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WHO WROTE IT? An Incendiary Circular Found on Streets of Camden ^ISSUED BY NEGBOSS Greatly Enraged the Good People of Camden and Tirt'y Indulge lo Some Plain Talk. Reputed Authors Deny Writing it. A letter from Oamden to Tha State says had the Russian "terrorists" manifested their presence in our midst today by the distribution of revolutionary propaganda the surprise and indignation would not have exceeded What which followed the finding on the streets of a seditious circular Wednesday morning whloh was ostensibly the work of a half soore ef Camden's most prominent negro citizens. A gentleman, walking on Broad street came on the disturbing document and upon noting its incendiary character turned it over to a friend who in turn posted it in his store window. It read as follows: "Private notice: Let every oolored man who gets this notice and who is uitirrosmju iu liib rikuis inoei ?l uev. T. J. WllHams' house on Sept. 6tb at 8 p. m. Not long ago a letter was published praising the white people and abusing our people. Tbey are the same white people who not longer than two years ago oalled some of our best men before them and also drove some of our best bo/s from home. We have some of the meanest white people In the State who Inspired that letter. \ >> "We desire to oollect money to defend the boys who had the manhood t<> resent tae insult. Oome out. G >mmittea. A. W, Powell, Walter Williams, S. B. Gardner, Geo. MoLean, Jr., G W. Gantey, Isaac English, E. H. Dibble, Evans Golllns, Jack MoKam. By order of R*v. T. J. Williams, R^v. Jv.CC W. Boykln, Rev. J. B. Taylor." KXCITKD CROWDS GATHBRKD. In a few minutes after the circular was exposed to view orowds of excited white men began to congregate on the streets and it was evident that something would have to be done very soon or trouble would follow. Mayor Garrison was advised of the situation and In less than halt an hour after the oiroular had been discovered he had the men whose names appeared thereon before him in the city attorney's office. An explanation was demanded and its sum and substance was a complete, absolute and unconditional denial of any knowledge of or participation In the preparation of the olr oular. They punctuated their very positive denial of oompllolty In the affair with feeling assurances of high regard for the white people of Camden, and dually frankly asserted that the circular was the work of one Gnarles Levy, a colored man who has recently shown hisjmtagonlsm to his race. ru Mr. Garrison tl^xed to them very cAiucouiy AUU iKniuivoiy, iuuiuuiauiu(; them that It was essential for them to get together and prove their innocenoe If they would retain the respect In which they were held by the white oitlzens of Camden. He reminded them of the good feeling which has heretofore prevailed between the raoes in this city and Impressed on them that thl<i was a very serious arraignment, strlklDg at the very heart of good feeling and confidence which only their own earnest personal efforts could now completely dispel. TIIKY DENY IT. The colored men seem to he deeply ohagrined at the position in whioh they have been placed and Indicate their full determination to sift the matter to the bottom and reveal the real culprit. The following statement has been given out by them: We, the undersigned persons hav,w* Ing seen In your paper dated Sept. 6th, an article giving publicity to a olroular of an Incendiary nature upon which our names appear, respectfully request that you print the enolosed resolutions, setting forth our position in the matter. Whereas, our names appsar printed upon a circular of an Inflammatory and incendiary nature and the same has been thrown upon the streets, thereby giving publicity to the same, and, whereas, this has been done a.i/&iri4t our knnwladffa or c indent, we being totally ignorant of Its origin, therefore, Kisolvtd, That wc regard this perpetrattou as a wilful and malicious * attempt by an enemy to put us in dioreputo with our white friends among whom we live. Ssaonri, that suoh lneoudlary utterances are condemned by u * and that huc i action is not in Jrat ping with our Idea of adjusting an grievanoes or difficulties, should any ex'st. Tnlrd, that we Individually and oolleotively pledge ourselves to give Killed by Lilghtnlnjc* At Troy, A a., on last Saturday Nowton Graves, a carpenter, and his two sons, John and Bisoom Graves, were klllei by ligntalng while at work on a house. all diligence to apprehension end eon-1 lotion oftfce perpetrator*. Fourth, thai wa aollolt the wiltano* of the oity council and our whit* friends to halp, at' our expenaa, find the perpetrator. Fifth, that to far aa our knowledge goes there