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PROFESSIONAL CARDS
C. Mu-nkr. X. 3. Anderson.
Milner & Anderson,
Attorne-’-s-at-Law
cartersvillE, ga.
OOOMs UP-STAIRS, BAKER ft HALL
building. Practice in all the courts.
DR. R. B. HARRIS,
DENTIST,
Baker & Hall Building.
ARMSTRONG
HOTEL
Monie t Ga .
Centrally located. Cuisine first-clase. Larf*
sample rooms, Kates according to location o(
rooms
J. W. YOUNG, Propr.
U . IL. CASON
DENTIST,
fOvar Young's Drug Store)
CARTERSVILLE. GA.
8. H. AUBREY,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
CARTERSVILLE. GA
HE. RE. B. PUT
(Health Restorer and Blood Purifier.)
Cures any form of
STERVOUS INDIGESTION, LIVER, KID
NEY, BLADDER TROUBLE, CONSTI
PATION, HEADACHE, CHILLS
AND FEVER.
Everybody in the U nited States should try one
buttle of thi wonderful remedy.
Every Bottle Sold Under
Positive Guarantee.
Don’t be Without it. A great Household Rem
edy Try it on Old bores, Eczema, Scrofula
od Blood Troubles, no matter how long stand
tng.
HEALTH IS WEALTH, DON’T FAIL TO
TRY THE HEALTH RESTORATIVE
AND BLOOD PURIFIER.
COOLEY'S White Wonder Soap,
for Infants, for Chaffed Hands!
Etc.
COOLEY’S Pain Balm, for Cramp
Colic, Sprains and Bruises, will
relieve in 10 minutes.
CATARRH
Catarrh is a Blood Disease and nothing but a
*ood medicine will cure it. He Re, B Pu. is
sold under a positive guarantee to cure catarrh
Will also cure all female trouble. Sold In Car-
Mrsvi tie by
YOUNG BROS.
Druggists.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
Itartifieially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted digestive or
gans. It Is the latest discovered digest
aat and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,,
Sick Headache,Gastralgia,Cramps and
all other results of imperfect digestion
Price 50c. anil sl. Large stzecontains 2'4 times
wuallslzc. Book all about dyspepsia mailed free
Preoared by E. C. DeWITT ft CO., Chicago.
HALL. & GREENE
EX-GOVERNOR TANNER DEAD.
One Time Chief Executive cf Illinois
Sucoumbs Suddenly.
Former Governor John R. Tanner
died suddenly Thursday afternoon in
the Leland hotel. Springfield, 111., from
rheumatism of the heart. He bad
been confined to his room since his re
turn from Chicago a week ago with
rheumatism In the left side, but the
case was not considered in the least
serious. He felt much worse Thurs
day afternoon and Dr. J. N. Dixon, the
governor's physician, was called aud
found the governor dying.
CJASTOHI A.
Basra tha /) Iha Kind You Hzvs Always Bo#'
WATERWORKS FOR CHARLESTON
Contract For Building Plant Awarded
to a Philadelphia Firm.
At a meeting of the Charleston. S.
C., city councu Friday night a con
tract was authorized between the
Charleston Light and Water Company,
acting for the city, and the American
Pipe Manufacturing company, of
Philadelphia, for anew water supply
system for Charleston, which shall
provide 5.000,000 gallons daily. Water
for the new system will be pumped
from Gooae creek, a distance of eleven
miles.
GOOD-BYE TO ’FRISCO
The President and Mrs. McKinley
Start on Homeward Journey.
INVALID WEAK BUT HOPEFUL
Prospect of Soon Being at Home
Again Greatly Elates the Pa
tient and Gentle
Sufferer.
President Mc Kinley and party, after
a sojourn of nearly two weeks in San
Francisco, left the California city for
Washington Saturday.
Mrs. McKinley enjoyed a refreshing
night's rest and seemed elated at the
prospect of soon being at home. She
| was conveyed from the Scott residence
to the Oakland ferry in a closed car
riage by a circuitous route chosen so
the invalid might pass over only
smoothly paved streets. She was ac
| companied by the president, Dr. Rixey
and a trained nurse.
An immense crowd had assembled
at the ferry depot of the Southern
Pacific railway. The large open space
at Market and East streets was a sol
id mass of humanity through which
the police kept open a passageway for
the president and uis party.
