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The Atlanta Constitution. VOL. XXXIII. NO. 35. AND THOU TOO, OHIO! Wild Mob at Akron, Ohio, Within Twenty Miles of McKinley’s Home, Goes Mad Over Negro’s Fiendish Crime and Attempted to Lynch Him—Failing Property Is Destroyed. Akron. O Angn’t 22.—1 n this city, the heart of the bcoxtefl western reserve, a mnb tonight nought the life of a nettro t>rl« »ner and In a conflict with the au thorities ble-ifl w.m> she.!. Two persons lie dead an I another lying. One of the victims wns a baby four years old. shot while lying in its carriage. Many persons are wound ed. but the complete list cannot be made cut until morning. Izu'» Peefc. n negro. was put In Jail tod ’v a the charge of criminally assault ing th- Utt!* «'x-year-r»l.l daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Maas. The report that he ha.l confessed spread rapidly, and ton' rht • mob gathered. Not believing the statement of the sheriff that Peck had b< n sent cat of the city, the crowd sen- c mmlttees thr*’igh the city prison and the county jndl in search of the JAIL IS FIRED UPON. Tb"« proving fruitless, the mob gathered Tn front of the dtv prison, where the mayor trie-1 to Induce them to disperse. «t * e >ne flred a shot at the prison. Other shots followed, and for a few minutes there were terrible scenes. Tao persons are 4- J from bullet wounds, and rev era are 1v..1.y wound'd. r»n<» of the latter fatally. Shortly after midnight the mob brdto into a :trdware store and stole all the fir» :ru»> and ammunition they could And. Including runs, rifles and revolvers, and prr • • ’«'d to the city building and opened fire on the defenders and finally set fire to the Columbia hail, which adjoins the city building- They will, no d->ubt, set fire to the ettv building before morning. a« th* fames are spreading rapidly. p.-ts.-m and 2 o'clock Wednesday morning Offl *r Puffy arrested Peck, who. during the .’ay. confessed to having at t*n • t ’■■l a M iday night to assault Chris- i Mr. ,".l M Th* More Min*. Industrious and I r--«-«• -..’■.0 n*»-p’. » wh.i live on Perkins . hill. MOK OF SEVERAL THOUSAND. ■ of his « - spread Ilk* : w •■!•’». through the t;y and several 1 t>- , - - * trn. -h.t l athered about Th* ’ n wis s- on pack* I with the ■ - ers r - - - ••• • - !•- k ’be n quietly taken away to y, . the mob the ''•Peers suggest- ■ rd t v a committee of six 1* appointed • . . • e cel * and »:<• through cv- | Tl-.-s j, - done and as the n*gro was pot f *4O-1 a '- II was made. • N. w for the county jail. Give us .f> -W -<A» - .< ■ z i-, 1 A MISSING WORD CONTEST | R FOR SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER, 1900. k HUE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION OFFERS! One-Tenth of the Amount Received for the Subscriptions of Those Entering the Contest as a Prize for Naming Properly the Missing Word in the Following Sentencet ( < There are a number of our men here, among the residents and hidden in the but for fear of the 1 ’ they do p <j not let themselves be seen.” b The sentence is selected from a book whose author’s fame is world-wide and whose works have been read everywhere. The omitted word is a common |< I nglish word, and the sentence is to be taken in all its parts in the meaning ordinarily accepted. The period covered by this contest, September and October. 1900, shows over 12,000 expirations for The Weekly Constitution. Os course we want all these f 1 t< renew and enter the contest, which would mean over $1,200.00 for the missing word fund. Every additional contestant will swell the amount by 10 per cent Lr of his subscription. No period of this year will he more interesting than the two months allotted to this contest. U During the past few years The Constitution has paid out over ten thousand dollars in cash on these educational contests. About one year ago we changed J lc N an lo figures, problems < f various kinds, new sums to work, cotton problems based on statistics and so on. Now we return, for one contest at least, to the p ever popular missing word plan, and if our