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BEYOND. Beyond the prison cell ftelease! t Beyond the stormy passage Peace! Beyond the starless night The great sun's rising? Bevond these wilds a home Of death's devising. After tumultuous years To creep Within a lonely room And sleep! After the exigence Of human hunger, Bread, and lodging, and wine To need no longer! How I have longed for this!? And yet How can I go content? Forget All that was dear in life I Entwined about you? i How can I pass beyond jn peace wiinout you: ?Allan Munier, in the Atlantic. i oes9?*a*a I R?i?5sEralf| $ 0 By ALPHCNSE MURIZ. Don Rafael Alsina lives in fine style in an ancient palace in the _ -pular Trianr. quarter in Seville. Witn 1 the old palace he inherited a large i fortune. This he has more than gou- j bled by a devotion to business which < is "-ceedingly rare in Spain, where the general rule of life is, "Never ] do to-day what you can put off doing 1 untijL to-morrow." His pet hobby, ] aside from making money, has been giving it away. He is honored far ] and wide in Seville for his charitv. i One morning early in May last, 1 two pretty girls, Paquita Vasquez and Rosina Ortiz, called upon him. "We s are laundry girls," said Paquita, i "and knowing you to be rich and j charitable, we have como to ask you 3 to do something for one of our fel- t low workers?a poor widow with six 3 children, who lives in a wretched gar- t ret." I "I shall send her 200 pesetas ($40) c to-day," said Don Alsina, "but why 1 ' did not the poor widow come herself a to get h^lp from me? It is well I known that I am always accessible to any deserving poor person who is in 1 ? need of assistance." i "Our poor friend," answered Pa- g quita, "is old and?and.she has lost 1 all her good looks, senor." i "But I never withhold my aims * from people because the infimities of i j age have robbed them of their good ! -v looks," said Don Alsiaa. "There j a must be some other reason why she t did not call herself." a The girls giggled and exchanged t glances. "The truth is," said Rosita, J "our poof friend thought she would get more from you if we told you her ^ story, because we, so our friends say, are?are rather pretty, senor." Don Alsina laughed and the girls' I VlnpVind "Tho rriMnro cVinxr'c " ho i U1 UOU^U. Jiuw 1I1UVI1 MV said, "that if age has deprived her of beauty, it has increased her wisdom. c , t I shall send her 300 pesetas. Now j * what can I do for her charming ^ representatives in whose selection L sho has shown such excellent judg- * ment?" c t "We leave that to your own gen' arosity, senor," said Paquita; "we t laundress gins are all very poor and c we work very hard." c "And are there among these laundresses who work so hr.rd for such c small pay more girls who are as pretx. ty as you two are?" r "Yes, senor," answered Rosita; 0 "there are some who are much pret- ' Tier?at least, so their sweethearts <?t think." "I fear I hhould hardly agree with their sweethearts," said Don Alsina, _ gallantly, "but I will tell you what I will do. Yesterday I bought a ticket t g In the national lottery, the drawing t for which takes place next week. The number of my ticket is 1S07. I t air. reputed to be a very lucky man. , Send me the names of the five pret- t , tiest laundresses in our quarter, and If my ticket wins the grand prize, 125,000 pesetas ($5000), I promise c to divide it among them. Whatever prize I win ? if I win any ? the j money shall be given to them." 1 _ The u"e girls elected were Manu- t ela Pinedo, Rosita Ortiz, Paquita Vaz<juez, '"ncarnacian Garcia and Lola ] Fernandez, and every night until the , drawing took place these five girls prayed devoutly that the ticket bearing the number 1807 might w^n the grand prize. Ticket No. 1807 won the grand ^ prize, and Don Alsina at once sent { for the happy laundresses and re- < ceived the in his finest apartments, < where he made a pretty speech, deCTJfr daring that no event in his life had '< ever afforded him so much pleasure : and that he was fully prepared to i abide by his promise aDd divide the i 250,000 pesetas among the five pret- ] >' . . ty girls. ' 1 "Oh, you angel!" exclaimel the -< buxom Lola, and, greatly daring, < threw her arms around him and 1 kissed him. Don Alsina said some- : thing that is the Spanish equivalent ; of "next," and each of the other four ] pretty girls in turn followed suit. "Such a delightful experience ] makes me wonder how it has hap- ; pened that I have so long remained ] a bachelor," said Don Alsina when *th'e last of them had finished. But, 1 ^ alas! as I am not a Mohammedan, ] and furthermore as the laws of : Spain forbid polygamy, 1 cannot : mam- all fivp nf vnn T ran nnlv marry one of you. To make choice of that one myself is a task far beyond