!jt ' 1* 'N
* A.FIEND HANGED
"Cdot" Li?er, a Black Boy, Executed
For Attempt to Commit Rape.
. CONFESSED THE CRIME
v Assailant of Dutch Fork Farmer's
Wife Pays the Death Penalty on
the SealTold?Admitted His Guilt,
but Claimed he was Influenced to j
i
Do it by a Negro Doctor.
Declaring that the Juuge, Jury aud
solicitor that tried his case will see
their mistake in the day of judg
merit Coot Lever, wbo was convicted
of attempted rape upon the per- .
eon of the pretty wife of a prominent
farmer of the Dutch Fork, on
the first day of last November, went i
to his death on the gallows at Lexington
Friday.
Friday morning when the corres- !
pondent of the News and Courier
called to Bee Lever he acknowledged
his guilt and repeated the same story
he told on the witness stand at the
trial. He said that a negro doctor,
Lem Judge, was responsible for his
crime, and that he, Judge, would
have to Bhare in the punishment. He
said that if it had not been for
Deputy Sheriff Miller he would never (
have been permitted to get right
with God. i
On the gallows he made the fol- i
lowing statement: "Of course, I was
In the fault, but I want all to take .
notice. The Judge, Jury and solcitor
did me wrong, and they will see 1
their mistake on the day of judg- 1
ment. Tell everybody to meet me
In Heaven. Mr. Miller and his family
and Sheriff Coriey have shore
been nice to me and have treated me ,
right. I hope God will bless them
all." '
Just after Sheriff Coriey had placed
the black cap over his forehead
Lever asked for some preacher to 1
pray for him, and at Sheriff Corley's i
request, the Rev. W. W. Keel, of the '
Baptist church, came upon the scaf- <
fold and offered a fervent prayer for (
the condemned man. Then the knol |
was thrown. Being tied Lever ex- t
claimed: "It's too tight, boss."
Just as the sheriff was about to <
announce mat everytning was ready t
Lever asked to be allowed to say i
Just one word. He said: "Tell our 1
race for God's sake to keep out of 1
trouble. Tell everybody to let this ]
be a warning. Everybody pray for I
me. May God bless Sheriff Corley, i
Mr. Miller and all." t
Lever was bidden good-by by the I
Sheriff and Deputy Sheriff Miller and i
a second later his body was dangling
in the air. He died without a move, 1
his neck being broken by the fall. !
The body was cut down and turned i
' over to the coroner. t
The husband of the victim of Levers
brutal attack witnessed the
hanging. He said that he was satisfled,
and was glad that the law had
been allowed to take its course. A
day or two ago I^ever made a will in
which he requested that the amount
of $550, which he claimed that he
would get from the Society of Sons i
and Daughters, of which he was a ,
member, be equally divided between
his stepmother and his wife.
Story of the Crime.
The crime for which Lever paid
the death penalty on the gallows was
one of the mast revolting in the
annals of the county. On the first
day of last November, while the husband
of the victim was ploughing In
a field near his home. Lever slipped
up to tho house and entered the
yard, where the woman was hanging
up clothes, with her .n..Mecr>t little
two year old %child playing by her
aide. Lever, without any warning
of his Intentions, grabbed her around
the neck in an effort to choke her
Into Insensibility, at the same time
vurowing ner to the ground.
So tightly did he grasp her throat
the the blood flowed freely frotu
the wounds inflicted by the finger
nails of the brute. Nearly every
garment was torn from her body, and
it was only by the most seemingly
superhuman effort that Dever was
prevented from accomplshing his
purpose, the cries of the woman
bringing her husband to her rescue.
The news of the attack spread like
wildfire before a sweeping wind, and
within a very few hours the usual
quietness of the neighborhood was
In a roar of excitement. Men who
had not shouldered a gun in many
years?some of them probably not
since the war?scoured the country
in an effort to get a shot at tho
fiendish culprit.
Deputy Sheriff Miller was rushed
to the scene In an automobile and
W.U1. .1 i ?
wini me am 01 two or throe men, ho
succeeded in capturing Lever and
landing him safely in jail before the
mob that had gathered knew what
had happened. The officer arrived
at the Jail during the early hours
of morning, but before ho could get
his man in Jail several men rode up i
on horseback, and the deputy had j
to hide his man for several hours,
before placing him behind the bars, j
So wrought up were the people]
of the neighborhood that a second ,
efTort was made to get Lever. On
the 2d of November a posse of from t
0
'
WALKED OUT ASLEEP
IiKFT PULLMAN AT WAY STATION
IN HIS PAJAMAS.
