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. >r
THE WEATHER.
Forecast lor Atlanta and Georgia-
Fair to-night and to-morrow.
£
Read i or Profit—GEORGIAN WANT ADS—Use For Results
. A
VOL. XI. NO. 219.
ATLANTA. <!.V. KKIDA Y. APRIL 18. 1919.
2 CENTS EVEKYV IIuim. m.Wk
J.Ham Lewis’Linen
Costs Two Days' Pay |
Stops to Change Shirt and Loses
Chance to h» Sworn In as
Senator.
Papal Physicians Assured Pon
tiff’s Strength Will Carry Him
Through Recent Relapse.
OTHERS ARE LESS HOPEFUL
Declared Condition Still Is Pre
carious From Malady and the
Lack of Nourishment.
\\ AfaHIXGTON, April 18.— Killeen
minutes spent in grooming himself
Tuesday morning before making an
appearance in the Senate chamber
cost Senator James Hamilton Lewis,
of Illinois, two (lavs of his term is
Senator.
Instead of leaving his hotel for th“
capitol promptly after arrival. Col
onel Lewis took time to change his
linen and reached the capitol to be
sworn in only to find the eSnate had
adjourned till Thursday.
The new Senator does not intend
iw remain in the aristocratic hotel
where he is now stopping.
“I cannot afford it.” he said. "1
have no desire to emulate the fools
or the rich. I shall get a modest
apartment.”
TIP OF TOII
BUTTLE POLICE
From Famous Billingsgate Shaft
Suffragettes Pelt Crowd With
Missiles and Literature.
OFFICERS RUSH STAIRWAY
Seeks 7th Divorce;
3rd From Same Man
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
ROME. April IS.—The condition of
pope Pius X to-day subject to
conflicting reports. According to the
mornir.g bulletin of the doctors. His
Holiness showed improvement and
gave indication that his strong con
stitution would ultimately be able to
overcome immediate danger.
Information from another source,
jowever, is that the Pontiff still is in
* precarious condition, being ex
tremely weak from lack of nourish
ment and from the cough which ac
companies attackv of bronchitis.
In support of the latter report it is
significant that Cardinal Oreglia has
been notified to keep in readiness clay
and night to respond to a call from
the Vatican.
At 10:30 o’clock this.morning (4:30
Atlanta time) the following bulletin
was issued from Dr?. Marehiafava and
Amici:
Improvement is shown in the
Pope’s catarrhal affection. His
general condition is satisfactory.
The temperature is 98.
The moderation of the Pope's tem
perature gave cause for hope at the
Vatican, but His Holiness was age! in
ttafmed by Dr. Marehiafava not o
over-exert ‘himself.
Sees Humor in Warnings.
‘Your Holiness muet not confuse a
temporary rally for permanent im-
rovement,” explained Dr. Marchia-
fava.
In spite of his emaciated and weak
ened condition, the Pope secs humor
in the constantly repeated warnings of
the doctors and smiled as ho promised
to obey to the best of his judgment.
It was but IS hours ago that the
■i' lief was general that the Pope*?
ours of life were numbered and the
mazing rally that he has made,
chiefly through his determination tu
get well, lias aroused the wonder of
the world.
The fear has been communicated to
Cardinal Merry Del Val papal sec: a
'ary of state, that the Pope may di<
suddenly. Anxiety on this point ha
beset the mind of the ailing Pontiff
■ nd led to numerous requests that the
ist sacrament be administered.
The life of the Pope was compared*
In his nephew. Mgr. Par.din. to a
flickering lamp. The flame is waver-
hig. now higher and now ’.ower, and
may be snuffed out at any minute.
Nephew Fears the Worst.
"Wo pray for the bcs*t." Mgr
Parolln said, but the unmistakable
signs of sorrow in his demeanor pro
claimed the forebodings in his mind
The Pope slept for interval? of two
and three hours throughout the night.
Dnce his heart became so weak that
he was awakened so that oil of
* nmphor might be injected. As soon
hh bf awoke this morning and had
partaken of a cup of weak gruel, he
immediately asked to be allowed to
fit up.
Both Dr. Marehiafava and Amici
protested emphatically against this.
The following bulletin had been ls-
v a d at 13: 30 a. m.:
The Pope i- 1 resting moiv easily
iban hist night, but his breathing
i.- - superficial and his pulse is very
w eak.
