THE W EATHER
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Saturday
2.301 Copies
VOL. XIV. FINAL EDITION.
ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 1. 1021.
EIGHT PAGES.
NO. 30.
AMERICAN PEOPLE SORROW FOR FALLEN LEADER
Funeral Service Simple
With No State Ceremony
Old Friends and Associates of Wilson Will Be Active and
Honorary Pallbearers, While Rev. James Taylor, of
Central Presbyterian Church Is Preacher
(By Th? Awociatfd Pr?w>
Washington, Feb. 4. ? ' ""'''j! i
services for former President W ood- ,
row Wilson will be held W ednesday |
and probably will be private in the (
sense that there will be no gnat
state ceremony. .
A large number of friends and
former associates will be designated j
as active and honorary pall bfarers, |
among them Bernard M Baruch. .
Vance McCormick. Cleveland Dodge.,
and Cyrus McCormick. some num
bers of his war-time cabinet and
others who were -associated witii
him during his terms in the Whit.
H?Rev". James Taylor, pastor of Cen- j
tral l'resbvterlan Church, which Wil
son attended during his residence In ;
Washington, probably will delltei
the funeral sermon.
The tentative plans for the fun- ,
eral as announced this afternoon by
Dr 'Carv T. Grayson provide for a
hri'of nrlvate &i_nire nl the realdan^
"inr^r^W.dnesday afternoon.
This will be followed by another
at 3:30 at Bethlehem Chapel In the
cathedral at Mount Saint Albans,
where the body will be placed in a
vault until arrangements have -been
made as to it* final resting place.
Washington, Feb. 4-The nation
al capital sorrows today as Wood
row Wilson lies In his last sleep.
From every section of the globe mes
sages of sympathy pour into the city
while leaders of all the country laud
the deceased President and sorrow
ing citizens pass by the S street
home where lived the man who had
been the great war time Itaderand
who had inspired the world with 1 is
high Ideals and given his life in the
cause of world peace and union
Washington, Feb. 4. ? Woodrow
Wilson has found in eternity a ha>en
from the sforms and sorrows or
troubled world. Q
In the prayerful quiet of a Sun
' day morning death folded hlm gen
tly In Its embrace and bore him to
hl He'apas?ed from life while he
slept, with those lie loved best close
about him. His broken body had
weakened little by little until the
last spark of vitality went, hut his
spirit was supported to the last by
the Indomitable courage of the old
^ni'1 his'' last wakeful moments he
told his loved ones that he knew th
end had come and was ready.
Todav the frayed remnant of his
mortality lies in the chamber whose
walls looked down yesterdw upo
the last scene of a career that _ had
known all the hefghts and depths of
human emotion.
In death he appears as If In peaci
f?l slumber, his features serene and
composed and his s-iuare Jaw s. t
with the old determination.
But the lines are somewhat deep
er and heavier and the flashing lire
of his eye has gone out forever. ^
The bed on which Woodrow W ilson
died and where his bndy rests ls of
massive oak, a reproduction of the
Si built at the White Hou.efor
Lincoln and used by every 1 re ?ldont
? ?inrc Tt U of unusual TenRth ana
has a goUien American eagle over
head. It was made to the order of
Wilson before he retired from the
Presidency and was ln"ta?'d at th?
8 street house he selected for Ills
'"AUhouXhe had no, known a well
day Since he crossed the
of Mi* place of retirement or for
months before, last Krldahy,/"iTne?''
beginning of the end of hls lllness;
Hie rollapw during bin. \V<?tern
"peaking trip in 1 H I !? f"n"wr",,l , r
atroke of paralysis soon after his r
turn to WanlilnKton made him ai
nioat an Invalid long auo.
Early last week a BltRht
disorder further weakened nl* foit
cate Vitality and on Friday h'" 'rl^nf I
and physician. Dr. Cary T. Gr*yi?n.
found his condition growing hourlv
m?re serious. He refused nourtah
ment and by Saturday night was
barely conscious. At fl o clock h
fell asleep and never awakened |
n-ain It was 11 :U> Sunday morn
ing that life Anally went out.
