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Ja., at 311 No'rtt. If?IIN illTCIiELL, JR. ? EDITOR M*asa* i- aal ?*<> ae >> rases -? by w^m.????? TERMS DJ ADVAaom. On? Ooov, on?? yaw. f I J? ? ?ith? - ? - ? :r*a? month?, - ? - .?BJ ? JOB ? ADYTKBTIflIKO &AT*eB. ?? inch, ?oae lnacrtloex, f .60 ?h. ? For twol BBSaBBaTBaBB, a ? ?eoh ?tabaeqTaeo? lii?Mua, .et ?^thr?>n?oetb*, - . COO a\?ix month?. | ?? t?? month? au.??? Marnnt.??? atvl F?i: Bu Standing ?Ad Trmnalfe? Sfotto?? pat Un?a. .10 A HIGHER ?? St er ?. vrT 1? 1??*??** w??k!y Thearibasrip 1 j ? ?u? In ?ad y are?. * Klee, yawaei ?aan b? -: ?*frt??? M'>n ? ?an Ba f tb???*? ?lwv "^??ll>tt*r i "?? ?anO W? wlii ?- ?t*?; asa Mom ? t Oansa? ?bob be nbOafud ?* ? .??r war, you meet d -<ra\ do not w? ? ? I ? ?ska. ?aas, ?:?>\\ ?\*? ?. 190: : ? . ! : ' : it wl I ' l'Ili s. RooeEl 111 SPI i:< II *i at a E I Apri! 7 was an tion on ?? It afford?'d hit;. r op? portunity to learn whether cr not any radical change had taken place In h. He is a brilliant ati . but some of his u! be remark ably out of harmony with some of I actions. In spea. corporations, he seemed to be oblivious of the fact that the principles enunciated ap? plied to Individuals as well. He said: "This is the exact spirit In which this country Should move to ? form of abuses of corporate ? < .? rongdoer. the man who swin? dles and cheats, whether on a big acale or a little one, shall receive at onr hands mercy aa scant as If he I crimes of vi bru- ? tsllty. We are unal?? ? ? tr> Ing t?? luch an ? past as would at a loaa to know \\h? ? ? ? Il POI I I 1? IL 81 n \ l IO? I ? II?? is a ; : ? the ; tin? ?if tl. ? .1 f ? I tance with , ib)Wan principie? and to ?11 o ?I Hl.lllWlM. 1 II nit of exist in Atlanta will f; ? ply to t: other :? riions. T*h?y may not be as aa'BTavatod in their details, but the where reat. In some localities white ? xerting their influence and officers of the law their off?,; ilng of the worst ?us. Th? "loodlum finds scant encouragement at the hands of the better class of wh. M and ?lie Negro loafer finds naught but con demnation at the hands of the better class of colored ones. Some of the utterances of Mr. In Athinla the ? ? ir and ? wiudoas like ar th>* low elaae ol Ne wlth eh ... ? . arder ? flred It the off. a I 1 like I ? Inof ' t he ' iiiur r or t?iat ? ? some oaTeodiaj R itli ,-M ;iriti?\s with Impunity and a poor ?rhlti of th?* loa how in a ? N?gro, who : When Im i Me? lt. One of the for a nnd was fought out all thron ?Hint of soii. I to th. ajro, The .?? that was about the size of his asset he finally won out. A similar con a well-to-do would . bankrupted him nnd It would ? his family to the alms To empTna the Mr. Raker said: ? Hoke Smith, Governor-eleet ?>f f?rorpia. who Is more distrusted ?es as a race probably than any ?itber white man In Georgia. ted many Nerroee In his house during the disturbance. In many ??cases friends armed N? ?>ld them t?> protect themselves. dpw I know of who had a single black servant, placed a Shot enn in his hands nnd told him to it any mob that tried to get him. She (nateti him absolutely. South ??rn people possess a real liking, w*hol ly unknown In the North, for Indi? vidual Negroes whom they know. That Negro would have uaed t*hat shot-gun, too, and if he had uaed it money would have come forth in BM for *hls defense. But t*hen poor white folks hav<? ';lnd ? here prtsitogee not accorded to those ?aid : ?it OUl ' '?R of Its bloody part la * a typical ? slum. I looked for squalor. \n.l I was sur,? to fimi ? practical!] everj < ?. ? home? boi ? ol the houses ns attractive wlthoal aad aa Mnary ?? :it han?!, su- ?.?.?led by 11 f ti 1 proundt?. ir\. T*h< I office ? Th.* schoolho . with teacher ? bolli of t.ie iher?> ?1 fa y had Tho ? indus Inj? t ' ?f this ? Thli .? In ? ? d ru f the ' ? At last, on M ? 