\ I ? "v ' \
' tI&ml ? p?'-rrfiiwP^
Y' - '
?? ^ ??
BIG GOV. PLOT
1
Hairy L Doherty Charges <
Attempt to Set Up Sepa
rate Government; A Few
Big Men Would Run the
United States !
Washington, Feb. 11.?Charges
were made yesterday by Henry L ]
Doherty, the oil millionaire, that h
Chief T'istice-deaignate Charles Evans h
Hughes and President Hoover were ,
linked in an alleged plot to impose a I ]
super-government on the United j
States. I (
Doherty's charge was made in a
letter to the Senate judiciary com-!,
mittee considering Hughes' nomina- m
? :* Uf+la I .
-ion. VH6 commiHse uwwv ? ^
weight, for it voted 10 to 2, Chair- I j
man Norris and Senator Blains, Re- ^
publican, Wisconsin, dissenting, to ap- i
prove the nomination. I ^
Brought up in the Senate a few j
hours later, opposition to Hughes j
spread som^rhat Senator Blease, the j
irrepressible Democrat from South e
Carolina,, blocked Senate Republican f ]
. Leader Watson's request for imme- j
diate action by an objection. .[ 1
Blease announced he has called upon
physicians attending William Howard <
Taft, who resigned as Chief Justice a j
week ago yesterday, for a statement {
as to his physical condition. Blease c
charged Mr. Taft has not been as ser
iously ill as represented. Blease said {
he expected a reply tomorrow from J <
Dr. Francis Hagner, one of Mr. Taffs t
physicians, and would not agree to!
Hughes' confirmation untfl he receiv- t
es this information. -I t
"I cant do it," Blease said, "until e
I receive some documents and ctertifi- i
? ?' 99 1
cates I expect to get m me monuag. c
Senator Norris opposed the no mi- v
nation in a speech, and Senator Glass, a
Democrat, Virginia, interjected to ask
Norris if he kn;w about Hughes1 fam- v
ous Supreme Court decision in the c
Shreveport case, "where the last f
rights of the states were extirpated," c
This decision held that the Federal
government had paramount control i;
over interstate commerce. L
Blease's objection put the nomina- p
> tion over to the regular calendar, 1
I where it may no? be readied for sev
that Justice Taffs resignation was, t
"procured under peculiar circumstanc- s
es," and that the change, announced c
a week ago was "made with unseem- C
ingly haste." , . l
"There are rumors afloat," Doherfy* r
said, "that a huge and uncontrollable' ?
political machine has been or is being i
built up whereby the governmental 1
control of this nation will be lodgedTn p
the hands of a few men, and, with the [
confirmation of Judge Hughes, this c
control will not only embrace each o. t
the three coordinate branches of the
Federal government, but will extend 1
as far as possible to a control of the r
separate states." The Senate should
investigate these rumors, he said, "if
for no other reason than to assure the
public against need for alarm."
"I have heard," he added, "that J
this is only the first disclosure in a
series of political maneuvers which
is probably aimed to give political
control of the entire country to a
small otyutd of man, and it is ffnmmon
report that already President Hoover's r
Hughes, Jr., the Governor of New i
supporters are at work to make Mr. g
York. g
, 1
CONDEMNS BIG WEDDINGS
c
We thoroughly sympathize with !
Mrs. William Jeffries Che wrung, who,
as Margaret Cousins, elopti in order t
to escape big weddings, which she de- *
dared "are messy.** 2
Without advising young ladies a- <
boot to commit matrimony to elope t
we call their attention to the argu- 1
meat of this yamg lady against big !
! weddings: i
1"With a regular church wedding it i
is necessary that the engagement be <
announce several weeks ahead of time 1
and all your friends, out of kindness
of their hearts, begin giving parties <
and risers* and other things in your i
honor, with the result that by the ]
time the dkte of the wedding has ar- \
rived, you are utterly worn out." ]
This paper has observed just such i
proceedings in our own county and i
the result is just as stated. However, }
if there are young ladies in our ball* ]
wick who insist upon big society wed- :
-?-? *\^oxr oTvtoil Mid 1
in the newt and ; our society eolomn .
will t*IL your friends about them. j
: '- r 1
The same folks who were hoping a
couple of yeazs ago that Iindy would 1
make some fool break that would give 1
them a chance to threw mod at him I
are the ease that are now chuckling
- because ft looks as if Admiral Byxd ;!
would be atudt in the Antarctic iee
for another yeas. There is a perver
sity about muRfcreaaful people which
? makes them hats saceere and gloat
^^ tk0ee
GIGANTIC BOOTLEG
RING IS EXPOSED
CITY OF CHICAGO
Government Furnishes Alco
hol to Bootleg Ring Oper
ating on Jjaige Scale In
$50,000,000 Coast to Coast
Business
?j ? - ~' ? *
. >
Chicago, Feb. 11.?A 150,000,000
bootleg liquor ring, described by the
government as the largest to quench
Illicit thirsts of Americans since the
advent of prohibition, was broken up
a ere today when a federal grand jury
indicted 31 corporations and 156 in
dividuals.