At 4:13 the following btihtin was
fori In oining:
The Pope is sleeping and seems
•■aflier, but his prostration is ex-
ecs ivo. Brandy was adminis
tered. but was followed by a lit of
vomiting 1 .
Awoke Nearly Suffocating.
At 3 o’clock this bulletin was i--
•aed:
The Pope ‘awoke suddenly and
seemed to be suffocating. This
caused a paroxysm. He after
ward took the yolk of an egg and
some milk. A few minutes latei
he fell into a sound sleep and his
nervousness seemed relieved
The Italian Government is making
aily inquiries on behalf of the King
Victor Emmanuel and Queen Mar-
fherita.
When Dr. Marehiafava asked the
Pope how he had spent the night, t
after replied:
I dreamed I was saying ma*-s
Dr. Marehiafava -miled cs !»«• -
In h month it uiil bf :i i-a lit.'-
Hair Down and Dresses Torn, the
Women Make Demonstration in
Street After Removal.
South the Coming
Section, He Says
Chicago Publisher, After Making
$50,000 Profit in Georgia Land,
Loud in Praise.
BRUNSWICK. GA., April 18.—After
spending a week in tfle city, combin
ing business with pleasure. Joseph
Keeley. publisher of The Chicago
Tribune, has returned to his homo.
While here Mr. Keeley sold a tract of
land in Glynn County for $140,000. The
land, known as the Bethel tract, was
purchased by him as an investment
two years ago for $90,000, and had
been sold two years previous to that j
for $50,000. This is a good example !
of the increase in Glynn County land.
“The South is unquestionably the
coming section of the country.” said
Mr. Keeley. in discussing the situa
tion. “It is the natural section fo; .
farming: it has every advantage to j
offer over the North, or the East, or
the West, and the practical farmers!
are rapidly realizing this.”
Mrs.W.C.Bunn Urged
For Postmastership
Congressman Lee Recommends Wid
ow of Late Polk County Sena
tor fo Cedartown Office.
WASHINGTON, April IS.—Con
gressman Gordon Le< . of the Seventh
District, has recommended Mrs. \V.
('. Bunn to be postmaster at Cedar-
town. and George Dansby to be post
master at Roekmart. b* th in Po'k j
< bounty.
Mrs. Bunn is the widow of the late
State Senator \V. C. Bunn, who died
in Atlanta, while s< rving as S nator
in the General Assembly of 1910*11
He was one of the best known and
most popular public men in Georgia,
and the petition of his widow for the j
postmastership was heavily indorse* 1 :
to Mr. Lee.
Mrs, E, F, Vanderbilt l
Brought 21 Trunks!
Costumes She Purchased Abroad Are |
Said to be of Extraordinary
Beauty.
NEWPORT, April IS.—T-monly-one
trunks passed t'.ir -ugli '.lie custom
hou3e for Mrs. Elsie l-Tenoh 'Vnndcr-
biit, just home from the Capitals of
Europe and from the Nile. They are
>aid to contain extraordinarily beau-,
tiful costumes for morning, afternoon
and evenins functions.
Mrs. Vanderbilt has Urns been noted
as one of 111" most beautifully gowned
women hero.
Publicity Men Begin
Crusade on Fake Ads
Members of Club Draft Eill for Leg
islature Aimed at Misleading
Printed Allurements.
mil miss
mipait
Men’!
A light against b
advertising is the
; tvhich thu Atlanta
I , mbarked to-cuy.
j A committer mode u o' W l‘.
Parithurst. I. J. Cassatt, 13. 1. I s .icy.
Hotvanl Geldert and Ben Err ''re.,
has drafted a bill aimed at the prai -
tice and use their endeavors for its
passage. It "ill be Introduced o\
Representative John V. •, 1111It, of At
lanta.
Twelve new members were admit
ted to the club at its banquet last
night at the Kimball House. Twenty-
seven delegates have signified their
intention of attend:!.'^ the convention
in Baltimore hi June.
The Sunday American toes every
where all over the South. If you have
anything to sell The Sunday Amer
ican is 'The Market Pls^e if the
South." The Sunday American is the
nest advertising medium.
LONDON, April 18.—Militant suf
fragettes to-day took possession of
the Famous Billingsgate Monument
in the fish market district of Lon
don, just south of London Bridge,
and fur several hours rained suffrage
literature and missiles upon the
crowds beneath. Jt stopped all tram,
vehicle and foot traffic in the streets.
