The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, February 28, 1924, Image 6
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THE PEOPLE. BARNWELL. S. C.
PLAN 18 TO PUT INDUSTRY ON
’ v
FIRM BASIS IN NEAR
FUTURE.
WILL MEET NEXT IN
Organization is to H*ive Benefit of
Shipping Point, Inspection
Service. ' .
Columbia.—Steps ^ookinff -Ato- th$
placihK of the peach growing int|u8tfy
- In South Carolina upon a firm bush
ness basis were taken at a meeting at
the Jefferson hotel of the committee
on contracts and bylaws, which com*
mlttee was appointed at a moling of
the South Carolina i'each (1 rowers’ i-s.
sociation hold several weeks ago. The
Peach Growers’ association was or-
ganized about two years ago but has
not been functioning actively owing
to the fact that no' very great quan
tity of peaches has been grown ?or
shipment heretofore. Now, however
there are 600,000 peach trees planted
in South Carolina, ah,, while all of
these will not be old enough to bear
this season, they will come in in a
few years.and the association is piak
ing preparations to care for their yield
■o that the growers and the buyers
> may alike be,benefited.
At the mefct'tng asttirjn avf contract
was draw# it fraud a set of bylaws was
also compiled. Plans were in£,de for
having the contract form printed and
to have these forms sent out to the
peach growers for signatures. A num
ber of meetings are to he held in Lho
near future in the peach growing sec
tions yf the state and the contract
fully explained and March 5 a state
wide meeting Is to he held In Colum
bia at which time officers will be elect
ed. the policy of the association decid- f
ed upon and other business transact 1
ad. At this meeting in March T. B
Young, president of the Sweet Potato
Growers' association, will talk on the
marketing of perishable crops ap(l A
s H. Ward, district agent of the ;farm
demonstration forces, with headquart
era In Florence, will discuss coopera-
. .tive marketing
■j
FOUR BURNED-TO DEATH ‘
IN FIRE AT ETNA, PENN.
: 1 \
KJttsburgh, Pa.—Four men were
hurn^d^to death in a fire which de
stroyed a three-family dwelling
house at Efha^near here. Two oth
er men escaped by Jumping from a
second story window. An over
turned oil lamp was ^believed to
have started the tire.
All the bodies were recovered
from the ruins but only one hi
been identified, that of Andrew
Dabie. Three'of the victims - 'were
sleeping in an unstairs room when
the fourth was believed by Are offi
cials to irav-e upset an oil lamp on
the first floor and to have been
overcome. “ .-
Their escape was cut off when
the fire sp.rdhd to the stairs; two
other occupants of the second
floof jumped fromr windows escap
ing unhurt. The othei' fatailler in
the house escaped without diffi
culty.
Bin SISTERS TO DESTH
GREAT SUM FOR
* ■ ■ - •
~ IS
A
AGRICULTURE BILL €#«RI^S T(*
- .i - -rr-- ' ' i Y *
TAL OF $Se;oOO,OOOr HIGHWAYS
FUND CUT.
\ i--
GARRIES FUND FOR WARNINGS
$20,000 AutbOTlxed AcuEnable Weather
.Bureau to Aid Fruit Growers
Throughout Country.
Washington.—A total of $56,758,618.
of which $17,700,000 would be avail
able for improvement of highways dur
ing -coming fiscal years ip carried in
the amrual Agricultural Bill reported
by the House Appropriation ‘Commi-t-
tee. ' ’
The total is $16,082,940 less than
NEBRASKA OFFICIAL KILLED
WHILE IN COtjlRT, ROOM.
~ ‘ ^ ' l '
Lincoln, ’Neb.—WjWalin M. Morn
ing, 56, vqteran dlsMict^ Juuge. was
shot ^nd killed in hi^: eriqrtrootn by
P Wallace'"G. wAllick, who^ in , turn
shot andjlpilled himself, r \lwv4udge
wart .shot jthrough the'heart.
Wallick sho^jtt't; F. Rein, attor
ney wiffe, Matilda Wallick,
who wasi 1 suing him for separate
mainte’iiahce, and at his wffe.