me. With your consent ! propose to have recourse to a lottery again to settle the matter. Does each one of you agree that she will accept me as a husband for better or .worse, if she draws me?" * I "Yes, senor," anzvered the five girls in chorus. Don Alsina inscribed his name on a slip of paper and folded it up. He took four similar slips that were blank and folded them up. Then he deposited all five papers in a hat. "Now," he said, "the one of the five best and most beautiful girls in Seville who draws from this hat the slip of paper on which my name is written wins me for a husband." Encarnacian stepped forward first, thrust her hand into the hat held by Don Alsina, drew forth a slip of paper and unrolled it. It was blank. She did her best to look as if she did not care mucii, uui it was a poor [ make-believe. " 'L' comes next," said Don Alsina, unmoved. "It's your turn, Lola." Lola drew another blank and could hardly repress her tears. " 'M' follows 'L,' " said Don Alsina. "Now, Manuela, try your luck." Luck declared for Manuela. She drew the slip cf paper on which Don j Alsina had written his name. All I present congratulated Manuela and felicitated the bridegroom-elect, who had so expeditiously and adroitly solved such an embarrassing matrimonial problem. Eut, somehow, Manuela did not seem so ecstatically happy at the prospect of abandoning the life of a laundry girl for the luxury of a palace warranted. Don Alsina did not appear to notice it, however. "I ask you all to be my guests at lunch," he said, "and while that is being prepared, I will show yen over my house." While tney were passing through Don Alsina's stables, in which there vere three carriages and two automobiles, Manuela drew him aside. "I have a confession to make, senor," she said. "I like you very much, but as your wife I fear I should never make you as happy as fou deserve. Notwithstanding all ;hat my parents told you, I assure j; ^m,?UA ? 4-/> iUu my uispusiciuu is> nut ouilc.. l\j ;he domestic life. I lihe too much to )e on the go. Will you not give me me of your automobiles instead of narrying me? Rosita will make you t far better wife than I should, and ! am sure she will gladly marry you." The accommodating Don Alsina eadily agreed. It was a matter of ndifference to him which of the five jirls he married. He had treated natrimony as a lottery and was wiling to take his chances. Rosita jladly consented to take Manuela's dace as his affianced bride. Two reeks later they were mart-ied, and ifter a honeymoon trip through Italy hey returned to Don Alsina's pal.ce, where, according to their friends^ hey were perfectly happy.?Detroit Cews-Tribimc FRISKY OX TEX. CEXTS A DAT. Lnother Cheap Liver Heard From? He Made 52 Centuries Last Year. I was much interested in the acount of two young men whose weeky expenditure for food was $1.27; iut I have beaten that, writes a corespondent of Health Culture. My ood costs me about ten or twelve ents a day, or seventy cents a week. I buy cereals by the case, dates by he seventy ponnu box. I keep a ow, and raise oranges and some ither fruit. If I had to buy the milk ,nd fruit it :~ight sum up to fifteen ents a day. riprpals fnnr rents: milk, five ents; dates three cents?twelve ents a day. This is about the averse, so at most my food costs me .bout a '^lar a week; but as a rule t does not average that. Am fifty years old; have eaten no neat for twenty years; for two and me-half years have followed noireakfast plan, and wouldn't go back o three meals a day. Last year, as a member of the Cenury Road Club of America, I wheeled .1,761 miles and made fifty-two cenuries (100 miles within fourteen icnsecutive ' ours), winning gold nedals for highest honors in both ivents, and was never so uniformly, rigoro"-';' well in my life. You mow that represents lifting many nore foot pounds th-t the work of he average muscle worker. I veighed 144 pounds on January 1, I.904, and 150 pounds on December II, 1904. Little Prince Olaf's Land. The story of the Sunbeam Island, vhich an English lady, Miss Ada Mus*rove, has presented to the little Drown Prince Olaf of Norway, is one Df curious interest. Sunbeam Island, or Fortin Bras, is it is now going to be called, is ibout 20,000 square yards in size, md is situated in the lovely Godo Sound, a famous summer resort three 9 ? * T> A kAMt /? ?