The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, July 10, 1913, Image 7
JHE PAST
IE6ULAIAINT PAT S TRIBUTE TO
lESTING BEROES 8F
THE WAR OF SECESSION
As Forty'Eight Cans Sound Orer Get
tysburg Professional Soldiers and
Volunteer Alike Stand in Solemn
Silence to Pay Token of Respect to
Fallen Warriors.
The regular army ■paid tribute on
Friday, July 4, to the thousands who
sleep under the hills of Gettysburg.
Somewhere down in the heart of the
tente.; - ’'y a bugle sang out in silver
sweet ! 1 that wandered over the
field uL. re Lee and Meade made his
tory. The big flag before the head-
quarler? of Gen. Liggett flashing in
sudden curves of red, white and blue,
glorious in the sunshine of a perfect
July day, came, slowly half way down
the shaft. !u front of the tent,
shoulders squared, figure trim in
summer uniform of white, face to
wards the flag, the general clicked
heels trceth'T and stood at attention.
Somewhere the guns of the Third
battery burst in staccato salute.
Every officer over the length and
breadth of the wide field, every en
listed man, turned away from the du
ties of the moment and faced the
flag h«‘els alight with the sentiment
of the hour
As the last gun of the forty-eight
sent the heroea clattering about
Oimfery Kidge and Round Top
ther** was solemn alienee, the huah of
peace Old veterans who did not real-
ire perhops. exactly at the beginning
what was going on stood silent nnder
the spell of the universal feeling that
seerred to sweep the field Even the
clafer of pots and pens In the mens
tents was hushsd. and the yells of
cfxiks sbout 'o dish up the midday
meal lowered to whlepers For five
tninutee the cgrnp was quiet Then
the bugle »(« ke again In notee more
joyous The silken flag leaped up
the »t*ff to its very pinnacle and the
nolaes «0.00 men can make reeum
e«l their sway The regular arm) a
tribu’e to • he dead and to the flag of
a united nation was paid
t'nlv a f«-» mlnutee before Tree!
dent Wlleon had epohen In the big
tent to the veterans In blue and gray,
and only a short time afterwards
thousands of tboee who ware left bw-
gsn their preparatloae for departure
Th* preei lent came Into Oettyw-
1 urg st-r-rtly before 11 o’clock from
(Vaitlmore Through the narrow,
crooked etrea*e of thle war famed
country town he motored o«t to
camp wtth ('«ov Teaer of Pettaeyl
vanle end Kepreeeatatlve Palmer of
Pennsylvania by hie side Mia ap
pearance at the elation of Getty*
burg wse the eigaal for a cheer and
from down in the Gettysburg college
grounds came the coetomary twenty
one guns salute From the efatlon
to ’he ramp over the village street*
an 1 rray roads the prvwldent was
dr ven while the Pennsylvania consta
bulary looking bualaese-Mke and effl-
clen* In their alate-llke gray uni
form* guar’ed hie automobile and
kept the traffic clear
At the entrance to the big tent
the preeldent paused for a moment to
l#-t the cameras pop away as he stood
with head uncovered between a vet
eran from either army HI* entrance
Into the ten* to the atralns of "Hall
to the Thief" bronght the crowd,
which eatimatee may numbered 10.-
000, from their chair* with a cheer
The speakers’ platform was filled
with the staff officer* of governor*,
with men In Confederate gray and a
few in blue, with women in gay
dresses and the president in hi* black
frock coat was a quiet figure.
Gov. Tener introduced him in a
dozen words. As he rose to epeak
there was another cheer.
BOY KILLED MOTHER
Young Man Arrested for Serious
Crime at Abbeville.
On Wednesday at about 6 o’clock
in the afternoon one Ben Ashworth
at Calhoun Falls Was accused of kill
ing his mother and was arrested and
brought to the county Jail at Abbe
ville that night. The jail was well
guarded as a lynching was threaten
ed. The boy is about 20 years of age.
Ashworth himself asserts that he
went home drunk and that his moth
er asked, "Are you drunk again?"
and that he replied “Yes.” Then he
claims that his mother remarked that
"You are going to cause me to kill
myself,” and at once reached under
the bed, pulled out a pistol and tried
to shoot herself in his effort to pre
vent her the pistol was discharged
and the bullet entered her brain.
