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i?wiMmmBmmmmm ' ? ,V" " , on Timc Today WEATHER: Fair and continued cool today and Monday; gen tle shifting wind. Tern peratare at 8 a. a&, 63 degrees. FINAL EDITION 3 Cents $5,000 of Radium. Where Does It Lead? Some "Heavy Lives." .Excuse Them. NUMBER 11,287. Published rrr erentn (tncludlnr Sunday Entartd at seeoa,-elBs matter at the postefflce at Wosmnrton. 2X C. WASHINGTON, SUNDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 14, 1919. PRICE THREE CENT& j5Tv r- s By ARTHUR BRISBANE. (Cepyric&t. 1919.) A nurse accidentally threw into the fire a vial containing $5,000 forth of radium, an amount that "would look small on your little finger naiL The ashes of the fire were examined, revealing radio active force, throwing out its billions of particles constantly into space. Experts say they will aave the radium in spite of fire. Locked up in that mysterious substance are secrets more im- iMrtaat to this and the bigger worlds outside than all the talk f peace, war and Peace League. Newtoa formulated the law of gravitation showing, low all solid particles in the universe tend to rush together, "directly as the wars, inversely as the square of the distance." But it was not easy to explain what had prevented all matter from uniting in one great lump, in the long course of eter nity, with gravity the one ruling force. If matter had been acting for ever a it was supposed to act, every atom attracting every other atom, the universe would long ago bare beea one gigantic ball of matter, falling forever through eadiess space, and endless time. Explosions, centrifugal force, eolliaofis between stars, creating gacea with molecules repelling each other, various explanations vara offered- lor continued separa ta? f matter in, spite of gravity's Then came the discovery of ndSsi; and other radio-active sub artaaees. This sew, strange "mat te" vras found to violate known Saws, and nuke a joke of gravita Ootu Here was found matter for ever sending out parts of itself pnjfe terrific violence, at a speed & great as the speed of light that goes around the world seven times Ira. one second. Bropoee the universe to contain :4SB0gh radium throwing off par- aCMB ox lsseu sua jrwu up wxit D9 cauea a cooaiir-ir.iw-tu matnnmg -rawer inr- -fcaswime to S1TPARATE mat- is, wbfl smother mysterious. B- 'teag&ifaed power that -we call graritjr tends forever to bring particles ef aiatter tegether. Tais same" radium has helped twe groups of sdeatists to over cetse one of their difficulties. Gedpgists, examining the earth, sfechtred that paefease theusaade. ef miliena ef years had befarre ejoired for fee slovr processes of earth formation on this planet. ABOtaer group oi , experts in physics- ess&miniag- the ana. wmwii' v. i ay- liat the sun "was admass up aadceastanuy grow- ing.Kaaiier, saia xbb juiok mmst be mistaKen. xne nre oi hib 8n, said the doctor of physics, eeuld not possibly last long enough to permit such slow geologicalde Telopment. aa .geologists required for their theory, Badium ended that difficulty. Imagine within the sun a deposit ef radium of sufficient size, and yea would have more than enough energy to keep the sun going and blazing through all the millions of years necessary for the earth's formative period and the other .;ii;we nt -uoars that will be necessary for it to finish its life iyf ana lor man xo perxecw ion. IFhy does one particle of matter rush to meet another particle of matter, like a stone dropped from your hand rushing downward to tke earth, or a comet flying through space, balanced by grav ity's power hurled originally, the Lord knows how? By what mysterious force does a, particle of radium, so small that your eye would scarcely detect it, constantly throw off billions of atoms with a velocity and force inconceivable to man? Man knows nothing about elec tricity, he knows only its effects. He does not know what life is, or matter, or force. Power of gravi tation and radio-active substances all is mystery to him. He knows nothing about the fundamental forces that surround him and con trol him. No wonder men so ignorant go en murdering, cheating and op pressing each other. It is some eemfort, however, to know what marvels await man's research to make life worth while, and that there are millions of years ahead erf us in which the human race Jcay study them. If you do not object, on a, quiet Sunday, to what some would call "heavy lines," read this extract from. Maeterlinck, who dreams dreams that educate by making ether men think: We are just at the moment whem a thoasand new reasons for baring ceafidence in the des tinies ef ear kind are being born