The women alternated their can
nonade of pamphlets with screams of
“Votes for women!” and “Victory or
death!” while the fish venders in the
streets below, enraged at the tie-up
of business, replied in that kind of
language which has made Billings
gate famous the world over.
Some of the fish merchants suf
fered physical injuries.
Flags of th<* suffrage colors, car
rying all manner of inscriptions, were
hoisted on top of the monument.
Police Storm Stairway.
By making a concerted attack, po
licemen managed to storm the nar
row stairway leading to the top of
the monument, but there another dif
ficulty beset them. Two men refused
to descend the steps, and one woman
declared she would commit suicide by
hurling herself from the top of the
tower if any policeman laid hands or,
her. Finding peacable means inef
fectual. the officers made a sudden
rush, each grabbing a woman. The
scene then became one of the wild
est confusion. Shrieking, biting,
kicking and struggling, the women
were laboriously carried down the
stairway to the street.
Women Bite Officers.
In their rage the women scratched
the policemen’s faces and bit their
hands. Each officer bore the ear
marks that usually follow a scrim
mage with the suffragettes. The v. om
en. with hair down, dresses torn and
hysterical from rage' and excitement,
continued to make a demonstration
i’.i the street, and bystanders hid to
help the police overpower them.
Three suffragettes still remained in
the top of Ui.e monument at noon, but
the police were preparing for an
other assault. If this failed, they
said they would lay siege to the mon
ument.
83 at U. S. Prison
Apply for Parole
Pardon Board, Meeting May 5, Likely
to Have 100 Petitions—Julian
Hawthorne Among Applicants.
One man in every ten imprisoned
in the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary
is a supplicant for parole, according
to Warden W. H. Moyer. Already 83
prisoners have made application! to
be heard before the Federal Board’
of Pardons, which meets May 5, and
the warden expects that before the
session of the board is over, the num
ber of applicants will be 100 or
more.
All of the applicants are eligible
for parole under the terms of the
Federal law, eacli having served one-
third of the term to which he was
sentenced And all who are eligible
have applied.
As was told in The Georgian some
weeks ago, anion:/ the number ap
plying for a parole is Julian Haw
thorne. son of the famous novelist,
who was sentenced to a year and a
day for misuse of the mails, ar.d
whose term began last November.
He has served considerably over one-
third of his term.
‘Blinking Owl Room'
Feature for Ansley
New Atlanta Hotel Will Stage
Amusements in Latest Wrinkle
in Rathskellers.
one ste*V> ahea: of anything-else. !n
the South, .ind right in line with the
innovations and thiilleis being n-
stalled in Eastern hotels, toe Hotel
Ansley intends to make Its “blinking
Owl Room” the very latest thing In
the form of a rathskeller.
T e name is tnken from the light*
'.rig s\stem which will be installed.
Owls with one blue and one yellow
e. >•; inuah' blinking, will throw a
flicker cf color over tin room and itf
.%1'rcr: non L a, following Lie latent
td'ci cf t'-shibn. will be served in
t. *■ i n«> >. from 3 to ‘j o\Io* ouch due
Michigan Woman Sues Eugene j
Mors. Her First, Third and
Present Husband.
KALAMAZOO, MICH., April IS.—j
Mrs. Eliza Morse made application
for her seventh divorce. The woman’s
first, third and present husband is
Eugene Morse of this city. She mar
ried him first rriore than fifteen years
ago. After several years she got her
first decree and married Albert Lat-
son. In two year** he got a divorce.
She remarried Eugene Morse, who
soon divorced her. Then she married
Will Keep, divorced him and married
his brother, Milo Keep, whom she
divorced when he was sent to prison
for life. Next she married and di
vorced William McLaughlin and re
married Morse, and iias lived with
him for three months.
Outlaw, Slayer of 6,
Is Shot to Death
Desperado Killed After Two Depu
ties Fall in Fierce Battle—Elud
ed Capture a Year.
Thousands Flee Mexico as Huerta Regime Totters jJQfjj
Revolutionists Hourly Gain in Numbers and Power jfj TR|^|_ \\\
SHELTON. WASH., ApriMS.—John
Tornow, the outlaw who killed ifls
twin nephews and four deputy sher
iffs who attempted to capture him,
was shot to death by Deputy Sheriff
Quimby, according to a report reach
ing here to-day. Tornow had defied
the authorities for nearly a year.
