Newspaper Page Text
The State of Dad
VOL. IX.
HAD HOT TIMES.
Men Crowded Around The Ensines
Clamoring For Water.
BRITISH SUFFER WITH THIST.
/
Descriptions Shoeing The Fearful
Suffering The British Are Undergo
ing in the Transvaal.
London, by Cable.—“ The men were
crowding around the engines in line,
offering the drivers fabulous prices for
a cup of water," writes the Globe cor
respondent, describing the close of the
battle at Enslain, “but it was useless
The drivers had been threatened with
court-martial if they supplied any, as
there was. great difficulty in keeping
a sufficient supply for the engines. I
saw one soldier lying flat on the line
under an engine, catching a few' drops
in his month from a steam pipe.”
Such extracts as this from the mail
ed descriptions of the fighting in South
Africa give sonie faint idea of the con
ditions under which it is being carried
on. Belated a.s these letters are, by the
time they appear in English papers
they throw much-reeded light upon
the campaign so barrenly reported
over the censored cables. The heat
that drove British soldiers to drink
gratefully from the exhaust pipe of an
engine after seven hours fighting at
Enslain, where they lost 179 killed
and wounded, has proved a serious fac
tor in the care of the wounded. Sur
geon Maltins, formerly of St. Thomas
Hospital, writes from the field hospital
at Orange river:
“During an eight days’ stay some 603
wounded men iiave passed through the
hands of the Royal Army Medical
corps hr e. • In one night alone 300 pa
tient? arrived from the fight at Modeler
river. Yesterday the thermometer reg
istered 125 degrees Fahrenheit in some
of the tents. The journey from here to
the base hospital takes 28 hours and
emphasizes the difficulty due to t*he im
mense length of line of communica
tion. Tbf doiugs.of the beseiged a.
Ladysmith have been fully described
by recent letters. If ihe Boers con
tinue to so closely hem in and contin
uously bombard White's foice, the be
seiged promise to become full-fledged
cave dwellers, for according to the
Daily News correspondent at Lady
smith, the prevalent tendency there is
to burrow.
“Some people,” writes the authority,
“having spent much time and patient
labor in making burrows for them
selves. find life there so intolerably
monotonous that th.ev prefer to take
the chances above ground. Others
pass whole days with wives and fam
ilies, or in solitary misery where there
is not light enough to read or work,
scarcely showing a head outside from
sunrise to sunset. They may be se°n
trooping away from fragile tin-roofed
houses half an hour l>efore daybreak,
carrying children in their arms, or a
cat, or monkey, or mongoose, or a cage
of pet bird?, and they come back sim
ilarly laden when the night gets too
dim for gunners to go on shooting.
There would be. a touch of humor in all
this, if it were not so deeply pathetic
in its close association witth possible
tragedies. One never knows where or
at what hour ,a stray shot or splinter
will fail, and it is pitiful sometimes to
hear cries for “dolly" from a prattling
mite who may herself l>e fatherless or
motherless tomorrow. We think as
little as possible of. such things, put
ting them from us with the light com
ment that they happen daiJv elsewhere
than in beseiged towns, making the
best we can of a melancholy situa
tion.”
Mineral O ltput' For ißoq.
New Special.—The United
States Engineering and Mining Jour
nal, in its annual statistical number,
aayri that the prelintinary statement
of mineral production in the United
States in 1899, shows that the total
production of metals in the 1 nited
States for that year was valued at the
place of production at $419,738,414, as
compared with $314,266,620 in 1898.
Wants SIOO,OOO.
Chicago. Special.—Miss Etta Thomas
a niece of General Joe Wheeler, ha- be
gun suit in the superior court against
Wm. H. Fahrney, a prominent West
Side society man. asking SIOO,OOO dam
ages for alleged breach of promise to
marry.
It is alleged that Fahi-ney. who is
treasurer of a large patent medicine
manufactory, and reputed to be weal
thy, has been engaged to Miss Tlhomas
for over five years but that recently
he brcfke off Hhe engagement on the
ground that his parents desired him to
marry another woman.
GILMORE RESCUED.
Exciting Tale of His Experiences
Among the Filipinos.
Manila, by Cable. —Lieutenant J. C.
