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/ 7 ■ : THE CHROl^ICLB \ • Strives To Be a Clean News* • • • paper, Complete, Newsy, • ; and Reliable. : : : If Tow Dent Band THE CHRONICLE Ton Don’t Get Tbe News. VOLUME XXXIII CLINTON, S. C„ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1933 V. NUMBER S HOUSE ADOPTS IChangeMade REPEAL BILL l» School Uw Resolution To Nullify'the fsth Amendment Passes By Larjre Vote. Issue Now Up To States For Decision With Hard Fight Expected. New Act Increases I^al Board ’ a ' From Three To Five Members and Provides for Selection By Electors of District In Future. An act has been passed by the general assembly changinjr the law in Crop Loans To 'Assembly Now In Zai^ara Gets Be Made Sooii^ Seventh Week| Eighty Years Three Hundred Dollars Maxi mum To Any Farmer. Bor rowers Must Plant Garden. . Mass of Legislation Before Sol- Would-Be Assassin Pleads Guil- ons In Capital City. Supply ! (y and Denies Insanity. Asks Bill Still Under Fire. Judge To Make It 100 Years. Washington, Feb. 20.—Congress to day proposed to the state.s that na tional prohibition, after its thirteen years of turbulent trial, be done away with by repeal of the^ T8th amend ment. ’ The house by a vote of 280 to 121, fifteen more than necessary, approv ed the repeal resolution passed last week by the .senate. Under it for the first time in American history, con ventions of the people are to decide whether the states shall ratify or re ject a change in the constitution. Tfnmediately after the house vote. legislatt\*e action was started! in more than half a dozen states to make ready for the conventions. Only one federal formality remains Wa.shington, Feb. 17. — Secretary! t'olumbia. Feb. 2U.—.A mass of leg-j Miami, Fla., Feb. 20.—.As scornful Hyde announced today that $300 will ■ islation, topped by the general appro- of the law as when he tried with fa- be the maximum loan to aby farmer i F’riation bill, awaited the con.sideration natical zeal to as.sassinate Presi*lent- of South Carolina’s lawmakers when!elect Franklin O. Roosevelt ta.st Wed- HOUSE PASSES SUPPLY BILL Appropriation Measure For Months Goes To Third Read ing. Speaker Atlacks .Mode of Passage. Claiming Bill Had Been “Railroaded.” <^olumbia, Feb. 22. —After a turbu- »r crop pro<luction finan- Jfhey returned here Tuesday to begin | ne.sday night, Giu.seppe 2^ngara session, the hou.se early today cing. j the seventh week of their ll>.'^3 session. 1 day pleaded guilty to four coun7s of tnore than three weeks of In addition to reducing the maxi-1 . The week will at least indicate the | attempt to murder and wa.s sente^'ced! of a gefieral appropri- to 80 years. on refeVence to the''board of tni.stees of ^90.000,000 fund set aside by Hunter School District No. 5. Under the provisions of the act the board is now comi>osed of five members in stead of three a.s heretofore. The five membens were de.signated in the act — . . , n i . . and the term of office of each mem-*"ho are delimjuent in repayment ofihammered away all last, years in each case, running ronsecj-. The vote on pas.sage. without a roll her fixed. Those named on the new j two or more prior loans will be limit-1is about j tively, ennstitute life impris^mmenf at { call, caught a number of members by board are B. H. Boyd, C. M. Bailey, ed to $li)0 in order to con.scrve the * senate, j Raiford state prison or hard labor in; surprise and brought ohai'ges of “rail- Dr. T. U W. Bailey, W.’ W. Harris and' fund from which nearly -one million ? .as it the Florid^ road camps. mum from $400 in 1932. Hvde issuetli 18-month supply niea.sure regulations providing that farmers approximately $9,209,000 at which the hou.se hammered away all consideration of a lation bill by pa.s.sing the measure Zangara is 33. His sentences of 20 i >^^<*ond rea<ling by oral . ote. Mrs. E. J. Adair, who will hold office for five, four, three, two and one years, re.spectivcly. Messrs. Boyd, C. M. Bailey and Mrs. .Adair conipo.seil' the former three member board. Dr. T. 17 W. Bailey and W. W. Harris j arc added as the two new members, j Dr. Hailey until recently was a mem-; ber of the local board, while W. W., ready to send the bill to the senate I which may pass^ it pretty much .as it I stands, or revanip it according lo the senators’ own notions. Should the senate decide to make farmers aiv expected to seek assist ance. The loan will be a first lien on! the crop produced. ('ongrc's authorized the .secretary of airriculture to require acreage ie-| ductinn up tn pi*r cent as a loan i coivli t ion. aruL Hyde ^,saal thi.s will be!