Newspaper Page Text
TWO
THAT INTERNAL PEACE
IN MEXICO IS DRAWING
NEAR, BELIEF U. S. GOV’T
ccrar- l " r, ‘ """
Appointment of Francisco Carbajal As Minister of Foreign
Affairs Means Huerta’s Retirement Within Few Days. Cap
ture of Guadalajara Emphasizes Inevitable Triumph of Con
stitutionalists
Ver* Cruz. —General Huerta
would bo willing to stop asldj
from the presidency If a man
agreeable to the various factions
could be found to take Ilia place,
according to Adolfo de Ift Lama,
Mexican minister of finance, here
today on his way to Europe.
Ttie minister asserted that se
cret conferences between repre
sentatives of General Huerta and
Venustlano Carranza were now
In progress at. Now York and be
had reason to believe unless an
agreement was re,ached with Car
ranza, Huerta would not eurren
der the presidency.
Washington Convinced.
Wasblnoton- —A survey of depart
monte In Mexico within tho last 24
hours has convinced of trials and di
plomat* here that internal pence Is
near at hand. The appointment of
Jt-Mioinoo Carbajal as minister «>T for
eign affairs means the retirement of
General Huerta In hit* ~w f r “i’*'
. vislonl president within a few days,
‘acoording to messages from the Mext
ure of the constitutional
ists of Guadalajara has ®™Pha»JMd
that the military triumph of the rev
elution is inevitable. This Is 111
tenor of the Information ranch lngeo
& along With the news thatper
sons prominently Wetumed wlth tne
jssr
Mr. widisr
Composition of dlfferet.ee b^ween
Gorranzs and Villa have solidified tn«
constitutionalist mllUatY
of U the‘'situation'"lalni a tnuch tnore
beneficial result has f"* ue< | )T ln honest
55SSST. ~f rP
from Torreon of theJ res , of
Ca^n» C from e ßsitlUo that be tk-nd.
To cam out to the letter the plan*
strv'K" »'i ’•«
tlon shall be lipid
Then Resign.
The belief presails in some quarters
that Cwrinw would stay b
U. order
to become a candidate. con .
AH h r °e! eH,natives of
fersncea between W vanished,
”cpr'ung n, to private 'lres from
coeds Huerta In tl • r ,
st Sab
$£ today tt almost ‘a
rewentatives here. “ the con
oertalnty that the ) on y « „ tu , , ha
nUtutionsUsts will l «»> r.uadabmpo
acoaptance of tnepmn , r
V thl federal terri
•awa the bx the large
'SSISSSJSU army S. generally b*
ju.wd Ue^ Maful occupation.
A Peaceful occupaibm c*
r t ‘ ty .&t arm it £ pointed out. would
object JrC£
“nd sacking.
•*AJTwmUSw administration to
Snf to et the constitutional!* and
HuU factions work out a solution of
the problem in their own waj.
City was predicted io
dS* after* receipt Of advices front
&r«m that the Internal peace con
.sssue
t.t hands and San Ults l’otoet be
zyi
sfjbbs:
arrov of 20.000 holds domiv
«<>
tost, 34 hours by rail from Mixteo
Gltv
tB Hours Travel,
the center Villas division oecu
til*-« the country from Juarez to Aguas
FXnte* 18 hours travel from the
**4o the west General Obregon has
stretched his lines so far as Ouada
fa£ra .econd largest city In the re
public and within *l* hour* ride by
railway of the central goal
Onee Pan 1 Alls Totosl Is captured,
lha three military divisions will con
verge on Mexico City, according to
assertions today by both Carranza an 1
Villa followers When this comblna.
tion la made CO.Odd men will be avail
able for the movement
It was predicted here that this con.
centratlon would take place at Celaya,
eight hours ride from Mexico City.
This point Is a Junction of the rail
roads front Guadalstara Aguar Pa
Ilentes nd San Uu* Potoel
The Three Armies.
Before the three armt»s arrive there
two or three etronglv fortified towns
held by Huerta’s troops including
Guanajuato and Sllao. must be cap
tured From delay* the combined
armies would have before them only
one fortified oitv. This Is Querataro,
po miles from Mexico City and the
place where Huerta, according to geu
ernl belief Intends to make his last
stand
General Obregon has advised Car
ranza that his men in taking Guada
lajara fifteen trorv, trains, eight can
non, Heven machine guns, many
rifles, a large quantity of rifle ammu
nition and two carloads of cannon
ammunition.
