CAUSES ALARM
Treaty With Jjp-tn is Opposed by the
Pec pie bf Pacific Slope. '
PROTEST AGAINST IT
PreNident Taft is I rged to Withdraw
Treaty, l ulled States Senate Asked
t<> e..r..u,> ???? ?
-?v*u9v iiini tin* l ailforiiiii
Delegation Instructed
< >Pposc*I!ut ilbut ion.
Tho text of a now treaty with Japan,
designed to replace tii.it of 1894
and drawn with the special design of
eliminting the restrictions upon tinmigration
contained In that treaty
has been laid before the S? nate b>
President Taft.
The essential difference between
tb proposed treaty and the existing
oonveiilion is said to be in the fact
tli it ii omits all reference to such
rest-ictions and leaves to tlie* national
hoiior of Japan the enforcement at
her own ports of the limitations
upon emigration from .japan now expressly
placed upon immigration into
the United States.
Because it embodies this radical
departure from the ovist.ijnj treat>
and touches the question of the deepest
iinpo-tance and interest toi the I
Pacific. slope tlie Injection of this]
convention into the closing hours ? j
the Sir! -lirst Congress has create*:
a sens::t inn.
1'aeilic Coast Kick-.
A rorolution was introdrti-.il in tin
California State Senate ns soon as
the above action of iVesldent Tuft
\v iVii'icil ntilMtitr ?i n/xri i?*
dent to withdraw the liow '.lapun se '
trenty appenlin.' to the I*oit? <L Stales
Senate to refuse its assent, 'and in
structing tile California delegation to
oppose rat ideation.
The resolution, whi"h was pre
Rented hy Senator Cnniitiefti, say?
that "the Senate of the State of California.
relying In good faith tipot.
assurances from official sp^rtes, given
1o the people of the State during
the last four years, that the immigration
of such laborers was precluded
by a 'mutual agreement' between
our Government and that o:
Japan, and that the latter nation was
as anxious to retain as we were tc
exclude them, patriotically and pntiently
observed calmness pending
negotiations for a new treaty, that.
The Resolutions.
"Whereas, our people have b'een
Jed to believe and hope that there
. would bo no surrender of our rights
in the premises, and that:
"Whereas, it further appears that
even the protective features relating
to immigration matters of the ,present
tr. nty with Japan arc omitted in
the new draft. Therefore, be it
"Resolved, That the Senate of tin
State of California earnestly urges
the I't evident ot' the United St.it<s
to withdraw said treaty,from further
consid r- fion hy the Senate of the
United States, and
"Be it further resolved. That we
appeal to the Senate oft the. United
States to withhold and refuse its assent
to a compact fraught with so
much danger to our citizens,, to out
industrial development and to out
civilization."
Chairman Wrleht. of the Federal
relations committee of the Senate,
sent the following telegram to President
Taft:
Letter to President.
"Mr President: California 4s much
alarmed over the newspaper reports
of the proposed new Japanese treaty.
The Federal Government, unless positively
assured that Japan will enforce
regulations restricting immigration
to United States of such subjects
:is are inimical to out.Western
civilization, should insist upon a restriction
clause in the new treaty.
Less than this will inflame the public
mind all along the Pacific coast
nnd may lead to a condition that will
he deplored by those desirous of preserving
affinity and good will between
the United States and Japan.- This,
in tlic opinion of the Senate eomnrttee
on Federal relations, is the s< ntiment
of the California Legislature.
(Signed)
"Federal Relations ConiniRtee.
"Lerow Wright, Chairman.'
Distressing Accident.
Roper Moore, a hoy I I years of
age, was killed by his brother. Tally
Moore, 13 years of age, at their
home, five miles front Wellford. late
Thursday. The killing was an accident.
the gun being discharged while
the boys were playing with it on lite
front porch, while William Moure,
their father, sat on the steps. The
entire load struck the hoy in lite back
of the neck and he died instantly.
Missing Man located.
A inessape to his brother, at Prosperity,
Thursday state that Mr. Parian
Caldwell, the young Prosperity
farmer, who disappeared suddenly
from the home of his sister. Mrs A
P Trice. In Charlotte, on Monday afternoon.
leaving $">0 and a note say
Ing that he had plven up the lipht
had been located in a sanatarium Ir
KnoxvilVe.
