THE RAPE FIEND. Pretty Young Mother Lying at the point of Death. Dragged From Her Screaming Ohidren. . . ,,. , Goldsboro, N. - C, Aig. 23, Mrs. J as, C. Smithy the white wo" ,,,,1 outraged and beaten yesterday afternoon, at her home hear Seven Springs, in in a very precaribusJ condition. N The negro brute, Thomas Jones, ttlio committed the outrage, I am advised at 8:30 this eveninjg, is lo cated in a swamp.in the neighbor hood and is thought will be captur ed. The chances of escape are in creased, however by the , dark ness As the neighborhood people are justly aroused, and if caught, a speedy fiend. fate doubtles awaits the v As the facts developed the crime becomes darker and darker, Mrs. Smith is young and pretty. She resides with her husband ona plan tation cleared in every direction save one. Here a pine thicket ap proaches the home to within a hun dred yards. From this-thicket the negro approached the house. Mrs. Smith was alone at the time. Jones made an improper proposal to her, saying that if she complied with his demands he would not hurt her. but if she refused he would . kill her. "' Mrs. Smith, indignantly refused) and the villian' dragged her from her home to the pine thicket and there accomplished ; his purpose, having beaten the poor woman al most to death and quite beyond re cognition. He left her he doubt--less thought dead;; J , The negro Jones ; came to this section trom Durham.- l,ast year he worked in tobacco atl,a Grange; This year he was employed on the farm of the father of his poor inno cent victim. . " LATER.: - Kinston, N. C Aug. 25! Tom Jones, the rape fiend,?paid the pen alty of his crime at ten o'clock this morning. He was tied to aMog; rid dled with bulets and buck shot and left half dead by lynchers. . after wards being finished by 'Citizens to put him out of his misery! : . Parties from Seven 'Springs; La Grange and other places had been scouring the .country from the mo ment of his crime until apprised of his capture. He hid all: Sunday on a pocosin in the midst of , a dense swamp, eight miles f rqm the scene of his brutal crime. He emerged soon after midnight and went to- warus ienansvnis, uuL:.wi m uu J Tr . ." M1 1 a. ..t 1 a bridge by a party from Duplin county, Messrs, J. M. Rich. Frank Simmons and John Marshall. They ordered him to hold his hand up and he submitted without any resist ance. They locked . hiur in an out house on James Maxwell-s farm and he . was then taken to the" Smith farm and identified by his victim. He confessed and gaye u.V 4. ra or stolenfrom Smith. . He. was bound and locked in a tobacco barn on the ; farm " of " Monroe Rich . to wait the arrival of the sheriff . - Later, ten men ; disv uised as - ne groes, came out 'of the woods' with guns' and axes and i demanded his person; Officer Walker, .who was in charge, resisted and was shot -in the neck but not seriously. .The : men battered down the door, . tcok Jones, placed him on atram car and run down, into the woods. . There i he yv'as bound to a log and then men stood off ' some . .distance, and fired a' vblly , mostly of shot, into his body wounding, but 'not killing him.l -The men then withdrew and afterwards sorne other citizens fired a volly that ended his life. - Mrs. Smith will live but is horri bly disfigured, i Her right hand is cut into. strips by the razor, Jones stole from her riusband, hef" . eye is gouged out her; jawbone smash ed and splintered, her face terribly lacerated , her. throat and breast dis -colored from choking and beating. Storms in the West; " -St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 21. Re ports this morning from Pana state that a cloud burst last evening caused over a quarter of a million dollars' damage. It was the worst storm seen in forty years. .ManyJ bridges were washed out, and rail . way traffic is impeded. Several churches in small villages were un roofed. No fatalities are report" ed. : ;' - - - .! STORM . IN KANSAS. Kansas City , Mo. , Aug. 12. A severe wind storm swept the town of IolaV Kansas at midnight. Thou sands of dollars worth of damage was done, to factories. Two coach es were blown from the track while standing in front of the depot and the passenger ; but'sligh tly - in j ur ed.-' - ; :-. ' ":- ' V V- -M A- L Game Killed by Itail. The hail storm last Thursday af ternoon, which was general in the county, seemed to have been fworse in Crab Orchard township and - es pecially in that section around Bur dette? Mr. C. W. Hodges, a farmer who lives in th at ! section, was in the" city yesterday. Hes said that his fields are in $ perfect stench' caused by the decomposition of the game" which was in the storm. ; He said that all game, rabits, partrides, etc. . which were not under holly, cedar or other very dense cover was killed. The fodder on his corn was entirely destroyed and the cot ton was left in bad condition. Dur ing, thei storm he saw hailstones larger than a hen egg.