Celebration Put Across Without Incident to Mar Enjoyment of Thousands I Committees in Charge ofj Acorn Hill Festivities Congratulated on Way They Did Their Joli 'MORNING AFTER' HERE Estimates Based 011 Nuin b e r of Automobiles Tagged in City Place Visi tors at 7,504) Strong Today Is 'the morning after" In Elizabeth City. The court house grounds, scene of the major part of yesterday's festivities, pre sented a desolate appearance early this morning- Where crowd* had ?urged hither and yon there re mained only scattered rubbish and partly torn away stands and ta bles to remind the observer of the big road celebration ? and event that will stand as u milestone marking this city's first real ef fort In recent years to entertain In adequate fashlou the people of Its hinterland. Everywhere this morning were heard praises for the smooth fash ion in which the celebration went through, and everywhere there were words of congratulation for the efficient manner in which the committees In charge of the event carried out their part of the work. A check-up of the crowd was possible today In something ap proaching accurate fashion thru a report of the automobile com mittee. which was to the effect that there were more than 1.200 visiting cars in the city yesterday. Members of the committee tagged substantially more than 1.000 cars, and estimated that they missed at least 200? possibly 500. This was through the fact that wheu the tagglug was begun, the visitors already had begun to ab^ut the city, and an accu rate check was Impossible. j' On thto basis, an estimste of I 7,600 persons as the site of the I crowd is regarded as not excessive 1 though conaervatlve ones placed the number as low as 6.000 and the more optimistic put it at close to 10.000. remembering that hundreds came here by boat from various sound and rlv?jr points. (Klter Estimate* Estimates placing the crowd at approximately 7.600 apparently are borne out bIho by the quantity of barbecue and other eatables dispensed during the aftermmi^ In all. a few more than J. 000 plates were served to the crowd. Making allowance for Instances In Which two plates were given to one person, for some wastage, and for the plfctea served to Elisa beth City people afte.r the visitors had been fed. It is estimated that 6.000 to 7.000 visitors were fed ' As In the case of every cel? bra tlon of the kind, there were a good many guesta who did not partake of the barhecue. through no fault of those serving it. A lot of folks never eat at an occa sion like that. Hence, the fig ures from this source go far to ward Indicating that there were about 7.000 visitors In the city. Josh Bullock, of Hocky Mount, who supervised preparation of the barbecue, stated before he left Thursday night that he never be fore taken psrt In one of aucn proportions He was worn out to a frazzle when he departed for home, having driven half tho night to reach here Wednesday morning In time to start prepara tions, and having worked steadily through, without sleep or rest, until Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock . Bullock and his assistants cooked H3 hogs, which made 000 pounds of dressed meat. They had four hogs left over, and a small quantity of barbecue. The fc hogs were sold to local meat den I era and the proceeds turned back Into the entertainment fund. Chief of Police Holmes. In com menting on the celebration Friday morning, stated that while the po lice aud their special deputies -worked bard to maintain order In the matter of traffic all day long, they were called upon to act In no particular violations of the law. No I'ntoward Incidents Despite the fact that the crowd here surpassed In proportions any other in the history of the clt>. apd that there were consequently more automobiles on the streets, not a single accident was report ed during the day. Nobody wan drunk, and nobody got mad two pleasing features- of the day well worth commenting upon. Whole families of Elizabeth Cltf folks Jumped In and worked energetically to make