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A . DOG WAS MAD~ Bit Four Persons and Closes Great Excitement in Columbia err other dogs also Those Hitten by the Animal. Which Whh a Fine Bird I>og. Were Mr. Alfred Wallace, Mrs. May rant. Alfred Wallace, Jr., and Mr. A. H. of th? State. Tho State says Quail, an Rnglish alitor beluglng to Alfred Wallace, of Columbia, appears to have become afflicted with hydrophobia, and ban attacked several persons. Not wishing to alarm the people of the citjr uune esaarlly, no statement was given out at the time, for it was hoped that the dog was not affected with rabies, and the animal was put under lock aud key awaiting developments. Tho persons attacked by this dog are Mrs. Mayrant, mother of Mrs. Wallace; Alfred Wallace, superintendent of the street railway; Alfred Wallaco. Jr., attorney at law, and A. Hamilton Seats, of The State. A very flno dog, the property of Magistrate Jas. H. Fowles, is known to havo been attacked, aa well as other dogs being under suspicion. Tho members of Mr. Wallace's household were attacked Sunday. The animal was supposed at first to have been 111 tempered on account of having probably been poisoned by chicken thieves who visited the place, corner of Senate and Henderson streets, one night last week. However, Hr. F. A. Coward, the State bacteriologist, was notified and all wounds were cauterized ami the auinial was looked up pending developments, for if it were affected with rabies, death would come in five days. It would not be necessary to administer to the persons attacked any Pasteur treatment within that length of time. Tuesday night the animal freed Itself from its fastening and at the corner of Benate and Barnwell street attacked Mr. Seats as he was on : his way to supper. The- dog struck ! him in the chest without warning, and as Mr. Seats foil hack from the Impact, the dog fastened its teeth in his left arm Just above the elbow. He went at once to I)r. T. M. I)uBose and had the wound cauterized. l)r. Coward stated that even should the animnl bo caught and found to be rabid, ho has at the laboratory enough virus to treat all the persons who have been attacked. Quail is a white seter, female, with liver colored spots. Every j patrolman In the Uty was given her j description and Sergt Sloan saw her j at the corner of Main and Oervals , streets at 1 o'clock in the morning. | Ho fired one time and is satisfied : that he wounded the dog. All persons in the city are advised if such j a dog is killed to notify at once the police station or Dr. A. F. Coward so that the brain may be tested. There was another rabid dog running amuck Wednesday and created muoh excitement on Main and As- ( sembly streets in the section from Washington street to the poatofllce. j Two officers were needed to kill it, the animal refusing to die after being shot and severely beaten about the head by the first officer, who essayed to dispatch it. The animal fcommenced its last run on Assembly street and after attacking another dog, it was seen to be clearly out of Its sense. Policeman Dreher therefore shot it and when the animal fell, ho advanced and after beating it vigorously with his club left it for dead. Tho dog recovered in a few momenta and ran into Main street, creating much excitement on this thorough Tare unui i-oncoraan ?ugn was encountered in front of Monckton's and the shot flrod that ended its ecistance. DEADLY PAH LRU KIFLK. liMl, Shot l>y Companion, Dies on Operating Table. At Hickory, N. C., Winston Morton. the 12-vear-old Hon of Mr. E. V. Morton of that city, died on the operating tnblo Thursday morning from heart failure dne to the effect of chloroform administered. The boy was shot in the left eye MondAy afternoon by Elon Aberncthey, another lad. Elon was play Ing with an air rifle and the shot was not intended for Winston. It. was found necesflary to remove the shot from the eye and It was while undergoing the operation the little > fellow died. Doctors Menzies, Shuford and Stephenson performed the v mm* Rlow l'p Hank. Illowlng up with a heavy charge of dynamite the entire side of thr building, five bandits a few morningi Ago robbed tbe Citizens' Hank o! Generimo, a small town eight mllei north of Lawton, Okla., securing $1,200 and escaped. Two citlzem were held under guard until thej V had robbed the bank. < ZELAYA HAS RESIGNED TYHAXICAL NK;ARA(}1'AN KVLKK YIKLDS TO TIIIC 1NKV1TABLJK. With Uie Whole Country Beething With Revolution Against Him, This Was IIIn Only Way Out. A