r
WAS IN BAD FIX
Yonng Pittman, Who is Imprisoned in
Ricarangua. Found Starring
IN A FILTHY CELL
The Ntcaragunns Threaten to Kill
All Foreigners.?Consul OUvnres
Wires State l>epartmnet Fcelliu
Against the Anwrirnns Bitter. ?
Subjects Ask Protect1'*!!.
Confined in a filthy cell, unfsl
avo by charitable strangers, Wll
liam Pittman, an American captured
by the Madrlz government forces
oear Hlueflelds. was found In t
crowded local prison at Managua.
Nicaragua, by Consul Ollvares on
Thursday.
The consul, who is stationed a"
that point, telegraphed the state de
partment that he visited Pittman,
discovered the revolting conditions
and through protests forced Dr Madrlz
to furniBh the adventurer better
prison accommodations.
Pittman, whose relatives live at
Cambridge, Mass., told Consul Ollvares
that he left Greytown July 4.
that since then Ills captors have failed
to provide him with food, leaving
him altogether dependent for subsistence
upon charity. Pittman was
starving.
Olivares immediately protested,
reminding Madrlz of his promise to
treat Pittman with consideration,
Madriz finally agreel to transfer
Pittman to a larger and cleaner cell
and to allow the consul to supply
him with a sleeping couch and food.
The consul reported that no definite
action regarding Pittman had been
determined on by the de facto authorities
and that he, Olivares, would
exert every effort to secure humane
treatment for Pittman.
When the United States originally
learned of P'ttman's arrcBt Dr. Madrlz
assured Olivares that the prisoner
would be treated fairly and considerately.
Constant complaints from American
citizens at Matagalpa, relative
to threats repeatedly made against
their lives and property by agents
of the htadriz government are being
ict-ciTcu u) l. uuou amies consular
representatives.
Consul Olivares cabled to the state
department that the anti-American
feeling in the western part of Nicarr.guu,
the section under control of
the Madriz faction, is daily growing
more bitter.
Mr. Olivares made vigorous representations
to Dr. Madriz and has
reiterated to him Secretary Knox's
warning that this government will
hold Madriz factions strictly accountable
for the security of American
life and property.
Iiritish and German subjects at
Matagalpa have appealed to their
consuls in .Managua for protection.
So far 110 representations as to these
have been made to the German and
English home governments, or to
Washington, probably because the
Hritlsh and German consuls doubtless
are Nicaraguan local merchants.
American Consul General Eberhardt,
who is detailed at large, and
happens to be in Nicaragua on a tour
of inspection cabled the state deliartment
cornoboraiting the alarm
of foreign residents over threats of
Nicaraguans. He stated that the
opinion at Matagalpa was that these
anti-foredgn demonstrations were instigated
by the Madriz faction, whose
otiicials have openly threatened the
Americans and other foreigners.
Fell to His Death.
Henry Mars, a negro convict at '
tho State penitentiary, committed ?
suicide Thursday by leaping from the i
main prison building. Tho negro !
sustained a fractured skull, dying
on Thursday afternoon. Although it '
was not definitely established that
Mars committed suicide, this is the
opinion among the authorities at the
penitentiary.
Him I Needle in Heart.
At I.andgraf, W. Va.. Miranda
Weeks died suddenly and her hus- i
band was arrested on suspicion of |
having caused her death. An an- (
topsy revealed a cambric needle
piercing the woman's heart. There ,
was no scar on the body to show
that the needle had punctured the (
kin and the man was released.
Mast Serve l.?>ng Term.
Twenty-five years in tho State pen- i
ltent.lary was the aentenc? mtmlnu. .
tered by Judge Gruber at Spartan- |
burg to W. N. Keunedy, the white t
man who was Wednesday convicted i
in general sessions court on the ,
charge of having committed criminal i
assault upon a colored girl under t
14 y^ars of age.
Mules Killed.
State Senator T. Y. Williams had c
a pair of valuable mules killed by f
a bolt of lightning Saturday evening 1
on his plantation in Lancaster coun- u
ty. The animals were hitched to t
a wagon in which three negroes were c
riding. The men were shocked into f
a state of unconsciousness, but soon J
revived. | t
RED SPIDER PEST
_ 1
MARKS ITS APPEARANCE IN THE
COTTON FIELDS.
I
An AK(>nt of the Agricultural Department
Tells Rest Wuy of Combating
the Small Hugs.
