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PRISONERS ON COUNTY FARM. What They Were Sentenced for and Who Sentenced Them. Supt. John Miller, of the Coun ty Convict harm, has furnished The Leader with the following statement in regard to convicts sentenced to the farm since he took charge last December, and the offenses they were sentenced for. It will he noted that Justice Hoffman, of Brookhaven, has led all others in keeping the superin tendent supplied with farm hands: WHO PRISONERS WERE SENTENCED BY. P. H. Hoffman, J. P.. 44 R.D. Danier, Mayor of Brookhaven.. 22 J. B. Daughtry, J. P._ 12 Circuit Court__ 9 J. C. Osborn, Mayor of Norfield. 6 W. P. Pepper, J. P._____ 6 G. T. Douglass, J. P___ 4 G. H. Vernon, Mayor of Bogue Chitto.__ 4 N. Greener, Mayor of Pearl Haven.. 2 T. J. Gill, J. P..._.... 1 R. R. Albritton, J. P._ 1 W. C. Summers, J. P___ 1 Total_ —Ill CRIMES FOR WHICH PRISONERS WERE SENTENCED. Vagrancy_29 Retailing_ 14 A. & B.___ 13 C.C. W__ 11 Petty Larceny_,_ 8 Disturbing the Peace_ 7 Moving Mortgaged Property.- 6 Breach of Contract.. 6 Trespassing.. 5 Grand Larceny_ 2 Unlawful Cohabitation.j.. 2 Gaming _ 2 Jumping on Moving Trains_ 2 Cruel Treatment to Animal_ 1 STOLEN! From my residence Saturday even ing, Aug. 5, one “Eldon King” Bicycle: Roco double tube tire. Used about one year. A suitable reward for its recovery or information leading there to. Mils. Jennie CHRisMan. Y. M.*C. A. The reception Friday evening was attended with the usual bril liancy and success of former ones, except that the spirit that pervad ed the crowd was even freer and happier than usual. Our friends did indeed rejoice with us in the lifting of our in debtedness, aDd well may they. The Association has been so long in debt that it is hard to realize that it is at last free and on the road to higher success. The cancelling of our indebted ness is the signal of Divine Provi dence that this organization has come to stay and will continue to do its good work. And as sure as it is His will that it continue its work, it is also His good will that His people support and encourage it in every way possible. “And behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work stall be.” (Rev. 22:12). Our library is overflowing with good fiction. it is beaven upon earth to have a man’s mind move id chari ty, rest in Providence, and .turn upon the poles of truth.” Our next reception will be about September 8th. Arrange to be present. Will the members of the Ladies Auxiliary kindly send their an nual dues to Mr$. Hartman or the general secretary at their earliest convenience? It means something to be a member of the auxiliary and enlisted in this great work for the betterment of our city’s young ■ men. ■ Join the Associaiton and enjoy its many privileges. C. H. P. The People’s Steam Laundry. Work began Wednesday on the People’s Steam Laundry, which will be locate in rear of the Court House near the Armory. G. E. Gardner, late of McComb City, is at the head of the enter prise, and the other incorporators are the following well-known bus iness men, viz: F. F. Becker, J. W. White, E. A. McCue, L. H. Bowen, G. W. Ard, Chas. Heuck, Luther Harvey, F. B. Woodieand H. Zwirn. The charter of incor poration is now being published in The Leader. The building will be 50x100 feet and will be equipped with the best machinery. The management hope to be ready to open the laundry by the middle or latter part of September. Letter From Dr. Luther Sexton. Dr. Luther Sexton, of New Or leans, writes the Clarion-Ledger as follows under date of July 31: Regarding the situation of New Orleans, I would state that condi tions are really not as bad as re ported. True, we have had quite a number of yellow fever cases, mostly confined to- the Italian quarter, where from a lack of proper treatment and protetetion from mosquitoes, the mortality has been rather larger than in 1989, but the tpye of fever is nothing like that of 1878, and the cases which are properly treated and properly starved,, which is one of the best methods of con ducting a case cure, show a vrey mild rate,, of mortality. Among our people, who are properly cared for, the mortality has net been greater than in 1897 and 1898. v-fue wu.ru auuut tue seuseiess quarantine, and the . prevailing scare which still seems to be per vading the average mind, when ever the subject, yellow fever is mentioned: It is only prnpogat ed and spread by the bite of the Stegomyia mosquito. Heretofore we have been fight ing in the dark. Now we know our enemy. Heretofore we imag ined some formites, or death-like emanation from either the cloth ing • or bedding which has been exposed to yellow