the day a auccess For Instance. E. J. Co hoon. who contributed the Ice water, pressed his three little danghters Into service at dlspen* Ing It throughout the hours of the celebration: his wife asslsfed In aervlng the barbecue, and hta son. the last remaining member of the 4 family, playjed In the hand Thl? M was only one of many Instances of j frftift game sort. The people pulled \ together In amaflnfly whole heart- I fashion to put the event acroea. The general committee wss busy Friday Morning paying hills and1 Only $1 In Bank Leonard Wood. Jr.. sou of tlin gorernor-getwral of the Philip pine*. filed h petition in bank ruptcy at Hrooklyu, ptatinu hi* bank account had dwindled to $1. His ilabilitic:) exceed $1 4,000. due to Ioskid iu theatrical produc tions. He Is a brother of o?born?* Wood, who made a "kiiliiiK" in Wall Street and tli?*n squandered bis fortune In Paris. CHICAGO HAVING MILK WAR NOW Milk Trust Discovered When Parent-Teachers Attempt Change Supply By O. I.. Nl *OTT | (Cwifi#!. IKI. ky Til* A#?irm) Chicago, Sept. 18. ? A*tallk war i ? the latest of Chicago's troubled |! ? In declared. Explosion of a big black powder bomb, Inhor'a cus .; toiuury chnllange to a fight, has juat wrecked u portion of an In dependent milk company's plant ! and the Employers' Association | of the city assert a that the battle la on. The unusual charge Ih made that labor leaders have created ja "milk trust" In rcstralui of : trade. Its activities were brought i to light by the Parent Teachers' ! Association of a local school who | sought to change milk companies. I The company from which they obtnlned supplies for their school ! furnished milk which had a pe culiar taste, and on Investigation was found to come from au Im ! pure dairy. Another company wus | asked to supply the milk. Then came the curt order telling the Parent Teachers' Association to go | back to the original dairy or re J celve no milk. The charge Is that union offl ? rials have tied up the milk dis tributing Industry In the city, j This brought a reply from the Employers' Association that It ; would- fight any such combine. As a rpsult they got behind the ; Independent company, whose plant j has now been bombed. I When trucks left the Independ ent company today to deliver milk J to customers brave enough to do I business with It, they were accom I pa tiled by a guard with a sawed [off shot gun. by a detective bu reau rifle squad on one side and a load of deputy sheriffs on the ! other. | "War has started." declared (J. ? L. Hostetter, executive secretary (if t ho Employers Association , "We are In to see that this cfm | bine Is broken. The distribut ing companies are no longer the master of their own business, i Under the combine controlled by the union officials, the barn stew ards are put In their Jobs by the j union bosses and nrn lh?- mas ters of the business." | There are rumors that similar ! [distributing combines are In ef- ) feet In the Ice business, as well | as in certain other necessities.. I Appeal Is being made to the dls- I trlct attorney, at the same time that direct steps are being taken I by the employers to flght a war to the finish with the alleged I trusts. checking up on the cost of the fes- 1 tlvltles. Many Items still re mained unpaid at noon, largely ? through the fact that bills had not been presented, and there was some doubt whether the funds In hand would prove sufficient to meet them all In the*vent there ils not. members of the committee | Indicated that a second solicits- j | tlon for funds would be necessary. ! "The celebration cost a plenty,"! 