• • VOL.XXXIV BARNWELL. S. e*i His official Other Things, on All of Which He Hpeaks Out Plainly. The Spartanburg Herald says Gov. Cole L Hlease addressrd two im- report of the speeches as we find them in the Spartanburg Herald: Gov. Hlease began hi-; ^address In ought not to be punished too severe ly for crimes committed in the heat i of ixassion There was no excuse, he said, for premedltsited robberies, but when a man got Into a quarrel and (Jaxg HOLDS I P AND drew a pistol and killed his antag onist he ought not to be judged too severely. "There are good men in the pen itentiary,” he said, "men of good fam- il^s as yours or mine. And there are a lot of people in the penitentiary who ought to be out, and a lot who are out who ought to be in. "I am going tg do something very soon,” he continued COWARDLY ATTACK BOLDIA BEATS SEN ATOR BILBO. Physician States Injured Man’s Skull Fractured, But Wound Not Neces sarily Fatal. FELDER SPEAKS I ™ s SIATE j vau ablk / He Sajs Crirntnals Role Sauth Carolina; Refering to Blease. AORICYLTI HAL STA TISTIC PI BUSHED. State Senator Theodore Ulllx), ran- "whieh will didate for Lieutenant governor of Career and Tells Why He Did Cer-1 caus€ me ,0 ^ severely criticised in Mississippi, was attacked and sovere- ! Spartanburg county. Hut gentlemen ly beaten at Starkville, Miss., Thurs- taln Things.—He Discusses Many have you ever considered what a ter- day by J. J. Henry, claim agent of irible thing life imprisonment is?” y; the Mobile, Chicago & New Orleans Gov. Hlease said it had been in- railroad, and former penitentiary sinuated that he sold pardons In warden, the en ounter coming as a di answer to that charge, he said, he i e ( >t gpquel to a campaign speech de- desired to say that with the exception ( iivered by Senator Hllbo at Hlue of Brigman of Florence, who had only Mountain, Miss., recently in which mense and enthusiastic audiences orjh a( j three more months to serve any- Hilho is credited with having vigor- eotton mill workers on Tuesday at way, there was not a man whom he I ouslytassailed Mr. Henry, impeaching Cow pens and Drayton Mills in Spar- ha,} released from the penitentiary hj 8 character. tanburg County. The following is a , w ho had money enough to buy a Thd affray occurred aboard a rail- nel suit of clothes after paying his roa( i train in which Mr. Bilbo was illroad fare home. 1 proceeding from Columbus to 'Stur- And, he added, a rich man went to j g| s _ xlies., where he was to have a formal manner and then said that, the penitentiary not long ago, and he 1 S p okon | Thurs dav afternoon. Roes A. he would talk about anything his Hs going to stay there. I Collinsi candidate for attorney-fiend• audience wanted and suggested that With regard to the charges of i ali who| was accompanying State Sen- somebody give him a text. Someone i bribery ™ade against tam by Col. | B | bo to s turK ig at the time of bluuU^' PLUllihitionJ^,,,^^....,., LTitKMiMMii B, Felder^.oL. Atlanta, Gov. i frls pnnbnnter with J. ,1. Henry, has “If you can shew me hhere there , Hlease said that if Tom Felder would , glven X, t |>e following statement: is any.prohiliition in South Carolina, produce a letter asking a bribe or "Wh^n the train reached Starkville S; .id Gov. Hlease. "111 talk about it." ' acknowledging the receipt of a bribe. ' j was Jeated directly in front of Sen ile referred to prohibition again an d any three men familiar with | ator in the smoking compart- He said he Hlease's handw riting would say the ! ment ( alking with Mr CarrutherSi of \ alue of Crops in South Oirolina Per READS A FEW LETTERS I Square Mile Keachrroy Percv as tile successor to the late Senatof McLaurin. Following the legislative inquiry a court trial w is had of a Percy sup porter in the senatorial campaign, and he was a quitted of the charges of bribery prefered by Hilbo l>nr- to \ a a: the car, and the two men i r^vented an> one entering while J J I i an ry administered repented blows upon Senator Hilbo's lie id and l>oil> with the tm't of a pistol Some peo ple on the outside of th- car thinking Hilho dead, begged Mr. Henry to stop which he did after having inflicted probably 2b or 2r> Mows " Henry was a witness before the legislative ri n vest i gat ion subseqm nt to the charges of Senator Hilbo that of At- fSS.ng.a.fiOO over 1910, all of which! shows that the value of the crops has | Mr. Felder was greeted enthusias- increased over 100 per cent, during- tically by the large crowd. Quite