Article clipped from Mobile Daily Item

THT? MOBILE DAILY ITEM, THURSDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 8, 1910.,NEWSIHONE 2069Misses Mabel McNamara Alies Stan-marat£T2iton Annie McNamara. Allda Nelson,Maa Wolfe, Minna Lindsey, and Messrs. Jim Carlisle; Waller Goodman. Roy Albright, Paul McAleer, Oscar Nelson, Kenneth; WlgUr, HenryGoodman and Dr. Louts Wilson.Tfce ctatperones were Mrs. W. H. Bflnpan, Mrs. A. L. Mayfield and Mrs. W. J. Newbold.\ Personal Notes.Mrs. J. Wilkins, of SommervtUe, and her daughter, Jean, will leave today for a visit to Fletcher, N. C.Miss Leona Childress left yesterdayfor Pensacola (o splt;nd two weeks withMintf'MB. A' „•«xl?i **.Mr. William Alvlere left Monday night for Washington, where he will visit his friend, Mr. John G. Herndon. Mr. Riviere will resume his studies atthe Washington and Lee University, which opens September 15.Mr. Robert. 8. Bacon, of Chicago, hut formerly of Mobile, Is spending a few days In the city and being warmlywelcomed by his many friends.Mr. Joseph F. Durham has gone on a business trip to Pensacola, where howill spend several days at the San Carlos Hotel. . •:Mrs. Laura Holt Pickett has gone toMobile to visit her sister, Mrs. Joseph Hodgson.—Montgomery Advertiser.Miss Freda Bose is the guest for afew rlavs of Miss Sophie Alba, at Coden. ±WzMrs. Johanna McNamara, Mrs. John McNamara and Mrs. Daniel A. McNamara and Miss Myrtle McNamara have returned to the city from Point Clear, Ala., where they spent the entire summer months, during which time they entertained many friends.BUROENSTUNG HEAVILYNEGRESS WHO MADE PRACTICEOF ENTERING HOUSES WITHOUT LEAS1N6 SENT TOHARD LABOR.LUsle Burden, a negro woman, who _ust movee In bouses without asking anybody, got her deserts In the Inferior criminal court today when Judge Chamberlam fined her $10 or ten days’ hard labor and added anadditional thirty days’ hard lanor,John F. Glennon, of the real estate firm of J. K. Glennon A Co., was the complainant against the woman and testified that she moved Into a houseof which his firm was the agent, without permission from any one, and when told to move cursed out the agents. There are a number of negro women who move into vacant houses and occupy them, and often force Is required to eject them.Will Arrest Complainant.Willie Jackson, charged with bastardy, had his rase called In the inferior criminal court again today, andthe court continued it. for the last time and ordered that a warrant be sworn out for I»lla Campbell, the complainant, charging her with frivolous prose-•MMML' 'Thirty Days for Light Tap.Robert McMillan admitted in court that the blow he struck his wife, Leila McMillan, on the head with a wagon spoke, was only a slight tap. and It was on this admission that the court gave him forty days’ hard labor. McMillan got Into trouble with his wife because she refused to let him do ss he pleased, and when he got real an-gery be knocked ber senseless.STILLCLUEMURDERERSELLISON AND BOYKIN HELD ONSUSPICION—BOYKIN'S HEARING NEXT WEEK.The . murder of Robert Liston Turner, at Plateau last Friday night, has not been solved by the sheriff's department, and the two suspcts, H. E. Ellison and German Boykin, areyet prisoners in the county Jail, although no charge of murder has beenfiled against them.Ellison was the first suspect arrested in connection with the case. He was picked up by Deputy Sheriff Floyd Lewis, of Whistler, who is at work on the case, and the man was drunk at the time. Ellison was seen beforedaylight on Saturday morning coming away from the scene of the crime. On Friday night he Is alleged ot have had no funds and on Saturday night, according to Information in the hands of the officers, he spent considerable money. The man had only been a resident of the vicinity for a shorttime. gffilffligfyJTr: lt;\‘JGerman Boykin, the young man who was arrested Monday afternoon, takes his arrest very cooly and denies that he knows anything of the crime. He will be given a hearing next week before Judge Chamberlain in the Inferior court. ■£-Not the Railroad Bandits.There are some of the officers connected with the sheriff’s office who stillbelieve that the men who held up the light engine of the Louisville and Nash, ville Railroad, at Bayou Sara, first committed the crime on Turner and then went, to the bayou, but they are off on this, as Joe Kents, who discovered the crime, insists that the shots were fired about midnight.Tiir iiim/rToFridayout quiat priclt;Onlyurge ycworthyNewAnotheiOurin a hui98cBeautifiishly cu
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Mobile Daily Item

Mobile, Alabama, US

Thu, Sep 08, 1910

Page 8

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Ross H.

NA, NA 20 May 2023

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