Neither of these shots took effect.
Judge Morning walked from his
bench after her had been shot and
was assisted to his room adjoining
the court, where he died in a Tew
minutes.
Wallick, 50 years of age, is a
well digger and lives'Tri Belmont,
a sttburb of Lincoln.
SIX SHOT IN RUNNING FIGHT
GOES FOR PART OF CLAIMS TO
. SURVIVORS OF LUSITANIA
DISASTER. -
DECISION GIVEN IN 57 GASES
This, However, Represents Only the
First Group; Forty Claims Are
Denied.
/ .
DESPERATE G U N M E N STAGE
fhe^ appropriation a year ago, when
^ ntin nnfi tsrfia i^t /i c? t .1
. $:12.00(),000 was allotted for State and
FRANK McDOWELL TELLS POLICE road construction and Is $471,312 less
tfian budget estimates.
For thfvnforeement pf special laws
by the Department of Agriculture, the
bill carries $2,627,000, the items in
cluding: ‘
Packers and Stockyards Act $452,-
WILD DASH FOR FREEDOM IN
KENTUCKY.
HE KILLED FOUR MEMBERS
OF FAMILY.
Mr. and Mrs. McDowell Shot While
In Bed, Apparently Neither Had .
Been Aroused;
St. Petersburg. .Fla.—Charged with
wiping out the four members of his
family, two by Jwo, on dates exactly
one year apaH, Frank McDowell, 19
years old Is eonfinej in the Pinel
las county jail at Clearwater*to await
trial In One of tbe most amazing
murder cases In southern criminal
records.
The youth signed a confession ad
mitting that he shot and killed Mr.
and Mrs. J, M. McDm
and that he caused the tire In which
540; Grain Futures Act, $104,460;
Plaht Quarantine Act, $324,426; Insec
tlcide Act. $140,575; Gran
Act, $500,000; Warehouse Act
000; Cotton Futures and Cotton Stan
dards Acts, $185,000; Food and Drug
Acts, $716,000. ' •
An additional $1^071,150 is provided
for meat inspection, $308,000 for mar
ket inspection of perishable food,'! and
$82,480 for the Department’s news
service on fruits and vegetables.
An appropriation of $20,000 is auth
orized to epable the Weather Bureau
to give warnings throughout* the
Louisville Police and Auto . Thieves
Fight Through Traffic Thronged
%
* Streets.
Washington.—Under an award of
the (Tennan-Amerlcan mixed plaims
commission involving only part of the
claims arising from the sinking of the
British liner Lusitania,, the German
government' must pay .approximately
$1,000,000 reparation for losses susta a-
ed by Americans through de^th, In
jury, property damage, or otherwise,
in that disaster. The decision was
handed down by Judge Edwin B. Par
ser. umpire of the commission, In 57
cases, representing ..only the first
| group of Lusitania claims.
Eighty-ejght-separate awards were
made, ’the .grtjvounts in the cases in-
77k« BEST Emmrgmncy Remedy
for Man Beast
, uu-jianl — — .— ,
of «®rSTn*,, bruise*, cuts and
tores, in horses as well as man,
and believe it to be the best Lini
ment now in we. 1 keep it in
, my house all tB?time and recom
mend it to all as tht Unimcnt
forallpurpour.” ,
Mustang Liniment is composed
of soothing, healing oils that,
when rubbsd in. penetrate the
tissues to tha.-bone I, Mustang
tt no alcol
/
L/t.
contains no alcohol, acids or pep.
per, and don not smart or sting. .
FREE rJir Souvenir
PENCIL, sent aUahtUlv/r"
with compl«U direction* for
oaing Mustang Liniment
for family ailmanta, and for
liraatock and poultry
Lyon Mfg- Co.. 42
Sooth Fifth St..Brook
lyn, N. Y.
