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ES6a0 -~~~ ~E -3BERRY. S. C ., FRIA Yf 1,E MARCH 27, 1903TIEAWEE, :5 A INTBRMBDIATB SCHOOLS. Miss McClintock Says This Question Most Important To Be Discussed By Federated Woman's Clubs. The following interview with Miss McClintock upon the importance of intermediate schools for the South and the good work which may be done towarda securing them by the approaching convention of the Fed erated Clubs for Woman's Work to be held in Columbia is from the Col umbia State. Miss McClintock is pres. ident of the Presbyterian College for Women in Columbia. and is the talented and accomplished daughter of Dr. E. P. McClintock, of Now berry. The State says: There is an immense amount of interest in the convention of the Fed oration of Woman's Clubs, which be gir.s hero on April 21, and those per. sons who are laboring under the im pression that the ladies are coming here from all over South Carolina to (iscusA new Parisian vogues, multi colored spring gowns, lingerie and all the fol de rol that sometimes makes the heart, of woman glad n:igkt just as well dissipate the idea Neither is it the purpose, so far as can be ascertained, to seriously con sider the advisability of bifurcated or abbreviated skirts, after the fash ion of the Rainy Daises and Sorosis. Very different snbjects will inter est the hundred or more delegates and some of t.hese are of the deepest posible interest to the people of South Carolina and of vital import ance to the welfare and advancement of the whole State. Among these is the edocational question. Miss Euphemia McClintock, the president of the Presbyterian College for Wro men, who will be a sort of steering committee for the convention, ro ceived a letter from the president of the federation yesterday and it has been practically decided that the morning and afternoon Resions will Lhe given up to business and the evenings the ladies will give up to recreation. On Thursday evening there will be a music and art reception at the Presbyterihn college, which Miss McClintock hopes to make exceed ingly interesting. The (1Uestion of advancing the usefulness of the State schools and the paramount importance of intermediate institu. tions will iii all probability be the all consuming theme for discussion. Miss McClintock, who is a South Carolinitn by all tates ani inlclina t.o,has made an e'xhaiust ive stutdy of sociological conitions ini thbe St ate and she is frank in the st.atemenmtt hat t.hi' tim ~e c~sL~io for reiid>rms and increasedi( educational ad vanttages. T1he conditions that obtain att her own college tire a pretty sfo fei ndien ion of the way the ltind lies anid Miss McCliUnttock po its with patrdlonable pritdt t o the fant t hat last. week fo r thie ilrst Liimne in the list. ry of the institution the, PresbytIerian college had t) tniru aiway a yoeung lady tip plicanit biecause the c>l Ilegd did not have roomi ini ite bohtardling dIepart. moent . The noenc,nsitry for int ermi dliat schoeols, in advance of the pres outt gradol~s, slhe ' tiks, i4 atll desir allt andl that i, ''se tf I bie th'ings that. will be tatj' ttn; wit bi mneuh titrnest ness by' ie fed'1erat itn at its appijroainnItg se'ssi ins Mneh gooti ion antd the h-gitlbit aur.' r'tud to ii to say on this sunbje'ct wvill dnhlt lesm have great weightli wn b ihe declegat es as she uns been r,unirkl,y su VCiccess ftul alonig certasin lines. She ex plainted compj rehieivel3 her idleas yesterdntay t) the write] amid ani envi ronmen'!t. thIat p)erhiapt no0 other woni mi's col legt'----or an3 other college for that matter-cat boast of itn the worldl. "When a girl comes here,"' sail Miss McClintock, "'slie very oftei ctmes dlirectly3 fromi lher homet aind wi have tried to retain tthe ttmosphere.' Miss McClintock pauiised, and1( th< writer glanced1 over t ht batiifiu grounlds otn a scone oif sy Ivan beaut) which just at he monntt wasth very 'acmne of naittire's best art. The 01(d gardens aib,mt, thle clas5si ample of ante bellum landscape gar. dening in the south, and yesterday they had on their best dress. It wa, high noon and the brilliant sun rays fell through the forest of trees