University of South Carolina Libraries
CAMDEN, S. CM' FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1803 Minor Event* of the Week In a ? Brtef Form. New College Building. Columbia, Special, ?Added to Colum bia's handsome now structure* will be this vtter the $50,000 building foj the Colqmbla Fetnele collage. The plans - of Mr. C. C. Wilson were accepted yes terday and the new building ? which Is realy not a new building, but two large additions to the present structure ?Will Mj begun In the fall. The draw ings show that the college building when completed will bo of imposing appearance, The oommittee appointed from the board of trustees to pass upon the plans met yesterday morning and after deliberation accepted the plans of Mr; Wilson from those of three architects Of this cltyf All of theso plans were handed in about two weeks ago and during that time each of the members of the committee has studied them carefully. At each end of the present ? building will be a large structure ap proximately JBO feet long and 50 feet , jg^l4e and placed at right angles to ^iatn. street There will be a corridor straight through tho entire building on every floor. -f- ? Boy' SeriotlBly liijflreil. " ? - Andercon, Special. -~ptls Bohanan, a 13-year-old boy, ways seriously hurt last week in 'overalls factory, where he. la, employed. The little fel low was trying to repair a broken belt, which runs one of the Bowing machines when his clothing was caught by the revolving shafting. There was no room between the shafting and the floor for him to be turned round, and he was caught against the floor and terribly bruised. His left affft\was broken In r-v. three places aud he wa|s probably In jured internally. His clpthlng was al most entirely torn off. Medical atten tion was promptly given him and he will recover. "V 0 WEATHER AND CROPS Summary of Conditions Given Out , By tho Department. The week ending .8 a. mk, Monday, August 3rd. had a mean temperature of 82 degrees, which in about 2 degrees above normal. The early part was excessively hot, the latter had at&ut , normal temperatures. Tho wlhds were generally light, bufc bo mo damage resulted from high winds In tlje western counties. The relative humidity waa abnormally low during the first half if the week, causing vegetation to wilt during the da>?ime and even at night, but the second half was more humid. About nofipal sunshine prevailed during the week. The week's rainfall, as reported by correspondents, was comparatively light and consisted of widely scattered local showers, that ' were very benefi cial where they oc9urred, as rain was needed over the whole State, but many places had none or else Insufficient amounts. During the last two days ad ditional rains occurred, that are not covered by the reports, and the show ers were quite general and heavy in the central counties, but were light in the extreme western and extreme eastern ones. These late rains thor~ oughly relieved tho drought over a large portion of the State, and to that extent were of gre^t benefit. The week's weather was generally ^adverse, especially during the fifst naif .in its effects on crops, especially on corn, owing to the h^at and dry ness of the air, and lack of moisture in the surface soil, but farm-work prog ressed favorably and~ nearly all crops have been laid by. Late corn In the eastern, and early corn In the western counties suffered' considerable Impairment for want of raih, and fired badly; and- is in a criti cal condition; while early corn in the eastern, and' late in the western coun ties suffered but little, the former being about ripe, and the latter being not yet in silk and tassel. Bottom land 90m is . fairly promising. Cotton suffered eomewhat* from lack of moisture* although on stiff and rich lands, the effects of the dry weather were principally t6 check its heretofore rapid growth and cause It to bloom to Its tops, but on light, sandy soils cot ton not only stopped growlng'hut also began to shed its leaves and fruitage: Portions tof the .crop are well fruited and still blooming freely, while a smaller portion is not well fruited and Is in a generally poor, unsatisfactory condition. Sea-lslan<J cotton maintain ed Its healthy color, but Its growth Tobacco curing Is nearly ^nKBed In the eastern districts, and about half finished In the central and