MMMMimHMlh1t fMIIMIIIIMIMMMII v f TAc. Medium i r 4 -VI lutfd in Ih County X , fi nrvsgn wniciv jyw. rcavn upv t people Madiaon County X ft a yar in Ad-Vanc t " i M IlllllllllMl'UII.IIHIIIIIlt ADVERTISING RATESCSAPPUCATlC.lt 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 POLITICAL REFORM AND THE GENERAL UPBUILDING OF MADISON COUNTY. MARSHALL, N. 0., FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1909. NO. 12. VOti.XI. ID 1 c of l- . 11 i h a d iy t. iy it i al le re in to f- 1 in n irt an of in tha, ' a rat iea lay rell iras iss aid nvi l! ard f i in ram' MS. RENDERS VERDICT OF GUILTY r Nashville, Tenn., Special Guilty of murder in the second degree pun ishment 20 years' imprisonment this was the unexpected verdict rendered , by the ury against CoL .Duncan B. -Cooper and Robin J.. Cooper when tha eourt opened Saturday. The jnry Fri day aoquitted John- D. Sharp, indicted . with the. Coopers for the slaying of 'former U 8. Sehator Edward W. Car mack. . ' , ,. : Rush to Sign Bond. Although Judge Hart fixed the bond at $25,000 there was a rush to sign it on the part of wealthy edtiiene of Nashville which fairly swamped the olerk of the criminal court. The first to arrive was John J. Greener, who signed for $10,00 on each bond. Several others had been .sent for and telephoned that they would eome as quickly as automobiles would bring them. In a few moments Walter O. Parmer arrived and signed for the balance. "I wiH sign for million for these men," he remarked. In vain the clerk protested Over and over again that more than enough sureties had signed but the invariable answer was "We want to put onr name on that bond too." It seemed as though every friend of the Coopers considered it incumbent upon him to sign the bond. When there was no more room for names at the foot of the document the new bondsment en dorsed across the face until it was difficult to decipher the signatures. When filed the bond totaled nearly a million and a half. The Jury's Verdict At 9:25 the 12 men entered the room and ' took the same seats they had occupied for nearly 9 weeks. "Have you agreed upon a verdict, gentlementT" said Judge Hart. "We have," replied Foreman E If. Burke hoarsely. "Advance, Mr: Foreman, and read " the-verdict." '' ' " '" "We, the jury, findlhe defendants Duncan B. Cooper and Robin J. Cooper guilty of murder in the second degree and assess their pnnishment at confinement in the State penitentiary ror a period ef twenty years." "So say you all, gentlementt" "So say we all," in chorus. I thank you, gentlement," said the court, "for your patience and de- votiton to tlie state, and dismiss yon to your homes and to your personal vocations. The jurors were tired-looking and disheveled, but with the conclusion of this remark the entire 12 sprang from their seats as one man and hur riedly left the conrt room. Decision Against the Two Coopers for Killing of Sen. Carmack 20 Years In the Penitentiary the Penalty. UNITED STATES CENSUS REPORT ON THE COTTON CROP Washington, Special. Running bales of cotton numbering 13,408,841, of average gross weight of 505 ppnnds, all equivalent to 13,563,942 500-pound bales, with 27,587 ginner ies operating, was the final report of the eensus bureau Saturday qn the cotton crop grown in 190Sl The report included 344,970 linters and counts round as half bales. " The final 1907 crop report was 11,325,882 bales, equivalent to 11375,461 500 pound bales with 27,597 ginneries operating, . .. . Included in ths 1908 figures are 93, 085 bates, trfiich the ginuers' estimate ed they would turn out after the time of the March canvass, ' Round bales in the report are 340,- LYNCHED AT ELKINS, W. VA., fOR ASSAULTING OFflCER Elkins, W. . Va.;- Special Joseph Brown, said to have, been an ex-convict, who Thursday evening shot and seriously wounded Chief of Police Scott White, at WJiitmere, near here, was taken from jail by a crowd of men at 1:30 Friday morning and lynched. Brown was hanged upon a telegraph pole. - Thursday evening White, who is a son of Wayor Wash ington White, of Whitemere, remon DECLARE ALCOHOL Washington, Specials - Alcohol practicality has no therapeutic uses, judging from the discussion at the semi-annual meeting here Thursday Of the American Society for the Stndy of Alcohol and Other Drug 