la perteot harmony between the white and colored oltlaana of thla community and therefore no cause for any auoh clandestine action on our part aa Indicated by auoh a circular. E. H. Dibble, J. B. Taylor, A. W. Powell, J- W. Boykin, E Oolllna, Walter Wllllama, T. J. Williams, J. J. McKsln, G. W. MoLaln, Jr., S. B. Garener, H. O. Oantey, Isaac B. Englsh. LEVRY CIIAKOKD WITH IT. Charles Levey, who Is oharged with the authorship of the olroular, la a former oamden negro man, who was for a number of years engaged In editing a paper In Baltimore, and In eduoatlonal work among his race. He returned to Camden sometime ago and seems not to have been hailed as a leader by the men of his raoe at home. A warrant ha* hR*n imhoH Tor Levy. A few months ago he published an artiole In The State in which he booted the men of his race in Camden, ending up with an appeal for whipping posts, and since that time there has been bad feeling between himself and other colored men of the town. Rev. T. J. Williams replied to him in Che State and the men whose names appear on the ciroular think that Its appeaeance is a scheme of Lwy's to antagonize the white people against them. While there 1b no exoltement here now over the occurrence worth speaking of, the citizens feel that a thorough investigation of the affair should be Instituted. Sentiment is divided among the white people as to the real author ship of the circular. Some think that the ciroular is genuine and that the men whose names appear thereon are responsible for it, but most of the best citizens of the town are giving the men the benefit of the dobut. They do not believe that colored men of their intelligence and business prominence would be In sympathy with such a movement and that If they were they would hardly Jeopardize their Btandlng in the community in which they earn their dally bread hv aUnvlntf thoir nimaa *-? onno?? -z ww -v 0 taveuuva vv uu an incendiary pap^r. FATAL ACOIDFJIT. A Yonng Lady Shoota Herself With a Small I'iatol. At Greenville, S. 0., on Thursday afternoon Miss Luoile Iladdon, a beautiful young woman about 19 years of age, daughter of Mrs Sarah E. Iladdon, who keeps a boarding house on north Main street, met death In a most shocking and tragic manner early this afternoon. She was shot through the heart by the aooldental llscharge of a pistol whloh evidently fell to the tloor while she was removing several articles of olothing from a trunk Miss Haddon had only a few minutes before returned from shopping and while out she bought & bottle of gasoline to clean a skirt. She went to her room and a few moments later the report of a pistol was heard. When members of the family reached the room the young woman was lying on the door orasnlnir for breath. She never spoke. No one was In the room when the aocident ooourred. The bottle of gasolene was on the tl x>r near the body and a smoking revolver of 41 oallbre was near tbe trunk, which was open and from which the unfortunate girl had removed several garments. Miss Luolle was of the sunny disposition and she was In her usual happy humor. The pistol was a sift to her two years ago and she always kept it in her truak. There Is not tbe least ground to support a sulolde theory. The Haddons are well known tnd hightly respectable people and dye In a very desirable section of the city. Mrs. Haddon mother of Mils Luolle, has been a widow for a number of years. She surported herself by keeping boarders. The dead girl was a great help to her mother in running the house. Tbree Dead. At Elyria, Ohio, three men were killed and a dozen seriously injured by the falling of the second floor of the aew factory building of tbe Garford company uoder construction. Slxtee j workmen on the first floor of the bi lld ing were caught beneath the fall of oeavy tile, briok and steel beams of the wrecked fl,x>r. The dead and injured, so far as known, are Hungarians who were doing heavy construction work. The names and cause are unknown. Mix Men Killed, The parting of a cable on the British steamer nails In the port of Progrcsso, Yucatan, brought instant death to blx men Thursday. They were in a small boat alongside the steamer, which was being unloaded, when several tons c f boxed machinery broke from the hoists and orashed fairly on bop of the small boate. Two were rescued unhurt. lie Hugged Hoko. For bugging Hoke Smith, at Macon, Ga., when he concluded his spech accepting Democratic nomination for Govern t, Polioeman Tom Williams will have to faoe the Polloe Com mis SHE WON'T TELL. Insists She Was the Murderer of Her Own Betrothed. AN INNOCENT GIRL Who May Qo to the Gallows Rather Than Involve the Man That She Loves More Than Her Own Life. A Very Straufe I Gase. Pretty little