a te past decade. number frain a distance came in ttu-j With reference to the value of the tomobiles to be present at the harhe- j crops per square mile South Carolina jcue, Macon sending a good delega-1 ranked second of all the state* with tion The barbecue was hMd under 34,518. Other States in comparison: the auspices of the Dublin chamber Georgia, $3,T4jT of commerce, and was the first pub- Texas, $1,369 lie function by that body. | All other Southern state* show the ; "I am unable to restrain a natural value of crops per square mile to impulse to refer to an episode in my lie less than $3,000. life of recent occurence, which has. The cotton crop of the South ac<- ibrought me into unpleasant r.e’nrietv e 0d fng oceo802FN’.Plah-AGIVxTflfT. if in doing so I trench u|«on the pro- cording to the statistics gleaned for prieties of the occasion, I plead in ex- 1910 went on the market for $963,- cuse and extenuation the fact that I 180,000. The crop of 1909 was crave above all things the continued i worth $81 2,000,000 and for 1908, confiedence and friendship of the peo-j $ 81,23 0,000. It will be seen that pie of Laurens county. It is not my i the cotton crop of 191C| was worth purpose to tax audiences with the full 1 $1,1,000,000 more than-F»44r There details of this episode, but I mere- are In the South 440,000,000 acres ly desire to briefly advert to it that' of land available for cotton and only you may understand that I shall in 'one out of 12 acres Is planted Of the end receive from you the welcome the cotton crop 19 per cent was con- piaudit; 'Wen done, thou good and'sumed in the United States; 49 per faithful s rvant ' cent was exported and 36 per cent re- ' About four v ans ago I was oni- : ma,ned ,n ■ ,h,B country U p to Feb- ployed b> the state of Sooth t'aroli- ruary, 1911. from the North Atlantic seaboard i Grlffln Williams, of Newberry, who w est to the Lisins States have ex-1 80 seriously and perhap* Catally cut changed during those four days, ac- 1 Andrew Davenport, a White man, at . count, according to a review Wednee-' old Town Tuesday went to Saluda ot $62,288,000 and an Increase of lay nlght for the death of 431 sons. Incomplete as the record U from the failure at many points to report specifically the number of deaths, It Is as serious as shown, as remer- bered for many years If not a record. The number of prostrations is *titl moreTDtH*nil to compute, hut It ap^ pears that thousands have been seri ously overcome by the heat In the great cities. Scores of Deaths Reported. At New York, although the fore caster's prediction of "not quite so warm" was literally true Wednesday, the maximum temperature waa only 1 degree of Tuesday’s extreme heat. The exhausting effects of the hot wave were manifested in a record tally of heat prostrations. The day's list of deaths from neat in the metro politan district was thirty-six up to midnight A Boston dispatch says another day of excessive heat wilted New England ers Wednesday. More than forty deaths were reported In New England Wednesday, although the tempera ture was slightly lower than Tuesday, half a dozen degrees being reported, p er . Wednesday morning and placed him self in the custody of Sheriff Sample, awaiting the results of the trouble. From what can be learned Williams tried hard to avoid trouble with Dav enport at Old Town, where a Fourth of July barbecue waa served. Old Town la just across the Saluda River . JjuNewberry^fVninty; hath aaea ew> , Newberrisns. It appears thst several days ago 1 cun in modesiy sac Hint Gm* tusk was no: only honorably and credita- . blv performed, but 'be sen in s met with the .approval of tile best people Williams, who was working ss a con stable In Saluda County, seised some whiskey found In tbe possession of Carv MeCsrthy, near Denny's. Last week, so the story goes, while Wil liams was at Silver Street, la New berry County, Davenport approached him and stated that he, Wllliama, had gotten one of hlr, Davenport's kins men In trouble over in Saluda County, referring to the Selsnre of Qary Mc Carthy's liquor, and he tried to In- volvo WlWams In a difficulty about It. It Is said that Davenport cursed Williams on thst occasion and said some pretty tough things on him. It Is likewise stated that Williams kept his head and although urgod by some of his friends to resent wfcat Davenport said, made the statement that inasmuch as he was an offeier he would not allow himself to he drawn into s difficulty