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THE SAVANNAH TRIBUNE
Established 1875
By J. H. DEVEAUX
SOL. C. JOHNSON_______Editor and Publisher
J. H. BUTLER „ _________________-Asso. Editor
MISS WILLA M. AYERS, Asst, to Pub. & Manager
Published Every Thursday
1009 WEST BROAD STREET
Telephone, Dial 5338
Subscription Rate in Advance
One Year ______________ $2.50
Six Months ......... $1.50
Remittance must be made by Express, Post
Office Money Order or Registered Mail.
Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post
Office at Savannah, Ga., under the Act of
March 3, 1879
"The South is the largest potential mar¬
ket for American industry,” said Dr. For¬
man, (and the Nation) "Will face an eco¬
nomic collapse greater than the 80’s unless
the South’s consumer power is increased.”
“If you line up the thirteen Southern
states according to the percentage of work¬
ers engaged in farming, Mississippi will
be at one end with 59 percent of its work¬
ers on the farms, and Florida at the other
end with 20 P. ( . If you then line them up
according to per capita average income, all
thirteen states will be in exactly the same
order—Mississippi having the lowest in¬
come, $205 per person, and Florida with
the least farmers, the highest, $472 . . . .
The poor farms and poor farmers of the
South not only pull down the southern per
capita income—they cut directly into the
pocketbooks of Southern city dwellers and
threaten their democratic rights . . . And
the poverty, ignorance and lack of organ¬
ization in rural areas provide fertile soil
for Bilbos and Talmadges ”
—The Southern Patriot
"Ignorant of farm life, city folks usual-
rural families almost always eat well, live
in roomy homes and enjoy better health
than their urban neighbors- None of this
is true Malnutrition is the rule on the
. . .
Southern countryside, especially among
the tenant farmers whom the landlord
compels to plant every available inch in
cash crops. A thorough government
study of this problem (poor diet), con¬
cluded : ‘Good died is dependent largely on
income available for purchasing food . .
Farm operators as a whole in the South¬
east have poorer diets than those in the
North and West • . . About one-half the Ne¬
gro farm families of the Southeast have
poor diets.’” The Soul hern Patriot
The program of large landholders of the
South “calls for wiping out the small fam¬
ily-sized farm owner, reducing him to the
piteous standard of the agricultural share-
cropper of day laborer . . .. Thb large farm¬
ers “want:
(1> Cheap, migratory labor, available
only when needed once or twice a year,
poorly paid and unorganized.
(2) Large tenant classes, kept in sub¬
jugation by feudal financial practices and.
peonage systems. Here, among the large
number of Negro and white farm work¬
ers, is an extension of the old slave econ¬
omy.”
SOUTHERN ALARM
Judging from the attitude of certain
southern newspapers toward the Demo¬
cratic party, under the leadership of
Roosevelt and Truman, a large segment of
the South would have welcomed a Repub¬
lican victory in November. Indeed, it
seemed that they were almost ready to be¬
come Republican. The votas had hardly
been counted before these same newspa¬
pers were expressing deep concern lest the
Republicans would not only clean house,
hut that they would also- atone for some
of their derelictions in the 79th Congress.
It is well known that if it had not been
for the coalitions of Republican and Dem¬
ocratic congressmen, especially reactionary
Democrats from the South, anti-poll tax
and anti-lvnch hills, and a permanent FEPC
bill would have passed both houses * of
Congress- These bills are designed to
implement the spirit of The Declaration of
Independence and The Constitution of The
United States, which the South orates so
much about. These hills which will ben¬
efit both the South and the Negro are
considered efforts to ram something down
the throats of the South. They cry cut
loud to be let alone to work out the prob¬
lems these bills seek to solve. Every
Southerner knows that most of the South
intends to do nothing about them. Geor¬
gia, South Carolina. Mississippi and Ala¬
bama have shown what they mean to do
about the Negro’s voting, for instance.
Louisiana, Tennessee, Mississippi and
Georgia have lived up to the South’s tra¬
dition for handling lynchers. Juries in
the South seldom indict white men for vi¬
olence agam.-'t Negroes, and when and B
they do, they seldom punish them ade¬
quately. Acts of violence in these states
aVC —ix_e. Nv -xx-lOsV^- La x.
been made in the Walton murders.
officer who put out the eyes of a
has been acquitted. If these states can
not or will not punish such offenders, they
should be willing to have such laws
as will make it possible for the federal
government to assist them in preventing
crimes against citizens of which they claim
to be so ashamed. The Republicans should
do something to make the lives of all cit¬
izens secure even in the South- Negroes
do not ask for special favors- They sim¬
ply ask for all of the rights and privileges
enjoyed by all American citizens.