western ones. The hot weather and absence of rain ?wcre - ayeweble oa rice. Peas doing well, atweet potatoes are exceed ingly promising. Much hay was secured inrprlme condition. Late fruits are variable, hut only fair at best. In places, preparations are underway for ftllVhd wihter crops. f A BruUl ilurder. .Aiken, Bpeeial.? Abram Sura sky, a /ew peddler living in Aiken, was mur dered near tyfllthorne, In Aiken coun ty, on Wednesday evening, by ,^W<r whlte meh, Toole uOl Lee borty.jHu not disoc/vered' until Friday evening, and SurSIkys family waa not notified until Friday night. The murdered man Was 30 yearn Of age, and one of 5*4 b?0th?r* whnjrau small store* in Aiken, ak pegMul, quletcltixens. harming no wj&JttJfe. characteristic of the raqa. On laa t Tuesday . M r. Su raaky loaded irtefragon with hls-paoks and started on tlfl rounds. Aa was his custom, he Js supposed- to have stopped at Green's houie to sell h i a w tffe s , a n d it wai thCn that the two men carried out their flan of robbery, and murder. Sura sky was shot tWlce In the back with a gpn, oh* aYHnrwalniost sev ered" ttonj fete body, and his head, and body. -tore hacked horribly with an axe. When* the body was discovered It was Impossible to reoognlse any ^ semblance of a hnman being in the face, as de composition had aet in. Bussards, fly ing over the spot, attracted the atten tion of men passing by. - Both Toole and-Qreen have .been for trial at court. A Moos Acc^est, ;a . v - Easley, Speolal.? Quite a serious ac cident occusred last week at the Gleta wood cotton mill, of which W. M. Ha good te president. His son Mr. C. Bruce Hagood, a recent graduate of Clemson College, was at work in the mill" put ting Into practise some of the knowl edge he had gained in Clemson's tech nical depart moat. In attempting to place a belt on a moving wheel, the .belt to**-and a large, buckle whlcfc held the belt* together struck Mr. Ha good just above the elbow <ft his left arm, breaking his arm "and burying Uself Ja the bone, The wound was cessarily a most t>ainftn one but ha bora it heroically and te doing as well this morotng as could be eapected under the circumstances. His numerous friends will top* aasfoastr for- fcfss ipilr rwffrwjr li ^ aemAflsyKr, Frank Williams of -thla cwntyr aadcjdao n Cteauon gradoate, * - ? ??> Mill M f M Hit i ? 111 a iw W mmorouie to lootv iwo BilWi WRECKED A BANK Five Hundred Dollar* Reward Offer ed For Cashier. Raleigh, Special, ? A special from Newbern says: On account of an al leged auoilaae in the accounts of T. W. Dewey, cashier of tho Farmers & Merchants' Bank, of this city, the bank haw been compelled to go Into liquidation. The amount yf the alleged shortage is large, but the *um has not yet been ascertained. Theiro will be no trouble about paying all depositors a^d creditors In full. Mr. Dewey, the cash ier, left this city last Saturday night, stating that he would return either Monday night or Tuesday morning. He has not returned and it is not known where he is. J. D. Ellington, the State bank examiner, is here to look after the interest of all parties concerned. The baffk offers a reward of $600 for the apprehension and return to this city of the cashier. Shooting; of Negroes. Lumberton, N. C. Special. ? The re port sent .to Raleigh that there wag a fight near here Sunday, between Crotans and negroes, Is not true. The facts in the case aro: Four nfliTQ la borers of tho Southern SaftfMlll & Lumber Company at Klngsdale, were fired on , from ambush and ' wounded, about 12 o'clock. Capt. T. C. McNeely wired Sheriff McLeod, who arranged for a special engine and car to come from Hamlet, stop at Maxton, take up Mayor J. C.. Parriah and Deputy Sheriff F. L. Smith, with their blood hounds, and come ' to Lumberton, where they were mot by the Carolina Northern train and taken at once to King^Qalo, a station on the Carolina Northern Railroad. The posse went at once to the place* of the shooting, about one-half mile from the station, and began preparations to trail the .guilty parties. Before the dogs start ed, however, Mr Neill Freeman sur rendered to Sheriff McLeod stating that he did the Bhootlng, and . was brought to Lumberton and placed nn> der a justified bond of $500 for his appearance for preliminary trial. He gave as his reason for the shooting that thoeo nogtoes -had been to hu. house and 