down to the cellar and se cured an axe. . Coming up st.aJfs he went into h!s mother's room, where the victims were sleeping, and attacked each In turn. . " Believing that he had dispatched them all lie started-for his brother's room, but James, the eldest, bad been awakened, and as Charles enterd he seized a heavy rocking chair and after a fierce struggle overpowered him. On the way to the station I he- murderer fought ferociously. After he was lodged in jail the intir derr failed to recognize his brother James, and when questioned about the tragedy talked Incoherently. Later in the day the murderer denied emphati cally that he committed the deed. He told a fairly connected story. He said he was "awakened at an early hour by pounds on the. first floor and went down stairs to investigate. Beturning up stairs lie found liis sister lying ncross the bed covered with blood, and fled to give the alarm. ... ' For two years he has been workim? on a device for a combined air and power brake. It is said to lie a won derful Invention, and men who have seen n marvel at -the. mechanical abil By of. th- inventor. In view -of - his years He was of a kindly disposition, ard was said to have been very -fond of hU mother and brothers and sisters. KILLED IN A STREET DUEL, j Pltehed Kattle In an Arkan.aa Town Lead, to Call For Militia. Eldorado. Ark. This village was the scene of a desperate battle between parties to a feud. When the fight was ended four men were dead and half a dozen-ot Iters wounded. . As the result of a quarrel begun some wweks ago over Hubert. Mullins's refusal to permit his young woman assistant to receive her fiance at Mul lins's photograph gallery, Mullins was killed by Constable II. L. Deerlng. The killing caused much excitement and I wo factions sprang up, one side Justifying the killing, the other con demning .' it. The .-controversy grew Into a bitter feud and there were threats, of killing on both sides. Tiie two factions met in the streets. Both sides were armed to the teeth, ami -indiscriminate shooting Immedi ately begun. The battle lasted but a few minutes, but was most desperate. Each man fired till lie was killed or his ammunition gone. When the sn'ioke of battle cleared Tom ami Waller Pnrnell, brothers: Constable Deerlng and City Marshal Guv Tinker were dead. Mat Pnrnell and City Physician Hilton were dan gerously wounded. , In compliance with the request from the Sheriff of T'nion County, Governor Davis ordered the company of the State Guard nt Eldorado on duty to suppress trouble and preserve the peace. CETS FIVE YEARS FOR BICAMY. A MlMourl Mayor Had Married Vnderan ( A.aained Mama. Emporia, Kan. James Pendleton. Mayor of Gentry, Mo., convicted of bigamy, was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. Pendleton, under the assumed mvme of Coda S. t,orris, married Miss Grace Obley. of Emporia, a few months ngo, find later, under the name of John Cox.Mnilcd a:coBin containing lee nt Orlando. Oklahoma, ami circulated the report thnt Coda. S. Morris had been killed In a runaway. Pendleton has a family at Gentry. r - Klllfd Sweetheart aed II tin. elf. Miss Alice Fisher, a young woman employed In tho Government Printing Otlieo -afc Washington, was shot and In stantly killed by Williifm Dougherty, an employe of the same otlloe. Dough erty then shot and killed himself. Jeal ousy was the motive. Town of Perth Honors Carnegie. Andrew Carnegie,- in receiving the freedom of Perth, Scotland,' dilated on the horrors of "civ Hissed war," and praised the work of the Cxnr in creat ing the permanent Hague. Arbitration Tribuual. Rhode I. laud Favors Rooxevelt. Hhode Islaud Republicans have nom inated Charles D. Kimball for a sec ond term as Governor. They declared for President Roosevelt's nomination, la 1904.. . 1 REVIEWED BY PRESIDENT RaoseveU Witnesssd tha Procession , of the Grand Army Veierans., .n Oration All A Ions the Koete A are Itide With Mr. Kooeevelt After the Parade. Washington. D. C.