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IBS MURPHY IS
■PION GIRL
SWIMMER
Walthour Wins Men’s Title in
Final 1912 Meet—Record
Crowd Sees Sports.
Miss Mabel Murphy holds the hand
< .in o piece of cut glass, first prize for
women swimmers at Piedmont park.
;i ml Tat" Walthour, brother of Atlan
ta'. world famous bicycle rider. Bobby
Walthour. holds, the silver loving cup
nd the men's championship of the
lake.
The women's prize was won in a
closely contested 25-yard swim in
which Miss Murphy won l/y a few
inches from Misses Frances Smith and
nrrie <'renshaw. who took second and
third places, respectively. Nearly a
dozen other pretty bathers at the lake
entered the contest and all of them
were closely bunched behind the lead
, r=. Miss Murphy's time was 30 sec
,,nd“. which is considered splendid
inuning for an amateur.
Walthour. who apparently is as fast
in th" water as his brother is on a
wheel, proved the wonder of the after
noon He won the cup by making the
largest number of points in the events
,f the afternoon.
Record Crowd Soes aces.
T'i'i swimming events, which were
the fina’ ones of the season, drew one
..f the largest crowds that has ever
io n at Pi ilmont park betich. Hun
dred- of the bathers were in the water
and on the banks several thousand
wati-heti the contestants and applauded
oi.ir favorites. Atlanta's "seashore
n-ort" never proved more popular.
Appreciation of what the life savers
i t the lake have done this year was
shown when they were presented with
cold medals and $lO gold pieces. The
~ lais were inscribed with their names
: nd bear the testimonial, “For faithful
. Tviie at Piedmont park lake, summer
.f 1912." 1.. A. Carraway and ('. R.
.'•.!< Dermott. the life savers, were called
before the throng and stood on the
flouting raft just outside the bathing
pool when the medals were presented
ml at the conclusion someone offered
three cheers, which were taken up by
m e titan a thousand voices.
hi the various events, all of which
■ <los I? contested and proved ex
iting, the winners and their time and
I r ■.? - are as follow s:
Events and Winners.
25-Yard Dash for Aten —Time,' 16
so. ends: Trammell, Peeples. Bedell.
Piize. shirt, offered by Es-ig Bros.
u-Yard Dash for Men—Time. 36
- i wnds. First heat. Walthour, Mon-
- Jxatge, Bedell: second heat. Logan.
Sams. Lenniek; final. Walthour. Logan
P..<!ell. First prize, bathing suit, of
fered by Yaneey Hardware Company,
second prize, tie, from Eiseman Bros.
100-Yard Dash for Men —Time. 1
minute 25 seconds. Logan, Walthour.
Cowles (Crane winning but disquali
fied as professional). Prize, bathing
cir. offered by J. M. High Company.
Half .Mile Race for Men- —Time, 16
minutes 34 seconds. Walthour, Len
nivk. Logan (Crane was disqualified
for third place). Prize, gold signet
ring, offered by Charles Chosewood, in
■■large of the boat concessions at the
like.
.’-Yard Dash for Boys—Time. 17.4
- • ontis. Louis Sams. Gilbert Frazier.
H-mv Anderson, Prize, bathing suit,
off -red by College Co-Op Company.
100-Yard Dash for Roys—Time. 1
i nite 32 seconds. Louis Sams. Gil-
i Frazier, Harvey Anderson. Prize,
'Gibing suit, offered by Cloud-Stanford
1 '"inpany.
Boat tilting contest, two best falls
"f three. Monsalvatge and Ryan,
Sons brothers.
-'7-Yard Dash for Girls—Time. 30
"nds. Miss Mabel Murphy. Miss
francos Smith, Miss Orrie Crenshaw.
I' piece of cut glass, offered by
k ng Hardware Company.
Winners of points in silver cup con
test: ,
Walthour 40- points; Logan, 30
"""its; Lenniek. 15 points.
DAUGHTER OF MORGAN
SAYS HE DIED IN 1899
''l I'HRIE, OKLA.. Sept. 3.—Claint
" - l hat she is a daughter of General
" in H. Morgan, the noted Confederate
' o,dry leader and head of “Morgan's
ru kiers," Mrs. L. F. L’abrue. of Chero
''"e. in addressing a reunion of old
mrs. told them that General Mor
gan. living under the name of Dr. John
M 1 'ole. died iri old Indian Territory
'i 1899 and is burled near Vian. Okla.