When Roused Ho Said He Was a
New Yorker?Sine? Retiring He
Remembers Nothing.
When the telegraph operator in
the St. Lotfts and San Francisco railroad
station at Tulsa, Okla., stepped
from his office to the platform at
4:30 o'clock Tuesday morning he was
greeted with the sight of a pajamaclad
figure pacing back and forth.
The night was bitter cold and when
the operator had recovered his composure
he inquired whether the
walker was taking a constitutional
walk.
Receiving no answer the operator
approached closer and closer and
found that the eyes of the thinly clad
person were closed and that the
stranger was to all appearances asleep.
*
When awakened the somnambulist,
his teetli chattering so he could
barely talk, explained that ho was
T. E. Jamison, a business man of,
New York, and that he had been
a passenger on the St. Louis train
en route to Oklahoma City. The
last he remembered was retiring to
his berth in a Pullman sleeper.
Explanations concluded, Jamison
began to collect a wardrobe. From
one station employe he obtained the
loan of ca pair of overalls. Other
railroad men furnished him with the
rest of a serviceable outfit.
Somewhat picturesquely attired,
Jamison took the next train for Sapulpa,
where his clothing and additional
belongings had been taken off
the train. ?
CHILD'S BITE KILLS DOCTOR.
?
The Germs of Diphtheria Aids Blood
Poisoning.
Dr. Charles C. Burhenn, a leading
physician of Jeanette, is dead front
most peculiar blood poisoning. Several
days ago, while attending a
thlld, about ten years old, wao liad
:ontractcd diphteria, the physician
placed his finger In the lad's mouth
o aid the child to free his stomach.
The little patient brough his * eth
iown on the doctor's finger, cutting
:he flesh and causing blood to (low
and in a few hours symptoms of
ulood poisoning developed and the
physician became very ill. Sp vial
physicians were hurried front p;,,.sPurg
to the sick man's side, but tne
poison from the first seemed to bate
aken hold of the entire system, and
but little hope was given the physician's
family. In his weakened
mndltlon pneumonia seized him. The
blood poisoning from the unusual
source seems to greatly puzzle the
medical fraternity of the locality ana
those who attended the physician. *
NEGltO I/OSES A LEG.
A Iaiborer Is liorrihly MnnghNl by a
Pile Driver.
Wednesday afternoon Chaclet G!l?Bon,
colored of Eastover, one of the
crew cn the Atlantic Coast Lias pi 1 driver,
which is now at work n the
Thompson creek trestle, attempted
to cross underneath the machine,
when the negineer, not knowing that
he was there, gave the signa. and
Gibson was caught. II*1 had his left
ieg horrably mang.v? ft-, n fo e t.?
thigh. Dr. Hull, the to^ai Coast Line
surgeon, assist-.d by 'in otner local
doctors, amputated the leg, and on
Friday afternoon the n< g.- j was taken
to the Coast LIo-b Hospital at
Kocky Mount, N. C. *
Keep IIiin Humble.
Just as a means of keeping her
nusnanu nunible, Mrs. Anna Ulrich
of Chicago, has received the authority
of the court to make him do the
family washing and do the washing
of the dishes. Ulrich was paroled in
the custody of his wife, when he was
arrained for drunkenness. *
Killed in Car Accident.
Two persons were killed, one was
seriously injured and several were
slightly hurt in a street car accident
caused by the blowing out uf a fuse
at 1?1 Paso, Texas Tuesday. Flames
broke out and the people became
panic stricken. A number jumped
from the swiftly moving car.
Dies of Earthkiinke.
Injuries received in the earthquake
at Messsina have just resulted
i? v,? i- - ?
... ...c uc-uni ui Vjnaries narara. an
18 y ar old boy in New York City.
fifty to seventy-five men drove up
to the jail with the intention of
taklns I^ever out at any and ail
hazards, but the officers having heard
of the probntde attack, rushed the
prisoner to the Penitentiary, where
he was kept until the day before he
was tried.