Sold by Drag and
Canaral Stores
(CAN
%
THE
Louisville,. Ky.—Six, ’ inen,
them suspuft^d automohiie
t two of ‘ vlt>lv ' nK P r #Pi’ly damage or destruc-
Te hhnciits ,ion ’ carrying 5 per cent interest a
!6: lnsec ‘J and alleged escapedfonvicts ,anil four • VPar ’ datin « May J. 1915. wh
Standard c ity-poTic4|ben, nursed, bullet wounds ' the Lusttan i a wa^, sunk, to the dt
- as a resulti’of a-desperate bit:
n Stnn- . . .. * .
SPRINGLESS SHADES
Last Longer_Look Bette»-
The pistol battle was initiated by
Lee Wallace,^ 23, Franklin, Ind., and
Rex Stacey, alias Harry Miller, 23, St.
Louis, Mo., when they suddenly drew
and
Marlon, 18, and Willem age. -l-&,-his - fruiting a praying- conditions
two sisters, perished at Decatur, Ga.,
February 19, 1923. ^
In fhe story which he repeated
three times to (’hief of Police George
and Chief of Detective
Frank 'said - his'mind
became “hazy’’ at times and that dur
ing these spells he was obsessed with
who were guarding them, leaped from
;ers -as, to front ‘ an » utolrtoblle Patrol aw t.h» nriaehi»g
advice‘on harvest’weather and ® Pprt) f Ghe<1 pol,ce headquarters, and
darted away. Police and detectives
joined in pursuit and hundreds of per
sons, pedegtrains, occupants of street
cars and automobiles and workers in
The hill carries $3,277,000 for erad
Ication of tuberculosis among cattle
the major portion of it to be spent in
M. Coslick
John Trotter,
indemnities; $$60,000 for eradication '1^^“ huildings. attracted by the sound
of firing, witnessed the spectacular
cattle
h
ithe hallucination that the members of
, It was announced that a shippingi tiis family were followers of the anti
point inspection service for the peach Christ.
growers of the state had been obtain Tracink the-origin of these - “hazy'*:
ed. This service, similar to that given spells, Frank said that when he was
;to potato shipments, is of great ad , 12 years old he Jjlasphemed the “Holy
tvantage to both the buyer and seller. 1 Ghost**- and that since that time he
dt means that at the shipping point has been trying to expiate,his sin, hut
[the crates of peaches as they are load- he did not explain of,what this “blas
phemy’’ consisted,; This "tiTisphem*y"
$184,000 for eradication
og cholera; $328,-480 fo.r blister rust
control; $411,31v\for barberry eradica
tion; $672,360 njt preventing the
spread Of moths^jjid $216,350 for pre
venting UitC-srpread of the European
corn borer.
ed in the ears will lit' passed upon by
'aij inspectorT who gives a certificate
■of government Inspection, UtTd the
product is often siild upon this certl-
ific'ate.
• Medicsl Meeting Comes to.Close.
Greenville.—Following a two ^day
session here, during which between 30
.and 40 medical‘popers were read and
occurred on a February 19, he said.
Every year since when the*anniver-.
nary of this “blasphemy” approached.
Frank snfd, his mind became erratic
and he believed his family to he allied
with the anti-Christ. Thdse delusibns
continued'annually until one year ago
he felt that he must kill his sisters
in order, to atone for his "blasphe-
dlscussed, the 26th convention, of the I mous’’ sin.
After he had started the fire in
which his sisters perished. Frank said
his mind returned to rationality and
he was appajled at the criniA^he had
committed, hut did not reveal it to
anyone. When February 19 of this
year came near, he'felt that the death
of his parents was a sacrifice demand
ed as penance for the killing of his
sisters.- he said.
Explaining the Decatur. Ga., fire,
Frank said that he crept into the
Tri-State Medical association attend
ed by medical men from alljiarts of
■Virginia. North Carolina and- South
Carolina, was brought to a close Of
fleers for the next year were elected
at a Riisiness meeting held In the
afternoon and Richmond, Va., was se
Wted as the next place of meeting
Between 130 and lat* p'hysicians
representing the profession .In the
;three states attended the. conclave
.The conventioji program was devoted
strictly to professional and business
matters and was not featured by <so
Vial entertainments of a formal ha'
ture. A teat fire of the convention
was an address o.n “Medicine IMuca
Hion." l y Dr H. W. thase. pres dent
,o fthe University pf North Carolina.
