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fyK • • If Yom Don’t Re»i THE CHRONICLE Yoo Don’t Got ' The News •••••••••••« THE CHRONidji . StriTes To Be a dean Newa- | paiwr, Conntote, Keirsjr. ‘S t and ReliaUc ^ VOLUME XXIX CLINTON, S. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 31,1929 NUMBER 5 DEATH CUIMS PROF. FANT Pi^tingfuished Member of Pres byterian College Faculty Pass es. Funeral Here Tuesday. WOMAN FREED; MAN TO PEN Holen Gentle Set Free and Jones Gets Five Years. Last Chapter ~ df Case Written. The great heart of A. T. Pant, which had sustained him through long hours when a eager Death seemed grasping at a new victim, gave way Sunday afternoon at five fifty-two, and the cessation of its feeble pulsa tions told that a leaf in his story must be turned. Funeral serv’ic-s wore held at St. John’s Lutheran church, of which Mr. Fant was a devoted member, at three o’clock Tuesday afternoon with his pastpr, the Rev. M, R. Wingard, con ducting the servie.s. Rev. John Mc- Sween, president of ;he college, read Columbia, Jan. 28.—The case of the state againi^ Helen Gentle,, 20-yenr- old Atlanta' girl, charged with the murder of Samuel Bickley, hotel de tective, and with being an accessory after the fact, was nol pressed in the Richland county court hei% at 5ill o'clock this afternoon. Miss Gentle left Columbia for her home in Atlan ta directly afterwaird. Dismissal of the charge against the 2()-year-old Atlanta girl today closed the affair of the killing of the. Jeffer son hotel detective on October 19. Fur man Jones of Greenville, driver of the ired thje y TRAINING SCHOOL HAS GOOD YEAR Eleventh Annual Report of Supf. Whitten Showg Institution Well Organized and Operated. (Editor’s note—We have just read with interest the annual report of the State Training school of this city, at transmitted to the State Board of Public Welfare by its efficient super intendent, Dr. B. 0. Whitten. It gives a review of the year’s work by Dr« Whitten and a report on the general health and farm activities by Dr. F. L. Webb, asssitant superintendent. The report, somewhat condensed by the writer, is published below because of its interest to the many local friends of the institution.) * To the State Board of Public Wel ls not so large. Thare are some very pathetic and urgent ^ases that we are having to refuse admission and we are calling the attentioh of the budget commission and general assembly tp these facta. Our piaintenance cMt has been showing'a .st«idy decline every year since the institirtion began in 1920. The daily per capita cost during the past year for all items of manitenance has been a Httle less than 77 cents. We arf frank to say, however, that we believe this cost is too low to get the desired results, considering the type of buildings, equipment and oth- MISSING TEACHER FOUND LIFELESS Mra Rafe King Apparently Suicide Victim. Doctors Perform Antopsy Body of Sharon Indtmctw. was follows! by Dr. D. M. Douglas of l^jjis morning to being an accessory af- i Gentlemen: Columbia, who paid a beautiful trib ute to the deceased and told of hi^ ter the fact and was sentenced to five years in prison. Her face covered by a broad smile, Helen Gentle.told newspapermen ip a farewell statement that “I am go- di^HWsition of the budget conunission I have the honor to submit the an- j and* legislature to reduce our operat- nual report of the State Training jing cost has not resulted in any notice- school for the year 1928. jable lack of physical care to our chil-jis thought by those, investigating the The institution is operating with dren, but it has caused a lagging in 1 case that the laceration on the head York, Jan. 26.—The bfeleas body of Faye Wilson King, wife of Rafe King and teacher of French in the Sharon high school was found in an outbuild ing Friday night under circumstances indicating that she had committed stti cide. Definitely to establish the cause of her death, however, an inquest will he cimducted Wednesday i^temobn, at which the medical findings of Drs. J. H. Saye and C. 0. Burrus, who per.- formed an autopsy Saturday after noon, will be heard. Mrs. King was found lying on her back, with her mouth and throat se verely burned from medicine that phy sidans thought waa poison, with an Her hair wAs clotted with blood from a gash on her.. forehead, and there were scratches on her throat. It BLUEUW BILL VETOED Senate Ovmides Richards* On Sabbath Liberalization Meas ure By Large Margin. Columbia, Jan. 29.