STAR! OUT WELL
Democratic Causes Meet aid Selec*
Champ Clark Speaker.
PRESIDE OVER HOUSE
K^lirespntallrc Underwood. r' .tlabnnin,
Selected as Chairman of
Ways and Means Gommttee?In
Fact, Km ire Slate, as Formerly
Agreed 1"ih>ii, <Joes Through
The Democratic members elect ot
the ne>:t congress met in WasVngton
Thursday ight and map;. * i out
certain things f ? the coming .sn'ci.
About 210 Demoorats were present.
Mr. Iinv, of Virginia, presided, and
Mr. Ashbrook, of Ohio, was secretary.
Francis Rurton Harrison, of New
York, called the attention of the
caucus to the fact that the name of
Theron . \kin, Representatire-elect
from New York, had been calied
twice in the opening roli call. Mr.
Harrison announced that he had information
that Akin had declared
that he would not enter the caucus
tonight and that Akin had said he
would vote with the Republicans.
Mr. Harrison then :isked that Mr.
Akin's name lie stricken from the
roll of Democrats. The Harrison motion
to strike Akin, of New York,
from tlie Democratic roll was adopted.
Mr. Atkin was elected on an independent
ticket and had tho endorsement
of the Democrats.
Mr. Lloyd, of Missouri, chairman
of the Democratic Congressional committee,
then placed Champ Clark in
nominalion lor spouser. messrs . misburry,
of Uhio; Pou, of North Carolina;
Adamson, of Georgia; Rainey,
of Illinois; Sulzer, of New York;
Iloflin. of Alabama, and others, seconded
the nomination, and it carried
by acclamation.
Mr. Olark, with a broad smile,
stepped to the front of the chamber
and formally accepted the honor.
"From the bottom of my hoart 1
thank ycu for your.generous endorsement
ft the high office of Speaker
of the House of Representatives," he
said. *"1 shall endeavor to discharge
the duties of that great position so
fairly, so justly and eo impartially
that you will never have cause to
regret what you have Just done.
"The caucus was called for the
purpose of seJecting the Democratic
contingent of the ways and means
committee for the 62d Congress, in
order to expedite the tariff legislation
by securing as speedily as possible
the date on which to introduce
bills we believe will promote the
prosperity of the whole country. The
.quirk ?r our plans are formulated
the better for all concernod.
"F ih member of the caucus
should have opportunity to' express
his o rions fully, and whatever is
done si.on Id l>e marked by good nature,
kindly forboarnnee and an
earnest desire to be of service to
the party and the country, for we
should never forget that the best
way to ser\e our party is to serve
our country."
Mr. Clark's speech niet with vociferous
cheers. One of the significant
speeches was by Mr. Anshurry, of
Ohio
"On behalf of the sixteen Democrats
elected to the 62d Congress
from the greet State of Ohio." said
Mr. Anshurry, "the State which will
at the next Convention of the part>
present the name of Judson Harmon
lor the Presidency, I second the
nomination of Champ Clark, of Missouri."
At mention of Mr. Harmon's name
several Democrats applauded, but
there was little cheering at the mention
of Mr. CI irk. Mr. Clark's friends
fearing that cheering in that connection
r. i tht he Interpreted to mean
cheerin : for the Oliioan, who is consplcniovs'y
mentioned for the President
' nomination.
Hepr<""entative Frank Clark. In an
imps? sloped speech, struck the first
discordant note by objecting to the
fixed p ogramme. He said he understood
a program had been mapped
out. ard he protested against it.
Mr. 'Ienry. of Texas, conspicuously
me Honed for chairman of the
next ri le? committee, made the formal
t otlon outlining the order of
business. His plan carried. This
Involved the selection of the personnel
of the ways and means committee.
as informally agreed upon in ad-vance
by the lenders, as follows:
Underwood of Alamaba, chairman;
Randall of Texas. Harrison of New
York. Brantley of Cieorgla, Shackleford
of Missouri, James of Kentucky,
Kitchln of North Carolina, Hull ot
Tennessee. Dixon of Indiana, Rainey
of Illinois, Hammond of Minnesota,
Hughes of New Jersey and A. Mitchell
Palmei of Pennsylvania.