on beds of luxuriant violets, bay trees, sweet olive, clinging vines of wistaria jessamine and the thousand and ont rare plants that grace the grounds in rare brilliance. The rippling melody of innumerable song birds fillea the air, rustling spring zephyrs stirring an accompaniment among the bud ding leaves radiantly green. Here and there through the vistas of hedge and clinging vines now and then one caught a glimpse of some pretty giri in white. In all verity the atmos phere seems to have been preserved. Discussing the needs of the State in an educational way Miss McoClin tock said after the writer had come back to thf prosaic that because t here was no high school in the State the colleges were now compelled to take girls that were really not far enough advanced. This was not as it should be and she hoped very much that something would come out. of the discussion of the Federation. "Are you im favor of the very ad vanced ideas' that exist in the big colleges of the east, Miss McClin tock ?" "I am in favor of anything that fits the woman more thoroughly for her duties in the home. I am a firm believer in mind training and I do not believe in teaching the girl math ematics because she may need that study later on, but because of the in fluence on her inind. There is soie thing she should know besides the polite accomplishments." Miss McClintock's attention was called to the immense harm that had been done by some of the great east ern colleges for women. It was meni tioned to her that in a little village in Maine the other day it was dis covered that among 1,700 women in. habitants there had been only seven marriages in the last five years. A large proportion of the women in that place were college women. Miss McClintock answered the relative query by saying that out of five of her students that would graduate this year only one intended to accept, a calling. "There is no danger of any such results here," said Miss McClintock. "The southern girl cannot stand the drive that a girl in the north can. They have to be nurtured and cared for and fo.r that. reason all the condi tions for her advanement should be of the best.'' Mis. MleClintock weont on to ex plain that tihe college education she hoh eves ini and( practices is the onie which hest fits the girl for her home life. 'T' polite accom plishments are of course necessary, but there must be somet hing more-son et hing t hat trains the mind. The writer tried to gather fromi Miss McClintock just how far this education must go, and called her attention to the fact. thnat the number of Vassar, Wellesley and girls from thle other big colleges ini the northi and east. who did not or could rnot miiarry wans emnrmous11. Of thle gil h, graduiiated' at Va-sair in 1890t onlIy about 22 pri cen'it. have' married at this late day. Tniris inf ormat ion dIid not seemi to cause MIiss McCl initock t he least aix. jet . She did not say so, buit it. was iinferre-d t hat it. was cintirely dliffereint withI Souith Carolina girls. T1hier'' was al way s a rising matrimonial mnarket for t henm Tlhu writer ennught a glimpmns of t wo y'ounmg ladies going do) wn t he' pict ure'(squen hl I-onet w ith a figure and1( face like Hlohe, and the other a little GIretlcn who wotn!d hamve sent Chart rain into raptures couild he but have soon lher -and im me di atel'y arri ved at ani iapprec iat ion of Miiss McClintock's failure to he coimo iaarmedl at t he po ssibhIe failur c Iof her st udenits to entern wedlock As a umater of facet it was Iearniet lateor t hat. she. c amnniot even keep lhm eacheors from marrying- thue engage men t of MIiss l:hiiipi s, one' of tIn imost. charming of those, having onl) recently been ann11 Ionee. That is perhaps one of Ihle sub ject; that will inot ha' tarkeni up at the muot ings of the I'Xdoirat ion of Women', Clubs. CONFERENCE FOR EDUCATION. Sixth Session in the South Meets April 2: to 24, 1903, at Richmond, Virginia. Richmond, Va., March 26.