It is said that the boy and his fa
ther have been on a drunk nearly a
year and that there is some doubt as
to the truthfulness of tha boy’s sto
ry.
e
City Rous Ice Houses.
Seven non-union Ice plants seised
by order of Mayor Hunt, of Cincin
nati. were operated Thursday by the
board of health in an effort to rsUsvs
the saffering canned by tbs strike of
the Ice
WHITE HOUSE ROMANCE
DAUGHTER OF PRESIDENT WIL
SON IS TO WED
Engagement of Mies Jessie Wilson,
i Second Daughter of the President,
Has Been Announced.
The president and Mrs. Wilson, an
nounced Wednesday night the en
gagement of their second daughter,
Miss Jessie Woodrow Wilson, to
Francis Bowes Sayre of Lancaster,
Pa. The wedding is expected to take
place next November at the White
House. Mr. Sayre is at present an at
torney in the office of District Attor
ney Whitman of New York.
While close friends of both fam
ilies have known of the engagement
for some time, announcement was
withheld until Wednesday, the first
anniversary of Mr. Wilson’s nomina
tion at the Baltimore convention.
White House officials accompanied
the brief announcement with a biog
raphy of Mr. Sayre. He is 28 years
of age and after preparing at the Hill
school at Pottstown, Pa., and the
lyawrenceville, N. J., graduated from
Williams college in 1909. He was
maager of the football team there,
valedictorian of his class and inter
ested in Y. M. C. A. work. He spent
two summers with Dr. Alfred T.
Grenfell in his missionary work on
the coast of labrador and studied
law at Harvard low school where he
graduated last year "cum laude.” He
ha* travelled extensively during his
vacations, spending summers in Alas
ka and northern Siberia.
Mr Sayre comes from a collegiate
family. His father was the late Rob
ert H. Sayre, for a long time presi
dent of the board of trustee* of I.e-
hlgh university and builder of the
I.«htgh Valley railroad Hta mother
waa Martha Finley Nevln, a daughter
of John Williamson Nevln. theologian
and president of Franklin and Mar
shall college at Lancaster, Pa She la
deecended from Hugh Williamson of
North Carolina, on* of the framer*
of the conatttutlon She I* a slater
of Robert J Nevln head of the Amer
lean church of Rome. Italy, and a
first eouatn of Ellfelbert Nevln. the
composer
VC.aa V> llaon la ?4 year* of age She
waa educated at Goucher college Hal
tlmore and has spocUMird In pollt
Inal science She haa done much eet
Cement work I* Philadelphia and has
been actively Identified with the T
W C A having recantly made many
speeches In Its behalf
While Mr Sayre la not known to
Washingtonians he has made sevnml
quiet vtalta (o the Wblls Houss la
recent months and waa a freqnent vis
itor at the Wilson home nt Prince
ton N J The announcement Was re
ceived with keen Interest In csplmi
social circles as ihs wedding starts
the winter nseson with an Important
nods) fanctlon Not since Mina Alice
Rooeevolt and former Representative
Long worth of Ohio were married has
there been n wedding nt the White
House
KN< AMKD IN (XINCRJCTK.
in Wreck Isaads la
Brah«
flaring the heavy downpour of rain
nt Magnolia. W Va . on the Balti
more and Ohio railroad, several eara
of a freight train were derailed Two
car* one containing nand and the
other cement, were crushed together,
and In the midat of the wreckage.
Rrnkemnn Henry Blogge was pinned
by the mass of cemsnt. sand and
broken cars. Blogge had been rid
ing on top of the car of cement when
the accident occurren.
It was several hour* after the acci
dent before Blogge regained con
sciousness. Then he found that he
waa incased in wet cement and sand,
which formed concrete.
Blogge’s head, shoulders and arms
were clear of the solid mass, hot he
could not extricate himself because
of the wreckage piled on him. After
several attempts the imprisoned man
attracted the attention of members
of the wrecking crew clearing away
the debris and they made an attempt
to relieve him.
It waa many hour* before they
were able to get to him. By this time
the concrete bad eet and Blogge was
encased tightly In the solid mass.
After several efforts to break up
the immense mass of concrete two
heavy cranes on the wreck train lift
ed it aboard a car. The incased man
was taken to the Martinsburg shop,
where the concrete was broken under
a steam hammer and Blogge rescued
from his peculiar position.