Mr. Foster, of Illinois, introduced
a resolution providing for the election
of the standing committees of
the House by the House. He proposed
that Democratic members of
the ways and means committee chosen
at this caucus he authorized to
nominate the majority of members
of these standing committees of the
next House to the adjourned caucus.
Under his resolution Democrats on
the ways and means committee
would be ineligible to serve on any
WAS BEATEN BY JAPS.
KULA.BR DKTAIIjS OP THR ATTACK
CN AN AMERICAN.
Vice Co' -ml \VlIiiani9on Struck With
a f Jck and an American Girl At.
.' ickwl by a J*p. Reporter.
Details of the assault eu Ignited
States Vice Consul Williamson at
Oalny, Manchuria, by Japanese on
'December 23, briefly reported te
Washington by cable, were received
by the steamer Hallamashlre.
Mr. Williamson, according to the
advices, went to inspect the flsh market
recently opened by Japanese at
Dalny and was on a high stana
watching an auction sale when a
number of Japanese and Chinese flsh
mongers pushed into the market.
Mr. Williamson was almost pushed
off Clie stand.
He was straightening himself up
in the crush when several Japanese,
including the secretary and a clerk
of the market. It is said, began
scolding him for being there and at
the same lime pushing their way toward
him and seizing him by the
arms and pulling him from the
stand. Mr. Williamson asked why it
was wrong for him to watch the sale,
saying he would leave after they
gave him a reason.
Then the Japanese rushed at him.
He pushed one of them over in selfdefense
and the crowd rushed at
him. A Japanese thrust at him with
a bamboo pole, wounding him on the
chin. Another Japanese threw a
block of Ice, which cut his head,
blood flowing freely. Several threw
flsh at him.
With blood trickling down his
clothing, the victim made his way to
ine jmuce mmoD nair a mock distant
and some Japanese policemen accompanied
him hack to the market, where
the two Japanese who first attacked
htm were found. The censul asked
that they be taken to the police station.
According to the version received
here, the police did not take
them.
Mr. Williamson made a protest to
the Japanese administration at Dalny
and sent telegrams and letters to
Washington reporting the assault.
Rereral Japanese newspapers commented
upon the afTalr as well as on
an attack made about the same time
on a Miss Hayes, an American at
Yokohama, by a Japanese newspaper
reporter who, it is alleged, struck
her violently about the head several
times without apparent cause.
STAKTIilNCJ STATEMENT.
Tree and lJlnl Expert Say English
Sparrow a Nuisance.
John Davey, a noted tree culture
and bird expert delivered a lecture
in Charleston the other night on the
culture of trees. Perhaps the most
Interesting and certainly the most
startling statement made by the famous
tree surgeon came near the
close of his lecture, while he was
I discussing the relation of trees to
birds and Ilia prvrvrl wnrt th?f
latter do In keeping down the hordes
of pestilential insects which would
otherwise* destroy all green things
The English Sparrow, he said, is
so roal a menace that it actually
[threatens humanity with extinction,
lit is estimated that there are Ore billions
birds of this species in America
today. At the normal rate of increase,
this number will hare increasto
thirteen trillions In the next fire
years, and should this increase continue
in the same ratio, starvation
and death will stare the human race
in the face.
The English Sparrow does nothing
ed to thirteen trillions in next five
trees, hut it doe* have a disastrous
effect upon all other birds that are
useful in this respect. We must do
something to check it. or else suffer
the conse<iuenees. At present, it is
doin? what King George tried and
failed?con<iuering America.
Huge Tomato Crop,
The Columbia Record say3 "an instance
of tlie good work of the government
farmers' work, in that
branch known as the girls' toniato
club, is that of Miss Katie Gunter,
near Samaria, S. C., a detailed report
of wiiose work wa? received at
the office of State Agent Ira W. Williams
Wednesday morning. Miss
Gunter produced F>12 quart cans of
tomatoes, ten quart jars of pickles,
elgnt pint jars of pickles, si* pint
jars of catchup. ei?ht pint Jars of
preserves, and five quart jars of preserves.
All this was produced on
one-tenth of an acre of ground, this
being the largest yield at the county
fair."
other committee.
Mr. Fitzgerald, of New York, then
made hla expected move by offering a
substitute resolution empowering
Champ Clark, as Speaker, to designate
the Democratic members of a
tentative committee on ways and
means, thus paying trlbuto to Mr
Clark as one in whom tho member#
had unbounded confidence. Mr. Clark
oppoeed tho Fitzgerald resolution.