-Th< Sixth Session of the Conference foi Education in the South will be open ed in Richmond on the the afternoot of Wednesday, April 22d, and wil close on the evening of the 24th. This body was formally known as the Capon-Spring Conference. Iti annual meeting was held last yea, at Athens. (Ia., and in the precediug year the Conference gathered al \Vinston Salem, N. C. The presid ing officer is Mr. Robert C. Ogden, of New York City, and among the ten mlost closely connected with itt origin wHs t he late Dr. J. L. M1 Curry, agent of the Peabody and Slater Boards, member of the Goner al Education Board, and supervising direct or of Ihe Southern Educatioe Board. Inioed, both the Souther[ and (eneral Boards may bo said tc owe their existence and inspiration to the Conference for Education in the Soub jnst. as this Conference so largely owed its own inception to the work of )r. Curry. The decision to hold the Con for encO this Near in Richmond waF reached only after the Executive Committee had give careful and re spective coos-deration to the invita tions from a minber of representa tive Southern cities. The invitation to IR ichmond was cordially and earn stl,y piresented by the Richmuond E(dicationIal Assoeiation, the Rich. tond Chamber of Commerce, the overitor of Virgiiia, the Legisla taree, the State Department of Edu cation, the University of Virginia, Washington and Leo University, and many other representative institu tions of he commoniwealth. The ('otsfterence nswill open fot organization in Richmond on the aftonto'ot Of April 22d, in the Acad. emy of Mns c, on litgh th street, bo tween (raco and Franklin streets, .'he formal opening will occur cu the evening of the 22d, at whicl time the Hon. A. J. Montague, the Governor of Virginia, will delivet the address of welcome, and Mr Robert C. Ogden will present the annual address of the president. The interest, of the program will cont inu until its close on the evening of the 24th. Representative educa tors, sIatesten, ment of letters and nien of atfairs will he present from every sett fin of t..e conitry. Mu imp~ortanen4 will be given to such subjects as atgricuilture antd technical eduentti, atid there will be oppor. tunity for informal disculssion of such topieQs as5 thle conisol idat ion of schoolt and the inmprovemlent of public school houses anid school surround. mngs. Thle local airrantgementsI as to th<4 mnentin'g are ini the hands of the Ex. eentiv'e Commiiittee of thie Richmond Educat ion Asstciat ion, P. (O. Box ($88 Rilihmonid, Va. Th'le program, ii fuill, will bie p)ublishied at an earl2 (date. Th'le plauts for t he weekt wil intclutde a puulic service ini memor of D)r. Curry. A rratngemienits as8 to reduced1 farei over the rilroads, and( ats to hote and1( boardingt hiotue atccomnmodlationsi wvill bie annilouniced within a few dlays W hilei the Contf''reunce for Educat tion in the Sou t has hiad nio sect iona or po~lit ia l tinrice, it. hais bee, of decid(ed( valuno to t he earnest ami putiblic sirt ted repr'tes.ent at ives of hotl sect ions. It ha s revealed to thI iSoth th le symttpithetic and1( piraction in t erest oif tht lairg(l t,umber o Nort horn mnen whlo wish to hielp wvith out hmndering, andu wVho wish to cc 0operte twithlonut intIe rforenice. Tlh Contferencee hast help1ed to reveatl th t ioal Norl h, itn its broad, frank, get. orous Amrcaii - the North . comlinun ''lM ses an fraternail kinli Itess. reveal t hie S. n t h. A d ist inoguiishei of li' ha isest andiu brtoades't uses t the Confe retc was' ithe pa rt jit ht layd i th edneat11in of the con try at Ilarge as t) Sothernt conidl tions. Tlheu Con ftohretnce's for Souitiher Ednteatntin have beinl.''' int a very em sensoi, to educato the iutorest and sent'ment. of the North. They have shown to the North nti only the pe culiar ditlicultios with which the South must deal, but they have also 3 disclosed the great, forces of heroic r and resourceful purpose with which - the people of the South are respond. ing to these difliculties The place of this Conference in the life and interest of the South is t indicated by the fact that its result. ing t:rganizations, the General and Southern Education Boards, have ro ceoived the cordial co operation of the Bureau of Education in every South ern State. Such gatherings, moreover, are not the outgrowth of only one or two lo calities or of only ote