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WEEKLY DEMOCRAT.
VOLUME I.
BAINERIDQE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1872
NUMBER 43
The Weekly Democf#,
rcxL&itxfl'
EVERT TIICMDAY HORXnO.
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[Special Dispatch to the Baltimore Sum]
The Geneva ArMtratiOtl—The
British “Case” Received at
Washington—N9 CoHaequeri-
tial Dahittges.
Washington, March 24.—An Of
ficial copy of the British case, as
submitted to the Gevcva tribunal,
has been received by this govern
ment. It makes a volume quite ae
large as that of the American case,
and is divided iuto ten parts, and is
accompanied by four large volumes
of correspondence. From its begin
ning to the end there is no refer
ence whatever to the consequential
damage feature submitted in the
American case. On the contrary,
tSie whole argument of the British
■case is directed to the conclusion
'.that the United States have even no
claim for direct damages “growing
.out of the acts of specified vessels.”
3ts .-position is succintly stated in its
«opening 48 follows: “In ef
fect, therefore, the Geneva tribunal
Is called npor.>to,<3etcnnine whether,
in respect of certain vessels not dcs-
ignatod 'hrmoiue, foe government of
'Great Britain, as a a^nlral power,
Gias made default in tlievperformance
of any international obligation due
from -that power to the United
States. Should this question be ans
wered in the affirmative, -the tribu
nal's then to form a judgment on
the extent of the liability, if any, in
curred by the default, and is either
to award a gross sum in satisfaction
of ailjjufit claims, or to define the
general limits of the liability as to
each vessel for the guidance cf the
assessors under article ten of the
t-ncsty. *Cte claims which may be
presented to the tribunal, and to
which alone it is to have regard iu
making awards, arc claims growing
tout of the acts “of the vessel, if any,
in respect <11 Vt hich a failure of duty
shall be proved.” It will be noticed
that the British case is confined ex
plicitly to the discussion of the claim
for direct damages.
Assuming this position, it goes on
to prove that of the four vessels in
respect of which the United States
have made claims against Great
Britain, two, the Georgia and She
nandoah, were never in any debtee
fitted out, armed or equipped for
war, or especially to warlike use, in
foe limits of Great Britain; and that
according to the evidence the She
nandoah was a merchant vessel and
was soli to the Confederate Govern
ment after she had left a British
port: and further, that no infoi ma
tron whatever of their character was
ever communicated to the British
Government until after they had de
parted from British ports.
The other tws vessels—the Ala
bama and Florida—though suitable
by their construction for war vessels,
were not armed for war when they
left the waters of the United King
dom. They had no armament what
ever, and did not receive any until
they had arrived at places very re
mote from Great Britain. In the
case of one vessel only (the Alabama)
admissible evidence tending to prove
the existence of an unlawful inten
tion was furnished before the depart
ure el that ship. This testimony was
supplied little by little, the last in
stallment being delivered four days
after shewaiksL She put to sea
without a clearance and unregistered
under pretense that she was about
to make a trial trip and return to
her moorings. The case goes on to
argue that Great Britain exercised
‘‘due diligence” within the meaning
of the sixth article of the treaty, and
is not liable for a cent of a damages.
It should be understood that this
case was prepared and submitted
before the important question of in
direct damages had been raised, yet
it shows most fully that Great Brit
ain did not regard any such claim as
existing, and denotes all of its case
to refuting that for direct indemnity.
in the penal sum of $3,000, with two
good securities, to repay all dam
ages that may arise from either ael
ling or giving away such liquttF. 2.
No liqifor shall be sold to minors or
to persons Cither intoxicated or in
the habit tif becoming intoxicated.
3. All plhces where intoxicating li
quors are sold contrary to law shall
J?£“ shot dp and abated as public nuis
ances. 4. Any man who causes the
intoxication of another, with or wi th
out a license, shall pay a reasonable
compensation, to the person who
takes care of the inebriate, to be re
covered in an action of debt. 5. Every
person who is injured, in any way,
by any intoxicated person, shall have
a right of action against any man
who caused the intoxication in whole
or in part, and against the owner
or owners bf the building in which
the sale took place; a married wo
man having the saftie right to bring
suits, and to control the same and
the amount recovered, as& feme-sole.