In Springfield, HL, indictments
were returned simultaneously against
he Corn Products defining Company
md the Ffeischmanw Yeast Company,
nationally known food concerns,
while in Philadelphia a group of dis
allers and former prohibition agents
were indicted on charges of diverting
$1,000,06 worth of alcohol there.
Specific charges were suppressed
n the Springfield indictments* Unit
id States District Attorney Walter
Provine said the indictments were the
!irst of their kind and that they would
le pushed as test cases.
The accusations named only the
;ompaiues and did not involve any
n dividual officers. Pro vine said a
110,000 fine was provided in case of
onviction.
The Corn Products Company manu
actures syrup while the Fleischman
Company produces yeast Both are
3 >a ?f hnpr
loCtt HI MIC V* ??? -
In Philadelphia, three officials of
he Glenwood Distilling' Company,
hree former Federal prohibition
mployes and a "mystery man" were
n dieted by a Federal grand jury on
harges of conspiring illegally to di
ert 115,000 gallons of alcohol valued
it $1,000,000.
Operations ;of the ring against
?hich indictments were returned here
entered in Chicago and extended
ram coast to coast, the government
harged.
The indictment cited law violations
n New York, Chicago, Detroit, Cleve
and, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Minnea
iolis, St Paul, Los Angeles and North
lergen, N. J.
More than 7,000,000 gallons of alco
d into the speakeasy and the "bob
led in bond" traffic during the last
even years with total business of the
onspirators ranging from $50,0007
00 to $60,000,000.
The name of Anastassoff Sreben,
?ysterious Bulgarian chemist who
ras reputed to have disclosed a sec
et method whereby denatured alco
10I could easily be rendered non
loisonous, was mentioned repeatedly
n the 96 closely typewritten pages
if the indictments as being head of
he syndicate.
PREPARE EARLY
FOR THE WEEVIL
Orders Are Being Received
For Dusting Machinery
ami Poisons
Cotton growers are beginning to
ealize that control of the boll weevil
s a regular part of the routine in
trowing cotton and that to continue
trowing the crop at a profit, provis
on must be made for this work.
We aye receiving hundreds of re
(uests from all parts of the cotton
trowing section asking for definite
oformaSon about the boll weevil, says
he entimologist at State College.
Manufacturers of dusting machinery
tnd poison tell us that they are re
viving orders and indications are
hat a number of dusting outfits will
>e sold throughout the State this sea
ion. those who buy these expensive
mplemeats must keep in mind one
mportint fact. Dusting must be done
acactly right or no results will be ob
ained. ? .
In most farm operations there is no
??-* Mm rtincm. One must
?MP VA UVAM^ ? T
ise his own judgment within certain
ftnits about how he shall plow, cul
tivate, apply fertilizers or harvest;
ait, when.it comes to poisoning the
weevil by dusting, there is only one
say and growers should not jump into
svevil control without being adequate
ly equipped and fully informed. Much
money has been -wasted in tip past
because poisoning has not been done
right Yet the methods have been
standardized since 1917 and are both,
practical and efficient : * '
There are a number of North Caro
lina cotton growers who have poisoned
successfully and have produced good
crops of cotton despite ravages'by the
weevti. ; Mr. Branson at State col
lege offers to and detailed inform
ation about how this is done to any
grower who will write him for the ii*
fnwhNnn, ^
1mmmmmmmf""?'.. ; -1'
Of DflMST
^BhkroHHaH^^fsp^t
by Matthew Gibbs,'32.
;
The student ire toethMing in the
auditorium every morning this week
at 8:55 to listen in on the radio to
the talks made by state officials. The
talks are very inspiring as well as
have deep ffle&rttTTgg. As this is live
at home week in North Carolina we
are going to try to do our share of
! work, in the public schools.