_ iiuurs sa.11 lium Dcigcu., auuul in:een years ago Mr. John Musgrove, m Englishman, spent the summer at Glodo Sound and bought the island, svhich was then a complete wilderness. He imported new turf mould and worked hard until the island dad a wood of about 12,000 trees. He also built a comfortable roomy liouse and a small water works. The garden of the house is beautifully arranged with small ponds and greens. Mr. Musgrove lived with a relative on this fairy island, the views from which are r,o impressive and romantic, until a few years ago, when he presented the property to Miss Ada Musgrove. Miss Musgrove wrote to Queen Maud and asked her permission to give the island to her son, and on their Majesties' visit to Bergen the necessary documents, as well as a series of pictures of the island photographed by Miss Musgrove herself, were delivered to the Queen.?< Manchester Daily Mail. i | ^ rti i*h rh m rti Hi. rTi. r J i jPaluietto State lews! 1 L ~1v v?r v v ? v f Religion Crazes Negroes. Crazed by religion, four well-to-do negroes?Read Anderson, his daughter and two sons?ran amuck in a remote section of Anderson county, atiacked and stoned several white persons and destroyed property. The Anj dersons finally barricaded themselves I in their hemes, defying arrest. Dr. i \V. A. Tripp, whom the police sought to have enter the house and drug the maniacal negroes, was shot ahd thrown bodily mrougn tne aoor. ins negroes were not overpowered until Read Anderson was killed. The Andersons own valuable farming prop* erty, and were highly respected by the whites. The survivors were lodged in jail. * * * Company to Extend Service. The Charleston Steamship company, operating a line of steamers between Charleston and Georgetown and points on the Pedee river, nas de- I termined to extend its service and run a line of steamers between Charleston and Baltimore. The idea is to have two vessels, sailing from each port every week. The capital stock of ihe company is to be increased to $100,000, and a committee of business men are now soliciting subscriptions lor tbc increase and The company is expected to rocorganize October 1st. * * Charleston's Invite to Georgia. The Charleston commercial organi rations stand ready to assist in mak- j ing the presentation of the testimonial of the people of Georgia to the new battleship Georgia a great success if the presentation will take place in Charleston harbor. It is possible for the fine ship to steam into Charleston harbor and drop anchor within stone's throw of the water front, and since there is not a Georgia haibor allowing the vessel to enter, Charleston will he glad to have the people of Georgia come in large number and let the presentation take place in her harbor. This is accounted a better place ihan having the ship cake position three miles off Tybee at Savannah, out of sight of thousands who "could witness the event if it was held at Charleston. Reduced rates might be had and there are accommodations for all the Georgians who would come, and a hospitable welcome would be given to the visitors. * * * I Historian and Poet Dead. After an extended illness, result- j ing from an accidental fall down a .e lair way last February, John A. Chapman, the venerable historian, poet and patriot, died at the home of his son, John W. Chapman, in Newberry, | a fow days ago. Mr. Cl-.apman v,*as horn in EdgeQeld county, in 1S21, and resided in Newberry for the past fifty years. In 1SS4 lie retired from active business life, and devoted' his time to literary pursuits. Mr Chapman's first work was 'The Walk and Other Poeins," published in 1873. "Within the Vail" and "Verses for Old and Young" appeared later. Kis best work in the poetic line still remains in manuscript. Mr. Chapman for several years In the early seventies was one of the publishers of The Lutheran Visitor, and in 1.878 accepted the editorial chair of The Newberry News. He filled this chair very acceptably for some years. Perhaps Mr. Chapman's most important work along the literary line was his completion of "The Annals of Newberry" up to 1890. The first part of this volume was "Written by Chief Justice John Belton' O'Neal, which extended to I860. Here the work was taken up by John A. Chapman, and completed through The year 1890. In 1893 "Chapman's School History of South Carolina appeared, and was adopted the same year for use in trie public schools of the stare. He is also credited with the authorship of "Stephens' History of ihe United States." * * * Lyon Talks of Dispensary. "If the present legislature doesn't; - * -foto Sienpnsarv out Of SOUlh | (JUL LUC .Itavi. - - . Carolina, the next one will. The vote [ it the people has shown clearly what i they think about it." So says J. F. Lyon, who won out in the strenuous fight for attorney general. "The people will no longer permit Senator Tillman to dictate how they shall vote and what they shall think," remarked Mr. Lyon, contemplatively, j "I believe that they would have re-; turned him to the senate, no matter ( who opposed him?but he can't run ! the whole state." The election of Ansel and Lyon means that South Carolina is tired , of the state dispensary and its graft. Mr. Lyon, then a