The giving away of liquors to evade
the provisions of the act shall be
held to be an uhlawfdi sellilig: The
remaiuing provisions relate mainly
to the enforcement of these above
enumerated.
Temperance Law in Illinois.
The following are some of its lead-
big features:
1. No man shall sell liquor with
out & license, and no man shall have
* license who will not give a bond
Facts and Fancied.
The youngest mother chronicled
in history is a Boston girl, aged
eight.
The present ample sugar harvest
of Minnesota promises to be the
richest in many years.
The amount of snow in thg Upper
Mississippi country is greater than
for twenty years.
French heels have at last succum
bed to the outcry against them, and
have gone from our gaze.
There is a man in Robertson
County, Texas, who is enjoying the
blessing of his eighth wile and forty-
one children.
Br* Moines reports a pig with
eight feet, two snouts, two ■ cars,
and only one eye, the latter, in the
oeitre if its head.
Fifty-seven deaths from violence
O&urasC in London during a single
week recently. Of these forty-four
were the result of accident or uegli-
gcnce.
One of the latest curiosities in
natural history is a«alftfck‘i& to be
dwned in Oakland, Oregon, which
sports a pair of wings just behind
his shouHcrs.
A cheerful giver put the Slewing
note in a pair of pantaloons sent to
the Michigan sufferers: “There take
’em; last pair I’ve got; don’t get
burned out again.”
A man played dead, with lauda
num, etc., at his side, in elder to
test bis wife's affections. She, to
test his ' vitality, ran a cambric
needle into his leg, and ‘brought him.
to.’
A microscopic examination of flesh
from the body of Miss. Yurbush, the
.young lady who died at Urbana, Il
linois, from eating han, revealed
fifty thousand trichinae to the square
inch.
ft has been discovered that a grad
uate and bachelor of arts of one of
the Eastern colleges is a woman,
who, unsuspseted, went through the
entire course under the style and
habiliments of oae of the sterner
sex.
Official information has been re
ceived to the effect that the English
Government has resolved not to go
into the Geneva Conference, unless
the American claim for indirect dam
ages shall have previously been with
drawn.^ ,
A man has been sentenced to
State Prison in Michigan, who owns
a farm in St. Joseph County, worth
$40,000, and. other property valued
at $30,000. He was convicted of
conspiracy and obtaining money un
der false pretences.
Iowa stands the sixth State in the
Union as regardsThrm products. In
corn she heads the list, averaging in
1871, 42 1-2 per acre. Next comes
Nebraska, with 41 1-2, then Illinois,
the so-called great corn State, with
38 1-2.
A farmer out west has just con
trived an infernal machine for the
destruction of crows, in the shape of
a kernel of corn which explodes on
being picked up by the unsuspecting
bird, and blows his head off without
the slightest warning.
A Michigan saloon-keeper has this
evasive arrangement: Yon put your
ten rents on a spot marked ‘whisky,’
the ttpp&fatus revolves, find directly
yon see a glass of whisky standing
before yon. and you don’t kilo#, of
course, who gave it to ydt, tjf how
it camfe there.
A whiter in the Christian Advo
cate fears costly charclies, and the
rivalry which must arise among
them /or popular preachers. He
says: “Corripetition leads to large
salaries, large salaries lead to sore
throats, sore throats lead to vaca
tion, «nd vacation leads to California
or Burope.”
A life-time convict in the Indian-
na State Prison by the flame of Kar-
ver, received word that his wife had
procured a divorce and was aUdut
td wed another. He was so dejec
ted over the news that he procured
a piece of rope and hung himself in
his cell, but wfis discovered find cut
down before life was extinct.
Glrand juries in California tire
made up of very unreasonable men
apparently. One of these fastidious
bdJ&ies in Sacrahifiiito lately^ rcconr
mended the removal of the jailor, P.
McGowan, “for taking prisoners
out and strolling around the city with
them in the dead hours of midnight,
leaviug the control of the jail id one
ot the prisoners.”
A story illustrative in the way in
which revolutions are got up in South
America is told by the Anglo-BrtiziU
ian Times: Three or four years ago,
an Argentine second lieutenant made
a “pronunciatnento” in the city of
CoTrldntcs, but Wits bdaten and Cap
tured. At his courtmartial he was
asked, “What poet had you in the
affair?” “I was commafidcriin-chief
of all the infantry of the revolution.”