That the majesty of the law has
been upheld is gratifying to the people
of the county, and the husband
of the pretty victim Is being commended
on all sides for the part he
has played throughout the whole
proceedings.
*
BITTER FIGHT
Is On in South Dakota Between the Be
publican Factions and
LEADERS ARE WORRIED
The Progressives and Stalwarts Are
Kngaxed in the Hot and Hitter
8triiiri?l??- WtilnH Will It i? Kuiil
. I^ast Until the Primary Takes
Place in June.
A dispatch from Huron says the
political atmosphere of South Dakota
threatens the most serious storm
that has swept the State In years.
Unlike Iowa and other States the
fight here between the "progressives"
and "stalwart" Republicans is not
confined to representatives in congress,
but officers from the governor
down.
Early In the month the "stalwart"
Republicans came out with the announcement
that they intended to
put a complete ticket in the field,
made up sorely of their own faction.
Friday the leaders of the "progressive"
faction met 4n conference at
Huron to take similar action. This
is taken to mean that between now
and June 7. when the State primary
will be held, there will be a battle
to the death between tli? rival Republican
factions of South Dakota.
Former' Governor S. H. Elrod is
slated for the gubernatorial nomination
on the "stalwart" ticket. In
the formal announcement of his candidacy
he Indorsed the principles enunciated
at the "stalwart" conference
held at the beginning of February.
It is not anticipated that he
will have any opposition in securing
the nomination of his faction. In
addition to the governorship the
"stalwarts" have alBO picked their
candidates for congress and for nearly
all the State offices.
The "progressives" so far have not
been able to present so united a
front as the "stalwarts," but it is
expected that Friday's conference
>,-< 11 .. 1 I ...
m.i uvcuiuiiiisu iiiucn lowaru bringing
al)out the deslrt<l harmony and
unification. Governor Vessey is slated
for renomination on the "progressive"
ticket. Much is believed
to depend upon the attitude of It. O.
Richards, one of the prominent leaders
of the State. 9
Mr. Richards, after having supported
the "progressive" Republicans
for five years, broke with them
over a year ago in a letter repudiating
Governor Vessey and Senators
Crawford and Gamble. Ever Bince
the break occurred, politicians have
been wondering what ticket Richards
would put forward this year. Recently
it has been reported that a
truce would be arranged between
Richards and the Vessey factions,
whereby Richards would be allowed
to frame the platform and the Vessey
people name the ticket. These
reports have been denied and from
all indications it will not be definitely
known just where Roliards stands
until after the present conference of
the "progressives" is over.
There is also some curosity as to
the course that will he taken in the
coming campaign by former United
States Senator Petlgrew. He is quoted
as having said privately, that
there is no longer any Democratic
DOnttr ?? 1? - 4 1 "
.....iv. ?.ii??i ?> u?i was len or it was
destroyed during the consideration
of the tarifT bill, and that there
ought to be a new party.
Alleced extravagencp on the part
of the present "progressive" Ropubijoan
administration will he the
principal slogan of the "stalwarts"
in the impending battle for supremacy
at the June primaries, while anti
Cannon will be one of the main issues
upon which the "progressive"
Republicans will wage their fight for
continued control. The "progressives"
confidently declare that Vassey
has made so creditable a record
as governor that no one can beat
him.
Some of the more hopeful Democrats
profess to believe that the
fight between the Republican factions
will bo so hitter that thousands
of members of the faction
which Is defeated in the June primaries
will at the election next November
cast their votes for the Democratic
ticket.
" * ]
Figlit About llooze.
A disnafch frrvm Mrtin T
?... ...? ! 311.1.,
says William Terry, a mechanic, is
lead, and Henry Spencer, a cleik, is
held on the charge of murder as a
result of a pistol duel. Spencer declared
that Terry fired the first shot
when he refused him a drinK t't.d
that he shot in self defense. *
Fight Fatal Duel.
A dispatch from Vienna, Austria,
says a duel with pistbls was fought
there Saturday by two Austrian government
officials, I)r. Oscar Mayar
and Baron Hermann Widerhofer,
Mayar shot Wlderhorfer dead.
Buried by Avalanche.
A telephone message from Wallace.
Idaho, last Sunday night said
twenty-five families, probably 75
people in all, were buried under an
avalanche.
SOME IDLE TALK
I
ABOUT SENATOR TILLMAN'S RF,SIGNING
HIS SEAT.