From the first to the last he was ,
without pain ?nd In his l#M m!'n I
nients he appeared to Im' nesting in
complete comfort. As the Mid ap
proached the little group watching
in the sick, room drew nearer about [
hint. Mrs. Wilson sat on the bed
?ide with his almost lifeless hand in
both of hers. Close by was his eld- 1
,st daughter, Margaret, and nr.
nravson. faithful In his mlnlstrsllon -i
since the first sign of Illness more :
than four years ago. watched for |
some new wsy at least to help him
as he crossed Ihe bar.
But there wss nothing to he done.
More and more feeble became the
nulseheat. There was a quickening
of breath, as little by little death
completed Its compiest A qu ck
flutter of the eyelids, a faint twitch
almost like a smile across the wast
ed features, and the spirit of the
GOLDIE REVERTS
TO JUNGLE TYPE
Discards Clothing and Other ,
Insignia of Civilization- and
Stages Two Wild Scenes? ?
Now in Jail.
Goldie King. neRress with a police'
record is confined in the county Jail
after hlVinf made a wild jungle out
burst Saturday evening and another j
Sunday morning at 1 o'clock,
j Goldie was drinking Saturday i
! afternoon about 5 o'clock when I
i Captain William J. Simmons, city
I sanitary inspector, aroused Goldie's
(easily agitated ire. She rushed for
| hint Willi an axe near the corner or
McPherson and Persse streets. Cap
tain Dill hastily deployed and has an
[injured hand, which speaks for- his
| activity. From the way his hand
I was hurt one would have thought he
hit it against an auto which he at
| tempted to outrun. After this bit of
1 trouble-making. Goldie. divesting
herself of every stitch of clothing,
ran home and got into bed. This
last instance made It hard for the
police to take her to Jail. They de
cided the wise thing to do was to let
her stay at home and get over the
: drunk. Nothing further "was heard
.from Goldie until Sunday morning
about 1 o'clock when the police re
ceived a hurry call to a house on
Shepard street. Goldie had again re
verted to the jungle type and had
coyly run all the members of her
family out of their home. Officer
Winslow, who went after the woman
received a blow in the mouth and
other injuries. -As soon as located,
she began to make a noise and up
roar that could.be heard for blocks.
jThis was between one and two o'clock
I Sunday morning. People were be
1 ginning to awaken. Dogs barked. Pa
j bles cried. Lights flashed on. Surely
some one. was being cruelly mur
dered. The night police were made
busy by answering phone calls and
allaying fears.
Goldie is the same negress who
shot a negro at Winfall and it was
i thought for a time that he would
die. When lodged in Jail at Hert
ford that night she did the same
sort of screaming. On that occa
sion Goldie said she was a good
j negro full of bad liquor and really
t ought to be home helping her mama
do the washing.
VIIMalXIA l? \IUO II \ l?l> HIT
1IY nilWV llltllM.'K SUN DA V
The funnel and steam valves of
I the steamer Virginia Dare of the
Elizabeth City Boat Lino were brok
| en of T at 7:P.O o'clock Sunday morn
| lng when the draw of the State'
; bridge was lowered upon the voss? 1
iaa_ It was golnt-Ahrough .luiund- 1<iJ
! from Currituck points and Norfolk. I
j The engineer was forced to leave
'the engine room when the steam'
valvwB were broken and as a eonse-i
quence the steamer ran into thaj
wharf of the Crystal Ice & Coal'
Company, damaging It to some ex
tent.
The Virginia Dare was taken to.
Elizabeth City Iron Works for an ex-:
lamination of the hull. It Is not
! thought that any damage was done!
| except to the funnel and valves.
It was stated at the offices of the'
'company Monday morning that ef j
'forts would bo made to collect dam-:
iage* from the State, as officials fool,
I that the accident was no fault of the.
I captain or crew of fho vessel.
| The keeper of the draw. Mr. Fore
hand. said Monday morning that, the:
j Virginia Dare usually docks at the;
warehouse and that he was lowering;
! the draw after letting the tug Wi
! cocon through when the steamer
blew three short blasts and started
j for the draw. Me says he stopped j
| the crank as soon as he could and |
started to raUe the draw but th.>
I funnel struck before he had It high j
enough.
great War President had burst at
; last the long weakening fetters that
'bound it to earth.
1 Tims he who had dreame4 a high
dream of peace for all the worid
had found peace for himself nni
had left behind a world still tossed
| by strife and turmoil.