Heads were uncovered as the car
riage bearing Mrs. McKinley approach
ed, and there was a visible effort to
restrain any burst of applause as the
carriage with drawn curtains passed
slowly through the throng. All re
spected the frail condition of the suf
ferer and enthusiasm was suppressed.
There were no formal ceremonies at
the depot. Goodbys were exchanged
by the president, cabinet members and
others of the party with friends who
had come to wish them godspeed and
the travelers boarded the ferry boat
Oakland.
The carriage containing Mrs. Mc-
Kinley was driven on to the lower
deck of the boat and the curtains were
partly raised so sho might obtain a
glimpse of the bay and the Golden
Gate.
As the steamer drew out of the slip,
hats and handkerchiefs were waved,
and as it swung into the stream the
shipping in the harbor dipped their
colors in salute. Tumultuous cheers
then broke forth on shore and were
borne out across the waters —San
Francisco’s farewell.
At the Oakland mole, where the
train was in readiness, the inolosure
was roped off. Mrs. McKinley was
tenderly helped out of the carriage by
the president. When she had been
made comfortable in her car he ap
peared upon the platform and waved
adieu to the throngs beyond the ropes.
The presidential train traversed the
state of Nevada Sunday and reached
Ogden. Utah, at 6:30 o’clock Sunday
night. The route lay along the Hum
boldt river througn the Ruby and
Wasatch mountains and then descend
ed into the Salt Lake basin. During
most of the day the elevation exceed
ed 5,000 feet and snow-clad peaks were
continually in sight from the car win
dows.
The president makes it a rule ordi
narily not to travel on Sunday, but the
present circumstances were so excep
tional that he hid his compunctions in
order that his wife might the sooner
reach home.
SOUTHERN SHOWS INCREASE.
Returns Property In Georgia at Big
Advance Over Last Year.
Southern railway property in the
state of Georgia is valued at $10,310,-
851 this year against $10,257,578 last
year, an increase of $3-,773.
The returns were made to Comp
troller General Wright the past week.
The returns have not been accepted,
however, and will not be until Comp
troller Wright goes over the returns
in detail and comes to an agreement
with the Southern officials regarding
the value of some real estate in Sa
vannah, Macon. Rome and Atlanta.
The Southern has reduceu the re
turns on the value of bridges, claim
ing that a large number of trestles
have been filled in since last year.
TO REVISE CHURCH CREED.
Presbyterian Assembly at Philadel
phia Vote Important Concessions.
Creed revision to satisiy conscien
tious office holders, ministers, elders
and deacons, who are disturbed by
some of the doctrines and certain
phrases in some of the chapters of tha
Westminster confession of faith, and
anew doctrinal statement of the re
formed faith for the million members
in the church not office holders, who
wish to know what the church be
lieves without studying the confession
of faith —these concessions were made
by the general assembly at Philadel
phia with practical unanimity.
KILLED HER SIX CHILDREN.
Demented Mother Arraigned in Court
and Found Not Guilty.
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Naramore. who
killed her six children at their home
in Coldbrook Springs. Mass., March
14th last l>y beating out their brains
with an ax and a club, was tried
Thursday and found not guilty be
tTAtse of insanity, and Mib. Naramore
was committed to the Worcester in
sane hospital for life.
THE WEEKLY NEWS. CARTERSVILLE, GA.
RAi HOADS NEXT VICTIMS.
Workers Will Make Demand for Nine-
Hour Day on All Lines.
President James O’Connell, of the
International Association of Machin
ists, announced Friday afternoon that
he would recommend to the next an
nual convention of machinists at To
ronto, beginning June 3d, that a date
be set for a nine-hour day without re
duction in wages on all the railroads
of the country. On railroads which
fail to comply with this demand a
strike will be ordered The recommen
dation will be made in Mr. O’Connell’s
annual report.
Mr. O’Connell says that such a
strike would involve probably one
hundred thousand men, including for
ty thousand machinists, the others be
ing boiler makers, pattern makers and
semi-skilled machinists in the various
shops. The policy will be to enforce
the demand by tieing up practically
the entire mechanical service of the
roads. It was simply a matter of poli
cy, he said, that the railroads were not
included in the present strike. Al
though a number of them are now in
volved, none of the roads were origi
nally contemplated in the order de
claring the present strike. Mr. O’Con
nell says the convention doubtless will
fix a date when the nine-hour day must
be in operation, and he believes this
date should be some day in the au
tumn.