gronp of imen. They represeit the governing point of many lines of interest. and co operation. And yet the Cotn ference has taken its plice in Southern lifee largely because it hits done so much to create aid to interpret what runy be called the eharncteristic genius of the two Boards to which reference has just boon mnalo. The success of the General and Southern Education Boeards (organi. zations but little ntoe ithan a year old) has bello duee not. so miuch to any new element in their methods or to any distitinctive qualty in their per sonnel, but rather to the spirit in which their tmethodls an)d their pear sonnel have touched hie inteerests of the South. Theso Iboardis have toucliede the life of the South not upon the as su1m1ption that local initiatIve is ah sent, but upon the assum pt.iotn that the many noble evidences of its exist. once inay well challenge t he co-oper ation of an intelligent patriotismi inl the country at. largo. They have worked not, upon the utderstanding that the failure of earliesttiess do. mnands the offensive solicitude of tho missionary, but ill tcordial apprecia tion of the fact that the i,outh, with an aindant eariestness, in trying to bear alone those burdens which the whole country has cretted, (de serves in her nit ional task sotet hinig of at national response. In fulfilmont. of this spirit the Coi ference for Education in the Soul It has invited to its sessions hundreds of representativo citizens from every section of the country, tlthough the Conference will be open to all who may be interestoi in the subject of its deliberations. These will gather in Richmond for the fort her earnest consideorationl of thet great cause which Dr. Curry loved to diescrihe in his own sim plo demiocrat ic pihraso as "'the educationi of all the people."' Thle outlook for a large and repro. senltat ive attonidanice is particuilarly MENi Wil0 SERtVED IN "1Till WAR." Southern Governors Who will Aid In Com-~ pleting the Roll of their Respec tive States. WVashlungtoii, March 2..---Thie Sec. retary of Witr h as rece i ved hitter('s Ifronm t lhe Governors of t he Stiat ('5 of Mississipp)ji, Louisianta, K eitutcky, G.eorgia, V7irgii andl North Ct( aro lia poisintg theti r hteaty c4 opert' 1at ion ini thle plainsof (Gent. A in sworthl, chief of the recordl tal letion ollica', for the pubiilcttiot of thle ntamtes of -oilicors andtt enilisltl mntti who be Iarms for th ItnU tion ir for t he Coni fedolrnecy dumrinig I ho ( itfetert. I war.' Gioverntor lI arti, oft Il.nit ,n, says13 ini his h-tIer: "This publication will be- ext retita fly gratlif. ing, 1 am Statw, to atll ili pletiai if tiIls Stati., fl aodaianttrl andl ptrt ioarly t o t he I -ta iciat ini the gre'at situgI. a,<l t o thi dlescenadantts uof tose who'ii have paiss huas tny entire apparobtio and 1(11cott monrdatiton, andtt I tdesi ra to aissitrr y'ou of myi) rdit(ltsx toa Oxt tott Ia i all I he as5sistat.ce ihat v.ill biea i m Th'lIe lealiig etl-tuo ta a It ; at w ill moot wit Staie Supeaarintatit for th putrpotsa uf dIiscu.-sintg tht< best m thodca s hv whih thle ru ra publhIic scht-ooIs can he i st rngtheIt (1( . and to organizta a sysxtenoitic move SOUTH CAROLINA NEWS. Items of More or Less Interest Condensed In the State. The Bell Telephone Company has entered Abbeville under agreement with the Abbevillo Telephone Com pany by which the Abbeville com pany agrees to use only fixtures manufactured by the Bell people. J. L. Snipes, formerly of Ander son killed himself by taking an over dose of morphine in Wilmington, N. C. He was 48 years old and leaves a wife and several children. Melan. cholia from drinking the cause. Assistant Adjutant Genonal Pat rick says that it is expected that the Stato troops will be furnished by the Foedoral government with Krag-Jor genson riles and khaki uniforms within the next sixty days. A roofing company, which will tanufacture a new style of roofing, has recently been organizood in An. derson and has applied for a charter. It will be known as the Granolitieh Roofing Company. Work is now well under way on Greenwood Cotton Mill No. 2. The construction work is being pushed and Greenwood will sooi have two