OEITIeIELMS
111 LA GRANGE?
Traveling Man Declares He
Saw Missing Girl in Georgia
Town Friday Night.
LsGrango, Ga.—J N. Mohr, of Wil
mington, N. C., Saturday brought the
Information to this city that a trav
eling man, Joseph N. Hackney, had
seen Beatrice Nelms, a man and an
other woman in an automobile here
on Friday night.
Hackney, Mohr says, was well ac
quainted with Beatrice Nelms.
According to the story the woman
described us Beatrice wore a green
dress. (Several local people recall the
fact that a woman dressed in green
was In a restaurant hero Friday eve
ning and was accompanied by a man
and a woman.
Mohr wired Mrs. .1. W. Nelms in
Atlanta the Information ho had ob
tained and received this reply:
"Telegram received; locale them at
any cost.”
The Nelms have relatives at Salem,
Ala., fifteen miles away.
Not Thero.
Columbus, Ga. A long distance tel
ephone conversation with relatives of
Beatrice Nelms at Salem, Ala., to
night brought tlie Information that
slip is not there. They declare they
know nothing of her whereabouts*
Salem, 18 miles from Columbus, is the
eld home of the Naims family.
A relative staled that Beatrice
Nelms lias a sister living In Tuskegee,
Ala., a Mrs. Kelly, and it is probable
that she motored from I-a Grange, Ga.,
where she was seen Friday night, to
Tuskegee.
Not Justified Yet.
Atlanta, Ga.—Agents of the depart,
tnent of Justice today announced that
no evidence thus far presented by
Mrs. John W. Nelms on tho disap
pearance of her daughter, Mrs Eloise
Nelms Dennis and Miss Beatrice
Nelms, Justified government action
Mrs. Nelms made special pleas to the
governor, tlio police and the federal
authorities, to proceed in the ease hut
there has been nothing definite upon
which they could work.
WARBURG WIRES
ARE POURING IN
Members of Senate Committee
Being Urged to Confirm
Banker For Rcservo Board.
Telegrams and let.
ter* favoring the confirmation of Paul
M. Warburg, of New York, and Thou.
D. Jones of Chicago, as members of
the federal reserve board piled In on
senators of the banking committee to
day Troin all sections of the country
Many came from individuals and
fillers from organizations.
The committee's adverse report on
Jones will be presented next week.
An effort will be made to consider it
in open instead of executive
Acting Chairman Hitchcock, leading
tlie opposition, said he would welcome
public discussion.
Endorsed In Savannah
Savannah, Ga. A special meeting
of tlie directors of tho Savanflan
Chamber of Commerce w as held today
to endorse the appointment of raiil
M Warburg of New York, as a mem
her of the federal banking reserve
board. Resolutions were passed urg
ing the cotiTirmatlon of Mr Warburg
by the United States senate.
‘Faint Hope' That Missing
Man May Be in Atlanta
Detroit, Mieh.—lnterest was renew
ed here In the search IGr the Rev.
Luts U. Patmont, the local option cam
paigner. missing from his home here
for nearly n month, when Chief De
tective Calmer announced he haa a
"faint hope” the minister may be !n
Atlanta, iJjt.
The officer said he based his hope
on reports from Atlanta telling of "a
Mr. Mack." sent there from River
Junction. Fla, who does not remem
ber his name and cannot tell wlis-e
ho came from. He waa found In an
open beat near the shore at Boy port.
1-ha. Palmer has written the Atlanta
police giving them a complete descrip
tion of Ihatmont.