aisaad aa. Fer hundreds and bvBdreds ef centuries we have oc cupied this earth, and the gnstest dangers seem past. They were so threateaiag that we have escaped them only by a chance that cannot eccar more tbaa eace ia a thou sand tines ia the history ef the world. The earth, still too young, Was poising its caatjaeats, its bl ende, and its seas before fixine litest. The central fire, the first vaster ef the planet, was at every Moment bursting from its granite pises, and the globe, hesitating 4 pi wauwmi aneflg greedy pa rwou sara, ignorant ef their (Ceatlaaed on Tigt 2, Celuata 4.) BRITISH RENEW RAID LONDON GEN. PERSHING R OF CITY AFTER CHURCH General "Black Jack Pershing loves Washington. He thinks its one of the greatest cities in the world, outside of Laclede, Mo., where all the "show met people hall from. And General Pershing loves the i Washington people. Not only that, but the famous warrior is trying to show. the city how much he loves it Appreciates' EeccjileB. The general's an appreciative sort of chap. He likes to do thing's' in his own way. He 'hardly ceuld be called a general of all the amies of the United States, If he -were Judged by his actions. Washlngtoa has treated him so wonderfal that he's going- to do bte darndest to pay the people back foirthelr reception. This teraooa, if one. happens to be oa the street, ie icy get a Americaa "expedKlosary forces mo toring, isver since the general ar rived here he has been anxious to take. a. little nL nA nsttiiw .in j all work, the general is spending- the oauumu resting. Although hfc'jl n r!li vM. Washington and knows the town he's anxious to get another glimpse of it, to see the many changes which took place during his trip to Europe. The General started hi dov u o clock when he got up and went to breakfast Accompanied by several of his aids the f-nous commander made a short trip to the St. John's Episcopal Chnrch, where be heard Rev. Edward S. Dunlap, assistant pastor, preach on "Love as the Ban ishment of Sin and the Completeness of Forgiveness." Conlnaed la Suae Chsrek. It was In this some church that "Black Jack" was confirmed some years ago by Bishop Brent, who was the Chaplain General of the A. E. F. But the General did not go Into the church. They took him to the parish hall, for the church Is now being remodeled and the small ad Joining building is being used for Sunday services. The General re turned to the Shoreham Hotel much pleased. Rev. Dunlay did not refer to the , General In his sermon. He told The Times he did not like to speak of the celebrities when they visited his church, for he felt that the General might be embarrassed. At present the general hs nothhwr on hand for tonight. The general's program for toraor- 11Z ll tm y?5 comPlete- With his aids he will attend the Poll's Theater UL r ""joon and see "Nothing But Love." During the morning he probably will spend part of the time (Continued on Page 2, Column 5.) babougIrom grave still lives 17-Year-Old Mother Admits She Buried Newborn Infant. MARLBORO. Mass., Sept 14. Medi cal Examiner Dr. George L. Topcy re ported what he considers the most re markable case he has had come under bis supervision. There rests at the Clinton Hospital a lively girl baby that was dug up from a home-made grave after she had been buried for seven hours. The chief of police was told over the telephone that If he dug In the garden at 80 Clark street he would find something out of the ordinary. He took a patrolman along. The point selected for investigation was In a garden abont fifteen feet square. The earth was loose, but showed no signs of recent disturbance. After digging half an hour at a depth of two feet they came across a sugar bag. and in it what appeared to be the body of a new-born baby. Medical Examiner Tobey, hurriedly called, was amazed when he heard the infant cry out The- child was rushed to the hospital and is in a fair way to livr. Bel In Sullivan, aged seventeen, daughter of Mrs. Jeremiah Sullivan, admitted to the police, they declare, that the child Is hers. She also con fesses to hiving buried It, (he police ay. IKES AUTO TOU 1,500,000 More Killed In World War Than In All Wars For Preceding 121 Years TACOMA, Wash., Sept 14 President Wilson in his speech here presented the following startling figures of the cost of the world war: Deaths on the field of battle, 7,450,200, divided among the principal belligerents as follows: Eussia, 1,700,000; Germany, 1,600,000; France, 1,385,000; Great Britain, 900,000; Austria, 800,000; Italy, 364,800; United States, 50,300. These losses compare with fewer .than 6,000,000 suffered in all the wars in the world fron1793 to 1914V. The total cost of