dispatch froiu Managua says Jose Santas Zelaya has resigned from Uie Presidency of Nicaragua. He placed his resignation in the hands of Congress Thursday morning. Apparently there was no other course for him to take. The people were at last aroused. The guns of the revolutionists threatened. the warships of the United States were in Nlcaraguan ports. Managua has been seething for days. The spirit of revolt has spread even to the gates of the palace. Zelaya surrendered himself with an armed guard. Unchecked the pop ulace have inarched through the streets, crying for the end of the old, proclaiming the new regime. Who will take up the reins no one knows nor cares. It is sufllcieut that Zelaya as dictator will be known no more. There is no doubt that Congress will act quickly on his resignation, for the people have demanded it. l)r. Jose Madrlz, Judge of the Central American Court of Justice at Cartago, who has been close to Zelaya, and Is now his choice for a president, has gone to Managua. Madrlz has his following, strong and Influential, even among the revolutionists, but Gen. Estrada, under whose command the great body of lighting insurgents now face Vasquez's troops at Kama, will have none of hiin. Estrada's word will bear weight In the choice of a President. Zelaya has known, too, that Madrlz Is not acceptable to the United States, and he has sought to learn U'hn wrtlllit hA Innliiwl iinnn uilt h fa. vor by that government as his sue cessor. Accompanying his resignation, Zelaya sent the following message to congress: "The painful circumstances In which tho country Is plunged call for acts of abnegation and patriotism on the part of good citizens, who are the witnesses of the oppression of the Republic by tho heavy hand of fate. The country is staggering under 1 shameless revolution, which threatens the imtlon's sovcre'gnty and a foreign nation unjustly intervenes in our affairs, publicly providing the rebels with arms, which has only resulted in their being defeoted everywhere through the heroism of our troops. "To avoid further bloodshed, and for the reason that tho revolutionists have declared that they would put down their arms when I stirrender the executive power, I hereby place in the hands of the national assembly tho nhnnilnnm?nt r?f thn remainder of my term of ofllce, which in to be filled by a substitute on their choosing, with the hope that this will result in good to Nicaragua, the reestablishment of peace, and partic ularly the suspension of the hostlli ty of the United States to which 1 do not wish to give a pretext for intervention." A commission of five deputies wai appointed to d^aft a bill looking t( the acceptance of Zelaya's resigna tion, which is now eonsi lered a inert formality. News of the president's l I k 1% A U ~ -I A? i ?v;iiuii n|iioau (.iiruuKii iiitj uny, ?mt soon groat crowds moved througl the streets, shouting for the Unitec States, Estrada and tho revolution Held in control for years by th< strong hand of Zelaya. the peoph have been quick to break througl restraint when it was certain tha the dictator could not breast the tid< that has been rising around him During the later days Zelaya hai ! resorted to all tho known tricks an< contrivances to hold tho people o Managua with him. Reports of a government victor; at Kama have boon freely circulat ed, and rumors that a massacre o revolutionists had occurred were al lowed to spread unchallenged and un denied. It finally became knowi that these wero without a shred o truth, and they rebounded like \ boomerang. First one deputy then another tool up the denunciation of Zelaya i the chamber and later in the publi places, and soon throughout the cit demonstrations were held, in whic open revolt was voloed. Wednet day night, however, a pro Zalay demonstration marked the sespion c congress, but this had no effect out elde the walls of the house. Th rising was more marked Thursda than ever, and the Prosldent d< cided discretion to be the bett# part of valor and withdrew froi office. Tragedy in <joorffia. At Cuthbert, Oa., John W. Harrl 50 years old, and brother of May< i Harris, of that city, was shot ar ) instantly killed In the lobby of ti i Randolph hotel by J. F. Herd, Ji f 18 years old, son of the proprleb * Harris was pj lying cards in tl 5 lobby when young Lord, It is sai s ordered him out of the house, ai f /In the difficulty following Harr * was shot. Lord is under arrest. SHOT ATDEPOT Mr. W. L FeMer, tf St. Matthews, Shot bj Express Messeager WITHOUT PROVOCATION While Waiting for a Train to From tlie Vnion IH'pot at Charlotte?