—Governor Rirfj- ards’ veto of the amendment to the Sunday Vblew, laws” was oveHiddeti in the Senate tonight by a vote of 30 to 6. The governor with members of his family was in the Senate chamber for the session which was called by- special order at 8 o’clock tonight to consider his veto message. * When the question was put before the members it brought forth no de bate. It was not until the three meas ures relative to biennial sessions ft.r about the same organization -we had rnrhVm'e‘\o “mV" mother in* Atlante, when my last annual report was sub- and nothing can take me away. I’m The personnel is composed of going to be a good girl from now on.” 59 fmployees, as shemm by statistical The erstwhile defendant, on whose 1 of this report. The testimony-Cbarles -R. Vaughn -was: convicted of Bickley’s murder and sen- Ph’y®^ m still high, compared with cc * * j * tonced to lifo imprisonment, ieft Co-! "“"y »‘hor ■nst.tut.ons ,vh.ch we have , our technique and trainin.a: of c'hil- j was caused by the fall and that she dren, and the postponement of certain' might have inflicted scratches on her repairs anJ improvements that should j throat by grabbing it in her agony af- be no longer neglected if general ap- \ ter taking the burning poison. A pearances and up-keep are to be main-' hatchet was on the floor close by, but tained on an ac ceptable standard. It j no importance was attached to this has never been our intention or desire lumbia at G-15 o’clock toniirht for At-with reference to this i ing costs to a reasonable minimum. . . > ; question. The shortage lies jpainly in ' We find our cost below the average lanta. She was unaccompanied on . . . J 4, * • J K ! the teachers’ department and ouithe .of other institutions of this kind in the tr,p- and »PP“«"‘'y_“"7™smaed o^r adSnal teacher I United Statea. Undoubtedl.v, the as- running the institution as well as we sfwerand"a competent farmer, we should be sumption should be that we are not „ iahle to do much better work. Thus Escort,nB her to the dtbot were leeisl.ture has failed to pro- J. W. Richardson, eh,ef state constable I shortages. At the close of 1928, the populationi was 452,. there being 218 males and 234 females. This is some 10 or 15 above our normal capacity. The daily who had arrested her in Atlanta last ! November 6, and Mrs. M. P. Kramer, I matron of the city jail here who had, according to Helen Gentle, been ” a mother” to* her during the time of her imprisonment. fact. Aside from the physical' findings, the suicide theory is given support by the statement of her husband, who is alleged to have told officers that she had ofen threatened to kill her self. Mr. King was the last person to see her alive. He w'as confined to bed that the oratory of the evening was let bose. A motion of'Senator Miller to strike out the resolving words of the three measures was carried after several senators had voiced their opin ions for and against the proposals. ! They were rejected by a vote of 20 i to 15. j There was a large crowd on hand j and the galleries we.re filled, with I many me;nl>ers of the House among ihe spectators. i Those who on the call of the n)ll should. The daily per capita coat of by illness. He says she gave him a food consumed hy children and em- doub’e dose of sedative at 10 o’clock ployees was $0.1868. ' and told him to go to sleep. He awoke Budget for 1929 " i at 2 o’clock, and when she did not •Maintenance ■ come home from school at the regular Re<iuest in budget for 1920,—$121),-' time, he thought she had stopped on average enrollment for the past year 1 282.50. This is estimated on the basis | the way. was 448 plus. During* the year, there j of a daily average of 448 children at Late today Judge Thomas Mauldin 81 admissions and 12 re-adinis-1 a little less than 79 cents per day, PROF. A. T. FANT signed an order releasing the automo-1 93,—males 49, females 44. . bile which had been driven ^he night i of the killing, to Mrs. Ada May, of of his I .Jacksonville, Fla., mother of Vaughn Discharged or paroled 61, of these 9 At nightfall, becoming uneasy at her abstmee, he got up and sounded an alarm. The body was soon found in an outhouse, the door to which was shut. ROAD BILL IS u J remarkable that the institution has i been able to employ teachers with the expect it. Permanent Improvements Budget request for permanent im school i provements i.s as follows: building and auditorium. It is rather; Equipment for school build- friendship a.id pppVc.iaticn WMi-k wuiie pi s:dcnt of the college! whose name the car stood. The ma-lg females. (Se'e^assistant superintend until he went to the university. Dr. A. had been impounded at the cityi„j,f*g reDort) J. Bowers a fonaer pastor, offered1 ^Lwo;!,. chapel e«rei.