'if war history relates that General
'"'Ran was killed at New Greeneville,
1 °nn.. on September 3. 1864, after a
" 1 ational escape from the Ohio pen
"entiary.
WORTH MONEY TO BE ALIEN:
$7,000 IS IN THE BALANCE
WASHINGTON. D. (’.. Sept. 3—The
1 niter! States Supreme Court has been
i -ked to decide w hether Belinda
''Hara, a working girl, is a citizen
Youngstown. Ohio, or of Ireland.
' 'n the assumption that she was a citi
"n of Ireland the Federal Court of
" 1 thorn Ohio awarded her $7,000 for
' iurii s received w hile getting off a
■ "vet car on her way to church in
1 mngstown two'"years ago.
Ihe Mahoning Valley Railway Com
my today filed an application for a
1 " lew of the case on the ground that
was a citizen of Youngstown. In
'h < vent the Federal Court w ould
' had tw right to have tried Miss
ilara'g vase.
Mrs. Frances HaydenWedsWealthy N. Y. Broker
KEPT HER PLANS SECRET
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MRS. FRANCES H AYDEN LAIRD.
Mrs. Stephens Hook, Her Sis
ter. Knew Nothing of the
Romance. She Says.
Mrs. Frances Johnson Hayden, of
Atlanta, and Charles Chambers Laird,
a wealthy young New York stockbroker,
are now on their honeymoon, and will
soon visit Atlanta. Their marriage is
announced today by thA bride's broth
er. Joseph H. Johnson, fire commission
er of New York, and a former Atlan
tan.
The marriage, which took place a day
or two ago. attracted wide attention
in New York, where Mr. Laird was
well known in financial circles. Mrs.
Hayden was a daughter of the late
Joseph Johnson, of Atlanta, and a sis
ter of Mrs. Stephens Hook, of Atlanta,
and Mrs. Louis Sloan and Mrs. Albert
Drooge. of Providence, R. I
marriage was an entire surprise to her.
News to Sister.
Mrs. Stephens Hook said today the
and that she was not acquainted with
Mr. Laird.
Here is an account of the wedding
which appeared in a New York paper.
Friends of Charles ('. Laird,
wealthy plantation owner of Haw
River. N. C., grandson of former
Governor Holt, of North Carolina,
and present member of the New
York Cotton Exchange, were sur
prised to hear yesterday, that he
had been secretly married early
Saturday morning in Hoboken
While they doubted, but express
ed the hope that It was true, these
chums of the wealthy and popular
young broker waited about the lob
by of the Hotel Imperial, where
Laird recently took up a tempo
rary residence, watching for his re
turn.
One Hundred Phone Calls.
During the day at least a hundred
calls were made for Mr. Laird at room
o. 236. But as evening approached and
he had not appeared the word spread
about that he would be found at a
bote! in Long Beach, and several of
his friends started a telephone search
for him the e.
According to the reported wedding
the bride is a charming young woman
of Atlanta. Ga. Friends of Laird said
that he had introduced her at a party
at Shanley's a few nights ago as "Mrs.
Hayden” and that they understood her
to have been the wife until recently of
a lieutenant In the I’nited States army.
The reports of the Hoboken wedding
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 3. 1912.
39 NOW KNOWN
DEAD IN FLOOD
PITTSBURG. Sept. 3 Thirty-nine
persons now are known to have been
drowned yesterday in floods resulting
from cloudbursts that swept valleys
In western Pennsylvania. Ohio and
West Virginia, causing property loss
estimated high in the millions. The
death toll may mount higher. Hun
dreds of families are homeless and
shivering on the damp hillsides. Rail
road traffic ia materially impeded and
many cities were in total darkness,
both electric and gas plants being
flooded.
Among the towns which suffered
principally from the rise of water were
Washington. Beaver. Burgettstown.