'ilnp, just irk. a aqa Ol ' ? ' ? I tho ? that tfl Ol ha . ?lown. fall session uutil ?and there t two life. haadi? now lab a ard. told. polle? and tad a :tion of ? the town. Pouce of .?ens, 0 home, where lay Lewis, bad!;, wounded >re. He was in bed is shirt, placed their s breast, and In cold Mood shot him tin eral times in the pr< t his y left him for ?)?11 ' .tico recover. rea, of Gau ary, one of the able tata, who had n?? lo with the riot, ? head by one of the b his rifle-butt. T*h. I were finally taken to r^ked up charged with f Officer Heard. In the Isr ?wnsville riot four Ne lled. One was a de industrious. though loud-talk i named Fambro, who kept til grocery store and o\ two h? ides, which he rented Ho had a comfortable home, a wife and one child. Another was an in o named Wilder, eev old, a pensioner as a sol? uti War. who was wen spoken of by all who knew him. He was found?not shot, but murdered by a knife-cut in the abdomen?ly? ing in a woodshed back of Fambro's ?ruder, a brick mason who earned $4 a day at his trade, and who had laid aside enough to earn his own home, was killed while un? der arrest by the police; and Ro? binson, an Industri?me Negro car? penter waa ahot to death on his way to work Tuesday morning after the riot. Bat ennagh for this week. Wh Bhal) d<*al fur' Mr. Kay Stan nard Hak? iipxt Issue. \ Sa:-;?:? ? R Dal ? John Duncan of ? :u July - April ' t??. I Win II. ! : ? of oppiag at SEVEN ENTOMBED MINERS SAVED Ken IVna?-?! io Flooded Shaft Four Days Are ? HEROIC WORK OF RESCUERS r one the ? ? u all I ? ? ? ? : befori the It. ? the h 11 in ply a lia I ? ? :.*rrifyln;? them If left in dai ?tated thai <?f nil the deag the darkaeaa ?aa the bbobI : Wh<*n al avail upply <>f ; . f-nin?! bal half tied ? m ?ras until Monday morriin?*. te mea bad with k from the aha: 700 SHEEP KILLED Raiders In Wyoming Dynamite B?3 Camp. Cheyenne, Wyo., April no.?An ra I'.iki H<>rn CO Aill?*.'. ely ?it other ? ' Of th? was told by a h< who said that a band of ma P. aud after binding him merely, arraaged ?? ? the work of de strili tion. April Was a Cold Month. Waehlagtoa, May 1. ? Th?? month onduiK Tin s?lay was the coldest April In tho la*?: - and within a de \peri ? Bcoordhag bo the weather bo resu. Th? ays: "The | ?ras charas ?^.si?>n ? f wblcb swept southeastward over the BOftheeet Rocky mountain i slope and gradually spread southward I and eastward over the r-ntlre countr; east of the Rocky mountains. The cold was almost continuous except for brief intervals of a day or so of warm er weather, and It doses with remark in the Interior | s ami the south w SLAYS WOMAN HE PURSUED OVER SEA Russian Girl Killed by Rejected Lowr in Philadelphia. 1HSM SHOT HIMSELF IN HEAD Phi 'irtha Ko waa shot ?nder nn? Franz Kndru t into his ind from am nikat. who was . ?ause ?n. follow '? ? kill 1; V Itti ::ipt he Cat his I in an effort to end his II months in a the infor ??v. he waa -;lit months ...... ?1 has not After the assault who was the ? ??ntry, unofsf thern sec ? was I minute from th?? ? a nearby tit In the laa she ?.? ' ? ? into his th?? A) RHODE ISLAND DAY AT FAIR - of the State Buildings at Jame? ?-? Exposition Opened. Kli.vd? ? ' u th?? VII ? I : ' visit . who nia for ; t a 111 y. was ' nor of I an.? Was 113 Yeara Old. Teaa of 1*: r woman Bt the Wireless Warna of Earthquake. ? b.? warn .at or 1" - ? the earth in be expia: ? r Bjrpotbt Killed By Trolley While Playin. ? Bproat r <>f Ja ? ?. Sprout, of kille?! by a : ir her a short of Harris The little girl's body waa cut in lellgthv. . DOWN TO DEATH WITH PIER Workmen Hurled Into Harbor By Col? lapse of Structure. \prll 23.?With a that s and a rush that drove a wave - ?h to dis ?.mt parts of the inner harbor of Hal timer. : ni" a new pier un? ii at I>Kiist Point, broke . ! and plunged Into t : <>?: i bod? ies hf u. Bat! Ie. nun arc suffering from - more or less While nian> th.ories are advanced no one is willing to say with anything like certainty why the catastrophe oc curred. The new pier was being built by the Paltimore Hridgo company