Gilmore, of the United States gunboat
York'town, who was captured by the
insurgents last April, near Baler, on
the east coast of Luzon, and rescued a
few days ago by Col. Luther L. Hare,
of the Thirty-third volunteer infantry,
sat Sunday in the apartment of his
sister, Mrs. Major Price, at the Hotel
Oriente, in Manila, and told a remark
able story of his eight months captiv
ity, ending with his dramatic deliver
ance from a death that seemed inevita
ble.
The steamer Venus came into the
harbor Saturday evening from Vigan,
province of South Ilocos, with Lieuten
ant Gilmore and 19 other American
prisoners, including seven of his sail
ors from the Yorktown. Lieutenant
Gilmore, after reporting came ashore
and hobbled along with the aid of a
cane, to the Hotel Oriente, where Am
erican ladies and officers were waltz
ing through the halls to the strains of
“Aguinaldo’s March.”
Although tanned and ruddy from ex
posure, he is weak and nervous, show
ing the results of long hardships. He
speaks warmly of Aguinaldo and very
bitterly against Gen. Tino, declaring
that while in the former’s jurisdiction
he was treated splendidly but that af
ter he fell into Tino’s hands he suffer
ed everything.
Col. Hare and Lieut. Howze, the lat
ter of the Thirty-fourth volunteer. In
fantry, rescued Gilmore’s party, on
Dec. 18, near the headwaters of the
Abulet river, after they had been aban
doned by the Filipinos and were ex
pecting death from the savage tribes
around them. When the rescuing par
ty reached them they were nearly star
ved, but were building rafts, in the
hope of getting down the river to the
coast.
Lieutenant Gilmore made the follow
ing statement to a correspondent of the
Associated Press:
“The Filipinos abandoned us on
the night of December 16. We had
reached the Abulet river, near its
source that morning, and the Filipinos
rafted us over. We then went down
the stream, along a rough trail, guard
ed by a company of Filipinos. That
night we were separated from the
guard, and another company armed
with Mausers, w,a.-, put in charge of us.
I suspected something and questioned
the lieutenant in command. He said,
“I have orders from Gen. Tino to shoot
you all; hut my conscience forbids. I
shall leave you here.”
”1 him for two rifles to pro
tect us from savages, adding that I
would give him letters to the Ameri
cans, who would pay him well and
keep him from ail harm. He refused
this, however, saying that he would
not dare to comply. Soon afterward
he left with his company.
“We had seen some savages in wai
paint around us. and we prepaivl to
fight them with cobblestones, the t>oly
weapons that were available to us. The
next morning we followed the trail of
the Filipino soldiers, feeling that it
was better to stick to them than to h
murdered by savages; but we could
not catch up with them. Then I order
ed the men to build rafts, in the hop;
of floating down the river. It was a
forlorn hope, but I knew the river
must empty into the seas somewhere.
I was so weak myself that I did not
expect to get out, but 1 thought some
of the men could.
“On the morning of December 18,
while we were working on the rafts,
the Americans came toward us, yelling.
One of my men shouted, ’they are on
us.’ He was lashing a raft of bam
boos. I however, knew that it was not
the yell of savages, but the yell of
Americans. The rescuing troops
thought we had Filipino guards, and
called to us in English to lie down, so
That was the finest body of men and
That was the finest body of men and
officers I ever saw.”
Lieut. Gilmore could not speak en
thusiastically enough about the 140
picked men who had rescued him and
his party. The command spent the day
in making rafts. Col. Hare thought
Lieutenant Gilmore too weak to live
through the trip, but there was no al
ternative. They shot many rapids, the
men lasing all their effects and Lieut.
Gilmore some valuable papers. Only
14 out of the 37 rafts survived the first
night's experiences, and 80 men were
practically unable to walk when Vigan
was reached.
• Telegraphic Briefs.
The American Presbyterian mission
at Batanga. Camaroons. has sent the
German government a letter of tihanks
for the efficient protection which the
German colonial authorities afforded
the mission in 1899.
A movement is on foot in Belgium to
ask President McKinley to mediate
between England and the Transvaal.