Friday afternoon Mr. O’Connell said
the outlook of the present strike was
very gratifying. The headquarters of
the strike have been shifted from
Washington to Toronto, for which city
President O’Connell left at a late hour
Friday night.
CASTOIIXA.
Bears the j? The Kind You Have Always Bough!
FAITH CURiSTS IN TROUBLE.
Followers of Dowie Held Criminally
Responsible For a Woman’s Death.
A coroner’s jury at Chicago, which
for two days listened to the evidence
in the case of Mrs. Emma Lucy Judd,
w’ife of one of the officials of John
Alexander Dowie’s Zion, returned a
verdict holding Dowie, H. W. Judd,
husband of the woman, and Mrs.
Sprecher and Mrs. Bratscli to await
the action of tne grand jury. The
tw’o women named in the verdict were
in attendance upon Mrs. Judd prior to
her death. The charge against them
is “criminal responsibility” for the
death of Mrs. Judd, as they failed to
ofcM in a physician.
CASTOIIIA.
Bears the jA KM You Have Always Bougto
‘“T”
MISAPPLIED CHURCH FUNDS.
Prominent Negro Preacher Goes
From the Path of Rectitude.
Dr. H. C. C. Astwood, pastor of the
Bridge Street, S. A. M. E. church, of
Brooklyn, N. Y.. was found guilty of
misapplying church funds, insubordi
nation and conduct unbecoming a
minister at Thursday’s session of the
S. A. M. E. church in Harrisburg, Pa.
Following the verdict of the confer
ence, Dr. Astwood was arrested by a
detective on a charge of defrauding a
boarding house keeper in Harrisburg
in August, 1899. He furnished bail
for appearing. Dr. Astwood was for
seven years United States consul at
San Domingo, and is one of the most
prominent colored men in the covutry.
SOLD ILLICIT OLEOMARGARINE.
Proprietor of Fake Butter Factory
Fined SIO,OOO and Given Six Months.
Having pleaded guilty to operating
an illicit oleomargarine factory, Al
bert T. Dow. proprietor of the Fertile
Valley Creamery Company, in Chica
go, was fined SIO,OOO and sentenced
to six months in the county jail by
Judge Kholsaat. in the federal court
Monday.
Dow is said to have cheated the gov
ernment out of $40,000 in revenue,
payment of which he evaded. This is
said to be the heaviest fine ever im
posed in a federal court.
How To
Gain Flesh
Persons have been Known to
gain a gsomid a day by taking
an ounce of SCOTT’S EMUL
SION. It is strange, but it often
happens.
Somehow the ounce produces
the pound; it seems to start the
digestive machinery going prop
erly, so that the patient is able
to digest and absorb his ordinary
food, which he could not do be
fore, and that is the way the gain
is made.
A certain amount of flesh is
necessary foi health; if you have
not got it you can get it by
taking
jpftrs jpineision
You will find it just as useful in summer
as in winter, and if you arc thriving upon
it don’t stop because the weather is warm.
Hoc, and si.oo, a!! druggets.
SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists, New York.
WITH THIRTEEN MEN
Steamer Baltimore Goes Down
In Fierce Lake Huron Gale.
OTHER VESSLS MEET LIKE FATE
Tempest Was Terrific and Staunch
Crafts Were Crushed Like So
Many Egg Shells—Fearful
Experience of Crews.
A special from Towas, Mich., says:
The wooden steamer Baltimore foun
dered in Lake Huron near Au Sable
Friday morning and twelve of her
crew of fourteen were drowned. The
men washed about in the lake for sev
eral hours lashed to a piece of wreck
age and were finally picked up by the
tug Columbia. George McGinnis, a
deck hand, one of the rescued, went
crazy from his experience. The other
survivor, Thomas Murphy, of Milwau
kee, second engineer, was able to tell
the story of the disaster.
The dead are as follows: M. H.
Place, captain, of Cleveland; Mrs. M.