In a substitution for both tht
Fitzgerald and Foeter resolutions
Mr. Cox, of Indiana. Introduced a res
olutlon providing for a nominating
1 commftteo to recommend namos tc
the Democratic caucus for appoint
AS IT SHOULD BE
THE NEW TARIFF RIL.I, WILL RE
DEMOCRATIC.
I'>anio<l i?y Underwood It Will lie
Without Tuint of Protection Which
Rome Might Fear Will Characterize
It.
Editor \V. E. Gonzalez, of The
State, writing to his .paper from
\Vaahington, savs:
Oscur \V. Underwood of Alabama.
whoEe letter indorsing The State
view or the potency of the national
platform In guiding party men 'n J
congress w?i published on Tuesday,
will lie ths chairman of th? next
ways and means committee and ae
such he will write the next tariff
bill. 'Mr. Underwood is quiet and
niodect. a listener rather than a tuiker.
and there was simple earneBtncs*
not HssertlvenosB In hlg declaration
to me last evening In Baltimore tv.i .
"any measure I prepare will be
strictly a Democratic revenue bill.''
There will be no cloaks for protection;
no Democrat In protected wool.
There will be fourteen Democrats
on the Democratic wave and means
committee and the only one of then
with a tnlnt as to any vote w.ll he
Drantley of Georgia long a member
of the committee. The question of
dropping Brantley because of his vote
for a duty on lumber In disobedience
of the Denver platform, has been
under consideration, since co tgress
met, but I understand from seve.al
sources that through the efforts of
Champ Clark and other old and
strong friends, and In consideration
of his acknowledgement of nrror In
voting for a duty on lumber, the ravers
will not cut the ground from under
Drantley.
The next ways and means committee
will put the stamp of disapproval
on the action of those who
"jumped" the platform by pointedly
Indorsing die free lumber plank In
the Denver platform.
There 's sharp division among
Democrats on two questions. Senator
Dalley is a leader of the scnool,
advocating a duty on raw mate.-.el
and also *or revising the tariff as a
whwle. From the present outloot L??
Is In the minority of both. The Tex
-is wciogauuu in uaniy spill, oil liuin
If the party Is to accomplish anythin';
in tariff legislation these questions
must be kept off the floor of the
house. They will have to be jettlert
in caucus, and the losers accept ti.e
majority decree. Representative ITnderwood
la convinced a revision sch dule
by schedule is the only practical
way of getting results and preventing
"trading."
Cold on Georgia Farm.
While at play on the farm of John
W. Harris, four miles from Tallapoosa,
Ga., a day er two ago, a child
discovered a large nugget of gold
and further search by older persons
led to tho finding of a considerable
quantity of the yellow metal. Tho
farm is in the center of the Georgia
gold belt and the discovery Is regarded
here as an '..nportant one.
Hold Posse at Hay.
Armed with revolvers and firing
scores of shots, two boys, Charles
and Henry Roberts, 18 years Old,
who escaped from tho Tennessee industrial
schools on the Murfreesboro
pike, held at bay a posse of more
than 100 tnon yesterday afternoon.
After a miniature battle lasting a
good portion of the afternoon they
made good their escape.
Struck by Plow Point.
wh 1 If* ah :in?f?n 1 ti & n nlnu;
an emery wheel at 11 o'clock Thursday
morning, N\ P. Abrams, manager
of 1j. W. Floyd's plantation, nine
miles west of Newberry, was struck
in the bead by the point, which was
wrenched '"rom his grasp by the fast
moving belt, inflicting a ghastly
wound. He was rendered unconscious.
There is little hope of his
recovery.
I'simI Much Ilccr.
Greater New York consumed K.500,000
barrels of beer during tn?
year 1010, according to a report just
made public. This is about an average
of two barrels a year for every
man. woman and child in the
city. Throughout the United States,
tho year's consumption reached a to
tal of near'v sixty millions.
Girl Will llang.