member of the lower house, was a live wire in the investigating committee which turned up so many things in the dispensary management that the business looked like \ an insurance trust in the packing- J house district. He was willing to talk about some of them. ? k "For instance," he said, "the stale dispensary was paying a Chattanooga I whisky house $3 a gallon for whisky, I which was sold in Chattanooga for $1 75 a gallon. True, it was delivered at the dispensary, but that cost only 3 or 6 cents. Then a house up east received a rush order for labels enough to cover several millions of dollars' worth of whisky and the dispensary paid $35,000 for the lot. We got bids for duplicating the order from other firms for from $7,000 to S9,GOO. The president of the glass company which makes bottles for the dispensary admitted afterwards that by cancelling their contract and letting a new one the committee saved the state over $30,000. These are just a few straws which show which way the wind blows. "Dicl Tillman use his pitchfork on me? Well, ~ather. He got stirred up first because our committee delayed matters, as he said, while we were holding up the whisky bills to make the whisky men talk. He intimated that the committee was doing a little gratfing on its own account. Then I made a few remarks about a rebate which had disappeared while Tillman was governor ana sain something about a piano which was said to ha\e arrived at Tillman's home with the compliments of a whisky dealer. And after that Mr. Tillman acted as if he didift want me to be elected." * * A Blow to Dispensary. A Columbia dispatch says: The death of State Senator W. E. Johnson cf Aiken may have more to do with the overthrow of the state dispensary system in South Carolina even than the election of an antidispensary governor in the person of Martin F. Ansel. In the senate Johnson was an influential man, and an ardent supporter of the dispensary system. So far as the politcians can now figure out. the house of representatives recently elected will contain a majority against the dispensary. The last house was anti-dispensary, but tbe ^ Imi.I TT/> i rt f o Hem a* uiajumj vi uvc in iavor of the dispensary and killed the ill to destroy the institution which the house passed. Since the recent elections, in which Ansel was nominated for governor on an anti-dispensary platform, it is calculated that tJiere are twenty senators favorable to ?he dispensary and two in doubt. Johnson ha1 been counted among the twenty dispensary senators. His successor will be elected within the next few weeks and both dispensary and anti-dispensary factions will make a hard fight to carry the county. The ioss of this vote by the dispensary clement may mean the loss of the majority in the senate. In the second primary election between Ansel rncl Manning for governor, Ansd received in Aiken county 1.5.15 votes i.nd $46 went to Manning, showimr ihsit the countv on a test is opposed to ihe dispensary. Tvo of the three representatives elected trom the county are also opposed to the state dispensary, being elected on a local option platform. REBELS OFFER TO GIVE UP. , Emissary Makes Surrender Proposition to Commander of Denver. An extraordinary incident in connection with the presence of an American warship in Havana happened late Thursday evening, when Commander Colwell was approached by an accredited emissary of Alfredo Zaya3, president of the liberal party, and General Loynaz del Castillo, commander of the insurgent forces in Havana province, with a signed offer from each of the men named to surrender their commands and hand over their arms to Commander Colwell on the sole condition that the United States government, through him, guarantee fair and Judicial trials. Commander Colwell, accompanied by Charge de Affaires Sleeper, immediately carried the opposition to President Palma.The president was immensely pleased, and asked Commander Colwell If he would accept the surrender. Commander Col. well replied in the negative, but ad-. vised the president to communicate with the Washington government on the subject, which was done accordingly. TEXAS MOB IN ACTION. " f Negro Swung Up For Using Knife on White Man in a Fight. At Rosebud, Texas, Saturday night, a crowd of one hundred farmers hanged Mitchell Frazier, a negro. Frazier pushed Frank Hess, a white farmer, from a walk. Hess struck the negro, and the latter used a knife ficelv on Hess. The mob stormed the town prison, where the negro was confined and tool, him to a nearby scaffolding iiipporting an overhead tank and hanged him. Members of the mob were not armed nor masked. BRYAN IN CINCINNATI. Makes Speeh to Big Crow from Stand Erected in Baseball Park. Introduced by Mayor E. J. Demp- j eey, and speaking from a stand erect- j ed over the diamond of the Cincinnati j baseball park, William J. Bryan Thurs- { day night addressed an audience that ! occupied all the 10,000 seats in the grand stand, and several thousand additional chairs. .