T-T17. V Aln)ivFiriTr. 'Post. For North Care- ! lina: Fair. Temperature for the past 24 hours: Max. 94; Min. 66. RALiEIG-H. N. CM TUESDAY. AT7G-TJST 25, 1903 No. 70 m , . i . " : - democrats" Can Win in--the Nexlt Elect i n A Conservative Candidate on a Conservative Platform Will Attract Votes of; Many Republicans JOSEPH LOFTIN DOING NEWPORT A Wilmingtcegrd the Dar ling of Strictly Upper. Crust Society Newport, R. I., Aug. 24. For the past trvo days people here have been staring: New Tork. August 24. General Mat thew C. Butler, who, prior to the" ad xnt of Tillmanism and Populism in t;.e politics of his state, so long repre- y.MteJ South Carolina In the United State? senate, discussed the general Political situation freely today: -It seems obvious to me," he said, that the Democratic party has an op-portm-ity to win at the coming elec ts..:! such as It has rarely had since th civil war. From my conversations with srentlemen representing all parts cf the country. I am convenced thnt were the Democratic party to , ,..r into the field next year with a , U.'ate representing- conservatism n .v: a platform reassuring to the !:...r.. interests of the country, there v. '-j.il le a great many more conserva tive Republicans who would vote Its t:-k-t than voted for and elected Mr. t:ve!and. -With such a candidate and such a .-Ctifrm as that with which the Demo ,: tt!e party went to the country at t; last presidential election the party cmaot and does not deserve to win. The leaders of the party then were not Iv:r.ocrats and they are not Demo crats now: they were Populisms, and are still Populists. Mr. Bryan is a populist if he Is anything. If he ts :ncere he lacks common sense; if he is rnt ho is a demagogue of the worst sort, lie now has the impertinence authorlty as the law directed. . J. ... "I do not approve of all that air. i- i..- uvniuwruut pariy. lie recently -Trounced Mr. Cleveland as a bunko are dominated by them. Then, I re torted, our system of government Is a failure. But I do not believe either the one or the other proposition. I do not believe that our courts are corroDt. The political pest of the times is Pod- ' aim us iwm orotner, centraiiza- at a fine locking negro, fully seven tion. They come to the same thing, feet tall, who has been riding about these two. The extremes meet and town in an, automobile. Many have fi comr"on menace. jbeen anxious to know who he was. Both parties are tainted with evil, and the curiosity was more aroused the Republican as well as the Demo- when he was driven down to the land- l a JS, ? 6 Popu"sts of the Bry" Ing of the New York Yacht club today ff?t,theiruats;,!f58".aiid boarded a launch and wa3 taken SSSTrnS u5 WC j?" out to on of the chts in the harbor, publican leaders truckling and weak- Tia t. . kneed and giving way before the cry. . . . , -Of course the greater respect goes "in! ho has here since Sun- to the frank ranter. He may be a bla- ay' thre suestT Mr- ,and Mrs- Pem' tant n ht i,. lov, orai broke Jones. Loftin takes care of Air- courage; and between the two the ran- ,lee Mr' Jones Place In North Carolina, ter is the least dangerous. I Both or After viewing the yacht race Saturday these groups. Republicans and Demo- he came to Newport on the Narada crats. have their go at the great com- and yesterday was shown about New blnations of capital. Without thoss Port- s great combinations of capital this coun- Mr. Jones placed an automobile fut his try could never have been developed, disposal and he was shown the sights They were bound to come. They have of the city. He visited the Casino and been of incalculable benefit to the was given an Idea Sunday night of country and to the great masses of the what social life of Newport is like, he people. j being an interested spectator ' at the "Bryan and his fellow Populists are Sunday evening concert at the Casina. strong on the trust issue and Bryan Loftin, who is a well educated negro still talks hl3 free silver issue. You and who speaks several languages, was ask what the Democratic platform next ! very much impressed with what he saw year should have to say about this sll- ln Newport, and, although he did not ver matter. It has. been settled twice. care to talk for publicatIon? it could I spoke about centralization In the Re- be tnat he had nmr seen any. publican party. Mr. Roosevelt for In- tning M befQr Hig declInin stance seems to be leaning distinctly tQ wag out Qf consideration for toward a personal government I do Mr and Mrg Jone wh6 he ve not approve his conduct in the coal nr.n,1Q