H. Place, his wife, stewardess; Mi
chael Brethren, first mate; Edward
Owen, wheelman; G. W. Sears, wheel
man; G. W. Scott, watchman; Herbert
Wining, watchman; August Anderson,
deck hand; John Delgers, second stew
ard; P. Marceaux, of Chicago, first
engineer; W. H. Parker, fireman; F.
Kreuger, fireman.
“We were bound from Lorain to
Sault Ste. Marie,” Murphy said, “and
had in tow a large steam drill and
scow. When off Thunder bay last
night Captain Place saw that the
steamer was making bad weather, for
the waves had smashed in the engi
neer's quarters and the wash room
and water was running into the hold.
Captain Place decided to turn about
and run for Tawas for shelter. Every
thing went all right until we were off
Au Sable, when the steamer struck
heavily on the bottom. The seas broke
over her at the same time and carried
away the deck house, then the after
cabin and finaLly the smokestack fell.
Both rails forward broke in two just
aft the forward deck house, and we
knew that it was only a few minutes
before the steamer would go to pieces.
“It is every man for himself now,”
shouted Captain Place. The look of
despair on Mrs. Place’s face was some
thing I shall never forget. It was aw
ful. I took the captain’s advice and
every man started to save himself as
best he could.
“Some of the boys took to the rig
ring, but McGinnis and I lashed our
selves to a ring bolt in a piece of the
after cabin and were washed over
board shortly afterwards.
“The strain was too much for Mc-
Ginnis and he went craxy before we
had been in the water very long. He
tried to throw me off the wreckage,
but I talked tc him and encouraged
him to hold on. Twice he got loose
and tried to drown us both, but each
time I succeeded in quieting him. I
told him a boat was eoming to take us
off, and then I would get him tied fast
again.
“The Columbia finally came along
and picked us up just as I was about
to give up hope. I am afraid all the
rest of the crew were drowned, inclnd
ing Mrs. Place.”
Murphy was in the water from 8
o’clock in the worning until 2 o’clock
in the afternoon.
Other Vessels Lost.
The tug Columbia, of Detroit, with
a government steam dredge and two
loaded lighters for the Soo, was caught
in the storm. The lighters and dredge
were lost, parting their six-inch cable.
The crew of six men is missing. While .
searching for her tow the Columbia
picked up two men from the Baltimore
on a raft. They were almost dead
and were taken to East Tawas. An
other man was on the raft, but was
lost, despite the efforts to save him.
Will Operate Independently.
Members of the firm of Burnham,
Williams & Cos., which operates the
Baldwin Locomotive Works, emphati
cally deny the report from New York
that their company is to be acquired
by the American Locomotive Com
pany.
TO SEE NEGRO HOP.
Trio of Young Nimrods Have Some Se
rious Fun in Alabama.
Oscar and Webb Winn and Ollie
Robbins, three young white men un
der twenty-one years of age, are in
the county jail at Birmingham, Ala.,
the charge against them being the
murder of William Knaves, a very
worthy colored man residing near
Robbins, where he was assassinated
and where the young men also reside.
It is charged that the young men
deliberately took shots at the negro as
he was passing along the highway, re
marking one of them: “Let us see
him hop.”
BIG FERTILIZER PLANT
To Be Established Near Atlanta, Ga.,
By the Armour Company.
Another evidence of the recent great
ly increasing prosperity of Atlanta,
Ga.. is witnessed by the fact that a
large $500,000 plant will be establish
ed there by the Armour Fertilizer
Works.
The big plant will be located on the
Western and Atlantic road, about four
and one-half miles out from the city.
Pain back of your
[ eyes? Heavy pressure
] in your head? And are
i you sometimes faint and
| dizzy ? Is your tongue
I coated ? Bad taste in
[ your mouth? And does
f your food distress you ?
I Are you nervous and ir
| ritable? Do you often
have the blues? And
are you troubled about
f sleeping?
I Then your giver is
I ail V/rQBIQm
I But ther is a cure.
| Tis the old reliable
pH's
They act directly on
the liver. They cure
constipation,biliousness,
sick headache, nausea,
and dyspepsia. Take a
laxative dose each night.
For 60 years years they
have been the Standard
Family Pills.
Price 25 cents. Ail Druggists.