fever, carried this terrible miasm. Now we know our enemy and how to ex terminate him. It has been dem onstrated beyond any question of doubt that the Stegomyia mosqui to is the only possible transmitter of this poison. Nine-tenths of the medical profession who are well informed, unqualifiedly ac cept and support this theory. Five governments, all working under separate qommissions, have come to the same conclusion. So why should the useless and ex pensive quarantine be kept up, except against persons who have lain themselves liable to infection in a yellow fever district. Cer tainly mosquitoes cannot be ship ped in packages of goods, or mer chandise. Mosquitoes cannot live in the average box of freight,’ from one point to another, and it is for this reason that I have tak en the trouble of going thus minutely into the details of this scare, that our Mississippi fiiends should ,not go into hysterics over merchandise which cannot possi bly carry the poison, but adopt a practical suggestion which we are putting through in New Orleans-, viz: “Death to the mosquito,” and it is my judgment that within the next 6 weeks we will be as free of mosquitoes as Havana was made by the commission which eradicated the pest there after it had existed for 150 years. A Good Word for the Doctors. Surgeon , General Wyman has issued a call for forty doctors to volunteer for service in the yel low fever districts of New Or leans, and he will get them and many more should it be necessary. Doctors who have bandied yellow fever and are immune will be most gladly welcomed by the marine hospital service. The doctor probably is not appreciated as he should be. His calling is equally as dangerous as that of a soldier, and to voluntarily give up a pleas ant and lucrative practice, at the call of duty, to devote one’s ener gies to the alleviation of suffering in a pestilential district, probably calls for even a higher degree of courage. The soldier faces a vis ible enemy; the doctor an invisi ble but equally dangerous foe. Mankind is prone to grumble at the immensity of doctor’s bills; especially if it is one he himself owes, but how many of us just now would swap places with these forty doctors who are to risk their lives in the service of humanity and science? And should they be so unfortunate as to lose their lives while so employed, no mili tary salute will be fired over their fraves, no page in their country’s istory set aside to record their brilliant achievements, and no pension paid to wife and little ones as a partial compensation for a life sacrificed upon the altar of duty. The doctor hopes for no special reward; be simply hears the call of duty, answers, and when the fight is over, should be be alive, quietly goes back to his piactice, happy in the conscious ness of a duty well performed.— Jackson Evening News. -THE CALL OF MOLOCH. ■’’■ ' V -■ { . ■ By Bobs Cuktis Hopr.sv. he time of sacrifice had come in ancient Tyre; Before the reeking shrines, the deepened glare of sacred fire Proclaimed the wrath of • gods or dearth of priestly tithos. The hordes came forth to saortfloe, the rich to pay their tithes. A Goldsmith from the crowded mart came forth to glYe his fee % For Belus’ smiles to linger o’er his shlpupon the sea; “My ship! my ship!” he cried; “from Afrlc’s golden store Is due in Tyre, and woe Is me if thou forget my ore.” With scorn the priest looked on the goldsmith's tendered fee; “Art Jew,” he asked, or valulst so thy treasure on the sea? Or thinkest ’tis tonic to attend the shrine? If so, perchance thou would’st with pleasure change thy place for mine.” A great and sudden change came o’er the priestly face; One priestly hand was raised on high, as though to plead for grace, “O man or Tyre,” he sa’d, “would’st hear how thy ship fares? I’ll tell thee then; to Moloch thou must take thy tithes and prayers. “Thy crew, at Carthage, stewed away within the hold Three chests, all filled with Ophir’s choicest gems and purest gold; Thy galley slaves had manned the oars; the sails had filled, And out to sea, with mirth and song, thy treasure ship had sailed, - rur uays auuj aays me sea was calm; no storms contend, And all was well; till passing Crete, a pirate crew descend Upon thy ship. Would’st thou desire thy crew had won? 0 Man of Tyre! offended, Moloch claims thy ffrst-born son. With bended head and anguished heart, the goldsmith turned, * And in his purse replaced the gold the scornful priest had spurned. Then back unto his Jewels, his gold, his lnfnat son— His haggard face of conflict told— “My treasure or my son?” We gaze across the chasm that separates today / - From Old Phoenicia's gods, and