Newspaper Page Text
SIRLSSCHOOLTO
H SAME HEAT
No Attempt Made to Improve
System Which Has Been De
nounced Repeatdly.
Girls in the senior class at the Girls
High school will find the same lack of
heating facilities that caused so much
loss of time to the graduating class
last .year and that Dr. W. J. Auten
harges caused the death of his daugh
ter No attempt has been made to re
place the heating system with an ade
quate one and. except for the fact that
the principal. Miss Jessie Muse, has
had the furnace pipes thoroughly clean
ed, the heating arrangements are the
same as last year.
School opens Monday for nearly 700
punils who attend the various depart
,r)ts of the Girls High school, and
.reparations to receive them are now
.. ng made. The pupils will find fresh
.>ll. rl doors and newly painted walls,
giving a touch of brightness and san
itation.
The Girls High school is giving the
same two courses of study this year as I
fornurh —the Latin course and the
1 ii course. Pupils may select,
either ..jie on entering, but are required .
tn follow the .ou'se selected.
In the Latin course the first tear,
studies are Latin. English, history, al- [
gebra botany and spelling, while in the
Flench course French is substituted for
th. dead langtiTige.
in order to explain any phase of th
high school w< rk w hich patrons may
not understand, Miss Muse will be in
her office at the school from noon until
2 o'clock .Monday afternoon.
shock~of death kills
WIFE: SLAYER iS HELD
SPRINGFIELD. MO.. Sept. 6.
Though there was undercurrent m••>
talk in Hollister, as the result of
murder th: n Saturday of August D .1
ste, a Ida. ks tnith, no attempt wh.
made to lyneli A. 'l'. Dickens, his slay -
er. win i jail at Branson. A hear;
u 11 rd was placed around the jail last
night Tie c was no disturbance.
ii . Dorste was kid tl by the s'm .k
lit ii long been a victim of tuber
culosis. Both bodies were shipped to
St. Louis today for burial. Dickens will
I.at e his preliminary hearing next
Monday. In the meantime the sheriff
will continue to guard the Branson jail.
RICH MAN HAS HIS SON
HELD AS A VAGRANT
KANSAS CITY. Sept. 6.—Holding a
cringing young man firmly by the
wrist, S \V. \\ . Bates, a wealthy m in.
walked into police headquarters.
This is Earl Bates, my son. and I
"ant him booked for vagrancy." he an
nounced. He’s a failure, I guess. I
sent him to California trying to make
him a better bo-., but here lie is again.
His brother gave him a tiepin the oth
er day and he is so utterly no account
oat he pawned it for fifteen cents.
Now I wan; the law , > deal-witlt him.
I or my part. I'm tired trying."
Ih> hoy wa.- hsoked according to the
tnd speat th< night on an
liarreii bunk.
LILY LANGTRY. NOW 60.
TO TOUR AMERICA AGAIN
LONDON. Sept. 6.—Lilly Langtry is
to make anoth r "farewell” tour of
' ae’ii-,-,. and oiil sail for New York
S' nteinber 10 for a twenty weeks
'.'iidevilli. engagement and with the
! 1 't wonderful collection of gowns, or
' " is said, any actress has ever worn
on the stage.
Lady Deßathe, as she is known in
private life, will carry no company, de
pending on these gowns and her own
versatile personality to win her audi
-liui s. Her act w ill be a sketch deal
ng with woman's suffrage, Tne "Jer
Lily" is now 60 years old.
PARASITE KILLING HORSES
BY HUNDREDS IN KANSAS
i'IPEKA. KAN.. Bern. 6.-Dr B A.
Ib'innson. of Independence, and D . O
'' Wolfe. of Ottawa. members of the
-tote veterinary board, and J. H. Mer
state sanitary live stock commis
sioner. have retuned from w‘este>n
Kiinoss. where they diagnose! Lie
• nge di ease w hich has killed hun
d- of horses there as “strongalus
mains." In this disease a small wdrm,
uown commonly as "the palisade
' orm,” infects the digestive tract, from
'hieh it migrat's to the blood vessels,
'ausing blood clots.