Some of the speakers We have
heard and will hear are Governor 0:
Max Gardner, Or. R. T. Allen, state
superintendent at public instruction,
I* E. Browne, director of vocational
education, Dr. J. Henry Highauith
and Hiss Rebecca F, Cashing. The
entire school is grateful to Mr. Wheel
er and Sir. E. A. Joyner for securing
a radio for the school to enjoy such
a program.
? ? ? ?
The senior class will present ."The
Chann School" in Perkins Hall, Feb.
27 at 8. o'clock. Hie admission will he
25 and 35c. The seniors are going to
give something worth the price.
? ? ? ?
Reverend Burns made a very inter
esting talk in chapel Friday morning,
after which Serena Turnage played
several piano selections.
? ? ? ?
The fourth year history class com
memorated the birth of Lincoln by
several reports on his life, of every
day, during the presidency and a
characterization. . - *
? ? ? ? ?
NOBILITY
True worth is in being, not seeming,
In doing each day, that goes by
Some little good?not the dreaming
Of great things to do bye and bye.
For whatever men say in blindness
And spite of the fancies of youth,
?? * 1_ V '
Tliere's notmng so Kingiy as mildness
And nothing so royalas truth.
: ]\ ? ..- J'*'- .Y{ ." v. ? '?<
We get dur mete as we measure,
We cannot go wrong and feel right,
Nor can we give pain and feel pieas
ure,
For Justice avenges each flight
SSmtixJozJbe wing of the sparrow^
The huh for the robin and wren,
But always the path that is narrow *
And straight for children of men.
Tis not in the pftges of story,
The heart of its ills to beguile,
Tho he who makes courtship to glory
Gives all that he has for her smile.
For when from her heights he has won
her,
Alas, it is only to prove 1
That nothing's so sacred as honor
And nothing so loyal as love.
Thru envy, thru malice, thru hating 1
Against the world early and late.
No part of our courage abating?
Our part is to work and to wait
And alight is the sting of his trouble
Whose winnings'axe less than his
worth, |
For he who is honest is noble,
Whatever his fortune or worth.
?Alice Cary.
? ?-? ?
Who's Who in F. H. S.
The text below describes a young
man who's identity will be published
next week. See if you can guess who '
he is.
He is one of the most popular boys '
of the school and especially among
the fair sex. He is tall and blonde
with bewildered blue eyes and a look
of having recently been washed am! '
combed by his mother. He is an ath
lete and also a good student One may
easily recognize this person by his
walk, it ia not exactly a walk that
one might expect a young man of his
appearance to possess, but he is stead
ily improving it
? ? * ?
The local team won their fourth
?me ID rne noruiHuiuini uiiuerenw
Friday night by defeating Elisabeth
City with a score of 17 to 8 on the
losers' court. The gam* started slow
with each team getting two field gOalr
in the first quarter anrfthe half end*
ing with Farmville in the lead with
five points the score was 9-4. Thi sec
ond half was faster thtooghout with
both teams air tight in defense. The
scoring was less and the game more
interesting. Guarding erf both teams
featured the game and especially the
work of Barrett being high scorer
with 7 points while Smith was next
with four. Johnson and Davis were
the outstanding players for the losers.
? ? ? ?
.Friday night also, the "Baby Dev
ils*' engaged in a game with th?
Greenville Juniors. The score indicates
a closely fought game with the
a 16-18 decision over the Devils. No
outstanding player developed in either
team, hut both teams worked brtt*
_ V* ' '
^Februs^ld the ^^viliaad^e
SM. J fSWp * *.
"tstfrunc" frtjn ?.j||^Ppfound|and to run up the coast 100 miles
to NjrwK*fc They ran into a pie. which blew them across the Aduk
anat sea narrowly escaped shipwreck on the shores of Salt
! t T^^niaySCUCd b> ^c hghthwtt tcndtf "Hesperg?< CS
Was Appointed to Sncceed
the Lata W. A. Pierce who
Served wtree Years
" I?:
John T. Thome, of Farmville, t?4s
elected Vice President of the North
Carolina Co^tm Growers Cooperative
Association at the last regular meet
ing of the Board of Directors. THe
election of Mr. Thome-fills the vac
ancy causedjby the death of W. A.
Pierce who lad served as Vice Presi
dent for thi& years. 0
Mr. Thorpe has served the Third!