* '^ , enfmeed except in the case of se.ss.ons manyitaj^ producers and growers of perennial.s. j Orchuid.i'.is will not be reo,uivt«l to cut down their trees o*- otherwise re duce their producing capacity to' and ^"log-rolling” the bdl reading” through. Speaker .James B. Gibson surren dered the gave) an<j took the floor, he announced later, to fight the bill, as serting it had been “railroaded" while a point or order was being raised. (jual’Ty for aid. Harris was a member the county "before the states have the question. board of education up until last year, fully in their keeping. The secretary j),^. term of office of each trustee of state must certify the congression- expires as designated in the nexv act. , al action to the governors. They wiiD their successors will be selected by the inform the legislatures. In many cases: qiijijified electors of tbe disti '.ct for the state exwitives, however, had al-!a term of five years. ready taken steps today to t ush ac Heretofore the trustees of the city’ous denial before the itouse expen H- tion. schools ha\c been aiqntinled by the | turts committee ♦hat govornmi nt em- Thc official copy of the repeal reso-! ( ounty Board ol Education. The act .'''hoitiy befo’i* Hyde’s S'vnounce- menl. Den MeVay, chief of tin*-crop l»ro«iucti»)n l(»an office. ma«le a vigor- However, should Mayor Anton Cer- mak of Chicago, or .Mrs. Joe H. Gill, prominent Miami society woman, die major changes, the procedure of iron-1 of the wounds they received when ing out differences between the ebam-! spectat*irs deflected Zangara’s aim at hers in free conference would f.>llo\v. | Mr. Roosevelt, the state will seek a i-ecent years, this has piolongcd ! flrsL^tleg'-ee murder indictTnent and , ^♦’ville Bennett,-chaircian of the.ways Idhe death^ penaltyv — j and means cqnimi ttw, rao’ ecl to ad- Once the house gets the nppropri-l Today’s sentences were for trying Journ with Gibson’s consent, which ation problem, with which it has presient-cdect. Russel ( aid- carried. struggled for nearlv a month, off itsi'^'^’^*- ('<K.-oanut Grove. Fla., Miss Mar- Gibson is to .-esume tbe floor at H hands, it may turn to some of the iKruis, Newark, N. J.. and W. .I,;a. m. when the measuiv .omes up for measures tbe senate ha^ sent over for!|>oIiceman and [third reading passage ard will fight it:, action. These include, among nth-i R‘>«>s<‘velt. The lat-' the bill, he said. .\ strong b-ttle is ox- lution was delivered to the .secretary | rt*cently pa.s.scd and which has alreatly unusual political activities. e»s. bills to extend pixqierty tax jiay- ments with a nominal penalty to .lunej* I ami to relieve crowding at the peni tentiary by admitting only p.risoners ployees in iiis divisiim had mgaged ini^*‘*’'ing two years or more instead of ter thn*e were slightly woumled by peeted. the bullets Zangara’s pistol sprayed! approved, the ‘ six months or more as at present. « • ' of state this afternoon and work was begun immediately to mail out copies tomorrow. The house approval came in dra matic fashion as the dry minority, fought with its back to the wall against the flood of anti-prohibition- is{ votes. Confident from the first of victory. Speaker Garner and party leaders forced the vote under suspension of the rules, a drastic d*^bate-cui*bing procedure. Fifteen members, who vot ed against the speaker’s outright re peal proposal on the first day of this session, shifted their strength for the Blaine amendment, adopted only la.st Thursday by the senate, 64 to 23., The news was hailed as a great \ic- tory by leaders of the anti-prohibition organizations, but the though not disguising their Indention to in- len'ify their fight every step of the become effective, provides that upon ^ The committee was considering a .Awaiting action by senate and the expiration of the term of office j jesolulion to require that accounts of i house