Tabert was whipped white • eon
Met in the has her company** camp
Juwit ST, lttt. The defmse claim
ed he died February 2.
G, Grimson, assistant attorney
geneval of North Dakota, investigated
the death, spending several weds h'
Florida. On his return to North
Dakota, he submitted his findings to
Hm North Dakota hgUatan, then In
ssoeli.ni, and which approved a reaolu
tion calling upon the state of
11m Florida legislature appointed
a Joint committee and the lnveetiga
thm that followed reeoltod fat dis
missal from office of Sheriff 3. R.
Jones and Comity Judge B. F. Willis,
ef Leon county, who arreatod* and
ill miiiiiI Tabert. Tahert was ar
rseted for riding a freight train and
Sheriff Jones admitted he had en
tend Into an agrnmiat with the
lumber company to supply prisoners
a* 9M each.
TtM me*, «u believed by the «m
l» be MeAdoo"! Mat pffwsefal op
M'Adoo Hu Nothm* To Say
About Boom
Santa Barbara, Cal., July 7.—WU
Iiam 0. MeAdoo, in wfcoee behalf
plana tor a McAdoo-for-President
boom hare be«n worked oat in New
York, baa ""nothing to say on polities"
he said today.
Mr. MeAdoo and bis family have
taken a home hers for the summer.
Prof. Prands Sayre and Mrs. Sayrs,
daughter of farmer President Wflaon,
also are here tor the summer. Mrs.
8ayrs and Mrs. MeAdoo are sisters.
Bryan Hm N«w hdorwJ A
Candidate, Hm DmIum
Lincoln, Neb., July T.—"I hm net
discussed the relative merits of avail
able candidates for the presidency;
that ha* been my rule for K years.
I hare said that Qovamor Smith, of
Maw York, la not an available candi
date because of his iliw on the li
quor question.''
This was the declaration of W. J.
Bryan today whan questioned about
reported InUiiiows in which he waa
repreeented as laliislsi W. 0. 11c
A400, far the Dmodie nomination.
Mr. Bryan came to hia former home
to Join his brother, Governor Charles
W. Bryan, at a mspUun tonight at
the governor's mansion.
, Mr. Bryan said he was glad to cor
rect the *8port connecting Mm with
Js ikJ IV^ssnm
vne rcpoiT^a csriciaacy 01 ntnry
Part. He added, however, that it was
his understanding Mr. Fort had net
1 regard a candidate's platform of
men Importance than his pareon
altty," ha said In discussing Mr. Port.
Mo tMrt party movement is likely
In *t"*iCth'
la regard to probable laaaee In the
next campaign Mr. Bryan add:
the drouth the '
treee that
Much at the i
of tMM that an not
and rain came.
Farmer* who tired or upland
no crop after the drouth set ta. Of
were matured before the drouth/
but corn simply failed to mature on
upland. And (hit waa the case with
all other cropa. Pasture* dried up as
dead aa if firs had burned away all
life. In the country alone the streai
is so much land that is so tar and wet
that ordinarily it produces hot little
(rrsln, but in this year of drouth this
low land "made a bumping big yield.
There were many farms along the
river who produced much more than
enough for the family from this kind
of land. The result waa that the Car
grain from farmers who ware
fortunate. Modi grain waa hauled
about the country tor many milea ta
meet the naeda of the people. A flew
fanners took advantage of the
and soil their corn at high pricea. bat
others did not A story that waa
told about the country U
peating. A man named CaL
lived hi WUssa and owned a big river
farm. Ha had a targe boundary of
bottom land that was wet soough to
make a big yield of com and,
thoae about hha made nothing, ha [
duced hundreds of bushels of the boat
com. The people began to coma to
him from many milea away to hoy
suppliss. The old man saw the u
of the times and decided that H
VU ■ -- ' " a._ ft—1> Al I
hi want And ao w^p a
camc far corn a conversation
thin« Ufa thte would follow,"
iroch m do yau Mad," tha Coloaal |
would oak. Than tha pun
hi* and the Colonel would aak if ha|
had tha monay, and if tha
ha had It th« CMonal would any. "WaH,|
If jrou hava tha
rat M corn, if jmm I
eon buy eorn at othar plaaaa, I
ha did. Ha aold out!
all ha had ta
ware poor and oat aMa to pay nlj
Hf
tha
ta tat
And tha aid OoIomI Brad to!