At Waynesboro, Ga., Rosalie Small,
a negro girl, was tried and convicted
of the murder of. Harvey Jones, a
white merchant and farmer on January
11. The girl and Calvin Johnston,
a negro man, convicted of the
same crime, were sentenced to hang
on February 8. In the man's trial
the Jury was out three minutes; In
the girl's, three hours. Th? girl had
, confessed her share in the crime and
Implicated Johnston.
k Must Serve Time,
i The United States supreme court
dismissed for want of jurisdiction
i the appeal of Q. Wash Hunter from
: his conviction of manslaughter in
South Carolina. Hunter was sen>
tenced to the penitentiary for eight
, years. lie was accused of having
killed Elben F. Copeland, near their
; homes In Laurens county, S. C., In
ijlflflfi, wihlle playing cards. Hunter
- entered a plea of self-d?feruw.
FAKE LAND SALE
Tbe Fraud Was Easily Detected by Colombia
Photographers
HOW GAME WAS WORKED
Tlve Prospectus Carried Puked I'no*
togruphs, the Pictures UcIdk Made
to Show Handsome Buildings,
Where Only Pine Barrens, With
Standing Tree*, Exist.
Neither being able to furnish the
$5,000 bail demanded of each, J. C
Masters and I. C. Sibley, arrested in
Jackson, Mine., for using the mails to
tk fraud, iu connection with a con
eern they were promoting, called tin
Albemarle Development company.
Albemarle, N. C., have beeu remanded
to juil, at Jackson, to await re
nioval to the jurisdiction of the
United States court for the western
district of North Carolina?all of
which, says the Columbia Record, ia
interesting to a number of Columbians,
several blocks to Albemarle
cfock having been placed in this city
by a plausible young man, giving his
nme as H. D. Rangdale.
The Record says it was in fact a
"ormer Columbian, now manager of
news bureau in the Southwest, ana
a firm of Columbia photographers,
hat first suspected the promoters of
the Albemarle concern of fraud. At
the request of the news bureau manager,
newspaper men here consulted
he photographers and learned that
l.nngdaie had sold to them-?or rather
had exchanged with them for two
dozen photographs of himself, valued
at $24?a "participating certificate,"
No. L-754, in th? Albemarle
Development company.
L>angdal? had failed In his effort
to part the photographers frotu any
cash, because they detected evidences
of fraud in the handsome prospectus
that he displayed, la the prospectus
there were, besides the usual roseate
word pictures, several illustrations,
purporting to be from actual photographs,
showing considerable progress
upon the development of the Albemarle
tract into a pretty suburb,
with largo hotel, stores, costly residences
and the like. It required only
superficial examinations of these pictures
hv a nhotocranher to show thnr
they were cunningly made composites
of photography, and drawing.
Actual photographs had been taken
of thy wood6 on the tract and the
several clearings and then half completed
buildings had been drawn In
at the proper places and the doctored
picture Itself had been photographed
and from this second picture the electrotype
reproduction need In the
prospectus had been made. The
work had been skilfully done, hut It
Is next to Impossible to give to these
synthetic, productions such appearance
of genuinesnees as to deceive a
photographer.
I.angdale, confronted with this evidence
of fraud, said he knew the
pictures were misleading and had
strongly urged hie euperiore not to
resort to such methods. He insisted,
however, that the propesition under
promotion was legitimate and gave
Albemarle bank reference# These
the photographers did not trouble to
verify, as they had but a small Investment
at stake and were willing
in these circumstances to take their
chances.
The stock certificate they hold Is
signed by Masters, one of the men
now under arrest, as "secretarytreasurer."
It is dated November 18
and the postmark shows it was
mailed November 21 from Albemarle.
Tho application for it was signed
hero September 2 7. longdate was
a young man of good appearance and
made easily a favorable impression
upon his acquaintances here. He
mimon to nave neen educated at
Harvard and said his home was in
New Haven.
Masters and Si'oley were arrested
In Jaekeon on warrants issued upon
the affidavit of PostofTlee Inspector
J. W. Bulla of North Carolina, woo
presented documentary evidence in
support of the government's contention
that the development, company
was being promoted by fraud. Inspector
Bulla Is quoted as saying
that on an investment of $1,000 in
100 acres of land near Albemarle the
promoters have taken in about $2f>0,000.
He said that Sibley had been
connected with a similar scheme at
Whiteboro, Texne, about five yeart
ago. Th >y have recently operated
in both the Carolinns and in Ala
bama, as well as in Mississippi.
U'ln?lin?> X? > ?