are bilks to limit the size and of each-of tho.se named in the act the the b>an office be audited by thehoads of trucks. They have majority county board shall appoint as success-j t-onipt roller genei-al. Chairman Coch- favorable, minority unfavorable com- or the per.s'on selected by the qaalifieil, pan .sai«l he undei stomi a fieM officer, miltee ix'ports. electors of the district. i of the general loan office here had, C'ommittet's of both chambers havei inspected the Si. Iahius branch, threat-^rprepared school WHs, which wottid cut ening employees with the loss of their!teachers’ pay u third, lengthen the jobs had then »ailing them together t school term for which state aid would 1 and advising them to vote for J’resi-|be given, and, their sppnsors claim, lIotA’er. Noted Speaker Here Tue^ay dent j greatly reduce opefirting costs. These, —^ j “I was not in the regional office^harply opposed by school interests, Anti-Saloon Head To Make Ad- I then and I know of no-such activity,” might easily precipitate a heate<l l>at- I .MeVay answeretl. "No political mate-, tie in either chamber. central' dress At Methodist Church and Show Famous Ficture. A community rally w’ill'be hehl in the North Broad Street Methodist church next Tuesday evening, Feb. 28th, at 7:30 o’clock, at which time the Rev. Noa^ E. Yeiser, D. D., slate superintendent of the South ('arollna rial was distributed, bv the office.” Cochran said he understood a trict collection officer in Maine Slated for early consideration of the I .senate are mea.sures to cut automo- dis-, bile license fees one half and to aid had mortgagors by .setting up mediation solicited campaign contrihutions the time of the .Maine elections. In Hyde's announcement, he said at' committees to act in i*eal estate fore- • T-i.- i: 4 been three weeks, closures. The license cut debated off and on for l^^-nu n'h bill to tals approximate!v $9.1 >^2.000. Tli« house began con.sideiation of it ' Weilnesday, after h iving ri «-o;n'»n7‘: .1 a 12-month bill. The vote came sluVtly aGer -nr night. So sudden was it that not a "no” was heard when the q iesti**’* i.s [ pas.sage wa.s put, with Gib-on pre^ - I ing. Sponsors of the liil! bad plan.wl for the hou.se to adjourn, immediat - ly reconvene, as it would be ano‘’' r leghdgtive ilay, ap4 wwj the hill the senate, but this plan was a’“.ai - doneil in view of the mood of house. “Earlier, the house hod a<b)nted ?a amendment which give.s the bu Ig S commission wider powers, includi g authority to re<luce approp.-iulior. - * it saw reyyiue was declining. Bennett, author of the amendin' said it would act as "a sa'’e‘v vak into the crowd which surrounded the car occupied by the prt*sidqnt-**le<*t in Bay Front park. Ivouis Twyman, defen.se counsel, who enteml Zangara’s guilty pleas, said his client had insisted he wa.s guilty. "He .says ‘No. no, 1 n<»t crazy,’ when we ask him if he thiak.s ht' in.sam*,” Twyman told the court. Taking the witness chair, uncon- ! cemedly, Zanara gave stomaili pain.s and hatred of cJnp4ta1tsts as nrtw .son for his desire to kill Mr.^ Roose velt. ' “I suffer all time from my .stom ach,” Zangara told Judge E. C. Col lins. "1 no like the way capitalists take all money. When I read in paper the president come here,, I ilecided to kill him.” "I decide to kill him and make him suffer. I want lo make it 50-50. Since my stomach hurt 1 get even wit cap-j The state auditor, hitherto uttiu*'' itali.sts hy kill the president. My stom-1 to the bank examini'i ’s departin'* ach hurt long time." 'which is aboli.shed under the v 1 the acreage reduction i-CHiuVrement the senate last week voting against, I w ill not ajiply to farmers w’ho intend ituipling a gas tax increase w’ith it. f no more than eight acres of, In the senate .finance committee’s! Zangara told the 4»uri he did .iiat|,iKU4dd ini iraiis/erre^i to the bnri7-»t cops kill me if I kill Anti-Saloon league, will speak briefly. I , . I ramous motion niciuii. i t iivei mi cc. „f ^heat; 20 acres of corn; 2>5* acres the house, to change the Iwginning of | of truck crops; 12 acres of sugar'the fiscal year from .Ian 1 to July 1.1 ’..ip* tKov «ii< care whether he lived or not. “I seek j commis.sion with authoriiv to all time," he said. "1 just think maybe, gate “overirrpping'’ in state iru I . dejm on the enonnous amount of hard ing remains to be done. k. I famous motion picture, "Deliverance,” campaign-.