Emma Stephany, although ill-taught and unused to the ways of the great world beyond her narrow lnvlronment. alts in her oell In the jail at Pottsville, Pa., a veritable sphinx. By all the rules by which detectives' experience has taught them to weigh the probabilities of guilt or innooenoe, Emma Stephany is no murderess. Yet ovor and over again she has raised her hand and declared to them: "I tell you that I killed him?I shot him with his nam ? WU A V f V* VOll "What did you do with the revolver after the shooting?" "I threw it over the fenoe." "You ought to knew that James Frizzell never had a revolver. Why do you rink your neck by telling such a story?" And then the gin, her bosom heaving with agitation, would declare again that it was she who had shot James Frizzell. "Why did you do it? lie w&o your lover. You were to be married to him." And tben, In a frenzy of dread of something which la the great mystery of this strange case she would wall: "No one else did itl Oh, I did itl 1 did it! It was an aooldent, but 1, and no one else, Killed James Frizzell 1" For weeks and weeks her Jailers have kept a olose watch upon her In the hope that some unguarded aot, some unoontrollable access of emotion during her long ntffhts In her dismal oeil?whloh overlooks the jail yard In whloh six Molly Magune terrorists of the coal regions were hanged in a single hour? would betray her and offer a solution of the mystery. But all the enlightenment they gained for their pains was when one night last week she rose from her oot q n rl ofeDra/l V* a* " _a?-s * noiauM wv uuo kiawu wmaow ana, after gazing out into the jail yard with its grewaome memories, mur mured: "I wonder if they will hang me?" This remark, made at such an hour when she believed herself to be quite alone, was interpreted to be the ex presslon of one who, knowing herself to be really innocent, wondered if it oould actually be possible for the law to send to the gallows a guiltless person. As none of the detective*} engaged upon the case had given oredenoe to "oonfession," the scene just described seemed to add force to their theory that the girl bad taken the orlme upon herself in order to save the real murderer. Then whom oould the real criminal be? This is still a mystery. Is be a second lover who kept himself in the background so effectually that not even his name is known, who had won her from Friz&oil? She is said to have made to a member of her family, who reported it to the police, one remark that hinted at such a condl tlon of affairs. "I must shield him, or he will not I marry me." J I But ever slnoe her arrest upon her own confession she has steadfastly denied oaring for any man except the one she deolares Bhe ihot. If she is shielding the real murderer, she oer talnly Is doing It thoroughly. There Is no doubt that, whatever ! her own part 1q the tragedy, Emma Stephany knows all about the murder of James Frlzzell. Early In the day of July 4, thh year, the body of thla young man was found In a Pottsvllle street, shot through the heart. Before the body was removed a orowd gathered tbout it. One of these curious persons was Emma Stephany. She leaned over the prostrate form, shaken, agitated. "Do you recognize him? ' a police man asked her. "I do not know this man," she sob bed, and walked away. When the Identity of the dead man was revealed to the polloe? that he bad lately been the aooepted lover of V O. 1 ' " a uuid oveimauy?mey immediately went to the girl's home and <iues?lon* ed her. The result showed uer to be either & murderess or a woman phenomlnally gifted with powers of subtle reasoning exerted with some mys terlous object In view. She sat in silence while her thoroughly alarmed mother declared that her daughter bad retired at her usual hour?whioh was early?and had not j left her room during all the night of the murder. The elder woman wept, lamenting: "lie was suoh a line young man. i I lam sure he would have made a good slon on a charge of being offensively aotlve In polltios. The oharge wae perferred by persons who were offended by William's action. Williams says he was so moved by Hoke Smith'* (speech he couldn't help giving a hug. hueband fw mj dang hist." "When yon lookad aft Ihi body In tha ilmi, why did you ny that you did not reoognlM II?" demanded one or ihe policemen of Iht girl. "I m frightened," the murmured. The polloeman looked al her sharply, setting a trap. "Who is this other man you hare been keeping oompany with lately." The shaft went straight home. "It Is false," said the girl, turning pale. "I hare been keeping oompany with no other man." The polloe were really nonplussed. They started to leave the house. Strangely enough, this seemed to alarm the girl more