Plans for the Aemriean rthurch in
Berlin, which Mr. Lafarge, of New
York, drew up after several modifica
tions, do not find approval upon the
part of the Berlin building authorities,
who insist that, to render the building
safer, a German architect will have to
change the plans accordingly.
Admiral Dewey has accepted an in
vitation to visit St. Louis early in May.
He will be accompanied by Mrs. Dew
ey.
A plebiscite of the citizens of Mexico
regarding candidates for the presiden
cy was held Sunday at the suggestion
of the Liberal party’s national commit
tee and resulted in a general endorse
ment of the present President Dtav,.
TRENTON, GA., JANUARY U, 1900.
1900 CALENDAR. 1900
\ JANUARY.
| S|M T |_W_|_T F S
j... 1 2 3 4 5 6
■7 8 9 10 11 12 13
: 141 15 16 17 18 19 20
• 21 22 23 j 24 25 26 27
; 28,29 30 I 31
M 1 ' ’
[ FEBRUARY.
|.... I|j. 1 2 3
:4567 8 9 10
■ 11 12 13 14 1 15 10 17
: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
: 251 26 27 28
■ MARCH.
: I —i - . r 123
■4 5 1 6 7 8 9 10
| 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
I 18 19 20 21 22 23 i 24
: 25 26 27 28 29 30 | 31
\ii— I— I
APRIL.
1 2(3 4 5 6~~ 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 ...............
••••!■■ i.-.-i...i..
MAY.
123 4 5
6 7 8 9■ 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31
JUNE.
• !•••• j r 2
3456 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 i 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
1
WHITE MAN PAYS PENALTY.
Tied to a Tree and Shot at Newport
News, Va.
Newport News, Va., Special.—The
death of Wm. W. Watts at the hands
of a mob between the hours of 4 and 5
o’clock Friday morning marks the first
sitting of Judge Lynch in Newport
News. His taking off signalizes the in
itial execution of a white man for rape
in Virginia legally or otherwise. The
crime that invoked mob vengeance
was peculiarly atrocious, being quick
ened by the basest ingratitude. The
victim of the wretch upon whom jus
tice was so speedily visited was the
benefactress of her assailant, having
fed him, a stranger at her door, when
he first appeared begging for charity
three weeks ago. after reaching -here
penniless from Lynchburg, where his
father is a policeman. Watts was 28
years old, unmarried, a professional
gambler and comes of a respectable
family with extensive relationship
throughout the State.
Waiting For Coal.
Norfolk Va., Special.—Despite the
heavy increase in shipments of Poca
hontas coal to this port, consequent
upon increased provision af cars by
the Norfolk and Western Railroad
Company, the demand cannot be sup
plied. There are now nearly 75 ves
sels here awaiting cargoes, and it will
be weeks before their bunkers are all
filled. No trouble has been experienc
ed in supplying the local demand, but
foreign orders have so multiplied, part
ly because of a reduction of 25 cents
per ton in price of bunker coal, that
they cannot be filled promptly.
British Gain no Ground.
London, by Cable—No decisive op
eration is reported from South Africa,
military operation being confined to
points of subsidiary importance. In
the central theater of operations, the.
British apparently have secured no
substantial gains. The only dispatch
of dramatic -interest is the narrativtjj
of useless gallantry at the sortie from"
Mafeking. where the storm era threw
themselves hopelessly against a strong
ly defended Boev work.
■— ■ ■■■ -
Dr. Hammond Dead.
Washington, D. C., Special.—Dr. Wil
liam Hammond, former surgeon gen
eral af the army, died here Frida?
night. Dr. Hammond conducted a
sanitarium -he-e for some years. He
had a notable and somewhat checkered
career. He was on the retired list at
the Unie of his death. At one time he
lost his position in the army, bat was
restored after a hard fight.
To Pay in Full.
All Depostors wll be paid in Full
New York. Special.—The trustees of
the New Y'ork Produce Exchange Trust
Company have made all arrangements
for the resumption of business next
Wednesday. General Samuel Thomas,
vice president of the reorganized com
pany. authorizes Che statement that
when the dorrs open again every de
positor who may desire his money
will be paid in full. He adds that he
is unable to say at this time just what
nsw r interests will enter the board of
trustees at the annual meeting, which
will be held the day the company re
sumes business.