'one member of this committee I "but everything worth while [costs. We did everything we prom- : Ised to do. and did It well If a few hundred dollars more are i needed, I believe the people of Elisabeth City will go down In i their pockets and give It cheerful If. feeling that the eyent was WOTt* arary cant it coat." * NEW YORKERS 1 ARE EXPECTING AN OPEN TOWN With Tuinmany Tiger Coin l<h*tely Triumphant Cer tain WmicnlH Hoping to Set- < "it y Much Knlivened SUNDAY THEATERS New Mayor Has Liberal Views anil Interpretation of "Open Town" May Mean lad Off on Sunday liy ItOIIKHT T. HM A LI. t (*??,< i?M 10) h Tkt *<)(??! I New York. Sept. 18. ? With the jTamniany tiger completely trlum j phani In the primaries aud ex pected to "put over" it h candidate for mayor at the November elec tions. there Is no denying the fart that certain element* of New York life are looking for "better things" In the future, and'better thing* to these citizens mean an "upeu town. "It hait been whispered 1 aloug the Bowery recently that If the "lid" Ih kept on Just a little while longer, everything will be, all right when "Jimmy" Walker gets to the City Hall. j Poor old New York has been looking for an "open town" for . so loug It Is not surprising to find | It grabbing at straws. With the Hale of liquor restricted If not ? stopped It Is difficult to know uowadays Just what an "open town" means. Certainly there Is no chance for a return to the davit ! iso freely predicted by Mayor Hy . Ian In his fight against Walker. ? Coventor Smith and Tammany. I Une interpretation of the "open . town" freely heard along Broad way today would be the right to i give Sunday performances In the ' theatre. New York has been "llb | eral" in many ways but It has ; been behind many sections (if the country, particularly the Middle 'West, in the matter of Sunday theaters. Even Washington, the : national capital. Is more of an j open town" In that respect than the metropolis of the nation New York's Hunday show go I Ing is confined to the "movies" and to occasional "concerts In the , vaudeville theaters, the law stat- j .lng that no performance shall be: given In costume. As a Btate sen ator. tho Democratic nominee fort I mayor has been known as the ad vocate of liberal legislation at A1-* bany. He Is called the "father" of Sundny baseball, while the law | .under which championship prize, ! fights to a decision are permitted < In the stage bears his name. This J liberality In the views of the man | Broadway experts to be the next mayor has led many of the easy I ; living residents of the city to be I lleve New York la hound to go ; back to the "good old days." The '"old sports" die hard. ? The truth of the matter is that | there Is not a chance In the world for New York to be any more op- j , en than It has been the last If. ; years or so. or since the famous ( tenderloin district was wiped away ' I never to return. New York Is no better and no worse than the av erage big American municipality. , , Perhaps It la a little belter than u good many of them. But New York Is a playground, there are' hundreds of thousands of "Grang ers" In the city every day. and H# per cent of them are looking i for pleasure and amusement by night If not by day. Tbey find the , city clean In nearly all of Its as pects and safe, despite the capital ; which was made of the crime rec- 1 ords in the recent political un-i pleasantness. However, to the minds of many I of the old tlmera. reformers and h ports alike, there Is an associa tion of Ideaa between the Tarn many liner and the red light. In ,11)6 good old daya. "when men , were men." the tiger never was 'pictured In cartoon without a red ! lantern tied to his .tall. But con ditions have changed Public [opinion has been changed. It has been found there can be plenty of | liberal pleaaurea left to the world , without a return to the period of open vice, living by police regula* tlon and graft New Yorkers laughed only at the Hylan charges that the red llghta were coming back to this fair city, that gamb ling hells would spring up at ev ery corner and that the under world would flourish from one end of the city to the other. Home ?if the ever-hopeful sports prayed that the mayor might be right; all Bane cltltena knew he was wrong. Governor AI Rmlth was not only the central figure but the bandsman In thla primary election The people f now what he stands for and they rather like the A) tfmlth brand of "wlck