'started in the gate, all of them carrying sticks, and frightened his children, who had been left at home while Mr. ?Y&eman went to church. The negroes were not serious ly wounded, as a shot-gtin. loaded with small shot, was the weapon used, and no further trouble la expected, . nor were any -troops carried to "the scene. Thirty Kilted. Berlin, By Cable. ? A dispatch to The Volks Zeltung from Breslau, reports a ~Trtn|oug_^lBSBUr on - jha railway fefe. tween cfrjte and Kalvaria, Austrian Silesia, . A^train consisting of eleven cars he^fy loaded with fs tones, broke their ranut a terrific Speed dowAa sharp rtade for twedt/ mil.es until \hey collided with a paa . train. persons are said to have been WIle4 and fifty-two oth ers severely injured. ^ Apply for Receiver. New York, Special.? The matter of the appllcationof.Edvln A. McAlpiu, 'of OBaining, and others, for the ap pointment of a re?IV*r f&r the Unlver Sfcl Tobacco -Company,, came up before Vice Chancellor Bltney, In Jersey City, The petitioners charge that President Wm. H. Butler has beep a party to a plan to wreck the company and has misapplied the company 'a funds. The company: has a stock of $1,000,000.- On Mar^lr si; t?*t, tt had asscts df WOSfid Ytabmtlea of f 862,000. ( New Orleans, Special.? In the en deavor to save the life of John J. Voel kel, t^ff ell-known resident of New Or leans, Walter B. Bertel, paying teller of the Whitney National bank, was browned at Grand Isle. Voelkel was also drowned, . Mrs, Voelkel and her daughter,' who went to the rescue of the men, ware rescued with difficulty. No Settled Law. eli !? ni fl?i s al^l i*n i liliOai^li n rtl . ? w?MingTC'fi, upotiRi. Aiinvu^u not adylfed of the repotted differences be tween the varioua umpires of the ar bitrations now sitting la Caracas over the -question of government HatilHty lor Insurgent acta, the officials here, are not at aj^gnrprtaed at the raislaf of the Issue. subject to one that has vexed erery interibatlonal tribunal wW* war cHIfti.ud go asset law hea ever been applied. It Is hoped ff ***? .U-L "lami* CROWDED BRIDGE COLLAPSES. (lor* Than One Hundred People Thrown Into the River. Portland, Ore., Special.? A section of the bridge <whleh spans the William ette River/at Morrison street, oollaps ed Friday- afternoon, ,,precipltatiU8 more than 100 people 40 fe^lulu the water. Three people are knOwn <o have been drowned, and it Is feared that tho list of dead will be much larger when all are accounted for. Many fell on twb small boathouses moored to a pier of the bridge immediately under the spot where ItgaVe way. The known dead are: Minnie Raymond, aged 10; Lottie Camerofft aged lOt unidentified' boy, aged IK. Thousands of peoplee had gathre* on the Morrison and Madison street bridges and along tho docks to witch Clarence Lutz, an armless man, swim across the rlvere, which Is about three-eighths of a mile wide. As Luts was climbing out of the water the crowd rushed to the south edge of the bridge In order to get a good view. A section of the walk gave away under the heavy weight, and the crowding, struggling mass of people were carried down a distance of .forty feet. Hun dreds of the people at the club house \ot the Portland Rowing Club, men in \boats and those on shore, started to the rescue immediately. They soon picked Hp those struggling in the water while the injured, who were clinging to the boat houses, were taken into the club houso and ? medical aid summoned. Every ambulance In the city, several fire companies and a large force of police arrived within & few minutes and the victims with broken arms and legs were hurried to the hospitals. News or the accident quick ly spread, and with a few minutes thousands of people -gathered at ' either end of the bridge, anxiously seeking information about 'relatives or friends. The bridge an old wooden struc ture, having been built 16 years ago, and has been , const derd unsafe for some' time, although^ It was not con demned. ***' Another rterger. Boston, Mass., Special. ? A certificate of organization was filed at the 8tate house by the TTnlted States Cotton Manufacturing Company, with a capi tal of $40,000,000 in $100 shares. Henry C. Bacon la president, end M. Shumer Holbrook, treasurer. John P. Rogers Ij a director, these three constituting a majority. The charter of $40,000,000 makes It the largest