District as director for seven years]
and his sound business judgment and
experience ire recognized by the!
members of the Board. He is not onliy
one of the leading businss men in his '
county but he is one of Pitt Chanty's:
leading fuitfers as trail. He is Presi
dent of the Citizens' Bank of Farm
ville and& ability and integrity
have nev?*\hee|t questioned
It hjfeero been truly said that
taTthe lilghl
UVU U?*V WWM i
type of men whom they have Selected
to direct the operation of their Asso
ciation and Mr. Thome is a fair rep
resentative of the type.?N. C. Cotton
Grower.
LOOKING AT HAITI
'I'
No one questions the fact that the
control of Haiti by the United States
has materially benefitted our country.
Order has been better, business has
improved, and, it was hoped, some
start made towards a stable govern
ment -
On the other hand, no informed
person doubts but that the American
occupation has brought some abuses
with it Some of these may have been
unavoidable under the circumstances
but that does not alter t|he case. Ar
bitrary and autocratic authority had
to be asserted at times.
Americans should getr back to' the
fundamental idea that we do not need
subject peoples, either as colonies pro
tectorate? or any other way. The
sooner we get out of other countries
the better for us and them, unless we
mean to take permanent possession
in which case lets do so and be done
with it. We should prefer that each
little republic managed its affairs
for itself;
On the other hifod, however, it can
not be denied that as the big nation'
adjacent to these little states, we
must assume some responsibility for
their oonduct or allow some other big
nation from abroad to do so, which
we wbuld not allow and which the
Monroe Doctrine forbids. We might
share our responsibility with other
Pan-American states, though, and re
lieve ourselves of suspicion and some
ill-feeling.
? President Hoover will soon appoint
? committee to Take an investigation
of Haiti Its turbulent history is well
known, nearly all its presidents have
been run out of office or shot out. The
committee may find some satisfactory
solution, but, if it does, it will have
to be . original andwiee.
WHICH?
t?> ?kan vmi and
" O UU^C . ^VW| I *TMVM ^ , ?
Rastus were married, didqt you a
gree to be one?
Mandy: Yessuh, yo' Honor, but we
been scrappin' to fin' out which of us
wus de one! :
? i i ii ? i ??p??????
much since the .game, with Parinville
Jul 16 and a hard fought game is
looked Inf. ^
? ? * ?
CHARM! CHARM! CHARM!
You wfll see plenty of it on Pebru
ary 87, in "The Cham School* to be
presented by the eenior class at Par
ens Hall at 8 o'clock. Tho adnrfeiion
wm be Wf m
? You'll miss a treat if yeq miss the
TWO THOUSAND IS
TAKEN FROM SAFE
, - .. t 3^ I -K .. J
Yeggmen Make a Big Haul
from Lancaster Furniture
Co. at Rocfcy Mount
s * : ? - J ... ?
Rocky Mount, Fob. 10?Checks and
money totaling $2174.96 were found
missing from the safe of the Lan
caster Furniture Company at NoPlQ?
North Washington Street when the
firm opened its doors for business
this morning.
The safe had been looted during
the night, presumably after the visit
'fcf Manager W. P. Holding, who went
to the store on business at 9 o'clock
last night and found everything in
order.
I The safe had been opened by a
I master cracksman, who can work com
binations, or else by some parson who
knev- the combination. It was found
closed, and only the small Iron door
to the cash drawer was broken. It
had bew pried open and thto cash
that the person robbing the store <Bd
not wait to sort out the money. ^
A diamond ring, valued at |700,
and valuable bonds were still in the
safe when it was found damaged this
morning. Police are without clues to
the robbers.
Entrance was made through the
back room of the store, opening on
Rose Street A meat hook is used to
slip in the catch in the door or the
store instead of a lock. Police found
the meat hook in plaee this morning
but glass on the floor where the glass
in the door had been shattered either'
by a brick thrown into the store or
else by a blount .instrument used to
break a hole. The person or persons
entering the store had been forced
to use a box or some object to stand
on in order to open the door of the
store.
Police think that when the thief
left the store hf left by a different
^ ^*!?? l.nMt mltlAlt VjA AVI.
UUUI tliaii UIC uuo nviu nrmvu uv vu
tered.
TWO GREAT JUDGES
William Howard Taft ends a life
time of public service in his retire
ment from the Supreme Court bench,
and the name of Charles Evans Hugh
es is added to the roster of great
Americans who have filled the post
which many regard as greater than
even that of President, Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court of the United
States.
Thirty different men have been
Presidents. Only eleven have been
Chief Justice, including Mr. Hughes.