At tin 1 business sessioq, the follow
ing officers'were elected: president
Dr. F M McLeod of Florence; vice
presido”*. Dr. Garnett Nelson, .Rich
niond. Va ; Dr. N C. Lawrence *ot
Winston Salem for North Carolina
and Dr. E W. Carpenter of Greenville
for South Carolina, while James .K
Hall of Richmond was re-elected sec
rotary 1 treasurer.
The ex -eutive emineil went into ses
shitr s’ > tly ’.efore the business live!
ing anj ’undo the-following recom-
nu>mh’ V! n S . which were .reported -to 1
’ tlie meeting of the association and
*1 •. x j
adapted.
'fh-,* '1,0 nmn'ier o r patiprs put or 1
the program at the following meetings
of the association he limited to 3ii in] ooio. Star,'filed suit In federal court
Coolidge Delivers Address By Radio
Washington — President Coolidge. in
a radio address delivered, from the
White House, combined with a tribute
to Washington an appeal to the Ameri
can people to accept the responsibil
ities and continue the sacrifices neces
sary to make enduring the Institutions
which Washington founded.
Mr. Coolidge described the part
played by Washington in the founding
of the Atnerican governmjint-'hnd de
clared he accomplished the results
“by accepting great responsibilities
and making great sacrifices.’’
“If we are to maintain the institu
tirns which he founded, if we are to
improve what he created, we must
when
date
bid for free- PR7 lllf!nt . and those in the death
dom by the gunmen which-included a < ase8 *he'same interest dating froih
running pistol fight through traffic- Novemher ^ 1923 > when the commis-
thr#nged streets in the heart of the 1R ' on ^ anf T 0( T down its opinion in {he-
downtown district here. . cases determining the measure of dam-
ages. Forty claims were denied.
In handing down his decision. Judge
Parker made a brief statement of the ,
facts in each case and applied them
, , . to the rules laid down in the Lusita-
weapons, wounded four policemen • . . , i -t-u
nia opinion of November 1. The
cases came toi him for decision be
cause of disagreement between the
American comirtissicner. Charles P.
Ahderson. and ‘ the (Terman commTs-
sinner. Wjlholm^Kiesselhach.
In the death cases..according to the ;
opinion, the basis of damages was notl
the value of a life lost or the loss i
sustained by the estate of fho deco- [
. ^ent. hut the losses to claimanfs re i
suiting from the death, “in so far as j
such losses are susceptible of being
measured'by pecuniary standards.’’ j
The., largest award made total was
in the case of Mrs. May Davies Hop- j
kins GUmcr and May Davies Hopkins,
who were allowed claims Totalling
$130,000 Mrs. Gilmer at the time of j
the Lusitania disaster, wasrthe wife of ,
the pres'deht—of the Newport News
Shipbuilding and Dry Dock company.
Mr. Hopkins, her husband, was 44
years old when he went down with
127 other Amerlcan^m the big linpr
She has since remarried.
FROST PROOF
Cabbage Plants
Barly Jersey. Charleston Wakefield, Flat Dutch,
Succession. Postpaid. 100, 80c; 800, 75c; 600, $1.00,
l.OQO, $1.50. Charges collect - L000. $1.00; 6.000
it 90c; 10.000 at 80c. Uennuda Onions. Lettuca.
Collard, Kale. Brussels Sprouts, Beet*,,Kohl-Rabl
plants same price. Satisfaction guaranteed.
J. F. Jamison, Summerville, Se C«
chase.
Flight of the gunmen was cut short
by bullets from the service' pietol of
Detective W. J. Diehl, who wan par
ticipating in a liquor raid when he
heard shots and saw the two men
running in his direction .
i"*" Neither Wallace or any one of the
policemen was wounded seriously.
Hospital reports, howeverrwere that
Stacey’s condition was critical.- His
mest dangerous wound was caused by
| a bullet that pierced his hack and
lodged in his stomach.