Tiie red spider has broken out on
the farm of R. H. Caughman. near
Lexington, and threatens to be very
destructive to the cotton crop should
the present wet season be followed
by a continued hot and dry spell. The
State says is appears from the statements
of those Interested in this coiton
pest that a great many sections
of the State are infected and it is
believed that unless its spread is
checked it will become shortly as
destructive as the boll weevil.
The cotton affected wilts as if it
were scalded and finally dies. No
practical remedy has as yet been
found, though there are preventive
remedies which appear successful.
The department of agriculture has
established a laboratory at Hatesburg
for a thorough study of the
rel spider and H. F. Wilson in
charge of the work visited Lexington
and made an examination cf the
Caughman field. He is positive, in
his opinion, that the trouble is the
red spider and, of course, he realizes
the danger of its further spread.
In speaking about this matter, he
makes tlnse int?? "Fting ooservations;
and desires *! :t 'bev sJnll receive
the attention of fa.T?.er.-> all
over the State:
"Violets and poke weeds appear
to be the plants from which the
spiders spread to the cotton. I have
seen a number of fields where volets
in yards were badly infested with the
spider before it passed to the cotton.
The or:g'.nal infection began close to
the violets and spread out first in a
fan shaped form and then gradual!)
me \\ hole Held became inrested. The
same uhing Is observed in connection
with poke weeds. Jersuulem
oak, burkock, morning glories and
garden products are food plants for
the spider and should be kept away
from cotton fields. The spider soems
to be pretty well scattered about the
State and is doing considerable damage,
and threatens to do a great
deal more unless some means can be
found for checking it.
"1 have hardly gone far enough
with the work to be able to suggest
a desirable remedy. However, poke
weeds and violets near cotton fields
should all be destroyed, and if tiio
spider is only found on a few plants,
these should be pulled and burned.
The spider seems to be able to winter
in violets and the danger lies in
infestation from these sources.
"Where the infestation is bad 1
have found the following mixture to
be effective in killing the most of
them: One pound of sulphur to three
gallons of water. The suljwhur to
be placed in a bucket or pan and
enough water added to form a paste
with the sulphur, then the remainder 1
if the water can be added. This 1
mixture can be applied with a spray 1
l>ump or with an ordinary sprinkler. 1
Care should be taken that the mix- "
Lure is gotten onto the under side of 1
:he leaf. The spider propagates it- '
?olf very rapidly and the failure to '
make a thorough spray leaves room
'or danger in the future.
"The most pactical method in the
way of prevention seems to be that
jf crop rotation and I hope that by
'hp PIlll of tho S?>.1?nn a cixf lafnetore
lystem of rotation may be worked
out. Tho farmers themselves can
lo a great deal towards prebenling
he spread of this i>est if they will ,
no careful about plowing around in- j
rested stalks. The spider catches on
t.he harness and may be carried a (
long ways into tho field and a new
colony planted. This is a very serious
problem and to some extent
a. new one. The department is doing
the best it can and is greatly in- ,
terested in the work."
<X>NFKS8KS TO Ml RltKK.
After (Contributing Materially to the
Conviction of Brother.
After testifying against and con- ,
trihuting to the conviction of his
brother, Albert Brown for the murder
of Alonza Addison, on July 28, 1
1909, Henry Brown went to the
Sheriff of Lee County in Tupelo, :
Miss., and confessed to the killing
of Addison. Both are well known
farmers. Albert Brown had beentwic<|
tried and oonjicted of thie
murder of Addison. He was sentenced
to 15 years in tho penitentiary,
but sentence was suspended
-w? n/l Inn- L /v ^ ? m
i.uc uuK-i)iui3 or an appeal
o the Supreme Court. The brother i
vho confessed has been imprisoned i
ind habeas corpus proceedings will i
>e instituted to secure the release of i
he convicted man. <
^ ^ ^ I
Many Peaches Is>st.
At Fort Valley. Ga.. it was stated
>n Friday that thirty carloads of
leaches has been dumjed into the <
'lint river eight miles from there, i
is a result of the failure to move 1
he crop quickly. Kighty thousand i
rates were waiting there and it is I
eared that thoy will be a dead loss, j
Uready growers have loss $100,000 <
ecause of the lack of ice cars. i
CL.KVKK RUSK.
IJjr Engineer Prevents Robbery <?f
His Train.