-7-Charlotte Observer. Mitchell Still Confident. Wilkesbarre, Pa.: Aug. 23. President Mitchell arrived here from -Chicago today. sN He fays , he was not going to-New York to hold a conference with any of the presi dents Qf the coal carrying railroads. So far as he knew, . the situation was uncnaneea. . jluc iuiucib, . M sust hYm now as tne nrsr, aay xney wcuuuu on .. . f 4 . 1 i1. Hte4- 4 M4n1a 4T am iust as conhdent as ever, toov continued the chief officer f rf .. , the striking army; Vthat we are go jngtowin.7' v ; - ' , Kinir Alfonso Mad., ; . Madrid, Aug. 21.-Spain , agliast, over the latest reports- is of trftordmarv r eccentncites of Kins Alfonso,;; the , details of which -are 1 gradually . becoming knowririd cause fears that the ru v?c tnental- aberration . are truef during altourjof the provinces which ended Monday; the King re peatediy gave evidences of; a lack". of mentaVbaiance. s- .The Packard Piano is theroughly ditistical in its every .detail. . . PREDICTS CALAMITY. He Says This Country Will, Pall as : " - Did Babylon.1 - -; Like Barjylon of old, the United States is destined to have its' . fall" with, the Republican party, in ".the role, of Belshazzar, the" responsible factor in its undoing. This is the pessimistic prediction, of :W. J. Bry an, who warns government leaders that there will be a. dismal awaken ing if 'national policies are rushing headlong into new -conditions and are leading the country into untried ed. paths. They are sure that " we can maintain a republic here and at the same time administer a colony in the Orient. . They are sure they can safely encburage the growth of private monopolies, notwithstand ing the Inevitable' tendency of .men to use power for his. own unselfish purposes..' They are allowing Uni . , L , , lieu oLciieb juugesiu auuse inc writ of injunction - when asked against laboring men, while those who vio late.the anti-trust laws go free; blind to the fact' that such discrim- all the speeches ever delivered by Herr Most. " Lincoln , Neb. , Dis patch. U "y 1 . . V MR. SAGE ON TRUSTS. , 'V ..V..- " ' .... . Aged Financier Declares Combina tions a Menace to : Government.' New . York; ? ' Aug. - 2 i;r--Russell Sage, the aged financer, Jtoday dur ing an interview, took direct issue with J, Pierpont Morgan regar dinsr the gigantic combinations and con solidation of; great interests. Mr. Morgan intimated ; that the era of consolidations had just begun and that ottier schemes were now planning, : Air. Sage said on this point: The combination of all the great r indus tries are a menace, to' government. They are not only a menace but are oppressors of the people. Should '.. .-.. . . . ...... an era of combination ensue the American people will pertainly re volt against them and if they do theret wilHbe financial ruin such as has never been dreamed of in the world? s. history. ' The Liquid Air Company Bank- J rupt. A hearing, instituted, by District Attorney Jerome, before J ustice Jn- lius'M. Mayer, sitting as a , magis ti ate, to determine the responsibility for the collapse of the Tripler Liqaid Air Company, and to disclose what has become of several-hundred thou sand dollars alleged to have been re ceived1 by the: company for stock, was begun this afternoon. The. hear ing was.not public. : At its' close the statement was made that' the only witness examined was John M. Hoen, one of the original promoters, who told of the company's early-his tory. An adjournment was taken until October,- , Senator John P. Jones, of Nevada and ex-Senator Stephen , W; Dorsey were,, respectively, president and vice-president of the defunct com pany. It was ,'declared . bankrupt last November, with liabflitfes of $350,000 and assets of $3,000.-, -Te New York -Dispatch. v ;4 Isn't this the 'concern with which exSenator Butler, of' North Caro-j lira, 13 or has been conhectedNlt Jia3 been reported i n this h Stat - recen tly that he has made a good large pile ont of . "a . liquid' air concern. The .... - ... . v r , Landmark.. . . BRYAN Makes the food I. more deiieiosis and whbSesome ROYAL BAKING POWDER PATTERSON WON Nominated for Congress at Fay- etteville. This Morning: at Six O'clock. , Fayetteville', NC-i". Aug.' 21V Precisely at six ;, forty five o'clock this morning the convention, after a tiresome though-anxious all night session, nominated Hon. Gilbert B. Patterson, of Robeson County, for Congress. ; . 