Newspaper Page Text
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GOVERNMENT WILL TAKE STEPS
TO PROTECT NEWCOMERS
’ FROM THE “CON MEN."
LATTER FREQUENTLY ALIENS
By EDWARD B. CLARK
Washington.—A good many Immi¬
grants come to America to exploit this
country, but It Is also certain that
some Americans succeed In
lug some immigrants before they have
been long on these shores.
The government’s attention bas
been called to many cases of the
swindling <if immigrants which would
be laughable If they were not in a
Way tragic. Means are to be taken to
prevent the Immigrants from becom
, lng victims of Americans who know
what they want and how to get it
It is only fair to say, however, that
In some cases of fraud practiced on
the newcomers the swindlers are not
Americans, but are natives of the
country of fbe exploited, men who
have been here long enough to learn
a few tricks and who already know
how best to attack the weak points
of their fellow countrymen.
Not long ago a half Interest In the
Pennsylvania railroad was sold for
$500 to two Ignorant immigrants who
had not been long in this country be¬
fore they were parted from tbelr
money. James J, Wilson, who is a
deputy assistant district attorney In
New Fork, has said that more than
$12,000,000 has been obtained from Im¬
migrants by what is called the “under
water lots swindle.’’ The Immigrants
are sold real estate which they are
told Is productive and finely located.
When they go to look for their new
bought possessions they have to sound
for them some distance down under
tide water. V ’
Real Estate Swindles.
Many pieces of real estate are sold
to immigrants who first are shown the
property. The property Is real, and
the immigrants part with their money
only to find later that the kind be¬
longs to somebody other than the
man wbo sold It. Frequently, however,
“■ men who have un Interest in property
-.sell It to imriiigrants who later find
out that the lots*which they have
bought are heavily mortgaged. In
cases of this kind the sellers usually
ask for comparatively small amounts
of money, the reason being that they
desire to keep the sum received under
the grand larceny limit so If they are
caught they cannot be sent to prison
for felony. '
Immigrants are not the only ones
who are the easy victims of swindlers
through games which It would seem
that any person with a trifling amount
of common sense would understand
were frauds pure and simple.
When the writer was a reporter on
a Chicago dally he wrote a true story
of a Michigan farmer who “bought”
the Masonic temple in Chicago, valued
at some millions of dollars, for $18,
000, making a $5,000 cash payment
for the building to two men whom he
met on the street He agreed to go
back home to get the remaining $8,000
which he was to pay for the structure
and to report at the same street cor¬
ner the next day. Somebody In his
home village heard of It and com¬
municated with the police. The Mich¬
igan man was saved $8,000, but his
$5,000 was gone.
! Paid to See Building Turn.
Years ago In Chicago scores of
visitors from Here, there and else¬
where paid anywhere from 50 cents
to $1.50 each to see the Masonic tem¬
ple “turn round.” The twenty-storied
temple was at approach that time a show place.
Men would obvious strang¬
ers on the street who happened to be
looking at the structure to tell them
that It was a building wonderfully
contrived mechanically and that It
would turn on a vertical axis at the
touch of a button. They would collect
the “sight fee,” saying that they
“ would go In and touch the button.
That was the last seen of them, but
the victims wofild wait fbr a while to
feast their eyes on the vision of a
twenty-storied structure making an
"about face.”
' Everybody thought that thia old
game was a dead oue, but within a
week a visitor to the city of Philadel¬
- phia paid $5 to see the city hall turn
on its axis. Ben Franklin, however,
who surmounts the structure, refused
to turn his back on the visitor who,
after watching for a while, told his
woes to the police.
A good many of the men and women
Who swindle Immigrants are persons
who come from the same general
locality in the old victims country as that
from which the hail. It Is
very easy for them to get acquainted
with the newcomers, asking as they do
about certain places in the old land
and occasionally about certain per¬
sons who happen to be known In com¬
mon. Americans going to Paris fight
shy of Americans who try to scrape
their acquaintance. There are plenty
of Americans in the city of Paris
who make prey of their fellow
citizens.
a
Patriotic.
“The rapidly increasing divorce
rate,” remarked the wit, “indicates
that America is indeed becoming the
land of the, free."