WOMAN STEPS UPON NAIL
AND DIES OF LOCKJAW
S T LOCIS, Sept. 6.—Miss Amelia
Si hellkopf. a prominent young woman
■f Belleville, died from lockjaw, as a
'■■■ult of having stepped on a rusty
I - ii two weeks ago while on a visit at
home of her sister near O'Fallon,
Her brother-in-law was having
' 'me repairing done at the time on his
idenee, and there were several scant
mgs lying about the yard. W hile be
-1 shown the work, Miss Schellkopf
stepped on the nail, which went through
the right shoe.
ARTIST’S WIFE TO STAY
IN RENO FOR A DECREE
RENO. NEV., Sept. 6. Following the
refusal of Judge French to grant Mrs.
H' lirv Hutt, the wife of the artist, a
divorce. Mrs. Hutt immediately stocked
'>P her home with provisions and pre
ened to remain in Rer until she ob
tains her decree, if it ; \es the rest o'
' r natural life. She is sending to New
' "il> to get depositions to substantiate
Her testimony?
Geraldine Farrar’s Operatic Romance Is Shattered
SCOTTI IS TO WED MISS IVES
I ■HI I I !■ II .... ■ I. . .... I. - II ■ - ! ' ■ ■■!.
' WHB / ' - I
A Se* aral |-
I. ® < fiT hi ■ rx/
Lu: \\ ' 'T ■’' I'lH'l'b"
»tte Ives.
i
Sudden Departure of Prima
Donna. Supposed!', Sick, for
Munich Is Recaiied.
LQNDON. Sept. 6. -Cha 'otte Ives,
the American actress, now at the Hotel
Savoy, confirms the report of her en
gagement to Antonio Scotti, baritone
of the Metropolitan Opera Company in
New York. Site said the marriage
would take place as soon as the ar- i
rangements could be made. It will
probably be in New York.
The betrothal has caused a stir, both
here and on the continent, because it
marks the collapse of the long-lived
rumor that the famous baritone would
marry Geraldine Farrar, the prima
donna.
The announ< ement has given new
interest to the fact of the sudden de
parture of Miss Fairer for Munich re
cently. ' 111 health was given as the
reason for her trip, but of course there
are now some who surmise, for the
sak< of chat, ihut there max have been
a final understanding between the two
singers, either friendly or otherwise.
Miss Ives has been on tilt continent
(lining' tiie summer, and has visited
Signor Scotti's family. She and l>>-r
friend, Miss Anne. Meredith, attracted
considerable attention when they ac
companied the airman. Sommer. In
flights at Evian les B.iipes. Fiance.
Miss Ives sails on the Mauretania to
morrow to appear in “Passers-by" in
New York. Si otti will remain here
for some weeks.
NEW YORK. Sept. b. Signo: Scoi
i had nol taken any of his American
acquaintances into his z confidence con
cerning his latest romance. It was
generally supposed he would, some day,
wed Geraldine Farrar.
The first report that Scotti ami Mjss
Farrar were to be married gained cre
dence back in 1906, when they arrived
in the. autumn io fill their engage
mem here. Both have busily denied
the report ever since, but Scotti’s at
tentions to the prima donna continued
to feed the fires of rumor.
Even after the opera season wa» over.
Signor Scotti used to follow Miss Far
rar to Piu’is, and he was her devoted
cavalier during several summer en
gagements. Some of Miss Farrar's
friends say she believed no artist
should marry, and they attribute her
refusal to her devotion to her art.
Tin- baritone will remain abroad for
several weeks longer, it is understood.
In 1903 Signor Scotti was reported
engaged to Miss Mary Britton Leavy, a
New York heiress.
TEXAS WOMAN IS DRUGGED
AND ROBBED IN A HOTEL
CHICAGO Sept. 6. —While the po
lice were searching downtown hotels
for "Charles Ryan." Mrs. Ruby Bath
ricke, a society woman of Austin. Tex.,
and a friend of former Governor Camp
bell's family, today told the story of
how she was lured to the Wellington
hotel, half carried in a semi-conscious
condition to a room on the third floor,
and there robbed of an SBOO diamond
ring. Mrs. Bathrlcke accuses "Ryan"
of stealing the ring.
"I met him at the water carnival,
which I attended with Mrs. Jourdan
Woolfolk Harris, of Austin, and other
guests." she said. "He had a seat in
ou. box."
M s. Bathrick" was (l ugged in tiie
room in which the famous Ella Gingles
THK ATLANTA (»EOKGtAX \XDXHVB. ERLDAY. SEPT’KMBER 6. 1912.