A fourteen-story syscraper planner
for Milan will he the hiphest business
building In southern Europe.
me three days' search for |
the gan g of bandits which held up
md robbed the Southern railway fast
nail train at White Sulphur Springs
last Saturday morning. It is the
belief of the officers of the express
nd railway company that the entire
tang lias been rounded up, but their
identity still is unknown.
Following the capture of one of
he robbers about four miles from
iahlonega, two other members of the
tang were arrested this morning by
\ posse headed by ex-SherifT Edwards
of Lumpkin county. The men
.vt re surprised on a public road about
4 miles from Dahlonega and offered
:o resistance. They were placed in
jail it Dahlonega Wednesday and will
ie carried to Gainesville tomorrow.
Nearly $1,000 in cash and jewelry
valued at between $">00 and $t?00
vere found on the two robbers. They
efused to give any names, but their
all; indicates that they are Westerner.
Wliile they kept the'.r own identity
secret, tfiey stated that the man
rested earlier near Dahlonega was
iip of tlie ringkaders of the gang
.lid was known as John I). Anderson.
lie Is said to be an old hand at
he game.
Fx Sheriff Edwards in reporting
.'lie capture of the robbers said the
inly resistance made by the men was
o point an obi pistol at their captors
when told they were under ar
vest. This pistol was found to be
wnpty. When handcuffed the robbers
broke down and admitted their
tarticipation in the expre ss o:ir hoielip.
They refused to give any de
ails further than t6 implicate the
man who was arrested near Dahlonega.
ItliKAHK HAD XAKICOW KSCAI'K.
ilursK of ilw II... L In win..i. I1-. II ...
Hiding Killed.
The State says (!ov. Hlease had a
cry narrow escape Thursday aftei o
u l?y a runaway horse running at
full tilt into n hack in which ho was
he passenger.
The accident occurred at the cor.er
of Main and Laurel streets.
The hack in which Gov. Hlease was
riding was going north on Main
street and when in front of Uedding's
,rorery store a horse attached to a
wagon owned by Willie Gaines
mashed into the hack, throwing out
the hack in an and killing the horse at.icliod
to the hack. A sliait of the
wa on was driven into the horse,
uenitrnting his heart and killing him
instantly.
The horse was owned by Ruben
Bright, a well known negro liacknian
and was driven by Have McNeal. At
the collision Gov. Hlease managed to
keep his seat, receiving only a few
slight bruises. Dave McNeal was
thrown out, hut escaped serious injury.
MANY I>1 VMS LOST.
Hundreds Are Mumping Out and
Suffering Severely.
A violent earthquake was experienced
at Mouastlr and elsewhere
throughout the village of Mouastlr.
There was some loss of life.
Several mosques and houses were
lemolished. The population is camping
out and suffering intensely with
lip oold. Tlu* aiithoritlp.s have appealed
to the government for 30u
tents and relief funds.
Monastir is a town of European
Turkey, eapttal of the vilayet of
Monastir in Macedonia, eighty-five
miles northwest of Salonki. It is an
important .military center and has a
large trade in wheat and tobacco he
ides having manufactories of gold
lid silverware and carpets.
The population, which is estimated
at 4a.ooo. is a medley of all the
nationalities to he found in Mace
doniu, the Christians numbering
about half of the total.
South Carolina's Share.
The following are the South Carolina
items carried in the sundry
civil hill, reported to the House
today, for the purpose of purchasing
sites and erecting new Fed'
oral buildings: Abbeville, site and
commencement of huildinp, $10,000;
Bennettsvllle, site and building.
$10,000; Camden, site ifnd building.
$10,000; Columbia, site, $75,000;
Oalfney, site and building. $35,000;
' aureus, site and building, $25,000;
- Marion, site, $10,000; Newberry, site
and building. $35,000; Oranieburg,
site and building, $30,000; Union,
. site and building, $25,000. Orange
burg gets $30,000, and work on the
building will begin in a short time.
i ?
To include the counties of Kershaw,
Calhoun and Orangeburg in
1 the prohibition of the killing of
i | foxes, was one of the new acts passed
' ?y the legislature.
?
BANDITS ARE CAUGHT
ADMIT SHARK IN WHITK SULPHUR
SPRINGS HOLD-UP.
Kxtent of Their Resistance is to
Point Kinpty Pistols at O dcert*?
L*mIkh1 in .lail at l>ahl' A('Ka, Go.