-s? . - ."j . " * t T' - >- 4\ ' ' r "CAUGHT AT LAST"] * Was Bemoaning Cry of Alexander, Exile Embezzler. ARRESTED IN PITTSBURG Fled From Augusta, Ga., Last July After "'Hitting" Banks for Nearly $200,000?Broken in Health and Spirits. Broken in health and spirits by the tterrible experiences of the past three months, Thomas W. Alexander, formerly a wealthy broker and prominent society leader of Augusta, Ga., was arrested in a hotel at Pittsburg, Pa., Sunday night charged with the forgery of documents on which he is said to have realized $200,000 before his sudden departure from Augusta two months ago. Alexander and his brother were partners in a brokerage business, and his downfall is attributed to speculation in cotton. The prisoner was permitted to remain temporarily in his room at the hotel under guard of two detectives. He signified his willingness to return to Augusta without requisition papers. "I would face my accusers a thousand times rather than live the past two months over again," sobbed the prisoner, as he sat in his room. Since his hurried departure fromAugusta, after his financial crash, Alexander has been a fugitive. Traveling almost constantly, he has been in hourly dread of arrest. He managed to elude the officers in New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis. Chicago and other cities, until: with his nerves almost jompletely wrecked, he finally ai rived in Pittsburg Friday. Going to a hotel he registered as Thomas W. Burton. He had not been in the city more than a few hours un til the Augusta officials who had been tracing hirn knew of his whereabouts. When the detectives walked up to Alexander in the lobby of the hotel,-be was nervously pacing back and forth, his' chin sunk upon his breast "You are under arrest, Mx. Alexander," said one of the officers. "My. God: caught at last! Hurry, take me out of this crowd," was the reply. The detectivesj escorted him to his room. There he broke down completely. At first he was not wiiling to return to Augusta without a legal fight. He seemed to dread his return in disgrace to the city where only two months ago he Was one of the leading business and club men. Finally he consented to go without a requisition 1 Alexander at the time of his disappearance. was a man of remarkably striking appearance", tall and wellbuilt, with a clear eye, and nerves of steel. The man who will go back to answer to tbe many criminal charges is stoop-shouldered, nervous, and but a shadow of his former self. He told the officers that after making his escape he traveled constantly. BRYAN AGAINST INTERVENTION. Says United States Has No Business Interfering in Cuban Affairs. William Jennings Bryan Sunday night gave the first expression he has made on the present Cuban situation. When seen in his car just before he left Roanoke. Va., for Lynchburg, and nr.l/A/9 I f a^n.cu il ixc wuuiu caj any 111111% about the situation in Cuba, Mr. Bryan dictated the following statement: "I am very glad the administration recalled the troops landed at Havana. While we should do all in our power io bring about peace by offering the good offices of our country we have no business interfering with their local affairs. They must settle the disputes among themselves, but I would be glad if both parties would be willing to accept mediation with the idea of bringing about an agreement through the good offices of our government.'' natural' death for trepoff. Russian Tyrant Passes Away Through Attack of Angina Pectoris. A fit. Petersburg dispatch says: General l>imitri Frodovich Trepoif, commandant of the imperial palace, died Saturday evening in his villa at Poterhoff, of angina pectoris.. General Trepoff, whose name was linked with reaction and oppression in Russia, was in many respects a remarkable man. He was a natural desist, a tyrant by inclination, education and conviction. BACON OPPOSED TO PLAN. Georgia Senator Does Not Agree With Bryan Ownership Propaganda. Senator A. 0. Bacon of Georgia, one of the recognized democratic leaders cf the senate, does not agree with Mr. Bryan's propaganda for the government ownership of railroads. Passing through "VVashington Moaday en route to Atlantic City, where he will take a rest, Senator Bacon spoke emphatically in opposition to th&? ownership plan advocated by Mr. Bryan. % ' . v; ' CUBANS BADLY SCARED. Threat of Intervention Causes Palma M to Issue Peace Decree?Roose?. . ? -. y? velt's Letter Sole Topic. 