the war in dollars was $186,000,000,000. The entente allies and the United States spent $123,000,000,000 and the central powers 63,000,000,000. INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY? President Hints At Profit-Sharing As Out come of Labor-JGapital Conference Here. Workers Going to Meeting With Definite Stand on Issues. By ARGHTBATJ) , Only the Sphinx conld answer thV riddle o'f the hqnc- $h& nddlehich. is perplexing labor leadersvcapitaliits, economists, industrial -engineers, and the puBlic generally theontcome the Whits Honse- conf erencebetweiiteital' and labor next month. H - What Will It Be? What Is this conference to be, A forum lor real statesmen of industry or a rambling debating society for the exploitation of personal views on the entire gamut of problems affecting the industrial structure, from the de preciation pf the dollar's purchasing value to police unions and their af filiation with the A. F. of L.? Is it to be a cut-and-dried, person ally conducted effort at conciliation, a polite patchlng-up of differences, or a real discussion of vital issues? There is only a single clew to the answer to these questions that preg nant sentence in President Wilson's call for the conference in reference to placing the relations of capital and labor on "an entirely new footing." Another Clew. No, there Is another clew, a sentence from the President's speech at Billings, Montana, last Thursday: "There is no use in talking about political democracy unless we also have an industrial democracy." These two sentences mean every thing to the immediate industrial fu ture of the United States everything or nothing. They mean everything if labor interprets them rightly. They mean little or nothing if they are double-edged, or subject to modifica tion. Labor is going into the conference armed armed with a program, armed with a definite set of principles and a clean-cut economic platform. The American Federation of Labor was the officially and exclusively rec ognised spokesman for all labor, or ganized and unorganized, during the war period, and in the same way the President has delegated to Samuel Gompers and his confreres the nam ing of the fifteen representatives of labor in the coming conference. The significance of this is that only the conservative, responsible, "go-slow" elements in labor ranks are to have voice at the council table; and there fore any effort to discredit the labor program on the ground that it Is radical, impossible, and subservisc of true progress in industry may well be left to the contempt that It de serves. "What Will be Standard? Nobody knows what standard the representatives of the employes, the National .Industrial Conference Board and the United States Chamber of Commerce, will raise at the confer ence. There are certain reports and rumors abroad, however, which are discouraging to those who look for real results from the round table. Unionism made distinct progress during the war. It strengthened its cause everywhere, and there is one thing upon which It is determined to regard its war gains as "won ground." never again to be disputed or called into question. It in the ten dency of the controlling forces in the employers' organizations, according to report, to regard the gains of labor during the war as temporary, as part of a truce to stimulate war produc tion. They want to .forget their com mitments to collective bargaining, to shop committee administration, to the right of all workers to a living wag. which they had to concede while the war was In progress. At the very hour when President Wilson is preaching the doctrine of industrial democracy in Montana, a strike is brewing in the steel indus try because Judge Gary Is not will ing to deal with his workers collec tively There are scores upon scores of employers who are biding their time to continue their war upon FEARFUL OF REVOLUTION MpkIIESON. unionism as ruthlessly as they ever have in the past Woald Have Beea Cases. This In spite of the fact that the labor situation would have "been a hopeless chaos in the war bad not unionism been developed, organised. and marshalled in much, the same way as an army Is organized, to aid in the winning of the conflict: In spite of the fact that unions are an in&xastfon ally recognized instrument far stabi lizing industry, and that the employ ing class, is extremely glad to have the cooperatlpn of Mr. Gompers and His Federation whenever that cooper ation promotes their own interests. However, President Wilson has the success of the conference In his own hands. If he follows the British and the Canadian precedent, he will pre pare a program, an agenda, for ths conference