A dispatch from Gair esville, ija.,
says three men have oeen arrestee
and more than $!' ' jO in money and
Jewelry has ' _n recovered as a re
'
iNLY WttUfc MtN
GOVERNOR UREASE Wil.l. IIAVE
NO NEGKO NOTARIES.
Clerks of Court In the IHfTcrent
Counties llavc Ikvn Notified Not'
to Enroll Them.
No negroes will be commissioned 1
is notaries public during the administration
of Governor Coleman L.
Blease No r.egr ps have thus far
>een commissioned by the Governor)
-io far as he knows, and he has taken
steps to prevent them qualifying If
my should he commissioned by mistake.
Clerk of Court G. Lawrence Bailey,
n common with the clerks of court
>f the other forty-two coantles lu
South Carol la a. has been notified
from the Chief Executive's office not
to record the names of any negroes
who may apply under the law. If. by
chance, any negroes happen to be
commissioned. Governor Blease says
he "will cut ofT their political
heads."
This information hns been con- j
veyed to the clerks of court In the \
several counties of the State, being
the gist of a letter sept out in man!-',
'old from the Governor's office. For
the first time is thus given what may !
have been the controllin? reason why
Governor Blease revoked the eommiss.ons
of the T.Orto notaries in the
State, called upon the General Assenthlv
to pla"p restrictions around
the notaries lob. and then reappointed
those to whom he wished to give
the posit ion of notary.
Governor 'lipase's letter to the
clerks of court states unequivocally
that he has not nor will he commission
any negroes as nortaries pub'le;
that the clerks of court shall refuse
to record the names of negroes; that
if any apply the names shall he sent
in to the Governor, as some may
have slipped through In the luit few
weeks. and that if any have been ap-,
pointed "I will cut off their political
heads."
Under the new lawj it is necessary
for a person who has been com missioned
from the Governor's office to
_'o to the clerk of court in his county.
have his name recorded b.s a notary.
with the date of the commission.
It is of more than passing Interest
that this information was not
given out at the Governor's otllce.
Steel Trust Is Shrewd.
For Ingenuity the "Heathen Ghfnee"
is not to be compared with the ntoel
I trust. As restraint of trade and combinations
are Illegal, the trust, so ft
is said, gets around the difficulty by
its plan of "neighborly kindness. '
This is an application of the Golden
Rule within a limited area. In other
words other steel concerns are expected
to show this "neighborly kindness"
by not opposing the trust. If
any concern should be so forgetful
of its interests as to do it. other concerns.
supposedly influenced by the
trusts, are to lal>or with the unneiglihorly
action. If it proves obstfnate
no one knows what would happen to
it, but anyone can make a shrewd
guess. There are some wonderful
and ingenious ways of keeping the
letter of a law and of breaking It in '
spirit. That Is the way Carnegie
made his millions. ITo is trying to
ease his conscience by giving thsni
away, but he can't.
Thinks for Herself.
That Canada is able to negotiate
commercial treaties with other countries
shows how near to being an independent
nation she has become in
recent years. This la again seen in
her i>osse?aion of a separate army
and navy, in her coinage and postage,
and in the right to make her own tar ffs.
To he sure the crown has the
right of veto on any measure the
Canadian parliment may pass, but
that right would never he exercised
on any question upon which Canada
1 might make up her mind. in the
present reciprocity treaty there are
people in Croat Mrllian who would
like that veto to he used or for the
British parliament to go counter to
Canada's action. Hut Canada would
'nke wi'li ill grace any such interference,
and it would but serve to weaken
the tie which although sentimental
rather than political, binds the
daughter to the mother and which at
present Is vorv real and strong.
Killed in Mine.
The lire which started at T> o'clock
Thursday morning in the timber
yard of the Ilelnmnt mine in Tonopnh
N*< vada. still sends out volumes of
smoke from the main shaft and it
is admitted by the mine authorities
that between ten and twelve men in
lilt; I j oil IUUI II'VCI are Ill'HO.
Murderer Cauclil.
Aft or a desperate fight in which
two men wore seriously stabbed, the
sheriff of YadVIn county, and a po. se
about midnight Thursday night arrested
Moses Speaks, who Saturday
killed his wife and son-in-law, William
Miller, at High Point, using a
. butcher knife as his weapon.
Swung for Murder,
Alter V. Hooper, who called his
wife to the door of her father's house
i at Atlantic, Ph., and shot her down.
' after their separation on November
I 11, 19uS, was hanged In the yard of
the county Jail at Erie, Pa.