« and prayer, aad hraut.ful ioaire were smgr, _ I .till (treat-1 rtueh w^'paS ure;tcS.- s^hiltOAD BILL IS lb' Han,pared by inade^aate many friends who gathered to pay | h(/mage an.l respect to the memory! cf one loved so well. The floral off-.r inps were beautiful pieces being sen and various organizations. Inte.rment; county delegation ha.s Introduc-j There are 74 boys and 69 girls ! Dormitories (2) followed in R-.semont cemetery. ' p^j ^ bju legislature providing enrolled for training of all kinds in , Farmer’s residence Tne active pallbearers were: Dr. W.t ways and means for the paving of the the school department. Younger and ' Colony for colored each. We are asking for a little in crease in the daily per capita cost .over have been returned. There have been i the previous year. W'e believe that the! She had been dead six or eight hours, n deaths during the year, 8 males and institution should be operated a little | physicians said. better and we Jbelieve that the people ' The body was takc^ to the home of ing, auditorium and dor mitories $ wen. ine tlcral oft .r-, Hoose Delegation Provides for P«ving; ability, character and personality pos-1 School building and audito- iful ami varied, many j yf Clinlon-Kinard Link In Near cessed by our teachers with the limit-i rium *. by fnen-s, relatives j Future At ('ost of $230,000. pj accommodations we have to offer i Administration building .... i relatives in Kings Mountain, N. C., j There the interment will take place. ( The result of the autopsy will not I be officially given out until the in- I quest is held. i Mrs. King was reared in the Hood- 10,000.00 towm section of western York but had I lived at King’s Mountain, N. C. for 33,500.00 i a long period before coming to Sharon 17,500.00jin December, 1927. She was 28. 37,000.00, Two brothers and two sistei*s at 2,500.00 King’s Mountain and Charlotte siir- 9,500.00! vive her. roi. M. r.. Murgeon,^ rroL. iciint^jn.KjnarJ stretch of highway I more promising children are given liton. Prof. M, W. Brown, 2. The bill, k Is understood, was preference in school work. We called Total $110,000.00 attention last year to the importance j TEACHERS TO MEET SATURDAY K. Hoy. Prof. H. F.. Sturgeon, Prof T. H. Graf Prof. R. L. Coe and \\. .A. Johnson, j p^pp^red by Representative Huff but Honorary pallboarers w re: Presulent j introduced as a delegation meas-i an in.stitution of this kind being John Mc,vween of fre.^hyteian college,. yre which is taken to mean that all I equipped for giving .its children suit-j I re.-uiciit 1). M. Douglas of the Cni- members have agreed to the terms of jable and systematized recreation. We, ' again emphasize the necessity of such ’ ^ * . « • 1 ’ u.-Vd'l/i AVfi «*ii HI pii^v#- 1> 1 I U The Clinton-Kinanl link is alniut, facilities if the spirit that is desired moj,ia, during the latter part of la.st Woodworth. Dr. D. I. Brinirn, Dr. J. '"J'*'* 1" iinstitution is to be mam- ^^'mild epidemic of influ- * monthly meeting ol the B. K nnedv. Dr. Dudley Jones, Prof. 1 G. W. Gignill.iat, Col, R. L. Glasgow, IJevit.' A. N. Taylor. L. S. McMillian, vesity of S;,uth (’arolina. Dr. S. C.; jjjjj Hays, Dr. A. E. Spencer. Prof.^ A. V‘, Maitin, Pref. B. Graham, Dr.