2>EMOCHA TIC,
JULY.
S I M i T | W j T- I | P i 5 •
1 8j 3,4 j 5 ! 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 ( 16, 17 18 19 20 21
22 231 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 1 31 1 || |
AIWjUSf.
—|—j: -- ‘ Ff 2j 3~j 4
51 6 7 8i 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19,20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27, 28 29 30 31
SEPTEMBER.
2345 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14! 15
16 17 18 191 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 1 27 I 28 29
30
OCTOBER.
.... 1 i 81 31 4l 5 8
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 ....
NOVEMBER.
•••• •• • I 1 2 3 |
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 :
11 12 IS 14 15 16 17 ■
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 =
25 26 27 28 29 30 I
J.... . :
DECEMBER.
21 3 4 5j6 7 8 =
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 i
16 17 18 19 20 21 22 •
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 =
30 31 S
Big Fire in Richmond.
Richmond. Va., Special.—Richmond
suifered Friday evening the severest
i .'lre loss it has known for years. About
3 o’clock fire broke out in the Mer
chants and Planters’ Tobacco Ware
house, at Fifteenth and Cary streets
and which covered about a third of a
i block. In it were stored some 3,600
i hogsheads of tobacco, 2.600 of which
: belonged to the American Tobacco
Company, and the rest to various par
ties residing here and elsewhere. In
V- lincredibly short spa.ee of Line the
j interior of the building was a roaring
j furnace, and hope of saving the struts-
I ture or any of its contents was idle.
jThe destruction was complete. The
i flames spread across Fifteenth street tc
j Kingan’s cold storage plant, across
[Cary to Carter and Hyland’s commis
ision house, and rearward to a vacant
! machine shop building. The damage
!te*lhe last two was slight, as was that
|to Davenport's warehouse, in the vi
cinity, but Kingan and Company suf
fered a loss of some $30,000, fully in
sured. The loss on the tobacco in the
Merchants and Planters' Warehouse is
'estimated at $350,000; with insurance
I about $300,000. Tlhe building was fully
insured. Total estimated loss, $400,-
oi|k; insurance, $350,000.
* Against Quay.
Washington, D. C., Special.—The
Senate committee on privileges and
ejections has decided to make an ad
verse report upon the resolution to seat
Senator Quay. The resolution is as
follows: “Resolved, that Matthew S.
Quay be admitted as a Senator from
the State of Pennsylvania in accord
ance with his appointment, made on
April 21, 1899, by the governor of saia
State.” The members of the commit- j
tee voting for the resolution were .
Senators Chandler, Hoar and McComas
and those opposing were Senators !
Burrows, Cafferv. Partus and Harris, i
Senators Turley and Pritchard were 1
paired, the latter for and the former
against, the resoluton.
Briefs
T'he French government has cabled j
£ie Commandant of the naval squadron j
in Hhe Atlantic, to proceed imme
difttely to Santo Domingo, to enforce
the collection of the Boise Mare-Cacco
wili claim of 280,000 francs.
Four quarry,men. on, the Tennesset
Central Railroad, near Rockwood, at
tempted to thaw out a stick of dyna
mite. The dynamite exploded and" one
man. a negro, named Jos. Gleason, was
killed and throe others fatally injured,
two of them dying two hours after the
accident.
The brewerie? of Milwaukee and Chi
cago made during the past year 643,80;
barrels of beer at a net profit of $73,342,
against $199,374 for previous year.
The Philadelphia Furnace, at Flo
ence, made the first cast of iron. 21
hours after the fires were lighted in the
big plant. The Philadelphia has beet
idle for seven years and has been re
paired at a cost of $50,000.
A special dispatch from Rensburt
says Major Harvey, of the Hussars,
was killed, and Major Alexander woun
'led, while the Hussars were pursuinj
| the retreating Boers after the attack ot
j the British left on January 4th, neat
! Colosburg. Lieutenant Gibson, of tin
| Inniskillings. was among the wounded
j There’s too much ice at Stettin ti
j permit the launchi-ng of the new Ham
! burg-American lJrve Steamer Deutach
! l>~ad.