discussion in advance, so that nobody will have an excuse for rambling off Into side-issues, or for being unprepared to meet on common ground. As already stated, labor will come Into the conference with a program. It is too early to discuss the details of that program, for they have not yet been worked out. Some of the leading economists in the labor move ment are waiting to see what is done at the Canadian conference between capital and labor, which opens at Ot tawa tomorrow. It is possible that, the conclave will have a direct and perhaps controlling influence upon the conference at the White House. Ianckf Program. One of the most interesting and comprehensive programs for the ad justment of the industrial crisis in the United States has been worked out by W. .Tett Lauck, former secre tary of the War Labor Board, and one of the best known labor economists in the United States. Mr. Lauck is the foremost advocate of economic courts, wherein labor and capital sub mit their claims to the hard, dry light of publicity and judicial exant- (Continued on Page 4, Col. 3 ) 25,0000ffl0STEEL WORKERS TO QUIT Union Delegates, Spurred on By Strike Order, Work Uhflaggingly. CLEVELAND, Ohio, 8ept 14. Ap proximately 25,000 organized steel workers in Ohio are prepared to quit work on September 22 when the nation-wide stoel strike is scheduled to occur, according to H. W. Raissie, or ganizer here. Reports from Wheeling, W. Va., in dicate that 16,000 steel workers In that district will bo affected, he said. Raissie estimated that about 76 per cent of the 25,000 steel employes in Cleveland were organized. A large proportion of the steel workers In the Toungstown district are unionized, he said. Union delegates, spurred on by the strike order, have been working un fiagglngly In the steel centers, and Ralsale reported ' hosts of workers Joining the organization dally. D'Aiinunzio In Fiume With Armed Force gmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmBrnmemmmm tfABRIELB P'ANJTONZIO. SOME, Sept.J Stride d'Ai BHXzio. tie Itallanvet-avlater. kas arriTefl Ja FIbhio fre3itSeiekl rltb dctackmefiw ef QreaaaJcM asd axv 41& raridei with luu&ise jtbbs aid armored , aetomoblles. HCCAraiasr to !rts leckliRrthis-cI '- - - xnB HorBBJCBE was maae in Tie. latloa ef sraen from the covers- ICRt Kegfeorders tare jet beea reported, GoTenuneat officials Ime beea instructed ; Investigate recent demons traueas at FinmcO&ad deter mine nh& was responsible for them. BOSTON QUIET WITH TROOPS NGCITY BOSTON. Sept. 14. With troops patrolling all principal streets. Bos ton was quiet today. Officials de clared they had the situation well In hand and feared no further outbursts of violence such as occurred during the past few days, as a result of the police strike. The authorities were on the alert and prepared for eventualities. Seven thousand troops with bayonets fixed and guns loaded patrolled the streets, and squads of police were quartered in every police station throughout the city. Machine guns were in readiness for Instant action, and one gun with u. full crew was sent to the Roxbury section, where gangs were reported to be forming. Troops Held Ready.. In the armories troops were ready to speed to any part of the city on a moment's notice. In the city hall soldiers slept on cots last night with the?:- guns at their sides. Private guards in business establishments and guards at public buildings were at their posts today. In the door ways of stores men sat with loaded revolvers, iranic or an Kinas was light. Police Commissioner Curtis Is go ing ahead with plans for the organ ization of a new. police force. The firemen have postponed their sched uled vote on the question of a sympathetic strike. There was lit tle talk of a general sympathetic strike to support the policemen, but It Is still uncertain today what action officials of the Central Labor Union and the Police Union will take as a result of the policemen having lost their Jobs. Loyal police wero pro moted In many cases, and will train new men In their duties. Withhold Sympathy Strike. hTe telephone operators' union plans to take a sympathetic strike vote on Tuesday. Other unions, which have already voted on the question or planned to do so. are withholding action for the present. In reply to a telegram from Sam uel Gompers requesting Governor Coolldge to reinstate the striking po lice after withdrawing the rule for bidding them to affiliate with a labor organization pending outcome of the labor conference at Washington In October, the governor telegraphed Gompers that he would support Com missioner Curtis in his determination sot to take back any of the striker. WD IN ES. WILSON FOR