The message telling of the death cf
Tornow said that he was fatally
wounded in a battle in which Charles
Lati.rop and Louis Blair were killed.
Deputy Sheriff &uiraby fired seven
shots at the outlaw am> a few hours
later found him dying.
Plan to Fly Across
Atlantic Abandoned
American Aviator Gives Deflation of
Dirigible as Cairse of Chang
ing His Mind.
LAS PALMAS, CANARY ISLANDS.
April 18.—Joseph Bruecker, the
American .aeronatfJLwho had planned
to make a baTIooYi Trip arrbs^ the At
lantic Ocean to Bardadoes or Trini
dad ih the dirigible Suchard IT. to
day informed the Governor that the
flight had been abandoned.
The primary cause for the aban
donment of the expedition was the
accident of yesterday when the bag
became della Led.
! By the time oxygen could be
I brought from Germany and the bag
j refilled,. the aeronaut fears that the
storm season would have set In.
World's Best Husband
Held to Be American
Wife of Ecuador Millionaire Declares
They Are the Most
Faithful.
NEW YORK. April 18.—"American
ripp.i an- the most steadfast and
faithful husbands In the world,” • do
ctor* d Mrs, Outcries De Cleveland just
before saiJiUB for her home in Gnu;. -
aqutl. Ecuador, where her husband
is a millionaire sugar planter.
With IsCr was her two-yer.r-md son.
Charles, who will receive S t.000,000
when he comes of age.
Mrs. Do Cleveland, a native of
Ecuador, was educated at Vasi-ar.
Victoria no Huerta. President of Mexico. h> virtue T tivaeli
power iapitll.v is waning, ami wlioSe'eai'lv overthrow is expected 1
friend
1 I lie Ri
Mad"rn, whose
'public.
II
BIG LM TOWER
$50,000,000 Pyramid as Memo
rial to Workmen Promised
By Rich Easterner.
Slayer of Madero Is Unable toJ (
Check Tide of Opposition Ris
ing Throughout Nation.
Reese Expects 7,000
Charter Mail Votes
Five Thousand Postal Ballots Al
ready Have Been Received
by Reform Advocates.
More than 7.000 voters are expect*fi
to register their opinion on the new
charter question, according to Paul
Reese, who Si.'.d to-day .that 3."JO
cards have been returned and th.it
j there were mar;: more to come in.
j As fast as the cards are s?nt to the
I headquarters, of the charter reform
I advocates.-they are-turned ox e.- to h<»
! American Audit Company, so that o
| correct tA!ly of the vot-o r.»ay be kept,
j ?.lr. Reese is certain that the voters
of the city ace registering overwhelm?
Ing’y favor of a charter vote.
Sunday School Uses
Movies to Advertise
Christian Church Inaugurates New
Scheme in Contest With Bap
tists for Attendance.
PITTSBFRG, April 18.—Superin
tendent S. L. Heeler, of the Pitts
burg public schools, to-day was ac
quitted ot charges made against him
by Ethel T. Fisher, formerly employed
as a maid In tin/ Heeler home.
Alter about one hour's delibeiaiion,
the jury Lte ycsteniay returned .
sealed* vfci u:. . hivh v. a - m> • ii>*.
CHIC AGO. A p .1 18.—Mayor, Karri-
son has received u letter which made
him sit' up straight in the chair. It
informed him t-hut; < Miicago is being
considered as the spot in which to
build a “pyriynid of labor” a gigan
tic building to cost $30,000,000.
“It' is to have 'several new features
about It,” said the Mayor after read
ing the letter .» second time, “and
is to be j,20u feet high, and ’’ here
the Mayor stopped short because the
proposed height i. an even 1,000 feet
more than the building ordinance al
lows.
The proposal, .which it is said will
be financed by an Eastern person of
wealth who does not want his name
mentioned until later, reached the
"Mayor with a ret of formal but tenta
tive blue print plans of the pyramid
:t!id ee. ,: :ii sportfi'Utions. Acres and
acres - of land in Chicago’s crowded
district figure isr th.e proposals.
The bewildering' project is disclos
ed in &ebny.-nur. cation Horn, Amo :
\j. Sm5.ii. of Ne v York. He deals
in securities and lias an office in the
Metropolitan Life Building them, ac
cording to ti e letter-head. Here are
^i«me «if the ••'“•* t** •
It Is proposed to spend $30,000,000
in buihling and endowing a monu
ment to labor, to take the form of t
great temple of ait, learning and ar-
(ha ulon. .