Left Fortune to Work
Utter weariness of being rperely a
millionare is the reason John 6’Brien,
of New York, Wednesday advanced
in explination of his long absence
from the ken of his old friends.
He mysteriously vanished at the end
of his college year in 1910. He was
found yesterday In Van Buren, Ark.,
where he la working as an assistant
engineer for a railraad.
Kills Wife and Commits Bnicide
Henry Dodd, a farmer of Green-
vale, Tenn.. shet and killed his wife
with s rifle Mondkyqand then com
mitted suicide. Eleven children sur
vive The cause of the tragedy is
hot known.
PRESIDENT DELIVERS INSPIRINfi
ADDRESS TO VETERANS
ASKS NATION TO SERVE
Shows That the Present Time Needs
Sacrifice and Valor in as True a
Sense as Was Needed Fifty Years
Ago—Appeals to AH Right-Minded
Men for Aid.
A call to service for the reunited
nation that Friday through its regu
lar army paid tribute to tho fallen
heroes of Gettysburg, blue and gray,
was the dominant note of the speech
of Woodrow Wilson, president of the
United States, at tht semi-centennial
reunion on the field where fifty years
ago the North and South strove for
the mastery. The struggle for su
premacy, said the president was for
gotten, except for the priceless mem
ories of heroism. Still, said the na
tion’s head, there exist opportunity
and need for service to the nation
which produced the men who faced
death and pain on the stricken field
fifty years ago.
The president said:
"Friends and Fellow Citixens: 1
need not tell you what the battle of
Gettysburg meant. These gallant
men in blue and gray ait all about us
here. Many of them met here upon
this ground In grim and deadly strug
gle. Upon these famous fields snd
hillsides their comrade* died shout
them. In their presence It were sn
Impertinence to discourse upon how
the bsttle went, how It ended, whst
It ■ignlfled’ But fifty year* have
gone by since then, snd I crave the
privilege of tpeeklng to you for a
few minutes of what those fifty year*
have meant.
"What hare they They
have meant peace and union and vig
or and the maturity and might of a
great nation How wboleeome and
healing the peace has been’ We
have found on* another again as
brother* and comrades In arms ene
mle* no longer, generous frlenda
rather, our battles long past, the
quarrel forgotten except »hat we
• ball not fotget the splendid valor,
the manly devotloa of the men then
arrayed against one another, now
grasping hands and smiling Into each
other a eye* How complete the uni
on has become and how de«r to all
of us. how unquestioned how be
nign and majestic, as Hlate after
State has been added to this our
great family of free men’ How
handsome the vigor, the maturtty.
the might of the great nation we
love with undivided hearts how full
of large and confident promise that s
life will be wrought out that will
crown tta strength wtth gracious Jus
ties sad with a happy welfare that
will tonch all alike wtth deep con
tentment’ We are debtor* to tboee
flflg crowded year* they have made
u^heir* to a mighty heritage
"But do we deem the nation com
plrte and finished ' Thee* venerable
men crowding here to this famous
field have set us a great example of
devotion and utter sacrifice They
were willing to die that the people
might live. Bat their task 1* don*
Their day 1* turned Into evening.
They look to us to perfect what they
established Their work Is handed
on to os. to be done In another way
but not to another spirit. Our day
I* not over; It 1* upon ua In full tide.
"Have affairs paused? Doe* the
nation stand still? Is what fifty
year* have wrought since tboee days
of battlefield finished, rounded out.
and completed? Here is a great peo
ple great with every force that has
ever beaten in the lifeblood of man
kind. And it in secure. There i* no
one within Its borders, there Is no
power among the nations of the
earth, to make it afraid. But has it
yet squared Itself with its own great
standards set up at its birth, when
It made that first noble, naive appeal
to the moral judgment of mankind
to take notice that a government had
now at last been established which
was to serve men, not matters? It is
secure In everything except the satis
faction that its life is right, adjusted
to the uttermost to the standards of
rlgheousness and humanity. The
days of sacrifice and cleansing are
not closed. We have harder things
to do than were done in the heroic
days of war, because harder to see
clearly, requiring more vision, more
ealm ^.balance of judgment, a more
candid searching of the very springs
of right.
"Look around you upon the field
of Gettysburg! Picture the array,
the fierce heats and agony of battle,
column hurled against column, bat
tery bellowing to battery! Valor?