capitalised cor poration in Massachusetts. It under stood that the. company Is formed to acquire all otvaraajorlty ofthecot ton textile joints of the country In one-Jiuge..ttuat_?tt.h hcartquattetAJlL Boston, but details cannot be learned at present. President. Bacon declining to discuss the plans pf the corpd|atlon other than to ssy that Its headquarters would tie Mti Boston. The charter em j.owera It to build or buy mills and to carry on a general cotton manufac turing business. [) Three Ktlted and a Score Injured. Lynchburg, ? Va,, Special ?At 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon three per sona were killed and more than a score injured by llghtfitn# At New" Hope chnrch. Apporamattox county ? The dead are: Paul Gowen, Charles Aus tin and Aubrey Wlngfield, /Jtfhlle , among the more seriously injured are: Eugene Tufner, Nathaniel Morris. Tom Coleman and Napoleon Patterson. A meeting of the James River Baptist Asscolatlon was In progrsaa and a largo number of men took refuge un der an. awning near the butlding when the storm came up. Lightning eirwek the dlsaster'and dSw^g^th^gSS crowd on the ground into a panic. T? Ex??li? Po?j Product*. ? Washington, Special.? The Agricul tural Department took Its flmt action under the amended gore food act of July 1, 1003, by requesting authority fxom the Treasury. Department to take samples and make a chemical analysts of certain food producta shipped to this country from abroad. The* permission aaked foirT>iB"Seen"TOat*d and airot^ flctal examination of these products will be made to determine whether their use Is deleterious to health. An iftquiry also will be made to determine whether their Use is prohibited In the country of their orlila. 1 n either of these contingencies their entry snd sale in this country "will be prohibited. ^ , Uphold Booker Washington. Tuskegee, Ala., Special.? A resolu tion wall adopted here by the Alabama Btate Colored Baptist Convention^ In session in this city, severely condemn ing (be attack made upon Principal Booker T. Washington, of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, du ring his address at Boston. The reso lution. which. wis unanimously adopted by the 200 delegates of the convention, ^uphold Principal Washington and pledgea confidence and endorsement of Dr. Washington ss a "conservative, worthy and safe leader, deserving of the respeet end confidence of all men." ; Tobacco Association In Session. Newport News, Va, Special.? Ths Tobacco Association of the United States convened in Its third annual eon nation at Old Point. Besides President Carrlngton, of Richmond, Bseritary-Tnatsurcr Thomas I Maeoe, of Louisville. Ky.. there were IfeBt n members la stteodance. Ow ?enters wtsmrnu fy^thi ; >a,w?s Uaaalctid. i LIVE ITEMS OF NEWS. Many Mutters of Osneral Interest la Short Paragraphs. Down In Dixie. Th$ Council of Keyser, W, Va., ho.H fixed the tax rate at 85 con Us on tbo $100. The two factions of the Populist party were reunited in a conference at Denver. A company has been chartered to operate a trolley line from Morgan* town to Fairmont, W. Va. Capt. B. J. Ewen began his testimony in the Marcum murder cane at Cynth- I iana, Ky. ' j Mrs. Ann A. Davis, widow of Sena toi Davis, of Minnesota, and Mr. ltynry Doll, of Knoxville, Tenn., were mar ried in Washington. The barn of Mr. L. H. Freeman, of Areola, Va., was destroyed by fire of unknown origin on Monday night. A portion of the contents was savbd. The German cruiser Oatelle, which had been at the Newport News ship yard for some time, sailed for Hall fax. Count vein Orcola, in command of the vessel, says his ship will go to Montreal from Halifax. The Clinton- CoaT and Coke Com pany has Increased Its capital stock to $1,000,000 and will build four miles of railroad at a cost of $100,000 to roach Its mines in the Clinton dlstrlot, Monongalia county, West Virginia, Three hundred coke ovens will bo In stalled. The company owns 10,000 acres. 