?
Cleverness on the part of the engineer
prevented three youthful and
apparently Inexperienced bandits
from robbing the Missouri, Kansas
& Texas Southwestern "flyer" near
Larimore, 15 miles from St.l.ouis
early Sunday. Three men were arrested
Inter as suspects and placed
in jail pending investigation.
Engineer Quinn through a ruse
prevented the looting of the baggage
car and the passenger coaches.
The bandits compe'led the engineer
Him me nreniuo hi me point 01 refolvers
to descent from the cab and
go with them to the baggage car to
assist in uncoupling it The enginemen
in the darkness managed to
glide away from the bandits and
made for the cab. The bandits opened
fire on them. Scrambling into
the cab the engineer threw the
throttle wide open and dashed away
with the train.
The three men, armed and masked,
used a red lantern to halt the
train.
TOWN'S IN PKIUL.
Forest Fires Sweeping ('ountry With
Heavy Damage.
A sepcial from White Fish. Mont.,
says that town is in the center of forest
fires which are sweeping the
mountainsides, licking up logging
and tie camps and threatening the
town itself. While it is not felt
that the city is in immediate dinger,
all precautions hape been taken,
the water works thoroughly tested
and the fire hose made ready for instant
use. So fur as is known there
is no loss of life. Rain appears to
lie the only thing that oan save this
part of Flathead Valley from terrible
loss. A dispatch from Kalishpeil
reports three other fires burning in
the valley.
WHKAT SHKD FIRKI).
Hy a Dig Holt of Lightning Which
Killed Four Men.
Four men were instantly killed,
three others seriously hurt and a
large shed containing wheat set on
tire by lightning during a storm at
one o'clock Thursady afternoon.
The dead are William llaldrlck, two
Whitten brothers, and a man named
Scott. The injured are two Malone
brothers, anl a man named
Phillips. The storm and fire occurred
on Buck Key place, eight mil??
west of Florence, Ala. The men
were farm hands employed bv F. M
Perry.
TOOK KMFF, FKOM N'EtiKO.
Attacked in Iler Home by Hlnck, She
( eta Hotter of Him.
At Rodney, near Corsicana, Texas
Tuesday, a negro entered the home
of Hub Bailey, a merchant and bran
dishing a knife, threatened a criminal
assault upon Mrs. Bailey, a bride
of three months, who grappled with
him, securing the weapon and forcing
the negro to take flight. ' Posses
caught the negro in Richland creek
bottom, and after he was identified,
he was hanged to a tree nearby. The
body was found and cut down. *
HAYK FIFTFFN CillLHllKN.
ljov. Gilchrist Suggests that Parents
Be Pensioned.
Mr. and Mrs. T. Barberi, of Pen tacola.
Fla., received from Governor
[Jilchrist recently a handsome spoon
benring the seal of the State of Florida.
Married 19 vears airo. the wife
is now only 37 years old, but Mr. and
Mrs. Barber! are the parents of lli
children. Six of the children are
twins. Governor Gilchrist suggests
that the legislature pass an act allowing
the parents a pension. They
certainly deserve It.
Killed by Fall.
The body of .1. W. Scruggs, nho
died Wednesday night froni the effects
of a fall from the third stor>
of his boarding house in Augusta
was taken to Iditohel, Ga., for burial
Nothing is known as to the caust
of the accident. He retired earl}
and about two o'clock next morning <
a policeman stumbled over bis bod} i
lying on the pavement. 50 feet be ;
low his bed room window. i
l
Mercy for the Merciless.
Guilty with a recommendation to 1
mercy was the verdict returned Wed- 1
nesday afternoon in the case of \V. 1
\\ Kennedy, a white man, at Spartanburg,
charged with criminal assault
on a colored girl, under the
age of 14 years. The Jury remained t
>ut more than an- hour. It is t**e t
lisoretion of the court to give ft oin \
j to 4 0 years' imprisonment. I
Down on Cones. t
The ice cream cone is the latest 1
jbject of attack under the pure food (
regulations of the Federal Government.
Thursday United States Marshall
Henklll with a forco of deputies
visited a pier at New York and i
seized 18 crates, containing six bun- i
irod boxes of the corrugated conical 1
receptacles for ice cream. t
LESSONS IN FARMING
4K1UES OF FA KM E ItH INSTITUTES
- AUK PLANNED.