Yes! Greater no man shall see in
war; and self-sacrifice, and loss to
the uttermost; the high recklessness
of exalted devotion which does not
count the cost. We are made by
these tragic, epic things to know
whst It costs to make a nation—the
blood and garlics of multitodes of
unknown men lifted to a great stat
ure in the view of all generations by
knowing no limit to their manly will-
ingnees to eerre. In armlee thus
marshalled from the ranks of free
men yon sill see. as it were, a nation
embattled, the leedem and the led.
YOUNG GIRL SEALED ALIVE IN
8TONE-ENCLOSED TOMB.
After Tearing Off Blindfold Mason
Was Compelled at Point of Pistol
to Complete the Job.
The identity and fate of a young
girl who was walled up and left to
die in a building near Barcelona,
Spain, has caused the Spanish author
ities to Institute a rigid investigation.
The affair was made public through
the statement made by Esteban Gut
ierrez, a Btone-mason, who tells a
thrilling story of how he was com
pelled, at the point of a revolver, to
do the work.
Gueierrez declares that, after he
had advertised in a newspaper for
work, two well-dressed men called
at his address snd asked him to ac
company them in a motor car into the
country a short distance to make
some urgent repairs.
Reaching a dense woods on the
outskirts of the city, the two men
and a chauffeur seized, bound and
blindfolded the stonemason, and a
few minutes later the oar stopped in
front of a loneely house.
The mason declares he was led in
side and ordered to wall up a narrow
aperture the stone and mortar being
in readiness. Gutierrez says he
heard some one sobbing, and, tearing
the bandage from his eyes, he saw
a young girl, bound with ropes and
wedged in the aperture.
He was promptly knocked down by
his captors, and when he arose, was
ordered to build a wall ao as to en
close the girl, and when he refused
was threatened with revolvers. The
maaon declares that, at the points of
the guns, he was compelled to wall
up the young girl after which the
car conveyed him to a woods severs!
miles away. * here he was unbound,
given |20 In silver and warned not
to speak of the Incident Ix>et. he
wandered several hours before he
was discovered by a sroodsman. snd.
reaching Barcelona, he went at once
to th* police
snd may kn >•. If you will bow little
except In form Its action differs In
days of p*a<>* from !t« action In days
of war
"May we break camp now and he
at ease* Are the forces that fight for
the nation dispersed, disbanded, gone
U> their home* forgetful of th* com
mon cause* Are ost fort** disor
ganised. without oonstUsted leader*
aad th* might of m*a couacloueiy
united because w* contend, not with
armies, but with principalities end
power* and wickedness In high
places Are w* content to lie still*
Does our union mesa sympathy, oar
pane* conteatmeat. oar vigor right
action, our maturtty aelf-cemprahea
sloa aad a dear coatdeaca la chose
lag what »* shall do* War fitted
us for aclioa. aad action never -~if n
I have been chosen the leader of
the nation I can not Justify the
choice by any qualities of my own.
but so It has com* about and her* 1
stand Whom do I command* Th#
ghostly hosts who fought upon thee*
battlefields long ago and are gone*
These gallant gentlemen stricken In
veer* who** fighting days ar# over,
their glory won’ What are the or
der* for them, and who rallies them?
1 have in my mind another hoot,
whom thee* set free of civil strife In
order that they might work out in
days of peace and aetled order the
life of a great nation. That boat la
the people themselves, the great and
the small, without clasa or difference
of kind or race or origin: and un
divided In Interest, If we have but the
vlaion to’gnlde and direct them and
order their live* aright In what we
do. Our constitutions are their arti
cles of enlistment. The orders of the
day are the laws upon our statute
booka. What we strive for ia their
freedom, their right to lift themselves
from day to day and behold the
thinga they have hoped for, and so
make way for still better days for
those whom they lore who are to
come after them. The recruits are
the little children crowding in. The
quartermaster’s stores are in the
mines and factories. Every day
something must be done to push the
campaign forward; and it must be
done by plan and with an eye to
some great destiny.
“How shall we hold such thoughts
in our hearts and not be moved. I
would not have you live even to-day
wholly in the past, hut would wish to
stand with you in the light that
streams upon us now oat of that
great day gone by. Here is the na
tion God has builded by our hands.
What shall we do with it? Who
stands to act again and always in the
spirit of this day of reunion and hope
and patriotic fervor? The day of our
country’s life has but broadened Into
morning. Do not put uniforms by.