various correspondents have not misinformed us, the people are readyagain to try their hands on a word problem. The hook containing the sentence is a standard publication and has been sealed up and placed with Mr. W. A. Hemphill, President and Business Manager of T! e Constitution, who will hold it safely until November Ist, 1900. The sentence speaks for itself and submits a very plain proposition for you to solve. H Toe Contest begins September I, 1900. The Contest Ends November 8,1900 k This contest lasts two months and the amount to he divided will probably be in the neighborhood of $1,500. There may be one correct answer, there may be ii* a dozen, there mav be more, hut remember it costs nothing to supply a w ord, and you may get it correctly. Whether you do or not you get / H —=THE SREATEST OF ALL AMERICAN WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS FOR ONE R KEEP THAT IN VIEW AND SEND YOUR GUESS WITH YOUR DOLLAR FOR A YEAR’S SUBSCRIPTION. , fik —-.7, , ... —-- -...,.,7 UL.’- ..... ... Z ZZZZZZ! •• ■ - ?«'" Ttn per cent nf the Guessers’Subscriptions goes to the Fund to be divided. In other words, if this Sub- THE CONDITION PRECEDENT TO SENDING A GUESS at * he Massing Word is that each and every guess must be N „ . . < c i . • h. accompanied by a year’s subscription to THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION; the guess must be sent in the identical P J scnptnn Fund amounts to $20,000 for tie two months, the f und to go to the successful guesser would be . ' , . J ( * u „-j . .. > ■js 1 envelope that brings the money that pays for the subscription; forgetting it or leaving it out by accident or otherwise, or Ll $2,000 Following are the conditions of the contest: not knowing of the guess at the time you subscribed, or any other reason will not entitle one to send a guess afterwards. V * ....... ... .... c .1- 4. r 1 • 1 ■4U 4 The guess must come with the subscription or not at all. Should a partv send more than one guess, he or she will be k * [„ w: PROPOSE TO PUT 10 PER CERT of the amount we recenre for subscr.pt.ons, where.n the party subsenbrng enters Sj fm . ' lhere wi|| > bt p[) M ize _ * ons , iz , > kl the -tang W ord Contest .nto a fund for distr.but.on among those who name correctly the m.ss.ng word For ...stance * subscriptions. It 14 5 .s r .7?^ C Z n Itiuona ’ s Mre o'Fta’fu. d THE CORTEST BEGINS SEPT. IST-We begin then to keep accurate accountot the subscriptions received withguesses, |> it the sum t» id h. equally divided, each correu answer receiving its p.oportionau h.ueoftn tu u. and on October Ist we will publish how much is to the credit of the subscribers guessing, and during October we will rJ F TH: COMTFST CLOSES NOVEMBER IST —At which time we will pay out to the successful party or parties the full publish each week how the fund has grown. IN MAKING YOUR ANSWER you need not write the sentence out in full, prize .mount that lias accrued in tne cuntest. just state simply the Missing Word for November 1 is “ .” * Address A.i! Orders to THE CONSTITUTION, Atlanta, Ga. K I the negro and we will deal with him.” ( A mad rush followed for the jail, and soon the jail was In the harwls of the I mob. After going through the private apart ments of the jail the crowd started to batter down the Mg Iron down. I'- vnty Sheriff Stone stood in front of the prison j doors and made a speech. • lie informed the crowd that Peck could 1 not be found In there and he told the peo i pic In th* mob to se|*ct a committee and . he would allow th* committee to search j the jail from top to bottom. COMMITTEE SEAJiCHES PRISON. , A committee was quickly selected and th.' jail was searched, every cell being | pe»-red Into. Satisfied that the n< gro was j not thcr* th* mob then rushed across the ' street and forced op-n the doors of the I county courthouse. The courthouse was j soon packed and all rooms searched ex j cept those tn the treasury department. A j start was made to tear off the Iron doors I of the treasury department, but the mob I decided not to tackle the Job, and then th* thousands of men and