-Harry Jonet*, Who l>id th?* Shooting, Arn^UHl and l*ut in awn ui awrh r t'iufr n injury. A special dispatch from Charlotte to the Columbia Record says Mr. W. L. Folder, a well known buaiuohh man of St. Matthewu, S. C., was ahot In the left arm and aide at the Southern passenger atatiou thore Tuesday morning by Harry Jones, an exproes messenger. Mystery surrounds the affair, no provocation or excuse for the shooting being given by either Jonea or Felder. The shooting took place at 2:30 o'clo !k Tuesday morning. Hhortly after the arrival there of train 3 9, and was witnessed by two other express messengers, who de?, 1 ~.?... ?? uavu ou; runt* lUUfll) U1 111(3 it II it 1T at flrst, but afterwards told about it after they were arrested. Folder, who is not. it is hoped, dangerously wounded, is in the Presbyterian hospital. Jones is in Jail, where he will be held for the preliminary trial. The Record gives the following particulars of the shooting: The first person to reach Mr. Folder was Capt. F. 11. Fishburn of Columbia, while I)r. A. 11. Knowlton of Columbia was also near and gave the wounded man prompt medical attention. The shooting ocouirod at the Churlotte union station about 2:45 a. m. Mr. Folder, as well as Capt. Fishhurne and Dr. Knowlton, was at the station expecting to come to Columbia on Southern railway train No. 29, due to leave Charlotte at 3:110 a. m. While in the lunch room Capt. Fishburne had been talking with Mr. Folder, but left and went into the combination baggage car to lie down. Mr. Folder, It seems, walked tip to the door of the express car, where the express messenger was checking up his express with the negro porter, and it is said that Mr. Folder asked if lie could get aboard the car, as the passenger coachs had not been opened and it was cold out Bitio. What else passed between them is not known, except that Mr. Felder stated ufterwards that he was shot, without warning, from the express car. Capt. Flehburno was first to reach the wounded man, and having seen Dr. Knowltou at the station, summoned hlin. Mr. Feldor waa carried to the Stonewall hotel, at the station. until he could bo taken to the hospital, and after some delay the ambulance arrived and he was carried to the Presbyterian hospital. At Mr. Folder's request, Dr. Knowli ton remained with him, returning to i Columbia on No. 35 instead of No. 20, and reaching Columbia at 10.30 a. m. Wednesday. 1 Dr. A. II. Knowlton, who was with Mr. Felder Just after he was shot at Charlotte early in the morning, i bitterly criticised the Charlotte po> lice department when he arrived In - Columbia. He says three officers ; were notified and given all the facts s one after tho other Immediately 1 after the shooting, and after they i were finally gotten to tho scene aet1 ed l[ke a lot of dummies. He could get them to do nothing, he says; and ? the most Important witnesses were ? about to disappear, when ho api pealed to Attorney ShannonhousiV, t who began to get results as soon e as he arrived. Dr. Knowlton says the shooting s was most wanton and Inexcusable. 1 Felder was thirty feet away from the r coacn when flred upon, had never been In the coach and wan walking y away when flred upon. Mr. Felder, - Dr. Knowlton says, had been walkf Ing up and down the cement floor - under the shed between the fruit - stand and the first track, waiting a for train 29. He approached a f couple of express coaches which a were coming to Columbia when No. 29 arrived and asked a colored man k in one if it would be allowable to n come into the coa'li and keep warm c till the train arrived, y Mr. Felder says the colored man h told him that this would be against ?- the rules and he went away. Just o before betng shot he had turned >f about to watch some antics the ne t groes were doing in the coach he e had approached, when the messeng y er came to tno dooj and ordered 3- him away. He saya he started away >r when he was fired upon, m The bullet entered the right aide luat under tTio arm, probably punctured the right lung and made Its erlt at what la commonly known as B the breast, bone. Dr. Knowlton could >r not eRtlmate Mr. Felder's chances of recovery before leaving Charlotf that morning. At Mr. Felder'a re P> nieat Dr. Knowlton remained with or Mr. Felder until the next train wwhlch arrived In Columbia at 10.3C 1, a. m. id * * la A soft. ?n?wer haa no effect upor a soft persom. FREE AT LAST " An Old Man to Bo Released From Connecticut Penitentiary. ^ ? SERVED FIFTY YEARS Ho Will I^eav? IIIh Priaon Homo (1 of Half a (Vnturjr and Stop Out a 1; a Prov Man Into a World in ( Which He Will Iw a Htrau^i I H h to Freedom. ji ( When tho State hoard of pardonu ( meotH tho tlrat of thin week It will F connldcr and act upou un up pi leu a tion for tho pardon of John P. Wup- r ron. who Ih offlpl:lllv i1?