CL?ssici-1 ci.JVN
For Sale?Mure Klag Cotton Seed at
Poultry Yard, Darlington, S. S.
For Sale-?Pur* King Cotton Seed at
$1.00 par bu*h*l. Address, J. J.
Llttlejelin, JooMTllle. 9. C.
For 8*1*?Fight hundred bushels selected
R*d Rust-proof home raised
?**d oats, at #0 cents bushel. J.
(U.Simmons. liountville, S. C.
For Sale?Fggs from pure bred
White Plyaouih Rocks. Fiahel
strain. Price $1.60 imr c^ttimr
15. K. H. Patrick. White Oak,
C.
Yob Caw Make HI* Mwior selling
portable f?nce right. Rr?rr farmer
aaada It. Write It. T. Staiukaugh.
Woodaboro, Md., for particular*.
Java* Esntneky Jacks. tw*nty-oas
Jsnoets for *al*. All of my own
raising, with guarantee as strong
an tan t>? made. J. W. Ri!*y,
Gracny, Kj.
For Hal*? Utility Rhode Islind Red
Cockereln, $1.50 to $2.00. 1**1
Cock, $5.00. One excellent Irish
Pointer Por, $50.00. W. It. Pe.ir on.
Strother, R. C.
I or Sale S. C. R. I. Reds. While
and llrown Leghorns, Black Langslinuir,
Plymouth Rocks. Krits tor
netting. 15 for J1. M. H. Grsr'
Darlington, R. C I
l ull stock Barred Plymouth Rocks.
Whlto Sherwoods and Rhode Island
Red chlrk< ns ard eggs for
ante. Address Mrs. Mary 1*1. I.lttlejohn.
.lonegville, R. C.
S. Rhode Inland Pr*l and Whit*
Leghorn eggs for hatcliin *. None
better, few n? good. Satisfaction
guaranteed. Write for prices.
Buysfde Poultry Farm, Guytun.
Ga.
Tlie Little- Tell Tale wnich tells the
Truth. A complete egg record o:
th* day, the week, the month, and
tha year. Price 1 0c. Address.
Mrs. U B. Roberts, Dade City,
Fla.
Fight to ten dollar* week made, spar*
time, mair or woman, each local
Ity, attend advertising material,
make reports, represent us. lOxchasge
Agency Brokers. London,
Canada.
Girl or Woman?each locnJity, gooo
pay made arting as represent*
tire, address envelopes, fold, mal<
circulars, material, stamps. fu?
nlshed free. Hex Mailing Agency
London, Ontario.
For Sal<??Whlppoorwlll" Pens, $2.25
per bushel; Clay Mixed Peas, $2.20
per bushel; Ripper Mixed Peas,
$2.20 per bushel. Write for prices
in large quantities. F. A. Hush
Co., Preston, Ga.
Dropsy (hired?Shortness of breatr.
relieved ir? 3 6 to 4 8 hours. Reduces
swelling in 15 to 20 days
Call or write Collutn Dropsy Remedy
Company, Dept. O 512 A iste'l
Htdg.. Atlanta Ga.
Doltlis' Single Comb Rhode Island
Reds and 'Crystal'" White Orpingtons
win and Tay when others
fail, stock and eggs for sale. Send
for mating list. G. A. Dobbs, Hex
R. 24, Gainesville, Ga.
Waate<l?Men and ladies to taJke
three months practical course. Rxpert
management. High salaried
positions guaranteed. Write for
catalogue now. Charlotte Telegraph
School. Charlotte, N. C.
Wanted?Men to take thirty days'
practical course in our machine
shops and learn automobile business
Positions secured eradu
ates, $25 per week and up. Charlotte
Auto School. Charlotte, N. C.
Wanted?Book keepers. stenographers,
clerks, write us If deslrin;
employment. We place competent
business help ami are not able to
supply demand. Carolina Audit
& System Co., Skyscraper, Columbia.
S. C.
Greenwood Crows?Could you be it;
dured to come and grow with us*
We otTer in our agency great bar
pains in Real Kstate; Farms.
Dwellings and I^ota at reasonable
prices. Call or write for information.
Goodwyn & Spence,
Greenwood, S. C.
I'or Sale?Sclented Marlboro Prolific
Seed Corn, first at Georgia expoiinn-nt
stations tests last year, and
the blue ribt>on rariety for many
years past. Muphel, $2.00; half
bushel, $1.25; perk, 75c. Pure
Money Maker Cotton Seed at $1.00.