than ever. They did not then have any real suspicion that there had been rival lovers, so they were taken wholly by surprise when fimma Stephany suddenly rose and said, in her mother's presenoe. "Take me with you. I was not home last night. My mother thought I was, but I was out. Take me with you. I killed James Jrizzell." SHIELDING THE REAL SLAAEU. The policemen were dumbfounded. The poor mother fell on her daughter's neok, half fainting. "How did you do It?" demanded the oftloer. "I shot him with his own revolver," she said. "It was an accident. Take me with you; I will explain later." The oftloers had no alternative. They had to oarry the girl off to Jail, uuargea oy ner own confession with having killed her lover. Hut she made no further explanation except to deolere that she had thrown the revolver "over the fenoe." She became the Sphinx of the Potts vllle Jail, whose pale face still gives no answer to those who try to read It. In jail the girl's ounnlng In her efforts to shield the real murderer?according to the aooepted police theory? grew sharper. Knowing that any letter she wrote would be opened and read by the authorities, she penned and addressed to her mother a confession that she really had killed Frl* ztll. She had used Frlzzell's own revolver, whioh she had hidden In her room. Be quick," she wrote; "take James' revolver and hide It. Then put In Its place my father's revolver. When the polioe search my room they will find It, and this will dear me." This was not very good logic, but It helped oonfuse the authorities. The letter was never delivered to the mother. The polioe searched the girl's room?and found no revolver of any description. Tney also searched the vioinlty of the murder, where there was a board fence inoloslng a vacant lot. They Bu?roueu every inon or ground beyond the fence, but found no revolver. At length they learned on good authority that Frizzell. a most peaceably inclined young man, had never carried a revolver. All these circumstances strengthened the growing theory In the minds of oollce and detectives that the girl was innocent of all exoept knowledge of the crime; that she hadjsome powerful motive for shielding the real murderer. But here they lost the trail, which they not yet been able to reoover. They were unable to find any one who had seen or heard of E nma Stephany In ..company with any man exoept James Frizz )U. They had to work upon only the framework of a mysterious romance dealing with a strange man, living, perhaps, in a neighboring olty, who occasionally mot Emma Stephany secretly; that it was him she really loved; that she still "kept company" with James Frizz ill for the sake of appearances and to satisfy her parents who wished her to marry him; that on the night of the tragedy, not expecting this myterious lover, she had walked out with Frlzell; that the stranger, finding them together, flew into a rage, shot his rival dead and (led the olty. A A WW A m A w ^ w* Vf M. AMTf */WlVO il TT A I I As it was on the eve of Independence Day, with oraokers of all 8 zw exploding in all directions, the report jf the shot that killed Frizz ell wu not distinguished from numercu' similar explosions. The shooting oo auring in a street little frequented, the body of the murdered man wu not discovered until the next morn n# There is still another reason for dls believing Exma Stepnany's 'confession." She declared that she had 3hot Fr'ztell by accident, if this had oeen true, and she loved him, and him only, wou d she not immediately nave sought assistance in order that his life might be saved, if possible. In the same block, only a few doors away?as Emma S&ephany must have known?lived the most famous sur geon in that p*rt of the State. Io five minutes she oould have had him on the spot, for he was at home an the night. If, as the authorities suspeot, Fr e zeli was shot to death by his mysten our rival, who was the man roally 1AOO/1 Kti f V * I n of 1 ? * A ? J? * v<uu u/ u>jiit nviatiKC Klr'i '(< IS natural to suppose that her tirst impulse would be to save the slayer. To call a doctor, to raise an alarm would have been fatal to this obj ct. Therefore Frlzzsll's body was left lying in that obscure street, and during the half dczan hours that intervened before its discovery the mur derer was able to eiTtoe himself. Sc i[ HunploCuro for NouraiKi*. , Here is a simple method of curin facial neuralgia: If the neuralgia is i the right side of the face the left han 1 should be plaoed in a basin of water a i hot as can be borne. Or If neuralgl is in the left side of the face then tn Mm polite argue. ? In Mm grey sadnses of Mm morning Mm girl oould not resist the Impulse o oomnoQ to those who have guilty knowledge of euoh