Canonsburg, and many .smaller places
throughout the Chartiers. Cherry and
Beaver valleys, while In West Virginia,
Colliers and surrounding territory suf
fered principally. The dead at various
points thus far ascertained number:
At Hollidays Cove, 6; at Colliers, 9;
at Cherry Valley. 13; at Burgettstown.
3.
stated that the bride, who appeared at
the home of Registrar Joseph Tucker
at No. 58 Eighth street about 4 o'clock
Saturday morning looking for license
to marry, was named Mrs. Hayden.
Last night Mr. Tucker was not at
home. A young man who wore a gold
badge and declared that he was Deputy
Colvin, said that he was not authorized
to show the records of the marriage
license because he had not Issued it.
The wife of Pastor Reichter, of St.
Matthews church, at Eighth street anJ
Hudson street, in Hoboken, said that
she was awakened In the parsonage,
which is directly opposite the Tucker
home, at ten minutes before 4 o'clock
Saturday morning by the arrival of a
party in an automobile.
"The party left the engine running
when they entered the home of the
registrar, and I soon guessed that it
was a wedding crowd and that they
would call here to be married by the
Rev. D Reichter." she said. "But
as my husband was away, I waited up
to keep fro mbeing disturbed until they
came out. They did not call here."
RAUERS PUP.E FLAVORING EX
TRACTS have no equal. Sold every
where 10c and 25c the bottle, at your
grocer s.
COTTON FARMERS
AGE VICTIMS DE
TARE RULES
Corporation Commissioner Re
ports Injustice From False
Weight Practices.
'VASHINGTON. Septi 3.—A false
standard of weights which inject un
certainty into practically every Ameri
can cotton sale in the important mar
kets of Europe, resulting in serious
abuses, indefensible practices and even
fraud on the part of cotton merchants
in this country, has been created by the
rules of foreign cotton exported from
the I’nited States, according to Luther
Conant, Jr., commissioner of corpora
tions. in a report to President Taft.
l'he report is based unon an exten
sive investigation of cotton tare—the
allowance for bagging and ties enclos
ing a bale of cotton in order to ascer
tain the net weight—which was under
taken on complaint that American cot
ton producers were subjected to seri
ous loss because of excessive deduc
tions for taie under the regulations of
leading European markets. The pro
ducer does not ordinarily suffer under
these rules, according to the commis
sioner. because of the active competi
tion among merchants in Ihe purchase
of cotton from the farmer for export.
The existence of competition and its
remedial effect, however, he points out,
cannot always be relied upon, and it
is impossible to escape the conclusion
that the produce may be injured, and
sometimes is.
Complicates Price Figures.
The tare rules, the report declares,
complicate price regulations with an
unnecessary element of chance, and in.
volve economic waste because of the
use of excessive bagging. If this
waste does not injure the producer, or
merchant 01 spinner, it must impose
an unnecessary burden upon the con
sumer of cotton goods, says the report.
Commissioner Conant declares that im
mediate action should be taken to
remedy the evils, and offers sugges
tions for temporary and ultimate per
manent relief.
The American producer sells his cot
ton gross weight and,, as a rule, ac
cording to the report, believes that he
makes a big profit on tare by receiv
ing the same price for bagging that
he obtains for cotton. This is untrue,
the report says, as tite evidence demon
strates that the buyer of cotton takes
the tare into consideration in fixing
the price he offers.
Cotton for export, on the other hand,
is sold net weight. It is in this con
nection that complication and uncer
tainty are injected into cotton sales.
The American exporter, by the terms
of his invoice contract with the foreign
buyer, must compute the net weight
of his cotton by deducing 6 i>er cent
from the gross weight. The average
bale of cotton weighing 500 pounds
gross, contains about 478 pounds of
cotton and 32 pounds of tare as it
comes from the producer to the ex
porter. A deduction of 6 per cent, un
der the foreign tare rules, from a gross
weight of 500 pounds net or 8 pounds
less than the actual weight of the net
cotton the bale, in addition to that
discrepancy the report points out, the
situation is further complicated by the
fact that when the cotton reaches its
destination, the foreign buyer, under
the contract with the American ex
porter, has the right to demand an
actual test for tare. In this test the
rules fix a maximum allowances for
tare of 500 pounds. This is a discrep
ancy of three and one-half pounds as
compared with the 30-pound invoice
deduction, and the foreign buyer calls
upon the exporter to make good that
amount.