big mills in operation. It has been annouiced that North. eri capitalists will build one of the largest tourist, hotels in the Stato at utesburg. The hotel will have A track, polo grounds, drives, gane preserves, etc. Chas. 11. German, t ihe mtigist rate at Langley who skipped with ('ounnty funds about a year ago, has been arrested near Rome, (Ia., after heing shot, in the arm. He left a wife and child at Langley and married another after leaving. The father of wife No. 2 has gone on his bond antI wife No. I is pushing the snit. against himi. R W. McDlaniel, recently con vicetd of killing Policenman Neese in Lo'xinglon and sent to the peniten titry has been carried back to I,ex ingt.o:, jail. Ho was imprisoned im fore not ice of appsual was given. It is reported from 'inowood iii Pickeus County that the oat crop inl that section has been almost totally ruined by the Hessian fly. The Mletropolitan Club will occupy the ontiro twelfth story of Colnumbia's now skyscraper. A Chamber of Comimierce has been orgniiized 1in Anderson anid has gonie down to steady work. It is reported fronm Union that thIe roadts of that county are abniost im. pIassablle for even horseback ridor~s. Mr. WVilliam Talbert, conductor of the C. & WV. C., was knockett fromt lie sidle of a box ear ini Anderson , fallhnrg on his arrm arid hiavinrg sovo ral blonle biroken. Clhicco, k inrg of the Charlostoun blind tigers, was raided ont Tuesdlay. As the newspapers expr.ess ii, thire waus hi -I for a tirme onr "Chricco st reet.'' Only ai small <pianrtity of litiuor was seize.1 One-Way Settlers' Rtates. The Atlantic Coast I ine IRailroad Coimpany will piarticipate in one-way set tler's rates from Ohio andI M ississip I i iiveri gateways - :fC iniat i, O h io, ciah, Ky., Cairo, Ill., St. I,ouis, Mo., andI points beyonde, also in b)asinig rate(s from MIemphIis, Tenmr. , ( ticket ( n ot to bet soldl firmN ('lemphis proper), for p oiits on and North of the lirne of the l"risco System (Memphis to K<anisas (i y ) , to the dlestirnations located on this systeml or~ to which this comupany~ [forms patrt of an authoriz.ed ticketing iou t', at rate of (one-half (of the st and ard onto way fare pilus $2.00. D)ates of sale inrclude from andI he tweenQr March 3 and( Novetme 1,7, I1903;. F'or furrthier in formiationi see ticket agent. LIFE OF YOUNG GIRtL 1tUJNI~Ib. Mairried Marn lii Iartsville, S. t:., After Few bays Aequin1itanee, lnt Sihe's Not Ills Wife D Ieserled. (Chtar lotto0 Obser ve rd At the boarding honse of Mirs. ,JoIhnl H entderson, ton Norm hi Tlr yon Ht rect , a prtty womrant andu a bride lhas wuaited aL woek for the .etnnrn of her huisbandr.I The womtarn, whot is qutito younrg aitd brido, aid tl}t tho rtal wife of he Ihaband is Htili living. The girl is lliyl M11i ary 1lIuvaitllo o IIartsville, tirlingt oii ounty, S. C Sho t.hought lln' il at dayt or so ago tha sle wts Mrs. .Juji ii1s A11an1uH F'ou months ago Hill mot " i Manu14 in Harts Ville and beca(1c (MiIO 'ngagod to him, aim whl h(r lloth'r objoeted to til match sho ria atway to Korshaw, 8 C., and( was1 nlarr"i((1 to Maus. Tha' was tlreo wo(1k t ago. A fortnight ag4 tho young coupih cam10 horc ttnl olnttg(gI hoard ant lodging it NIrs I1litlorMon's. Manut climiue(d that lIt hlot bee(1n I su1 rinl told nt of i 'otttn ruill and that ht e%xpected1i to S4cu'1r11"( work it Charlotte Evory tuorning d11"uring his t.tay here ho wohil(aovi t' ( h4 h.m+st 1trly, taking his diinne1r with hin, tl would niol roturn until th(1 Into tafttornoon. A we ok igo Sait ii rdaiy, t ho li tb iIt. M1anuH d1i8}appear1-( . Prior to his (de p)arturo h.e hald taktn fromII th(+ womlan ho hadl illI'ga Illy Itrril( ( all th mlonoy Hho had, about $2;. In1 tt e.. nv(rs:tt I t wit h Oluof of )o lice Irwin tinol an Obsorvotr r(+lport( yostoriay ift rni n l Mias Nl i'nviilh( Htated t hat Hh11 wonjId I,eVo l8 ti itrn iig for lLitrtsvill(, hrr fIorlt r homo. Hot mothe"r had w1r1 1i to r. I. 11 WeddI(ington, ebairmnan (,f th(1 ounnt commllissionersH, . Sking thatt hl ridauigh for be Hs111nt ck homeo; aInd tho youngt w( man *"11d1 h(" wouhdi'vor hav(+ a t ht''r i i 1 nt t'it s pI(11"C,'4 m1tii aHim tgliin saw h( r 11t 11h(i . NI als nt( only b,41. h(r p l( ,("- but fil1 tc pay ay pillmrt of the o Ir bir 1111 1uc )' t ho collll(. "I want o tnkl MIr. litis ufl'r,' saitd Nil . lInI, aille to the choi' o polic(. "Iit tntst be' arrlistd. lie ht ruined mily lift conp1eIte(Iy." "And I vtnt imy u1 tiet i," saitl (tit y'otnlg girl, withl a wail. C;1lE1S1 A ND 1IISSL"S. How a Detroit Audience Received thi impassioned Speech of this State's Senior Senator. Det roilI, 1ich, Nl trel 21. Mona tor .13. n. It 'illn lmtl of iouth Caro lin tt was gret( l1(d Wilrth ltlrnia tltorntt of chern l 111H('S whien IhI tl d(+livo r (i l t anl 111111iin (1 a dt i sa olie raco prol m 'onit llig at t h111 I /ighlt luard armlO ry, t1 amliin+e boIp (+vidiently dlivhhI( 1 h1et w( en uphdoldort oif h1i ieast an l tr t llio1s opponli tr of themn. Hie satn north Itn1md1 tioa lntijority ru11 tilld w %itl a1 S111l 1arli. "0 t w11 1' (rll u 'ean tht l(o r bloodi tiw Itha wi'as slhed' Winth 5l cl'il'i war i you 8 p rit 11it ryting 301 dsub11jcttstolith d ontation Iof th<gr "YjoultIi buthelrth lfi'rIin tl. beenil (now byciti*' ith hiers who surl)tll fouht youill ow. Upon he soator' refeos 1 Holin f S errant'sarry a l Irin r chckntheesadbapmger hi orhr adenPbO 'Au i tosuh ilet esig ab eso wa nTHEREplan seIS Nf d o r GENERAL NBWS NOTES. Items of More or Less Interest Condensed Outside the State, Mrs. Florence Maybrick, the Ane r rican woman who was convicted in London in 1899 on the charge of I poisoning her husband, at Aigburt, by arsenic, and sentenced to life pen al servitude, will be roleased in July of next year. It is not believed sHie isguilty. +The Stnto ) >mlingo revolutionist-8 on Monday stormed and captured one of the forts in the city of San Dormin go. There wis groat loss of life. Tle American war ship Aalanta will pi ceed if ntecessary to protect Amleriean interests. In the intymo.t into the 13nrdick iurder myst ery at Ilt1falo while Mrs. Blirlick was on the stmtl lettors were produlced from Arthur Pennell, kill ed in his autotobilo recently, prov ing guilty relations betweon himself and Mrs. Hurdick, and in one letter I'ennell said ho might kill Burdick. Mrs. Burdick admitted the cvidence Jas. H ilahlir, the largest. man in Uhicago if not i the country, died this week le weighed 480 poundls, tho only ) feet 10 inches high. He WIs No broad that he could not pass the ti1rist"ilos to ise elevated railways The Crown Princess of Saxony is seriously ill from the effects of a self-adnist redt dose of poison in anl attteinit to c.ommilnit suicite. A sulin i"r school for the sotlth, a branch of the work of the Southern edcauetiiontl board, will begin at K noxville oi the 23d of J unie. 'There will be it faculty of 80t men and womer with 150 courses of instruc tion. A bonlder falling on the track just hefore its arrival caused the wreck If it north bound Southern passenger 80 mlles nurth of Atlanta on Mon .lay. 'T'he engineer, firoman, and a negro t.rampl, were killed. A fren,zieid worlan in the little ham let, of l"iskdtle ini Miassaulisetts oil Montdaty ftstenredt all t he windows and door in her hoime, crushed in the heads of htr four little children, pouled oil otvet ltit Ioio0lies, set t.hern on lire and cit Ibor owin Ihroat. She wals a Mrs. Peoter liirk, wife of a ('1:t'hi o4 of It 11oos serioUs nIattire hitave b1en hroughI tgainst (31enieral Sir Ileelor 11t( l)oinahld, colmmanding the Iiriti.h furc.'s in Ceylon, and the geWeral will Ie coulrt rartialed. lim miority ' is the~ liiniti otfinse. Mact( D)oinald is ore of liritain's greatest witr rio rs. iinan to namo h as b eeni chiosent the pirinipairl Uited Startes narvatl station in thli \\ost I adi,si. Th cons em:tioni fort iIiitions1, ((te , wvil locmienCLiiicedl. SA miong~ iho oIliChrs ele4CtedJ bwy 11ho SNait ionaiil WVoman's Silratge (Conven tion ini New O)rleatns not one1 wits fromt lie Hon.hI. Si muchl I lie beittIer for Sie woolnn ofI ie S lnth. . \V . \leMakh in, it Spart atnhuJrg Counity boy, whoi( pitehodt for th. ri lIrooklynw piirfessmional bll tenin last in yourr, hase J.igned.( withi the Co(lombnJr:', ( ) teamu in their Ameii~rcn league fn r 1903. R~ELIAbLE~ YA VDER tely Puro P SUBSTITUTU