tft . a strike. I think he went entirely beyond , , - his authority as president of the TJnited Loftin wfll witness the race tomorrow States. The primary fault lay in that , "Z: . J onararocK. case with the governor of rennsylva- , fIwnicf -ff wlu reiurn IO JSOTZn nia. He could have brought matters U1" "ever nc"n speedily to a focus had he exercised his .before. His impression would probably iiiciKe inieresiing reading. What must be the sense of "I do not approve Cleveland did. As a party smasher he and Mr. Bryan both were very effec tive. But I do approve, heartily ap- of Mr. Cleveland's course in the Chicago riots. As compared with in . that NEBRASKA POLITICS Trouble for Bryan in Conven tions Which Meets Tonight Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 24. Mr. Bryan crer. . .:i:Ity of a man who, only three us aero, was th ranrlHato of n prpnt prove. :-irtv for Dresldent of the TTnlted sci:m nn TK-hr, HTon(ia tn e,iv. ,or. President Cleveland's course ...terizatlons of a man who for two ' crisis the attitude of Mr. Roosevelt. to- ,-- . ! ward the law-breakers and their repre- .u nation sentative in the coal strike appears In ae a Aght on his hands In the I dislike to mention Mr. Br-an per- a light distinctly disadvantageous. ! Cra"CorT. Z 5, , ally. To discuss him. I think. I "And then there U the matter of that ts tomorrow night at Columbus, if " ' " 7 f tv, flw that the Present plans of what is known as . t magnify him too much and leads small fleet of ssels of the f the Herdman faction of Democrats are . ..ly to swell that Inordinate vanity, are -in use M -he-president a private Mr. Bryan wants the con- ; ,A c. nceit in the man which seems yachts Now. I am not narrow on i r..i aiuKeiiier run away wun inose iiiiihp x i ico v. -h-. ter fundamental basis of sense he tw.'.y ever have had. GRAVE SITUATION $ There is Apparently No Limit j to Turkish Atrocity London, Aug. 24. The angry excite ment of the Mohammedans at the exe cution of the murderers of the Russian consul at Monastir, the submission shown by the porte to the Russian fleet, and the general attitude of con cession marking the present Turkish policy, are the gravest indications in the Balkan situation. All ' Turkish military circles clamor for war against Bulgaria. The mobilization of troops continues on a large scale. iCls re ported that the minister of war has signed contracts with the Krupp and Mauser, firms for two hundred can non, two hundred thousand rifles and one hundred million' cartridges at a cost of $12,500,000. jThe insurgents are reported to have captured the town of Vasillko, north of Iniada bay, where they killed the garrison, consisting of fifty men, and also one hundred of the inhabitants. The government employes in the town were taken prisoners. The insurgents are now said to be attacking the im portant town KIrkibs. The telegraphs are cut and the result of the fighting there cannot be learned. ; Reports from Sofia claim that in surgents' have annihilated an entire! Turkish regiment at Chagonasko, near Surovicovo, and that at Pulankdera, near Malko Tirrovo, seventy-five in surgents defeated a Turkish battalion. ; The Turks have bombarded and de stroyed the monastery of St. Constan tine near Losengrade, where fifty in surgents had fortified themselves, j Other reports from Sofia , state that the Turks have massacred all the wo men and children in twenty-two vil lages In the district of Floriina and Monastir. They afterwards burned the villages. Prisoners says the Turks lev eled 150 houses in the village of Armes ko and massacred every man, woman and child in the place. 'CtH(0)IBl vs. Cotton Gamlblers Former Senator Butler of South Carolina Goes up Against Secretary Wilson's Ex Opinion pert of Raleigh are registered at the Ral eigh. They are enjoying their vacations. dent having a liberal latitude in uchjforins Mr Herdman is clerk of tne matters. If there were one naval ves-: Mrt. thP most lnrrativp of- With hfs Influence Impressed upon'sel, for Instance, In attendance on him flce ln the state Which he will lose if Democratic party next year, and as his pri-ate yacht, one might not the Republican candidate for supreme th- t.iir-.t of his Populistic absurdities feel inclined to make any comment, : Jud?e is eiected in the fall. He insists i:; th platform, the outlook will In- Kt n-Vion it roms to ronnpetinsr three tki v,-.. f maono n nrt !! he far from encouraging. Freed Df the government war craft and put-jtionai iSSUes into the campaign, " drive from that danger, the chances for sue- .ting