“COONS”
“Coon” is an ugly word to Negroes when
it is applied to them ordinarily, but when
it is used by a fence-riding politician,
shall we say, to describe a group of people
who he says have had much to do with
his success, it is, to say the least, an un¬
warranted and ungrateful dig and insult.
In the first place, the statement that he
had all of the "d . . . ,n coons” under hi -
control is untrue, and the party to which
he makes such a boast will do well to part
company with this gentleman for he and
his henchmen are a liability to it. If this
man is not repudiated by the party to
which he seems to be an adviser on mat -
tors relating to Negroes, it might as well
give up the idea of receiving even a little
support from self-respecting Negroes. As
a matter of fact, the alliance of this gentle¬
man and company with the party tags it
as the party to be let alone. This incident
leads us to believe our conclusion is safe
and sound, that issues and not men will
be the decisive factor in determining the
vote of Negroes in the coming city primary.
Preserving the right of Negroes to vote is
the chief issue- Right thinking, honest
self-respecting Negroes are solidly of this
opinion, and will not be influenced by new
opportunists and previously discredited
mercenaries-
The extent to which some Negroes will
go to gain a little prominence (?) dazes
• ‘.ill *i,„
us. Mr. Duke , has , noj lacked do cony in -
illations of citizens who love and support
the meting out of justice. He knows he
is performing his duty in prosecuting hate-
preaching groups. Tie is not in danger of
being assessed a fine he can not pay. We
doubt very much that he will he sentenced
to serve a term in jail. We doubt that he
could serve by proxy, and we are really in
doubt as to what some Negro preachers
will not do next.
The Chatham-Savannah Tuberculosis
Association has launched its Christmas
Seal Sale campaign and it deserves tho
support of the entire community. Last
year the citizens of Chatham County pur¬
chased $28,000 worth of seals. The asso¬
ciation needs $40,000 this year from the
sale of seals. We are sure every pepson
who is at all familiar with the work
association has accomplished in the past
will not hesitate to make liberal purchas-
es so that it will he able to make the ne-
cessary expansion of its program- It takes
this amount at least to add to the services
it already offers- It wants to inspire the
public with its faith that tuberculosis can
be prevented, controlled and cured, and
eventual^ eradicated. Buy Christman
Seals Now.
IT’S'FUNNY—BUT IS IT FACT?
By Ruth Taylor
You know what 1 mean—the jokes that
are clever, insidious propaganda. Funny
—hut not fact. You have laughed at
them—and been half ashamed of yourself
for doing it. And sometimes before you
realized it, you ve repeated them.
The yokes 1 mean are started by
mongeis in vanous paits oi the eounti>-.
Carefully, thought out and planned >v.l
an eye to teal numoi, tney ate picked up
and unthinkingly repeated—and then they
spread like the ripple caused by a stone
thrown in the water.
“But who takes a joke seriously?” you
say. Unfortunately it is the slur in the
story that stays when the laugh has gone.
It drops like a speck of poison into the
mind ready to germinate under the heat
of stress or strain.
There are the floods of national jokes
which try to establish a racial difference
between people of similar bloods by em¬
phasizing so-called characteristics. These
are the jokes planned to create disunity.
Stop and think—How many jokes do you
hear told on a hundred percent Aryan?
No, it’s either the Celt, the Gael, the Latin,
the Leventine, or the Slav who is the
laughing stink. How long has it been
since the ’joke” was on one of German
stock ? ' ’
i hen there is . the religious joke based
on something that will slight or throw
on some taith o? on the believers in some
creed. How long has it been since you
heard a joke which had an atheist as the
butt ?
It makes you think, doesn’t it? Is it so
funny when you realize the fact?
There is just one thing that can be*done.
one way in which to stop joke propagan¬
da. And that is to follow a simple rule—
don’t repeat it! Let the story die with
you. Don’t he the mug the hate-monger
takes you for! Shut him up by shutting
up!
And—remember whenever you hear a
joke—just say to yourself: "it’s funny—
but is it luci.