edneaa." Nevertheless the cry of the "op en town" still may be heard In the coming campaign. The Re publican committee In charge of the campaign to be waged against Walker Is headed by Charles I). Illlles, vice chairman to I'real dent Taft. The preeence of Mr. Illllea at the helm Insure* a clean campaign so far aa the republi can are concerned with an ap- . peal to lh? paopla to put a bnl- j naaa man at tb* tmd of Ikalr af falra at a Una whan baalnaaa aeu dmb. rather than political papa Father of America's Playgrounds to Preside at National Recreation Congress JOSEPH LEE OF BOSTON, President of th? Pi?jrgiound and Kt; cation Association of Am?ri:?. ?ObKPH LKE was studying U? la I ** Harvard ?b?u Ameilca'a Aral public play space. a "sand garden." was opeued la tiottou Now, with lu forty years. be ifi-? 8 116 public playgrounds and recreatlou c?uUr? spreading baaltb aud Joy la 711; cltiaa a* a result of a movement be baa fathered Ha sees mure and mora young Americana given op portunities Cor the kind of bappy outdoor play be bad as a boy. And October 6-10 be will p.eslde at tb? Twelfth National Kecreatluu Coo greaj; wbere some six hundred lead ers ta oar aatloual llfa will T ? >MM> the problems aud the future of pub Uc recreation. "The boy without a playground la the man without a Job." Mr Lee announced tweniy-tlve year* ago. after ha had made a study of the raasoua why boye and girls go wrong. Much of the waywardness of children la due to a luck of wbolesoina outlet for the play spir it. ba found. And plenty of real play la also a cure for the rentlfMs ueaa and 111 health of grownuns. JUDGE Wil l. DECIDE MONDAY ABOUT NOI.I. Newark. N. J.. Sept. 18. ? Argil' merit of coiinnel (or Harrison Noel, the youthful slayer and kidnap per, that he wuh not Bane and lex ally could not plead guilty or not guilty, today resulted In Judge Caffrey'a renerving decision on thlH question until Monday.. Handcuffed to two other mur der HtispectH, Noel wuh taken to the court to plead to the indict ments charging him with murder of Raymond Pierce, negru chauf fer, and kidnapping and murder of six year old Mury Daly. STATE OF SIEGE IS OHDKItKI) IN BOLIVIA Buenos Aires. Kept. 18. ? A dis patch asserts that the order for the Htate of siege wan luttued after the discovery of u serious conspir acy. HOAKI) OF 1-SgriKY SELECTS WITNESSES Waahington, Sept. lg. ? Acting i Secretary of War Davln will prob ably be t lie flrnt witnea* before tin* President 'a special air board. The board In an Informal meet Ing today decided to call firm up on the War department for teal I* money on aircraft aubjecta and In aammh aa It w an Mr Davla who flrat proponed the Inquiry it 1m thought he will atari the presen tation of the depart meat's position when the board begins Ita hearing Monday. Washington. Sept. 18. ? The aircraft aituatlon moved today to ward complete MhlftliiR an the President's special board of In \ ulry prepared for the opening of I the public hearing* here next Monday. Selection of the IIm| of witnesses waa asalgned to aeverAl membera of the hourd and the board aaya these will include Col William Mitchell. <;ekman delegation TO LEAVE HATirKDAV Hremerhaven. Sept. 18. ? The CJerman delegation to the Inter Parliamentary conference In Waahlngton leave* for New York tomorrow A delegation by Paul Loehe. president of the relchstag lerlty. mar he needed Bui the r*.maanta of the Hearst - Hylan peraonal machine will con tinue to fight Tammy end Al Smith In the old orthodox way ead from auch aourcea the red j light, open town charge* will be broadcast la ever Increasing fury. | Mr Lee lias u?vtr piactked U*. but baa devoted mII Lis time lo uii paid social sei-vlce UN Inherited piupeitjr tic bM I egarded aa u pjb IU trust. He bas bceu rettpoii.-Mblu for Oiucb social and rdiKitlluiKl (lugr?t( lu I'osluO Slid MaSnUcliU acrtts, but bis wrlllugit uu play and Lu l?ad?r?hlp tu the recreation uioveinent Lav* beeu his gra^lf.-*: . oOtrlbutluD. SlUjLo IV 10 he ha* bren President of the Plavgruund sud Recreation Asiioclat Ion uf America. the urgaiilcatlou foriu?