Newspaper Page Text
politically independent; alway* for
the b est interest of the whole people
0 f *h e county.
Purity of politics; purity of the bal
lot box, and clean administration of all
places of public trust. Only paper In
county. _____
R. F. TATUM, Editor.
VOLUME XVI.
DRIVING BLIZZARD
Rages with Frightful Fury in
States of Middle West,
CHICAGO IS HARD HIT
Snowstorms, Sleet and High Waters
Give Luckless Denizens cf That
Section of the Country a
Strenuous Time.
The most violent storm that has
visitt and Chicago in many years com
mer/ed Tuesday at 7 o’clock in the
morning, and by 4 o’clock in the after
noon seven inches of snow had fallen
and if was still coming down heavily.
The wind at frequent intervals blew
with a velocity of 50 miles an hour,
and it lurried the snow through the
stre< in such blinding clouds that it
w..s impossible to see for a greater
distance than a half square, and often
the i of vision would be limited
to a few feet. A great number of
accidt nts of a minor character were
caused by collisions between wagons
jmd street cars. ,
At 5 o'clock, when the hemegoing
crowd was at Its thickest, the wind
was blowing so heavily and the snow
was falling in such blinding siheets
that it was positively dangerous to
attempt to cross Michigan avenue at
its intersection with either Jackson
boulevard or Van Buren street. These
crossings are, .used by thousands of
people' every night.
Tt was found necessary to station
, large number of policemen at these
corners to assist women and often It
was more than an officer could do to
pilot a woman across without assist
ance. . ...
The street car companies and the el
evated roads fared well throughout
the day, but the heavy increase of
snow that came in the late afternoon
limit- desperate work for them. Every
available man and all the snow plows
wrr at work in keeping
,-the tracks‘clear. In the distant sub
ur the trolley lines were operated
with great difficulty because of the
i nstantly increasing drifts and loco
in ion became constantly more diffi
cult. . _. . '
The Illinois Central railway exjjQgb-y
rue i groat difficulty during tite dVen
ing moving its great suburban trains.
In ( me instances the trains remained
Mail'd for hours, while the tracks
v-> -hoveled clear. In consequence,
< r • !g of homeward bound patrons
greiuly delayed. The Illinois
Central, Chicago and Northwestern
an ) Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul
railroads reported incoming trains 3
to 7 hours late.
The • torm center during the even
ts.■ was over Springfield. 111., and was
moving northward. The snowfall was
gen ral in eastern lowa and Nebraska,
no ern Missouri, central and north
c Illinois and Indiana, and in Wls
"i in and Michigan, Omaha, Neb., re
portirg the heaviest fall in twenty
years, about fourteen inches, entail
in: much- delay and suffering to live
i en. route • if) eastern markets.
veral trains are sai'd to be more
! i fifteen hqurs,overdue.
A special fr’ofci
Hundreds cf flood-stricKen families
eel on the high placed in the Wa
rm, White and Pakota- river bot
toms, spent a day of hardship and
during. During the day a biting
v'ind, accompanied by hail and rain,
mad,' it impossible for them to use
boats. Late in the afternoon the tem
ittire moderated and the melting
v added to the torrents. The rlv
ms rose four feet, covering hundreds
acres seldom known to go under
vm mr. The whole population of East
I mt Carmel were forced to leave
their homes.
PEONAGE IN THE SOUTH.
Subject .of Inquiry by the House Com
mittee on Rules.
Peonage prosecutions in the south
v re the subject of an inquiry Tues
-1 y by the house committee on rules,
< ‘ which Speaker Cannon is the chair
i- an. The committee met to deter
mine what course should be pursued
v-ith reference to a resolution by Rep
> ntative Humphreys pi Mississippi
( anding on the attorney general for a
full report on peonage cases, and the
parts played in them by Mrs. Quack
' bos and Special United States Pros
-1 vutor Russell.
REFERRED back to the states
Immigration Question'is Thus Disposed
of at Tampa Conference.
Aftr'r adopting resolutions referring
the immigration question back to the
< veral states and expressing prefer
ence for securing settlers from other
states rather than from foreign coun
tries, the immigration convention ad
journed at Tampa, Fla., Friday, sine
die.
IF THEY’LL BE GOOD
Locker Clubs Can Keep Out of Clutch
es of Uncle Sam, Says Reve
nue Commissioner Capers.