Tuesday at Old Town, Davenport again approch- c ludiqg twelve babies, and prostrated e d williams and rebuked him for tak- the do " Gov Hlease said tie had no for- uiveness for his enemies because they knew very well 4vUat they were do- wtiicii had been taken to mean that 1,1> ' lie favored lynching He said he sa* no reason why tie should not be per- burkshot," he said ".ire often most effistive remedy ' Later he said that on a previous oc casion te hid made a statement na to assist her splendid a'torney Concening the value per bale of general in the Herculean task of boHon the following comparison There were fifteen deaths due dlrect- ( leaning out her Argent sta les of i 1S 8:1'*’11: Yalue per bale. 1910, $87.- ly to the heat within the limits of th Ir tilth and cornu tion. 1 fee) that ' ’ value per bale, 1 904, $50.37; Boston during the day. value per liale, 1 898, $30 22. • Heat k „ lpd thirty-two persons, In- It Is pointed out that ihe sum of $t,e| was received for.20 bales °f j dozens in Ghic.ago Wednesday, the I ing McCarthy’s Uquof and saying thai cotton In M98 while the farmer re-, flfth day of thft I)re8ent heat wavp 1 t eived $1,7 43 for the same number In The temperature was recorded at ! 101.5 In the weather bureau at 2 30 In South ( arollna there were In , Wednesday afternoon, equalling the 10 1 0 1 75,1 80 farms or an increase ; high ()olnt regl ,q pred Tuesday, while of 13 [i;t cent over the preceding 1 decade buildings increased hv 16 2 per cent: of that sfati tion to th.' soaked and prox i in a: <•! v . resiil' ing in the r. stit u- treasi]r\ of that graft er ift ridd. n people aii- had' iiiilliou dull irs, and feotly frank about it that he did approve of lym-hing \nd the rmson, he said, wliv there had been no Ivnch- ings in Son'll Carolina during the six months in which he had been govern or was because the negroes knew that he would not call out the military to proto t them from lynching if the; ' insulted w bite w omen Necroes. he said, are so fond ’ of notoriety that often they are willing to make a sacrifice and take a chance of losing the.’!' Ii\es in order to get their names emblazon'd In the news papers Hut tho\ knew .he said, that while he was governor there was no possi de came of their being saved from an infuriated mob Gov Hlease said that if anv women of his famiy was insulted b\ a negro all he would ask was that 'the negro he. caught;, he would do the rest himself. Gov Hlease took up various of his otficial icts which have been . riticis- < d and defended them The purpose of revoking the commissions of the notarv public was to get rid of negro notaries. He n >w makes it a rule, he. said, not to issue commissions to notaries without the recommendation of a member of the legislative dele gation of the county in which the; live.. He mention'd among his enemies the newspapers. He'said the engi neer of a train could no; stop his train t<> pay attention 'o the eurs that ran out and barked at the train. And neither, tie said, eouid he stop for the .snarling curs, tip' newspapers Ho said he would like to call theni by another term, hut it would be un- parliamentarv Chief among his newspiper ene mies. he considers the Columbia State and he said it was controlled by Cu bans and thev were foes to organ- ved guvernmeut ('tie of their an cestors he said was exiled from Cuba because he was a foe to organized gov. rnment. Gov Hlease also paid his respe ts 'o The Spartanburg Herald He as serted that this newspaper w-as own ed hv The Columbia State, ana mat the editor published nothing until lie had telephoned to Columbia and haiT obtafri'ert permission. The Henald. he said, published an untrue storv to 4he effect that th- girls of Winthrop college had asked ihH their diplomas be presented to them by somebody else than Gosetm- or Hlease. This storv was la er found to he untrue, he said, but the Herald lacked the manhood to come out and admit it was untrue. He wus warmly applauded and one ing the present political campaign charges and countercharges between sev' ral of the candidates have fol lowed fust and partisan feeling lias reached a high tension Rei*>rts as to the extent of Hilbo's in'uries are conflicting At first ;t was said that his wounds were not serious, but late this afternoon a des patch from A> k' ritian. in the immedi ate vicinity of Sturgis, quotes. Dr Murphy, who was called to attend Hilbo. as s iving that his skull is fractured, ’ott he is not necessarily f a i a 