Put the harness of the present day
on. Lift your eyes to the great tracts
of life yet to be conquered in the in
terest of righteous peace, of that
prosperity which lies in a people’s
hearts and outlasts all wars and
errors of men. Come let ns be com
rades and soldiers yet to serve our
fellow men in quiet counsel, where
the blare of trumpets la neither
heard nor heeded .gpd where the
things are done which i
the a otiose of the world la peace aad
rtgh
REENACTED IT UNFHERATEJ
IN CEIETEIT RlliL
IDENTITY CAUSED BY
TWO MISSPBO TOES.
1
. m
RECEIVED WITH CHEERS
▼Ule Wheat ft Waa
Was Not the
By the Old Defenders, a Philadelphia
Brigade, When They Reach tlxe
Stone Wall—Grays Climb Over to
Shake Hands and Halk of the Days
That Were.
A handful of men in gray re-en
acted Thursday the charge of Pickett
across the field of Gettysburg. Up
the slope of Cemetery ridge, where
death kept step with them in ’63,
150 veterans of the Virginia regi
ments of that Immortal brigade
made their slow parade.
Under the brow of the ridge In the
bloody angle, where the Philadelphia
bridge was a handful In blue, scarce
ly larger, waited to meet the on
slaught of peace. There were no
(lashing sabres, no belching guns, on
ly eyes that dimmed fast and kindly
faces behind the stone wall that
marks the angle. At the end, In
place of wound or prison or death,
were handshakes, speeches and ming
ling cheers.
The veterans In gray marched for
quarter of a mile over the ground
that they traversed during the
charge. They came up the slope In
column of fours. Irregular but re
sponsive to the commands of Maj. W.
W. Bentley of the Twenty-four Vir
ginia. one of the few effleer* of eith
er Pickett’# or th* Philadelphia bri
gade* preeent. Ahead of them mareh-
*d a band snd well down the column
was * faded Confederate flag. Its red
field pierced with many holes. Its
cro** bars dim and Its ahaft colored
with the aweat of many a man who
died that It might fly high In the last
desperate effort to pierce the Union
lines
Its progress was slow snd palnfnl
for the timothy In the field was high
and Its plowed surface waa not easy
for weady feet Up to the very edge
of the atone wall, covered now wtth
tangled vines, shaded by trees and
peaceful as s aumraer Isas, they
marched In the hot asn while the
bend played "Dills’’ There they
stood for half as hoar while their
comrades ta bias peered across at
them
The hi a* Mae formed bahlad the
all Overhead floated a faded stand
ard of th* Second army corps Behind
‘hem were the stats lea of the Phfte-
delphie brigade end the Feerth Unlt-
1 fits tea hosiery where
tateed died.
As tbs men la gray formed la a
long Mae faring the wall,
aad Bar* aad the flag of the
corpe were rroeeed la amity
Star* aad Stripes were aafaried aad
th* crowd that came to watch bar*
Into a cheer IteJreaeBtatlve J
Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania,
mad* a long speech aad Maj. Beat-
ley answered him on behalf of th#
South The veterans in gray ware
given a medal provided by Jobs Wan-
namaker They crowded ever the
•ton* wal. shook ana da aad the
charge was ovsr. There waa
picturesque figure la the Ua* that
cams up tbs slope. W. H. Turpin of
the Fifty-third Virginia appeared la
th* uniform he wore on the day of
ths charge. Hi* feet were boaod ia
cloth, he had an army blanket strap
ped to his back aad he calmly amok
ad a long stemmed corn oob pipe.
There were fifteen regiments In
Pickett's division that day in 'll, and
the histories any that S.OOfi men
charged acroee the field. Every field
officer waa killed or wounded except
one lieutenant colonel and two-thirds
of the line officers met the same fata.
Of the 5,000 who charged, only about
2 000 returned to the Confederate po
sition. The Philadelphia brigade num
bered about 1,200 men and lost 45S
in killed and wounded.
One of the most remarkable
of mistaken Identity, caused by titu
lar peculiarities, happened at Ben-
nettsvllle in the trial of Neal Daria,
alias Tom Hightower, for wife mur
der. In 1904 Tom Hightower, a ne
gro man, murdered his wife in a
most brutal way, severing her arms
and limbs from her body, cutting her
throat and otherwise brutally cutting
ler. The different parts of the body
were buried at different places In a
bay. Tom Hightower made his es
cape.