them at the disposition of the away returing gold' Democrats and al "5 for our party are of the best. Ipresklent, his family and his friends asjienate Republican voters favoring state "There are a number of gentlemen private yachts run at the public ex-'issues only. Mr. Bryan has been away who mi?ht be selected, any "one of it seems a little too much. land the anti-affirmation fellows who hom would be a tempting Invitation j ..Ag to the negro question, I have al- consist of gold Democrats, office hold to the really large number of conserjj ways hejd and sti!1 noiti one opinion, ers and practical politicians, have been vatlve Republicans, who, I find, are'on the 'subject, notwithstanding the i attempting to organize against him. tronsly difoosed to regard Mr. Roose-' f . . tne'pOPie call me a crank for sol Mr. Bryan will get a slap in the face volt in the light of an erratic man. and . . i have always held and still .' from the Populist convention. Itmeets hT.ce a man unsafe to the business . . ,' . .0Uti0n is in the ; tomorrow night at Grand Island,. The .ntrrest of the country. This solid.:110' , J" , ,'', fhp nrPs jleaders say a resolution endorsing the dement In the Republican , .V f??0".-! which Bryan So- I J.L IliC Htfc,IU.J A m. " " 1 lil.l 3 .!lt 1 TT" rr!y doe tf ratios not like spectacular char- in Its candidates for the Fu- tomorrow's me "r"""7";v;,"::; -iverely criticised, will be passed. Issue, and that is extinction by . n, rrav.ly responsible office- of president. ?mafn? the Democrats gett,n& "Mr. Blaine was defeated although ' evU? J?"0". L the supreme Judge and the Populists vi:h a certain element In the Republi- i edly going on. Why, In sight of my n;. :;i.,7.. "!".r r-: house at Edgefield there lives a white Vh. 3 , , .r man with a negro woman. They have the political situation today as held. . . . ,v, ri .lpmont loaay as neiu i .VIM..n A tw.a fftrfpn plpmpnt ve. f. ij - iiiuii v.niu.... .-.-o- ---- ----- n:.-iin. " " - III V A k A - V. A a W K I UP- mao In thoro 1 trtorf Of ttliS mlXing V Uii 1 3 4 . - V- w -" " ine same, or a greater, op-. A Mn.ntai oni do not nuiiiiy 10 win a great victory is two university regents. BUCKEYE DEMOCRACY have the prejudice against negroes that prevails with those of English-speech "red to the Democratic party. , :Z R numDer OI , the English. Scotch or Irish. After our - "u-inrn aaiiaoie 10 neaa me uemo 'tic ticket who would be calculated T" bring about serious disaffection In ' -e republican ranks. There is Judge blood. I told him that I thought about n'iv of Delaware. He. of course, would ?z nor rsnt tt then Informed me , I - - i k an ideal candidate. Then there that the census showed that one-third ; Convention Will Meet Today to Nominate Candidates state census In 1870 Wade Hampton asked me how many negroes In South ! Columbus, O.. Aug. 24. All roads of. the Democracy lead to Columbus, where; Carolina I thought were of pure neSr0!the delegates will assemble tomorrow. to choose candidates for governor and other officers. The convention promi ses to develop one of the hardest fought J::i:re Parker of this state. Governor .were mullattoes, that another one-third" had some admixture of white blood, and that only one-third of the col ored people in South Carolina were rmo$5 of Missouri and Senator Gor- n of Maryland. ". to the nlatform. that should b mip!e matter to construct. Why I pure negroes. And this blood polson- ri back to the old leaders ln the Ing Is going on. l.-t'o-rptir party and present In com l i- t frrm the principles for which they F 1 and which are the bedrdck of l-'fuocracy. Why riot go back to ruch i ''-tas Samuel J. Tilden. W. H. Craw. f r l of Georgia, Joel R. Poinsett of ?r ;th Carolina, Marcy and Iloratlcn ymour? . I'resent in the platform in consise f"rm the principles for which such men they stood, and make as the funda r ntal proposition that there should no Interference on the part of either state or federal government with tfc business Interests of the country. A to that there should be an absolute '"I unqualified enunciation of hands f" Here we have have men in Con Fr,' and In the state legislatures 'Muttering about trusts when probably v.i5t percentage of them do not know fcU trusts are or what they them 'Ivs mean when they tak about t'its. There Ij not a corporation in this country over which the authority "tntin its charter has not control. Jf th corporation Is exceeding its rented powers' In any of its acts. If is 'ioing things that are illegal or jurious tn the general welfare, there thA courts