'Narcotics. Some of the medical scientists contended that alcohol has no therapeutic uses; others that on the whe) it has few such uses, while another - declared that alcohol, grad ually is being eliminated as a drug. Papers were read by Drs. Henry , O. Marey, of Boston, honoarary presi dent of the society, entitled, "A Verdict a Surprise. The verdict, coming as. it did upon the heels .of - Foreman Burke's dec laration Friday that "we are hope lessly tied up as to the Coopers," waa a decided surprise. The defendantl took it colly almost without emotion. In a second after Judge Hart ceased dismissing the jurors, Judge . Ander-. son, of the defense, was on his,' zee! exdaitnihg: "Your honor, we moV that the case be declared a mistrial because of the verdict Friday we eon tend that Friday 's verdict was the only one, and that it acquitted John Sham but declared a disagreement on the other defendants. We also ask that the. defendants he admitted to bond at once." . A Bailable Case. "The verdict of the jury makes it a bailable case," was the court's re tort. 'Hence I will fix the bond of eaeh defendant at $25,000 unless there be some objection. In that event I will hear arguments." "It is satisfactory to us," said Attorney General McCnrn. "And to us," re torted Judge Anderson. "There seems nothing left but for the court to pass sentence," added Judge Hart. "I do not think that necessary, said Judge Anderson. We move that judgment be suspended and that we be given a new trial. We Will be pre pared to argue the motion later probably next week." "All right, judge," remarked the court. "I know you will not delay unnecessarily and I will fake it up at your own convenience. ' ' How the Jury Voted. The jurors were not inclined to talk but one of them said: "On the first ballot we acquitted John Sharp and disregarded the con spiracy theory. On this same ballot we. stood six for guilty of murder in tha first degree with mitigating cir cumstances, five for murder in the second degree with 2(k years, the maximum penalty and one for ac quitttal. The ballots all day Wednes day and Thursday showed the same result. Friday the man who voted for acquittal came over to murder in the second degree but demanded that only 10 years be assessed. The rest of us did not deem ten years as any thing like adequate, so we disagreed again. Of course, all this refers to the Coopers, not Sharp, whom we had acquitted. Early Saturday morning the man who was holding out for 10 years agreed to 20 years and the six who were .voting for a first degree verdict agreed to this verdict." 450 bales. Sea island bales included are 93,848 for 1908 and 86,895 for 1907. ine crop by btates, in running bales, including linters, follows: Alabama, 1,358,339 bales; Arkan sua, 1,018,708 bales; Florida, 71,411 bates; Georgia, 2,022,828 bales; Kan sas, Kentucky and New .Mexico (in eluding linters, of establishments in Hlinbis and Virginia) 5,054; Louis iana, 481,694 bales; Missessippi, 1, 665,695 bales; Missouri, 60,609 bales North Carolina, 699,507 bales j Okla homa, 703,862 bales; South Carolina, 1,239,260 bales ; Tennessee, 343,582 bales; Texas, 3,719,189 bales; Vir ginia, 13,013 bales. , strated with Brown for using off en sive language. Brown drew a revol ver and shot White and then took to the mountains. He was followed by a posses of citizens, captured and placed in jaiL Early Friday it seem ed that the whole town was aroused and Brown was quietly taken out of the l ail and hanged.' .Chief of Poliee White, it is believed, will ' recover. Brown is said to have served several terms of imprisonment. IS DEING ELIMINATED. Medical Study of - the ; Temperance Movemenfin the South;" Howard' A, Kelly, of Baltimore, on "The Alco holic Problem in Every-Day Life; T. D. Crothers, of Hartford,' Conn., on "The Future of ' the Alcoholic Problem;" and W. B. Parks, of At lanta, Ga., on "The Effects of Al cohol on Temperament -as it Relates to Raee . and Nationality. , The night 's session developed . much,, in terest among the scientists as indi cating tha necessity for laws relat ing to the care and protection of in ebriates. ! CENSUS BUREAU REPORT Amount of Cotton Stocks on Hand February 28 Was 5,252,663 Bales Eeport .Preliminary to. Official Statement and is Made at Bequest of Congress Total