“Yes,” replied his prosaic friend,
“buf the continued marriage rate sug¬
gests that It is still the home of the
brave." .1 ;
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS AND SUN
DONATESASCHOOL
Missourian Equips Building for
Poor Children.
, ✓
"John H. Bothwell School" Will 80
for Years to Come a Monument to
Hie Interest In Hie Neighbor*.
Six miles north of Sedalia Is one of
the best one-room country schools in
Missouri. It Is In district No. 105,
sltuuted in a rather poor community,
but fortunately having a resident who
Is interested in giving the country
boys and girls an opportunity for a
common school education. Credit for
building and maintaining this school
has been given largely to John H.
Bothwell of Sedalia, who has a coun¬
try home in the vicinity.
Mr. Bothwell became interested to
the rural schools of his neighborhood
about seven years ago. Although
without children who might obtain an
advantage from better school facili¬
ties, the Sedalia lawyer and capitalist
undertook to provide the country chil¬
dren near his home with better edu¬
cational opportunities.
In that neighborhood were four dis¬
trict schools, several miles apart.
Through the mud and snow he saw
the small children of neighboring
farmers going to school. Small chil¬
dren were forced to cross creeks, often
almost impassable, and to travel long
distances through the rain and the
snow.
So Mr. Bothwell started a movement
to organize a new school district
district No. 105—to be cut from the
follr adjacent districts. After the new
district was organized, he asked the
people to raise $500 for a new school
house.
You do that, and I’ll furnish the
rest,” he said.
The $500 was collected. Mr. Both
weH subscribed about $7,000. A new
schoolhouse was built; also j. real
dence was built for the teach Both
were furnished. The buildings were
equipped with water and electric
light. A furnace wag installed In the
school building.
So todqy more than 30 children in
the neighborhood have the advantages
of a model one-room school, due to the
Interest of a man who had no chil¬
dren of his own. Since the erec¬
tion of the school buildings, Mr. Both¬
well has never lost interest. The
John H. Bothweil school,” in district
No. 105 of Pettis county, and the
three-acre tract on which It stands,
will be for years to come a monument'
to Mr. Bothwell’s Interest in the wel¬
fare of his neighbors’ children.—Kan¬
sas City Star.
■■ y—
Animals Thrive on Poieon.
There are many animals and birds
which are quite unharmed by the
stings of insects, or even the poison of
the mosl snakes. Ducks love
to feed oiPbees, which they will swal¬
low in dozens without any ill effects.
The same Immunity Is shared by an¬
other bird—the bee-eater, and appar¬
ently by the death's-head moth. The
South American ant-eater makes tasty
meals off ants of the most poisonous
kind. He goes to a hill and proceeds
to scratch a hole In It with his power¬
ful foreclaws; then, lying down, he
pushes his long tongue Into the breach.
The ants swarm on the waiting
tongue, and as soon as it Is nicely cov¬
ered Its owner draws it In. The
badger’s thick fur seems to protect
him .completely against the attacks of
wasps. His fondness for honey often
induces him to dig up a wasp’s nest.
Most curious of all are certain birds
which delight In eating deadly snakes.
The stork lunches contentedly off an
ndder, or two, though he has swallowed
poison enough to kill a man.—Sports¬
man’s Digest.
Trapping on Big £cale.
In the little island of Tasmania
trapping is a very profitable business.
The trappers supply a market that
used to look to America and Siberia
with skins of the humble rabbit, the
wallaby,.'the kangaroo and the opos*
sum. Inexperienced trappers earn $125
a week, and the old hands earn as
much as $300.
One of the leading fur exporters of
Hobart states that tills sum is a fair
average with many of his customers.
The trappers are sought after. Cara¬
vans go out Into the bush for weeks
buying up skins. Before the advent
of this Industry landowners were glad
to have trappers to keep down the
game that devastated their runs, but
skins have now become so valuable
that they lease the trapping rights for
big sums, and there are many appli¬
cants. The state government has fol¬
lowed their lead in respect to crown
lands. Options are now held for two
seasons ahead over the best trapping
country.
Too Close for Comfort.
A number of sportsmen were relat¬
ing their most thrilling experiences.
“I’ve just returned from hunting In
the Rockies," said one. “One day I
struck the trail of a bear and I fol¬
lowed It for hours before giving It up.”
it What made you quit,” said one of
his audience, “after putting In all fhat
amount of work? *»
“Well, to be frank,” said the sports¬
man, “it uppeared to me that the trail
was getting altogether too fresh. »»
Quite Willing.