*M. G., cost of pavibg it is placed at $230,000. j tained. The religious activities of the This project is to he paved in the ' institution are still under the direction same way that other state highways I of Dr. F. D. Jones, professor of phi- ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT’S REPORT ' * General Health ^^'■* Haf.' Clark of (ireenville. To Ik* , -J • f Hoard. Demonstration I.essons F-xcept for an epidemic of pneu monia, during the latter part of la.nt voted to override the governor’s voter were: Senators Ard, Arrow'smith, Campbell, I>ennis, Despories, FJlis, Ginn, Goodwin, Gray, Grenecker, Hammond, Hamrick,'’'''Hin; Ho<lges, Jeter, Jones, Kirkland, Legare, Mc- Coll, Martlkt, Miller, Nash, Robinson, Rogers, Stukes, Taylor, Thompson, Weeks, West and Williams. Tho.'ie alfainst overriding w'ere: Sen ators .Anderson, Brown, Bryson, Crouch, Findley and Jeffries. Senator Ward refused to vote. Senator Miller opened the debate against the biennial sessions of the general assembly w*hen the three measures, which were introduced Jan- j uary 10 by Messrs. Brown and Bry- ' son, came up for their second rend- I ing.s. ' Declaring that, he coul.l cite ma: y “cogenF^ reasons” why biennial ‘ sr-s- tsions of the legislature would not he ' advisable for South Carolina. 1’he Darlington ' senator stated that it would require either that members of the House be elected for four year terms or that the body ever be a green one. To jia.ss such bills, he said, wouM [destroy the principles of bicameral ! fprnv of government. No saving to the ] people would be gained by such a I change, he said. De laring that ex- ' penses of special .se.ssions and special ; organizations would have to be added ■ in orJvr for the government to fune- I tirn properly. ( Mr. Bry.son’s reply wa.s that, he 'knew the sentiment of the- people of I Greenville county and the northern enza for two or three weeks preced- ' Laurens Cifunty Teachers’ as.sociation u nu u *u k 14V. Ihe held Saturday, Feb. 2, begin mg the Chri.s-tmas holidays, the health! . ,11 ' r , . ... . . . , ning at 10:30 o’clock. . of the mmates< has been remarkably ; DepartmentHl {lomonstration lessons manyjlosophy at Presbyterian college. 1 are confident that the ma-' 'bHpartmentHl {lemonstration lessons i.ergcant laiham, W. L. Jones, 'pbe countv advan- The care of the farm and all kin Is f -4 /41, t • \ given from 10:30 to 11:30. In Holland H'j **cr of ahe colleire and ' reteniij. int, tounty aavan inecarc 01 me larm anu an of these case.s of pneumonia and , 1 1 1 , , c * 1 Me S3 I C Bo’and J D Bohnd L ^^ock is still oeing apportioned prevented high school department Supt. J. V. Eincon. .1. u: J).-mi„i.k, H.'c. S.,; h.,d b...n aJ^uat. farimU-a: Prof**-•SOT department,which buildf^ the roa Is, [among various attendant-employees and enters a contract To return the ; This was made necessary by the with-■ nnstration lesson in .American history. ’ ■ • • • . II : . , • _ . 1 • ) •• - In {be intermediate grades department .Vliss .Anabel I.ooper, of the Gray Courl-(>wirigs school, will teitch a , ^ ifir iri&r iiui which will be taken care of out of the : it impossible to get hold of a V. pinion, .1. D. Drmini'.-k, H. C, Su- be. f>rooks .Sw..gu.. R. inKbcinei, ^ , to the county in annual install-j drawal of the fanner-dairyman on ac-|'”' v^V-itP one nriv* H. J. F.argle, \\. M. Sh alv, O. I. rr 41. ur 4! ^ * 1 ,• <• 4U i , „ to \acdte one pn\. , / , . ments to pay off ithe obligation. Mean-! count of reduction of the salary ap-i^^. , . • ■ l Sheelv and .1. .A. Shce of t.ne laitheran .. 4,1. . *1. *.,4 „ • 4- r 4U* *4 w „4;ri 1 J^tienaanis, m oatr , ; .. time the county pays the interest, 1 propnation for this item. We still find t uic. jcounti . . , • u- which will be taken care of out of the 1 it imnossible to get hold of a few 1* ant. who was in his ite room use<i by h building, to be used for isolating certain cases, but the crowded condition in other quar- ninth vear cf ‘-crvicc as head of .the gasoline tax. so thousand dollars with which to pur- to permit the re- depaitiv.ent ef physics at the"’Fr-Jshy-' no additional property levy will k-hase a few purebre<l daily cattle. y^.,upation of these rooms hy employ- teijian roUege of S'outh G.arolina, haj tie needed. The two colonies (or men and one ees. <1. monsLration lesson in sixth grade history. In the p»*iniary dcnartniont group discu.ssions will be held under the direction of Mis.s Alargarct Blake ly, of the Clinton city schools, and part of the state and that by a large majority they favored the change. F'orty-two of the forty-eight states of the Union, he said, were gov’cmed un der either biennial or (lu’adrennial ses sions of their legTsTature.s. t Me pointed out that South Carolina -was the .snialle.st and should not fimi ! it necessaiy to meet every year. The Lsnpply bill carries