Supply of Cot: ton. . . Washington, Special. The census bureau in a report Monday announc ed that the amount of cotton stocks on hand in the United States at the close of February was 5,252,663 bales. The indicated consumption of cot ton is 2,521,436 bales. The report is a preliminary one, and is in response, to a resolution of Congress. The stocks on hand are distributed as fol lows: .' Manufacturers, 1,844,992: produe? ers, 326,377; warehouses and com press, 2,306,786; transportation com panies, 518,379; other folders, 255 The , total suddIv of cbtton in the United Stales and the net imports for the six months' period ending Febru ary 28. last, were 14JI40,870 ana 98,000 bales respectively. The total stock held September 1,. last, was 1,236,058 and cotton ginned since August .31, last, aggregated 13,00V 612 running bales. - Toe total export of cotton from September 1, 1908, to February 28, last, inclusive, was 0,- 566,571 bales. The approximate segregation ol cotton stocks shown in the report re lates to location and not to owner ship. Cotton in warehouses owned and operatingin conjunction with mills is classed as in possession of manu facturers, under independent ware houses and compresses is shown all cotton so stored, rearardless of its ownership. 1 Cotton of foreign growth included in these statistics amounts to 55,629 bales, of which 50,561 are Egyptian, 1359 Indian, 3,085 Portl and 124 others. Oi tbe total amount held 3,721,971 bales were in the cotton-growing States and 1,530,- 692 bales jn all other States. Feudists Shot From Ambush. Huntington, W. Va., Special. John and, Frank Flemming, alleged mem bers of a feud gang that has terror ized Harts Creek, incoln county, 40 miles sooth of this city, were shof from ambush MIonday evening. Frank was Killed and John was seriously wounded1, John Flemming was re leased Saturday from the peniten tiary, where he served two years for conspiracy to defraud the govern ment. When he learned that his young wife had secured a divorce and had married John McCoy, a bitter enemy of his, the Flemming brothers started for McCoy s home. 4hey were ambushed en route. , Five Persons Die in Mine Explosion. EvansviUeJnd., Special. Five men were killed and a score injured in an explosion at the Sunriyside coal mine near this city Saturday, afternoon. The explosion was caused by a windy shot due to an overcharge of powder said to have heen placed by John Petit. Petit s burned over his entire body and will die. The dead were all killed by sulphuric fumes which fol lowed the shot. The mine was swept as if by a whirlwind. Twenty-nine were in the west shaft of the mine when the explosion occurred. Wild Train Hits Station. Montreal, Special. Four persons are dead and thirty others were more or, less seriously inured as the result of Ithe blowing out of a wash pipe on the locomotive hauling the Boston express of the Canadian Pacific Rail way Wednesday morning, three miles out from this city. Scalding steam filled the cab' and the engineer and fireman were forced to jump. The train without a guidipg hand at the throttle, dashed into the Windsor street sation, through he orranite wall Unto the woman's waiting room and men into the rotunda. Furniture Shippers Most Pack Their " l: - Wares. -Mbbile," Ala.,' Special. The" South ern classification committee adjourn ed to meet in Atlantic City in July. The committee devoted most pf its time to correcting errors in the pack ing of freight, with a view to decreas ing' the number of claims for dam ages. - It was ordered also that fibre boxes must be made waterproof. Shortest BUI on Record. " Washington, . Special. Representa tive Coudrey, of Missouri, has just introduced .what is probably the shortest bill so far presented during the present session, yet if enacted in to law it would attract more atention than the Sherman Antitrust law. After the enacting clause the entire bill is as follows: ' ' " That' from and 'after ' the passage of this act all corporations, shall pay a license tax of 1 1-10 of 1 per cent on their capital. A CHILD KIDNAPPED Willie Whitta, Aged 8, Taken From School at Sharon, Pa NO CLUE TO THE PERPETRATORS Willie Whitla, g Tears Old, Taken From His School at Sharon, Pa- Held For $10,000 Ransom Terms Complied With, Bat Plan Pails. On