A Washington dispatch says: The
United States government, through
John G. Capers, commissioner of in
ternal revenue, in a letter to an anx
ious Inquirer in Savannah, Ga., writes
that there is hope for the “locker
clubs.” If members will be real care
ful, he assures the gentleman, whose
name he is kind enough to withhold,
there will be no interference on the
part of Uncle Sam. But members
must be very careful or else they may
be pounced upon and viewed through
the eyes of the law as retail liquor
merchants. As long, however, as the
members keep their own “private
stock” in their lockers and refuse to
sell to a member who, through lack
of providence, unusual thirs-t or othei
reason has suffered his stock to be
depleted, there will be no trouble. But
beware the wrath of the internal re
enu inspector should it become known
that a member transferred a drink or
drinks to a fellow member for a con
sideration. In his opinion, Mr. Capers
says:
“If an incorporated club has lockers
in which the member places the liquor
he desires to drink, the liquors not
having been purchased from the club
and no sale is made by the club,
but each member uses his own
then no special tax liability is In
curred. ■ ' ‘
“I may say that these -unincorporated
clubsiin which the members have their
lockers for the storage of their liquors
will of necessity have to be extreme
ly careful that they do not render
themselves liable in some manner to
the special tax of a retail liquor dealer,
but there will be no unusual or special
construction of she law to (fit the
state of Georgia. What is unlawful
elsewhere will be held unlawful there,
and what is lawful elsewhere will-be
permitted there, so far as the adminis
tration of the internal revenue laws is
concerne'd.”
TWO NEGROES PAY PENALTY.
Father and Son Hanged for Murder
of Farmer Jethro Jones.
Charles and Wes Summerlin, jtwo
negroes, father and son, were hung
Friday in the county jail at Carrollton,
Ga., for the murder of Hon. Jethro
Jones, a wealthy planter of Carroll
county, on November 29, of last year.
A large crowd was in the city, but
the execution was private, those who
were permitted to witness the execu
tion being only two attending physi
cians, two ministers, newspaper report
ers, the court officials and the five eons
of the murdered man.
Wes Summerlin was placed on the
ga’lows first. He made no statement,
except to proclaim his innocence. 7h e
drop fell at 10:27 o’clock, and he was
pronounced dead in twenty minutes.
Charles Summerlin was then placed
upon the gallows. He also denied his
guilt and declared that Lonzo Chad
ler, another negro, fired the shot. The
drop fell for him at 11:20 o’clock, add
death resulted in fourteen minutes.
The crime was coldblooded and un
provoked. A bale of cotton had been
stolen from Mr. .Jones' ginhouse and
carried into the woods. The cotton
was discovered by a. young white boy
while hunting and lie informed Mr.
Jones. Late in the afternoon Mr.
Jones went into‘the woods to where
the bale was lying. When he reached
the cotton he was killed by the Sum
merlin according to the evi
dence. He was one of the most ‘prom
inent men of Carroll county, aqd his
murder created great indignation.
BIG LUMBER PLANT BURNS.
Blaze Near Morganton, Ga., Entails a
Lorn. Aggregating SIOO,OOO.
The lumber plant of Beebe & Son,
of Boston, Mass., three miles south
off Morganton, Ga., was destroyed by
fire Thursday night, entailing a loss
of between $75,000 and SIOO,OOO, with
no insurance. It is thought that the
fire is of incendiary origin.^
SEVEN KILLED; DOZEN HURT
In Crash Between Passenger Engine
and Electric Car.
Seven persons were killed and a doz
en injured when a Big Four passenger
train struck a Toledo and Western
electric car at the Michigan Central
crossing in West Toledo, Ohio, at 8
o’clock Saturday night.
According to an eye-witness of the
wreck ,the conductor stopped at the
crossing to flag the car across. Seeing
the train coming, he motioned to the
motorman to stop, but thg signal was
either misunderstood, net seen
“Eat what you like,’’ says the Phil
adelphia Inquirer. . But suppose you
like tenderloin steak, inquires
Louisville Courier-Journal, and you
make $2 a day and haven’t accesß
to the funds laid up by the innocent
depositor?
New York and Pennsylvania have
raised the pay of school teachers al
most up to that of the day laborers,
notes the Atlanta Journal.
TEN MEN GOWHIDED
By Bold Band of Night Riders
in Kentucky lown,
FOUR WHITES; SIX BLACKS
Mob, Three Hundred Strong, Raids the
Town of Eddyvilie and Creates
Reign of Terror Judge
Warned Not to Prosecute.