't The National Capital. Thefrrnlcera of the United States na val squadron are being royally enter tained at Lisbon and King Carlos will visit the warships on Saturday. The Secretary of the Treasury has been asked by the Agricultural. Depsctr Brtnt to hold up cargoes of imported food products until they can be exam ined by an expert under the provisions of the Pure Food law. The Stale Department is advised that President Castro, of Venezuela, \b pur suing a high-handed course tdward foreigners. It Is said the new Currency bill will provide for the deposit of customs, as well as of Internal revenue, receipts in national banks. In ~ a communication Commercial Agent'' Langhorne shows how Russia is implanting herself to control Chl nese trade at Dalny. . Alexander Isvolsky is spoken of ' as the possible, successor to Count Caa sinl, Russian Ambassador -at Wash ington. At The Nortfc Twelve of the convicts who escaped at Placervllle, Cal;V were still at~ large -Though prices were Irregular, th?? | was a better feeling in the New York stock market. After sleeping' 44 days, EndUott O. Allen, In the bong Branch, N. J., hos pital, Is awake. Martin Ebelt is said to havo" ' coin- , Ceased * the murder of his wife, whose body was found in a sewer at Mount Vernon, N. Y. . When he attempted to prevent Adolph Schloes, a soldier, from shOot^ Ins his sweetheart, Patrolman Corne lius Mulvey, of New York, w?s se riously wounded# A South Dakota divorce waa ad judged void under English Jaw by the president of the Dhorce Cqjirt, lo Lon don. ^ A terrific explosion of gunpowder at hg Lowen (MWt.) factory killed pr6b-v ably 20 persons and wounded a number ofothftOL The convlcls who escaped from the Gallforqla- prison have- reached the Greenwood Hills, where the officers hope to starve them out. The stock. of the TCvawrville and Terre HauuLRallway was transferred KTRwa mahfl Interests. ^ Twerfty-two ucion miners were ar I rested at Idaho Sprlnfrs, Cold., charged wUh conspiracy, a mlnehouse having 1 been blown up. From Across The Se? I, ; Cardinal Gsmerlengo Oreglla has Km? tQ.be. ready to enter their cell* tor the con clave b j tomorrow. Const Hedervary, the Premier, was shouted down In the Hugarian Diet at Budapest and the sitting broke up in a riot, which will result, it was report ed, In several duels. A' solemn requiem mass for King Humbert was celebrated In the Pan theon at Rome bn the third anniver sary of his asssssi nation. Cardinal Gibbons had a conference with Cardinal Logue, and many hon ors are beta* tendered the distinguish ed American prelate. ThwOmard aisninsbtfr Company has agreed to the Bjitlah Government'* offer of 15,000, 000 subsidy,*?. the pro posed two new veweis for the line. MtsceHaweoos flitter* v A. B. Youngson, Grand Chief Engi neer of the Brotherhood' of locomo tive Engineers, la dead at MeadrfflS. The conclave for the election of a pow Bop* . vrtfl begin la the Vatican this lymta*'; ft waa reported that a man named Pupo was; a* the head of a fseolutlsn. SOUTHERN INDUSTRIAL! Southern Statistics. Baltimore, Bpoclal. ? In last week's Issue The Manufacturers' Record pee! eents figures of assessed valuation of property for each of the Southern States in 18$0, 1880, 1890, 1900 and 1902 as the basis for an estimate that the complete figures of Uk wusus of 1900 will show the South possessed In that .year more than 114,000,000,000 worth of proporty of al!k kinds, only about $2,000,<fy0,000 less than that possessed by" the whole country in 1860. Those , preliminary figures ob tained from Qfilclal sources enable one to trace the growth of material wealth in the South during tho past 20 years. , Tho MJuuif acturers' Record says: "These figures show an increase be twoen 1860 and 1880 In assessed valua tion averaging about $26,000,000 a year, the actual increase, of course, having been largely made with., the lightening of the reconstruction bur den. Between 1880 and 1890 the as sessed valuation Increased from $3, 061,176^098 to $4,669,614,833, or $1,. 608,339/736 an avorage of $160,000, ? 000 a year. Id the next ten years the Increase was to $6,457,653,031, or but $798,038,198, an average of/less than $90,^00,000 a .'year. But .tyurfng the nexl two years, between 1900 and 190ir there was an advance to $5, "916,960,7^2, or $4B9, 407.681, more than half tho advsnco between 1890 and 1900. The total advance between 1880 and 1902 was $2,365,785,614, or nearly 94 per cent. "Material betterment of the South thus Indicated is more clearly shown in comparing the true valuation of property In the South with that of property in the rest of the country. The Increase in true Valuation be tween 1860 and 1880 wfcs from $6.286, - 214,108 to $7,605,000, or $1,218,745,892' equal to only 19 per cent. In