SAVANNAH TRIBUNE
“THE CHAMP” HELPS FIGHT
HUNGER IN EUROPE
TOE 1° I OUIS purchases ! CARE food packages from Lincoln Clark (! .
j APV S h n rtcri 50 Broad Street New York. Lou s rent the
, a packages destitute put upl>y the non-profit, govermrent-ap contribution ro the - .
to children in Europe, as his to
i*' J'.'r'n-.r hunger. “Hunger is an opponent that doesn’t fight fair,
Cuih b hits eld*people myself, and but helpless if lot children,’’ of other people Louis help, said. too, I $ I :• tn.i.k h
1 win all by a
we can win.’*
POLL TO SELECT
BOWL TEAMS
GREENSBORO, N- C— On
New Year’s day two of the na¬
tion’s leading Negro football
teams will clash in Greens¬
boro’s Memorial Stadium in
the second annual Cotton-To-
baeco bowl football class.c.
A poll is now being conduct-
ed among sports fans to select
the popular and favorite teams.
Cotton-Tobacco Bowl
report that to date
thousands of votes have
J reCe j ved in the poll.
t he latest tabulations include
Shaw university, A and T. col
j ege l ncoln University, Flor¬
ida A and M-, Allen University
Lane College, Fisk University
Tuskegee. Vagin a State
lege, Morehouse College,
Va. State College,
State College, Soil h Carolina
1 State College, Hampton Insti-
tute, Howard University,
diet and Johnson C-
University.
Coiton-Tobacco Bowl head-
quarters in Greensboro is a
busy place these days count-
ing ballots of pigskin enthusi-
I asts
.
I -_____
\JQ DRIVE YELLOW
pinq CABS IN i»i IMLWAUliLL iw/i w AJIKFF
MILWAUKEE. Wis. (ANP)
Negro men and women will
soon be driving Yellow Cabs in
this city. Yellow Cabs here
are operated by the Boynton
Cab company of Milwaukee-
Denying an .article appearing
in a recent Sunday issue of
the Milwaukee Journal that
Red Top cabs were intended
for the purpose of segregation,
a Yellow Cab official said:
"It has never been a policy
nor practice of the
to discriminate against race or
Wear e J going; to employ
J a wome „ „s cat.
^ yers A11 cabs wil j be the
cnlor ;md N e-
groes be protected by the
union on the basis of seniority,
which means that the best
conditioned cabs will be given
to the old drivers.
“The union has been inform¬
ed of the Negro drivers,” the
official said-
The absence of Red Top cabs
in the sixth ward is hailed as
a victory for Negroes.
DODGERS TO GIVE
ROBINSON A CHANCE
HOLLYWOOD t ANP i A try¬
out for a major league spot in
ihe Brooklyn Dodgers infield
| will be given Jackie
leabing International league
hitter and Negro star of the
i Montreal Royals, according to j
an announcement Saturday by!
Leo Durocher, Dodger
If Robinson succeeds in
ning the infield position,
will be ihe first Negro to play
in top-noteli organized base¬
ball.
Describing Robinson as “a
great bunter, a pivot man on
the nation’s best third base
double plays and
one of the men,”
said, “I've got Robinson and
I've got two or three other
good infield possibilities Ii
3 ip as the others, he’ll
HAILS CIO WORK [
FOR RACIAL 1
EQUALITY ;
NEW YORK. Nov. 21. To the I
CIO convention, meeting this
week in Atlantic City, N- J-,
Walter White, executive secre-
tary Qf the NAACP, sent the
following telegram, addressed
phii p Murray CIO presi-
dent .
-National Association for
Advancement 0l Colored
ple ex t ends heartiest greetings; i
0 the convention of the Con-
grbss of T„a,.ei..!oi Industrial Industrial Orgamza Oi-puni?!!-
tions. Negro Americans and
others active in the struggle
to secure equality of economic
opportunity an,d full citizen¬
ship rights for minority groups
hail . the endeavors of ... the GIO „ T „
in this area . Realizing that
gQ a j s labor are
J cal wjth progress and security
j£ 0r a R we have recently added
j 0 our s taff a labor secretary,
1 Mr clarence M- Mitchell, Jr-,
!n hope that even
cooperation will be developed
in t Re future in our common 1
f - ght aga inst bigotry, exploita-
cion and poverty-’
NAACP PICKETS
THEATRE
LOUISVILLE, Ky-, Nov. 15.—
To protest the policy of segre¬
gation in a municipal auditori-
um, the Louisville branch of
the NAACP threw a picket line
i around the Municipal Auditori-
| um tonight where Billy Rose’s
i “Carmen Jones” is being pre-
- seated-
1 According to Alfred M- Car-
j roll, president of policy the branch,
while the general of the
t auditorium years ago had been
' to segregate at all attractions,
j Wyatt, under former policy Mayor had Wilson been
a new’
I put into effect of no segrega-
I 1 tion when Negro attractions
appeared,
To ma k e c ] ea r to the citizens
of Louisville that there were
people and organizations which!