• Hpa old ago and dlad and wart to|
Ma N^ardjjokrrrt
of tin
?
Lost Persons Don't Starve to
in mines do net starve to death. but
sore mnd to death, Dr. Hugh W.
Concklin, of Battle Creek, "^'r*
said today in an sddrsas before the
27th annual convention of the Ameri
can Osteopathic association.
"Of coarse, aome die of suffocation
in the mines and exposure in the
woods," said Dr. Concklkin, adding
that his belief that thv do not starve
to death la baaed upon faithf treat
ment of epileptics. In 78 cases ha
treated in the current year, Dr.
Concklin said, the average number
of consecutive days each fasted «u
more than SO.
Malnutrition is mors prevalent la
children of the rich than thoee of the
poor. Dr. Jeanette H. Bolts, of Den
ver, Colorado a sported.
"I have found an avrngo of «
per cent of the children in oar beat
malnutrition,'* aaid Dr. Bailee. She
said malnutrition in children to at
tributable to four things, faulty food,
faulty health haWta, lack of 1mm
officer* bat without mIL At 1
left for
in* km shortly War* dark
ean •n-rctopc containing the official
of the Mnl balloon trip, badly
mtenotM ud ihmt uudstlphsr
•hie, pmmmI papers ijjwmJ to
Ueotoneat Both, a pair of rauntleta,
one leather coat and an Aaerican flat.
Mr. Bnmo, Captain of the *"Ntea"
■aid the rope* which held the wicker
baaket to the balloon had been cwt
No traea ef the baaket was found.
"Both men apparently had sti ipped
to their underclothing," Mr. Bruno
■aid. It looked aa though they had
discarded their clothine and the baa
ket ia a desperate effort to Hghtoa
the balloon mfleiefit to r*t Mown
nay probably eat away the
Henwled thoir and
threw away all the weight thay could
whan the basket first Ut the
dinging to the rnoih about tin
part of the bag in the hope it
carry thsm to safety."
A slight chance remains that the
airmen ssay he alive, it ia said by
airmen bars tonight Life
war* said to ha in the balloon
it left ia the trip and K is
the two lieutenants might have been
picked ap in Lake Brie by ssass
of tfcs rescue. Lsoal air
plane pilots said the two naval offi
ce™ might haw want life ptsesrms
or a rubber salt containing air next to
their underclothing.
in a packet ef one ef the
*as found a
on Um bordw of vMeh
ta gone bad. WS1 try
Aberdeen to get new gea
We ought to make H all
rifnt.
It waa believed here that this had
B. SUtooalh United
in Army Mm
Own," took part to (to
to * toto* at
the wMrttiw «| the whrtiirth anto
Although the
small in comparison with the
anniversary celebration to 1911, whan
55,000 man who wove the Blue ar fee
Gray camifcd here, the eIt leu at
Gettysburg hare arranged an ohaare
ance almost u impressive aa that af
10 yean ago. TV town itaeif la |
ly decorated tor the occaalea.
and bunthf fly from nearly
home and business place, and the ]
He square la brilliantly
Many pH€HkI
open for the entertainment of the <
erans. moat of the hatoh being i
ad with other ria iters here
In the
Pickett"* charge, which took plate
July 8, IMS, hat no attoaapt ew haa
Seen made to repeat tM ■•ncunter to
and Union mm a*
I Tto The attack' than,
haw declared, really asarfc
ed the to«tontat of the'defeat at
Lee's foreoa.
- * •
years ago. asen of the
oeer the field mi