‘How many men had that infantry?’
“Seven men,” replied the cominan-
der-in-chief.
has tried to take Care of bis health. Then I had drather hev a little one.
He is a jolly and eloqnoflt advocate They can also drag sleds,- some has
Georgia Cities and Towns.—The
census of Georgia, taken in 1870,
under the direction of the Federal
authorities, has been made public.
There are only four cities in the
State with over 10,000 inhabitants,
namely: Savannah with 28,225, At
lanta with 21,789, Augusta with
15,389 and Macon with 12.314. Co
lumbus comes next, with 7,000, then
Athens with 4,251, Griffin with
3,421, Americus with 3,259, Mill-
cdgeville with 2,750, Rome with
2,748, Brunswick with 2,348, Car-
tersville with 2,232, Albany with
2, lfl r L, and LaGrange with 2,052.—
The towns with less than 2,000 and
more than 1,000 population, aie:
Newnss, 1,917; Marietta, 1,888;
Dalton, 1,809; Thomasville, 1,657;
Washington, 1,606; Forsyth, 1,510;
West Point, 1,405; JBainbridge,
1,351; .iFont Talley, 1,333, and
Gainesville, 1,028.
Peculiarities of Politicians.
WHAT SUMNER, SCHURZ ANT* THE
PRESIDENT DO TO SUPPORT THEIR
HEALTH.
pPron*b« Herald of Health.
Everybody knows that the Presi
dent is a smoker, and "a tremendous
one, too. He told me that while he
was m the field he smoked literally
all the time; but that in civil life,
confined to the house, sis he is, many
hours in the day, he has been obliged
to reduce the number of segars that
he allows himself. Especially in
walking docs he smoke. He takes
his solitary walks regularly every
day, and graduates the walk to the
length of the segar. When John
Quincy Adams was Secretary of State
and President, he set an example
of care for health with reference to
bathing. Every morning early, dur
ing the summer months, he took his
plunge into the Potomac. In that
form of hydropathic zeal, the present
occupant ot the White House cer
tainly does not imitate Mr. Adams.
The executive mansion enables him
to take his ablutions in a more pri
vate and agreeable manner than by
a swim in the great river. But
President Grant has another habit,
which is Very wiolesome both tor
the mind and the body—he believes
in the sanitary value of an occasional
journey, a trip to the seaside, a run
across the continent.
It is hard to find fault, even in the
mildest fashion, with a man like Mr.
Coxfax. His sudden and alarming
illness last year led to a pretty wide
discussion of his health and habits.
Some very ridiculous and false things
were published on the subject. Mr.
Colfax has always been a very healt
hy man- Me believes, in health. He
of the sanitary value of Constant
cheerfulness, of resistance to bother
and worry, of the avoidance ot per.
sonal quarrels, of moderation in am
bition, of living at peace with God
and man. Moreover, he takes all
the exercises he can in rapid walk
ing about Washington; he is very
temperate in eating; and all his life
he has wholly abstained from intoxi
cating drinks.
Charles Suiiliic'r is a prodigy of
physical endurance. I have it from
his own lips, that for many years
past, indeed for nearly the whole of
his life, he has worked fourteen hours
a day. He has never been a smoker.
He lives “generously,” and in a tem
perate fashion, is a wine drinker.—
In his younger days he was a famous
pedestrian, striking off his dozen
miles without the least difficulty.—
He has given all that up. He liter
ally takes no exercise. Living so
heartily, working so laboriously, shut
up to his pen and his books for so
mahy hours, it is astonishing that he
keeps so weil. But he is a man that
will go suddenly when he does go.