J. H. Myers, Sumter, S'. C., R. F.
I). No. 4.
For Sa?le? Mich rows, registered .Jer
sey color.- Golden Lad. Flying Fox
and st Lomhert strain. Mronee
Turkeys and eggs. Also eggs, U.
I. Reds, White Leghorn, Marred
Plymouth Rocks and Pit Game,
ono dollar per do*. White rallie
puppies, regi tered. M. It. Sains,
Jonesville, S. C.
(k<nU Wanted?Make bis money sell
LEES HEADA
NEURAL
Safely Sure
Cures Headache and Neuralgl
ou? testimonials on file in our oflie
Head the following:
I have been a constant suffercould
not get any relief until it in
I tried Lee's Headache and Neural;;
lief.
I heartily endorse it an the be*
t Signed)
Sold everywhere. Price 25c and 50c
Burwell & Dunn I
iug photo pillow tops. 2.5c; broinldoa.
25c; portraits. 25c; oilettes,
2 0c. We jeodtice works of art
guaranteed, lowest priev's. largest
studio. prompt service. credit +.'iren;
samples; portrait and frame
I catalogue free. Hitter's Art Stuilio.
1212 Madison. Chicago, 111.
[(.(mil Live Ag? nts wauled in every j
town to sell a merit ?r!ou* line ol |
medicines extensively advertised
and used t>y ever family a ad lit
the stable. An exceptional ?,-ppor.
fuuity for the ngltt parties to
rnube good money. Wrfto at once j
for proposition t<? h. It. Martin.'
Hex 110, Richmond. Vn.
in *?rder to introduce niy high grade |
Succession Flat Dutch and Wake-)
ftetd Cabbage Plantu to !'*?>?" tic
have not used tlrem before I wtl |
glre with each flrat ord.tr for a
thousand plantu at SI. 12, a d?vl- I
lar's worth of vegetable uu i flower ,
seed alkfi-lately free. \V. R Ham, I
Plait Grower, ETnlarpriu* P. O. '
8. C.
If you wsi.t mors money for your
cottos rrnti nl*nt "4i>ih? I' r\l j ? .1
I/oag Staple. Very productive
superior staple. Two bal*? (102S
lb?> thla variety aoid in iiUatorr.
No*.. 1 V1 0. for $281..12. Seed
$1.50 per buHhel, TO or more twushelv.
$1.25. Addrttaa A. U. Hegging,
I.auiar, S. C. Reference:
Merchants 41. Planters Han It, Lamar,
S. C.
Wanted?Every man, woman and
child in South Carolina to know
that the "Alco" brand of Sash.
Doors and Hlinda are the host and
are made only lry the Augusta
Lumber Company, who manufaorure
everything in Lumber and
AFMIwork and whose watchword is
"Quality." Write Augusta I.tint
bor Company, Augusta.. (Georgia,
for prices on any order, large or
small.
Eggs?Rarred Plymouth Rocks. Huff
Plymouth Rooks, Rose Comb R. I
Rods. Acknowledged to be the
three hest general purpose fowls
yet developed. Our pons are composed
of the cream of last year's
stock, all selected with the view
of keeping up our wonderful estg
yield of the past. Our birds carried
off a long string of prir.ee during
the past show aeason and we
can give the best quality to be
found. Eggs for hatching. $2.r>0
per 15. Send In orders now for
future delivery. West Raleigh
Poultry Farms, Ft. M. Parker, Mgi
Weat Unlalgh, N. C.
I
Bargains in South Georgia farm
lands; 5.too bpw of Ann, lave)
land. 8 miles from rail-nsd; land
productive and no wbsib, 20 or
mora houses; flowing wall, 1 1
miles of fine fencing land, adapted
to general farming and stock rain
ing. Price $10 per aire. 3,100
arras located on railroad; 2.000
arras open, bnlance in woods;
land lias wall and vary productive:
dwelling, good barns. f>0
tenant houses, 3 nrteni.ui walls,
ginnery. eta. Cheap at the price
of $20 per acre. 807 nares, I
mile from rnilrond station; 0oo
acres in aultiv-.tion, balance in saw
timber; land productive, lias wall
and no waste; dwellln?, barns. M
tenant houses, deep wall with tank
and gasoline engine. For quick
sale, can sell for $i2.">0 oar acre
If you are In the market for a
fine farm and mean business, -all
to sc-e us. Do not delny, as the
prices we have now are sure to
go higher. Address Allen & Crockett.