resented the present mayor’s
policy of segregation. thc
NAACP will cominue to de,»on-|
strate throughout the run of
this popular all-Negro musical
—-
All World War II veterans
may now carry up to $10,000 j
hv National Service Life I»ur-
ance regardless of the amount
they carried while in uniform 1
_ , ,
Any veteran with active ser¬
vice between October 8. 1940
and September 2, 1945. is eli¬
gible for National Service Life
Insurance.
SHOPPING DAYS
i 1 TO
MRISTMAS
*** (more used fatT)
, ^ JJS
Iasksamta ,
(JSJlD !
PETITION FOR
INCORPORATION
Pet t on For Incorporation
STATE OF GEORGIA
CHATHAM COUNTY
The petition <l 1,0 1 is
RALPH GIBBONS. MlLLtRD
WIILILER and CLARENCE
( LAIN, all ol said county,
''V that they desire
themselves and their associates
(o be incorporated and maae a
body polite under the laws of
Georg a tor a period of
f.ve <35) years with the
lege of renewal at the expira-
ium of lhat time, under the
name of
“SPORTSMEN'S PARK,
INCORPORATED’ . .. ... _____ ^
2. THAT the object of -aid
propose dcorporation is peeu-
n ary gain and profit to its
promoters and stockholders, as
well as to provide legit.mate,
wholesome recreation ior the
public-
i. ' Tii l n.t -l 'he .tie punt.pal nrinc s nal fgtfice o.ute
ol sa d corporation will be in
Savannan Chatham
Georg .a, but pet.lioners alo
desue tl"> light to establish of-
Dees in other cities and states
conformable with the
nances and law- obtaining in
such ’ places.
4. Petit oners desire toes-
tablish and maintain
ment parks, building, and bus-
inesses, concessions, cafes, res-
(aurant;, and soda
To promote shows, carnivals.
concerts and dramas of all
le nds; To own, operate and
maintain all forms of ithletic
events, including baseball, bas-
ketball, tennis and other teams;
To promote boxing, wrestling
and shooting contests; To
operate and maintain
leagues and like
and to provide transportation
for the same; To promote ” r pic-
n -cs, excursions and races
all kinds; AND generally to
any and a11 acts and th * n S s in -
enterprises and related auxiti-
ary enterprises - • • all wholly
legitimate, legitimate, wholesome and
ith , n {lu , laws of Georgia-
5 Petitioners desire to op¬
erate within a capital stock
and to issue certificates of
stock up to Twenty Thousand
($20,000) Doha's, divided into
Two Hundred (200) shares
Hundred <sioo> Dollars
each , par value- Said stock to
common stock and trans-
ferablc only upon hooks of the
corporation. And desire that
sa d stock may be sold
cash, lands and any
forms of valuable property
vv h , l, may be suited to
purposes of promoting said ««*■-
poration. Petitioners further
desire to increase said stock to
Fifty Thousand ($50,000) Dol¬
lars upon application to this
court.
6- Petitioners desire the
right to own, buy, sell or en¬
cumber real and personal and
mixed property, and to deal in
stocks, bonds, mortgages and
other forms of debts, and in
securities consistent with the
purposes of the corporation
and cons stent with law.
7- Petitioners desire the
right to have and use a com¬
mon seal, to sue and he sued,
to plead and be impleaded, and
to make and adopt a consti¬
tution and by-laws determin¬
ing the duties and rights of
stockholders, and fixing the
qualiiica'.ions of its members.