“ I have taken Ayer’s Pills regu
larly for six months. They have
cured me of a severe headache, and
I can now walk from two to four
miles without getting tired or out
of breath, something 1 have not
been able to do for many years.’*
_ , S. E. Wal work,
July 13,1899. Salem. Mass.
Wflto the Onotor.
If you have any complaint whatever
and desire the best medical advice you
can possibly receive, write the doctor
freely. lou will receive a prompt re
ply without cost. Address,
Dr. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass.
THEY NEED HELP.
Thousands are Homeless and Hungry
In Flood Ravaged Section.
Reports of Friday from upper east
Tennessee indicated that high water
In all the rivers was receding. Eliza
bethton, the wrecked town, presents a
terrible spectacle, and the faster the
water receded there the more serious
became the situation. The Doe river
has changed its course and >s now
running through the residence section,
over the ruins of many homes. Some
of the finest farms in that vicinity
have been swept of their soil and bar
ren rocks are appearing.
Railroad communication was re
stored early Friday between Johnson
City and Elizabethton over the East
Tennessee and Western North Caro
lina line. The towns of Allentown
and Butler have been more or less de
vastated. All the stores in the for
mer place were swept away and 1,000
people are without food.
The county court of Carter county
has been called to meet to take action
as to relief of the helpless and to ap
propriate funds to repair roads and
bridges. Railroad traffic is gradually
beina resumed.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Sfe are of
ATLANTA MARKETS.
COBBECTED WEEKLY. —22
Groceries*.
Roasted coffee, Dutch Java SIS. IC.
Arbucklo $ll.BO. Lion *ll.BO pjr
100 lb cases. Green coffee, choice
fair 10@10JaC; prime
Sugar, standard granulated. New York 6c:
New Orleans granulated Cc. Syrup,
New Orleans open kettle 25ft>40e.
Mixed, choice, 20 ft) 28e. South Geor
gia cane syrup, 36@38 cents. Salt, da ry
sacks sl.3o<§) $1.40;d0 bids, bulk s2.to: 100s
$3.03: ice cream $1.25; common to(a>7o.
Cheese, full cream 12 ft 13 omits.
Matches, Gas 45?4@50c; 20Os $1.50(0)1.75: 300s
$2.75. Soda, boxes 6c. Crackers, soda 6J£c.
cream 7 %c-, gingersnaps S’i'c. Canny,
oornmou stick 6}£c; fancy 10ft 14c. Oysters
F. W. $2.10®52.00; L. W. $1.20.
Flour, Grain and Meal.
Flour,ail wheat, first patent, $4.80; second
patent, $4.50, straight, $3.90: extra fancy
SB.BC; fancy, $8.73: extra family, $3.25.
Corn, white, CBi: mixed, OCi. Oats, white
44c; mixed 42c; Texas rustproof 43c. ltye,
Ga., sl;Western tOc. Hay, No. 1 timothy,
iarge bales, $1.10; No. 1 small bales, $1:
No. 2,90 c. Meal, plain, 4•; bolted meal 59c.
Bran, small sacks $1.13. aborts sl.lO.
■Stock meal, sl.lO per one hundred
pounds. Cotton seed meal $1.15 per 100
pounds; hulls $7.50 per ton. Grits SS.SO
per bbl; $1.70 per bag.
Country Produce.
F.ggs 12 cents. Butter, Fancy Jersey
13ft20 •; creamery 18®20c;Georgia
Tennessee 15ft20; cooking butter 12}/ft lo<\
Live poultry, hens 21),;® 28c: turkeys
11® 11*: Ducks, puddle, 22*fa-25c; Peking
27 1 ., ft 30c. Irish potatoes, northern stoek,
85 a9O : per bushel. Sweet potatoes 40ft60c.
Honey, strained 6(®7;in comb B@loc. Onions
*5.00 per barrel. Cabbage, N. Y.
stock, none. Florida I*@2. Dried fruit,
apples 4 ft) 4 ! J; peaches, peeled, 10c; ua
peeled 4<sc; prunes 6 ft) 7: California
peeled poaches 14<® 10; unpeeled 6@7.
Provision*.
Clear side ribs, br.red half rib?
8;s': rili bellies 9%®10; ice-cured
lfes IP*.-. sugar-cured uams 10, ft)
Lard, leaf 9}{ ; best SJjc.