POLITICAL By HUGH BATLLTE. United Press Staff' Correspondent SEATTLE; Wash., Sept 14. Presi dent Wilson is to meet representa tives of the State Federation of Labor this afternoon to listen to their plea? for the release of so called political prisoners. In the morning he planned to at tend services at the Presbyterian church, leaving his hotel at 9:301 and ''later going on an automobile trip in the beautiful foothill region back of the city. Later 03 however, tbeeliminatioii of the moralng churchservice -was Considered fit favor; of aJonger aatq ride and a 8&1L. 3T ta- -- fKhNJUKflTyWi k. MraiBBan -r-- BY MUNCH SEATTLE, pt. 14. President and Mrs. Wilson narrowly escaped dis aster at the review of the pacific fleet here L The power gig of the batueaaip Oregon, la which the President and Mrs. Wilson were riding, was in col lision with another navy launch Just as U was leaving me tanning si&ko &. tte navy pier for the- Oregon from whlch the President and Josephua Daniels, Secretary of the Navy, re viewed the fleet. There was a sharp shock as the two craft came together, and the President's launch tipped sharply as it veered away. SEATTLE HURRAHS PRESIDENT'S TALK ARENA. SEATTLE. Sept 14. Presi dent Wilson, in the center of some of the strongest Senatorial opposition to the peace treaty, received one of the greatest ovations of his trip here yes terday. The climax of his appeal for the treaty and the covenant, to a crowd tat Jammed the arena while large numbers pounded at the entrances shouting "Wo want Wilson!" came when he shouted that the United (Continued on Page 2, Column 2.) MEXICANS LYNCHED BY COLORADO MOB Two Men Who Slew Police Officer Taken From Jadl ' and Hanged. PUEBLO. Col., Sept. 14. At 0:3S o'clock last night a mob of 1!00 citi zens held up the Jailer of the city hall, removed therefrom Santes Ortez and Jose Gonzales. Mexican slayers, took the cowering men to the out skirts of the city, and lynched them to the girders of Fourth street bridge. Ortez and Gonzales early Saturday morning shot and killed Jefferson Evjina. aged sixty, a member of the Pueblo police force, when the police man attempted to arrest them after they had made threats of starting a race riot in the "Pepper Sauce Bot toms," the Mexican and negro quar ter of the city. The Mexicans had been drinking "chec" and told railroad men that they were going to start a race riot here by killing "every negro In Pep per Sauce Bottoms." Evans followed the men and encountered them .emerg ing from an alley. He overheard them bragging to each other of the "dozen negroes" they had killed In Mexico and "that they were going to add a dozen moru to the list here." When Evans attempted to make the arrest Gonzales fired point blank, and as the officer sank to his knees Gonzales fired again. The officer died soon afterward. $10,000 JUST DIVESTED IK SPECIAi hlrt and cellar equipment by 8tar Laoa dry to lnur yoa mtlf-tl'n Alt PR K m WAR CAPTIVES WjT- IRELAND MRS. EHMELIN2 PANKHUBST, Brit ish suffrage leader, who -has' come to this country to wage war on Bolshe vism. MRS. PANKHDRST BRITISH SUFFRAGETTE ARRIVES IN U. S. To Wage War on Bolshevism WHICH SHE BELIEVES IS THREATENING TO BOB WOMEN OF THE BIGHTS THEY HAVE JUST WON AFTER LONG STRIFE - NEW YORK. Sept. 14.-Just at the time when the women of the world have battled their way to conquest of the ballot have even gone to jail and starved for it up rises the men acing head of bolshevlsm and threat ens to rob them of its privileges. Thus did Mrs. Emmellne Pankhurat, British suffrage leader, express her self when she arrived here with the announced and avowed intention of tcoplhi vA- nn tK. imI.1i.wI1.I "Now that we have attained the full rights of democracy, bolshevik doctrines would strip government of all the institutions that make for democracy," said Mrs. Pankhurst, a surprisingly meek, mild mannered woman in appearance. "The women of the world must fight bolshevlsm to a finish." she con tinued. "In the flrst place It strikes directly at their own welfare. Rus sia Is an example of this. Bolshevik agents may deny it, but the nationali zation of women has been practiced there. I have proof of that Bolshe vism also will rob them of their family life, and it will take from them tbelr spiritual Ideals. It Is the gross est form of materialism." Hand-ln-hand with the fight on Bol shevism as a political problem, women can play an influential role in appeas ing industrial unrest and reducing living costs, Mrs. Pankhurst declared. "They must work," she said, "for increased production, discipline In in dustry, and better organization. Now that they havs the vote, they must strive for child welfare. ImnrovM housing