11 v hurt. man shouted that he had stopped his Regarding his veto of approprla- subscription to The Herald h. cause I tion hills, be said that by so doing he n f jt s unfair attitude towards Gov- saved the Mate $6.,bob He declared ernor Hlease. the government of South Carolina was the most extravagant of anv Shate of the Cnion. He denounced the extravagance nf the State edu cational institutions especially. Gov. Blease declared that there were men traveling fin Fhrope and ertjoying themselves and at the same time drawing ^ilasies from the Stale as members of the faculty of some of hosiery mill, which he prop°f>ed to IriSllLulionB. aholiMVr-—Me-said that prisoner-H-wepe- Gov Hit a so in a do s light! ng ro- '"arks a ho’ ut Northorn ors 8o\ ora times. Ho said that of 1 6 " votors in a Newh rry cot ion mi 11 15 1 veto 1 for him. "Tho nt h or six." ho sa'd, 11 woro l h o Y a n koo hnssopt! " While SI'O nking of tho nouit ontiarv ho dovotod soni" atton tion to the and if Siecr'antiurg county sent Mr Osh'rn to the legislature for a cou ple more terms he would probably he on the Hlease platform hv then Hlease hod a kind xrorri for^the Mate detectives,. J-ohn F -VMller and Robert K. Miller, and said that Dan Miles was the best . supervisor :n South C irolina. Gov Hlease snoke at some length "f his tight for the governorship, which h siid h id been the crowning ambition of his life He said thu, when Ms father had In'cn on ItG deathbed he had called him Cole and toid him that he wanted him to tm Governor of his state, iand that all his life antMhat every dollar Te hud made had been devot'd to attain the governorsh ip. He said he was ron'ent with the Governorship, but ondifions might arise whirh would make him s candi date for T'nited States Senator. There has be n talk of imnesehing him. he said Hut if the legislature at its next session, should imnearh him. he asserted, he would make a 'our of T he Stite which would result in his going to the senate as the suc cessor of Penjamin R" Tillman. Tn concluding his speech Govern or Hlease said there were six empty bedrooms in his nianshion at Colum bia and though they were poorlv fur- ni'-'hed, he invited any of his audience who visited the capital to come to the mansion and stop there. He declared that he owed his suc cess in polaGcs largeh' to the cot ton mill men Gov. Blease was suc ceeded on the rostrum by Congress man Johnson, who gave a short gen- Bv Steam ShAvel Fatal the overturning of a steam Uie editchtion' 1 He said the excuse for permitting j put to work in the hosiery mill vvho them to travel in Europe was that Vu/>T nothing about making hosierv. thev were being trained to teach. hut who were required to do just a- "But why the devil." he ask n d rurch wojk as skilled operatives. Tlm4 “were they employed to teach if they find 1° wmrk ten hours a day, he said, didn't know how already'’" q n d were kept standing the entire He said he had respeej for the ed- time, ucational institutions conducted by \ lawyer, he said, might he nut ,1 the State, and yet they had given m. to work alongside a skilled worker men to public off! e, Whereas other The lawver would be given the sam* colleges in South Carolina, notably ji^sk a s t^ye other man. If the lawyer Wofford College, had produced Ulus- rnuse of his Ignorance of the work, , ,, , ,, trious nifm. lie mentioned that Wof- -tMled to complete his task, even rra ,:1 on 3 eovein ford had produced Senator E D. though it was an impossibility, be- Smlth. with whom he had ridden to cause of hts ignorance of the work, Spartbinburg from Florence.i 4 he was taken to the stocks, his arms "And Henry Synder,” he said, re- pT.a*ed K*, It. his clothing removed **<"■•*' n u the New Orleans, Mobile ferring to the president of Wofford to the waist, and the lash applied Chicago Railroad^ nt Orchard, college, "has in ore sense and e'duca- Gov. Bleaise, In the coursp of his Ala. Wednesday evening, • Engineer tion than Dr. Mitchell has brains speech, made several remarks about TV- H. Doolittle and a negro named enough to learn ” Spartanburg men, which pleased the I^e Bonna xvere killed, and Tke Cot- Speaking of his tilt With the SO. crowa.