--President Itoose felt reviewed the Grand Afffty parade lu bis carriage. He wss carried dowa stairs from his room on" the seeondi floor of the temporary White House lot ' an invalid's chair, am! amid tiie cheer of a large crowd was placed In he ear rlage. iu which there wss a board t upport his injured leg. He was ac- , rompauied by Secretary Oortelyou and Colonel Bingham, bis military aide. As the carriage apics.rod on the a1 nue the President was greeted withi loud.cheers. The President stopped at the reviewing siand for a moment until the marshals of thy parade and Haw- litis Post, of Minneapolis, the right of the line, bad passed, and (hen drov down the avenue to the l'esi Monu ment at the foot of the Capitol. The veterans faced the carriage as th President drove by and saluted hini. There was continuous cheering from the crowds ss the ' President drovtv along. Less tna.n ttiirtyjiiv minutes were consumed iu the journey, and when the : White House was rest bed Secretary Cortelynu and Colonel Bingham got out and, much to the surprise and delight of the waiting orow'ds, Mrs'. Roosevelt emergen, entered the carriage, and was) driveu rapidly away with the Presi dent. President and Mrs. Roosevelt re lumed to the White House about 1-30 p. m.. having been gone an hour and a. half. They liad driven through Rock Creek and Zoological Parks, but kept clear of the crowds. Several thousand iK'ople waiting outside the White House cheered their return For five hours tiie (.rami Army of th Republic inarched along Pennsylvania avenue between crowds which seemed larger than (hose at the last inaugura tion of a President. It la ten years since Washington had a national en campment. The ranks of the Grand Army haT been thinned by death: one New York post, which sent eighty men to the en- ' eajupmeiit of ISii'J. sent only thirty to this, and In addition there were nunv ; hers of Grand Army men iu he crowds who bad attended the encampment, but were unable to march from the infirmi ties of age. But, after allowing for all t!-i t!w number of men in line waa sill! surprising. Another fact that wa remarked upon by the spectator was the tine appearance presented by many of the pots. Many of them, particu larly those from the Atlantic States, marched and looked like soldiers still. : "Daughters of the Post" were numer- ous. and Some of them were so prettily uniformed and marched in so soldierly a fashion that they sot more applause thnn tk veterans. One of the "Daugh ters." attired in louave uniform, marching vltb some New York Zouaves, pleased the crowd There was one female band, composed of women hailing from Waterloo. Ind., alt of whom wore long maroon colored dresses. They played a patriotic air n they passed the reviewing stand, and were duly cheered. Indeed, wheir--... ever ladies occupied a place in the line they were applauded, notwithstanding their presence was forbidden by gep ernl orders. WON'T SEE THE BOER ' GENERALS. Kamer Not to Invite Them and They Will Not A.k For a Reception. Berlin. Germany. It has been decid ed that Emperor William will not re ceive the Boer Generals, Botha. Dela rey and De Wet. The semi-oflicial North German Gajttte says: "When it came to the knowledge of Ills Majesty (hat the lenders of the. Boer Arniy. Botha. De Wet and Dela rcy, wera coming to Berlin, nn order was issued by His Majesty that the Geuernls (should bp acquainted with the fact tfcat he was ready to receive them, proyitled they would abstain while In Gfrtnnny from nny antl-Eug-lish agitallsn anil present lliemselvea through the JCngllsh Ambassador. Gen eral De Wet; in behalf of his comrades, accepted these conditions. Aecordinff to official news from The Hague the Generals In the meantime have changed their minds, and now, while hesitatlne to ask for. an audience, prefer to wait In the expectation of- tt( Kaiser offer ing oue." I The Gazette concludes: "The Incident ,1s thus settled. The question of an au dlemv has been decided In, the uega tlve." ' ; R 1 0 1 IN C - IN - N E W - 0 R LE A N Sr - lli.order Attends the Street Car Strike Militia Ordered Out. New Orleans. La The first attempt to run cars from the Canal street barn resulted - ttr a - serious riot -In -which - r about fifty shots were fired 'and a num ber of people wounded. Policeman Scblessinger was shot through the head ami probably fatally wounded; Conductor. Kennedy wa . shot In the hand; Mntorman Ferguson, a striker, wns shot, through the arm, ntul a number of policemen were pain fully grounded by flying missiles. Mofonniin Nintz is charged with hav ing fired the first shot from the street tar. Orders for his arrest have been Issued. Governor Heard was reached during the afternoon and after a telephonic. . ' coi'fevenoe with Mayor Capdey telle' or dered Major-General Glynn. "In com mand of the military district, to report to the Mayor. Arrangements were , made to distribute the troops so that adequate protection was afforded tho company In Its effort to run cars.