Balmont last spring disappeared
from Ms homo In Ihanville. 111., snd
was found In a cellar II days later. Hr
said he hod been abducted by enemies
who were not iu favor of his local
option work. _
Scene at the Mineala Jail Upon the Arrival of
Mrs. Florence Carman
•
& ‘—MUttS-'i* . ■*w - . . ~ - ... - Z
MRS. CARMAN OCCUPIES 8-BY-10 CELL. „
The above photograph was taken at the time Mrs. Florence Carman, wife of Dr. Edwin Carman, in whose
office Mrs. Louise Bailey was plain more than a week ago, was being taken into the Mineola jail at Freeport,
L. I„ following tier arrest on a warrant issued charging her with the lißjrder of Mrs. Bailey. Mrs. Carman i 3
confined in a regular 8 by 10 foot cell. v
230 EXECUTED BY
HUERTA IN WEEK
Of These 170 Were Put to
Death in Federal Penitentiary
While 60 Were Killed in San
tiago Prison
Baltillo, Mexioo. —(Via. Laredo, Tex
as.—Two hundred and thirty persons
were reported executed in Mexico City
last week by Huerta, according to
news from the south received by enn
stltuionallsta here today. One hunred
and seventy of these were sald'to have
been put to death in the federal peni
tentiary and sixty executed in the
prison of Knntiago Tialtelaloo. Most
of the victims, it is asserted, were of
ficials.
Fighting is reported within the fed
eral district, the constitutionalists
having attacked Xnchlmiloo, San Pab
lo and other small towns in the im
mediate vicinity of the capital, and
Huerta has ben advised that Pachuca
will tie attacked shortly.
Constitutionalists under Jpfe Banios
are reported to he attacking the fed
eral garrison at Esperanza. Malt rata
and Orizaba. General Garcia Pena
it waa said, left Esperanza with two
strong column* to reinforce Mexico
City.
Huerta. It Is reported, intercepted a
message from General Obregon stat
ing that the latter would take Gundn
lajnra before July jnth and had sent a
rescue force which had arrived within
about thirty miles of the city when it
was taken. •
GfIETHS RAVE
HIS PERMISSION
So Say the Magazine Men Ar
rested For Taking Photos of
Canal Fortifications.
Ban Francisco.—The defense -of
Chas K. Field, editor of the Sonnet
Magazine, and oT the three others nc
cueed with him of liaving disclosed
military secrets by the publication of
an illustrated article revealing Pana
ma Canal fortifications will be that
the pictures were taken and the aero
plane flight across the Isthmus made
with tlie [ ermlssion of Col. George W. |
Goethale in command of the Panama
lone. This was st»t*d w-hen the men
appeared before a United States com
mlssolner today.
Field Robert Fowler, an aviator,
Riley E Scott, author of the article,
»nd Ray Dubem, a moving picture
man were arrested yesterday, but re
leased on their own recognizance.
When the case was called before
Francis I. Krull, United States com
missioner, it was continued until Au
gust 10th
"Colonel Ooethals not only gave
his permission,” said Fowler in pro
testing his Innocence, "hut he wished
us the best of hick and said he hojjed
the pictures would turn out well."
ON ROCKS WITH
257 ON BOARD
Gorman Steamer in Dangerous
Position on Argentine Coait.
Warships to Rescue.
Busnos Ayres, Argentina.—The Ger
man steamship Mendoza went aaher*
Saturday m a fog off Mogotea Point,
on tlie Asgcntlmi coast. She has 387
people on board, including passengers
nnd crew. Telegraphs by wireless th.it
her position Is dangerous.
The Argentinian gunboat Portrla and
two tugs have gone to the assitaance
of the Mendosa which is lying about
five miles to the south of Cape Onr
rlentes, where there are many aunken
rocks near the shore.
The Mendoza is a vessel of 3,BM>
tons net. belonging to the Hajnhurg
South American steamship Company,
was built In 1884.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
LEW TRACHOMA
CJSESJN S. C.
Results of Investigation in
Mountainous Districts Made
Public—Only 34 Out of 16,-
805 Examinations.
Washington.—Results of an investi
gation of the mountain districts of
North and South Carolina to deter
mine how prevalent trachoma is, were
made public by the public health ser
vice today. Tho survey was under
the direction of Passed Assistant
Surgeon Foster and shows the
disease exists only In isolated local
ities. Conditions were found to be
better than in the mountain sections
of Kentucky, West Virginia and Vir
ginia. where the disease also exists.
Of 16.803 persons examined in the
two states only "4 were found to have
the disease. Most of these eases
were in the Cherokee Indian reserva
tion in Swain County, N. C., twenty
cases being located In that county,
practically all of them traceable to
the reservation school.
The survey disclosed that negroes
are singularly Tree from the disease.
Foreign immigration does not seem to
he responsible for the malaHv as Im
migrants ore free from it and practi
cally all the sufferers are native born.