from $100,OUt)^ to ! $1.')0,000 for legislative salaries and expenses each year, S-nator Bryson ; said, and ho suggosted that every oth er year that amount could he saved to the peitjib-.. Mr. Brown also spoke in iefense of the bills of which he was co-author. b cn in feeble hcaith for some months,; Members ofjhe delegation are quot-t for women are stilf being operated I The number of deaths ha.s im rea.sed. department. In the' He stated that the will of the peoii’e but it was nv)l until S( me six weeks saying it was planned to have very satisfactorily. These three umt.s ,during the past year, but this was due , f *•:-„. LTade tea-hers ago that he wa.s forced to give up his ^^is under way at the earli-Hake care of 88.—68 men and 20 wo- to the fact that we have admitted a , _i :n * u .. ■ work and go to the bod from which he practicable moment sq that the j men. It is hope ) that we can establish altoui 125 low-grade children'since De- was never again to rise e.xcept k r a paved as soon a.s possible, j other colonies in the near future. This ;\.ombcM* 15. 1927. This type of individ brief interval. Th n, for several days, he was permitted to sit up in his home, but about ton days before his' death, he was ag.ain .severely stricken and was nevir able to rally. Death wa.s due to Bright’s disease and arlerio scelcrosis. He h^d been JUNIOR ORDER TO I has proven to be one of the most in- ^,^^1 has very little vitality, expensive of our de\'elopments and j j )i-. ,s. C. Flays, consulting surgeon I the inmates seenuto make a fine ud-, to” the institution, 'has performed a B ANQUET TONIGHT ! justment to colony life. j number of operations, including some I There have been no permanent im-1 tonsillectomies and .some aWominal l.anford^ ('ouncil No. 257, To Gather j provoments at the*^ histitution during work. " At Festal Board This Evening for ' the past year exct,pt an exten.sion of j Dr. T. G. Mcrullough spent ]^-|i th.e dairy barn and a shed for dairy 1 months at the institution during the AJIU v/II a»I|H Miss .Aleenc- F’ranks will teach a dent- onstiation lesson in nundt r w+trk. Promptly at 11 :•'’)<( all the tc*;i: her.s wdl assembh* in the slu ly hall at which time Dr. Many <'laik. profes sor of education at rnnnan univer sity, will address the teat hers. The usual luncheon will be servc'd. Get-Together Occasioif. «(implaifiing c^JJie f rmer trouble for, AAA.v<.r>.A,... , 4,^ . 4 , some years,Iml it wa? only compara- lainford Council No. 257, Junior H attie. $2500.00 appropriated at the past summer anej.cared foi the den a lively recentlv that it became aggra- 0. IJ. A. M., will stage a banqu?t and [ assembly were used for . Work of the inmates. ^ated. He had lost a great deal of open meeting this evening at eight, "taking these improvements. I Dining the year, each child in the flesh just prior to the end, an i only o’clock that will’bring many out-of-i’ We have endeavored, with the fundswas given the powerturvibrations of an enlarg- -town visitors here as special ed and slightly displaced heart put for the occasion. off the inevitable hour of dissolution. The program will open with the i psychometrist haying sers'ed the va- To Liquidate lecial gpests at our disposal, to continue the extra- smallpox, anj nivuv 01 ’ll service activity of the institution, our 'vere also given typhoid^ ,n will, .‘^Vio 1 r»a\rph/4motri-4t Liavincr a<»rC4»H thp vn--^“Farm and FamU I vaccine for the children treatmenl. ' roducts .At tbj bed.side st(K;d his wife, his .serving of th'2‘ banquet in the Mary j rious orphanages, juvenile courts,'de-' farming activities during the ir-_ k t:’ 1. k ’%r A a. A-i- ^4.4. V J ! parents. Rev. and Mrs. A. T. Fant of IMusgrove tea room. At the conclusion 1 teption homes, etc., when we'could year have been a,s satisfactory as Tl]c* legal notice in last week’s issue i.f Th.' Cbronlcie H'on("<!*iiiiTig.the Clin ton Oil .Mill’s liquidation, does not in any vvay refer to the Clinton Cotton Oil Company, local corporation head ed by John T. .Stevens of Kershaw, as presidenU and Fred E. Culvern, vice- Rock Island, Illinois, his pastor, the of the menu, the members and t,hei?* apare her from the institution. 9e expected under tne cLrcuan- *rhese ara two distinct cor- .. ». 4i »..41 . . ,,, J 4 .1 .