1 Thus he against whom life had
turned at last after leading him
{through the paths of greatest glory
I found death gentle and even morel- 1
iful .
Thus with the soft chanting of
hymns floating In on the Rah hath air!
was written the last letter of that
j Imperishable chapter of human his
Itory comprising the life of Woodrow,
Wilton.
TUTS COFFIN IS
BROUGHT TO LIGHT
(Bt T!if A>?nri?ird Pkm.1
Luxor, Egypt, Feb. 4. ? Today for
tlu? first time in 3.200 y?-ars the
groat stone coffin of Tutankhamen
stood forth in all its majesty. Shorn
of its protective - nest of golden ;
shrines, as massive in construction 1
as it is chastely simple in design, and
i as untouched bjr^the tooth of time j
i as it Is inviolate from .the hands of |
tomb robbers, this grandiose stone
I chest must be acclaimed a unique
[specimen of funerary art of the
eighteenth dynasty.
VENIZELOS AND
CABINET RESIGN
(By Th? Amciilid Prut)
Athens. Feb. 4. ? Premier Venlze
| los and his cabinet today resigned |
and a new ministry will be formed]
j by M. Kafandaris, former minister*'
I of the interior.
1 CONVICTS SAW WAY
OUT OF THEIR CELLS
| "Jefferson City. Mo., February 4 ?
j Three convicts today sawed their
| way out of the cells of the state pen
: itentiary. killed a guard by crush
ing his skull, took his gun, gave bat
tle to the guard on the wall, and
then gained their liberty;
VILLAGE IS NEARLY
DESTROYED BY STOK1W
i Conway, Ark., Feb. 4. ? The vil
lage of Worcester near here was al
] most totally destroyed by a storm
; last night. Three general stores,
.two blacksmith shops, the school,
! post office, three residences and a
! number of barns were destroyed. No
lone was seriously injured.
ATTACK KD 1IY HI LL AND
IS KKKKH'SI.V INJlltKD
Mrs. Will Modlin of " Weeksvllle
was attacked by a bull in her yard
last Thursday as she came out of
j the barn on ihe way to the house.
She has wounds on her face and leg
'and is badly bruised. Her condition
| was so serious that she could not be
j brought to the hospital until Friday
Monday morning she was reported to
i be resting easier and a little better.
KIXMR WIIJJAMS HAS HIS
IjICFT FOOT BADLY MASHKD
Edgar Williams had his left foot
| mashed Monday morning about 10:45
? at the Southern Hotel corner under
j the wheel of an American Express
I wagon. Sam Mann, was driving the
wagon headed up Main street toward
I the Norfolk Southern Railroad sta
tion. When passing the corner near
the Southern Hotel Edgar Williams
ran out and while the horses were
trotting stepped on the hub of a
wheel in the attempt to get in the
I wagon, he slipped and the wheel
. went over his foot. Maurice Gas
, kins in the Albemarle Pharmacy took
Williams to the Community Hospital
, where his injured foot received med
! ical attention. He is now at his
| home and is resting fairly comfor-:
tably.
MKRTING PIjANXBD TONIGHT
HAS IIKK.N POSTPONED
1 The meeting "that was to have
. been held at Black well Memorial
| Church has been postponed owing to
i the fact that Dr. Charles E. Maddry
is much fatigued and has to he at a
meeting at Ahcrskle early Tuesday. J
M<M<I<ISON CALLS
l)AY OF MKMOIUAL
Kalcigh. 1'tb, 4. ? Coventor
Morrison last night called up- |
on tho people of North Caro
lina to cease all festivities un
til after tin* funeral of former
President Woodrow Wilson.
Tho (lovernor also set asid ?
a day- for State-wide memorial j
services in memory of the de
ceased War President- The
memorial date will be named
I later, he said.
FIVE ARE DEAD
IN MOYOCK FIRE
Blaze Sunday Morning Com
pletely Destroyed House of
John Harris, Colored, oil S.
i J. Jennings' Farm.
| Moyock, Feb. 4. ? Five colored ,
people are dead near here as the re- j
j suit of the fire early Sunday morn
; ing which completely destroyed the
; house occupied by John Harris and
I his family on S. J. Jennings' farm.
I Ida and Al Harris, daughter and
son of John Harris, and his wife's
sister, who was visiting them, were
JT3Tu rned to death in the building. Jo
i sephine Harris. John's wife, and her
! young baby, died later.