1 ~
Antonio Scotti.
j
Up and Down
Peachtree
Alas, the Peach Season
Is About to Close.
“Take a last, lingering look, for they’ll
soon be gone.” said the man at the soda
fount, “f mean the peaches of Peachtree,
those from fifteen to eighteen, who make
the promenade a delight these summer
days. School opens next Monday, and it
will be back to the 'ologies and ’isms for
them.
“It makes a lot of difference.’this school
thing. You c n tell when it's Saturday
or vacation time just by looking at the
parade past that door.
“Most folks are too wise to let their
daughters put on their war paint and
show harness to wear to school. They
say the teachers have sent one or two
home who looked too much like a fall
opening at a ready-to-wear. And when
the girls haven’t got on their real regalia
they hit the trolleys home or foot it by
the back streets No Peachtree for them.
“Aping the grown-ups'.’ Sure There
ain't any difference in clothes between
’He eighth grade grammar and the third
.' ear in college except the number of yards
in the skirt, and even that’s getting less
da 1 by da\. Kids hardly up to your waist
are wearing pocket size imitations of their
mother’s outfit. You can’t tell whether
they are babies or grandmas until you
size them up against the wall and. see
whether their heads come up to the sign
on. the show window. j
“Oh, yes: we'll have plenty of the regs-l
ular paraders this fail, but the pony bullet 1
effect will be missing after the school,
bells ring.”
—
Here’s Music if
You Can Dissect It
Just back of a drug store m Forsytl
street, opposite the city hall, is the only
free music dispensary in Atlanta. You
can recognize it by the clusters of ne
groes going on errands who stop by the
hour in the shade just outside. There is
a hole in the brick wall by the door just
big enough for one man to sit com sorta
bl\ and the first negro there holds the
coveted place for hours.
Inside is a big bare room where a firm
humlling electric nkkel-in-the-slot piano
players repairs its instruments. There is
always at least one being doctored ami
sometimes two or three All day long
the strains of “F 3 very body's Doin' It” bat
tle against the plaintive “Silver Threads
Among the Gold." or a rag-time ditty
gets into a regular riot with a Chopin
selection From across the street it
sounds like a difference of opinion in a
German band But the negro music
lovers who cluster around the door seem
to enjoy their music a la goulash.
“No, suh, hit don't worry me none.”
explained one “I jes’ fixes my min’ on
one chune and don't pay no ’tention to
nuthin’ else An’ I sho do hate to leave
dis place.”
Glooms Invaded
Some Home Today.
Somewhere in this great city a woman
is mourning the loss of an autumn
■ chapeau, or a milliner weeping over an
angered customer and the necessity of
supplying a substitute creation in place
of one hopelessly wrecked
, There's no evidence as to the owner,
but it was intrusted to a small negro boy
1 on a wheel. That bat box was as big as
’ a steamqr trunk and the breeze was
. strong at Five Points. The boy was ped
alling bravely into the wind when an au-
' tomobile dodged the crossing cop and spun
around the corner. The bicyclist dodged,
the wind swept him from his balance and
1 down be went. But his fall was broken.
Ii was broken by a three-foot hat box
with something leathery and chiffonery
1 inside it The boy's head and shoulders
went through the pasteboard and came
out again with bits of willow plume
. sticking io his wool. Then he gathered
' n the fragments and went ba<k the wav
SNAKE HIDES IN BASJi
HORN AND HOT TEA IS
USED TO EVICT HIM
ALTOONA, i'.'... Sept. 6.- En rout
io MeAlevy's t'm.. Huntinfgdon count?.,
to give a concert, the newly o ganized
brass band of .Mooresville ran into Hie
best snake story of the season.
They iravcTri t ie nine mile.- in a
primitive ha.v vs:;.m. S II Lightnet
a gamb watden musician, sitting up
with the driver, ospled a three-foot
black snake snoofting along the road.
Ho .-lid quietly to the g-ciind, seized the
. I "piile by the tail, just for the fun
of the thing, gave it a toss into the
• midst of the banluKti. who were all
togged out in new uniforms. In their
efforts to get away, some of the parly
fell off the sides of the wagon.