In the white and negro schools for
the blind at Raleigh only one case of
trachoma was found.
Dr. Foster advises a strict treat
i ment of all trachoma.
SHUMAN BACK
SALTILLO AGAIN
U. S Vice Cousul Resumes His
Duties. Villa to Get Coal For
His Troop Trains.
Saltillo, Mex.. (via Laredo.) —Short-
age of coal for moving troop trains,
from which General Villa is said to
tave suffered recently Is to be reliev
ed immediately. General Carranza
has given orders to allow coal trains
to be run from the Coabuila coal
fields near Sabinas to Torreon.
Re;orts were received today from
Teuiblera*. Vera Cruz, that fully half
the federal forces were ready to join
the constitutionalieta.
John R. Slliiman. the American
vice consul, lias arrived here to re
sume his duties. Tho commission of
officers, dtvAlon of the northeast,
which went to Torreon to smooth the
difficulties between Carranzn and
Villa returned today and immediately
went Into conference with Carranza
AVIATION Bill
TO PRESIDENT
Hav Measure Increases Army
Air Service to 60 Officers and
260 Men With Increased Pay.
Washington. D. C.—The H»v bill, or
gnntiing a special aviation service In
tho elzn.ll corps of the army waa final
ly ngreed upon today In the house and
now- goes to the President.
The btU provides a service at sixty of
ficers and 2*o enlisted men to have
charge of all of the army's aviation
work Pay of officers vnd m*n engaged
in aviation work w-ould he ImVeased
from 78 to 78 per cent of thetr regular
compensation.
700 N. I GBPS
AT I. IAIJ. MEET
Mayor Forbids Urns Contain
ing Ashes of Bomb Victims
Bein'* Exhibited.
New York.—Seven thousand persons,
some professed anarchists and some
members of the Industrial Workers of
the \\ orld, the Free Speech League,
and kindred organizations, gathered in
Union Square Saturday afternoon for
a demonstration In memory of the
three men killed in the bomb explo
sion of July 4. The ashes of the vic
tims were not exhibited In urns, the
mayor having forbidden it.
Seven hundred police surrounded the
square before the services were be
gun.
Alexander Berkman, anarchist, spoke
from a stand decorated >with the an
archistic red and the mnuHiing black.
Surrounding the stand were banners
executed in red and black. One pro
claimed: "Caron, Hanson and Berg
did riot die in vain.”
Rockefeller Attacked.
. Bterkman made a bitter attack on
John D. Rockefeller.
"These men may have been mur
dered by agents of the capitalistic
crowd,” he said. "If so, John D. Rocke
feller is responsible for their death.
He has committed many murders and
would not stop at this. Or maybe the
men were murdered because of their
loyalty. They were either victims of
a murder plot or martyrs to the cause
of liberty.
"1 hope they wer e martyrs nnd were
killed by a bomb they expected to use
against the enemies of labor. We are
now ready to resort to physical force.
We will get our rights by bloodshed.
We are advancing toward a revolu
tion.”
The crowd cheered Berkman's speech
and when he concluded gave three
cheers for the dead men.
IU, 000.000 FOR
NATL FORESTS
Last Purchase is 13,575 Acres
in North Carolina. Total Now
is 1,104,000 Acres.
Wazhington,— Purchase by the gov
ernment of 13,675 acres of forest lands
In North Carolina was approved Sat
urday by the national forest re*erva
tlon commission. The acquisition em
braces twelve tracts, eleven of them
in Buncombe. Yancy and McDowell
counties, with a total area of 12,400
acres and the other with an area of
1.175 acres in Macon county. All of
the tracts adjoin federal reservation*
previously acquired and most of them
are wooded with poplar, oak, chest
nut and other valuable timber.
Now Total 1,104,000 Acr»«.
Washington.—The national forest
reservation commission Saturday also
approved for purchase 6,803 acres of
laud in West Virginia. The land 's
In Tucker. Randolph and Hardy coun
ties. The total acreage in West Vir
ginia approved for purchase now
amounts to 105,480 acres.
1-anda approved for acquisition by
tk| government for national forest
purposes in the East now total 1,104,-
ono acres, having a purchase price of
85,600.000. About 12.000,00 of the orig
inal appropriation remains available
for further purchases in tho fiscal
year 1915. Of the lands favorably
acted on to date, are 971.000 acres In
> arlous parts of the southern Appla
ehlans from Virginia to Georgia. Near
ly 400.000 acres were approved for pur
chHse during the past year at an aver
age price of $4,96 per acre.