1 hi. ihne of . bout one thousand
workmen vxil.1 b*. rvijuired foi a:
»as’ i n ytais * ’) th»- xvbrk.
Reside- the pyramid there are to
:i»» constructed -i the grounds—un
less by &t me chance there should be
a hitch in the p'ans—a replica of the
Roman Coliseum, the Parthenon, the
leaning lovyr of alto a mu
seum for the exhibition of things b1s-
torli a*, r stadium, am audito;Turn and
lib: ar', buildim .
r or t." be’iCfi • : '.ipooui.;* < i u •>
AIEXKU > CITY, April IS. The .► - j
litf th:.t. the overthrow of the Huerta
government Is near and that Gene’-.H
Oluegon, con.niander of tin Smuv;i j
rebels, ami V r ciitistirtim f'anurizn, •.* -
Goveipor of < are about «) |
will auccfcsii.in their revolt is growi.:g
hourly throughout Mekico.
Without exception, the newspapers
aver that the only hope of salvation
lies in .th" flotation of a loan. Prac
tically* all of them admit that non -
fecoguitioi) of the present administ..--
tlOii makes this very doubtful.
The banks continue to reflect th
Government’s financial difficulties, and
refuse lo sell exchange except at ex
orbitant rates, while merchants are
raising their prices to balance the dif
ference between Mexican and foreign
currency. There Is no -fixed rate of
exchange. The bankers are buyers as
tow as 230, while demanding from
heavier purchasers as high as 330 .
Refugees Flee Mexico.
Ti’uit the rebels in the north are
rapidly extending their lines is indi
cated by the isolution to-day of Mon
terey and Saltillo, the capitals, .<•
spectively, of Nuovo Leon and Coa-
huila, by tin; cutting of the rallrpad
at liinurrs. )nJ.v.s ( 'ii .Monterey ind
Ta cpic. and the muin line of the
National Railroad between Sun Luia
Polos! and Saltifio. Linares is i -
ported to be occupied by the be! •.
The suspension of railway traffic
has deflected the pas:*eng< r business
fur abroad Lo Vera Cruz and T;tm-
pico, chiefly to the former.^
Outgoing • teamrrs art* crowfieJ.
dome of the wealthy travelers con
tent themselves with quarters on the
floor of smoking rooms, while others
are accommodated in the second
cabin, although paying lirst-class pas
sage. Many foreigners are leaving
the country in fear that anarchy will
follow the revolution.
Unable to Check Rebels.
The Government is using every .*f-
fort to resist the advance of the re ; >-
i-'s. but the oxtreordinarily rapid
growth of the rebellion has brought
to" central Government face to face*
with the most serious situation which
it has been called upon to meet in
many years.
Tt has not been found po-sib'e io
dk-aatch any great number of troops
to the north vest. Chihuahua is* in
adequate!'.’ defended. C.oahuila, v-\-
MG FOR POLICE
Twenty-three Regular Patrolmen
Examined for Promotion Yes
terday at Same Time.
li takes more than brawn and good
looks to constitute an Atlanta police
man these days.
Hence. 48 husky aspirants for the
brass buttons and the blue uniform
tu-dav arc anxious to know whether
they have sucr«*s.sfull> demonstrated
that th«-y have a feu (finer things
in their heads besides the mere
knowledge of how to gracefully twirl
a club over one thumb. They will
know when the Civil Service Mental
Examiners pass on the papers of the
various applicants in the civil service
mental examination held yesterday
afternoon.
In addition to the 48 Taw recruits”
23 of the “finest” took the examina
tion for promotion. Three of these
sought to demonstrate that they are
mentally capable of occupying the
chief’s chair, while the remaining 20
sought to qualify as fit subjects for
captain ami sergeant.
W. T. Morris, Chief Beavers’ sue- !
« rotary and an old school teacher, j
who prepared the examination and!
: Mrs. Mattie Flanders at Last
Faces Court at Swainsboro for
Alleged Complicity in Death of
Her Husband, Fred Flanders.
I - •; ■>
Dr. McNaughton, Under Death
Sentence for Slaying, Probably
i Won't Be Summoned to Testify
at Hearing of Woman’s Case.