Mr. Taft is the only man in our his
tory wwho has filled both posts. He
brought to the Supreme Bench a rec
ord such as few men in America have
made. He made a career of public ser
vice. After serving his native city as
a public attorney and a judge, he be
came, successively, Solicitor General
of the United States, United States
Circuit Judge, Governor-General of
the Philippines, Secretary of War,
Provincial Governor of Cuba, then
President of the United States, and
.after eight years sa a Professor.at
Yale University, Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court
Mr. being in
, dependent of financial considerations.
Mr. Hughes, who succeeds htm, has
; had to make his own way in the
; worii Mfc Taft had:%haw?yJheuBy
of hiding himself aloof from partisan
?strife and ever, hi* political opponents
never displayed toward him the bfT
Iterneas which others in similar situa
tions have aroused. |dr. Hughgi has
k-i? -?- ~ 9?M .J . . n / j
-pis country's interests nor questioned
his ability an ana of the really (mat
lawyerrWid jMfctr of* AinerieaT tit
service as Secretaryof 8tat|; and as
*iuTT*r^?!0;'i
. (N. C. Cotton Grower) ? -
Tfie South may produce another big 1
surplus crop of cotton this year, but
fif ft doe* it will be in the fa* of; a
timely whTning broadcasted by the
| Federal farm board that cotton farm
ers need not expect the Farm Boapd
I --U- ?- -.?? I
to come to tneir rescue nexx iau u
they plant an excessive acreage this
spring.
' - .? i
It is true that acreage reduction
campaigns in the past have not al
ways proved successful and the idea
has ' become prevalent that the w|y
[ to produce a surplus crop is to cam
paign for acreage reduction in the
spring. No such results are expected
to follow the warning issued by the
Federal Farm Board a few days ago
because the influx of cotton fanners
into cooperative associations during
[ the past three months has shown that
they are taking the Farm Board ser
ously.
The cotton.growing industry is in
a very serious condition and the plant
ing of an excessive acreage through
out the South this spring would be
nothing short of a calamity. The
farmer who ignores the situation and
invests his money or his credit in a
j big cotton crop this year will do so
I at the risk of not being able to pay '
the expenses of growing his crop out
of his feottoh next fall
1 The Farm Board in its note of
warning points out that last year's
acreage of cotton was too large. It
was the largest acreage planted any
| year except 1926 and 1926. Nothing
but a crop failure in Texas last year
prevented a yield of sixteen million
bales?more American cotton than the
world would take at anything like >
fair price.
The Farm Board came to the rescue
last fall and steadied the market by
advancing 16 dents per pound on cot
ton when the price otherwise prob
ably would have dropped much lower.
^1980 is^niisanwre "Hog and Horn:
iny" and as much of our food supplies
as possible.
MANY CHINESB DIE.
New York,?Five successive and
almost complete crop failures, follow
ed by tl|e coldest winter in decades,
have caused the death of two millions
of people in Shensi,. according to Gro
ver Clark, officer of China. Internat
ional Famine Belief Commission.
FIVE ARRETED
IN DOG SCHEME
Federal Agents Get After
Grafters for Using Mails
To Defraud
A shevi lie, F>b. 1?,.?E. Ray Moody,
formerly of Heber Springs, Ark., was
arrested by federal agents today at
the filling station he operated near
Hendersonville, charged with being a
member of a "hound dog" mail fraud
ring which, it is alleged, cleaned up
considerably more than $100,600 dur
ing the two years that it operated on
a nation-wide scale.' v.'
Moody is the fifth man arrested in
connection with an investigation be
gan at the request of J. F. Russell,
a wealthy Lon Angeles sportsman.
Once under way, the investigation re
vealed frauds in many states, accord-'
ing to officers. The other four men
held are Paul DaVis filling station;
operator of Charleston, Mo., Robert
Finley, an employe of Davis, Mack
Lyons, of Bee Branch, Mo.,, and J. R.
Pierce, an Arkansan, and said to be
held principally as a witness against
the others. Lyons was arrested Sat
urday in Arizona, while Davis, Finley
and Pierce were arrested about a
week ago.
? All face charges of "conspiracy to
commit a crime in violation of the
[ United States postal laws by using
the mails to defraud." Moody is also
to face a charge of violating the
Mann white slave act since he wa?
alleged to have been living two miles
f east of Hendersonville with a 29-year
old Heber Springs girl, having aban
j doned Hs wife and seven children in
V?i?iwVv njwirriinor officers.
h Moody is to be takento Little Fock,
* "eCoraril, of
Fayetbevilk, Ark, a post office in- -
??-?, ?!- ?>? ? 'i'? ;
ward his present exalted post. As the
Chief Justice of the United States he ?