the South while in the rest of the country It was from $9,873,401,960 to $88,189,000, 000, or $26,263,698,040, equal to 266 per cent. Durtpg the /Q6Zf ten y*ars, wllh the wonderful Industrial, agri cultural and railroad expansion in the South, the rates of Increase In the South and lh the rest of the country became about the same. Between 1880 and 1890 the true valuation 'increased from $T,505,000,000 to $11,150,582,804, or $3,645,532,304 equal to 48 W cent, in the South and In the rest of the country the tttcrdtote was from $36, 187,000,000 to $53, 886,518, 8*3, equal to $17, 749, 558*898, or 49 per cent "If there was the same rate of ln crease between 1890 and 1900 a^be t ween 1880 . gad . Iff? the true ?rntna tfen of properdin the South for 1900 would be 116, 717,810,000: If the attual increase was the same the true value* than would be ?14,796,064.<08. ir W ^same proportion of jessed valuation Kto true valuation qitained In '1900 as In 1890 the true valuation lb*: 1900 would be $12,81*104,954. TheT 1900 of farm values, $3, 951, 631. v??, w capital In manufacturing, $1.I6*;0O1,l S&iPf I^Ji^SS.^TtotS? $7,839,642,000. The sum la 86 per cent Wrter vt* of im Ttliwa OT those three fending classes ofjurpp., erty in 1890. . '>ru hofny Wrapper*. Fayetteville. Special. ? Samples of to bacco were shown In town laat week from the farm of Hon. J. O. Shaw, in Seventy-first township, which were J mahogany wrappers all through. llr, ean, superintendent of Mr, W. M. Mor gan's plantation, -aaye that auch to bacco he sold for 47 eenta laat year. Messrs. Morgan and Shaw will togeth er cure 50 barns, and it Is generally of very line grade. Young Mr, Eugene M. Morgan has a email crop* rather In ter even than the others, averaging wrapper A all through. Sacramento, Cat., Special.? The chief clerk of the Folaom prison has tele phoned that three of the sherifTi posse were killed and that two convlcta are thought to have town wounded. Ills stated that preparations are belfeg made 4o set Are to the Qraad Victory mine in W.hWh. (he convicts have t aken refuge. Po?t office Rohted. Salisbury, N. <3., Special.? The post offlce at Moehsvllla^anui burglarised 4>e tween :* o'clock m. flptarttor morning: by unknown parties, whose enred ?W0 la et*mpe end |M in cash from the safe, **?door o( the battdta g was opened by^ke one of aektoel, erf tor which the 'handle of the totaft of tkr aafe prt^ o^aid nlli'Ui g>j uei tee Lady Near SlafestfHIe the Victua d a Dwferous Ne|fo? * NOW IN IflP, CMARLOITB JAIL Circumstantial Evident* Point,! tO H ^ Negro Named Wil(?r4 k^eboro M the Culprit. ? - jJj Statesvllle, N. C., Special ?The fc* Queat wm held over the body oC 1?$$? Dolph Beaver, which wm fouad tm tfsir well at her homo la Cool EU^ttgft township Thursday night, an d Wit, coroner's Jury rendered a verdict to the cffect that deceased can** to fcir : " death from being choked and bf v blow on the head. They Jury also fotpw ' that she was outraged and WUforft Roseboro, colored,' la charged with tfe* crime. The substance of the ?vl4?o? brought out by the autopsy fi? *f follows: The dead body Of Iftit.-" Beaver w{u? found In tho weU dark Thursday evening by Mr. 8fft<r?r . . and his nolghbors atter Mr, Be*T*r r* ; turned home from StateavUle^ That* . 1: was a fracture In her skull Jive inebef ' long and the brain was exposed; gjao a gash two Inches long over tha 4>ya. Her clothing was badly torn and tftir# was evidence that she was outraged* A knife was found on the floor of tfe# T house, and also several aplotefceft ?t blood. As evidence that thq erimo waa ~ committed early in the milk vessels were on tha table fchjf ttf ~ house " WgorB88tt' putliS W|Ml the day. Mrs. Beaver having beeW^ff gaged In this when Mr. Beat?f taken from a drawer thai lie had tried to buy time ago. Mr. Beaver left home for towi 6.30 o'clock in *he morning aj Roseboro In the road In front tielng his shoe. Th^ negro Uft U and Walked out UmMJfr tS* J Br. Bearer passed the home^on Roseboro, Wilford'S mother, WO/i her if Wiiford waa at home. ? told* no. In heir testimony Mai that Wilfordbad gone ytar Uh on Wednesday night, until 8 o'clock last neus testified tfialL her house a while day, gave orderi'to" untied his shoes an ? bd. The wornn o'clock and he left, 8?o'clockrwXn*Si sole oeenpaat sent The neg k which rttider* sclottsTMraT Ix flcitntly toned