and the M ?mtracting company fot the P.alt nuore & Ohio railroad and waa to have h . hy the steamers ol the Johns?.p. line. It waa a two-story ?tractara, 930 raat ion?, about 500 feet of it being on land. The water end was built upon piles. There were heard warning cracklings, and the workmen were being called to places of safety .. as many of them were Strug gllng tin oliali the doors In the fire wall, this collapsed and, with 430 feet of the water end of the pier, plunged into the harbor, carrying a number ol men with it. ? WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED Thursday, April 25. I^sfayette College, at ttaston, Pa, will celebrata its diamond Jubilee com? mencement June M t 1st church st Parsons, near l'a., was destroyed by ^tailing a loss ?G G Herman .:??. th?* ?. atad to Presl use. Mai | r a It year Klrl of Camdcn. N. J.. died of brain fever, the result of over ? Frank Thompson, a civil eng He temporari: ? sta? tion at Columbus. O.. where he had been piai ag. Friday. April 26. ' High, a nearo, was <-*on\ *e uirl at fafcilhai ough. <?a, and ! to be hanged rold Kat 'and dl??d in her boms in Philadelphia from burns ? lothlng catch in? f.re from a mateh. aa and a summer Bt Lake Pleasant, near Miller's Falls Mass, were dost roved by fire, entailing a loss of JT."? ? ss. who com? manded the 97th Pennsylvania regl dariag the Civil War. died In Pa. aaed 82 years. Saturday. April 27. ' C4 years. Brigadier ''?? aerai John W. Bubb was st. The director of the mint purchased ery at Philadelphia at 66.144 cents an ounce. ? ?Jlgnatlon to President Roosevelt, to take effect 1 ?? to the illness of John of officials of ? n at Wllkes I?arre. Pa,, has i.e. ? postjx?:. With eon aplracy In a with the embez from s bank at Charlotte, ? C ?raa arreeted si Lu rarae, Monday, April 29. ?>*um tally baraed at Allentown. i Jan? brother Of United ator 1-?p clnn:? r after a long Ilia* The New York district attorney's Life Insurance irress msn from I r ???>inmis ?-?ffice. was acquitted in Washington hargo lag public ? id. which i?a?i b? rlaaaathsfj with to burn drank it in mistake f?>r ??nigh syrup nn?i Is In a dyll at Shamo Tuesday, April 30. i tbe be?lnx>ni of ? ?hu Freier al M. 1. I . and ?tola s ontalnlng | t nun w< :i a tunnel at plant at ? m. Ill . S a bundle ? fants. girl, A Bed man Michigan nt of nd to Wednesday. May 1. Bl Mil ction prom era ee t Mi.lillelowii, 11 iron l?: Doaahu? oa a .?>t in ; Broke Leg Turning In Bed. Chai olive Pin??, an v rapidly Imprortng !:. pltal here. Th*? little nirl : leg while taralag in ! ture ?lid at Beat, and In on1.? . WIFE MURDERER HANGED 6hot Girl Forced to Marry By Parents' Greed For Gold. May ? .i ?cele? an Italian, was hanged h?*ro fox th?> murder of his I On If Of last y?sar p.. who had lain in wait for her for ser eral hours, met his wife a* sil?* came from a silk mill w was em? ? ber dead. She had re? to Uta with him, and this re? fusal, with the fa? t that she fold him she preferred eepaay of Amerloaa men to that of an Italian, caused him to become ininit the crii was only 16 y?ars old, and the marriage waa one of those which so freqjaeatly ?.< ?ur among the fot population .?I about $6oo; the girl's parents knew this, and set about to making a match between daughter and the young fellow. They had no trouble so far as Boccia waa opacaras!, but the Httle girl who was to be sacri.'?..fd for . thing, and on the appointed day the wedding took place. la a short tinu* trouble arose in th?* ! and the wife ? left. It is said she generally turn?-?! up about pay day. but disappeared again after her husband had giren her his earnings. This thing kept up until Boccia killed the girl. His money gone. be was deserted by his wire, and her parents had no longer any use for him. He was arrested a few hours si? te* the tragedy. He wee pennileea His defense was conducted with money colle? ted by hia fellow countrymen, snd they also looked after his burial.