and the machinery for 'rinsing it to account. "A man with whom I was talking on ' object said In reply that the courts are in the hands of corporations, "I entirely agree with the Sun In Its-criticism of Mr. Justice Brewers recently expressed opinion regarding lynching. The accused must be pro tected In all his rights, of having coun sel and appeal. I think the Judges have been surrounded with too many restrictions for one thing, and-1 think the salaries paid Judges in some of the states are inadequate to get the besl legal talent on the bench. "I can see the shadow of serious trouble ahead In a clash between white and negro labor in the south. The negro is coming into competition with the white man in the labor market. White labor and negro labor In the south are drifting toward the same crisis. I can see no way to avert disas trous collision.' The portents of It are already In the air." 'China MayBuy Arms Berlin. August 24. The pronioiuu ! contests In the history of the party. Both sides claim a victory and an un- prejudicial observer would hesitate to say which will win. The results will decide whether Tom L. Johnston and the Bryan free-silver Democrats will control the party or-i ganization of the state and nominate Mayor Johnston for governor, or whether John C. Zimmerman, repre sentative of old time Democratic prin ciples, will prevail. Judging from the delegates arriving tonight, Johnston has a shade the better of the argu ment. , Charles P. Salen, Johnson's lieutenant, says he will have an over whelming majority. y Zimmerman arrived on the ground tonight and has opened headquarters at the Great Southern hotel. He will have a branch office at the Neil house, where the Johnston men are congregat BARKER PUTS TO SEA i : & His Fleet Expected to Reach Portland Tonight Rockland, Me., Aug. 24. The North Atlantic Fleet cleared from Rockland this afternoon, the first ships to leave starting at . 3 o'clock. It Is supposed that Admiral Barker, the commander in charge," will-keep his vessels at sea until" tomorrow evening When he may make for Portland. Under the rules of the wan games he can not attack the defenses of that place until Tues day night. The fleet consists of twen ty-seven vessels of all kinds, ranging from armor-clads to tugs, divided as follows: Five battleships, including the Indiana (which will join later) four cruisers, three auxiliary cruisers, two rord-time training ships, includ ing the Hartford (which was Farra gut's flagship at Mobile), fourN gun boats, five torpedo boat destroyers, ,one tug and three colliers. m Tiionis j. PBxen Washington," Aug. 24. Special. Secre tary Wilson of the department of agri culture read the New York Sun this morning containing an interview with ex-Senator M. C. Butler of South. Caro lina, who went after the cabinet official with gloves off for asserting that the men who had cornered the cotton mar ket were common gamblers. The secre tary was evidently Impressed with the interview of the irate South Carolinian, who declared, among other things, that Messrs. Brown & Hayne, the bull oper ators, "had done more for the pro ducers of cotton, the farmers, in a few months, than" the department of agri- i reply was accordingly given out. Secre- j tary Wilson says, among otlrer things, in noticing General Butler's interview: "I have read ex-Senator Butler's criticism on my interview regarding the corner in cotton and j its effect upon the country generally and the cotton- Death of Mrs. Erwin DuTham, N. C, Aug. 24. Special. News was received here this afternoon of the death of Mrs. Elvira Holt Erwin, f which occurred at her home .at Mor- ganton at 3:30 o'clock, aged 76 years. Mrs. Erwin was the widow of the Ute CoL Joseph J. Erwin. and left four sons and six daughters all of whom were at he bedside when she died. The sons are Mr. W. A. Erwin of the Erwin Cotton Mills at West Durham, Col. J. Harper Erwin of Durham, Hon. Ernest Erwin of Mprganton and J. Locke Erwin of Tennessee. Four of the daughters " are Mrs. Lawrence S. Holt and Mrs. John Q. Gantt of Bur lington, Mrs. E. TPowe of Durham and Mrs. Thomas Moore of Morganton. HERE' S A CRE AT 1 RAILROAD SCHEME Comes Very Near Connecting the North and South Polar Regions Guthrie, Okl Aug. 24. Plans for a gigantic railroad with a trunk line con necting Hudson Bay with British Co- growls and "nrnnufa'cturlns Industries lumbia and Buenos Ayres In South particularly. "I hope the business men of whom he speaks will see to it that these prices continue until the cotton grow ers sell the coming crop. If