Night riders, three hundred strong,
visited Eddyvilie, Ky., at 1 o’clock Sun
day morning and whipped ten men,
four of them white and six negroes-
The white men, who are suffering from
sore backs as the result of a severe
chastisement with the switches, are:
Police Judge C. W. Rucker, Leslie
Woods, former city marshal;
Fralick, who occasionally acted * as
deputy city marshal, and f e Rob
ertson, a saloon porter. '
The connection betwee? £ whip
ping of the white men anr *„* negroes
and the tobacoc war in’’Western Ken
tucky is hot apparent and no one has
been able to offer any explanation.
None of the victims was known either
active or influential in opposition to
the farmers’ pooling movement. No
attempt was made at destroying stored
tobacco.
The riders were will drilled and well
armed. About 50 entered the town
from the direction of Trigg county,
and the remainder from the opposite
direction.
Over a thousand shots were fired
during the course of their stay, but
the only casualty reported is that of a
young woman, whose face is said, to
have been grazed by a stray bullet.
The home of Judge Rucker was badly
damaged before the riders were able
to get hold of him, the walls being
riddled with bullets, doors and shut
ters fern off, etc. After taking each
of the men to the edg§ of town- and
whipping them, they were allowed to
return home.
After the whippings had been ad
ministered, the mob awakened County
Judge- W! E. Crumbaugh and warned
him that "his immunity from similar
punishment hereafter depended entire
ly on the friendship he was expected to
show the tobacco growers’ organiza
tion. He was told that, his gray hairs,
alone were responsible for his being
spared this time.
The only tobacco man visited was J.
Mr. Bradshaw was ordered to close up
for one of the growers’ associations.
Mr Bradsha was ordered to close up
a billiard hall, which he owns.
Before leaving the town the riders
announced that they -had not finished
•their work and that they would return
before many days.
DETECTIVES NAB MORSE.
Indicted Promoter Held Prisoher Be
fore Landing in New York.
Charles W. Morse, financier and pro
moter of many large combinations, in
cluding the so-call ice trust, and a
merger of nearly all of the coastwise
steamship lines, returned to New York
Saturday from his trip to Europe. He
was arrested in his state room when
the steamer, • Etruria, reached quar
antine in the lower bay, held in custo
dy until the ship was docked and then
was whirled away in an automobile
to the home of Justice Victor Dowl
ing of the supreme court, where he
gave bond hi the sum of $20,000 to
answer to two indictments charging
grand larceny and involving the sum
of SIOO,OOO.
Mr. Morse was released and went
immediately to his Fifth Avenue home,
where he later gave,, out. a statement
assenting his innocence, and asking
the public t;o suspend judgment Until
he has the opportunity of facing hia
accusers in court. - ,V " :W
FORF.STRY BILL SHELVED
So Far as Action at Present Session
of Congress is Concerned.
All hope for the passage of the bill
creating forests reservos in the Appa
lachian and White mountains, is dead.
A delegation of .southerners and New
Englanders, visited Speaker Cannon on
Saturday, and were informed that the
bill cannot be passed.
The speaker has been opposed to
the measure ever since it was intro
duced. He is particularly opposed to'
it now because the republican admin
istration faces a deiJcii in the treasury
and the program of the house leaders
is not to spend a cent that is not ab
solutely necessary.
TO PAY TWENTY PER CENT.
Neal Bank Depositors Soon to Get Part
.of Their Money.
The Central bank, as receiver for
the Neal bank, at Atlanta, is taking
steps to Ray the depositors of the Neal
bank atyijfr 20 per cent of the amounts
they hJiFin the bank at the time It
went intqltbk hands of a receiver. It
Is expected! that this payment will
come between thirty and fifty days.
TRENTON, GA., FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1908.
TO SECURE COTTON TAXES
Representatives from Southern State*
Ar# Banded —Will Ask Congress
for $68,000,000 Outright.
A Washington special says: The
southern members of congress are go
ing to make a determined effort to
fight through the present session a
bill providing for the refunding of the
$68,000,000 of cotton taxes paid dur
in the years from 1863 to 1868.
Wednesday .flight a meeting was held,
attended by one representative in con
gress from each of the eleven south
ern states affected by this bill, and a
permanent organization was formed.