-d lb 1*06 by President Huosvvelt slid others to help rtttrs provide play ipscss and play lea?lera fur Ute safety and wHfare uf their people. The Natlu'iol Recreation Cou irriM taken place In A?hev:llc. N. C.. "the I .and of the Sky.'* Recrea lion superintendents. educators, manufacturers. clubwomen, wilier* and city official* are airioug tho types of leaders who will attend. Tb<* topics tu b? (H-<cilN4ttd tiicl.nl*> rural recreation, the* national park study, community music snl dra ma, recreation . Ilfu for girls a:.d borne recreation. 0\F. KILLED II IIE \ TRAINS COLLIDE I V MLXCO TlWhl. SlflllM-li* lllr, O., ttcpf . IN. Oin- Iriiliiniiin H'km killed ami wvpihI ??i Ihth MTltiusI) Injured wIh'Ii I lie I'ilislmrKli and Writ I Virginia railroad freight (rain run head -on Into a rnal train In MIiiko tunnel near lw | day. I.AI HA 1>I DVT MAKK Ml I'll HIT with ji ik;i: Luura Sylvester, colored. did not find a sympathetic Judiciary I when she had Iiit hunbaiid. Frank Hylveater. brought Into the r<* corder'a court Friday morning <>? a charge of abandonment and non support. After q ligation lug the prosecuting witness and eliciting the Information that Hho did not care to live with her hushand any lotiKer because "he funned ho much." and observing that l.nuro t was seconded In her prosecution by her mother. County Judge Saw yer Hoemed Inclined to belleVo the 'lack of harmony In the home wan due to too much mother-in-law. and to plain IttlneH on the part of the wife. The court accord ingly suspended a four months road sentence over the defendant i conditional upon hi* pitying the cost h and f I a week to the support of the three children, making no provision for the aupport of the wife, who, though somewhat pon ly and seemingly In good health, claimed to be a victim of "pella- , gracy." Tho foregoing wan the only case j tried In recorder'n court Friday. I)IKT BUILDING is DESTROYED IIY I IIIK Toklo. Sept. 18. The lni|>erlal diet building was destroyed by fire today. The diet was^ not In session. SHERIFF DKTLARES IT WAS FAMILY AFFAIII Monroe. Sept. 18 -No arrests yet have been made In connection with the mutilation of Turner , Rlanchard. The sheriff said to day that it waa a "family affair " cotton si i i? in roni Washington. Bept 18,-^-Cotlon seed crushed In AuguM totalled llfi.381 Ions as compared with 82,1 40 last AuguM. the Census Huraau today announced Stock i on hand at the mill* August SI smotiaud to lll.tit tons. CURRITUCK FOLK WILL ENTERTAIN AT POINT HARBOR 4??*t Ha\ Will Itc i U?M?rvr?l Next Iriilav lit I'lfiisiin- l*ark, Nrtip l\ml of Nrifilthor < ?Milil\ im.im > 01 i:\ r\iii .ks i Prominent S|H*akikr I'rom*, immI, ami Kiilrrtaiiiin^ Musical l'rom*ain Asniirt'd j ? t?? 1 1 ? - 1 1 > Sflvi's by * li?* success of the Acorn Kill celebration h?*re Thurs day. and ax a nivalis of making Klizabftli ciiy folks tiiul others in ih?' Albemarle district acquainted with I li?' altogether delight fill County Currituck und its peo ple. this neighbor county will tili iierve tiei Toiteilicr I>jv next Prl (lav. September l!i?. In t lit* |il<*a Ml re park mar tin* site of tln> old In ? Han fun on Cnrrji ink Siuinit. ut Point Harbor. There *vlll Im> a prop rum of spe cial music aiol an uddrcM bv a speaker described as one who rank* ainoiiK (lo* lies.t In the Stat*-, but wbohi' name li:i*< not been announced yet. Dinner und supper will Iih hcrved at a nomi nal cost? -and an abundance of fried chicken, barbecue, hum. picklci and other tasty products of Currituck will be nerved. Cuesta will l<f permitted to help .themselves to the eatables. which will lie Hp read on loin1, tabli-it. und nobody will bo limited to a single ht'lpinc TIih serving of dinner will begin at I o. clock In the af , teriiooti. and will continue until ' H o'clock that nir.lit. until (?very body has been provided for. The park will he electrically lighted. The HollR service which will .conclude the enterlulnment pro gram will her, In at 7:110 o'clock. Those in charge of the event luvlttf ) every body lo come at 1 o'clock, 'and remain until the celebration | is over. ; Point Harbor in readily accen i slide front KlizalMlU City und nearby points h.v reason of the i State highway running all I tie way lo the Point. It Im declared to be In excellent condition, and the dis tance from Kli/.nbeth City can he covered 111 a litllo over an hour and a half, at u reasonable speed, according to local motorists who have driven over it lirthe last tew ' days. NKW SPKKll HKCOKI) liV NAVY AVIATOR Mltchelll Pi.