Before the bandmen recovered from
their fright, the snake, seeing the in
viting hole in Hulle Isenberg's big bass
horn, sought refuge in the interior of
the instrument anil quickly disappear
ed. Huller nearly shook the horn to
pieces trying to gi t the reptile out. but.
it "sat tight." defying all his efforts.
Finally a biotin musician, with a
streak of originality in him. suggested
scalding it out. Wlien the hand ar
rived at its destination a kettle of hot
tea was secured, and the snake came
out so quick it all but got away.
BUGGY WHEEL FIRES GUN.
KILLING PLOVER HUNTER
YORK, PA.. S'-pt. ti George Gren< -
waid, siKteen-year-oid son of John
IGtenew s.K. was the first victim of gun
ning aeaew acrirfents in this county
having been killed tadav while hunt-
■ ing for plover. GrenewaM with a com
panion, Harry Myirs, was driving in
a buggy and when a flock of birds ap
proai bed he raised his gun to fire. The
trigget caught in a spoke of a wheel
and discharged the contents of the
weapon into his abdomen. H. died on
hour later.
THIS IS “SOME” BULLFROG!
KNOCKS A HUNTER DOWN!!
ALLENTOWN. PA., Sept. 6. -Th
residents of Guthsville, seven miles
from here along the Jordan, are excited
ovet monste bu Ifrog, said to w< igh
at least 40 pounds. Alexander Hart
zell. while frogging in the stream, was
knocked down into a deep pool when
•the amphibian jumped against his
(jiest. Peter Krause mustered up
courage to go after the animal with
a shotgun, but the frog escaped him
by jumping over his head. The rest of
the terror-stricken natives are now
after the frog in squads.
WOMAN, 98. IS SURVIVED
BY HER 113 DESCENDANTS
DIXON. ILL. Sept. 6.—One hundred
and thirteen direct descendants sur
vive Mrs. E K. Miller, who died at
Pawpaw. Mrs. Miller was 98 years
old. She could read without difficulty
and was up and about only a few days
before she died. She is survived by
four sons and two daughters, 43 grand-
, children and 64 great-grandchildren.
, All the children were present at the
funeral.
SHOOTS DAUGHTER HE
AMUSES WITH REVOLVER
; CHICAGO, Sept, 6. — Eugene F La
( vin amused his nine-monlhs-old baby
, by snapping an "unloaded' revolver in
■ front of th" little one's fao The gun
1 went off and shot the baby through the
510,0110 TO SB
OF HIS GHILDBEN
Doctor Offers Fortune to Any
One Who Can Conquer Dis
ease Ravaging Family.
• ________
S’r Lol’lS. Sept. 6.—Following the
• tea th of his daughter, Virginia. 7 years
old, from infantile paralysis. Dr. Robert
Edward Wilson, of 4295 Lindell boulevard,
in his grief declared he would give a
fortune to any physician who would save
the lives of the other three Wilson chil
dren. who are all ill of the same disease,
at the Wilson country home, “The Oaks,”
Pattonville, Mo.
"I will give SIO,OOO to the man who can
save my children.” was Dr. Wilson’s <*ry
alter his daughter's death. The sc°ne in
the- little girl's room was so touching just
before her death. Saturday night, that
Dr. Wilson was frantic and two other
physicians who had been in attendance
were so touched that they had to go out
of the room.
in a swinging bed. under a canopy on
the lawn. Robert Edward W »lson. Jr., ♦
years old. lay critically ill. with two
trained nurses in constant attendance.
Two other nurses were caring for the
baby, 2 years old, and her sister. Ellen
Marie, 11.
The older girl apparently is recovering,
but little Grace, who was the first to be
stricken by the disease, is in a serious
condition, her attendants say. Virginia
was ill only four days.
Dr. John Zahorsky. an expert on infan
tile paralysis, makes two trips daily to
“The Oaks.” Another St Louis physician
and one from Pattonville have also been
assisting Dr. Wilson in his battle with
the disease.
GREENVILLE & KNOXVILLE
EXTENSION IS SURVEYED
GREENVILLE, S. <’.. Sept 6. From
in official source it is learned that the
oik of ext ‘tision on the Greenville
imi Knoxville railway will begin with
in the next 30 days. Within the past
.-. eek engineers have completed the
-urvey from Davenport to Gap Creek
Gap. a distance of twelve miles. This
tap is at the top of the Saluda ridge,
and the route laid out by the engineers
is on a grade of 68 feet to the mile.