|jj «hown. The picture is based on : Prof, Irving Fisher’s book on prohi- — Ibltidn now b^ing shown all over the i land as a medium of education against [the liquor traffic. Dr. Yeiser has been in this type of work for fifteen years in other states. He served as a missioimiy in Hriti.-.h' Roosevelt Writes Mth. ('rows Ap- IndiaTTml founded an orphanage in Effort To^^® Island of (’ypi'U.s. He has traveled I extensively in foreign countries where he has obser\e»l the evils of >trong ' drink. New York, Feh. 19.-—President-elect. pj A'ci.-^or riiiuest*! mini.-ters and Roosevelt in a public reply today f** othi’rs interested in the pre.-ent crisis the thouNand.s of Americans who coin-j church at Tuesday munlcateil with him after his attempt- t.v».ning for a brief confei-ence. The Letter Praises Cool Courage preciation of Her I*revent Tragedy In Miami. eight acre.s of pf rice, or eight potatoes; acres of |H*a- 30 llie IH-month appropriation iiieasiu-e is ba.sed on this bill. Resting with the house wavs and loans for tenants of means committee''are the Crum hill beets acres nuts. The .aggregate an individual land owner will l>e liin-.for a .‘•ales tax ami i'ep<*al of the 6-0-1 ited to *$1,200, compared '.vlth $1,600 .school law and the Spruil-Leppard, jin 1932, when more lhan $•> 1,000.000 jmasure to ini'ieaseJncoine tax president. j ments and institutiorh^ to see tha •» in when I try: uniform system of bookkeeping * 1 ! auditing is carried out. \ They fool.s! They should let me kill, .Much debate centered oiind him.” ' amendment which, a-: finally adop' -. The prisoner turned as he was led j would require that w hen anVx^s'7 • from the courtroom, held up eight fin- employee receive'- to'al and per*^ - gers, and asked Judge Collins how nent di.sability allowance from bo <yl a.ssassination .sai<l; *‘.My heuit is; filled with thankfulne.ss for their ex-* presfiions of solicituile for my wel-. fni-e.” ' ( * "That all tho.se who w'ere injured will be fully re.«to>red is mv fervent; ilesive ahd daily prayer,” his brief - statement "^concluded. Mr. Roosevelt also made public to- was loaned to r»07.632 farmers, an average cf $12<i. Interest will be at the rate of ."I’v per cent, the *ame as reve nue tenfidd for schoid purposes. The latter, tax experts estimate, wimld hoist income tax collections from ap proximately $2b0,n(in a year at jiies- ent lo some $2,00n,t)0U. The committee has not imlicated when it will bring either out for de bate. famous picture i.s free and the public i.s cordially invited to .see it and hear Dr. Yei.ser. Dr. Delmar Rhame Locates In City day R letter he was semling to Mrs. | .Announcemenl is made in today’s |. W. F. Cross of Miami, credited with pa|H*r that effective March 1st, Dr. grabbing the pistol of-the assas.sin, Delmar O. Rhame, Jr., will be associ- Gtriserpe-- — - ated xvithJDr^^ C. 11 ays, well known The letter follows: n'oeaT'' ".My Dear Mrs. Cross: D'* Rhame will “It is hard for me to fimj words to j maintain an office at the hospital last year, w ith the obligation due next Octolier 31. In counties wliere ferlilizei-s arc not commonly useil. the rate of In.r- rowings must not exceeil $3 an acre for general field crops and $12 an acre for truck crops, including |wita- toes. In counties where fertilizer is reijuired, the rate for general fn Id j crops will be $6. with $10 in the case I of tobacco, and $20 an acre for truck I crops. ! SiMwial provi.sion is made for ad- ' ditional loans, within the $300 maxi- for financing the purchase of| rian Men's OrRanizution. many years he had been .sentenced to .serve. i The judge noilded at the uplifteil! fingers. “Four times twenty is eighty,” Zan gara shouted. "Oh, jiulge, don’t b<': stingy. Give me a hundrt*d years.” fetleral government the co -iptr ’ r general shall deduct the st»ni he eeixes from his state salary. As originally inti'oihiceil by - field of Aiki n, the amend'lent -J make the^same provi.sion for any d - ability received from t’ne i 'eiaii.',’ s ministration. In a lengthy sp.