8- Petitioners show that the
name of said proposed corpor¬
ation is not the name of any
other corporation registered
with the Secretary of State of
the State of Georgia-
W HER E FORE, Petitioners
pray for all the rights and
privileges allowable and to be
^ . SX aJ
.»r°pom t
the laws of the State of Gem-
a; and pray that they and
‘- r associates and successors
prlvlleEa , and
corporations; and in the
name and for the term set out
in their petition.
Petitioners’ names and ad-
SSwIlj.S. "S; Si
i ard wheeler, 630 West 35th
and Clarence McClain,
RFD, Telfa'r road, all in Chat¬
ham County, Georgia
J. G. LEMON.
Petitioners' Attorney.
STATE OF GEORGIA
CHATHAM COUNTY
In tile Superior Court of Chat¬
ham County, Georgia.
December Term. 1946.
RE: Petition for Incorporation
of SPORTSMEN’S PARK.
INCORPORATED:
COURT’S ORDER
The petition in the above -
matter having been
to th\* court, and
appearing to the Court that
petit on is legitimately
within the purview and
tion of the laws of Georgia: and
that all requirements of
law have been fully complied
and it having been shown
that the name of the proposed
corporation is not the name
ain other corporation
ed with the Secretary of
of the State of Georgia.—
IT IS THEREFORE.
SIDERED, ADJUDGED AND
ORDERED that said petition be
and the same is hereby grant-
ed. and thal petitioners, their
associates and successors be
and they are hereby incorpor-
THURSDAY, NOV- 28, 1948
7uinniiir““““**'“ ** h«m i m
Lodges And Chapters Notes
MASONIC NOTES
1 Account of the Scottish R te
Mystlc Shrllle ceremonial
with cut of novices and nobles
will be published next week-
__
Daughters of Isis, led
by Illustr ous Dt Kate Wright,
served qifite a repast to one
no bles last Sunday-
____
Imper al . „_____- D pi -y , • Irl) . n Wrs
ley Dobbs as usual gave his :
hearers a cheering address at |
|---—--- under the law s of the
j 'State ated of Georgia, with i he
_____ for the
name, for the purposes,
term with right of renewal,
and with the powers and pi v-
'leges prayed for and eniimc
ated in the petit on-
This incorporation, nowiv ,
confers no right to sell ir.t«\i-
eating i quors, no right ■<> op
gambling S games l<- or
nor othcr ,owe. or
violate lhe laws of this
For eolation of these
provisjons the charter will be
fo feited .
Don e in Open Court this
lglh day of November 1949
! o. s. ATKINSON
cm Judge,- -ludic.al Superior Circuit Court.East-| ol otorgia,
F-led in Office this Nov 18 ,
1946. .
JOHN R- FAWCETT
Hep- C’lk- Superior Court ^ ^ of f
Chatham County, Georgia.
P-TA ASKS FOR
BLIILR DrTT r D SLHUUL c/’llfiGl
FACILITIES
The Cha ham County Par-,
ent-Teacher Association, in pe-
titioning .... the .. board , , of educa¬
tion for better school facilities
for Negro children last week, im-J is |
continuing its ques; for
proved schooling in this
! ty. Last week's petition was
as follows: j
\To the president, superin-
tendent and members of the,
Board of Educa’ion. We, the
members of the Chatham coun- j
ty Council of Parents-Teachers 1
wish to renew our pet t on of
last mon h and the following'
thereto- j
“1. That the drinking water
at the Pooler school be |
ed to;
“2. The great need of a new
school at Burroughs; foun-|
--3 Additional drinking
tains at East Broad street-
school:
“4. The further peti.ion for
a night school at Cuyler. Since
the building is, it will afford
an opportunity for adult edu¬
cation.
“Note:
“The Pooler drinking water J
pump is situated between two
(pit) toilets-
“The children have to drink
water from pump and the wa¬
ter is used for cooking, also:
“May we further emphasize
the deplorable conditions exist-
ing at Beach-Cuyler.
“We beg your sympathy and i
action as soon as possible.” j
The petition was signed by
Mrs- Ruth Haven, S. F- Glover,
Galvestus Orr, Earnestine Wil¬
liams and J- A. Brinson, presi¬
dent-
BURLEIGH RETIRES AS
CHURCH SOLOIST
NEW YORK (ANP)—After 52 *
years as soloist in one church
choir, Harry Thacker Burleigh,
one of the outstanding bari¬
tones of the age, retired last
week on a “substantial, pen¬
sion” according to church of¬
ficials who reluctantly accept¬
ed ihe 79-year-old singer’s res¬
ignation.