Later eleven southern senators will be
urged to Join the special committee,
and work in a systematic and deter
mined way for the passage of the bill.
It is the purpose of the movers to
have congress appropriate the money
outright to pay to all holders of cot
ton tax receipts. There will be no need
for the employment of lawyers or lob
byists to push individual claims or
any necessity for a reference of claims
to the court of claims.
In this instance the southern mem
bers of congress are lobbying for the
-passage of the measure through con
gress. They may not be successful at
this session, but they be’ieve with sys
tematic work they will be successful
next session. This was the tone of
all the talks made. A resolution has
been introduced calling upon the sec
retary of the treasury for a state
ment of the amounts paid under the
acts of congress levying the tax. In
cluding the names of those who paid
the tax and the amount paid.
The state legislatures throughout
the south will be asked to adopt reso
lutions memorializing congress to pass
the bill. Georgia has already taken
this step.
The chairman of the congressional
committee is Representative Frank
Clark of Florida, who introduced a
bill on the first day of this session
calling for a refund of the cotton tax
and who supported his measure in a
masterly argument on the law and the
evidence a few days ago. Represen
tative Bell of Georgia is Secretary.
These two, with Representative Hef
lin of Alabama, constitute a subcom
mittee to look after the details of
the work.
CLAIMED TO BE AGED 133.
Remarkable Old Negro Passes Away
in Troy, Alabama.
Squire Mitchun, an old negro, who
claimed to be 133 years old, died at
the county hospital in Troy Tuesday
night. He was born in South Caro
lina on February 15, 1775, and was set
free by bis master in 1862, when he
was 87 years old.
’ Mitchun claimed to remember when
Washington died. He also claimed to
have helped cut the three notch trail
through Alabama when Jackson made
his campaign against the Indians.
ALABAMA’S COAL OUTPUT.
Increase of Production in 1907 Over
1906 Was 1,541,973 Tons.
State Mine Inspector Gray Wednes
day gave out the official figures on the
coal production in Alabama for the
year 1907.. The report shows that the
total for the staie for that year was
14,393,748 tons. The total for 1906 was
12,851,775, showing an increase for the
year 1907 of 1,541,973 tons. Of the
total for 1907 Jefferson county alone
produced 7,572, 7 40 ton* or more than
half the total.
BAILEY MAY LOSE SPOUSE.
Another Chapter to Cowhiding Epi
sode in Canon, Ga,
Canon, Ga., looms up with another
chapter'to the whipping of Dr. Bailey.
Hife wife has 'filed a petition for di
vorce in Franklin superior court, the
ground being cruel treatment, it be
ing alleged that he would..chastise her
and that his treatment was very cruel.
It is said that Dr. Bailey has made
matritffdhiar ventures prior to the pres
ent which did not result happily.
■ *—-— — -
GRANDFIELD ON THE JOB.
•* Y-k': r £. */<£''
• 4 :7%er- • *' —
SucCeetfe Hitthclfcck as First Assistant
r Postmaster General.
Frank H. Hitchcock, first assistant
postmaster general, who concluded his
service- with the government Saturday,
will be succeeded by Dr. Charles M.
Grandfield, chief clerk in that office.
Dr. Grandfield’s nomination was sent
to the senate on Monday and until the
nomination is confirmed lie will be
acting first assistant.
VETERANS IN JOINT REUNION.
Brigade of U. C. V. and G. A. R. Men
Fraternize in Tampa.
The Florida department, encamp
ment of the Grand Army of the Re
public and Woman’s Relief Corps and
reunion of the third brigade of the
United Confederate Veterans opened
at Tampa Tuesday. Governor Brow
ard addressed joint meetings of the
veterans.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF DADE COUNTY.
Georgia Briefs
Items of State Interest Culled
From Random Sources.
3
To Meet in Brunswick.
The annual convention of the Coun
ty School Commissioners’ Association
of Georgia will be held in Brunswick
March 31 and April 1 and 2.
This was decided on at a meeting
a few days ago of the executive com
mittee held in the office of State
School Commissioner Jere M. Pound
at the capitol.
* * *
$104,963 for School Teachers.
State School Commissioner Jere M.
Pound received a few days ago a
warrant signed by Governor Smith for
$104,963, which he will send out to
county school commissioners and su
perintendents of local schools, who
have seat in their requisitions. The
remittances will go to all parts of the
state.
• * *
Slayer of Policeman Resentenced.