last Friday Willie Whitla, 8 years old, was kidnapped from school at Sharon, Pennsylvania. A well dressed man drove up to the school and told the janitor that Willie's father had sent him to, .bring Willie to his office. Not suspecting any thing wrong the teacher fixed Willie np and sent him on, in light -pleasan try saying she hoped be was not be ing kidnapped. All too soon she found that it was a stern reality. A letter was received Friday in Willie's own hand which read: Dear Father: Two bad men have me, and if you don't send $10,000 they will kill me in 10 dys. Willie Whitla. There was nothing on the envelope to denote where the letter had been mailed. Frank H. Buhl, a millionaire uncle of Willie's took a decided interest in the case and will freely pay the $10, 009 for his safe res'very. It was reported from that city that two men and a boy answering the description of the kidnappers and their victim have been seen there, consequently the supposition is that Mr. Buhl has received word which made him believe his nephew was in Cleveland or that vicinity. The bug gy in which the child was taken from school was located at Warren Ohio, and as the Cleveland papers were among those specified, in which the demand of the kidnappers for a $10,000 ransom should be answered by a personal advertisement, all evi dence seemed to indicate that devel opments in the mysterious case was centered about the Lake City. A clue was secured Sunday, in which little credence is placed, how- rever, On March 1 the local posfofficel uepurtiueui received a circular an nouncing a reward for a ' man de scribed as Samuel C. Leavanson, of Canton, O., said to be wanted there for the theft of $400. Janitor Wes ley C. Sloss, of the school from which Willie was taken, when shown the cir cular bearing a portrait of the man wanted, declared it bore a strong re semblance to the abductor. A Cleveland, O., special on Sunday says: Whitla was instructed in a letter from the kidnappers to -leave $10,000. in Flat Iron Park Saturday night. If no detectives were about the kidnappers promised they would deliver the boy safely to the father in a hotel at Ashtabula at 3 o'clock Sunday morning. Whitla deposited the money as requested, but the Ash tabula police learned of the plans to pay the ransom and went to the Dark. The kidnapers are supposed to have seen them, for at 3 o'clock the money was intact and not a man had ap-. proached the spot. Whitla believes that the failure to effect a settlement with him will frighten the kidnapers and they will not communicate with him again. The police of Ashtabula are unwil- ling to .believe that the kidnapers have left that section of the country. The letter from the captors of Wil lie Whitla came to the boy's parents m onaron jrriday afternoon. . Upon receipt of the letter Whitla called in private dectives and asked their advice. They were anxious t capture the kidnapers and pleaded with bun to permit them to place o decoy package of bills at the desig nated spot and let officers lie in wait and capture the men who came aftei the money. Whitla would not agree to this. H finally consented to permit the detec tives to acompany him to this citj and await his summons to start search for the kidnapers. Promptly at 10 o'clock Whitla left the package of bills in the park, at went tto the designated spot alone, feeling eertain that - his compliance with the request of the kidnapen would prove the means of delivering his boy back to him. Three policemen who had been sent out from the Ashtabula central sta tion saw Whitla leave the money is the park. They appraised Chief Las key of their discovery and received instructions to remain on duty and capture the kidnapers should thej appear. - ': la the meantime Whitla returned to the city and communicated witkJ his detectives in Cleveland, i hey ad vised him not to go to the hotel foi his bov a minute before the time set After five hours of .anxious waiting Whitla stated after his boy. as h was on his way. a policeman inform ed him that three officers had been os guard in the immediate vicinity ol the park, and that no one had called for the money. Whitla was overcome when thii news was broken to him. He went t the park and found his package ol money undisturbed. A dettachment of detectives