Mr. Burleigh, as a young man
of 27, was chosen from among
60 applicants for the soloist’s
job at St- George’s Episcopal
church—the church of the
Morgans and other wealthy
New Yorkers. Each year for the
past half century, Burleigh’s
singing of the Easter hymn,
“The Palms,” was a feature'of
the festive program. This is a
recorcl ,
Later, Mr- Burleigh was also
soloist in the Jewish Temple
. E1 where h e served for!
0 1 ,
*
^' J ’ c e 1 d Vllth .... llltI . oduc- .
. the
ln § service at St. Georges
where an entire program is de-
voted to Negro spirituals.
Mr Burleigh & denied that his
. health ,,, caused . his . . retirement.; ..
singing to prove the po'nti ^
a few bars of a rich Jewish
lament he J s b
Emanu-EL w \
Declaring that he wants to<
devote his time to writing and 1
composition the famed singer nnt«’! i
, t also a eomooser composer nf of note.
s
pl ans nothing definite for thej
immediate future- Loin in ‘
pra.
the banquet of Mystic Shrine
Past Potentate Crawford did
an effective part during the
Noble Denny and the m>b\
assisting h in conducted 11'
Shrine ceremony as never be
fore done here.
Illustrious 'Potentate DoniUrL
Thomas rushed back in t.nw
to make . aD appearance nearanpf> 1 lon„ >n ■ hff be Il¬ -
fore the closing
Pa, he was educated through
mother’s aid-
j n par i y ]'fe, Mr. Burle'gh
was a c i ose friend of Antonin
£ )vora [ j - j writer of the “New
World Symphony,” and the
Burleigh influence is, felt in
the stirring numbers wn ch
have been sung and played
around the world for years-
L1NCOLN-FAMC
GRANGE BOWL TEAMS
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Ta.
1 ANP 1 Lincoln university has
accepted an "and invitation College’-’for from
Florida A M.
Negroes to play m the Orange n
class.c on December 7 in
Fla., it was announced
here last Friday. Participation
this gridiron classic will be.
the first post-grid season con¬
test in which the Pennsylva¬
nia Lions haVe engaged the
Florida Rattlers in past years-
Demonstration Against
South African Annexation
New York, Nov. 21.—In pro¬
test against the Smuts govern-
ment and its plans to annex
Southwest Africa, as announc-
at the United Nations Gen-
ra l Assembly, a picket line was
thrown around the building oc-
-upied by the South African
consulate today, under the
sponsorship of ihe Council of
Affairs, one of the pie¬
kets carried a sign with the
NAACP s initials reading;
’Negroes in America fight
for their rights, Negroes in
South Africa have no rights.”
i TDAVEI A KHV GUIDE C.LLI\d EDC FOR X
A pocket-sized guide book is
eing P re P ared for release ear
ly in 1947 by the Travelguide
company, wh’ch will contain
arranged listings
selected business enterprises
the forty-eight
that are essential to
those of our group who travel.
Hotels, rooming houses, beau-
D 1 parlors and summer resoits
only a few of the items to
covered in each locality- All
lis:ed must first
been recommended by a
of the Travelguide. ad¬
staff (now numbering
500 1 who are reputable
ersons residing in various
ar t s °f the country.
company, headed by
Butler, is being assisted
W C. Handy, Andy K'rk,
Jackman, Mrs- A. P
the Urban League
many others-
Published annually, the first
compilation of its
should prove to be of tre¬
assistance to botii
and interracial business,
offices are located at 1650
New York.
The Bible is a book all men
swear by, but woe be unto
who swear at it.
Files ot The Savannah
Tribune
FIFTY YEARS AGO
NOVEMBER an. I89G i
Officers of the First Battal
Infantry, Georgia Volun¬
met at The Tribune of¬
Monday, last, and decided
attend the inauguration of
dent McKinley, March 4- .
-
-
.Isiah Morant, leader of the
irs j Eeg i ment g anc i ' died Fi^ ^
‘ Qf , v eK .' 5
, Light , infantry. Capt.
N- Walten. paid military
__
• — preached ,
e „ ’’ , '*' TT ,llsou ., Callen ,, ,
F.rst pygregational church
Sunday.
_
„ J T . member . Jt ..
T Law
’ ’
, legislature from Liberty
- was in the city this
k
WH