that should be done I will make a Irip to South Carolina, find General Butler, if he branches, was disclosed today, when articles of incorporation of the Pan American Railway with a capital stock placed at $250,000,000 were . filed here with the secretary of the territory. The purpose of the corporation, it is, said, is to build a line of railway ex- there, taKe on my nai to miii-aiiu y , tendinr from Port Nelson. Hudson to him that I regard him as a great j bay ln a southerly direction, crossing public benefactor who has been able the line o .the Canadian Pacific near to see further ahead into the future Winnipeg, Manitoba, through North Da- ROWDY - CONDUCT . BY STATE GUARD WARNED TO "GET" Negroes Not Wanted in a I Small Iowa Town DesMoines, Iowa, Aug. 24. Supposed whitecaps posted notices at Clive, a town on the Milwaukee railroad, six miles west of Des Moines, warning the colored population to leave the com munity and threatening all white men who empfoy colored help in any way. Isaac Anderson, a colored man em ployed by the Milwauke e road, has been particularly ahrrassed. A futile ef-rr-t was made two "nierhts aero to blow against the exportation of arms an(!broke the v. orld's trottine- record on up his house with dynamite.. The ifn miarlil to rhln W3S rCIIlOl ea .. . . . . ... nWA n-Tt rt it-alt I hi. . u w - GREATEST TROTTING Lou Dillon-Goes a Mile in Two Minutes Fjat , j Reldville, Mass., Aug. 24. Lou, Dillon Asheville, N. C, Aug. 24. Special. Residents of austere Biltmore, George W. Vanderbllt's model village, witness ed a remarkable spectacle this after noon. The first regiment of the state guard have ,been in camp near Bilt more. After the regiment had been reviewed by Governor Aycock and his staff on the village green some sol diers decreed that no negroes should be allowed to remain in the vicinity. The resolution was formed in a spirit of fun very largely, but after several ne groes, old and young, had been tossed up in blankets, there came very near being trouble. Several negroes werjfe chased off the yards of the Southern Railway until one man, a brakeman, drew a revolver and threatened to shoot a soldier. He was arrested, but a representative of the Southern Railway Company . took a hand in the matter and secured the negro's release on bail. It was stated tonight that one old and infirm negro was handled roughly by some of the soldiers and that they threatened to throw another into the Swannanoa river. This negro escaped by claiming that he was employed on the .Vander bilt estate and could not leave. today. Under article 4 of the protocol sign ed by representatives of the powers and the Chinese after the Boxer out break, the importation of arms Into rhlnn was nrohiblted for two years." An edict to August 25, 190L the mile course here today, going in ' chimney and part of the wall were 2:C0 flat. The previous record was J shattered, the members of the family 2:024. held by Cresceus, made, at barely escaping with their lives. Two Columbus, Ohio, last year. weeks ago an effort was made to burn Lou Dillon's time by quarters today, his home. The natice posted about PMrst ounrtM-. 2nU soroiio n'nnr-i Clive warning an negroes 10 gtt than we poor fellows of the department of agriculture. "But if, on the other hand, it should occurthat the price. of cotton is drop ped when the farmer gets ready to market , his new crop, down to 8 cents or 7, instead of 15 or 12, then, of .course, I shall still adhere to my opinion that the manipulation of the present cotton corner by the gamblers of whom I spoke Is doing infinite mischief." The criticism of ex-Senator Butler, published in the New York Sun this morning, was, in part, as follows: : "The gentlemen to whom he refers as gamblers, Messrs. Brown & Hayne are not only among the most reputable business men in the country, but are fontiMnen of hierhest character. One of them, Mr. Hayne, is from my own state, and I think he will stand fair comparison, as will Mr. Brown, from Mississippi, with Secretary Wilson or anvbodv in official business. I must sa-' I was surprised at what appeared to me to be a very reckless charge one which was not Justified by the facts. "The fact is that Messrs. Brown & Hayne have done more for the pro ducers of cotton, the farmers, in a few months than the department of agricul tnr has done in ten years. I was somewhat surprised at Secretary Wil son, for he did not appear to get Into a frenzy of indignation when certain other gentlemen in the West were mak ing a corner in wheat and corn, which enhanced the value of these two com modlties, and from which the farmers got the benefit. 