Exporter Faces Problem.
lite American exporter, under these
circumstances, according to the report,
faces a serious problem to avoid con
ducting business at a loss. Some cot
ton merchants, Mr. Conant—says, argue
that these facts are thoroughly under
stood by the trade, and are adjusted
in the price which the exporter asks
for his cotton. The commissioner does
not entirely agree with this view, and
says that the practical result of the
rules has been that the exporter adds
unnecessary tare to his cotton.
"The expo'-ter." he says, "naturally
adds tare up to the amount allowed by
the rules .roughly 26 1-2 pounds). He
does this by 'patching—that is, placing
strip-bagging on the bale. A small part
of such patching is usually necessary
to cover sample holes. However, since
the exporter, in making out his invoice,
must deduct six per cent, he frequently
goes further and adds tare up to at
least six per cent of the total weight of
the bales; sometimes he adds even
more.
"Obviously, if the exporter makes a
complete adjustment in the price, and
also adjusts by adding tare, he makes
a profit of such added tare. If, how
ever. complete adjustment is not made
in tite price, this addition of tare be
comes simply a means of protection
against loss, although in the trade it
is usually spoken of as a 'profit on
patching.'
"Granting that the price of cotton
is in no way affected by the six per
cent rule, it is nevertheless highly ob
jectionable. It results in changing the
gross weight of the bale and thus in
troduces an avoidable element of
chance, both as to the actual weight of
cotton to be para for and as to price."
Hilf Over-Tared
As a result of this six per cent rule,
the commissioner estimates that at
least 50 per cent of American exporta
tions of cotton are ovrr-tared and that
an insignificant proportion of the re
mainder is under-tared. It is this use
PROGRESSIVES ARE FOR
A VISIBLE GOVERNMENT,
SAYS SEN, JOS. M, DIXON
By SENATOR JOSEPH M. DIXON,
Chairman of the Progressive National
Committee.
NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—The Progressive
party is determined to have a visible and
not an invisible government in Ktis coun
try. It Is determined that the man who
pays the taxes shall get value received
for his taxes. It Is determined that pub
lie men shall work for the voters who
put them in office, and not for interests
whose object is to raise the already tre
mendous cost of living that they may
personally profit.
The Progressive party believes in the
suffrage for women because it believes
that women are just as intelligent, just
as honest and just as interested in the
welfare of the nation as men are.
A mother who has a son who must
make his living as an American citizen
can be trusted to vote to surround him
with the right conditions, and to give
him honest opportunity. A woman who
is supporting herself can be trusted to
vole to make conditions of labor better.
It is unthinkable that any woman would
vote for a man who defended child la
bor. or who sought to give any employer
the right to work his employees, men or
women, twelve or fifteen hours a day.
Better Labor Laws Urged.
Better labor lavs are insisted on by the
Progressive party. We do not attack
property, but we hold that human life is
more precious than property. And while
we intend to do no man an injustice, we
do not propose to permit any man to do
other men injustice.
Go into any city slum and you will
see the need for a government that takes
an interest in the welfare of the people.
What this country needs is intelligent
effort to conserve human life; to place a
decent living within the reach of every
man or every woman who works: to pro
tect the aged and the weak; to guarantee
to every human being the right to hap
piness.
We know that the laws now on the
statute books are not all suited to pres
ent condlthions. Some of them have been
put there dishonestly, for dishonest pur
of unnecessary tare, says the report,
that injects uncertainty and possible
fraud into the cotton business.
"This uncertainty," adds the report,
"strikes at the basic factor of every
transaction, namely, the amount of the
commodity actually sold. It in effect
establishes a false standard of weights
with the invariably unfortunate con
sequences of such a condition. It thus
gives an advantage to a skilled class
of specialists who best understand the
complicated details *of the business
with a corresponding disadvantage to
the less expert. It is not sufficient to
say that the competition among these
skilled classes often forces them to
turn over the benefit of this false
measure to the producer. It is not
seriously contended that this is always
so. and there is thus ever present the
open door to fraud. There is always
the invitation to cotton merchants to
adopt Improper practices, and there
is thus enticed into the trade a class
of men who bring discredit upon hon
est merchants. This is not only the
oretically so. but it is actually so. Buy
ers of cotton, both in this country and
abroad, are constantly finding them
selves involved in transactions where
shippers have taken advantage of
these opportunities to defraud.”