CARLOAD OF MAIL.
Laredo. Texaa.—A carload of mail
from Europe destined to Mexican
points crossed the Rio Grande to
Nouvo Igiredo here lat* todev. It
was said some of the mall had'been
held In New- York for several weeks
because of lack of railroad communi
cation In Mexico.
CARRANZA REITERATES ,
INTENTION OF CARRYING
OUT -GUADALUPE PLAN
EYE WITNESS
OF MURDER?
Has Been Found, According to
District Attorney. Negro Maid
Spirited Away.
Mineola, N, Y.—An eye witness to
the murder of Mrs. Louise Bailey,
shot down in the private office of Dr.
Edwin Carman at Freeport, has been
found by District Attorney Lewis 1.
Smith, it was reported tonight. Mrs.
Carman is in the Nassau County jail
charged with the crime.
The one other important develop
ment in the case today was the decla
ration by George Levy, counsel for
Mrs. Carman, that Cecilia Coleman,
fife Carman negro maid, who has play
ed an important part as a witness for
the defense, had been spirited away.
Mr. Levy charged that the maid had
been kidnapped by private detectives.
District Attorney Smith denied any
knowledge of tile affair.
WILE CONTINUE
TALKS
Kansas City Delegation to Be
Received By the President
Wednesday. Commendatory
Letters.
Washington.—President Wilson will
continue this week the conferences
with business men begun when bo
talked with J. P. Morgan, Henry Ford
and a delegation from the Chicago As
sociation of Commerce.
A group of men of large interests
from Kansas City is to be received
probably Wednesday. They asked to
talk with the president on business
conditions and trust legislation.
The president's statement in support
of Paul Warburg and Thomas V.
Jones, nominees for the federal re
serve hoard, in which he stated that
men should not be refused confirma
tion merely because they were con
nected with “big business,” was sail
today by White House officials to have
brought forth commendatory letters
from a large number of business men,
OAR SECTION
OMNIBUS BIEL
Clause of Clayton Anti-Trust
Measure Thought Establish
ing Too Dangerous Legisla
tion Precedent.
Washington—ln reviewing the Clay
ton omnibus trust bill as it passed
the hquse, the senate judiciary com
mittee today struck out section three,
which would make it unlawful for an
owner, operator or transporter of the
products of any mine, oil or gas well,
reduction works, refinery or hydro
electric plant, or for any person selling
such products, to refuse arbitrarily
to sell the prod get to any responsible
person applying for It.
It was held by the committee that
such a provision established a dan
gerous precedent in legislation, par
ticularly because it strikes at one gen
eral line of industry. Other amend
ments are planned to the sections re ■
latlng toprice discrimination, price
fixing and labor.
The Interstate eommerec committee
hoped to have the railroad escurities
control bill completed by Monday.
GEORGIA GIRL
KILISJATHER
H. Preston Powe Found Dead
in Bed. Daughter Confesses
Freed; Justifiable Homicide,
Whigham. Ga.—Mrs. Clifford Grit
fin, lil-year-old daughter of H Pres
ton Powa, a widely-known Grady
County Farmer, who was found In his
bed yesterday morning dead from a
gun shot wound, told a coroner's jury
today ahnt she had slain her father,
as he slept, because of repeated at
tacks on her.
She declared that her father had
repeatedly attacked her and had
come to her room after midnight yes
terday. She followed him to ’ his
room, she said, and when he slept.
Tired into the hack of his zkull with
a shot gun. killing him instantly.
She was freed on a verdict of jus
tifiable homicide, and her brot.ijr.
Howard Powe, aged is, who had been
arreated, was released.
"No Alternative."
Lame, Ireland—"if It be not p«n-c
with honor, It must be war with honor,”
tald Sir Edward Carton, the miter Un
tonlat trader, addreealnfl the Central
Antrim volunteer! here today. 'There
la no alternative."