boys ag tin ru-hed back to the city t-rtbon crying for i tho blood of Peck. I Tho city prison was again surrounded ; and hundreds of people forced their way ! Into the prison for the second time, In i slating that I'eck was there. Mayor i Young, at this juncture. ap]>eared at one j of tne windows ;n tho upper part of the : building. He addressed the mob as Last he could, saying that Peck had been tak en out of the prison at 4 o'clock by Siier j iff Kelly and driven out of the city in a I closed carriage. The people in the mob would not believe the mayor and continued to yell end demand that Peck be sur rendered. At 10 o'clock the moh began for the third time to attack the city prison. Bom ■ on* in the crowd began shootjn* at th. building This was followed by several more shots. The officers In th building appeared at the windows and ! I*‘gan to shoot over the heads of the I people. A man with a shotgun then feed ;al the officers. It is said that several officers were wounded. The crowd then j j began to smash In the windows of the ! jetty building and the tiring became gen ' eral. Hundreds of shots were exchang d and a boy. tllen Wade, was carried d< id I from the street. Il Is certain that «loz. ns of men were wounded. A report has . been received from the city building that j one of the officers had both of his legs ! broken and that another was badly «ound><l. - PRISON KEEPER KNOCKED DOWN I Mayor Young remained in the building 1 to direct a call for the militia. All the I ambulances of the city were called out i ! and the excitement was Intense. The • front of the city building is a total i wreck. At 10:45 p. m. Prison Keeper John K 1 1 Washer came from the city building and was knocked down by a. brick, lie was badly injured about tli* head and had to receive medical attendance. j It is known that two people were killed . and another fs-rson is dying at the hos ! pital. Tli® dead are: GREEN WADE, aged ten years, shot through the heart. JOHN M. DAVIDSON’S feur-year old child, shot dead in a baby car riage. FRED V. ORWICK. aged twenty five years, is badly wounded with buckshot. He is now dying at the hospital. A man named Mull was shot In th* ; head. A driver for the American Ex i press Company was shot In the leg. It j Is certain that many more people were I wounded. LOUIS PECK IN CLEVELAND. Negro Admits Enough To Indicate IDs Guilt. I Clevelail. O._ August 22. This aftcr , noon Sheriff Kelly and Prosecutor Wan ' ramaker. of Summit county, arrived in Cleveland from Akron with two colore I , prisoners. I.ouls I'e"k. le-cuscd of assault ti g th* little Maa< girl, and William How ard. another neuro, accused of a minor < ffense, whom th. Akron authorities thought it l>*st to remove from within reach of th* mob. THE DEAD AND WOUNDED. I Akron. 0., August 23.- When day dawn ed in Akron Thursday morning It reveal ed a scene of desolation and the evidence ! of vlol< nc A and lawlessness unparalleled ‘ in the history of this city. Th< i oters had done their awful work : and had dS' er • 1. < tne chi'd was Ivlntr cold In dentil and m arly a score of people j w«re stifi- riiig fi-fiin the wounds of pistol bal’s. buckshot and other missiles. Tli* city building wns a heap of ! sm- ldering ruins and beside It steamed th- wo.tet-5.,,.k. d ash. -of Columbia, hail. The police force of the city was dlsor |. :<7 1 and - 'Uttered. The chief was fl< i-!ng hi desperation from the scene of bi • - d-' .d. riot and burning, almost , er .z< <1 ov what his men b.