July and August Will b-* (iiral
Months For the Tillers of the Soil
?The Parties and Schedule.
During July and August farmers'
institutes under the auspices of
Clemson college will be held in the
various counties of the State. The
members of the Clemson college staff
who will travel throughout the State
in the interest of the institutes will
be divided into three parties, these
parties being as follows.
First Party?D. N. Barrow, A. F.
Conradi, T. F. Keltt and T. F. Jackson.
Second Party?Prof. \Y. R. Perkins,
Prof. L. A. Niven of VVinthrop
and Dr. B. Barnette.
Third J arty?Prof. J. N. Harper,
Prof. C. C. Newman, and C. L. Goodrich
of the United States department
of agriculture.
The Institute at Gray Court will
last two days, at Jonesville three
days and at Fountain Inn five days,
will include besides regular work
for the men, some domestic science
work for the women, to be given by
instruct' rs from Winthrop college.
Following Is the itenerary of the
pa rties:
First Party.
-McClellansville?July 11 and 12.
Horse Penn?July 13.
Peniel?July 14.
Cross Swamp?July 15.
Fhrardt?July 16.
Georgetown?July 18 and 19.
I'regnos School?July 20.
Scranton?July 21.
Turl?eville?July 2 2.
Pine wood?July 23.
Dorchester County t point not determined)?July
25 and 26.
Elloree?July 2 7.
Jamison?July 28.
Providence?July 29 and 3 0.
Cameron?August 1.
Bethel School?August 2.
Fair Lawn School?August 3.
Richland County (point not determined)?
August 4.
Wilkensville?August 5.
Cherokee?August 6.
Coleraine?August 8.
Cross Keys?August 9.
Jonesville?August 10, 11 and 12.
Fountain Inn?Augusst 15 to 19.
Second Party.
Allendale--July 16.
illusion?.iuiy is.
Kstelle?July 19.
Cray's Point?July 20.
ShiloJi School?July 21.
Point Not Settled?July 22.
l^eesville?July 23.
Richland Church?July 25.
Young's Grove?July 2 6.
Torn Keitt's?July 27.
J. C. Courtney's?July 2 8.
Troy?July 29.
Hodges?July 30.
Apt Harmon Springs August 1.
Antreville?August 2.
Wardsworth?August 3.
Woodruff?August 4.
Gray Court? August 5 and 6.
Liberty?August 9.
Haucusville?A ugust 10.
Comeross School?August 11.
Townville August 12.
Rock Mills?August 15.
Helton?August 16.
Willlamston? August 17.
Maulden?August 19.
Third Party.
General Sumter July 25
Not Decided? July 2?".
llishopville July 2<.
St. Charles?July 28.
Orange Hill- -July 29.
Mount Coghan?July 30.
Jefferson? August 1.
I'nion School?August 2.
Hethune?August 3.
Elgin?August 4.
Van Wyck?August 5.
Secrist Farm? August 6.
Gold Hill Academy?August 8.
Pleasant valley- August 9.
Stevens' School?August 10.
Green Drier August 11.
Dillon?August 12.
Marion ? August 13.
Sandy Plain School August 15.
Mulling?August 16.
Fork?August 17.
Meriwether?August 19.
Killed by Lightning.
Two University of Illinois students
were killed by lightning on the summit
of Mount Pisgah recently. The
young men started to ascend the
mountain) in the morning. When
:hey did not return that night a
search party was organized. Their
todies were found under a Wig pine
:ree that had been shattered by the
Dolt.
More Xew Cotton Mills.
The State seems to he on the eve
>f a revival of mill construction. On
:?n of the announcement for tWr*
ilrtnt called the Connemara Mills, at
Laurens, and the establishment of
i $100,000 mill on the Clinchfleld
il>ove Spartanburg, cornea the news
he Newberry is to have another hig
otton factory.
Invite Senator Tillman.
The board of commissioners of
lullivan's Island have extended an
nvitation to Senator Tillman and
lis family to visit the Island to h**.
be guest of the commission.
EVANS GETS WARM i
CAMPAIGN MKK.TINC* KXMVK.NKlt
11Y SMAI.L Sl'AT.
C. G. Ih'ndrrson falls K\ans Down,
Whereupon lie I'Hers Strong l?anftnage.