>?lirno?i?a ?" convict No. 1 on the roster of the e big Connecticut Btatcs prison ut ? Wothersfiold. If favorable action f Ih takeu by the board, and It Is gen- v orally believed that such will be I the case, tho coming Christmas will c! bo a happy one indeed for Warren, d for it will bo his first Christmas out- f side of prlaon walle In half a con- (! tury. r On tho day that the Itoard meets to consider bis cane Warren will i; have completed an even fifty years ' aa an Inmate of the State prison. He c Ih believed to be the longest im- ? prisoned life convict In the United I States, and possibly in the world I When the doors of the big prison > tlrHt cloHed behind him the Civil war had not commenced, railroad trans I portation wuh in its Infancy and such t common conveniences of the pre?- li ent day as the telephone, the (dec- t trie car, the automobile and tho typewriter were unheard of, not to mention the skyscraper buildings, wireless telegraphy, flying machines, | submarine boats and a hundred and one other things with which the present generation Is familiar. Wife murder was the crime for which Warren was sentenced to llf?> Imprisonment. One day In July. ( 1 859, he Invited his 18-year-old wife to take a walk with him. and. ( coming; to a brook near their farm In 1 Wlllington, a Hrnall town in Tolland county, in northeastern Gounectl H cut, ho suggested that they tak? ,v their shoes and stockings off and f t>athe their feet in the cool waters of the brook. ^ She acquiesced, hut once near the 1 brook. Warren seized her and held her head under the foot or more of water until life was extinct. Just what was the motive that actuated the man to commit the deliberate, r cold-blooded and apparently unpro- * vokod crime on his wife, none knows, ^ and Warren himself has never talked of the crime, since he confessed and pleaded guilty at the time of his arrest.. ^ Warren's plea of guilty and his ' attorney's earnest plea for a second degree sentence saved his life and r ho was sentenced .to prison for life ' on the day on which a notuble meet- 1 Ing was held at Hartford of famous ^ Connecticut patriots, under a call vci nave mc union. " "i no war Tool J ing wa? Just then beginning to become a factor In nationul politics, but Warren was taken to Wethers ' field before the war commenced, and, ! what has happened In the fifty years that have elapaed since that time, he ' knowa of only Indirectly and from what he haa been permitted to read. 1 It Rpeaka well for the method? employed at the State prison that the fifty-year Inmate shows little evidence of falling powers, either men tal or physical. Though 71, he looks more like n man of 4 5 or 50 years. lie Is alert mentally and takes an active Interest In nil that goea on about him. In recent years he haa been allowed considerable freedom in the Institution, though never permitted to leave the prison grounds. If the aged lifer is released through the action of the board of pardons next week he will be well taken care of during his remaining years by his two younger brothers and other members of his family, all people of excellent standing. It Is understood that the application for a pardon has been indorsed by many peorsons of prominence who have Interested themselves in his case. * Three Perish in ley Water. Laura Currans, who hal Just received the prize "for the prettiest 71 r 1 In the school district," Alma Utterback, her chnm, and Wm. Johnson, the girls' school teacher, were drowned Saturday night as they were trying to reach their homes after a school social, by crossing Indian creek, near Hedford, Ind., in a row boat. The boat upset and they were unable to reach tho bank through the icy water. One Killed, Many Hurt. One woman wan killed and 51 persona were Injured when the eaat ' hound California limited on the Han > ta Fe collided with the rear end of the eastbound California express at i Winona, Arz., Friday. Mrs. Alice Bennett of Hartford, Conn., was I crushed to death and 22 people on the express were Injured. Twentynine persons, passengers and dlninc j car waiters, were Injured on the ltraltd. ACCUSED HER HUSBAND ?OlilCK FIND VtlXHtDY ( OWXKO 1?V lll'NTKH, Vhow Wlf* I><<clur?