“It’s a shame,” cried the young wife;
•hot a thing In the house fit to eat.
I’m going straight home to mamma.
“If you don’t mind, dear,” said the
husband, reaching for his hat, “I’ll go
with . you.”— Pathfinder.
FIND OLD
*
Skeletons of Giant Warriors Un¬
earthed in France.
Men Who Lived 25,000 Years Ago Be¬
lieved to Have Died Fighting— Ar¬
row Found in Head of. One.
The discovery of 25,000-year-old
graves containing well preserved skel¬
etons of three prehistoric warriors,
has Just been made at Solutre, a
small village In the Cote d’Or depart¬
ment of France, , widely known for its
prehistoric remain^
In the last 60 years remarkable spe¬
cimens of remains of the prehistoric
period have been found at Solutre,
and, a short time ago the Lyons fac¬
ulty of science decided to undertake
a methodical and scientific search of
the district on its own account The
first search proved rather disappoint¬
ing, but the week was, nevertheless,
energetically carried on, and after
days of patient toil the scientists in
charge of the expedition discovered
the' skeletons of three men who lived
in the latter Paleolithic or Aurignacien
period, from 20,000 to 25,000 years ago.
The three skeletons were buried
in the same position at a depth of
three feet seven inches, five feet and
six feet respectively, the heads facing
the rising sun. Lying on their backs
the knees slightly raised, the hands
clasped over the stomachs, the skele
tons were resting on ’beds of ashes,
On either side of the head Were two
roughly hewn stones in the shape of
a “cromlech,’’ which, it is believed,
indicate the exact position to be oc¬
cupied by the body.
The skeletons evidently belonged
to extremely powerful men, as the
smallest of the three measured
feet two inches, while the tallest
measured six feet nine inches. The
shape of the skulls is remarkable. The
forehead is rather low. The sockets
of the eye are square and of large di¬
mensions; the jawbone Is prominent
vand the jaws are powerful and still
contain well preserved teeth.
The skeletons are in a wonderful
state of preservation. One skull is
intact, while the trunk and limbs of
another are in perfect condition. To
judge from the teeth the skeletons
fire those of men from twenty-four to
twenty-seven years old, who probably
died while fighting, as the head of a
stone arrow is lodged in the skull of
one of them.—London Mail.
Inventions Must Wait
In his new book. << We and Our
Work,” Joseph French Johnson cor¬
rects thus a possibly current error
about the inevitableness of the in¬
vents ;
“Many people imagine that a man
like Edison could invent almost any¬
thing and anywhere.
M That Is not true. If Mr. Edison had
lived in 1800 he could not have made
one single Invention for which he is
now justly famous.
| "The science of physics was not ad¬
vanced far enough In 1800 to enable
anyone to invent the electric light.
“Much has been said about Marconi
and his genius in Inventing the ‘wire¬
less.’
“But back of this Invention was the
work, - continued -for many years,
English and German scientists, who
showed how the waves .of the al¥
spread.
“Marconi himself has acknowledged,
his debt to these men.
Yes, even the inventor of the lately
popular refrain, “Yes, We Have No
Bananas,” might have had to wait on
the discovery of the banana plant.
bovver From the Waves.
Professor Trischetto, an Italian, pre¬
dicts that If his recently invented
model is adopted it will make it prac¬
tical to get pouter from the waves of
the ocean.
The extraction of power from the
ocean’s movements—waves and tides
—has long been the dream of inven¬
tors, as such a source of power Is
practically inexhaustible; but hereto¬
fore the models have either been fail¬
ures or so expensive t o operat e as to
he impractical. .
-- Prof. Trischetto, however, claims
that with hts device he can generate
10 horse power from -each square
yard of ocean surface used. r
An interesting sidelight on the Pro¬
fessor’s invention is the fact that he
lias been refused aid by his own gov¬
ernment and has announced his inten¬
tion of offering his device to English
capitalists when it is perfected.
Why Taxes Are High.
The old lady had just paid her taxes
and was in anything but a happy mood
when she entered the car on her way
home. When the conductor came for
her fare she looked rather sourly at
him.