? .
And Who the Governor Would Appoint
us HLs Successor Should III
Do So.
A Columbia dispatch says the feeling
that Senator Tillman may resign
on account of the condition of h's
health is causing a deal of political
to llr horn oo /* ?? **? ...til 1*i 1-- *
usic an iu n uu will I1KOIV gel
his tbga. It is known that Senator
Tillman has been forbidd-m to Co
any more work at the present session
of congress but the likelihood of
his resigning has no additional foundation
other than that of a sort of
vague feeling.
The politicians, however, seem to
be placing some faith in the report.
In case he does resign It will be Governor
Ansel's privilege and duty to
appoint his successor for the short
term, so talk is centering on whom i
the governor is likely to appoint.
Had the vacancy occurred daring
the sitting of the legislature that
body would have made the choice,
and it is likely that Speaker of the
House Whaley, of Charleston, would i
have gotten the place, as he is about
the most popular man in the legislature
as well as perhaps the ablest. i
But is is an easy bet that Governor
Ansel would not appoint any man
from Charleston, which has been
fighting him so hard for many years
on account of his attitude in regard
to Injunctions and the way no went
about the tiger Injunction busiae.?s.
Lewis W. Parker, the cotton mill i
man, whose home is in Grennillo, i
and J. A. McCullough , another of
the Governor's fellow townsmen, aro
regarded as among the strong probabilities
if Governor Ansel has the
appointing to do. Ex-Governor D. C.
Heyward and J. Eraser Lyon are also i
spoken of in this connection. 1
MADE A LUCKY GUESS. <
Woman Stenographer Wins $5,000 '
Concrete House. I
Miss Lillian M. Williamson attend- j
ed the cement show at the Coliseum ,
and heard her name called off as |
the winner of the $5,000 concrete ,
house offered to the woman guessing ,
ciuscsi to me total paid admissions '
at the cement show on Washington's t
birthday and tlie following day.
She is stenographer in a bank and ,
is nineteen years old. She guessed
the attendance for the two days
would be 15,960. The total paid at- 1
tendance was 15,965. Other guesses
ranged from 3,600 to 80,000.
Miss Williamson recently made the
last payment on a thirtyfoot corner J
lot and has $300 saved on a building
fund. "I think part of this good
fortune came from my fortunate pos- '
ession of a lot." said Miss Williamson.
"What should I have done with 1
material for a $5,000 home if 1 ,
had spent all my spare money for 1
millinery or chocolate creams."
COATS A\l) SHEEP.
Herds Will lie Shipped from This 1
Country to Japan.
Herds of goats and sheep are soon
to be sent from the United State? to '
Japan for the use of the Japanese '
government in developing stock
raising, according to Dr. loda Tani- '
mura, dean of animal industry of the [
university of Tokio.
He came to Chicago from the East 1
where he has visited several uni- '
versities, and after a day )r two 1
In Chicago he will continuo his jour- !
nev to San Francisco and Jan m.
"We raise a fow sheep in Japan, '
he said, "but no goats, and our pur- (
pose now is to go into the industry
to a large extent, providing it w'll
prove profitable and feasible in our !
climate. 1
STHEXIOUS imiDEGItOOM.
, 1
Walked Ffteon .Miles for License and
1
Five With Wife. !
Rather than delay his wedding by |
waiting Frlady night for a train
| that was late, John M. Miller, a farm- !
I er living five miles from Duquoin, ,
111., walked five miles to Pineltneyville
to get the license and ten miles (
to the city with the temperoturc
near zero. Ills marriage to Mrs.
Mary A. Terry took place on schedule
time, but to get back to his home,
where a reception awaited them, the
bride and groom were compelled to
walk the five miles, through the
lack of any conveyance. I
Sensations Are Probable.
The arrest of Mrs. Alma Proctor
Vaughn at Kingsville, Mo., on the
charge of murdering her husband,
marks another step In what promises
to be one of the most sensational
cases in the history of Missouri. Both
the murdered man and his widow are
prominent in society and rich.
Slashed I.ady Willi Knife.
A negro entered the bed room of
Miss Luella C. Ilancey at Fort Myers.
Fla., Friday morning and attempted
to assault her. When she resisted
desperately he slashed her on the
arm and wrist with a knife and then
escaped. 1
I
f
KILLED A DEPUTY
BUT IS SLAIX IN TURN BV OTHER
DEPUTIES.