Ben Harris, another sen, saved
j himself by jumping from a second
j story window.
^ The cause of the fire has not been
ascertained, John Harris declare*
lie left no fire when the family re
tired Saturday night. The theory
lias been advanced that sparks from
the train which passed close by the
! house may have started the blaze.
I John Harris says he was nwak
| ened by the sound of something fall
ing in tho adjoining room. He went
t*? the door and names burst Into
? his face, setting Are to loose paper
, on the walls in the room where he
was. He waited until the paper had
burned off, then broke n window
with a bed slat and helped his wife
1 and baby out of the window. When
he returned for the others, flames
Iliad already taken possession of the
i room and he co-uld hear cries from
within which Indicated that his oth
j er children were perishing in the
j fire.
Meanwhile his wife had wandered
off in the cotton fields and was not
found .for three hours. During that
[ time she suffered from the exposure
I as well as burns reoeiyed In making
I her escape. She and lier baby died
Sunday night.
| The charred remains of the thrct;
left in the building were found on
Sunday morning. Nothing was l"ft
! of the building but the brick chim
in oy. The family dog and some
I fowls were prowling about th.?
grounds on Sunday afternoon.
NffidllO SIIOT AVI) KIIXKP
? IN IIHItTFOKD SATt HI>.\Y
| Hertford. Feb. 4.-- Mat Parker,
IK, Was shot and mortally wounded
by Rlton Parker. 21. following the
colored moving picture show here
Saturday night.
The two young men seenf to have
I been paying attention to the same
'girl. She elected to go with Mat to
the show, though Elton protested
that it she did he would shoot Matt
on sight. Klton saw Mutt on tho
street shortly after the show ano
made good his threat.
Matt riled on his way to the Com
munity Hospital at Elizabeth City.
Elton Is still at iargM....>.-.M..l -
Mrs. Wilson's Devotion
Constant And Unswerving
ll> CAROLYN HKIX
Copyright. |?4. b? Thf Advance
Washington, Feb. 4. ? It was a lit
tle girl's trick of photographic re
porting. developed years ago for tho
pleasure of another invalid that en
abled Woodrow Wilson to keep In
touch with life after he had boon
stricken on his League of Nation'y
tour.
Imprisoned hy his cruel Incnpaclty,
Mr. Wilson depended on his wife to
bring him news of small happenings
?the little intimate touches that
made him feel a part of the world
outside. Lately she had hor n going
out morn than had been her wont
because she discovered that Mr. Wil
son drank In avidly all the details
of her contacts with their friends.
She brought to 1n-r**.'?!<k for the
distinguished Invalid who was her
hunband an unusual degree of skill,
because, as she told her Intimates,
she had lived as a little girl with a i
Invalid grandmother, whoso oa?er
ness for news of the* outsid*' world
was unusually keen. To satisfy that
craving, she learned to repeat ver
batini. and with admirable mimicry.
th?? conversations of grown-ups in
whose company she had been.
The radio and the newxpaper*
kept Mr. Wilson acquainted wlt'i
world affairs, and a few close friends
were allowed to see him occasional
ly. but he enjoyed most of all th ?
storlea Mrs. Wilson brought him of
events and people In Washington.
Particularly wan lie Interested in
the affairs of the Democratic Na
tional Committee women, who wen*
In the capital recently.
Mrs. Wilson attended several din
ners of the wom?-n politicians, and
listened intently to ail that vu said
?particularly to the funny stories.
These she reported to Mr. Wilson,
who laughed heartily over some of
them.
One of the stories nlie related con
cerned himself. It was told t>y Mrs.
MacDoui:all of Oklahoma. It was a
war-time story of n little hoy who
had heard much discussion of the
President. Finally he demanded of
his mother:
"When Ood goes to sleep, does
President Wilson rule the world?"
At the close of one of the dinner?.
Mrs. Nonle I'.oren Mahoney, commit
tee woman from Texas, proposed a
teist to the war President, with a'
wish for his health. a;id the guests |
drank In Alienee.
"I Know all of us wish we could
break our classes after that toast to
our sreat ProilHotit," said Mrs. Em
ily Newell niair.