This is considered a remarkably low
grade for a mountain road, and is an
agreeable surprise to the promoters.
The Gap Creek route is the lowest
route across the Blue Ridge mountains
b. tween Richmond and Atlanta. Re
cent developments certainly mean that
the Knoxville road will be put through
within the next twelve months.
SOLVES HEAT PROBLEM
BY DISCARDING CLOTHES
NEW HAVEN, MO.. Sept. 6.—Nolt
stein brothers, of Beouf Island, in the
Missouri river, near New Haven, think
they have solved the perplexing prob
lem of how to keep cool.
It is very simple and economical—
they wear no clothes, and never get all
"het up.”
When these unt eri ified plow boys go
to the field to split the soil into fur
rows they remove all their artificiality
and proceed to dig up nature in a nat
u.il mode
One day while plowing they got
caught in a heavy rain. They put’their
clothes in the furrow anil plowed them
under to keep the garments dry.
MULAI~HAFID HAS SPENT
$15,000 IN ONE GAY WEEK
PARIS. Sept. 6.—Ex-Sultan Mulai
Hafiil, of Morocco, continues spending
tils $60,000 annual allowance from the
French government at the rate of $15,-
000 a week. Today he bought $2,000
worth of papier maclie animals, also six
live animals, to wit, four Great Danes
for SBOO and two cows for $250. He
then went to the village of the French
Guiana natives and gave the' crowd of
dancing girls a handful of gold and
unsuccessfully attempted to buy two
of the prettiest girls.
BIGAMIST WEDS SISTERS:
CAN NOT NAME HIS CHOICE
WAYNESBORO, MISS., Sept. 6.—H.
L. Clarke, arrested here on a charge of
bigamy, says he doesn’t know which of
his two wives he loves better. The
wives are sisters.
No young woman. In the joy of
coming motherhood, should neglect
to prepare her system for the physi
cal ordeal she is to undergo. The
health of both herself and the coming
chiid depends largely upon the care
she bestows upon herself during the
waiting months. Mother's Friend
prepares the expectant mother’s sys
tem tor the coming event, and Its use
makes her comfortable during all the
term. It works with and for nature,
and by gradually expanding all tis
sues, muscles and tendons, involved,
and keeping the breasts in good con
dition, brings the woman to the crislv
in splendid physical condition. The
baby, too, is more apt to be perfect and
strong where the mother has thus
prepared herself for nature's supreme
function. No better advice could bj
given a young expectant mother than
that she use Mother’s Friend; it is a
medicine that lias proven Its value
in thousands of
cases. Mother's IVs ini"ff'«_Birir»'*C
Friend is sold at ftlLlCd
wX' i" o ”,’. SkFrieNb
book for expect-
ant mothers which contains much
valuable information, and many sug
gestions of a helpful nature.
BRADFIELU REGULATOR CO., Atiuta, Ga.
Thousands See Spectacular Factory Blaze
CAR LINES ARE TIED UP
• «
• To West End Wives: •
• This i- to certify that th. West •
• EnJ cars were delayed two hours »
® from 6 to 8 o'clock, last night. ®
• am! your husband's excuse for ®
• getting home late was probabb ’
• true. ®
® THE FIRE DEPARTMENT ®
• Per CHIEF CUMMINGS. •
• •
••«••••••••••••••••••»••>«
It wasn't that husbands and others
couldn't have reached home if they had
been anxious, but most of them stop
ped to watch the blaze at the Binder
Frame Company’s plant at Whitehall
street and the trolley underpass, oppo
site the Willingham lumber yards. It
was a spectacular blaze, sot the fac
tory was filled with wooden mouldings
and varnish and other high inflamma
bles, and it looked for a time as though
the whole block would be destroyed.
The fire companies at last got the blaze
under control, saving the brick f[ront
of the structure, though the remainder
of the building and its contents were
a total loss. The damage is estimated
at about $15,000.
Perhaps 10,000 persons, drawn from
West End on one side and the mill dfsa.
trict on the other-, gathered to watch
the blaze. They filled Whitehall street,
crowded the long trains of frieght cars
in the Peters street yards, and swarm
ed onto the roofs of nearby buildings.