A I>esperate Battle Between Outlaw
SOME HOT STUFF
Pinchot Scores Ballinger, Who, He Says,
Deceived the People.
BETRAYED THE PEOPLE
Declares That There is no Such Decision
as the One Cited by Mr.
Taft?Pinchot Insets that Glavis
. .Told the Truth Al>out the Case
*
When Testifying on the Stand.
With GifTord Pinchot on the wit- ]
nesa stand, the Ballinger-Pinchot
inquiry entered its second phase on
Saturday. The dismissed chief of
the forest service, before being
sworn, systematically declared that
when his story had been told the
country would demand a verdict "In
harmony with the general conviction
that the secretary of the interior has
been unfaithful, both to the public
whose property he has endangered,
and to the president, whem he has
deceived."
Mr. Pinchot aecused Secretary Pallinger
of having made an explanation
of his conduct to the president that
was "essentially false." He charged
him with being a "dangerous enemy
to conservation." He charged him
with having made a statement that
whb shown by undispted documentary
evidence "to ho absolutely false in
three essential particulars." He also
charged him with having "willfully
deceived the president," and of being
disloyal to the president.
Mr. Pinchot's first hour on the
witness stand was as replete of sensations
as had been promised and
the suffocated crowd in the hearing
room hung intently upon every word
that fell from his lips. A triile nervous
at first, Mr. Pinchot soon became
accustomed to his surrouutlings
aid maintained a conficdnl poise
thereafter.
His recital had not progressed very
far, however, when there came an
jbjection from Mr. Ilallinger's attorney
as to the witness repeating conversations
had with Presdient Taft.
It was contended that the relation of
these conversations would put the
president in an attitude where he ,
would either have to remain silent or
?lse appear before the committee as 1
i witness, which it was declared 1
would be undesirable. i
The conservation movement begun 1
inder the administration of Presi- 1
lent Roosevelt was progressing '
splendidly up to the time that Pros- ]
dent Taft and Secretary Ballinger i
lame into oftip?? (loplorn/l \1 V ..t
iiiu authorizing tne removal of GlavIs
from the servico of the United
States. The president had contended
that Mr. Balllnger hail acted upon a
decision of the comptroller which
permitted of no appeal when he had
abrogated a co-operative agreement
with the agricultural department,
whereby the forest service *.vas given
control of the forest reserves of Indian
lands.
Mr. Pinchot admitted that there
was an opinion by the comptroller
which forbade the detail a' a clei k
from the forest service to the Indian
oflice, but contended that it had nothing
whatever to do with t.he work of
the forest, arrvio'-* in the h-*i I
Mr. IMn*-hot's intiim b ? the!
President Taft had either been misled
or utterly mistaken brought a
rapid fire of questions from Senators
Itoot, Sutherland and other members
of the comrnitte*. They read into
the record the v i.ious dtei> oim of
the comptroller, which tlicy contended
had a hearing on the matte-, out.
Mr. Pinchot wou d not withdraw
front his position th-t them was
absolutely nothing in the decision*
which the president had referred to.
which In any way warranted ;h?
abrogation of the cooperative agreement
by Secretary Balllnger. He declared
In fact that a previous opinion
speclfica'ly held that the agreement |
' was lawful.
~ , Mvvmjcu ai i i intuui. \
de charged that in less than a month 1
hereafter, Secretary Ballinger had J
iractically broken the backbone of <
he central idea of the conservation i
movement by restoring previously
vithdrawn water-power sites to the 1
mbllc domain and laying them open i
0 private appropriation and mouopo- i
istic control. ]
Mr. -Pinchot charged that when 1
he restorations were made Mr. Hal- 1
inger gavo no hint that he would <
vithdraw the power sites and that as i
1 matter of fact he did not rewith- i
Iraw any of them until after Mr. I
Pinchot had gone to the president <
ind had made a vigorous protest.
The restorations by Mr. Hallinger
ivere made without any investigation
of the object whatever, said
Mr. Pinchot and he charged the s *cretary
with having deliberately orIberately
ordered the oilicers of the
reclamation service against their will
to recommend that some of the relocations
should be made.
One of the most dramatic inciients
of the day was left for the last
half hour of the session, when Mr.