M'flft Jessie MoLeod, a student a
Winthrop College, whose home Is a
nishopvllle, was married at Charlott*
on Monday to Fred Hennlgan. :
young man of that city. The yount
lady had received pernrlsslon to g<
over to Charlotte to have her eye
treated, but it developed that she ha(
an affection of tho heart. The yonni
lady was a member of the freshmai
class.
ment to the committees, this nomi
Hating committee to be composed o
one member from each Democrat 1
State delegation and none of ther
to he cha'rman of other committees
the nominations te he subject t
change by a majority vote of the can
cot.
| Burduco Livi
w A scientifically prepared rem*
% stipation, Dyspepsia, Nenrol
$ Coated Tongue, Bad Taste,
| Mild and
No Griping i
I Makes a Swee!
Pretty Cor
I
Sold by all medicine
?>
I RIIRVAfFI I &
I MANU FACT
| Charlottej
CLflSSIFIED COLUMN
t VukImhI (I)nioi sht'll* ?ur Poultry.?
One hundrea pound*, *lxty *cnf? _
five hundred pound*, $2.50. Brjy
Inner, Lachlcotte & Co., Waverl^ ^
Mills, 8. C.
Rice Flour, 100 Ton6 fresh. Rite
Flour. Hay, Grain, Bran, Ctaopi
C. S. Meal and etc., Albert Bla
chnff nnd Co., 31 Elizabeth Street
Charleaton, S. C.
Women, sell guaranteed hone. 7?
per cent, profit. Make $20 ually
Full or part time. Beginners investigate.
Strong Hosiery. Be . ""
4029, West Philadelphia, Pa.
For Sale?Single-comb Ithode Island
Red cockerels; well marked; good
colors; free of "smut"; at $1.00
nnd $2.ho each. Eggs, $1.50 per
15. R. r. Gillespie, IlartEvllle,
S. C.
Girl or Woman, each locality. Good
pay made, acting as representative
Address envelopes, fold, mall circulars;
material, stamps furnished
free. Rex Mailing Agency, I.on
don, Ontario.
The High Point Detwtlve Agency o
Columbia doe* a general detectlv?
business. White and colored d#
tectlve* at your convenience
W r-i ..a TIT O rr> 1__ ?'
WW UD. r* . o. 1 Ujriur, WkUtft:
Columbia, S. .C. .
Oobbe' Hiuglo Comb Khodf> Islam
Rids and "Crystal" White Orpin*
tons w In and lay when other-,
fall, stock and eggs for sale,
for mating list. Q. A. Dob be, Box
B. 24., Gaineevllle, Ga.
Fnn.i, I<Yult and Truck Bands In
Hillsborough County, Florida.
Write me your desires. Can All
any requirement. J. E. Snyder,
Llmona, (near Tampa) Florida.
Correspondence solicited. . ?
?
I r
North State Rife Insurance Co., of (
Kingston, N. C.. operates only in n
th? two Carolines snd has ranre h
A
Carolina lives insured than nn> *
other Carolina cofpany. Adonis
wanted where the company 'a not .
now represented.
f
s
Mammoth Bronze Turkeys for sale ^
Won flrfit prizes at Piedinon fair >
and extra prize of $18.00 lamp ?
Hatched last of May. Young torn.- J
weigh from 16 to 18 pounds, nice J
hens, $7.00 per pair. Oliver .1 >
Conrad, It. F. I). 2., Winston- Sal ?
em, N. C. r
I
j,
Attention Farmers?Do you want to '
raise more cotton with less for;I-> '
lizer. se >d and labor than you !
ever dill before? If so, p?-nd for
particulars of the Bunch rtystem .1
of Cotton Culture and learn how
to double your yield per acre. A
postal brings it. Address A. I<. ,
Couch, 00 VV. Russell St., Orange-, ,
i burg, S, C. yn
i WnnU'd?Make big money a< ! 1
I Ing photo pillow tops. 25c: fcr
nildes. 25c; portraits, 35c; oil?tte?
30c. We produce works of #r'
guaranteed, lowest prices, large* <
studio, prompt service, credit gl* i
[ 'i; samplos; portrait and fram 1
r aalogue free. Hitter's Art 8t"
3 dlo. 121 R Madison. Chicago. Ill i
\ 1
? (iood I,ive Agents wantod In ever?