-ld. Sept IS. - A unofficial world'a HfM'i'd . record was catahllHlied today wlu-n I ,U?n t . A I ford J. Willi. iiiih. Navy nvlulor. flew at a rale* of 30 nilles an j hour. I'KKNMI MAKK <;AIINS W ITH SMALL I.OSSES r??z. French Morocco. Sept . 1H. The French arc now aald to hold moat of llo* lin porta nt strategic positions on the northern battle front It wuh aald in military clr i'|fN today that. tlianka to Mar nhal I'etaln's carefully matured plans, thin result ha* been achieved minimum losses. HAD NOTHING TO DO tt ITII l)KINYIN(> VISA I^indoti. Sept. 18.- It wn? of flclally denied today that the Hritlaii government had any con nectlon whatever with t lie exclu sion f t ? ? in iln- United StAtN of Shapuriji Haklatvala. Communist ? member of the House of Com j moiiM. whone passport visa an 'member of the ftriiish delegation to the luter-Parllamentary I'nlon In Washington was revoked by the Secretary Kellogg. TONC WAR' SEEMS about bm;in a<;ain New York, Kept. IK I'onlhlllty of the rnmimptlon of the recent T?nK war loss than four duys at j tei* the slKiiing of a formal truce was seen hy local police In tin' kill- I In k today of Yung Sue (Sunn, Tour member In New York's Chinatown K.ITI ItflAV is MKT DAY or rnr.r. ?o.%i. orrr.K The free coal offer featured thin week In the avert Isements of the M el. Morrlsette A Company will close on Saturday. While many have taken advantage of the of fer there are at III a few lleatrolaK left The offer will clone Saturday night and those who do not sign up for Meatrolan before that time will not ho entitled to the fret* coal. advlt I s i Mi r III N |,|.\ I-; Kdenton. Sept 18 The fiden I ton Suffolk Norfolk Itus Line will, atari operations Friday. Septem- j her '2%, when Wendell Story at I tie j wheel of one of the latest Ilea bus ? sen pulls out of, Kdenton at 7: SO o'clock oA that morning. Anyone wlahlng to apend a few bourn In Norfolk or Suffolk can take the first bus from here, which starts at a convenient hour, and return on the bus leaving Suffolk at f? : SO, given seven and a half hours In Suffolk and fully five hours In Norfolk. Poisons Snakes Juliux Jenny. of Antonio. T?*.t n df.tdl > potnon to the mom tMiNoiiuux aiiakt-a ||? ha* been bit 02 polaonoua Hn.ikvi in the ?UBI 20 yearn Mitd every one of them )?M dud In MKuiiy AH ? result. Jenny >*-lle\eN that hla blood haa betoin* 10 polBoiit-d from 20 yeara wuik with inakea that It now quickly |>oinoiia *ny reptile that bitea him Ueni.it ? hla. ha ttlways hua been In perfect ?* hHHlih IZZYANIIMOE MAKE AN EXIT ll> ROWLAND WOOD j Now York. Sepi 18.- -l?y Kin- j ; Kf?rln unil Moo Smith, IIih Slam- ] oho twin rum Hleuthx. to whom prohibit Ion brought almost aa! much notoriety um H did to Mr.. Volstead himself today got their! ph't ii res In thu Now York pupera for probably the last I line. ? Tl?' pictures accompanied mii an-1 nouncement that John A Fouler, NVw York'M new prohibition en forcement chief, ban issued an or derail providing I but henceforth I all agents operating under him . are to remain Incognito luy'n and Moo's names were iio| men- ( 'Honed In the order, but It wan | * obviiiiiN that the ruling won aimed al them, inasmuch lis they are vir tually the only agenta In these parti* who ever make a "top head"j In I he pa pern Junt why the Incognito order wa? isaued ?whether it h uh to at III the Jealous pangs in the breaats of li*y and Moe'a coworkers, or | j whether It waa Inspired by aotne other motive wait not made ] I clear. It could hardly have been In- 1 spired by fear that l?