Tli
T'nc
clear
pan,
cottr
Judge •
S. C., severely
duty a jury which remained
days in the case of Prof. Meares, elm.
ged witli the downfall of a girl.
Anew cotton mill, with a capital
stock of $300,0000, is to be located at
Homea Path, S. C.
Councilman H. 1). Darnell introduced
a resolution at a meeting of the Roa
noke, Va., city council to prohibit the
wearing of hats by either sex at thea
tres and other places of amusement.
1 lie Lake Tracy Drainage and Im
provement Company, of Lake Tracy,
Lake county, Fla., has been incor
porated with a capita) of $50,000. The
general objects, are the drainage and
improvement of lands in that vicinity
and building and operation of rail
roads and canals, saw and planing
mills.
Urey Woodson, Democratic national
committeeman from Kentucky, has
said in an interview in Chicago that
William Goebel will be seated as Gov
ernor of Kentucky before February
Ist.
The Columbus, Ga. Power Company
has increased its capital stock from
$300,000 to $300,000 and the additional
stock has all been taken.
The fourth cotton mill to be organ
ized in South Carolina this year is the
Limestone, at Gaffney, capital $300,000.
The North.
The Cranston Hotel property at
Highland Falls, N. Y., has been se
cured by the Missionary Sisters of St.
Francis, and will be converted into
the Academy of Our Lady of Angels.
The manufacturirfg jewellers of New
England are using every means to de
feat the ratification of the reciprocity
treaty between this country and
France, which would lower the import
duties on jewelry.
The trustees of the estate of the late
Cornelius Vanderbilt have paid to
Yale University the SIOO,OOO bequest
left to the institution.
| In a quarrel over the ownership of
| a knife. Willie Daggs, 8 years old. pro
; cured a shot gun and killed his sister,
Lena, aged 12, at Evansville, 111.
While eh route to Joliet’Penitentiary
I from Chicago, 111., Thomas Downes, a
i convict, leaped from a train in the
darkness, but was recaptured.
Believing that there is discrimina
tion against them, the colored business
men of Chicago, ill., will incorporate
an insurance company exclusively fer
their race.
The Kentucky Distilling Company,
known as the Whisky Trust, has mort
gaged its 38 distilleries in Kentucky to
the Central Trust Company of New
York for $5,000,000, at 5 per cent.
The New England Tobacco Growers
convention adopted resolutions pro
testing against any early admission of
Porto Rico as an integral part of the
United States, as a forerunner of dis
aster to pur leaf tobacco interests and
favoring a constitutional amendment
providing a colonial system and civil
government of all insular possessions
separate and distinct from the United
States.
A Gardner. Me.. Dispatch says ice
manufacturers are discussing the pros
pects that the American Ice Company,
which now controls the natural ice
product of New York. Pennsylvania
and Maine, may purchase artificial ice
plants in Southern cities. An agent
has visited the leading plants in the
South to ascertain the capacity and
value of each. The cities which it is
proposed to first bring into the com
bine are Atlanta, Memphis, Mont
gomery, Birmingham. Chattanooga and
Nashville.
Foreign.
Influenza has caused 193 deaths -in a
week in London.
The American art Institute has been
granted a permanent site for a building
in Paris.
French soldders’ anti-army newspa
pers have now been shut out all troops' <
rendezvous.
English life insurance companies arc
severely criticised for charging an ex
tra 5 per cent, war risk.
The London Authors’ Society will es
tablish an Authors’ Pension Fund to
l>e available to applicants 60 years old
or over.
While walking alone at night. Miss
Rachel Ferguson was knocked down
and robbed at Toronto, and died soon
afterward.
Miscellaneous.
Captain Eckhoff, of the Dutch oil
tank steamer La Hesbaye, in port at
Baltimore, reports having sighted an
iceberg* on which four polar bears
were walking, off the Newfoundland
Banks.
Private David E. Ferrick, Troop G,
Fifth Cavalry, died on Friday of ty
phoid fever at San Juan. P. R.
General Otis reports that Thomas
Stocker. Troop K. Fourth Cavalry, was
killed in action near Concepcion, No
vember 11.
The Comptroller of the Treasury
holds that under the personel act naval
officers on leave are entitled to one
half shore pay.