Andrew Johnson, the negro slayer
of Policeman James Manier, at At
lanta, was on Saturday morning sen
tenced to hang on Friday, March 13,
in the Fulton county tower, Judge
Roan pronounced sentence upon the
negro, following the decision in the
supreme court, refusing anew trial.
Johnson was sentenced to hang on
January 3, but his attorneys carried
the case to the supreme court, which
handed down a decision refusing a sec
ond trial.
• * *
Reward of S7OO Offered.
Illinois officials Have given the Ma
con police authorities a special de
scription of a smooth land shark and
robber who is said to be working
farmers in the rural districts out of
large sums of money on loan schemes.
A reward of S7OO is offered for his
capture. He has numbers of names,
but that of John L. Butler appears
most frequently. Efforts &re being
made to locate him in tlie south. The
man Js said to have made hundreds
of bbgus purchases, forged land
and then large loatt§ upon tha
plea of needing the" funds to, make
certaiTT improvements. V
* * *
Awards for Fruits and Flowers.
State Geologist W. S. Yeates, who
had charge' of the state exhibit of
fruits, vegetables and flowers at the
Jamestown exposition, just’receiv
ed a letter from James L. Farmer, sec
retary of the jury of award's, notifying
him of the awards of certain medals
not previously announced. These med
als wpre as follows: -
Gold medal, state of Georgia, for
the best collective exhibit of fruits;
gold medal, state of Georgia, for the
best continuous display of garden veg
etables, and a silver medal for the
best chrysanthemums.
Uncle Sam Testing Soft Drinks.
Manufacturers of alleged non-alco
holic drinks who are allowing more
than one-half of one per cent of alco
fiol to get into their products will soon
hear about it if they are not paying
the government a special tax.
Revenue Agent Surber is now having
tests made of various drinks on the
market to ascertain whether or not the
manufacturers are keeping within the
United States regulation. Tests of this
character are made at all times of the
year, but now that prohibition has
brought forth several new varieties of
non-alcoholic drinks, the government
officials especially are active.
* * *
Sausage Dealers Warned.
The state department of agriculture
has issued an Order as the result of an
examination by the state chemist of 65
samples of sail rages collected in vari
ous parts o? the state.
Eleven of the samples sold as pure
pork sausage w r ere found to be mixed
sausage, w r hich is a distinct violation
of the pure food law, and offending
parties are notified that they will hi
future be prosecuted.
A number of other samples were
found to contain various chemical pres
ervatives which are prohibited by the
pure food law.
* * *
Bank Stockholders Enjoined.
Judge Ellis of the superior court,
Atlanta, signed an injunction restrain
ing all the stockholders of the Neal
bank from disposing of or encumber
ing in any way any real estate held
by them. He also ordered the Cen
tral Bank and Trust Corporation as
receiver on applying to the court for
leave to sell any of the property own
ed by C. T. Ladsou & Cos. in Cuba, or
that of the Alabama Sulphur Ore and
Copper company—both of which owed
the Neal bank large sums—to notify
counsel of the intervenors and of the
defendant.
* * *
The District School Dedicated.
The seventh district agricultural col
lege was dedicated last Friday. The
ceremonies were held at the college
grounds, two miles from Powder
Springs, beginning at noon. A large
crowd was in attendance. Dinner was
spread at the grounds, where the
exercises were held. Several speech
es were delivered, the principal one
being by State School Commissioner
Pound.
Only the main building at the col
lege is completed. The school opened
February 3, and a large number of pu
,Ms are attending.
♦ * *
Rtese Elected Episcopal Bishop.
Rev. Frederick F. Reese, pastor of
Christ Church, Nashville, Tenn., was
elected b.ahop of the diocese cf Geor
gia at the Episcopal convention in
Augusta. Th. ee ballots were taken.
The strongest contest was made by
the delegates supporting Dr. C. H
Strong of Savannah. On the last bal
lot, however, the election was made
unanimous for Dr. Reese. The va
cancy in the bishopric of the diocese
was caused by the state of Georgia
being divided at the general conven
tion of the church, held in Richmond,
and the election of Bishop C. K. Nel
son to serve the new diocese.
* * *
Banker Suicides by Drowning.
J. R. Carmichael, president of the
First National Bank, of Jackson, com
mitted suicide by drowning in Mc-
Cord's mill pond, about two miles from
town.