Cotton.
Market closed steady, middling 7%0.
FOURTEEN FOSE U\
Freshet Disasters In Tennesse
Worse Than First Reported.
EUZABETHTON ALMOST RUIMQ
The Majority of Fatalities a <
Greatest Property Loss
Occurred In East ’
Tennessee.
The Tennessee river reached tt
height of 35.8 at Knoxville Thursd,
afternoon, and then began
tributaries in upper east Tennessa
where the greatest loss has resulte
from the flood, have rapidly recede
into their banks, revealing wreckagi
of houses and bridges and ruinel
crops.
The loss of life thus far reported ag
gregates fourteen, though it i S no ° t
improbable that there are others
Three bridges are reported swapt
away in addition to the twelve report
ed ’Wednesday. There were two road
steel viaducts in Washington county,
over the Nolaehucky river; Sullivan
county steel bridge at Devault’s ford;
Ohio river and Charleston railroad
bridge near Devault’s ford.
The loss at Elizabethton due to the
flood is conservatively estimated at
about $250,000. The damage to the
town of Watauga is estimated at
$150,000.
The Holston river, near Hogersville,
was higher than it has been since
1887. The water touched the tracks
on the Southern railway’s steel bridge
near there.
At Knoxville the flood did a great
amount of damage. The Onega, steam
er. largest vessel plying the Tennes
see above Chattanooga, was wrecked
Thursday afternoon, being a total loss.
Traffic via Bristol on the Southern
railway, Norfolk and Western route,
will be delayed until the bridges that
were carried away are replaced.
The Southern hopes to handle trains
by Asheville and Spartanburg, to and
from the east, while the road through
Asheville, via Salisbury, will not be
in use for several days.
The damage in North Carolina from
floods is far worse than at first report
ed, especially to the crops and the
fields. Many fertile bottom lands
were entirely denuded of soil and are
totally worthless.
An Southern railway trains between
Charlotte and Atlanta were tempora
rily operated by way of Columbia and
Spartanburg on account of a washout
of about 300 feet of a trestle at the
approach to the Catawba river bridge
ten miles below Charlotte.
The heaviest damage to the South
era railway is on the Western North
Carolina division. In many place*
along the line great gaps are found
on the track.
Asheville is without water. The
flood so badly damaged the water
works plant that it may be several
days before it can supply the city
again.
LEPER HOME DEMOLISHED.
Louisiana People Forcibly Object to
Establishment of Lazaretto.
The Louisiana state leper board re
cently quietly purchased a large plan
tation in Jefferson parish, opposite
New Orleans, and made arrangements
to establish there a leper lazaretto.
When the news became public Jef
fries and St. Charles parish were
aroused to indignant protest and
threats were freely made that the
torch and the rifle would be employed
to prevent the transfer of the leper
colony to the point selected.
At a meeting Wednesday the board
heard vigorous protests of the citi
zens of the two parishes, but decided
to take no action at present. The pro
testants concluded that the board was
determined to at least attempt to es
tablish the lazaretto in Jefferson.
The result was that during Wednes
day night the proposed home and
other buildings on the plantation se
lected were fired and totally destroy
ed. The facts will be at once reported
to Governor Heard.
BROWN SIGNS ORDER
For Removal of Gaynors and Greer.
to Savannah—Bonds are Given.
Judge Brown, of the United States
district court at New York, signed
an order Thursday for the removal ol
Captain Benjamin D. Green, John F.,
Edward H., and William T. Gayn° r
to Savannah, Ga., for trial on charges
of conspiracy with O. M. Carter. Cap
tain Green and John F. Gaynor were
held in $25,000 bail each and E. Ft.
and William T. Gaynor in SIO,OOO.
James B. Leary furnished bond f° r
Captain Green and William B. Kirk
furnished bond for John F. and Wil
liam T. Gaynor.
STOP HAZING OR CLOSE.
Congressman Landis Makes Dir#
Threats Against Military Academy.^
Congressman Charles B- Landis, o
the thirtieth Indiana district, a W
Point visitor, is reported as sal int
that if the hazing evil at West F° lU
could n6t be suppressed the mili tal "F
academy would be closed for three or
four years.
“Congress is in a humor to do ju s
such a thing,” said Mr. Landis.