Last February a negro who wag
raised In Marlboro county, was serv-
ng a sentence at Easley and he re
ported that another negro on the
gang at that place and at that time
waa Tom Hightower. The arrest wag
made and the negro who claimed to
be Neal. Davis wag bronght to Ben-
nettsviUe. The resemblance was
most striking. A striking feature of
the resemblance was that Tom High
tower had lost a great toe on the
eft foot, as had the prisoner.
After being brought to Bennettg-
vllle he gave hla name aa that of
Neal Davis, stated that he was raised
Pulaski county, Georgia, gave
names of citlsene of that communi
ty.
Several negroes In this county who
had worked with Tom Hightower
and knew him intimately, swore .
lively that the defendant on trial
Tom Hightower, one of then*
the sxprsoeloa, "If that Is not Tom
Hightower, he la In Tom Hightower’s
Hide.” Two white men who aloe
knew Hightower well, teotified that
th* defendant was Hightower. Two
chaingaag guards from Ptekaas coun
ty had bees brought to BeaaettsvlHo
by th# Bute, aad they taeUted that
Davis bad told them be bed morder
ed his wife, that he bed eat np her
body and bnrled It la different
The defeaee sought U weak
testimony by showing that these two
Kneeeee mod* no reference U the
coufeeeloa when the sheriff went U
Easley for the prisoner, and th*
they said aotbiag about It aatll
time afterwards, when all nf the
bad been pnMMhnd In the dally pn-
Democrats Economical.
Uncle Sam closed the fiscal year
1913 with a surplus of $40,083,229,
representing the excess of receipts
over expenditures, exclusive of Pan
ama canal and public debt transno
tions. This exceeds last year’s sur
plus by $3,750,000. The Panama
canal expenditures and public debt
transactions, however, wiped ont the
surplus of ordinary receipts over or
dinary expenditures and created a
deficit for the year of $2,149,000,
>
Confesses Through Remorse.
Tortured into sleeplessneee by the
knowledge that he had forged his
employer’s name to a check, H. D.
Hendle, a sixteen-year-old youth of
Cullman, Ala., surrendered himself
at the Fulton county tower ’Wednes
day morning, with the request that
hs be locked up. His guilty con
science would not let him sleep, said
the boy.
Gets
Two hundred and fifty Uw
dollars and all the costs of the smH Is
the price the Marquis of Northsmit-
ton has agreed to pay to settle th*
suit for breach ad promise
against him by the boadon
Miss Daisy N
asm* Is Ytolet
the kUUng of his wtfa la 1994.
ilssAag tee e<
cat off
godly, asd sot
t of Dr
toe oa the a acre's foot had boaa
patated by a shilled saicaaa.
U was as fine a pioaa #f
faery of the kiad as he had
It
other
that the
Hightower. After betag eat a
mlaataa the )ary ret armed a
of sot guilty.
BLOOD
AT EEUEIOffi.
Save* men
day in a fight la the dtalag room ad
the Gettysburg Hotel, aa a result of a
fight, which started when several
men aroused th* anger of aa old vet
eran In blue, by abusing Lincoln.
Several of the wounded men are la a
serious condition at the Pennaflvaala
State Hospital. Th* state constabu
lary are making desperate efforts to
find ths men who did the
According to all the informatloa
th* authorities could gather tho fight
started suddenly and was over ta a
few mlnutee. It began shortly before L
seven o’clock, when the dining room
was full of people, and caused a
panic among the scoroa of gueots.
The veteran who was unhurt aad dis
appeared in the melee waa sitting
near David Farbor and Edward J.
Carroll, when he hoard tho slighting
remarks about Lincoln. Ho jumped
to his feet and began to defend the
martyred president and berated his
detractors.
The men who were stabbed, ac
cording to the Information the sur
geons gathered/ jumped to the de
fence of the veteran when the others
closed In. Knives were out la a
second and the room was thrown Into
an uyroar. H was all over before
the rest of the men In the room
conld get their breath and the men
responsible for it had fled.
o o W ' -
•m
'M
William K. YaaderMtt,
Hampton. L. L, W<
The mashtn* ho urns drtriM ovsr-
•m* to regufi* thot Ms w«» to a*»