/y and Moo might become too well known to! the bootlegging gentry through conatant publication of their pic tures, their names and their mclh ods. For It la u curious fact that. ; I despite the conatant broadcast lug , of their picturea and descriptions, .they never ueem to be "spotted" ? aa prohibition agenta. | One of the bent stories the pair | [have turned up for the papera re- j cently was the atory of how they' had purchased drinks from and j then arreated. aaloon keeper* who bad their picturea pasted on the bar for identification The fame of I sly and Moe. who now paaa Into hlatory and even- , tually. perhaps Into legend, wan, baaed partly on Ihelr akill at dis guises, partlv on their aense of what wua a "good atory" and part ly on their willlnKtieaa to "ntand for" almost anything the report era thought up to write about j them. Their dlagulaea ran the entire git m ill . from gentleman of the evening, out for a good time In "aoup and flah," down through the tauka of coal heavera, long ahoremen and yegga They have' impersonated bar tendera out of a Job and aufferlng from potent thirst It la even rumored that they have Imperaonated beer bar rein, which la not entirely In- { creditable considering their gen eral contour Hut disguises or no dlagulaea. their exploits must he recounted 1 from now ori behind the alias "two prohibition enforcement agenta " Apparently the only way they can keep their namea before the public Is to turn bootlegger There la no ban yet on publication of the namea of bootleggers who fall Into the toll*. lUniffl MAHKIf New York. Kept. 18 Hpot cot ton closed quiet, middling 24 45. , a decline of 20 points Futures, closing bid Oct. 24.20. Dec 24 68 1 Jan 23 03, March 24.30, May', S4.lt. MATTAMUSKEET LAKE TO BLOOM IF PLAN WORKS New Holland i urjmratioii, l.utcM INuvliiihfrii of ? (.urge Traol in Hyde, I'ro jiotfe New I levelopitient S4 ILI. IS IN COURTS litigation Over Hum! Is?ue j Is Sul)j?'rl of Hearing Be i fore Inderal Judge I. M. IMeekiiiH Here w.rd'i' r""""k'n ?r W"rk ,lyd" <tni"'V. after ;.u"7 ln *?? b-d hivS T' ?1 and th. V i , .. r " "?'""""'1 larte ' wrm-k ami ruin, in in ,p, ; ...'.r,1::;';;::: "v n*w . i"'r,u ion, a concetti ' "ml 'I ??1> New ?""< capital l.,?; | ,'k!' J"'"" lnv?l? ! J"*-' "I a I. a' ..." J "?"?"?>* anb It.-r.- ii.i . 1 Court ? ; Z fu X'T Jud** '? M;~ ?? .. ...... V. .-'..T ."V'- Uk" 1 'n th1";.; ' IneCln," a-sSS^S?; > '?*? in in appearing ??? T * Wilson, of cuumi* lb. new corporation. , "" '''"K"1 To Ht?|? l-aK.. MllMaliiiinki-fl wti.fth belonged to II,.. statf liXir; Vh;ji%rm:x? ?&&&& al't'i'in"" lum Vulf ''ti'"1 lb? lltisfiii j?.? I- ",wu" n" present !|?>" ?,.? *$SS?S$Ftt& ? }"n?r* r r>.'/|,iV,i",y V !'ohi2 t? be, ,.r . "V. . ... """""n* ? w.? '"t, Mld' Hi". Hi.- fak.. Mi.li,. . . , ,or ? IgSS&SS '?"?1 '? L"" ;'-'v;.|" ?"!,! the property V " '<?"'nnh.ni ? Nl"h.,l,on ??? City. and ||? a||r Kj't r..: ...i,.,:rHr^,;:,;j,:lor;*^ Hullj.d, l||rK|n Halltoad. 1,1,1, fnni JI. rltv of v,. ,, , . ' *?'"' with th?. u . ?llJi??cl *o connect Z ..#? of the Norfolk ^Ttztr^ ,r",n M?k-w A <'otife?i*,| <>rrtw. M r "?*. JiidM W llotld, In Superior Court H I ?r rT, 'l"fr f''" ,,r"!M'r'r 1 .nrijr.ibrancp lhu .id ortlerln,. thai the rce,.|*Sf5 IMy three fourth,, of the J100 000 <l,?t ihl? would fr,?. ,h? Uk# of fill t her r?*imiuilbllity for th? reilreni. n, ,?."JLg? >? ihm i.nrl ,,f n,f dralnaee df. ..rlKloally h.,1 hSen " M; 'rz l?Hnk or Coliirubun. Ohio r*iir *TX""Zr' iHiOiiKk. . i lir?'lMK""in,ta,{5j Jn* that the dl.tr lei be retjuired ? pay on .|| ?le b?n<|,. St hit ? IhioI be Hold In <l< fault 0# nar t . n,. ?,iT ,h'i """ . ouil her!' 'hl" W,"k ln ?" firnorailoti . ,. y . """? Judite M.eklna t . . "n I-* V r " " r " B0 d"r' anewer without Porallon" ih r'*h"' ,h' "?? ?r ?h.. l? rk urt ?"?er.-d forth h" <?"" "? the bonda !?"' ?, b*' f'.ld ?nd the ?> .?astn.nl. not ?.||eei,.,| i*ror? Continued on pace a n ."j

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