- .. na # m ^ ^ ales w ? re preme Court over the appointment.of. —Congrapsmaa- -Josef^V T. - h " dlv Occident was due special Midges, Gov. Biease said that Johnson oame upon the Nostrum he to an overload, he did not intend to i/opoint*special said that a United States Senator had * * * iudges when regular circuit judges .told him that Mr. Johnson had more, G*™ Life for Dog. were sitting around In club rooms, ! sense than all the other South Car- In the va'n effort to save the life drinking cocktails and plaving pin- lira congressmen put together, and of his dog C. L Grant, of Danville, ochja. And he added vehemently this, he said, confirmed his own Judg- Va.. was struck by a Southern R*il- that he could frrovd that this had ment. jway train Wednesday night and died been the case.' i He said that his friend. Represen- an bmir later at a hospital. Grant Concerning his liberal use of the'»at!ve H K. Osborne, srho was also had cleared the traces but had gone pardoning power, he said that ©en on the rostrum, wa$ coming his way, back for th# dog. I h ' / in the indict numt hi the grind juries of the sev. ral , m iring rii.'rOof of more th in a score of thb ves and I'lundorcrs "In tho lust gubernatorial . lection 4he criminal element of that st it ■ suc ceeded in electing one .f their num ber to the go\erm»rship 1 am in po-sessimi of ■ videnco. written snd ■ ral. which in my jadgmi'iif. would not only justify, bir demand his im- I'.'.i' hno tit If I could read in Giis presence tlie tiun ir< d< of 1 tiers from the good but graft-ridden people of fbaf once glorious comnionwmltb in which their greatest to knowledce- ments are fetid re.i and their prayer ful God speeds are wisffed nie in the groa' w rk at hand in ridding them of this moral and politic il leper, his confederates and allies. I am ,sur>‘ I would receive from this audlenc. shouts of approval as would make the welkin ring 1 will detain you long enough to read >ou extracts from hut a few of these letters " Co! mol Felder then read the low ing e.xtracTs from Tcters "The offense which von have com mitted. which js grev ions to the sigh' of our present governor, is the great success yon have attained in expos ing him and his friends in crime." "'Have you r.:ul with interest the proceedings in th" eontroversv be tween vourself and our vagabond governor* * * *| want to say with Huh Evans. Hlease and Fred Dominick right in N'ewberrv, and in control of things there thev could convict most inyhodv they wanted to by picking a jury and th" plunder bund of South Carolina, knowing tlia* you are the man will go to any extent in perjury and forgery to convict you, and Blease is making every effort to discredit you in this state and thus ittempt to weaken the evidence you tiroduee against him by declaring nnon the ignorant rabble that he had you prosecuted for attempted bribery * * Governor H! ase's requisi te.n is bear Lily approved b-v every decent law-abiding citizen of South Carolina." "Hermit me to sav that while l do not approve of all you hnv./said and done in this ma'ter, yet if is impos sible to escape th" conviction that vnu at the street level, and the mercury The value of the lands and i r || m h ed j 0 degrees itnolements and machinery 112 per lent lands 169 per cent; increase in labor Mil 76 per c. nf These statistic* show that there were 20.825 farms added. There are 64.227 owners, or an increase of $ 1,v 1 n. and of these farms 1 4,987 are mortgaged. The tenants number 1 1 .- 097. The Increase In the number -of tenants during the decade was 16.- 113, and the same In preeeedlng de cade, 26,non I’RKDBTS DKMtM'RATM VKTOKV Well It Known Tennessean Hays Re publicans Will Lose. A dlspateh from Cleveland, Ohio, Isays a light breeze Wednesday morn- ; ing caused the mercury to drop sev eral degrees, «fter It had reached j 96 degrees In the weather bureau and 102 at the street level. The ] deaths of eleven babies were attrib- I uted to the heat. I At Baltimore thr of which his grandfather was the DIED FROM A MOLE, Made Its Appearance on the Arm AJ- niost One Year Ajjo. Augustus W. Mott, of New York, "and I have parti ipated in ev- founder and well known as a yachts man, is dead at his home as the 'In y cry but the partv has not been In bet- *.t shape for a great many years ! rwui,t of ,he development of an on Th" situxition today ts the reverse of: dinj'ry pigmented mole Intc^ mallg what it has been In past p^esideJltlar J contests. j In the past the Republican party has been united and the Democratic party divided. Today wo are united and the Republicans divided hope lessly so. Tho division are not !o- al, hut general. The more advanced . and enlightened Republicans have ; malignant growth he had always rente to realize that in the language enjoyed