'The secretary seems to be particu larly concerned about the operators and the cotton mills; that the cotton mills have had to shut down and put out of employment a large number of pmnloves. and that therefore it's a great wrong upon the cotton mills. Now, in regard to that, Messrs. Brown & Hayne simply bought cotton from the bears in the cotton market and re quired them to deliver the cotton, and of course, the price went up. "As a rule the managers of cotton mills all over the country are bears and sympathize with the bear opera tors. Very naturally, their interest is to lower the price of the raw material, and they heeded the representations made by the bear operators, exagger ated the last crop of cotton and failed to provide themselves with the raw ma terial to keep their mills going. That is all there is in that." "Then what do you make out of Secretary Wilson's statement?" "Well, summarized, briefly, I should say that they amounted to an unwar ranted, and, it seems to me, rather wanton characterization of reputable business men, doing business in a legimate and honorable way, as com mon, gamblers. That, and a number of bogeys, apparently the emanation of Secretary Wilson's rather vastlack of information in what he .was talking about, seem to me about all his pro nunciamento comes to." , Judge Pritchard returned last night from Marshall, N. C, where he greatly enjoyed -a week's stay at his old home. Miss Alma Pritchard, a counsin of Judge Pritchard's, who is a trained nurse in a local hospital, received a telegram today that her mother is dying at Jonesboro, Tenn., and she has J.VT voari was: .First quarter, .30ft; second. quar-;ve J was issued ter. .20; third quarter. SOU; last , The colored population, which numbers gone to her bedside this effect was issuea 'rter. .29. . ! I several hundred, is terror-stricken. 1 Messrs. T. B. Heartt and R, R. Boyd kota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Indian Territory to Gal veston, Tex., from Galveston, through the republic of Mexico to the boundary line of Central America, through the Isthmus of Panama, thence through United States of Colombia to Ecuador, and finally through the republic of Pe ru to Buenos Ayres on the Atlantic ocean. It Is further planned to build a branch line from- the republic of Peru through Brazil to Rio de Janerlo and a branch line from the republic of Peru to Chili thence to Valpariso, on the South Pacific ocean. -The estimated, cost of the Pan-American Railway is 250,000,000 and the estimated length 10,000,000 miles. The incorporators are: J. H. Dodge, Stephen A. Sheldon, W. J. Pendleton, Eldridge G. Phelps of Shawnee, Okla homa, and C. E. Wells 6f Lincoln, Neb. It is not knownwhat outside Interests if any, these men represent. The prin cipal officers of J:he company are stated to be at Guthrie and Shawnee, Okl. BELIEVES IN BABIES Twenty-seventh in a Family Named Alice Roosevelt Washington, Aug. 24. A special from Trenton, N. J., says: The twenty-seventh child of William C. Pettifore of this city has been named Alice Roosevelt. Her father admires the strenuous president, who has so much to say against race sui cide. Pettifore is fifty-one years old. All his children have been born within thirty years. There are four pairs o twins. Twenty of the children are living. The eldest is twenty-nine yean old. . Pettifore is a negro and was born the property of Col. Edward Hennlson of Jones county, N. C. He has married twice. He declares he would not feel home if there was not a baby in e nouse. mm ,. .4 . tne A FLOWER CUT DOWN Mrs. Henrietta Sinclair Died in the Bloom of Young Womanhood Wilmington, N. C., Aug. 24. Special. Mrs. Henrietta Sinclair, wife of Mr James Sinclair, orfe of the popular young officials of the Atlantic Coast Line, died yesterday at 1 o'clock at her home ln this city. This death is one of the saddest that has occurred in Wilmington in many a day. In the bloom of young womanhood and Just entered the state of motherhood, with scores of friends, and occupying a so cial position that meant happiness she passed away. Her death was a shock to the community. ' She was a pure young woman of splendid character and a disposition that always carried sunshine in her path. She leaves an nfant daughter three days old. Mrs. Henrietta Sinclair was a daugh ter of the late Dr. J. C. Shepard, who died last March. She was married a ittle over two years, ago. She was 21 years old last Friday, : 'i , i ' 5 ' i ,-. ti ' 5 . A-