The men had been /hrrested ah a
garage a short distance from police
headquarters when they called for
an automobile police said was stolen
from Indianapolis. Wallace, officers
said, told them he and Stacy cScap-.
ed from thy State reformatory at Pen
dleton, Ind., last month.
V
Instant Relief
SjOr~
Whoopmg&ufli
Ctoup&Ghtaf a|.v
Ennchullnmbkr bm
Cotton Spinning Active.
'Washington —Cotton spinning activ
ity was greater in January than in
any month since last May. The Cen ;
sus Buftau's spinning report indicat
ed the number of active spindle hours
for the month was larger by 1,300.1)00.
Decide on Big German Loan.'
Paris.—The expert committeemen
continue to accept responsibilities, we examining Germany’s resources- have 0fKl than in Ih ‘ cem j> er -
mustcontinue to malte- sacrifleds,'* reached a general agreement«onTlmlr Artlve s ' l)!n ' ,I, ‘ hours
the President said. "Under all‘ the ' report to the reparation commission
Beautiful Marabou Most
Repulsive of All Birds
Would it enhance or dampen the en
thusiasm of tbe woman wb«» possesses'
a costly and beautiful marabou coilnr-
ette or boa if she I.new that those lo\t>-
ly featbers came from undec the wings
<4 the. most repulsive scavengers of the
stork familyV
In the native villages of Africa they
are c^ve/euced ns sacred—in Arab
marabou 'tmans saint so they are
quite tame and are allowed to stalk
‘aroqiid the native huts unmolested
Though obnoxious, they are TeaHy a
blessing, as they devour great quun(i- v
ties of filth and troublesome -Insects*
that would surely be a menace to the
inhabitants of tbe villages. Nature
Magazine.
law* of God. and man there is no
other way.’’ # T
The address was delivered by the
i’resident in his study in the White
House and was made by invitation of
Rotary International, members of
according to information from author
itative quarters. They-have , decided
it is stated, that instead of the formid
• *
able loan to be placed on the inter
national market /previously suggested
a mortgage of approximately ten Ml
4-
which recently asked that the Presi ^ lion B° ld marks on . the- German rail-
dent deliver an address in observance way system and other sources of rev
room occupied by 'his sisters, saturate of the anniversary of tin* founding of enne of the German government shall
Feline
Here’-* a snappy hit of diiHogue.re-
port**d by Chaparral:
Flora—What were you and Jack do
ing in the conservatory last evening?
I>(»ra.—Now just because you smell
a rat you don’t have, to be catty.—
Boston Transcript.
ed the bed clothing with gasoline
fired the inflammable mass with coals
carried from the family heartb.. and
fled from the house when the blaze
flared uif, locking all exits .behindJiim.
.Although the house did not burn
to the ground, the room in whuh the
two girls slept was destroyed
Frank said he went to sleep on his
couch in- a room .adjoining that of
his parents without any-, definite
thought of violence to Mr. and Mrs
McDowell He dreamed, he said, that
In* was commanded to aec.mplish the
destruction of his Talher and mbther.
He said the dream was so compelling
hat when he a woke he arose fh»m bis
t ed, .went into the next rooM and fired
live shots at Mr* atid MrS. McDowell.
' ' \
Rotary.
Gain Entrants, to Tut Tomb.
Luxor, Egypt. — After remaining
closed'nine days the tomb of Tut
Ankh-Amen was fofcibzly opened by
the Egyptian guvernmeut. A guard
of soldiers was drawn up and many
tourists - were present. .
The minister pf works ordered
Pierre LacaTt, of the Egyptian anti
'quitics department, to o;u*n the tomb
and'great excitement pntvaiied at
[.uxor It was known to "every one
that Howard ’-Tacter. representing^the
■ Carnarvon 'expt ditjou. wojik! not sur-
riTider the keys to the locks viihich
secured the door^ .at the tomb, and
that the government officers must cut
the'lock's to gain entrance.
' Mr. Carter not havind replied to the If 11“’ Plan is accepted hy the"A41ied
ultinipturn of the government within governments part of'this-loan will be
dhe 4’8 hours specifii’d. inviting him offers#! in the American market.
form the basis of a plan by which tfie
allied countries, . ’especially France
will derive regular payments of inter
est.