Mr. Bailout uie American Revo
lution is the Only War Bnglandhas
Lost She Has Suffered Disasters.
i '
j London, by Cable.—The War Office
j has neither contributed any light on
| the situation in Natal since Sunday
noi allowed the dispatches of corres
pondents to get through. Consequently
the public impatience finds vent in a
discussion of the conduct of the war.
; The Morning Post demands that the
forces afield, afloat and in preparation
shall be increased by 65,000 men. To
this end it urges that all the trained
men the country possesses, militia and
volunteers shall be called out, assert
ing incidentally that although the atti
tude of the other powers is correct in
the diplomatic sense of the word, an
invasion, if attempted, would be sud
den, and that now is the time to appre
hend contingencies.
The Daily Mail says it understands
that the suppression of another general
commanding in South Africa will
shortly lie announced. This may have
relation to General Buller’s hasty sum
mons from Davenport. It is reported
; that he came by special train to Lon
don yesterday and held a long eonsui
, tation with the headquarters • .staff.
This seems to indicate that his advice
which only recently was in extreme,
disfavor, is about to be utilized.
The critics range up and down the
entire field of war transactions, finding
fault especially with the lack of trans
ports for the troops who are ready to
depart, and with the concealment of
news, averring that the censorship in
South Africa embraces the mails; that
the reports of correspondents are be
ing mutilated and entire letters sup-
pressed. The admiralty is seeking
transports and is reported to have char
toyed the American' liner At. Paul,
which was inspected previous to the
I chartering, and three Liverpool steam
[ ersl
The government's defense, as put
forth by Mr. Balfour, at Manchester.'
has produced a disagreeable impress- ,
ion upon the country. The Standard. '
the Times, and The St. James Gazette
join in the almost unaimous metropol
itan and provincial disapproval of the
government’s explanations.
Great Britain's losses since the war
began are fast approaching 8,000. A
War Office compilation of casualties,
issued last evening, shows a total of
7.213—1,027 killed, 3.675 wounded and
2.511 missing. These do not include
140 who have succumbed to disease,
nor the casualties at Ladysmith last
Saturday.
The Daily .Mail says: “With charac
teristic bad manner?, the Transvaal
authorities have refused to allow Mr.
Hollis, the American representative at
Pretoria, to care for British interests.
This is unprecedented in modern dip
lomatic history.”
S. A. L.’s Liberal Offer.
The industrial Department of the S;
A. L. announces that they have the
following breeds of fullblooded roos
ters: Light Brahmas. Black Lang
shans. and Black Monorcas. which
they urouose to loan to those who ave
located on the line of the S. A. L. sys
tem. for the purpose of improving their
breed of chickens. These roosters will
be loaned to parties for a term of nine
ty days, which time will be ample to
get the breed of same. It is important
in order to get a good pure breed of
chickens to let the roosters above men
tioned exclusively run in a pen with
not more than fifteen hens. Those de
siring the- service of any one of the
above named roosters should apply to
J. Strang. Assistant Chief ln'd Agent.
Portsmouth. Va. Applications will be
’ recorded and served as come na
turn.
Pulitzer’s House Burned.
New Y'ork. Special.—The handsome
residence of Joseph Pullitzer. publisher
of The New Y'ork World, at 10-12 East
Fifty-fifth street, was -destroyed by fire
Tuesday and two women servants were
suffocated or burned to death. The total
loss Is estimated at about $300,000. 1 he
insurance is $250,000. The victims of
1 the fire were Mrs. Morgan Jellett, the
housekeeper, and Miss E}izal>eth Mont
gomery, a governess.
20,000 Witnesses.
Frankfort. Kv., Special.—The ses
sions of both houses of the legislature
- were uneventful. Former Governor
Bradley, chief counsel for u-overno.
Taylor, denied stories that troops had
been brought here in citizen’s clothes
and that Republicans had arranged 10
-import here large bodies of men from
over the State to intimidate the legis
lature. He said: “We will summon
20,000 witnesses. whose evi ence
is to be taken for use before the state
contest board, and many of t m ’
suppose, will come, but theie wi.
effort at intimidation. I take no stock
in the talk about bloodshed.