- a double » tY l.iiughing in apparent amusement, Zangara tlien fell in with his guards | Stansfiehl as.^ailed the and was led back to his cell. j racket” and said some He Leaders Named To Head Work Ue emp - will 1)0 hehl there |H*nding out-lees were receiving tot-^il iiisa!)ilily a - .'ec/iiie of the injuries of Mayor t’er-Mowance along with state .salarie.-. I inak and -Mrs. Gill. | Another amemlment, by Senseney Department and (iroup men Appointed For Freshyte- ilaily to $2.r>0 and outside the from $6.00 to $r).00. T'h'..* bill’s provasion thu' candid for admis.sion to stale institulion- materials for spraying and dusting' crops, ^o protect agam.st di.soases, payment of .S un is conviy to vou my appreciation of* where he will maJui.ids headquarters., you- heroism and my gratitude fori Dr. Rhame is an A. B. graduate of: you-prompt and courageous action in; P«-esbyterian college, class of 1926, attempting to prevent the t’agodyjand an M. D. graduate of the Gol-| w hich occurred last Wednesday eve-! lege of Physicians and Surgeon*--. Go-1 . lunibia nilTg. ■ II u “How much greater and sadder a He na tragedy was averted by your unselfish; at the courage and quick thiwking, of course.* Kings no one can e.stimate. It now appeai-simonths that by divine providence the lives ofs'cned as resident suigeon on the sur all the victims of the assassin’.s dis- gieaJ .staff of King’.s County hospital, turbed aim w ill be spared. ' >n Brfjaklyn. a general city hospiul of j a 3,000 hbd c .st in.soct.s andj The February meeting of the men water charges of -the First Presbyterian church was dMts ■ uf- held l»>*t, Kriilay^eyening in th« hand^j^hor in the case oT su^’FheJTs. [ dky srhotat btifWing - wrth Thr- sugar cane, hops and rice. Loans up elected presiilent, Prof. .M. W. Brown, to $2.50 an acre will lie available for i presiiling. .After the serving of a summer fallowing. dutch .sup|*<*r by the lailies of the Borrowers will he requireil to agree ■ chuix'h, an interesting program was to plant a garden for home use andjcarriwl out on “Siewaniship of Pos- to grow sufficient acreage of feed ■ se.ssions,'” with R. E. I-ecguson Trial of Zangara went foi-waid f'harleston, reduced tra'e! expen v 'day over objections of defen.-A- attoi-1 i»f state employees.,exchi-ivii of ti-a ■ - ] neys, ap|K)inted by the court, who first , poitation, within the stall from S: 0 moved to <(uash the charge of attemf>t ('hair-1 to kill Miss Kruis and Caldwell. Dt-fending the moLiun, w-hich wu.-' denied, Twyman asserted it was “in consistent to charge that Zangai-a in-'higher learning be requii'vd to sti tended to kill the president-elect, j entrance examination.s was el which i.s quite proinT, and to charge I nated, 1 in contradiction that he attempted the' At the conclusion of no'i ning x jiJ^qf C-aldwell with the same bulleL”! afternoon sessions .<ix nniemiir •• Next, Twyman sirngKl posit>6YiSEi|rha<nS6STt iadopteJ-stfrlring-ont-ap-*’ ment of the trial on the theory that' priations aggregating $-2',SOU. ,Ti Zangara may be held for first ilegn-e brought the total of tbe 1''-month muriler in event .Mayor Cermak ami Mi*s. Gill .should die. This al.so wa.s 1 denied. • *'•* -- ' When Zangara was brought to the heard the charge.s read, as demonstrated as - I am! only tain funds for crop production fixi.n other sources. No loans will la* :nade to applicants with a means of liveli- conscious pride In the part you play ed, and I rejoice in thi.s fine example* of forgetfulness of self and courage. “Gratefully your.s.” vited to be present. Officers for the coming year are: Prof. .M. W. Brown, presiilent; W. D. P. Bur- God frey, not to he caught napping. With annoyance, Zangara 'lown to $9,183,200. The highw'ay dcfu'itnu-nt. lar subject in the b'- ' e, bore ‘ brunt of the changvs, all le-.t one :• ing on it. At tlic opening of tbe m ing .session several meinb. ' s nredic . (’harles A. More-j a tax strike or u "revoiu .ion” un7* him |.s "Giusepjie] tax relief is given. .\n ainendm? Zangara.” He was wa.s approved eliminating $9,T.')0 : crop pests and disease'*, but atieir ' turned I to eliminate other activ ities of pn'’’' VoushouMal.ay.hii ea,u <t,^^ ^ .„eliical frLmity. |othor than aKV.culture, no. 'or ■ Copoinnd. vUr-iur-u'Irnt; W ! I>r. Hhamt i. thr only ron of Dr. P*)'"*'*'* or_,,rU-«.