ortme to crefcp book to the eoeae of It; iod there eke showed, beading over the deed body, her froe *>ele end drawn. her eyes star la r, Almost the only weakness la her whole line of conduct, when she sobbed out huskily: "I do not know this men." Brer since her erreet B ami Stepbeny's meaner hes been Spblnz llke, except for her oonftsslon th&t she wee the murderess. Even that oonf vision, admitting that It Is false, adds a resemblenoe to the Egyptian emblem of mystery, for It is the moat baffling circumstance with which the deteotives have to deel. "I wonder if they will hang me?" she asks of herself. "If I do not shield him, he will not marry me," she Is reported to have said. Will she go to the gallows rather than involve the man she loves? No one who has studied her ventures to say?she is such a strange girl. THE CATTLE TICK CAUSES QUE AT IiOSS TO THE WESTERN FARMERS. Dairy Cattle Not 80 B?dly Affected But There w Much I o?s There. 8ome Facts. Government experts recently sent out to investigate the ravages of oattle tick report that belpw the quarantine there are something over 16,000 000 cattle, the total farm >alue of whloh is given by the last census as nearly $183,000,000. The dairy oat tlo are oredlted with a value of about $58,650,000 and the other oattle with over $124,000,000. From obtervatlon and experience it is estimated that a shrinkage la value of 20 per cent in oattle other than dairy cattle la due directly to the effects of the tick. In round numbers this would mean a loss of $25,0JO,000 for beef oattle. Tne dairy oattle being better oared for and to a large extent oontlned In lots where the tlok do not flourish or even exist, suffer leas damage. However, considerable damage la experienced In a great many Instances, especially In the oountry, because of the extra feed required and the shrinkage In the flow of milk caused by tlok lnfeatlon. It la believed that an estimate of five per oent of the total value of the dairy oattle Is not overcharging the tlok. Tals means an annual loss of nearly $3,000,000 for dairy oattle. The total depreciation of southern oattle on aooount of the tlok would be $1(8,000,000. The loss from exposure In the southern states is partially due to the ne , gllgenoe of the people In regard tc their oattle. Seldom Is any provision ! made' for shelter or any additional feed/ The excessive loss from exposure Snd disease In the tlok-lnfested states must be ascribed to the tlok The loss in the states with the most equable oil mates Is greatest because tlok aottvely is greatest there and the tick season Is the longer. The total number of oafcMe that died in the tick-infested district during the year ending March 31, 1906, was about 1,260,00), death being due largely to exposure. This loss constitutes nearly 50 per oent of the total loss suffered by the whole country, and get the ttok-lnfested states contain barely 25 per oent of the country cattle. The average value of these southern cattle, both milk and beef breeds, may be put at $12, according to the bureau of statistics; therefore the total annual loss from death in the tick-Infested states amounted to $15,000,000. The average death rate tn quarantined states being nearly three times as great as that In the tick free states, It Is not unfair to assume that two thirds of this loss by leath Is directly attributable to the tick, that Is, 10,000,000. The average value of southern cot>le Is $7 below that of northern cattle, In the 'state of Arkansas beef cattle vre given *a farm value of $7 50 pei lead. The cattle of Iowa are valuec it $19.42?almost three times at nuca. If 12,000,000 oattle of bettei ilood could take the plaoe of 12,000, 000 scrups, the valuation of southeri oattle would be about $84,000,000 mor< chan It la today. The southern statef with the tick gone, would soon double ind even trehi* fch? nnmhnr r?f do in the northern states One of the greatest benefits that , would follow the eradication of th< cattle tick would be the increased i fertility of the soil that would result from a great cattle Industry In th< south. Instead of exporting as no* to foreign countries?over 1,000,000, i 000 pounds of cotton seed meal year ly, which If coDterted Into beof would A?i t\t\r\ f\f\t\ a < a aaa aa/ uaiiik nuiii fU,UUU,UUU liU flU,UUU,UUl mere than is received for It froac abroad, It could be fed to cattle, anc ' thus would be kept at home the enor mous amount of fertilizer of whlcl i the farms are row robbed, besides se 1 ou-iDtf the $10,000,000 extra value foi ) the finished product. The fertilize! saved to the lands of the south woulc i represent $10,000,000 In direct value It 1b believe i that, all told, th< south loses annually between $100, 000^00 and $200,000,000 through th i ravages of tbe lick. rig at hand should be placed In the h( k water. It Is asserted that in this we relief may be obtained In less tha H live minutes. The explanation is thi a the two nerves which have the grea t est number ol tactile nerve endluj ( * BRYAN AT HOME: < He Is Welcomed by Republicans < as Well as Democrats on i I BEACHING LINCOLN. The Qreat Commoner's Nelfbbers Welcome Him Back to Hie Home. The Republican Governor Makes an Address and Extends a Joyful Welcome. William Jennings Bryan reacbod his home at Ltnooln, Nebraska, on Wednesday night and tha "Home Folks" would welcomed h'm with every evidence of approval and satisfaction. It was a neighborly welcome, planned as such, and oarried out aa planned. Lincoln has more Hapublloans than Democrats, but to-ntght tbere was no line of partisan division, and the welcome extended to both Mr. and Mrs. Bryan was a Joy.ul one. Tue city wat handsomely deorated for the homecoming, the fronts of business houses being a mass of tlaga and bunting. The non-partisan nature of the reception was omphazed lo every way possible. Tao Bryan train arrived shortly after five o'clock. There was a roar of welcome as Mr. Bryan appeared on the platform. In kho |J- ' ? auu asiuo i rum nr. a no Mrs. Bryan and their daughter Grace, was the Ltnooln delegation, which left her ten days ago to meet at Now York, and whloh Mr. Bryan aooompanles on its homeward trip, together with a few of the Nebraakan Democratic mayors. Showing no sign of fatigue, bowing right and left, with an occasional word to an old acquaintance, Mr. Bryan walked to a carriage. Seated with him were Governor Mickey, Mayor Brown and John H. Miller, president of the Llaooln Commercial Olub. A second carriage had Mrs. Bryan, Mrs. W. D. Welch, Mrs. J. K. Millar and Mayor Dahlman, of Omaha. Then In turn, followed carriages containing members of the Reoeptlon Committee. There was a pretentious mounted esoort, headed by Captain Chas. Cosgrave, policemen on horsebaok, fraternal organizations and individual 1 marohers, the whole preceded by six : bands. Along the route Mr. Bryan was received with cordiality and enthusiasm The party traversed three of the i prlnoipal business streets lined with i oheerlng crowds, and then proceeded I to the home of Charles W. Bryan, where Mr* Bryan had dinner and restI ed for a time prior to going to the eroises and reoeptlon. i Two hours before the time for the t exercises at the Capitol grounds 36, ; 000 persons struggled for pMnts of vantage around the speakers' stan.d > Mr. Bryan was escorted to the stand by Gov. Mickey from his private oftlse in the State house. In a brief speeoh i of welcome Mayor Brown said: "Before Introducing Governor Mtoki ey, who will extend the greeting of the State, Mr. Bryan, I, as Mayor, welcome you horn?; not as a statesman, nob as a Democrat, bub as that i deareib bo us all, our beloved neighbor." Governor Mickey spoke of bhe awakening of bhe publto oonsolenoe to civic righteousness. - Mr. Hryan began by saying bhat in his travels he had learned that the Arabic laoguage contained 600 word meaning camel, and that since return" ing to the United States he had wished that bhe American language con' talued as many wordi meaning. "I i thank you." Fie declared bhe happiest part of the long Journey was bhe > home-coming, ana then went into a . general-description of his travels, i Following his speech a reception r took place in bhe Capitol. Mr. Bryan I shook hands with bhe thousands who i passed before him. r There was a brilliant display of flre works for an hour on the State House i grounds. | Amilnitod. ? A dispatch from Moultrie, Ga., says John A. Johnston, a prominent farmer of the lower part of this county ^ and a formor county commissioner, t WM J " ! .. iuuiBUB]f UltfUt wnue & sitting at his supper table surrounded ? by his family. He was shot and tnt stantly killed with a load of buckshot that took etTect In his head and brain. . The shot was tired through a hole I in the ohimney. ' Kouml Doail. | The Hading of the bodies cf Nellie . Dleboldt, aged 17, and Harry Kolly, a i glass worker, aged 35, in Buckeye ' lake, Newark, Ohio reveals a mysterrr lous tragedy. The couple went to the \ lake Monday for labor "a/ holiday. That was tho last seen of them alive. ; There were evldenoei ( f a struggle preceding the tragedy. It Is thought e chat in the struggle bo ch w*ro thrown from the boat and drowned. jt are the fifth and the median nerve? as the fibres of these two nerves oroas any impulse conveyed to the left hand ' will afleo* the rlgnt side of the face, or if applied to the right hand will a t fee; the left side of the face. This it <s on aooount of the crossing of the ct r i.