7 The mortgage bonds bo be issued
would be a first licn-cm the.raid-ways
and„ha.<livided among Germany's creil
itors on the basis cf the percentage
adopted at thd Spa conference in 1920
.-France. 52 per .cent; Great Britain,
26; Italy, ten; Belgium, eight, with the
remaining.tour per cent divided among' _ W f " : ’"*P t *L_ ce P^
tip* other allies. _ last year.
A re’utivoly small international*loan
will also be recommended to help Ger
many set Up. tbe proposed national
.gold issue hank In this loan \meri
can financiers will be .asked t<> invest
’ts amount remains, to be fixed but it
will probably, not exceed $500,000^000
for ^January
totaled 8,448.247.467, or an average
of 224 hours per spindle in place.
Compared with 7,139.371,847. or 190
per spindle in place- in December,* 1
and 9,266,290.904. 249 per spindle
in place in v January, last year. j
Spmnihg spindles in place January
31 totaled 37.740.454. of which 33,339.-
806 were active at some fime during
the month, compared with 37,635.709
in place December. 31, and ^ 044 870
active at some time during December.
and‘37.225 419 in place January 31. last
year, and 25.^40.85,3. active at some,
tlme’ r during that'month._
The average number of spindles
operated glur'ng January was 30.476.-
177. or at 96 7 per cent of capacity ... / ' .
on a single shift basis, compared with Physician’s Daughter Took
32,674 471, or*ftrt s S6.8 per cent capac
ity in December, and 40,00087203. or at
eapaH^y' nr January.
WEAK,
NERVOUS;
EASILY TiREO
Marion Star Files Slander Suit.
Nt*w York Roy D Moore and Louis
II Brush,.joint owners of I he Marion. tn 0 j )Qn d the tomb-and resume work
under certain comli-tkuii the cabinet
against
banker.
Frank A. VanderUp, retired i. a ncelied the license originally grant
for- $600,000 damages, alleg to i j0rc j Carnarvon and ordered the Toba
Co-Operatives Announce Payment.
Richmond. Va.—Directors of the
a lead of 40.. which is the present
number placed on the “ program«for
reading and discussion . . ing slander and libel as the result .of reopening of the tomb immediately. t , on meeting here, authorized a sec
That any person having Ms name t ] u , banker’s gurported utterances in WJ1S feared lereat damage mlch-tj ana n .vmanf -which will "amount to
-to South Carolina
Claims Revolution Virtually
-Mexico City. The •.•evolutiO]
Mexico has virtually been .stamped
out, according to statements made at
the \y: r department. It was as^efted
that-the. federals, now. having no im-
pcr»int ein my forced to fight, will he
engaged hereafter in ihr r “work of ex
terminatihg the guerillas who are
manmling in several states.
With the occupation of Morelia.
Cardui for V/omanly Weakness,,,
and ^ Says It Did Her
“Lots of Good.”
EMra, Tenn.—That Cardui bus no
?qual as a tohic l<»r weak women, suf-
iug as she sulfereiL is tbe couedu-
sionN^iicbcd by Miss dht ^lorgun. of
Elora, utler her experience in tiii* use
of this wMid;nown, purely vegidable
tonic int'dicine.x , •
—21 badp t lu*en so -strrmj; and my
health hadn’t been so good, for soim*
time,’’ says Miss Morgan, “and when’
I reached womanhood, I bad troubles
common to wtum n. I would have
0 \ the banker's DA*rported utterances 1° j a^t was feared-great damage might. on( j payment—whic
placed- on Ue program to read . a , an address at Ossining on February 12 rf , suIt thnn *, gh the ropes breaking and ; $900,000 or more-
paper and failing to be present, be , Three separte causes of action ask
barred from having his name ^placed $.200,000 damages each were cited
in the papers served on Mr. Vander-
again on the program for a peTlod of
two years.