conditions, and a higher standard of morality. "In their political participation. women must insist that radical changes in the industrial or social order must not be made without a mandate from the people. That is the danger of Bolshevism. The Bolahevikl cannot survive If they permit the ma Jority to express its will. Thus in England we have two or three million men demanding the nationalization of mines. Do they stop to ask if the majority of the people want such a condition? No; they do not" Mrs. Pankhurst will lecture In the United States and Canada, she said today, when she arrived on the White Star liner Adriatic Her militancy has lost Its charms, said Mrs. Pankhurst. as remlnlscently she recalled the days of the hunger strike. "We don't use those tactics any more," she said. "Wove won our fight. Now we have another one to win, but well achieve It In a different way.H issbssssssssssssssssssssbbWe J9EI' 111 i sE.'J9bM MSTVMBBflZfBBBBr . t ;l':lVBBKMfi t'" iff iHKIasBBr iiM : fcV - ,& nHr?N; 1 M JHOL. j f " T ' B ' 1 HBSbBBBBBBBBBBB, " ! I JmMSJ&sw. Ll L GUiH lO-; WmwiPmm krFT.V - BBBBBBBsSHRlSHirBSBfi'PES&lBBBBr E. BBBBBfBBwtir BbW T-bVBK ' 'SbBBBBBBBBRT ifSBBtflH IBBBBIBMBBBlilaB 'BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSS4SSBP!X5?a2FjSB3BBB BBBBBBBBC&aBSkjT):BBBT tBBBBBSSSBBBBBiBmAfiaMSlSH?isyKi3iBBBBB SBBBBBBBBBBBBr'BKsBBBBBBB&BBB8raP9lBBB' BBBBBBBBBBBskHsBBBBBBBBBWHK LACKOFARMS OF RADICALS SOLE HOre OF OViilENT DUBLIN, St 14-Farther aati Sian Fein raM? were Me ia t& soath of IreJaa tedar T tie mJ3b tar? and poUcer The fceaea ef avf. eralr policez&e vara attacks dajaaged foKowlxg ralda as- cosnacv fliteem ssil soatkeaat f 4 ciir of Cork. ' fcONDONj Sept 11 With garornmept raids eontinaias ia Ira lasd, the 'aitaatioa, waa rapurdad day as xaore pragaaat witt. davagap ee posatMtitfc Uamrat aaar tip since the "Baater rerofo-tkst-r Sins Fein ofjWaHr are ant, while affeaaMMav 'i ' S!n& ?tfa. Laok .piUat. belief that no gserar vprfeter Mi reealt is that the raWa ae ' aWri tesded. to show the Sinn Teitftk sMvra enly segliglble sppUa& of ana ami. asamunitioBr and so artillery- or air planes whatever. Is view ef this the belief is heM that the Staa Feiaers will attempt no determined reotttan at this time. It Is realized, however, there ia danger of extreme radiealsr aetiaff blindly, with the result they will be come martyrs, inflame their ows cess munltles, and bring- oa more deaths. Arthur Griffiths, acting kearf ef th Sinn Fein. Issued a statement )a Dhb lln aanouncing flotation ef a J1.3W.9G loan tn Ireland, fe be raised simul taneously with the lean sought hy Bamonn de Valera In the TZaKad States. "No jail, bullets, or bayonets wiM prevent the Daily Sircana (Irish Par liament) representatives frea per forming the daty with which the Irish people Intrusted them," said Griffiths. Declared Britlah Aid Caaae. "Lard Frenoh's proclamatlaa et lawing the Dall Kireaan, and the raids now being conducted, have aroused the people's enthusiasm aad are helping our cause. Freaoh tried to prevent feun-afthr sOthe from carrying tt tl titmo. tt the government Bo4fc w4th b pression of the JCMal pk ,fr land's repreeeataefrisl J$& " i stand where they mm ty tS ! world will get ItaraaTTawBtt 4a J militarism, and America will see the effest of the government's ceaaalta- tion with its Belfast advisors. "I was never more sanguine of Ire land's success. The governments ac tion is a sign of weakness aad panic." In Glasgow yesterday be trade union congress unanimously passed a resolution stating it "views the situation in Ireland with alana," aad reaflirming its belief that the "only solution Is self-determination." The Congress demanded that British gav- (Contlnued on Page 2, Column 8.) CANDIDATE SHOT ON STREET BY WOMAN Mississippi Man and Wift Both Arrested for At tempted Killing. STARKVTLLB. Mass., Sept. 14. a J. Wallace, a candidate for the Stata senate, was shot and mortally wouad ed yesterday by Mrs. O. X Smith, also of this place. No reaaes for th I tragedy can be ascertained. to milk his cows when he was shot without warning by Mrs. Smith, fear bullets entering the victim's a&d men. Sheriff James, notified Immediately, arrested Mrs. Smith and her husband, who. it is said, also sho Wallace witfc a shotgun sine wounds having beea found in the lattefs body. Mr. and Mrs. Smith are being held on a charge of attempted murder. GOD'S TROTHS DT GOYXXSXKStT. Reoaw year eyefl. body aad wind. Uve your beat oa 19c a day. Kid yewself ot Coruampuon. cmxtth. jweep uwtiw TTy By Uai! C O. XX. .. cpm vi 01 ia raiest). oMBit-Ja. 1 - .. BVrV-ir-. " v ,f BBBB-r - MH& .flw, eivv . JN "" F j &mi " BBSBfi? Vfcaantstoa. o. C- At