> above, and removed from .party
strife and there -rill be few, if aoy,
who will not. ooncede that in naming
iostrious Americans who were his pre
decessors, President Hoover has made
m**t posrilda ehefefc ^
fe-;
~~
_ JRaleigh, Feb. 0.-~Mo? midnight
assaults by masked banda^of young
meU at State College wtene unearthed
by college authorities yesterday as
they continued their investigation of
the attack on Charles Kiellenberger,
Jr., Greensboro aophmore, who is now
at home and, according to his mother,
being treated by a physician as the
result of a brutal beating with a blade
jade early Saturday morning.
R. C. Pleasants, freshman from An
gfer, L. A. Massengill, freshman of
Four Oaks, told Dean- E, L. Cfoyd
I il?1 iU V
jcsbviuajr UIM uwtr ruoffl WIS WttW*
eb by a masked band about two o'
clock Saturday morning' and that each
of them had their hair cut with dip
pen. This incident was removed from
the category of usual hazing, in it
self illegal, by the fact that one of the
intruders blacked Massen gill's eye as
he left the room. Both wen braised
in the struggle. ?' '
F. A. Shore, a sophmore who lived
in the same building with Kellenberg
er, told the dean that a masked bind
knocked on his door eaxiy Sunday
morning, one of the members saying
he had a telegram. When he opddcd
the door, said Shone, he slammed it
at once and grabbed something which
he believes the intruders thought was
a gun. He then opened it again tad
the masked men ran.
The fact that two of the four nam
visited by the masked bands were
sophomores gave rise to
that a group of Freshmen, their feel
ings aroused by the sophomore's bp
position to abolishing the freshman
cap, were doing a.little hazing on their
own part Dean. Cloyd, however, does
not hold this view.
Kellenberger, in addition to his
bruises and alleged black jack injuries .
had his hair cut as did the two Fresh
men. snore peneves mat tne group
visiting him came; with the intently
of eotting his hair. He is a eopott
baiter
his' hair at' night. He put a challenge
on tift bulletin board offering his hair
to anyone who could come and get It
R. A. Harkey, who started Kellen
berger's car for him about four o'clock
Saturday morning and saw the young
man start his 80 mile drive to Greens
boro, told Dr. E. C. Brooks, president
of the college, and Dean Goyd that
he did pot think Kellenbergter was
seriously injured as was indicated in
the boy's mother's report to Den
Cloyd and in Greensboro rteWs dis
patcher He added that Kellenberger
told him he was going home because
his hair had been cut
Harkey and the janitor that cleans
Kellenberger's room, both of whom
visited it early in the morning, said
that there was no signs of unusual
disorder. Other students in the dor
mitory, however *aSd the? had hsofd
some disturbance <41
"We intend to get at the bottom of
this thing,, was the statement mads
by both Dr. Brooks and Dean Qoyd.
The State College Student CoUftdl,
head of the student govemnamr
which outlawed hazing and made it
an offense for which a student is ex
pelled, is also making an investiga
tion.
EYES BIGGER THAN BELLY
How did you like the party, Jackie?
Awful! You said I could eat as
much as I liked and I couldnt do it
Uncle Si Tinklepaugh says heV K
heard about these Chinese eggs that
they fcrt? for ten years before dating
'em. Be had some in a lunch wagon
over at Bingville the other day,' but
they'd been dug up about nine yean
too soon.
Merchants here want you tc pat
ronize them. Perhaps if they would
advertise you would know they had
something to sell.
_____________
You can pay your subscription any
day this month, we are not scrupu
lous about taking it in advance.
"? '? '?'?''[rZ ?
A man's face may not be his for
tune but some acquire a fortune on
their faces.A ;?>'
Any school boy can tell you what
? a t. . ? m ' < M . a. i. .
a teiepnone is zor unui yon cry to
get central to hurry.
i ?'< i ? ' i il' > .i? :
spector who trailed him to this section
and along with Deputy Marshal Jim
Pwfeiti made the arUest He wairud v
preliminary hearing befotfv fthuted
States Commissioner Vozrno L. Gudg
a? and w?*.held -Writer $8,000 bond
The arrest are alleged
**&, prtacipaHy trained coon^^nds. &
?- - -? ? * -m.?iV. . .... j - ?i
not tnST