Standardization Remedy.
The ideal remedy for all these evils,
Mr. Conant concludes, is the standard
ization of tare to be put on a bale of
cotton by making It a definite or read
ily ascertainable amount, so that the
net weight may be determined with
out controversy or test. The present
careless and Irregular methods of cov
ering cotton, if the evils are allowed to
go uncorrected, he declares, seem like
ly to invite legislation.
Pending the adoption of a thorough
remedy, the commissioner believes
substantial benefits will accrue by
modifying the six per cent contract so
as to provide for a deduction of five per
cent or some other percentage more ac
curately representing the amount of
covering actually necessary to protect
the cotton. The requirements of the
contract, he says, should certainly be
identical with the allowance established
by the rules under an actual test.
There'would be a great saving, the
report says. If the cotton could be com
pressed at the gin. Under the present
practice, the staple is pressed at the gin
and later compressed to greater densi
ty at numerous establishments scat
tered over the cotton belt. Compress
ing at the gin. he says, would encoun
ter opposition from the owners of com
presses because it would destroy their
business. Furthermore, he adds, it
would be Impractical at this time be
cause it would require a capital outlay
of at least $100,000,000 to equip gins
with compresses. Nevertheless, he be
lieves, this Is an ultimate idea! condi
tion to which the cotton trade must
look forward.
STOMACH TROUBLES
Horsford's Acid Phosphate
Produces healthy activity of weak and
disoniered stomachs. An excellent
strength builder. •••
Men and Women
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ination. Hours, 8 a. m. to 7 n. ni
Sundays, 9 to 1.
Dr. J. D. HUGHES, Specialist
Opposite Third National Bank
16 ! 2 North Broad St.. Atlanta, Gi
poses. Some of them were put there
years ago by men who could no more
foresee our national, social and industrial
development than they could foresee the
aeroplane, or the telephone, or the eigh
teen-hour train between New York and
Chicago.
It will not be a light task to write
our program into the statute books, but
it can be done, and we mean to do it.
Dishonest laws must be repealed.
Statutes written in a bygone age and un
suited to the times must be repealed anil
new statutes must take their place
It is the people who will do this. The
new laws will come from the people, and
the legislator's who try to stand in their
way will surely be brushed aside
"Courts' Power Too Great."
As for the judges who attempt to say
that they and not the law-making bodies
of the states and of the I’nited States
shall make the laws, we have provided
a remedy for them—the recall. No hon
est, upright Judge has any reason to fear
the recall. No dishonest judge has any
reason not to fear It. Judicial terms
are often long, in some cases for life; and
until the people have the power to re
call those officials either too stupid or
too dishonest to discern the difference be
tween right and wrong, the power of the
courts is greater than is good for the
country.
No one knows that some judges are cor
rupt better than the lawyers themselves.
No one suffers from corruption on the
bench more than the lawyers who prac
tice before it. It ought not to be neces
sary to invoke congress to get rid of a
judge the people do not trust The peo
ple should he able tq do it themselves.
And the great majority of both the
bench and bar will privately admit that
this is so.
All we ask of the voter is to think
about the issues. We have made most
of them. \Ve provide remedies for evils;
the other parties provide vague promises
to correct them. If our program is given
careful thought we shall win And we
are going to try to get every voter to
think about it before the end of the cam
paign.
$150,000 TELESCOPE IS
DEDICATED AT PITTSBURG
PITTSBURG. PA., Sept. 3.—A new
30-inch photograph refractor tele
scope. valued at $150,000, said to be the
third largest instrument of its kind in
the world, has been dedicated at the
Allegheny observatory, Riverview
park.
Ten years of subscriptions were made
before the amount was raised. Director
Frank Schlesinger announced that an
attempt would he made to determine
the exact distances between the earth,
stars and planets, although the task
might occupy the next ten years.
The new instrument was erected in
memory of William Thaw and his son.