“How much do you get a week.,
young man?” she asked him. The con¬
ductor told her.
“No wonder the taxes are high,” she
snapped, “whet! 'they pay you all that
money for Just running up those steps.”
“They don’t, mum,” retorted the con¬
ductor ; “we get half of it for running
down. •»
Preferred the Candle.
Doris had a horror of going to sleep
in the dark. Her mother, anxious to
overcome this weakness, said, ns she
was leaving her:
"Remember; darling, that an angel,
will still be with you when I take the
candle away. tt
“Mummy,’’ pleaded a smalf voice,
"I’d much rather you took the angel
and left the candle. ♦»
CHINESE BANDITS REVIVE
OLD FORM OF EXTORTION
\
Outlaws' Threat to Desecrate
Graves of Ancestors Brings
Money From Rich.
A practice almost as old as China
Itself-vthat of extorting money from
well-to-do Chinese by threatening to
desecrate or by actually desecrating
ancestral graves—has been revived by
Honan bandits.
Nanyang, in the middle of Honan
province, offers an outstanding ex¬
ample of this revival. Once a thrifty
town and the home of Chu-&o Lipng,
'
famous hero and strategist of the time
of the Three Kingdoms, Nanyang has
become a bandit stronghold. Virtually
ail wealthy Chinese have long since
left the place to escape extortion. Bnt
the bandits still have a grip on them.
By threatening to exhume the bones
of their parents or other ancestors, the
moat sacred things conceivable to the
mind of the Chinese, and to burn them
or scatter them^to the four winds, the
bandits are virtually certain of receiv¬
ing ransom money from these wealthy
people. They are just as certain of the
money as if they had possession of
the victim of extortion himself or of
his living relatives.
Moreover, even in the event a cap¬
tive Is killed owing to delay paying on the part
of friends or relatives in ran¬
som money, the body still remains to
be ransomed to save It from desecra
tion.
It Is said there are at least sixty
gangs of bandits centering around
Nanyang and occupying more than fifty
villages In the surrounding territory.
The gangs range in number from 600
to 2,000' members each. Each Is striv¬
ing to attain the fame of the infamous
“White Wolf,” who for years terrorized
portions of Honan province before
banditry became such a widely recog¬
nized profession. -
“Wang the Bearded,” “Wang the
Monk,” “Chang the Ninth” are titles
assumed by three of the gang leaders.
No apparent effort is being made by
the military authorities to suppress
these gangs.
**************************
ii PAUPER” LEAVES LARGE
ESTATE TO YOUNG GIRL
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Above is pictured Miss Elizabeth
Rosalie Wurthmann, twenty-one, of
Jersey Qity, N, J., who is left sole
heiress to an estate believed worth
several hundred thousand dollars, by
the will of Louis Lehmeyer, ninety
two, who died In the charity ward of
'a hospital there last week. The will
provides for bequests to various char¬
itable organizations totaling a hun¬
dred thousand dollars; the balance is
held In trust for Miss Wurthmann,
whose grandparents were dear friends
of Lehmeyer, who lived as a recluse
and seemingly in dire poverty. Be¬
cause of the friendship that existed
between Lehmeyer and the Wurth¬
mann family, the young lady was made
heiress to the estate.
U. S. INSISTS YANK IS DEAD
Ex-Service Man Listed as 44 Killed”
Wants Citizenship.
, Frank Pira, “killed in action” in
France five years ago and for whom
taps had been sounded at four Me*
.morial day exercises at Madera, near
Fresno, Cal., has appealed to S. B.
Hem, commander of the Madera post
of the American Legion, for aid in re¬
covering his citizenship and establish¬
ing himself on army records as a liv¬
ing man.
Pira declared that he had been de
pied the privilege of rejoining his
puny in France because he was report
ed dead, and that he refused his own
$10,000 life insurance while visiting
his parents in Italy. He later returned
to the United States as an lmmigtant,
after being refused entry as a citizen.
The Madera post has taken the case
up with Washington authorities.
TOMB OF HEROD’S KIN
Sarcophagus Inscribed With Name of
Phalion Found.
A sarcophagus inscribed with the
name of Phalion, uncle of Herod the
Great, has been unearthed by excava¬
tors of the University of Pennsylvania
Museum at Philadelphia, who have
been working at Beisan, Palestine, the
Beth-shean of the Old Testament.