Tyre and Sidon's wicked-way, Condemning those who sacrificed before the shrines of old, And then go forth and license Tice and sell our sons for gold. Jim Hunter Held Under a $2,000 Bond. * At the preliminary trial of Jim Hunter Wednesday for the mur der of Mattie Wimberly, Justice Hoffman held the defendant in the sum of $2,000 to answer at the next term of the .Circuit Court. Hunter had no trouble making the bond, with Messrs. S. W. Hos kins and Luther Harvey as sure ties. The plea of the defendant was that the killing was accidental. There were no eye witnesses, but the fact that just before the shoot in the woman and Hunter were heard contending over six dollars she claimed was due her, and that he ran away for sevehal days after the killing, together with other circumstances, caused Justice Hoffman to believe it was a case of murder and demand a large bond. The woman, who did not believe she was going to die up to the time she became unconscious, stated to Sheriff Applewhite and others that the shooting was ac cidental. The bullet passed through both lungs and she lived about 24 hours after being shot. May be Oil in Lincoln. A Wesson man, wbo has a rep utation as an oil expert, says that there are traces of crude petro leum in many counties in the State. He says: “Indications point strongly to an oil field in Mississippi, begin ning near Trotter’s Point, on a line through Coahoma and Talla hatchie counties near Tutwiler, thence through Leflore county near Mossy Lake, through a cor ner of Holmes county, the line extending through Yazoo county near Valley to the middle of Hinds county, near Clinton, east, and Raymond; thence through Copiah county to about ten miles west of Wesson; thence to Wes son, Lincoln and Franklin coun ties, near Meadville, and diagon ally through Wilkinson, crossing into Louisiana near Pinkeyville.’’ Edgar Harris, the versatile edi tor of the Greenwood Enterprise, was married to Miss Minnie Mar garet Warner, of Dayton, Iowa. The young people met five years ago on a National Editorial excur sion West, and Memphis was the scene of the happy climax on Au gust 2. Mr. Harris has been identified with newspaper work in the State for twelve years past. STATE HAPPENINGS. Columbia’s court house corner stone will not be laid August 17. The Civic League, of Gulfport* is trying to enforce the Sunday Law. Mayor Hursey, of Abbeville, was acquitted of the murder of B. A. Gallagher. Marshall county has at last adopted the contract system for working roads. Mayor Vardaman and family, of Greenwood, are spending the summer in Kentucky. Geo. W. Vaught’s*sawmill was burned at Magnolia. Total loss, $3,000. No insurant^. The Whitworth Chautauqua at Gloster was compelled to close on account of quarantine. A handsome row of brick stores will take the place of those re cently burned at Liberty. The Circuit Court term for Madison county has been preter mitted until further notice. A mass meeting is to be held at Gloster today in the interest of the new county of “Love.” Miss Maggie Hartness suicided at Starkville. She threw herself in a well in a fit of despondency. Circuit Court to be held at El lisville has been postponed on account of the threatened epi demic. A franchise was granted by the City Council, of Hattiesburg, for a $125,000 underground telephone system. Magruder Maxwell, assistant cashier of the Columbia Bank, and Miss Leila Ross were married at Columbia. A waterspout at Fannin, Ran kin county, last Saturday, drown ed 100 head of cattle. No person was Killed. The Faimers’ Institute that was to have taken place at Port Gib son was postponed on account of quarantine. Real estate at Jackson isn’t suffering from quarantine. None will be sacrificed on account of quarantine. At Jackson, J. E. Brazell, a loan agent, and A. J. Liles, a loan collector, were fined $25 for car rying concealed weapons. Cotton damaged in the recent compress fire at Meridian sold for $52,630. The loss was not as great as at first supposed. Dr. W. T. Lowrey announces that he will not be able to get out regularly in the interests of the building movement before Octo ber 1. Durant has a farmer who clears $700 per aqre off of vegetables. The secret seems .to be deep plow ing and attending strictly to bus iness. Dr. L. M. Quin, while .working the roads of Pike county, lost a yoke of oxen by lightning. Oth er oxen drawing the machine were not hurt. Lady Thompson, colored, shot and killed her husband near Can ton. At the fatal hour he was en gaged in advancing on his wife with a razor. C. S. Morris, a Pennsylvania capitalist, is planning to make ex tensive timber purchases in Mis sissippi. He is tied up at Jackson by the quarantine. Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Holder are suing the I: C. for $5,000 because of the loss of a grove of pecan trees, thought to have been set on. fire by a spark from one of the engines. Jim Monahan, a popular young man of the younger society set of Jackson, died in that city of con sumption. He had made several trips out West; hot came home to die a few weeks ago._ Two coaches filled with almond eyed Orientals passed through Jackson. They Were merchants of Havana, most of them had been in Cuba ten years or., more, and were on their way home to enjoy their fortunes or to visit. The following report was filed by the Liberty-White Railroad with Secretary Maxwell, of the Railroad Commission, at Jackson, Tuesday: Receipts, $8,099.64; operating expenses, $9,715.28; leaving a deficit for the quarter of $1,019.64. Mrs. Davis Contributes $50.00 to the Beauvoir infirmary. Mrs. A. McC. Kimbrough has received a contribution of $50.00 from Mrs. Varina Jefferson Davis to assist in building the proposed “convalescents’ iufirraary” at Beauvoir, which was accompanied by the following letter, which » we take the liberty to publish: ■<* Hotel Gerard, June 13th, 1905. My dear Mary Hunter;—The enclosures which you kindly sent me from The Commonwealth, fill ed my heart with thankfulness that your family at least under stand how _ intense my love for Mississippi and her honor is, and it does me more good than all the tonics I have been taking to stim ulate my waning life-sources. 1 realize all your heart-aches and absences from your family in the service of our dead veterans, hon or you more than I can readily express for all that you have done. As I look back over the 1 Jong years which have passed over you, uncomplainingly and ardently pursuing your noble quest of help and comfort for these silent he roes of our just cause, who when it failed, were uncomplaining, though they lost all, when time had bereft them of the power to retrieve their personal losses. I think you have proved the match less constancy of woman when she entertains a noble ambition. I thank you for Mr. Davis, whose sjiirit, I know, has followed you with loving approbation. Your plan to erect a building at Beauvoir for our invalid and suf fering veterans, is one which has been in my own mind for a long time. A hospital of this kind, I think, is the thing most needed for their comfort, and it grieves me to my heart’s core to feel I have no power just now to give a more considerable sum towards the building. However, as the widow was commended for not withholding her “mite,” I send you a check for $50, and pray God’s blessing may crown your efforts with success. Please keep me advised of your plans. Comfort me by news of your progress, and believe me, al ways affectionately, Your old friend, Vafina Jefferson Davis. What Vardaman Told a Western News paper. In response to a request from a Western newspaper the governor has sent out the following. _ “Everything serene in Missis sippi. Only two cases of yellow fever in the State, one at Lumber ton and the other at Sumrall. The Lumberton case is convales cing and no new cases from either of these infected points. “The quarantine regulations promulgated by the State Board of Health are beingjvigorously enforced. No embargo has been placed on merchandise from any where, ana upon proper evidence that the holder of a health certifi cate has not been in an infected uistnet ior ten aays can enter tne State. The much-talked-of armed conflict between Mississippi and Louisiana might properly be de scribed as sound and fury signify ing nothing. The people of Mis sissippi are not excited, nor are there any evidences of a panic, but we are pursuing resolutely the policy inaugurated by the State Board of Health, based up on modern scientific developments, to keep the yellow fever out of this State. “I regret the inconvenience suffered by the public generally, resulting from this quarantine. But the exigencies of the occasion demand it, and I believe that when the Board of Health promul gates a rule or makes a law, that that rule or that law. should be enforced* That is all I have done and that is all that 1 shall continue to do until all danger shall have passed. “The report that the Governor has called out the State Militia is absolutely untrue. There are members of the State Militia per forming the duty of guards, but they are not acting in a military capacity. I have refused from the beginning to call out the Na tional Guards for quarantine pur poses.” T. B. Murray, marshal of Dio, shot and killed a negro named Jessie Jones while resisting ar rest.