Senator Schurz is another inter
esting figure in the Senate. What
are*his health habits? A glance
shows you a noble physical endow
ment. He has a muscula , active,
vital frame; all his movements are
quick and vigorous; and with proper
care he ought to have length of days
and great honor. As to driuking
and smoking ho. is thoroughly Ger-
mau—if we may say that Germany
has any monopoly of those graces.—
I mean especially that he has a Ger
man’s faith iu beer, arid a German’s
ability to flash intellectual light from
the midst ot dense clouds df tobacco,
smoke. His greatest peril lies in the
excess of work. Such a brain as his
cannot lie idle: nay, it is a despotic
member, domifttltlrtg the whUle man
and tl'riillpling on thd gospel of rest
and sleep. Senator Schurz works
very late at night, even till one and
two o'clock. For exerciari he has
a fine plan. He has taken a house
about two miles from the capitol, and
resolutely walks the whole distance,
both going and coming.
Mr. Boutwell is a man of medium
size, of wiry frame, self-possessed
and temperate in all things. He
takes good care of himself, especially
depending on billiards for exercise.
For that game he has a passion, and
amid the click of ivory balls he eases
his mind of the cares of state.
It appears from McAlpine’s “Life
and Times of James Fisk, Jr.,” that
the redoubtable James had not only
a strong aversion to lying, but that
he had an utter contempt for a man
who would be a salesman in a whole
sale dry goods shop. He thought
there must be fun in the life of a
salesman in a retail concern where
existence is made more thaq endura
ble by chaffing with women and
measuring tape for them, but to
stand and ‘ ‘dicker” with a man who
knows you are lying, and who knows
that you know he knows that you
are lying, was a thing from which
his gigantic soul ever revolted.—
This purity and this pride made him
at last controller of Erie and the
Opera, House—two institutions in
which pride and parity went hand
in hand, and so became notorious.
Col. Fisk’s First Composition.—.
From MeAJpine’s “Life and Times
of James Fisk, Jr.,” we extract as
follows.' “One of his copy books,
used when he was about twelve years
old, is still preserved by his step
mother at her home in Brattleboro,
and to say that it is a literary curi
osity is to do meager justice to one
of the most original of all the written
results of school-boy labor ever ex
amined by the critic. Hardly a
page but shows the antipathy of the
boy to everything like set forms, and
hardly a line but shows his natural
contempt for uniformity. The little
book contains three or four composi
tions, one of which entitled “A Piece
about The Dog,” » 48 ani( l ue “
been learned to cary sticks and bask
ets and seterer. The bulldog is the
best fighting dog, because most
likely he was made for that purpus.
A terrier goes mostly for rats, but
they can also fight. I think the new-
foundland is the ttoblest dog, he
saves children from drowing, and
they are sagasious. This is all for
the present.
The Contracts of a Life.—In a
recent speech at Great Falls, N. H.,
Senator Henry Wilson, referring to
some" experiences in his early life,
says:
“I feel that I have the right to
speak for toiling men and to toiling
men. I was born here in your county
of Stafford. I was born in poverty;
want sat by my cradle. I know what
it is to ask a mother for bread when
she has none to give. 1 left my home
at ten years of age and served an
apprenticeship of eleven years, re
ceiving a month’s schooling each
year, and the end of eleven years of
hard work, a yoke of oxen and six
sheep, which brought me eighty-four
dollars. A dollar would cover every
p^nny I spent from the time I was
born until I was twenty-one years of
/Lgc. I know what it is to travel
weary miles and ask my tellow-men
to give me leave to toil. I remember
that in September, 1833, I walked
into j^ur village from my native
town, and went through your mills,
seeking employment. If any body
had offered me eight or nine dollars
per month, I should have accented
it gladly. I went down to Salmon
Falls, I went to Dover. I went to
Newmarket, fend tried to get work
without success, and I returned home
weary, but not discouraged, and I
put my pack ou my back and walked
to the tbWli where I now live and
learned a mechanic’s trade. I know
the hard lot that toiling men have to
cridure in the world, and every pul
sation of ray heart, every conviction
of my judgment, puts meou the side
of the toiling men bf my coriritry—
aye, Of all countries.
[From the New York Citizen.
General Hancock.