The jury of inquest rendered, a ver
dict that he came to his death by
drowning while under a spell of tem
porary insanity.
He left letters of instructions about
his business affairs and a letter to
the directors of the First National
Bank, of which he was president.
In the letter to the directors he saidi
that the bank was in good condßiom
with perhaps some SSOO worth of ndH
which might not be collected, but
erwise everything was in fine coadi®
tion.
He left a letter" to his family, the
contents of which will not be given to
the public.
* * *
Roads Cannot Take Off Trains.
The railroad commission has decided
refuse its consent to the discontin
uance of any of the local passenger
trains on the Georgia railroad, which
ihe road requested permission to take
off.
The commission some time ago an
nounced its refusal to permit the dis
continuance of the Conyers accommo
dation, and the local passenger on the
Bapnett and Washington branch. It
has" noyr decided ne^'to permit the disfc
continunnce of the accommodation out
of Augusta, or of the local train be
tween Camak and Macon.
The commission was at first inclin
ed to allow the road to take off these
two trains, but so strenuous were the
protests against such action, that a
different course has been determined
on.
* * *
First Week cf Educational Train.
After a week of strenuous activity,
the Educational Special of the Georgia
State College of Agriculture stopped
in Brunswick Saturday evening for a
brief , day s rest. On Monday ..morn
ing it once more rolled forth on it-?
tour of the state.
During the week the Educational
Special visited thirty Georgia towns,
and conservative estimate says that
not .less than . ten thousand farmers,
and probably many more heard the
addresses of Dr. Soule and ills assist
ants and viewed the exhibits prepared
by the state college.
One of the lecturers on board is a
practical oil mill man, who tells the
planters how best to market their seed
to get the best price and how to help
themselves by feeding coton seed meal
and hulls to their stock and how to
use the fertilize# thus generated.
“REMEMBER THE MAINE.”
Anniversary of Destruction of Battle
ship Observed in Havana. and
The tenta anniversary of the dl
struocion of the Maine was observed
in Havana with customary
A fleet of tugs and launches
ed about the wreck of the battleshif
on which were deposited many floral
offerings, including wreaths sent by
the Daughters of the American Rev
olnticn, Governor Magoqn, Mr. Morgan
the American minister, Major General
Barry, commander of the American
forces in Cuba, the American Club
and the Rural Guard.
OHIO DEMOCRATS FOR BRYAN.
Nebraskan Unanimously Endorsed by
State Central Committee. *.
William J. Bryan's visit to Cohnn-'
•bus, Ohio, Tuesday was signalized by
the democratic state central commit
tee unanimously endorsing his candi
dacy for the presidency. Mr. Bryan ar
rived at the Southern hotel while the
committee was in session.
While endorsing Mr. Bryan the state
committee made provision in the call
for the state convention.
SWEDE AND RUSS GROWL.
Strained Relations at High Tension Be
tween the Two Countries.
The relations betw an Sweden and
Russia are decidedly strained at pres
ent. The tension h.s arisen because
Russia insists upon being released
from the agreement made when Swe
den surrendered Finland that no na
val stations or fortifications should be
established on the Finnish shores ad
jacent to Sweden.
WHELMED BY m
Twenty-Eight IVytfj
Up in Pit
Great flood of Water
ed in Without Warning
less Workers, But Rescuers '
Ar# Hopeful of Saving Them.
Twenty-eight miners were impi#fl
and in the Mid-Valley
Mount Carn; t-i, Pa.. Monda^^B
.j||
Am
■t
If
Jjl
wl
W
*
JR .
M
■s!§ .
ill . -
Gr A
• led* 1
men
■<
: were gathered about
rushed there from their homes at the
first alarm of the disaster. They 4MM
not be prevailed upon* t<s go homejM
insisted upon remaining
ttiouth of the slope.
< heard from the
-ai ■.'■■Wfr&ii
- | A
r i-lire'l. 'ed .. i <u JBHbHUHH
to their homes, while
bonfires with the intention of cainHH
out during the night. TlienM
about the (ollierv were forn^B
po'ic fmc-. but
afternoon a squad of statu
appeared on t’ae scene and ffl
excellent service keeping
back.
LEAVES
Multi-Millionaire Wouldn’t
Dry Town.
.1 hi*
time aan <V in:.:
mean. • ! 1;- 1 a went
ii; i;
i ‘
IS Vv;
■ v-/-v
trJfl
aM
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m
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