Amerlaus. Ga.
TIll'V I^Mfkl/ll V
The death of Hen. VV. L. Cabell,
of Dallas, Texas. 011 Wednesday last,
leaves only about half a dozen k "mieral
oUcorK of the Confederate army
still alive. Anion i them are (Jens.
S. It. Duckner. Kentucky; C. I. Walker.
Sr.iith ( rolina; Clement A. 10 vam.
Ceorgln; Marcus Wright, Washington.
D. C.; (!oorge W. (Jordon,
Tennessee, and T. T. Munford, Virginia.
CHE AND
G1A REMEDY.
?ly Speedily
*i no matter what the cauue. Nuiuer- ?
e bear ut out iu thin statement.
r from headache for 12 years and
id run its course or take morphine,
la Remedy and found permanent ro(t
tbint ' have ever tried.
H. A. GANDY,
HartsvlHe. S. C.
Manufactured by
Co.,
Charlotte, N. C.
Manager Frank J. Shauph-' I
nensy, of the Virpinia Loapue ?
Champions, found Noah's :>
Liniment beat for |>
Sore Muscles
bruises, scratches, stiffness.
One trial will convince you.
Noah's Liniment penetrates.
Requires but little rubbing.
Here's the Proof
**T havt had occastion to use Nnah's
Llntraunt on two of ?ny players' arms,
and the result was mom jfratlfyln#?.
I Both w?r* Immrdluleity relieved of sore
, ....... ?< bui* iu rcnuan iiirowlriK with I
Sielr former Hpeed. Have also used It
lysclf, and consider it the best llnl- I
ont r *rer tried. It Is fine for bruises,
Scratches. stiffness, etc. Frank J<
. Shanwhnessy, XIania'HT, Roanoke Champions,
Roanoke, V&."
Noah*e I.lnlmcnf Is the best remedy
for Rheumatism. Sciatica, Fame Hack,
Stlft Joints and Muscles, Sore Throe t? ,a
Colds, Strains, Sprains, Cuts, Bruises.
Colic, Cramps, ?_ .. , cfrEa*. 1
Neuraljtla, ^Tooth- I
MuscU? Aches and
ulne has Noah's
Ark ?n every
package. cts.
Sold by dealers In ' J A T w ^
medicfnc. Sam- k If /IB 1
pie by mall tree* AAifriP^M^i
Noah Remedy Co., u J, IB
Hlchmend. Va, lb JJUUS
IIOMK 'll)H XT I"I0.W KTTSVILLK.
('. I,. Itlvcrs Shot tilltl Killed by His
Brotlier-in-I.nw.
At Ttennettsvflle C. KnFayette Itiv-.
ers, was shot, and instantly killed
Saturday evening hy VV. Clary Smith,
wlto received a wound In tho neck.
The homicide occurred In a hack
room of the Matheeon building on
Broad street. No one el.ao was present.
but from the circumstances. It
aeems that Rivers fired the frst shot.
| Tho men married sach other's sin
| t?rs and w?r? o? jood terms so far
! nn In known. A J"?, partly Blind
with whiskey, was found In the room
! after the shooting. The coroner's
jury charged Smith with the erime
and he is now in jail.
Drink More Water.
| A prominent man in Missouri lost
hla health nnd was taken to a sanatorium
near Chicago. After look'ing
the patient over for 1110 days
'and qnostioninX the man about his
habits, the great doctor said: "You
need to drink more water. Nature
cannot do her work properly with
the average man unless supplied
with some eight or ten glasses of
fluid, counting coffee and all, within
tlie twenty-four hours." The patient
recovered under this simple treatment.
Years ago the present editor
of the leading Baptist paper at tat.
Louie, then a young man, was quite
th;n and wrinkled. Recently lookin?
ten years younger, he s?ld, in
r?nr-n?-| Ml Jl IIIII'MIDII SIIOIll II1H IHIprovonuent:
"It is due to drinking
saw a paragraph
'about it In the paper. and so, as I wont
al>out the ity attending to my
work, whenever r happen'
a suitable plr-re-^
that wis not suitable 1 would stop
and take a drink of water. And for
years my health has never been so
good."
I'ell to llis llcntii.
Slipping on a banana peel at tho
head of a stairway leading to an tiptown
suhwav station, an unidentified
man tumbled, thirty feet. Ho
was dead when picked up.