->«; dettn. jirc.vtaiy; hrank oool i and .Mr.. D. O. Rhame of thi. city,! *'■<’ machine, y or l.vc- trenaurcr. and has a wide circle of friends and*’’^^*', , u av ^ President Brown has announced the acquaintances whVwill be interested! ^*^*®'?* . *^*'* ***^ chsffrmen of dcpai tment.s -j to learn that he i.s retuming to his adopted home for the practice of his trtward the projweutor. "Thats mean | ^(.(-vice activities of (’lemson collr^ge. same thing,” he declared. “Joe and[ j^duding farm and home demon.s^*-?- Giu)^p|>e mean same thing,” he con-jtion agent-s, were defeated, tinuwd waving his hamls earnestly. I Much of the matter w’as "You caU me Joe and Giu-sepiie. You Friday. gone over Tlie public statement of Mr. Koose vch follw.i I Profram®" “I am deeply touched by the thous- ' ands of telegrams and messages " Web regarding The de-' at Miami la.st' Evangelism f t » *a have come to me pl<jrabler trccurrence Wadnesday. HOOVER NOT TO OFFER LN-i^t partment last year «t Washington.; Memphis, St. Ltouis. Dallas. Mmnea^j <^ 5ritual Life and lis and .Salt Lake City, will handle p 31 the distribution of loans. Foreign Missions—C. W. Grafton. The department will be; ready to Missions- J. F. Jacobs. ‘U^ursejoans in aUrut 10 Christian Educarion and^A^i.sterial ‘ 1 Kelief—J. B. Townsend. torney^ make people think Pm fool.” Twyman soon showed that Z;rngara .had no desire to try to escape prison by pleading insanity, despite that n .sanity cr-mmi.ssion had term<*d him a; social misfit and a "psycho|>athic |K*r- j ■ sonality.” | "Your honor,” said the ilefen.se at-1 When the highway department soc- t’on was reached thi.s aftefnoon Ren- 'T.sentative Glymph, of Oconee, in- tiosluced reduction amendments which were ad''pt,ed in rapid order. MR WOLFE ILL ‘^my client Ka-s “in^sled Washington, Feb. 18.—Friends close* ~~ ' Religious Fiducation and Ptxblica-;guilt. - “Were it possible, I would like per- to President Hoover„and in a posi-| ' FEDERAL COURT JURORS ition—W. W. Harris. "He has one grue^^ome regret. He sonally to express my api»reciation tojtion to know hi.s mind made known' F’i'e Ijiurens county citizens have! Steward.'-hip of- Posses«i»)ns u. r. sorry he did not .succe^ in his a - all of these friends, but the demands, tonight that they “felt certain” that'been drawm to serve as jurors at the Ferguson. , on the life of PreMdent-elect he intended to retire definitely intoi Fedei*al term of court at Rock Hill,* Christian Hvaial .Service K. h. Sad- Roosevelt. He scofLs at the idea he The many friends" oT AV.'T. '^Wolfe ! 'vill greatly regret to learn that he on my time are such that it cannot be j he intended to retire definitely intoj Fedei*al term of court beginning March 14. For the first Ter. w'€ok, W. P. Hudgens of Laurens auid' Group CTiairmen done. The, erefore, I must simply state, private life and not run for the presi- ta them that my heart is filled withidency again in 1936. thJmkfulne.ss for their expressions of! ^' R. A. Stoddard For with March 20, C- P, Robinson of C'linton, and solicitude for my welfare. j Miss Daisy Harris of I-ake “That all those who were injured ,* has been spending several dav.s fervent! her briber and sister-in-law, Mr. ' will be fully restored is my desire and daily prayer.” j Mrs. T. G. Harris. City, 1 will serve. March 20, C. C. D. Gray and J. B. Owinga of Gray Court, will report for duty.' Alex B’ack, H. of Owings station,! D. Rantin, Heath Copeland, R. B. Fer- the second week, | goson, Arthur Copeland, L D. ^ Mc- Crary» J- H. Davis, Jr., Irby Hipp, R. B. Vance, L. S. Henderson, Joe L. Carter, Frank Miller, Mac Adair. ' may be in.sane. Twyman explalneti how the defense sought the verdict of the sanity com mission. "After talking with the doctors and Zangara,” he' aaid, ”we came to the ’(ConUaued on page two) has been confined to his room for the past two week.s at the home of D. E. Tri'ble, on account of illnes.s. Mr. Wolfe has beep a resident of this city for the past thirtv-five yt a ^ and is one of its mo'^t beloved aid esteemed citizens. His fr’en-ls, w; o aie many, will be glad to know t! t his condition is somew-hat improve i, and hope for his speedy and perma nent recovery. aggsazg: J ■ \ IV I. jk\ •A \ / A