'A mild sensation In the meeting
of the State campaign, at Walterboro
Friday, was the spat between Far j
II. Evans and Mr. C. G. Hend rrson.
Master of Colleton County, when the
former mad" reference *o the H*;u
L). S. Henderson's connection w :ii
the Pink Franklin case, recently
heard in Washington, and in whicu
Mr. Evans charged incompetency on
the part of Attorney Geneva' I.yon
to compete with a neg lawyer <f
Orangeburg. Mr. C. G. H*?-wierson
is a brother of the Hon. 1). S. Henderson.
of Aiken, and Jhe endeavored
to set Mr. Evans right ?>q the
matter of the Slate being put to expense
by reason of I). S. Hende ;-?n's
assistance to the Attorney-Genera'.
When Mr. Evans stated that Mr.
Lyon was unable to cope with a
"nigger lawyer" on a little constitutional
question and had to hire Dan
Henderson to assist him. Mr. Henderson
arose and said, "Didn't my
brother settle that matter at Aiken
the other day? The State did not
pay hint one cent to assist in this
case. He was paid by the Congressman
from this State."
Answering with considerable emphasis,
Mr. Evans said: "Well, Jim
Patterson told me at Harnwell that
he didn't pay him so then who did?'
to which Mr. Henderson did not
reply.
Looking straight at Mr. Henderson.
the speaker forcefully and unequivocally
denounced I). S. Henderson
for his unfairness in making a
speech at the Aiken meeting, in connection
with this affair, and not giving
him an opportunity to reply, it
seems that Mr. 1). S. Henderson acted
as county chuirman at the Aiken
meeting and when M.r Evans made
reference to the Franklin case stated
his position and connection in
the case, especially as regard the
fees paid. This act on the part of
a chairman Mr. Evans denounced as
cowardly in the extreme.
Another matter of some little interest
was the statement by Mr.
Evans that he "intended to make the
newspapers punnsn ins statements
or make them go down as detainers.
However, Mr. Kvans had considerably
less to say about the newspapers
than at Beaufort. His address, devoted
almost entirely to an "exposure"
of Mr. Lyon's record, was received
with loud applause.
Lyon Ounes Back.
At the Charleston meeting there
was a Hue illustration given by Mr.
Lyon with reference to the attitude
of Barney Evans as to the injunction
law. He told how Barney Evans
tried to en'oin his landlord in Saluda '
county to keep from paying his office
rent. This caused much laughter.
Mr. Lyon said that the time had 1
come when he must speak plainly. '
lie declared that all the charges
made by Evans were false. He tin
derstood that Barney Evans had been '
attacking the newspapers of me
State. 1
IK: though that the press had been
very kind to Barney for not printing
a record of his past life. When the '
attorney general left the stand there. 1
was wild applause and from all sec- '
tions of the .hall came cries of "Lyon."
1
There was a crowd small in mini- 1
her present, which was inclined ?o 1
cheer for Barney Evans. There were :
some hisses and howls. The Evans :
crowd worked hard and untiringly !
to create a sentiment for his candi- 1
ciaey. Evans made his usual charges '
whic.h fell lightly on the ears of his '
listeners with the exception of the '
Miiuii uvans crowd.
("HACKKit CAl'SKS I I KK.
Kxjdoded Among Straw in I tarn Willi
Soi*i?US KcSllltS.
A fire which will amount to approximately
$300,000 destroyed 60
buildings, made 3 0 families homeless
and wiped out the business and
residential section of Menton, Columbia
county. Pa., occurred Monday.
An exploding firecracker thrown in
among the straw in the barn of (?eo.
(Vossley was the cause of the fire.
The fire broke out at about three
o'clock in the afternoon and it was
not until late that night that after
aid had arrived, that the fiumes were
got under control.
I'sed Sheep I tone.
At New Orleans the bone of a
ant'f|i was irausiereu ui me arm 01
a patient at the Charily hospital
Thursday night. The forearm of
the patient undergoing the novel op- |
eration Jiad been shattered by the t
discharge of a shot gun. The oper- j
ation was pronounced successful. ,
? 1
Sold for n Song. t
The naval yacht Hornet, a steel j
vessel of 425 tons, built for Henry t
M. Flagler and purchased by the
government for $117,500 at the outset
of the Spanish war, will be sold t
to Nathan S. Stern of New Orleans t
for $5,100. Jt
- J
CRASH TO DEATH
Five German Aeronauts Fall a Thousand
Feet to a Horrible Fate.