Sir Edward declared the Heterltea had
told the government they never would he
turned out of the Imperial parliament,
end by that declaion they would eta:.J
SiTprn»T jitit
Cons titutionalis t Firs 1 Chief
Says He Will Struggle to
Establish Peace and Im
mediately Call Elections
Throughout Republic
Torreon, Mexico.—The conven
tion agreed Carranza was the su
preme leader of the revolution
and Villa chief of the division of
the north. In regard to a com
plaint that General Carranza had
not assisted Sufficiently the di
vision of the north with ammu
nitions, a resolution was adopted
which called for all divisions of
the army to “receive from the
first chief all the elements that
they may need.”
To Continue.
Saltillo, Mexico.— General Carranzo,
the constitutionalist chief, issued a
statement here Saturday reiterating
his intention of carrying out the plan
of Guadalupe.
He announced:
I all continue to struggle to es
tablish peace throughout the repub
lic as soon as possible and will im
mediately thereafter call elections
which will result in the re-establish
ment of constitutional order in Mex
ico.”
Carranza’s statement said:
The Statement.
i first chief of the constitutional
ists, I have complied and propose .»
comply until the end, to the plan of
Guadalupe, which bears date of March
last year. J n conformity with this
Plan which was subscribed to bv tho
chiefs and officials who surrounded
me before I was acquainted with the
usurper Huerta, I v then being governor
of the state of Coahujla, and accepted
by all the chiefs and officials of the
constitutionalist army, I find myseif
obliged to remove from the posts they
occupy unlawfully all the usurpers of
tne three powers—executive, legisla
tive and judicial.
Continue to Struggle.
As first chief of the constitution
alists. I shall continue to struggle to
establish peaec throughout, the repub
lic as soon as possible and immedi
ately thereafter call elections which
will result in the re-establlshmtnt of
constitutional order in Mexico. For
this reason the plan of Gaudalupe is
not and will not be a program of gov
ernment, nor a revolutionary plan, but
rather, as it is, a political plan.” \
Carranza added he considers himself
obligated to carry out the reforms
which failed of consummation in th*
brief Madero regime. His statement
than continued:
In a Few Days.
“In a few days the three divisions
of Generals Pablo Gonzales, Francisco
Villa and Alvaro Obregon will advance
simultaneously toward the capital of
the republic. I believe that Huerta,
the usurper, will not resist the advance
of the constitutionalist forces.
"If the columns of the northeast,
the north and the northwest amalga
mate, I shall take direct command of
all those forces and will direct mili
tary operaions in combination with
the division of the center."
Delegate for Each Thousand.
Torreon, Mexico.—At the Carranza-
Villa conciliation conference at Tor
reon an effort to prevent Genera! Car
ranza or any of the military leaders
of the revolution from becoming can
didates for the presidency or vice pres
idency failed to be adopted, accord
ing to a lengthy official statement is
sued today.
The motion was made by the Villa
delegates. A motion was passed, how
ever. demanding that the first chief,
as president ad interim at the triumph
of the revolution, should call a con
vention composed of delegates repre
senting the rebel army, every thous
and soldiers to be represented by del
egates selected by a committee of mi!-\
itary chiefs to be approved by this*
general of the division which would
fix the date and arrange for the elec
tion.
To Selsct From.
A list of names was suggested to
Carranza by the delegates from which
he could select if he saw fit a pro
visional cabinet or a consulting com
mittee to act until the election of
permanent officers. Resolutions also
were adopted condemning what was
declared the activity of the clergy In
assitsing the Huerta government.
This followed a fight in which the
Villa delegates attempted to eliminate
any military leader, including Carran
za. from presidential possibilities.
Those recommended as suitable for th?
provisional cabinet were Inglesias
Caledron, Luis Cabrera, Antonio Villa
real, Miguel Sylvia, Manuel Bonilla,
Alberto Pani, Eduardo F. Hay, Ignacio
Pesciuclra. Miguel Dlaa Lombardo,
Jose Vasconcelos, MiguaiAlessin Ro
bles, and Frederico Gonzalez Garza.
Ml 11 CONGRESS
Washington.—
Senate.
Not In session; meet* Monday,
House.
Met at noon. Senate ,ameg|(lmenta
to army aviation bill adopted. Debp,,
was begun on general deficiency ap
propriation bill.
Adjourned at l:6B p. in., until nooa
Monday. t
v THE WEATHER “
Forecast.
Washington, D. C.—Oenrgln and Font!*
Carolina: Partly cloudy Sunday and
Monday, probably loc&i thundershowers