1 town to sell a meritorious line of j
s medicines extensively advertise'' J
1 and used by every family and !r
? the stable. \n exceptional oppor
1 tunltv for the right parties tr '
make good monev. Write at onc< '
for proposition to L. B Martin ,
Box 110. Richmond, Va.
f ; I
c
(I In order to lntr<Mliir?? my high rrad' j
Succession Flat Dutch and Wake ,
9 field Cabbago Plants to those wtw j
i. have not used them before I wll 1
give with each flrmt order for 1
er Powder, j
*ly for Billiousnesv Con- J
i e- i i i * ? *
x? ukj oick neadache. * >
and Stomach Diseases. <'
i?
< >
< >
Gentle. i: *
*?
io Nausea. i;
< >
; Breath and ::
4 >
nplexion. <[
< >
< >
4
: dealers at 25c.] <?
4 I
i DUNN CO.)
turers, i:
v N. C. II
4
o
. v.>
thousand plants at a a dollar's
worth of vegetable and flown
eed pbsolutely free. W. K. Harl,
Plant Orow?r. Enterprise P. O.,
?. n.
Wanted?Every man, woman an*
child In South Carolina to know
thai the "Aleo" brand of Saafc,
Doors and Blinds are the i*et
and are made only by the Au|r/s*t?
Lumber Company, who nianafaeture
everything In Lumb4>t an*
Mlllwork and whose watchword la
"Quality." Write Augusta Lumber
Compan" Augusta, Georgia,
for prlcnr on any order, iarg* !
small
No remedy will deaden tho
pain or take the soreness from
Cuts and Bruises
quicker than Noah's Liniment.
It is antiseptic and tlie best
pain remedy.
One trial will convince you.
Noah'?Liniment penetrates;
requires but little rubbing.
Here's the Proof
Mr. Edward Ryan, who has been emiloyed
at the Olil Dominion Iron and
fall WorkH In Richmond, Va? for about
Ifty yearn, makes the following statencnt:
"While work i ok at my trade
Iron work) I pet bruised and cut fre[uently,
and I find that Noah's Llnllent
takes all the soreness out and
leal* the wound immediately. Have
lno used your rem* dy for rheumatism
rlth the best results, and rerommend
t to anyone Buffering with aches and
alns."
*
Nonh's l.lnlmrnt Is the best remedy;
or RhPiimntUtn * ~
- i.iiinc MUCK,
tiff Joints uml Muscles, Soro Throat.
:olds, Strains, Sprains, Cuts. Bruises.
Jollc, Cramps, CR <
leuralgla, Tooth- w>* " ^O*.
iche and all * /? t/S\ \ *
Jerve, Bone and VI "H Tvvv
luflcle Aches and i\t
'alns. The Ken- ',3c?c2i* IF
ilno has Noah's L*rT>3 It
trk on ever y Uf*V
tackage. 2*. els. It| W \M "H
(old by dealers In ' f A J a E^
nedlelne. S a m - k L? J k II
do by mall I roe.
Joah Remedy Co., i'j j i E ? kj I 2f k I
tlchmond, Va. IlkllMlnkl^ J
MKTIIOIUKT ( II \l TAi gl A.
lovomeiit Authorized by Confcrenro
Takes Shape.
What may be regarded as the first
efinite step toward tno establishment
of 'ho Methodist Chautauqua
itt Waynesvillo, NT. ('., as authorized
by the (Bneral Conference of the
Methodist Kpiseopal Church, South,
taken Monday at Waynesvllle,
ivnen tne incorporators of the Southirn
Assembly Company met and organized.
with the election of the following
ofllrors:
President, Rlshop James Atkins;
doo president. John It. Pepper,
Memphis, Tenn.: secretary, S. A.
Scatterwalth, Waynesvllle, N*. C.;
treasurer, H. J. Sloan. Waynesville,
S\ C.; general superintendent, Dr. ^
lames Cannon, Hlarkstone, Va.; su- 1
aeriniendent of TUble Conference,
[>r. F. W. 1'llett, Vanderbllt UnlverJltv;
superintendent evangelistic
sork. Dr. Clone Stuart, Cleveland,
Tenn; superintendent missionary
raining school, the ftev. James E.
Cnlloch, Nashville, Tenn.
The Assembly has purchased 1,000
icres of land near Waynesvllle, with
in elevation of 2.000 feet and plans
lave been formulated to develop and
jeautlfy the property at once.
i