A BALLOON COLLAPSES
The Accidental K\pl<i?ion of a DiliKihle
Air SI lip's Benzine Tunk
Wrecks the (ills ling and tile Colli*
psoil llnlloon iiikI TI*os?> In It
Hurled to Heath.
Falling through space a distance
of nearly 1,000 feet. Oscar Krbsloeh.
noted aeronaut and inventor, winner
of the international balloon race
held at St. I?uis. Mo., in 1907. and
one of the most promising of (lerman
erperlentmers In aerial rtight.
and four companions, were dashed
to death in a field near Opladen
Prussia, Wednesday.
The others killed were: llerr
Toelle, a manufacturer of Bartueu;
Kngineers Poehhoeppe and Kranx
and Motorman Splcke.
Only peasants saw the tragic tending
of the llight of the dirigible balloon
Krbsloeh, which, after a series
of accidents since its construction a
year ago, had recently been refitted
for passenger service. They had observed
the balloon a short time hefore
us it swung gracefully in the
air. Soon it disappeared in th*> fog.
and shortly a loud explosion was
heard and a crumbled mass fell like
a plummet to the earth.
So terrific was the force of the
fall that the gondola was smashed
to splinters, the motor buried deep
in the sod. while the five men were
crushed aud torn almost beyond recognition.
Experto who examined the wreckn
ep /\ r*< > 1 u e/v/1 I* ?? * .* - ? ? ' ? ' *
..,v llllll lilt? llfr-UZUie IAI1K
had bursted. The rubt?er envelope
had been torn to shreds and the
bow collapsed. Nearby was found
a sad memento of the disastrous
trip. It was a leaf from the notebook
of Engineer Hoeppe, making a
Bhort record of the Journey. There
were only a few records:
"Departed Hall 9.04; ascend air
9.10; thick fog northward. Can not
see earth; sun breaks through;
heavy fbg beneath us. Elevating
planes sloped downwards; altitude
280 metres (910 feet) at 9.14."
This is the sole record of the
last voyage of Erbsloeh. the details
of which can not be learned owing
to the death of all the occupants of
the car. Peasants near the scene
of "the catastrophe say that they
heard the propellers working. They ^
fired revolvers in order to indicate
to the aeronauts, then hidden in the
fog, that they wore in the neighborhood
of houses. Then the explosion
occurred and they saw the broken
mass hurling downward.
The ErbsloeJi has had a dubious
career. The first time it ascended
it crashed into a clump of trees and
its occupants narrowly escaped injury.
The balloon, which was one
af the non-rigid type, had just been
made over, preparatory to the es
tablishment of a passenger service
between Klberfeld and nearby points.
There wei e few eye-witnesses of
the accident. According to these,
the start was well made. The Erbsloeh
rose gracefully, pushing it?
way through the fo-' to heights ?*?mated
at 300 yards. At this altitude
a series of evolutions were be;un.
To the onlookers the airship
ippeared to obey her helm perfectly
Suddenly there was a loud report and
it the moment the fore part of the
vessel crumpled up and the gondoas
was twisted about until appeared
is tho standing on one end. As the
;as escaped from the forward compartment
the prow swayed downward.
For a flash the airship fluttered
like a wounded bird and then
'ell swiftly to the earth.
Erbsloeh and his companions wero
tilled the second they struck the
ground. Their heads were battered
n and every lintnb was broken .The
todies of the victims were removed
o a morgue. That of Erbsloeh
would not have been recognized had
t been alone. It was pierced through
the breast by a piece of wreck. Tho
>yos of the engineer were gouged
>ut. The hands of all five were ttclity
clutched as though they had held
iesperately to the car as it shot.
lownward. Their shoes were t???-r?
from their feet.
The death of Erbsloeh and his
tow, with the destruction of the balloon
from which much had been
toped following closely upon the
wreck od the German ship, Deuchsand,
has caused a gloom in aviuiou
circles.
Votes for Income Tax.
The Georgia Legislature votes for
nrome tax. After debating the queslon
for nearly a week "the lower ) ^
touse of the general assembly Wed- \ J
lesday passed the income tax resoltiion
by a vote of 125 to 4f>. Fouroen
members present did not vote.
\. similar resolution was adopted by
ho senate.
Helieving that Teddy is the only
white man in the country who can
Whip Johnson, the Andorson Mail
hinks It is up to Teddy to do it.