>A That Whlb' m Ne^ro Held H??r lie* <i?vo Her j a Fatal Blow. A disputch from Savannah says evelopments Monday night In the ftermath of the tripplo murder of tst Friday afternoon gave birth to he startling theory that not a ingle murderer, hut two or possily three were engage! In the comuisslon of the terrible crimes, 'ouoty ofTlcerp> declare that of these . C. Hunter, husband of Mrs. Mag fie Hunter, whose death Monday < aided u third to the number of uurderod women, Is certainly one. i They declare that the chain of vldenco Is complete, asserting that > ome clothing, badly stained, appar>ntly sputtered with blood, which i van found and belongs to Hunter, ( s the llnal link. This clothing Is is loclnrod, was worn hy Hunter on the lay of the crimes, and a walking ane found in the house of the muri ( k t' u lu j?/*1 ?? ~ - - -- 1 .. ... n w? ? mi cti iu nil v i? neen carled by Hunter on the same 'lay. It w a h declare:! by a physlolnn it the Savannah hospital that statenentH made during a moment of oiiHolouKneNH by Mrs. Hunter ear'y donday charged the erlmoH to her lusband, and that she was being add by a negro man when the blown vore Htruck that canned her death. The Rev. J S. Wilder, pastor of i. laptlHt church In Savannah, stated hat Mrs. Hunter, after rerognlzln,; dm, declared a white man ha<l struck he blows. CORN YIKIjI) AWAUIIKI). lolni It. Dingle of Clarendon County Wins First Prize. A dispatch from Columbia says ho first prize on yield In the State orn contest has been awarded to ??!? % I ? t*x % - ' ?iuii iv. wiiigic, oi Hummerton, in 'lurendon county, as also the first 1 >rlze on pointH. His yield was 16(5.7 mshels on one aero. This is the econd State contest that has beee von by a Clarendon county farmer 'be total points made were 9 9. Too list prize on yield is $ 1 7f?. Ti:e ward was made at a meeting of the itato Corn Contest, which is coin- ' losod of Commissioner Watson, ' 'resident I'. 11. Moll, of Clomnon Coi ijko, and 1). N. Harrow. The second prize for yield and 1 >olnts went to A. Hascomb Usher, be young Marlboro leunty t>oy who iroduced 102 1-2 bushels on one ere. Ho will rece've $70. The five-acre contest wan won by . M. Mosse of 8t. Matthews. The tumber of bushels produced wan I 00.5. ThiH prize 1h worth $200. I1 rho second prize of th? five-acre I ontest whh awarded to Thos. Tay I or, of Hiehland county, who pro-1 luced 25 1 bushels. Thin prize Ik J 150. I There were 156 entires in this! roar's conteat, representing 26 conn-I i?'H of the State. Many of the con-l ?stents are boys. Of the total en-l tries only fourteen complied with I ill of the requirements. Many of I the contestants failed to send in I ramplos of their corn. j The best ear of corn pent in the I opinion of the commission was thnM of H. K. Hayes, of Marion county, I who won second pr ize in last year's I contest. A close second to Mr. Hayes I In the quality of corn was sent hy I Usher, of Marlboro county. i | ltOOZK POUKINCi IN 8UMTRH. i Kxpress Company Opens Kxtra Of- I fit*? to Handle It. j A special to The News and Courier from Sumter says "Since the I closing of the State dispensary in Sumter on the 15th of November,! the liquor handling business of the j Southern KxptVss Company has! reached such large proportions that It was found ImpoKsihle to handle! the largo shipments of liquor at! the regular office. Hundreds of I packages 'for personal use' come in on every train. The local manager I of the express company has been forced to open up a 'booze sub sta- I tlon' on West Liberty street for the l delivery of packages of liquor 'to be I called for.' The liquors for linrneliate delivery are still handled in the regular way. The sub-station threw ooen lt? d r?r>ro t/? >,.-> ki--*.. I , ? - ^ w.m v?/ iiiv inn ni.y public Wednesday with a stock on nand that would fairly rival the ol 1 grog shop, the county dispensary The floor of the store building was literally covered with packages of liquor of various sizes, shapes and quality, heralding the advent of another great moral institution. It certainly seems thnt legislative prohibition In Sumter county Is a delusion and a snare." Negro Identified. A dispatch from Thomasvllle, Oa., says Lucius ItobinRon, a negro, was Identified by the two young daughters of Mr. Jack Walker as the man who confronted them In their heme and after holding a pistol In their faces threatened to kill them If they screamed. He Is In Jail. The negro after frightening the girls fled. WRECK OF TRAIN ]osts Elefcj Lives aid "a sjj b^srr/ t# Many People. OCCIDENT ON SOUTHERN \ llhikon Itnil Throw* Kvif <V>arh?? ? I-*-* ??r *?rv* n??iwr??. N. ('.?Two High Southern liallwuy Ofllciuls Arc Inrhulnl iu tho Ijisi of Those Kill?'