The luck of the trolley company
stood it well. The physical connection
between the Ashby street and West
Eml lines, at Park and Lee streets, had
been completed just fifteen minutes
when the fire broke out. The connec
tion between the tracks, which had lain
separate for- years, was made for just
such emergencies as this. And within
half an hour after the work was done,
lie first car, a College Park, was re
routed fiom the efty and passed over
the new track.
Traffic through tile underpass by the
regular lines was impossible. The
tracks lie almost under the eaves of
the binder factory and anv car caught
there would have been destroyed before
it could run the gauntlet of flames. A
line of cars extending several blocks
was banked up in Whitehall street, but
the passengers crossed the railroad
tracks and found wafting ears on the
other side.
The frame factory has figured once
before in the newspapers. That was a
number of years ago, when an East
Point car ran away down the White-
I frmFSvSrammMßwmSk I
. ■ /■*«£»* Chance Yet to |F% ,
iJapP Buy a Dress for sj?Cr 0
»V’-.nf- •'*/!, Saturday we are going to run these
dresses again at 98c.. We bought J
'HL few more. Be on hand early, as
A iS’fti k there is only a few left. |
Suits iCIL i
«I $ 1.89 a
Li'. I fW
U 1 i- j HK«
;H[; | A chance for every school boy
u •j‘ d res s up easy. These suits
JI ‘ 1 r un from $3.50 to $6.00. All go
■l e ■MLuI ? sale Saturday for this price.
Don't miss these bargains. f.s>W,
’W SATURDAY ONLY I \
OVER NEW
ATLANTIC " E ” t
& PACIFIC CREDIT
TEA CO. 73 1-2 WHITEHALL STREET * ,UKfc
CCHOOL BOOKS BOUGHT
•School books solo
School Opens on 9th
Sell your old hooks now for Cash
Book lists are ready and
yours for the asking
Buy your books this week and avoid the rush
and jam of opening day.
Everything in stock and ready.
Southern Book Concern
(Gavan’s)
71 Whitehall Street
hall -tr --t grade, lailed to round the
sharp curve and clashed into the cor
ner of the brick structure. The motor
man, tried to stop the ear, failed and
jumped for his fife just before the
crash. Several passengers weye se
riously hurt.
BIRMINGHAM AND
RETURN $2.50
Tuesday, September 17th. Special
trains leave old depot 8 a. m. SEA
BOARD.
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AMD DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO,
Call Main 1130.
$2.50 BIRMINGHAM AND
RETURN Via SEABOARD
Tuosday, September 17th. Special
trains leave old depot 8 a. m.
Benefited Many Who
Had Tuberculosis
Those who suffer from consumption are
generally troubled with night sweats, fe
ver. toss of strength and little or no appe
tite Fresh air, good food and the proper
care of the body are essential to a. re
covery, but in many cases something more
is needed. Eckman's Alterative is a medi
cine which has been most successful in
stopping night sweats, reducing fever and
promoting appetite, and many who have
used it declare it saved their lives. In
vestigate what it did in this case:
"Gentlemen: For four years I was trou
bled with cough, which gradually became
worse. I had night sweats and pains in.
my chest. 1 was losing my appetite and
had become so thin and weaj< I could not
attend to my household duties. A physi
cian pronounced my ease consumption.
Not being satisfied. I was examined by
the physicians of the Polyclinic hospital.,
Thej also pronounced the disease con-/
sumption, which was proven later by an.
examination of sputum, as tuberculosis
bacilli were found, i was ordered to a.
consumptive hospital. My nephew would
riot allow me to go until 1 had tried Eck
man's Alterative. Before I had taken the
medicine three weeks, I had marked re
lief. night sweats ceased, pain in the
, breast relieved, cough became loose and
easy, fever left me and I commenced get
ting well. My health became normal. I
am In excellent health now and have been
completely cured for ten years. I strong
ly recommend it.
"(MRS.) MARY WASSON.”
Care Ed Green, 1722 S. 17m St., Phila
delphia. Pa
Eckman's Alterative is effective In
Bronchitis, Asthma. Hay Fever, Throat
! and Lung Troubles and in upbuilding
the system. Does not contain poisons,
opiates or habit-forming drugs. For sale
’ by all Jacobs' drug stores and other lead
i ing drugigsts. Ask for booklet telling of
, recoveries and write to Eckman Labora
tory, Philadelphia, Pa., for additional ev
idence.
3