IJUt Mrs. Wilson never accepted |
an Invitation on Saturday nlulit. On
that night she and Mr. Wilson at-!
tended the theater, or sp^nt the ev- i
eninu quietly at home. In all the!
years sine* Mr. Wilson's break-down i
Mrs. Wilson made only a few short
trips away from home. Her devo- ;
tlon has been unswerving.
Death First Foe Ever
Wilson Surrendered T o
No (loin promise in Make-up of Man Who Preferred to Ix>se
Life in Fi^lit of Hi* Ideal* Rather Than Yield His
Convictions for Expediency's Sake
Bv DAVID I.A WHENCE
Co*vri|ht. 1424, by Thi Atftanc* t
Washington, Feb. 4. ? The houn of surrender ? a word which
in his days of power he never recognized ? came at last to Wood
row Wilson.
I And with it there wells up si
multaneously in the hearts of
the people everywhere a sadness
borne of admiration for the sto
icism of a statesman who fought
jtill the last for the ideals in
which he believed.
i "I would rather fall" ho used toi
say. "in a cause that I know souie i
day will triumph than to win In a
| cause that I know some day will
r*11" . . ^
It was hid philosophy or battle. To
posterity lie looked always for vin
dication. Ho m.v.ir und**rHt4Mxl the
' word ?'compromise." Even in his
breakdown after the famous West
ern trip, when it seemed as ir the
Versailles Covenant of the League of
1 Nations was beaten in the Senate,
i he scorned defeat.
Senator Hitchcock. Democrat.
, chairman of the Senate foreign relar
i tions committee, who was In charge
of the fight for the Uaguo of Na
tions treaty, asked for an . engage
ment.
"I suppose he is coming to talk
compromise," commented Mr. Wil
son as he granted the engagement,
'but he listened without surrender.
' All the world may say Wood row
Wilson should have compromised
and that today he would have had
? America a member of the League
with reservations. Rut to Wood row
Wilson it was an enduring principle
1 he could not barter what ho
thought was fundamental to the
1 peace of the world. And he has
looked on ever since, waiting pa
tiently for the turn in the tide- a
turn that years of agitation may
or may not bring; but at the hou/
of his passing from the stage of life
America remains outside the League
he worked so ardently to establish.
[ Tragic as may be the atmosphere
today with sorrow felt by his
t friend? and foes alike that he did
I not retain the physical vigor to con
tinue his fight, not a word of pity or
pathos did the Wilsonlan tempera
, ment want. His was the spirit of
a crusader. His was the tenacity of
a soldier In a hand-to-hand flglit. Ho
never nave an Inch. For years he
; was ready for death. He went forth
on his Western trip against the ad
vice of his physicians but with i
smile of disregard for life Itself. He
used to say lie would gladly give hl.i
life for the cause of the League of
Nations. " The remaining years of
his life were meant to him only for |
the accomplishment of the greatest
ideal of all- a world organization
for peace.
Scarred by the war. racked In
nerves, never forgetting the awful
ness of the combat In which lie felt
always a personal responsibility, he
never could drive out of his mind
the thoughts of the hundred thous
and American bovs who died, as he
thought, for ah i < 1 ? ?? 1 and of It'4' hun
dreds of thousands who came home
wounded and maimed In the service
of the flag. ? # I
"To make the world safe for <
Democracy" was Mr. Wilson's war!
slogan. To his critics It became an
empty phrase. Hut the idea of a
war to end war never left Woodrow
Wilson. Long after the American
people began to turn their minds to
domestic concerns and the material
side of reconstruction, the broodlngs
of Mr. Wilson over the breakdown of
moral force continued. He was ar
bitrary In his views about a formula
for world peace because he was In
no mood for distrust of other peo
ples or governments. All had
worked together In the common |
partnership of war. All had put 1
their armies and navies under one I
command and had given of their j
food and money and resources with
out stint for an Ideal. The decision ,
of 1017 meant to Woodrow Wilson j
a readiness on the part of America
to assume obligations in the affairs i
of the world and to fulfill them. The I
recession from this viewpoint hoi
could never understand. Iti his last I
speech to the American people over
the radio on Armistice Day, Noveift-j
ber. 1923, Mr. Wilson wfts bitter In!
his denunciation of that policy. H ?
called It cowardly and Ignoble. And |
his words were resented by many. ;
To the sick man In seclusion In the |
national capital It was but the last t
feeble attempt to beat I r the people!
to a realization of the change that i
had come over them since the/
pledged themselves in 1917 so will- j
Ingly to co-operation with the rest of ;
the world without reservation. I
Seven years ago to a day almost?-- ,
Saturdav. ? February 3, 1917- came
the fateful turn In the career o?