good health. This forjn of of President Taft, at Providence, the is very rare. Chinese wall.' has to come down.” 1 1 ♦ ♦ ♦ Inasmuch as one of his kinsmen had been gotten Into trouble, Williams would have to get him into trouble. The story goes that Williams tried to avoid any difficulty and quietly walked away, going to Chapman’s store It seeims that Davenport fol lowed him, and after some words at tacked him. In the tuasl* both men went out of the .store door .in the little plazra at the froat, her* th« fight waa continued as one of Wil liam's legs got fastened between some slats nailed around as banisters, and swaying backward fell and Davenport fell over him and out on the ground. While In this position. It Is said, that Davenport collared William# the latter reached for hie knife and gashed him acroas the musc.e of the left arm and acroes tbe heart. As soon as he waa cut Davenport. It aeeas. loosened his grip on Williams and running a short distance fell; he bl#d profusely, and It was thought he would bleed to death before medical aid could be had. A telephone meseage from Newber ry stated that he was not dead, but was in a critical condition Williams came across Salutie River after th# trouble and spent Tueeday SlgirTil Saluda County. We4ne*day morning on hearing the Davenport waa dead he came to Saluda and delivered him self Into the hand of Sheriff Sample end Ts now occupying a room at the Herlong Hotel.' Williams la a brother-in-law to Governor Blease, and until a few days ago was operating In Saluda County as a special constable. Upon being advised by the supervisor thst a constable was not needed In the nant growth. The mole which uras on Mr. Mott’s right arm showed the first signs of Irritation less than a county both Williams and R. L. Wert* year ago. It developed rapidly Into who was also a constable, were iiie- what Is known as a molane sarcoma, missed by Governor Blease. In case Medical science has no cure for this Davenport should die Williams will disease. Mr Mott was not yet 50 at once surrender himself to Sheriff years old. Until the development of Buford at Newbarry. BLEASE SEES JOE BATES. SI FI FR IN CHICAGO. - The Awful Heat Drives Folks from Their Crowded Home* Th" poor people of the large cities, ! The Governor Visits the Condemned Man In Jail. While in Spartanburg Tuesday n the crowded tenements.! ni * ht Go , v< ;™ or visi u cd the (county Jail .ice HaMt. the former .Spartanburg police officer, under The who liv* suffer greatly from the heat. A Chi- now hold in your hands very largely ' W dispatch says thousands of Peo- p . , , ,, the State of South Carolina for the i^ 1 ' ri'cM Monday night in the parks t , ... next few years at JBast. It, is to he A DEPLORABLE ACCIDENT — ♦ 1 ~ Mr. Luther Hutchinson .Meets Death From Scalding (Ream. Luther E. Hutchinson, an employ* of the Dargan Lumber company's planing mill at Effingham waa fatally scalded by the bursting of a throttle early Friday morning, dying that night. The funeral, which waa la carge of the Woodmen of te World, was held Saturday In the Preebytar- or on the sidewalks In an effort to „ , , . ■ - i , .. commute Bates sentence to life im- presumed that you fully appreciate ^ ^ hnv ! prlsonment and the belief Is here the gravity of the r-sponsihHHy. m dnight the ^ ^ ^ ^ Banes "lal Men sen- which by reason of nrcumstances ering close to 90 and during the hang on three different <*. nipnt it (lin not get below 85. In , ^ » the rrowded West Side district early ? a8ion8 ’ but , ea ^ Gra f 018 atr ° r t Dey 8 Tuesday the sidewalks were lined have succeeded In having the sentence with people who found it Impossible 1 8tave<1 ' A commission appointed re- Indoors, t-—i cently to pass upon Bates sanity governor has recently been asked to ian church Rev. M. B. McL*ughU& conducting the service#. Mr. Hnteh* i irests upon you at this time. There may not he with you the motive tq act that would move a citizen of this state, but many are hoping that you will justify the confidence placed in you by our people. "fn conclusion permit me to sav that If the reprobate who occupies number will be large the governor’s chair can he induced ed H U 16 heat continues. J 'to ac-ept your challenge f which the * • • good people of South Carolina feel ' 8*®® After All sure you will never he able to dot. | Revised figures on the number of Twenty-two permit, to' centl >' to P 388 f$3t88 ’ ( reported that Bates was not insane. He shot and killed a >