N WILL AIDTH RELIEFAIGN WORKer Appoints Com-To Work With fular Group;ing of the local post, Mc-5, of the American Legion ;k the body of ex-service the matter of drouth re-i parish and unanimously the post would render all to the program as out-i by the Lincoln parish committee.who was installed com-i post for the ensuing year 3 a committee composed .askin, chairman; Dr. W. j. B. .staples and Harvey in co-operation with the minted major committee. * Pox Stated that the le-I'eady to aid in work of i the destitute and that it ir purpose at this time to ossible in the way of re-lardship and suffering befall the citizenship oflegislators certain duties ilities which we as a mass e time, opportunity nor perform. We placed cer-i their hands, and in vot-that contract we tacitly Ives to support them in nee of those duties andif those powers.se duties was that of de-tr or not proposed amend-f sufficient desirability to being presented for pop-, a two-thirds majority ,ry. The $68,000,000 road cposed did not receive the the necessary two-thirds respect for constitutional ie matter should have The one-third and more were exercising a power le constitution, the power ve legislative check. Yet eing made to present this their heads to the peo-jpt the issue, to support ;ort, would be on our part of authority, a violation titutional contract, and :t of dishonor. More, the irity who saw fit, in the exercise of their judg-the authority vested in constitution, to obstruct f the bond measure in the will still be under obliga-v their own judgment in nd abide by their oath of rdless of any pretended i us.One of the People.Loses Arm When Truck Shaves His AutomobilePensacola, Fla., Sept. 4.—Orvin Mason, Mobile, will suffer the amputation of one of his arms as the result of a peculiar accident on the highway near Crestview, fifty miles east of Pensacola. He was driving on the highway with an elbow resting on the side of his car. A motor truck pulling a trailer and heavily loaded with cotton was passed and the trailer passed too close to the car, catching Mason's arm and crushing it.CLAY LEAGUERSCLOSE SEASONWITH VICTORYYoung Amateurs Record 29 Wins Out of 42 GamesFARMER VILLECITIZEN DIESAT HIS HOMEFather of Mrs. Harvey G. Fields Passes At Age of Seventy-Two(By C. A. STANLEY)Get Two MillionsSept. 4.—Having made the i flight from Paris to New lonne Coste and Maurice : acclaimed today on twolegram says that the Dailyi a story today to the ef-m remarks of Dieudonne V to friends1 it was deduct-isured himself the sum of th success of his flight jus contracts he has sign-Flushed with the realization that they had licked the strong cross Roads nine in the two preceding contests to a frazzle, the chinks confidently went into the last game of the season and came out victorious by the score of 5 to 3 to make it three in a row over the Cross Roads nine this week.Playing errorless ball behind the masterful pitching of Dick Hinton the Clayites were able to produce a run any time they saw fit and were never hard pressed by the Cross Roads team.Saturday afternoon’s game closed a very successful season for Clay who won twenty-nine out of fourty-two games played.Clay boasts wins over such hard teams as Antioch, Hilly, Cross Roads, Greenville and Simsboro although the Antioch ex-leaguers handed the Clay team six defeats out of eight played. Clay won the last game by the one sided score of twelve to nothing.If Clay had been lead by the master mind of coach Kavanaugh the entire season they probably would not have lost a single game. Coach Kavanaughtook charge of the team, August 1stand began shuffling the team until he found each player’s position. He made such drastic changes as playing Sam Kinman on first base, pitching Dick Hinton and playing Ghent right field.Clay has been handicaped the entire season by the absence of it’s most valuable players, the first of these was Hamburg, and Kinman had to go to Camp Beauregard, and was lost to the team for three weeks.Monard Kinman, star catcher, was lost to the team last of the season on account of Injuries received during the early part of the season.While playing for Hilly against Antioch Berry Hinton tore a ligament in his back, and was out of the line for a half dozen games.Lefty Edwards, star south paw hurl-er, was,lost the last half and Vardanian Kavanaugh, a very consistent hitter, did not get to take part in but a few of the games.The Chinks boast of having the youngest amateur base ball. No pluyer is over twenty and only two over eighteen.The Chinks are looking for a great season next year as they will not lose any of this year’s players.FARMER VILLE, Sept. 4.—George B. Sanders, aged 72, civic and religious worker here, died at 1:30 p. m. today after a lengthy illness.Mr. Sanders was a native of Louisville, Miss. Moving to Monroe in 1897, he became connected with the Southern Grocery company and worked for that firm seven years. In 1904 he moved to Farmerville and established a general mercantile business.The first wife of Mr. Sanders, who before her marriage was Miss Florence Woodard oi Ackerman, Miss,, died in 1900. His second wife, who was Miss Emma Tabor of Mount Lebanon, whom he married in 1908, survives.Seven children of the first marriage survive. They are: Mrs. Claudia S. Myers and Mrs. O. M. Taylor, of Memphis; J. W. Sanders of little Rock, Ark.; Mrs. Harvey G. Fields, Mrs. R. T. Turn-age and G. D, Sanders, of Farmerville; Clyde V. Sanders, Monroe.Funeral services will be held here at 4 p. m. today with Reverends R. A. Bozeman and W. F. Roberts officiating.JuRIDesSMrmerlj recen after in 81 open RichiBu John chur( this i ceme there rowirBur ow, 1: Natcl son c Rich* daug: ViviaTinKaiser’s Real Estate Valued At $6,500,000Berlin, Sept. 4.—Wilhelm Hohenzol-leni’s realty in Germany is valued at $6,500,000. In his name is the real estate of 16 branches of the former royal house, including 49 persons.Long’s Supporters Quitting In Droves As Campaign Closesmerithenmenmenldrouat mforbefo]talkhelpArditiortzontal earth movements ponsibie for the shape ofA pipe line to Detroit from Kentucky will carry gas. It will cost about $30,-000,000.Coed smoke, according to the scientist, represents lost dyes, drugs, flavors, perfumes and explosives.NEW ORLEANS. Sept. 4.—The following statement was issued Thursday by J. Martin Hamiey, manager of the Ransdell state campaign:“Huey Long, is striking around like a blind snake. Apparently he is desperate, Word is coming in that people are leaving him In droves. He reviles his own dear highway police, ridicules his own dear highway commission chairman, tells the sugar people that a tariff of 10 cents a pound on sugar won’t do them any good, talks about having people pulled out of their cars on the public highway, goes into hisreputed strongholds to hold meetings a second time, orders an old man out of a hotel and then runs into an elevator, makes claims of strength Urnt are a joke, talks about the debenture on cotton in a way that really demonstrates lie is badly informed, and brags about having enormous sums' of money to bet on the election,“Something is bound to be wrong. People who are ‘sitting pretty* don't do things like he is doing, in fact, I am constrained to again repeat that he is to be likened to the man who whistles as he passes through a graveyard.Apples, Apple Blossoms Seen On The Same TreewhicertymenstanlawfcdiffeoffletimeworswilluntilthellvinflghlsumpriviAttion:nouiWEverto tandrantcamelse.denbutItwan ston Get of a ter-niglPort Jervis, N. Y.. Sept. 4.—Ripe apples and apple blossoms have been noted on the same tree. The cause presumably is a warm spell alter undueciniflness last month.fur i he'a goot ner, A: pro) andden