The workmen also found a cawed
basalt stele of King Setl I of Egypt, on
which Is described the Pharaoh’s mili¬
tary dispositions in Palestine, and con¬
tains the name of Beisan.
!
£*s i
V
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY
RAILED AT COMMON BANKER
Robert Lewis Stevenson Described
as First Seen by His Stepson,
Lloyd Osbourne.
While the others talked I appraised
him silently. He was tall and slight,
with light brown hair,/a small golden
mustache 'and a beautiful ruddy 1 com¬
plexion and was so gay and buoyant
that he kept ev4ryone in fits of laugh¬
ter. He wore a funny-looking little
round cap, such as schoolboys used to
have in England, a whit««flanneJ shirt,
dark trousers and very neat shoes.
Stevenson had very shapely feet ; they
were long and narrow, with a high
arch and Instep, and he was proud of
them. However shabbily he might be
dressed he was always 'smartly shod.
All these?, lads—for they were scarce¬
ly more—were gloriotisly under the
spell oif the vie de boheme; they want-;
ed to be poor, improvident and reck¬
less; they were eager to assert that
they were outcasts and rebels, ac¬
cording to "An Intimate Portrait of
R. L. S. by His Stepson, Lloyd Os¬
bourne.” One of the Americans, who
had an ample allowance, found enjoy¬
ment in wearing an old frock coat and
fez; another, equally well provided
for, always wore expensive rings so as
to have the extreme enjoyment: of pawn¬
ing them; but to some epoverty Sitter was no
masquerade and wag enough. I
doubt if poor little Bloomer had more
than a spare shirt to his name, or even
enough buttons for ids one shabby
suit. Once he had been refused ad¬
mission to the Luxembourg gallery as
m indecently clothed.” It was supposed
to be a wonderful joke, but Bloomer’s
fine, sensitive face always winced
when it was repeated in his presence.
It was the custom 0 / them all to
rail at the respectable and well-to-do;
R. L.. S.’s favorite expression was "a
common banker,” used as one might
refer to a common laborer. "Why, even
a common banker would renig at a
thing like that—“renig” being another
favorite word. I got the impression
that people with good clothes and
money in their pockets and pleasant,
big houses w£re somehow odious, and
should be heartily despised. They be¬
longed to a strange race called Philis¬
tines, and were- sternly to be kept in
their place. If any had dared to in¬
stall themselves in the Hotel Chevil
Ion they would have found it a nest
of hornets.—Scribner’s Magazine.
Ancient Blue Seat Ring.
Tut-Ankh-Amen’s ring is said to
have been in the museum of the New
York Historical society for the last
sixty-years. The presence of this an¬
cient ring is explained by the habit
of the monarchs of old Egypt of be¬
stowing rings and other personal ob¬
jects on lucky persons who won their
favor. Inscriptions on their tombs
frequently picture pharaohs present¬
ing such trinkets to court and other
attendants. Each sovereign was well
provided with rings, it seems, The
blue seal ring In the museum in ques¬
tion was identified as King Tut-Ankh
Amen’s by Dr. Caroline Williams,
Egyptologist of the Metropolitan mu*
seum and Bryn Mawr, from a three
year study of Its inscription. It Is
part of the collection of Dr. Henry
Abbott, an American physician, who
practiced in Cairo from 1832 to 1852.
His accumulation of 3,000 objects was
bought by public-spirited citizens and
presented to the museum.
Stare a Long Way DJetant.
If the light of all the stars were to
go out at once, it would be at least four
years before we noticed any difference
in their light. After that time these
lights In the sky would disappear one
by one, according to their distance
from the earth. No one living today
would see the last starlight go out If
all their lights were extinguished at
once.
You must remember that it takes
light four and one-half years to corns
to us from the nearest star, We say
a star Is so many “light years away,
basing its-distance on the time It takes
Its light to reach us. It takes light
100,000 years and more to reach us
from some of the farther stars.
From some of the more distant stars
we are just now receiving the light
that originally emanated from them
way back in the Stone age—before his¬
tory. It has taken it all these years to
reach us.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Japs Prefer English Tongue.