1 . He was. given "on , the 310th bal- lot 174 votes, thirteen over a ma jority, which were obtained by ' a combined attack against Congress-. man Bellamy, Patterson, Hale and Brown, with the first mentioned al- ways leading. , - ' ' , . - - Three hours, previous to this time it was plain that Hale had decided to drop out and that,4us support ers were awaiting an advantage ous opportunity to vote fori Patter son. This .the Cumberland : dele gation did when Columbus dropped its candidate, Lion. J: A. k Brown, and just about halved its fifty four votes with iseliamy and v Patterson . The new, nominee., made- a fine speech of acceptance. This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative-BrompsQuinine Tablets ; the remedy that cures a cold in ona day Souvenier. Gold Dollars to be c'olri- ed. . . TMe gold dollar, which passed out of circulation' some- years; ago be cau se the govern men t su spend ed the coinage of this diminutive - piece, of metal, is. to be " temporarily - rein tro d need in 1904. An employe of ; the bureau of engraving and printing is drawing a design, bv direstion of Secretary Shaw, for, a special 'sod venir pne dollar gold. piece; in . cele bration of the Louisiana Purchase exposition to be held at St. IJoni8.,, 'Two issues of the coin will, be made. One will bear unon its face . . " v -.' portrait of William; McKinley ' and the other that of Thomas Jefferson. The words ?' Louisiana Purchase Ex position, ' vwith the dates "1803 and 1903 will appear on the reverse side; On the-reverse side will be engraved an appropriate design, i After you've seen a Packard you won tsbuy any other.' ' HOE Not talk, but. facts. -r Facts that -are worth ;your consideration. , If we can only get you to ex amine our stock it will not be necessary to talk much."J?he goods and the prices will do that. Tie say it without hesitation or. fear iof successful contradiction, for it is a fact, that our lair ; sfock of shoes and prices will not be matched in Eox, boro. . . : ; - We have iust received V big pother good shoes direct from the factory arid are expecting I another lot every day, then in a short time those celebrat-:- ed best on earth Ziegler's will bellxereiWill give you extra close price if you want only one pair and still better if you ; take several. . vv l: . ' 1--';.:. -X mm 'I Li? CO. NEW fORK. - " - Littleton Female College; Littleton, N, : C.,' an : advrtisement of, " which r appears elsewhere, ia-one of the, best" ' 5 located .schools in the south. ,Jt is , - . immediately on the Seaboard Air Line- railroad? betweenLtaleigh;" arid Wel don.N. C, in the mfdst of 'a region ; ; of noted ymineral'SpringSj Where peo- : pie go every-yearl in quest of health ah(J where the pure, water," . braeeing ; . atmosphere-andfsplendid clinrate eas-v lly make it one ;of the most desirable piuca i.ui a iemaie AJUiiege tu ue iuuuu anywhere.- The 'Vew, building now : about completed is a very handsome i 1 I 1 " . .- 14 1 V.. . f ' t : structure ana presenta an imposing- -appearance from the-railroad - which - forms the Northern boundary of the' - ' 1 1 H q Roof PioonyiTHrtTi fV-ki.-a TVTci iaifa ' . Chills and Fever is a bottle V of-' 'V Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic.: 'It is, simply iron and quinine in a tasteless -form. No care no, pa vV Price 50b.- :, 7 John S.-Wise, formerlyof ptVirV gioiai but now of New; iYork; and' ; the negrq9Sof iVjrginii haeinaug- , br)ng trouble m the Commonwealth of Virginia.-; -1 r. v " C l . j ; An address. violent and -inflatna-. v ? -..- , - 'f ' '-.'.- tory in character, has, been issued by ' a convention ct,t negroes in: Eich . mond. and learned counsel hss ; been ; employed to test the. constitutionality off the new suffrage amendment in r Virginia. vv John. Wise, "Esq., who . . has beiBn retained as counsel for - the, V u a L3r4 i u r i i i r 11 vrt m t r Trio - r ri u irriiuu ... that "the courts will hold Jhat the -new Constitution ofVirginMa';i8.vhot,,;V?:: has never- been, and cannot be r the -law of Virginia,' and" he adds': ; "Ic will be held a nullity, arid all efforts tn f.rpaf. it as valid or hindinc -. ririon - the riftonle of Vframia will ; be held '.. void. . -;;- . ; " : ' ZK ' ' ;1 1 1 5 c -v Judge. SehenckDead;. ''Greensboro; N. C. Aug. 26. r After, years, of ill' health - and a- year of complete incapacity to take part in. I the affairs of; life ex-judge -David; t ' 4 -i 1 - . --i -i OcnencK aiea at ms resiaence nere.; on Kdgewofth7- street at ; 6 o clock. His death had beenvhourl expected , for the past two days. . . :: 1 While stealing a ride on top of a coach in an excursion train from At lanta to -Wilmington, Tan unknown negro pitched o headlong " to the grtund, breaking bis neck arid dy ing instantly. The accident occur ed near Monroe. v , . .. . shipment bC"Dixie :- Girl, and FAGTS s.