-td done. l,lv> <1 ■■■ -..ires lay cross the streets ; ty of th* burn 1 buildings and de. sos al! kinds was scattered far : d n< ir. Th,, down-t ovn streets were I I ju • as the mob left them, and although i nothing was ’.lng done by the rioters, , 1 <■’■ was of spe. tutors, hundreds In num- ■ I Ist. hum* ir >und. waiting f->r something I At c '■’ >ck the crowds began to In- 1 i crease ns the curious spectators hurried ■ to t il* s-ene of the trouble. policeman api "i red and then mother, timid at first, but with > using asiurance as no vlo- I h-nce w is off-red. Then company C, of A, GA., M()NDAA\ ATTGU ATLANT Canton, a detachment of tho Eighth Ohio regiment, marched down the street from tho train and halting before the ruins of th* city building, was at once sot to work patrolling tho fire lines. There was no evidence of 11l will or disquiet on the part of tho crowds at the lines. There was no talk of violence. The turbulent element had slunk away with th • corning of daylight and order was once more fully restored after an awful night of terror and anarchy. A revisi d list of killed and wounded, when completed, was as follows; Killed: (ILEXX WAI >ll. aged eleven years, , son of Lillian Wad*. Empire hotel, shot 1 through th* heart. Fatally injur-d: RII<>I»A i’.WII’SON, ag«4 fovr, ilatigh ' t< r of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Davidson, shot I through the load. i Injured Frul Vorwerk. buckshot wound I 1 In abdomen; W. 11. I’u.-sel. flesh wound i i iu hg; Park Stair, tlesh wound in leg; ’ | John E. W ash. r. s. alp wound from brick; | Arthur E. Sprague. te... : iter, scalp : wound; John Ahern, painter, llesii wound I In th. :it in. Il Chelitzkl. II 41 wound in I th* hand; Albert Grant, th li wound be- i low kin e; Fr ink Souers, enroll and .spieer, : tlesh wound in li. u.l. E Shelby, buckshot i ' in abdomen; Albert Stevens. No-th’i Id. I . shot fn foot; Fileman L. Manchester. I i th n wound eh<ek and neek; W’. Kopkc. 1 fie; h wound in neck. Minor Fritz, tl* h I wound in cheek; John Denious, flesh . ! wound In hg; A 11. Berly, - h wound j In breast; David L’hllllps, flash wound j in leg; I'oliecman A. G. Greenb-z, struck ! over lieart by brick; J'ollc man John 1 King, knee injured by brick, I’oliecman ; Ed Dunn, struck by brick. | At 9:20 this morning nine companies ; of tile Fourth regiment arrived in the I city and marched to the scene of last [ night's rioting. Shortly before 10 o’clock Mayor W. E. . Young issued a proclamation closing I every saloon in Akron until further or i ders. The mayor is taking every possl- i Ido precaution to prevent a renewal of j tlie outbreak. j If tlie situation demands more drastic | niea nres the mayor strifes that the city I , will lie put under martial law. In the Akron riot history again repeated i Itself th* innocent ones w*r* those to I I suffer, while tlie guilty ones were practi i eally uninjured. j <>n the advice of friends Mayor Young, 1 who had been on the scene at a m.. , | when t'umpany <? arrived, sought ills of- I tic* by back streets and alley ways, as it i j was feared that his pres nee so early I after the rioting would cause a fresh out- J break. I of the victims of mob violence Glenn I Wade was shot and almost insta itly > ' killed. He was jn the tnnb and a bulet j from a revolver pierced his heart. The ■ j lad was omy eleven years oi age. Another innocent who will die, is Rhoda . ' I»avid--on, the four-year-old daughter of | ■ Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Davidson, of No. HI j ■ Alyn . treet. Sitting tn i carriage with ‘ her mother and father, on the outskirts of the moil, a bullet found lodgment in ‘ i It r skull. No hope is held out for her re- I covery. I The resistance shown by th* police of- 1 I lice's and it.v ollie al in the city b ill, on- i iy served to lash the mob into greater j frenzy. Falling in its effort to force an I entrance into the ety hall, i portion of th* , mol. ran to the store of the Standard i Hardware Company, on Main street, about one mi l a half blocks from tho scene of i tli* rioting In the twinkling of an eve a I | large plate glass window in 'he front cf 1 the store was smashed to atoms, and the moh ran Into and looted the store. Re volvers. rifles, shotguns, razors nnd thou sands of rounds of ammunition were ta- j ken. and with these weapons the mob re turned to the city hall. Standing in the i ST 27, J 900. CHICAGO TOOK A TRY AT LYNCHING—NEGRO ESCAPED ■ ' 1 --s Mimi) SKts a• ■' ’ ‘ tMTfcFe. oct.- AM iH|m r/s William Fiqna Narrowly Escapes Downtown - Chase Almost P * Lynching In Blsiness «>* • Ends iA Lynching. ■ .'4 a £".”•? ROPE IS PRODUCED .’ r. Runs Eleven Blocks, Pursued by r. Angry Mob of 500 TRY LYNCH A NEGWOg \,c- L ~ wild chas2 fob a yxcKTOCKtr- •-L \ ‘Xs'J 4 ~ Cr*wd« Are SB«t Into UT a ~ * dSwtrW tr 1 Who !• , 3 > ■rfMU’*- V zfflyX > Ur A-re«te«l Police* JF* , p 'll it* H W 7. s;.us Eg! gT gMESLASDTKiT«M Fls k » t , Ft,-1. wtu n, £M cts.. A THIE W in BusC*33 District V 5 Hnndreds Pursue a Uegro ® so Strects fter He Ha 3 ■ -W feL /A? < C fobbed Woman. r' rf' ® ometr. 01 ,- , - V C l -c* .*• Jqdr ■ ? »2 i OVL? “ nnE ■ ! front windows of tho bulldlnp. Mayor i Young, ci’.i. f of Police Harrison and other p Hr- >l‘ dais h.i.rrai;-. ulng the mob. en<l<.iv<>ring to convince the rioters that ; lands Peek, the colored man citargeil ! wi:h a- .tilting little Christina. Maas, had > been 4 ii tie 1 .move,! from the Jail dnr- I ing tlie aftert.oon and taken to Cleve land for sal.- keeping. I The remarks of the mayor only Increased 1 the anger of tilt* mol.. In his first attempt . to quit t lite mob he said that the pri.-t- I oner h id be. n taken out of the city about i t o elo. k. In another speech he gave <J I o’eloek a? it- time of the prta.neC - «- parturt, and in speaking tigair. lie said S o'clock Tiny be.irved from tite mayor's .r.idstatements that he was not , telling 1 m truth, and that the prisoner, was sti 1 in the city hall, notwithstanding tin f1 -t that two different committees find searched the building from .ell.ar *o roof without finding any trace of the pris- :om r Join. A. Wintrode, one of the com mittee who made the search, stood on the roof of the building and told the mol. that Peck was not to he found. Tite rioters refused to l>e satisfied and, with the cry. ; "To the courthouse, to the county Jail?’ ■ they started up the hill to High street and arm. s the commons to the court- i 1 house and Jail. MADE CONVICT FOR, LIFE. j Cleveland, fi._ August 21.—Lmils Peck. ! I the negro man who ; ; >t Monday evening ; assault •.1 four-y» ar-o!d < hristin.a Ma ts, nt Akron, and v Itrim • is resiiomd ’ lie for the fearful rioting that occurred 1 at Akron VV’ednesday nigh’ and Thurs- • < day morning, was this afternoon taken ; ' from the tall at «■’ev<d:in.L w here be had I be.-n removed for saf tv, rushf ’ t > Akr »r.. i taken to th.- coiirtlmuse. and within five; | minutes after bis arrival in Akr .n was ; I ccnv.oted >f ’h ■ .Time an 1 senten e,i to ■ penitentiary far life it hard labor. TEXANS ENTER A PROTEST. { Sherman. Tex., August 21.--At a public j [ meeting of citizens held in the district | i courtroom this evening and presided over i by Judge K. R. Ha:: • w.csl, the following ■ j resolutions ware passed: •‘VYhcreas, We . informed by the ; ! public press of the country that a riotous | mob has defied tite laws and put the ' < peace orticers of tite ci;;, of Akron, < >., I ito flight in f< ■ of nersona! violence at : j the hands oi th< !av,n s element in a i fruitless effort to vi-.t summary ven- j I gt anco on a negro; and in the effort PRICE: FIVE CENTS. I above named Innocent bystanders and helpless children have i- en w titoniy hot to den Ty of im- mense vali.'e has been destroyed by the i- . ' ■ ■ ■ ■ by ; dynamite; now, therefore, be ft i “Rexdvod, Th at the epjzens of Sher , man. state of T< ■ is, here assembled, : ■ ■. ■ trate against ! sucn uncivilized <■ . due: on the : irt of citizens of <nr i ter -..t of Ohio, and f the pernicious ex ample tbtl. d; av d in ttir.g the laws . of the land at <. .atice in this ..ge of We . liy pt .it, st agairtt s:.< n < x tmrdes of law i-'ssr.vs-- in Ince f the f-.ct that ■ 1 d- diers and sailors to >':.inu to i n-; h the j bioody-hamted boxers for their mobo > cratic j.ractices while in our own land such scenes as thos. lately emitted at ; Akron. 0.. are mockery to our ; reten sions in favor of law and order and the ! i»rotection of the weak anti he.pl ss. “R< solved. That we in nowise excuse , the unspeakable crime committed by the vicious negro, against whom the m b was i directed, but we deplore the recklessness and lawh - •:: : wr< ... t It crimi- nate murder, and bewail the condition i of so.’i- ty that could engage in such , conduct.”