wa sent out from Cleveland as soon at it was learned that the Ashtabuli police "were working on the case. The father refuses to sleep at all and keeps up through sheer wil power. The mother, who will not al low her daughter, Saline, out of hei sight, is showing the effects of th worry. Whitla returned to Celevland ani after a conference with Detectivi Perkins the return trip to Sharon wai made. Hundreds of letters from all ovej the country continue to come mltjoi the country continue to pour in from friends and strangers alike, tenderinn sympathy.. But among all the corres pondence there has been no wofi from the abductors, nor any one wfc seemed to be in any way ia aeucl with them. ! WASHINGTON NOTES For four hours the House 6f Rep3 resentatives Friday listened to the reading of the tariff bill which was the only business 'transacted. It was perhaps the dreariest legislative ses sion of any held by the body ia re cent years. The eonsus bill was received by the Senate from the House and referred to the' committee on th? eensus. After being in session eight minutes the Senate adjourned until Monday That the Payne tariff bill increases the cost of living; that it is crude, in definite, sectional and prohibitive; and that it is an open challenge to a trade war with every other nation on earth, are some of the criticisms of that measure made by Democratic members of the ways and means com mittee in the minority report submit ted to the House by Minority Leader Champ Clark Monday. The report is a severe arraignment of the revision which the Payne bill proposes. The countervailing duty provisions for coffee and petroleum, ihe maximum and minimum features, the Cuban reciprocity clause, the woolen, glass, agricultural and sugar schedules are bitterly attacked. There are many changes for the most part minor changes,' says the report, "of the Dingley rates, some up and some down. .Most of the changes in a downward direction are reductions more apparent than real, the Payne rates being as prohibitive in their results in many cases as the Dingley rates." Declaring that a tariff is a tax paid by the consumer and that the only function of a tariff law is to raise revenue to supply the needs of the government, the minority members of the committee insist that instead of an increase in taxes of a new issue of bonds, the correct remedy for the growing deficiency in the revenues is the cutting down of the expenses, or the government. The first gun in the tariff debate was fired in the House of Representa tives by Mr. Payne, of New York, the majority leader and chairman of the committee on ways and means. Mr. Payne declared the country was overwhelmingly in favor of protective tariff. "It is an Ameri can policy," he said, "and it seemed to be acquiesced in by the great ma ioritv of the American people." Coming to the Dingley bill Mr. Pavne declared that it had proved to be a boon to the people of tbe United States, in proof of which stateaent he cited the immense collections of revenue and expenditures under it, as given in his recent report on the bill. Those expenditures, be said, included $50,000,000 for the Panama canal, for which no bonds were issued, "bo that," he said, "the entire surplus over the ordinary expenditures of the government have been about $125, 900,000 during that period." Girls Whipped in Lien of Fines. Atlanta, Ga., Special. Two girls, one of whom had been married but had left her husband, were chastised at the local police barracks Monday moraine in the presence of the police matron by their mothers, following a declaration by the city recorded that S mother had the right to "wWp her daughter until she "was 21 years of age." This eourse was agreed up on in lieu of a fine. Items of General Interest Small pox is said to be raging in Guatemala and Mexico is making rigid quarantine against it. The latest prospects in the East are for peace.. The Servian government acceding to Austria's propositions. A case was handed down from the higher courts of Georgia recently 16 the effect that for a man to call a Georgian a liar meant a fight and is to be construed as an assault. THE CHILDJSRESTORED Required Ransom Paid Agent The Scene of the Reunion Was Hollon den Hotel, Cleveland, O. Cleveland, O., Special. Little Wil lie Whitla, who