7 < The great topic of conversation to ^ j ./ t**-? -ft J lie exclusion, of everything else in M Havana Saturday was President Roose velt's latter regarding the situation. President Palnta declined to be iDter> viewed on the subject, but it is known < y that he has every confidence of a 4 square deal." Con.man.ler Colwell cabled the navy \r department that the revolution lead- p eis assured him that they had ceased hostilities and again offered to bring * . him their arm?, etc., and disband their lorces. Commander Coiwell stated he belie /ou that he could., if authorized, end the insurrection at /.-J once. Up to Sunday night, however, no instructions in this connection had beea 'f"\ received. The commander also reported to the department that negotiations for peace had been opened with thai government, and that he believed an. end of the trouble would result He f added that he was informed constantly" as to the attitude of the revolutionary -;S\-j leaders. in an open letter, Alfredo Zaya*, ^ president of the liberal party, offers y ; crx behalf of the liberals to negotiate peace on the basis that Senor Palrna * ; shall continue as president; that two- "' of the cabinet ministers shall be men*- ^ fcers of the liberal party; that the municipal officers removed last year ' shall be restored; that tho electoral laws shall be revised and t^at new ' V*- r: elections., of senators and represents tives shall be held, and also elections __ / of governors and provincial officers'to < iyi the vacancies of those removed. % last December. Senor Zayas says thf? v the revolutionists have suspected all the* time that peace parleying wasgoing on; that the government was ex- ,'</: pecting help from the United States, 'ifv Three American warships are the most imposing and interesting objects; . cn Havana bay. Their presence un- *'Jos designedly, yet pointedly, is typical the fact that it is the intention of the United States to take a hand In r Cuban affairs to the extent at least^||| o! bringing order out or the ^present' y'r. chaotic conditions. On the other hand the government c |4e is makiiig final strenuous efforts tp N. restore peace in *jhe island and avoid any kind of American Interveti^^i^g tion. The object of these endeavors;** -^ J| it is stated, is that it may be able to: say by the time Secretary of Wai"U':$lj Taft and Acting Secretary of -Stat^t|^^ ??acon arrive that peace has been sef *MT' cured and therefore there is no need . for the American government's inters' vonticn, either to restore peace or insure permanent tranquility. Members of the government state* they are making efforts in connectl^d^l^ with the advice in President Roose-SfSW velt's letter; that they have no ob-X'y-^ jection to the friendly assistance o? the United States in the matter if it becomes necessary, but they behe^d/Mgre they can settle it between the government and the revolutionists without-^^ the necessity of anyHutervention. ^ ^ least, they say, they are making an attempt to accomplish this end uih aided, with fair prospects of success., i- S This is the latest phase of a rapi<HT<<3? changing situation that developed late Sunday afternoon when an extraordi- ; ^ nary gazette was issued containing \ a peace decree signed by President .-^1 Palma. THIS PRISONER 18 OWN JAILER, yjU :'z Turpin Contemplates 8uing For Wages For Unique Services. Emmet Turpin is his own jailer at 'U Nashville, Ir.d. He is a prisoner in the Erown county log jail at that jdace. Being his own jailer, Turpin be- f ; lieves he ought to be paid, for bis set* vices an-1 is contemplating suit for the wages usually paid jailers. / Late last fall Turpin was arrested ^ and fined heavily for violation of f. the liquor laws. He could not raise enough money to pay up. Being a con- ^ scientious man, he philosophically i ^ went to jail. There being no jailer, Turpin himself took charge. For nearly 25A days he has been prisoner, jailer and janitor. DOCTORS ACT DISGRACEFULLY, . ^ While They Wrangle Injured Men Died and Others Suffered. Two persons were lulled and thirty "Cl V were injured by the collision of two : hea-vlly loaded electric cars in Saa ^ Francisco Sunday. Following the ae \ j uvriit, ct wiasi. ui autiiuixtjr uv;v;uircu between surgeons of the railway and y City Emergency hospitdl as to who should render aid to the wounded. The IK lice finally took a hand and the injured#were taken to the Central Emer- ^ gency hospital V MEAT FULL OF MAGGOTS* . *<0 Atlanta Inspector Unearths Awful Con- v.--'y ditions in Sausage Factory. An Atlanta inspector condemned about 160 pounds of scrap meat in the Enterprise Sausage company's plant ^ at 125 Peters street Friday afternoon.' ?C > In a large part of the meat, sent in by local butchers to be ground into .. * sausage, maggots were working. Part +% f: of the condemned stuff was rotting <- 7^ and much of it had turned green. *' 'y t' ^