The great libraries In Tokyo have
been destroyed. Before the calamity
fell upon the city, those libraries were
stocked with American books. Every
college student in Japan reads English,
and unlike American students he does
not forget his foreign tongue nvhen he
graduates. On the contrary, English
is the key which unlocks the western
world and he keeps It bright by the
continuous study of works in English.
English has completely outstripped
French and German as the foreign
tongue of educated Japanese. The
Osakt^ Mainichi publishes an English
edition dally for foreigners and more
especially for Japanese readers. A new
English daily was launched in Tokyo
in the summer by the Nichl Nlchi.—
Review of Reviews.
One Man Shakespeare.
A professional writer gets many of
tils Ideas at home. He may pick up a
vigorous thought while fixing the fur
naee. He may frame a timely phrase
at the supper table or even at cards.
For Instance, Mr. and Mrs. Shake¬
speare were opponents at bridge.
The bard of Avon has Just bid four
spades. '
I double, it announced Mrs. Shjikcv
spearo.
Doubie, double, toll and trouble,"
sighed gentle Will, as he laboriously
proceeded to lose two tricks.
HOUSTON, Texas, Jan,
Associated Press)— State officers have
a ■R warrant charging violation of game
laws against Irvin S. Cobb, f amous
newspaper and short story writer,
who is reported to be on a hunting
trip in Texas at present.
. The warrant charges that he hunted
with a license issued to J. H. Davis
and used a resident license costing,
two dollars, when he should have
a $15 non-resident license.
MISS SHIT ISON
Many Handsome Prizes Given Away
at Drawing Contest Monday
Afternoon at Three O’clock.
Miss Sally Ison was winner of the
diamond ring at the drawing eonteat
held Monday afternoon at Wynne’s
jewelry store.- The numbers were
drawn by little Charles Sanders, J r
.
The prizes won were as follows;
Diamond ring, Mrs. Ernest Travis.
Silver tea set, J. A. Putman.
$20 in gold, Mrs. George Pursley.
Water set, Miss Ida Wa'drup.
Ivory frame, Bill Tyus.
Silver shoe horn, Mrs. T. I. Haw¬
kins. - '
Cluster ring, R. A.' Minter.
Ash tray, Mrs. W. F. Pursley.
Silver hook, Mrs. H. A. Willey.
Cut glass vase, O. S. Tyus.
Silver handle darner, E. Chappell.
Cameo ring, Guy Haisten.
' Ring, Mrs. G. J. Coppedge.
Ivory powder box, Grady Norton.
Ring, Mrs. W. F. Pursley.
Ring, Gerald Chappell.
Pin, Mrs.. P. V. Reagan.
Ring, George Murray.
Ring, W. J. Coggins.
Silver buffer, Mrs. Sawtell.
Silver file, Leila Powell. 1
Ring, Guy Newman.
Incense burner, Miss Etta Stanley.
* CLASSIFIED ♦
* ADVERTISEMENTS «
• 9 • *»*«»*•
WANTED.
WANTED—Field peas, all kinds,
market prices. Submit samples. H.
V. Kell Company. 6-d&wtf.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT—4 room house; all con¬
veniences. 425 West Broad street;
Mrs. S. B. Frye. l-d-3t.
FOR RENT—Three unfurnished
rooms, kitchen and kitchenette—
entire upstairs. Phone 242. 29-d-tf.- ‘
LOST
LOST—33 by 5 tire on Macon road
between Griffin and Milner, Jan. J.
Return to M. K. Wilson, Box 223,
Griffin, Ga. t-l-d-3t.
x
LOST—Ladies kid glove. Finder
please call phone 403. 29-3t.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—Stove wood. Call Ralph
M. Jones, phone 312.
FOR SALE—400 bushels good com.
Also cordwood, peavine hay. J.
Touchstone, Zetella, Ga. 29-d-3-fl*
SEED GRAIN "FOR SALE-Genuine
climatized rust-proof oats,
wheat and rye. It pays to buy best
seed for planting and we have them.
A. F. Gossett & Son. 19-d-tf.
NOTICE—We will appreciate y»» r
orders for Paints, Varnishes, •
dow Glass, Roofing, etc- Newton 1
Block, 135 S. Eighth St Will Hffl
Newton Co. H-9-d-tf.
MISCELLANEOUS.
NOTICE! j
Second installment of city tax® 5
now due and payable, E. P. BRIDGES
City Manager. 27-d-lOt