William Thaw, Jr., who were lifelong
1 students in the researches of Samuel
Pierpont Langley and James Edward
Keeler, both former directors of the
Allegheny observatory.
Dr. E. G. Griffin’s a
Over BROWN & ALLEN’S D RUG STORE, 24’/ s WHITEHALL ST.
$5 Set of Teetii $5 I
COMPLETED DAY ORDERED
wM SfiSn 22k Gold Crowns S&3 j
Special Bridge S4 J
Jafe.4 f All D®ntal Work Lowest Prices.
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Wonder what upset your stomach stomach. A little Diapepsin occasional,
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ate has fermented into stubborn lumps; your food is a damage instead of a
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food; breath foul, tongue coated—just sin. which costs only fifty cents for a
take a little Diapepsin and in five large case at drug stores. It's truly
minutes you will wonder what became wonderful—it digests food and sets
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Millions of men and women today nnd on with (| WPak
know that it is needless to have a bad stomach; it’s so unnecessary.
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CONSTIPATED-CASCARETS KNIGHT
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They end the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness, sick. sour,
gassy stomach. They cleanse your Liver and Bowels of all the sour bile, foul
gases and constipated matter which Is producing the misery. A Cascaret
tonight will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box from your druggist
will keep your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular and make
you feel cheerfid and bully for months.
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"CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.”
ARTIST'S Iff E IS
REFUSED D«[
Judge at Reno Thinks Mrs.
Hutt Has Failed to Make
Out Case.
RENO, NEV., Sept. 3.—Judge French
refused to grant Mrs. Edna G. Hutt a di
vorce from her husband. Henry Hutt, the
New York artist. Judge French said the
charge of wilful desertion against. Hutt
was not sustainiated, and Mrs Hutt's a.t»
torney has asked that a date be set when
he may introduce further evidence.
Judge French has set September 18 as ihe
time for the taking of further depositions
in New York.
Mrs. Hutt, wearing a dark satin gown,
took the stand. She testified her hus
band had stayed away nights from their
apartments at No. 342 West Eighty-fifth
street. New York, and toW how they had
quarrelled. Finally, she said, she became
in poor health and her doctor recom
mended that she go to the seaside.
Furniture Was Gone.
She went to Narragansett Pier on July
2. 1910, and with the full consent of her
husband, she asserted. Hutt went re
their New’ York apartments and took ev
ery tiling out of them. When she came
back from Narragansett Pier, she said,
she found her apartments bare and her
husband gone.
Mrs. Hutt testified she was compelled
to go to her aunt s. She declared sho
had been a dutiful wife, and upon ques
tions from Judge French, slated she had
not seen her husband after her return
from the seaside, and that she had not
rung him up by telephone.
Hutt told her attorneys that he wanted
nothing further to do with her. Mrs. Hutt
said. There was no possibility of a re
conciliation. she felt sure.
Mrs Hutt denied there had been an”
agreement to separate,permanently. She
described a number of quarrels with her
nusband, which, she asserted, marl* 1 her
nervous, and affected her viuiig s*m.
She Was Artist's Model.
Mrs. Hutt, whsoe husband once declared
her more beautiful than the Venus Pe-
Milo, won a suit for separation a year
ago. ,\n allowance of $l5O a month ali
mony was made to her. She came here in
January last and has Veen living with
Mrs. Harry Mechling. daugl ier of Mira
beau L. Towns, of New York
Previous to her marriage Mrs. Hutt
was Edna Garfield Polla Torre. She was
noted for her beauty as an artist's mod
el and had posed for Charles Pana Gib
son, A. B. Wenzel and other artists, 'l’he
romance that ended in her marriage be
gan when she posed for Hutt
Hutt declared that his w'fe had been
cruel to him and that she had ceased to
be an inspirations for his work.
IN BED 50 YEARS. SHE DIES:
WOMAN GRIEVED FOR LOVER
LUZERNE. N. Y.. Sept. 3.—As a re
sult of her sweetheart disappearing,
Miss Helen Jackson kept to her bed
for 50 years in a dark room in her
home at Luzerne.
She died today, and for the first time
in the half century the sunshine has
penetrated this bedroom.
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