Savannah Baptist Minister Pres
ent in Behalf of Condemned
Physician—Atlanta Lawyers Are
There to Conduct the Defense.
SWAINSBORO. GA.. April IV -
Mis. Mattie Flanders was placed on
trial here in Emanuel Superior Court
at 8:30 o’clock this morning, to face
an indictment charging her with com
plicity in the poisoning of her hus
band. Fred Flanders, in June. 191»*.
Dr. W. J. McNaughton. under death,
sentence for sla> ing Flanders, has not
been summoned as a witness and
now probably will not be brought line
for the trial from the Chatham Coun
ty Jail at Savannah.
When courl convened the. little
court home was crowded lo its ca
pacity, with an eager throng from
this and adjoining counties, naxious
to hear every word of testimony that
might be offered, and particularly to
hoar the women’s own story of her
husband’s death.
Father With Mrs. Flanders,
Mrs. Flanders ; yme to Bwainsbon*
with her father yesterday morning
from her home ul Bartow, anticipat
ing that her case woftid he called In
the afternoon. But when it was
found that the Sheriff and his depu
ties could not complete tlie summon
ing of veniremen, by 2 o’clock. Judge
•upervision over it. de
ss “one of the finest he
on ubanfi
Si a
i had general
j dared the cl
| had seen.”
In the mental examination, the ap-
j plicants both for patrolman and for
promotion are called on to prove
their proficiency in spelling, arith
metic, letter writing, penmanship and
practical questions.
They are given two subjects front
which to choose to write their let
ters, :.ufh as “asking pay for lost
time on account of injuries received
while on duty.” “asking a leave of
ab.- nee,” "a. king to be allowed a re
ward,” or “asking for the arrest of
a fugitive” the subjects are always
based on features of police service.
The practical questions test the
applicants' knowledge of the city and
•»f the dutie: of policemen and su
perior officers. The ph> sical exarri-
inaLk.n was conducted several week.
Tin report of the examination
’ ■ > -1 wilt I * subnvllod to tin- l*o-
l •• «' mine •'"*! ci its next meet-
J. T. R.;wlings, presiding in the case,
announced in open court that tire
trial would go over until 8:30 o’clock
this morning. Officers scoured the
county all of yesterday summoning
veniremen, and it was not until after
nightfall that their task' was com
pleted. All other business of the court
has been suspended until the Flan
ders case is disposed of.
Atlanta Lawyers Present.
Luther Rosser. Reuben Arnold and
Edgar Everhart, attorneys for Mrs.
Flanders, arrived hero yesterday aft
ernoon and completed the prepara
tions of the defense for the hearing.
Tey had a conference with the de
fendant and her father.
Rev. John F. Wilder, the Savannah
Baptist preacher who has interested
himself in Dr. McNiughton’s behalf.
aJs-» came yesterday and will spen'i
tiff day and to-morrow in attendance
at tlie trial. Mr. Wilder som** weeks
ago made a personal apepal to Gov
ernor Brown to save McNaughton
from the gallows.
Mrs. Flanders Confident,
Mrs. Flanders talks without hesi
tation of her trial. Before court con
vened to-day she said:
"There is no doubt of my acquit
tal. i am innocent and expect to
prove this. I do not want the case
postponed or nolle pressed. 1 want
the trial to go on. so that I may be
vindicated in the eyes of the world.
I shall go fief ore the jury firm in the
conviction that after they hear all
that the State can bring against me
they wilt feel that I have committed
no crime, and will bring In a verdict
in my favor.”
•Mrs. Flanders i in a very cheer
ful mood. If she lias any misgivings
about the outcome of the trial, she
carefully conceals her anxiety. In
appearance she is not unlike hundreds
of other women of her ago in rural
Georgia, and she will no doubt make
a good impression before the jury.
Whether she is to go upon the stand
in her own defense has not j 7 et been
determined.
Stopping With Relative.
Mrs. Flanders is stopping at the
home of a relative, Tom Fields, a for
mer Sheriff of Emanuel County, and
who was in office at the time Flan
ders died. Her father and sister will
remain with her during the course of
the trial.
Practically all of Emanuel Count
is here for the trial. People have been
coining in constantly since early yes
terday morning. The people are quiet
and well behaved, it is not believed
there will be any trouble during the
trinl. a’.though feeling tan high dur
ing the trial ot Dr. .McNaughton.
it