has eaused the police of the entire country endless worry since he was kidnapped from school in Sharon, Pa., last Thursday, was re turned to his father at the Hollen den Hotel here MIonday night at 8:30 o'clock. In compliance with an arrangement entered into between the kidnaped boy's father and an agent of the kid napers here Monday the boy was placed on a street car on the out skirts of the city and started to tho hotel shortly after 8 o'clock. Tw boys recognized the lad on the ear and taking him in charge, conducted kim to his father, who was in wait ing. The moment the anxious parent beard that a strange boy was in tha hotel he rushed across the lobby, grasped him in his arms and smoth ered bis face with kisses. Willie is "in- perfect health. Ho says that he has been well treated and ever since his capture has been constantly indoors. He believes he was taken from Sharon to Warren and thence to Newcastle, Pa. It is hij .opinion, expressed in a happy school-boy way, that he was in Ash tabula on Saturday night at the time ' his father was to leave his $10,000 in Flat Iron Park. Whitla, senior, refused to state whether he had paid the ransom or not. He said that he received a let ter Monday from the kidnapers at his home in Sharon, saying that if he called at a confectionary store ia the east end of Cleveland he would b told how to secure his boy "unharmr ed and well fed." In Mortal Terror of Kidnapen. Shortly after noon he left Sharon for Ceiveland. He was unaccom panied. His immediate family and the private detectives he had in bis employ he apprised of the proposed secret meeting, but insisted that he make the trip alone. Every one of them was warned that he must be allowed to go unheralded, and no at tempt at tbe capture of the kidnapers new be made. ' Whitla was eertain (hat if he spoiled the plana of his pson's captors he would never see the lad again. His experience at Ashta bula served as a warning. About 2 o'clock in the afternoon he went to a candy store in the east end. With him he carried the $10, 000, expecting that it would be de manded of him there. He was met by a woman who detailed to him the terms of the kidnapers. With all the eagerness ol a distracted parent Wibitla agreed to them immediately. Willie unconscious of His Danger. In the meantime little Willie was being treated kindly and even at this time does not realize what danger he was in. Tbe woman at the candy store had done her duty. She com municated with the captors of the boy and told them that the father had made no attempt to trap them. The boy was brought from his un known hiding place to a car line in the east end of the city. Part of Willie's Story. "When we got to 'a town that the man called Newcastle, they took me to a big building and turned me over to a woman. She was good to me. The hospital, or whatever the build-' ing was, was a clean place. There was s man there who I think was a doctor. He looked like. a doctor, be cause he had whiskers, short grey whiskers. "The people in the hospital told me that I must do just what they told me to do. If I did not obey them, they said they would take me to a place called the pest; house, where folks that have smallpox have to tro. I walked the chalk line Just like a good boy, papa , like you've told me to. . "They told me I was taking a little vacation. I was not goirig to be hurt. they told me, so I just acted nice and bad a good time playing around the hospital. I knew I would get back home all right and just supposed Mr. -Jonse was one of my friends who was treating me nice because you wanted him to treat me that way, papa dear." Before retiring for the night, Mr. Whitla admitted that he had paid $10,000 to the woman in the candy store. Off For Africa. New York, Special.-r-The steamer Hamburg dropped her mooring lines from Hoboken, N. J., pier Tuesday, and the long-heralded East African expedition led by Theodore Roosevelt has begun, The former President has intimated that he did not wish" -official notice of his departture to be taken by the municipal government of Hoboken, but the occasion was bound to attract as many, well-wishers as the shores f the North river - -in that vicinity and available sea , craft could accommodate 'and the "send-off" was one to be remember ed. " ' 1 tv.