Pinchot declared that there was no
such decision by the comptroller of
the treasury as had been cited by
President Tuft in his letter of September
13, 1909, to Secretary Hallinger,
dismissed the GMvl.; charges
All Hound Had Xogro and Officers
of the Ij?w.
In a desperate battle early Friday
between negroes and the deputy sheriffs
ten miles east of Memphis, Tenu.,
Deputy Sheriff \V. H. Lucy of Germantown,
was killed by Aaron Norlleet,
a negro, who then attacked
Deputies Hay and O'Neill and was
killed by them.
The affray was the result of an effort
on the pnrt of officers to arrest
Norlleet on a charge of larceny. After
having had the warrant read to
him by Deputy Lucy, Nortleet agreed
to accompany the officers and asked
permission to go into the cabin to
get his hat.
Not suspecting trouble, the officers
consented to this move. Norfleet entered
the house and reappeared in
a nvlnute with a single barrel shotgun
in his hand. Before Lucy could
move, the negro raised tho gun and
fired upon him at close range, literally
blowing the officer's head from his
shoulder.
Swln p-f n cr Mo omnt.. ? - - -* *
? "*o KU1& US a CI U Dt
the black leaped upon Deputes Ray
and O'Neill, knocking the former
down and leaping over his prostrate
body, lloth the olhcers had drawn
their revolvers as soon as they saw
Norfleet appear with the gun. As
Norflect passed over the form of Ray,
O'Neill fired at him with his revolver,
but his aim was poor.
Deputy Ray began firing before he
had regained his feet and both officers
continued to pour bullets after
the fugitive, who was disappearing
in the darkness. Aften ten revolver
shots had been fired at him, Norfleet
fell to the ground, pierced by
three bullets, dying within a few
minutes. t
DIED ON THE TRAIN,
* i
While on Her Way to Visit ller Parents
in Rranftiville.
The Augusta Chronicle says Mrs.
Julia Jones died very suddenly on
Thursday morning of heart failure
on the Southern train just as it
was pulling out of the Union station,
it 7.30 o'clock, ller husband, Mr. W.
K. Jones and her little daughter
were with her at the time, and she
was carried as far as the City Hospital
on tlie outgoing train; but
nothing could he done for her, as
Jeath was instantaneous. She had
lieen in ill health for several months,
ind it is thought that the rush and
oxcitement of catching tho early
tnornng train was too much for her.
She, her husband, and little girl
tiad started on a visit to Mrs. Jones*
motherland father in Branchvllle;
ind the body was sent* on to that
;ilacc Thursday afternoon?the same
ticket that had been purchased by
the daughter earlier in the day
jarrying her dead body to her sorrowing
parents. She was 23 years
aid, and besides her mother and
rather, leaves her husband and
laughter.
KILLED HY UNKNOWN PARTY
While Searching for llis Wife Man
Is Shot from Ambush.
A dispatch from Adrian, Ga., says
John Swain was killed Thursday
night by an unknown person near the
bouse of W. E. Moore. Swain and
his wife had s perated. Swain, supposing
that a man by the name of
Uutcherson was in company with
her, went to Moore's home searching
for the couple, and finding Uutcherson,
severely beat him, and as Hut
?? '
viiciouu i mi, ureu tuiir hiiois at mm.
Swain then returned to the house
In search of his wife and was shot
down from out of the darkness by an
unknown person. The coroner's inquest
failed to reveal anything definite
as to the guilty person.
They Deserve Death.
At Kurac, Russia, a timber merchant
named Levkin and two peasants
were condemned to death by
the military court for arson, committed
merely to make a market for
Levkin's building timber. Levkin's
terms were $1 for every house tired.
The peasants had applied the torch
to about ten houses filled with sleeping
peasants.
Ilad a llig Fire.
Fire early Sunday morning destroyed
seven business bulKlings at
McCormick, the total loss being $85,000.
The buildings destroyed were
the banking house of the Farmers
Hank, and the postotliee and the
stores of .1. S. Deacon, Harmon and
Co., Fuller and Company and X. Q.
Itrown and Son, anil two owned by
M. L. D. Sturkey Company.
Mad Dog liites Four.
At Mobile, Ala., four persons were
severely bitten by a mad dog, which
up to noon Saturday had not been
killed. Patrolmen all over Mobile
are on the lookout for the dog.
\