Two Negroes Dead By Electrocution
Newberry.—Will Gary, about 2' id
Wesley Abrams, exactly 23. hotline,
gro truck drivers for the Newberry
Cotton mill, were killed while enga*
ed in getting the truck out of the gar;
nge on Drayton street. One of them
drew the droplight down to see if
the truck . had oil enough and was
instantly elctrocuted. ' The other grab
bed him In an effort to help' A\u ho
was also instantly killed —T_———-
Two wb'te men who entered the ga
rage-iirm*d'"*ety fo^owing the trag
edy were severely shocked. __
lip.
Quinn Argues For Passage of Bonus.
Washington.—T^e vi£w, point of
the American Legiop on; the bonus was
again presented to President CooUdge
by John A. Quinn, national command-
er of the Legion, but without any ap
parent change in the President’s atti
tude of opposition.
“I explaint 1 to the President that
.^. Legion favjrs adjusted-eompensa-
tior. legislation as a matter of Ameri
canization. because its enactment will
allowing the heavy; granite lid sus growers whib^have delivered tobacco
pended over the sarcophagus to fall to the association this year; Oliver J
and perhaps irreparable damage the s an( j Si president of the organization
magnificent gold-covered coffin withth
Son's Victims Laid to Rest. .
Acworth, Ga—Bodies of Mr. and
Mrs John M. McDowell', . parents of
the boy slayer, Frank McDowell, who
he confessed he murdered Tuesday
night as they slept in the McDowell
home at St. Petersburg. Fla , arrived
here.
Patzcuro and Uruapan, it was added. |
cco Growers Co-Operative asoscia-J/l the state of Michaocan has been
practically pacified. The' rebels there
are withdrawing into Guerrero and
Jalisco. The rebel general, Manuel
Dieguez, is said to have completely
vanished with all his forces, and the
federal General Escobar is chasing
Enrique Estrada. '
announcea
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Neck Brokenj Youth isOklive
Kinstoiw^rthuk Rouse, who, broke
hi* ueek-divlng Into a, swimming hole
at a Lenior county rural point nearly
a year ago, is still alive, according to
reports had here. Rouse-was brought
,to a local h jspital with a fracture of
the fifth cervical,vi^tebraiand a mang-
They were interred in a single grave led spinal cord. Surgeons Jield out np.
and laid to rest in the same burial j hope for him, but proceeded to operate
plot In- the little cemetery one mile a nd patch up the bfoken vejtebht.
from town, where exactly one year; Fallowing’the owration it-was an
promote contentment among a large a g 0> the bodies of their two dau filers nounced that Rouse^a youth of 18 ot
portion of the American citizenship,’ —glain as they slept-by their brother 19 years, rpight ' fbcoYyf, hat .the to- rescue the—guirU, but were nn-
Mr. Ouinn said, aftef his call. Frank—were buried. • -chances were mostly against him. | successful.
. - - v \ .* . s - r ' , •
all in my sides, stomach and
back. There was a great deal of
soreness across my stomach..
,“I was weak, nervous, easily tired,
and .would have to lie down. It was
suffering for me to stand on my. feet.
“My father, "who practiced medicine
for years, knew of Gardui, hcTTiavlng
used it. in practice fori womanly
troubles,, such ns I seemed to have,
and I decided to tnke It.
“I took four or five bottles and I can
assure you it did me a lot of good.
There Is no other ■medicine that can
take its place ns a female tonic.” 4
There Is *only one CARDUI. the
Woman’s Tonic. It Is a pure, whole-
Two Sisters Burned to Death.
Andalusa, Ala.—Two sisters. Miss
Edna and Maude Donaldson met death
in a fire which gutted the Knox build
ing where they were working as tele- , ^
phone operator,. It U believed, the, “blvely from
were suffocated,by smoke. Miss Edna r harmfuli ^eterlous or habit-forming
Donaldson.‘sacrificed her l.fe, offi- drug8 _ Try it! At all drug stores,
.cilals think, in-rtifning in a fire, alarm.
Her sister, who was a guest, died by
her side. Parents of the young women
live at Opj^ Ala. C
Firemen braved smoke' in ah effort
A-
THE.
WOMANS TONIC
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