-'ll. 1_. -A-4i 1 4 < (Continued on page two) . ..... Rev. M. R, Wingard of the Lutheran guests will proceed to the Masonic! has also done some of the psychomet- ehurch where he w’as a member, and temple wh-ere an interesting “open 1 rical work in connection with the ptnatinns under the laws of the state, land the Auinding up of the-affair:-; of one or two old friends.. His brother, meeting” will be Jield to which all are! State.-iujspital clinics in j ' ,thf^former company will have ha ef- the Rev. Carl Fadt, also stood by.. invited. Several out-of-towp speakers' Greenville and Spartanburg. This rfect* on th^' Clinton Cotton Oil Corn- Breathing which had been interrupted are on the program and an enjoyable j same employee i.s expected to visit k.,...,- HI At OlS HOIllC pant, headed by J. H. Pitts. .Ir., well and fit fall for, many hours, became evening is^anticipated. Mrs. Lester, our paroled cases as often as possible'^;:''"^'' known young bu.siness man, as local regular and easy just before the close state organizer for the Woman's bu- and devote some time to the planning, F’riends in the city, and they are ' manager. of the struggle, and his passing was reau, will be^wesfent and speak on the' b? riew paroles. . * jmany, of Hayne B. Workman, will be quiet and peaceful. ^“Daughters of. America.” 1 Applications continue to come in I distressed to learn of his continued *'I HOKNWELL filKLS For several days he had b?en nn^de local council is m a flourish-1 with usual regularity. The success of | illness at his country home near here. } ' PL.AY 'I'O.MORROW to .speak coherently, M'Kile conscimia, ijjg and is headed as council-v,the institution in paroling a goodly j Mr. Worieman ha.s been conrine*! toj ^ remained cheerful and patient, glad' John G. Pitts, well known citi-i number last year has enabled us toihia bed for ^tjbe past tbree weeks, i* The Thornwell oi-phanugc girls bas- and speak to the friends that'^jg^j local magistrate. AWange- keep the list of those waiting for ad-! thbugh' the report yesterday stated! ketball team will meet the Abbeville should lie o!>.servld and that the people had l)y a vote expressed their favor ol biennial se.s.sions. Senator .\Ia’*tiii reminded ,Mr. Brown that while the proposed change (»f s -ssion schedub.-il bad leceived a favorable vole it.-; <-oni- j an Win tax bill h'ad been voted down by the people. i Getting the laws of the .state I straight should be the first prol^lem of the general a.-^-sembly,'accoriiing to .Senator William.-;, who was ag:'in.-it he proposals. He declared that if t’ds could not be accomplished with the legi.sjature meeting annually artd,that j biennial sessions would not improve j matters. No saving to the state would* be po.ssible, he said, becau.se special I sessions, and special boards and com-* missions would have to be created. 'There wa.s not long ago a great'deal” , of talk. Senator Williams said, of how .-'moothly the statb would operate if the governor were elected for.a four [jear term. A wave of chuckling swept ! over the chamber when he denmndod • to know, ‘‘w.her** Are those adYocatVs [of a four year governor now?” Slight Increase In Cotton Ginned tAih^ to see him^^^ imnts 'for this evening’s enjoyable [ mission from mounting so high as it'that he was Adolph The^re- Fant,' th^ eldest [ jirogram is in the hands of the follow- childofjfcw. tmd ilftw. A. T. r»wtiing committee: H. Y. Abrams* J*.V. b6fir|une 20, J894, at Warren, Pa. He | Edwards, V. V. Vandiver, J. M. Row- (Coatrnued on PaSn Four) land, Ed Steveps'and Bryant Jackson. slightly improved. He is Hi girls, Friday af^rnouirat^: 15. The has been in .former years, although! one of the useful, upright citizens of-game will be playtM (p^the college the liat of-appHoations for females isfhis oommonity and hit friends unite gym and promises to be a lively «x>ii- still quite large and includes many ur- in wishing for-hinrn » speedy recovery test since both tcanisiare repotted as gent cases. The waiting list for malet, from his present ilincss. [evenly matched. 1 , ■ ' ■ —'j -r- ' I The* ginnera report for the county -<hows a total o{„24,939 bales of cotton I covering period of Jan. I6th„jhis year, I ginned. This is a very slight increase 1 over the report for the saihe period last .vear, the total figure at that time .<tanding at 24,444. ^ V* A.-' *1 K~'- -wtisJ .1- U'.. ,K-.l t.