<t. Local passenger train No 11, oh .ho Southern railway, known an tho Richmond and Atlanta train, due In Greensboro at S: 4 0 a. in., was vreeked Wednesday at 0:32 at Reedy Fork trestle, ten miles north of Greensboro, and at 0 o'clock Wodnesday evening eleven dead bodies tvad been removed from tno wroc* Fourteen are reported dead au?t twenty-five injured nro being c,u?ed for nt St. Loo m hot-pita). Owing to the character of t*"* wreck much time was required t*> t remove the dead and in lured fror> the debris and, it was 8:3 0 befor* tiiih work was well underway. Tb? injured were carried to (Jreensboro as rapidly as they could bo extrl cated from the wreck and p! m >d in St. Leo's hospital. The derailment of the train vat caused by a broken rail, about two hundred feet from the trestle that spans the small stream. The train was composed of two baggage, press and mail cars, three day conches and two Pullmans. The engine and baggage, mail and express cars passed over lit safety, vblls the day coaches and Pullman wer** thrown from th? trestle Into the creek and along the banks nom-a twenty to thirty feet below. At the point where the first coaeh left the track, the right hand rail being broken, about eighteen inches from a joint, the rail was broken into fragments for several feet, and Lorn entirely from the erosBtiea. Th i truck wheels ran on the ties until near the trestle, when the outsld** wheels went over, allowing the hrake beams and axles to fall oi> the guard rail of the bridge. As the last conch was about on the tro* tie, the five coaches toppled over, broke loose from the mall and e* press car and tumbled to the mu4 and water below. The Norfolk Pullman fell In tU? water while the Richmond filoeper just in front, landed only partially In the water. The most of the injured and killed in the sleepers we ?* in i ne turn in on <1 sleeper, which was totally demolished. The Norfolk sleeper was not so badly torn np. but fell on Its side In the swo*id* stream, submerging many of the passengers in the water. The nondustor In this coach, Capt. Johnson, was vary slightly injured and none of th< passengers In his car were hilled. The Richmond Pullman is a mt^> of wreckage and scattered over tkvr wet and muddy bank of the stream, part of it being buried in the mu-rl. At 11 o'clock parts of two bodies were visible from the edge of this mass of wreckage and It is not now known how many more are under It. Railroad men, who were working hard to rescue the unfortunate victims and to recover the bodiss of the dead, are practically certain that a removal of the debris would reveal more de.ia bodies. The iwj day coaches in front of the Pullmans were also complete wrecks, being smashed Into kindling wood. Of the dead their appearand at r llr> " V 1 * 1 x ~i iiimii 1 inning - 'IllWfll [II li SOUiW were scalded to death, o*bo. \ nere badly mutilated, while one was eat i nhalf at the waist, his dismember e;l parts being found at the opposiie end of the coach. At 1 o'clock, when the dead woff carried into the city, the morgue was so crowded tha* the train pa-.? ed on further where the ambulance* and hacks were gathered to convey the dead to an Improvised uiorgu* which had beeu ordered. It took a cordon of policemen to keep the eager crowds from oI< clr ng all approaches. For a sp.? *c of a 1 iour nours tne streets wore at on# time or another the pcene of u procession of ambulances carrying Ih# wounded to tho hospital or the (load to the morgue. The Bouthorn li'.d a corps of offlcials, physicians and laborers on *h# seen quickly after the news wus received. Improvised litters were quickly put into service, as the injured were released from their per Hoes positions in the mass of wreckage. Plillmnn n\nO?/Mi??? - - 1 V1 *?- ? . ...... ii iiimn v.-nrn HUU Mill PKf'U were used to protect the the Injured, and the dead were wrapped and handled as tenderly as the exigencies of the occasion would permit. Stron? and willing hands lifted thn Improvised litters with their burdens of suffering humanity and bore them to the hospital trains, which were operated between the place of the wreck and Summit avenue, nearest the St. I.eo's hospital. Getting married .Is like gettiuc drunk?it either brings out a man's best or worst Qualities.