Woodrow Wilson. It was on that!
SHAFKIt WlfXIAMS SAYS
WAS FI(AMKI) II Y l*OLICR
That ho had been framed by tl?
police was the astonishing testi
mony of Shafer Williams in the re
corder's court Monday morning
when charged with being drunk and
disorderly and with Illegal posses
sion and transporting of liquor. Mr.
Williams denied emphatically that,
the liquor produced in police court
and which l'olice Captain Winslow
testified that he had taken from tho
defendant's pocket had ever been In
his possession. Ho also affirmed
Thai Wlu?n arrested lie had not had
a drop of llQUor and VM as cool
sober as he. .had ever been in his
life.
The court took the word of tho
police captain, who was supported
by two other police officers as to the
defendant's being drunk when ar
rested, and lip posed a fine of $10
and costs on the drunk and disor
derly charge and of $50 and costs
on the charge of illegal possession.
Ho noted an appeal.
Irving Overton, colored, for pass
ing a street intersection at a great
er rate of speed than 10 miles an
hour, was let off with the costs.
TWO 4'IIIMNKY KIRKfl
Two chimney fires called the fire
company out Sunday, ono at the
home of Kills Perry, colored, on Pear
tree road at 11:20 a. m. and tho
other on Shepard street tit 2:30 p.
I m. at tho home of James Dance, col
ored. There was no damage.
day that the United States severed
diplomatic relations with Germany
and ordered Count von Dernstorff,
the German ambassador, to go home.
War followed two months later ? :a
war that Woodrow Wilson never
wanted to enter though he felt for
a long time prior to 1 01 7 that Am
erican participation would sooner or
later become imperative. He hoped
against hope for an allied victory
without tin* aid of the United States.
As lie steered the ship of state In
what lie believed was a course of
benevolent neutrality, he prayed that
the Allies would end the war tri
umphantly and enable the United
States to play a role of peace-maker ?
and healer of the wounds of wa?\
Hut when war came, he thi:ew him
self into the fray with an abandon
that wiped the mistaken phrase "too
proud to fight" out of the vocabu
lary of his critics for once and a!!.
The selective service act ? compuls
ory military service ? something
which under the dread term of
"conscription" had shaken the other
Democracies of the world to their
foundations was recommended by
him with a suddenness that made
everybody gasp. But it enabled Am
erica to nut two million men Into
Europe and tucii-_tlie_-tid** o? batt4^~
toward the ultimate victory.
It was Woodrow Wilson who from
the first fought for unity of com
mand on land and sea and the brush
ing aside of technical sovereignty In
the interest of self preservation of
the allied peoples. His influence In
the scales made Koch the generalis
simo and enabled the fleets of the
Allies to be combined for effective
operation under the Ilrltlsh high
comma nd.
The hectic days of the war with
their worries and burdens that his
friends thought would break him
down were weathered triumphantly
but he set sail for the peace confer
ence with a heart saddened by the
loss of both houses of Congress after
his Ill-fated appeal of 1018 for n
Democratic Congress. He had been
thinking of the partisan attack be
hind his back in the war days. Ho
was a partisan too. His appeal for
a Democratic Congress was based up- #
on the belief that he would be able
the better *,o make peace. Tils op
ponents construed his statement a*
reflection on their patriotism. Ills
advisers and friends besrsr??d him to
deny It and set the country si might.
He never Issued a wo;*d of defense,
he never changed n syllable of the
statement. He never made a pub
lic comment on the verdict. He felt
that If the Republican Congress
would give him the proper co-oper
ation in making peace, the result
prove that he was wrong. !# tho <
Republican Congress blocked his
peace efforts, as he predicted, tH?*
country would know why he ap
pealed' for a Democratic Congress. ^
The events that followed con
vinced Mr. Wilson that the Republi
cans would make a partisan propo
sition of the I .eigne of Nation and
the peace treaty and he wss still *>o
(Continued On Pan? Eight)