The leaders of the Democratic
party, in their anxiety to combine
with the Republicans, are losing
sight of some important considera
tions. So demoralized are they by
their frequent defeats, that they are
becoming bewildered and gasp after
victory wildly; they look to dissatis
fied Republicans for assistance,
ly run the risk of driving off more
steadfast supporters than they will
obtain recruits from tne enemy. The
Republican party is confident of
victory; it is in the possession of
power and patronage, it has the
prestige of success in the_ past and
hope of it in the future. It can offer
numerous and certain advantages to
those who remain in it or desert to
it, while it can punish promptly and
surely those who would desert it.—
Instead of losing the dissatisfied
element, the floating population,
which goes with the strong battal
ions and has but slight convictions
of its own, is sure to draw to itself
all such unstable classes. Were the
people convinced that Democracy
was better than Republicanism they
would join it on principle, but the
politicians Will never exchange the
party which possesses, for the one
which merely hopes to acquire pat
ronage.
Very little, therefore, is to be
expected from mere defection in the
ranks of our adversaries, petty quar
rels among the office-holders arising
as often from disappointed greed as
from any other cause. • Senator
Schurz is sincefe in his convictions,
and from his position in Missouri,
has little to lose from leaving the
Administration attd defying the party
discipline, but for Sumner or Greeley
to pretend to leave the negro wor
shipping high-tariff organization is a
self-delusion which, however firmly
believed, is as improbable as the
aiyrthing ever penned by Artemus jj-g^pogition of the poles. Sumner’s
Ward. The young writer says m his stoc t.j n .trade, it is true, is almost
“Piece” (which had evidently been
originally written “Peace ).
<< A dog is an animal with forelegs,
because he is quadrooped. I like
large dogs best, because they can
run farther and fig*»t better than
little dogs, and they can also cetch
rabits. A big dog aint worth much
without hes got good breed into him.
an overrated mediocrist before the
public in a prominent position.—
Greeley knows nothing but the blun
ders and vagaries of protection, and
would be as ill at case in a Demo
cratic Assembly as a fish would be
out of water. He means to do right
and is convinced that Grant's Ad
ministration is Ccfrrdpt, but would
rather swallow the most corrupt ad
ministration in the world than to
accept the benefits of honest free
trade. Of such materials little can
be made to help in breaking down a
system, nine-tenths of which they
approve as the very shibboleth of
political salvation.
But Graut has it iu his power to
annidown this revolt at any time he
thinks proper. He can run Greeley
with himself^as Vice-President, and
this he ought to do, both out of re
gard to the great abilities of the sage
of Chappaqua and as a security for
his own election. He can emasculate
Senator Fenton by taking away his
followers. Conkling is already com
mitted, and cannot withdraw. Now
let Grant satisfy Fenton, and the
much talked of revolution dissolves
into mist. It is rumored that he will
do this, the scheme being to run
Thomas G. Alvord for Governor of
this State at the Fall election. To
this plan Fenton must either give
his adhesion or the selfishness of
human nature will induce the parties
interested to leave him out of the
combination, which would be his po
litical ruin. Without Greeley, Fen
ton, Alvord, or Sumner, and with
Trumbrill hesitating and doubting
and ready to drop back into line, the
bolting Republicans could hardly
command a corporal’s guard of fol
lowers. And yet in the face of all
these considerations, this rag, tag,
bob-tail of an armv proposes not
merely to set up for themselves, but
to nominate the candidate for the
Democracy at the next Presidential
election. These threads and patches
of power are to assume the dignity
of Rings and act as though they
were masters of the situation.
Call they bring as many recruits
as they drive away old-time suppor
ters ? Will the regular Democrats,
the extremists, the State-rights men
the copperheads, and secessionists, if
you please, accept any such dictator
ship ? We doubt it, and these are
actually a power in the land. Other
meaifa of gaining strength must be
sought, which, while they will not ex
clude the revolution’sts, will keep
them iu their power and place, and
will retain forces Which have always
given allegiance. Dissatisfied Re-
which is hot 'to be expected with
much confidence, while they reckless- ’publicans must be contented with a
exhausted. He has his Civil Rights
bill left, but the negro has already
received to the full the rights of the
white man, and the people are not
ready to give him special privileges,
therefore the Massachusetts aboli
tionist is casting about for some
other hobby to ride into power, or
some other scheme which will keep
reasonable regard to their prejudices
and the careful preservation of the
essentials which they have won in
the past. The most damaging charge
against Democracy is that it is .not a
loyal party, that it does not give
hftarty approval to the change in the
statris of the black man, the sup
pression of the rebellion, and des
truction of secession heresies. This
opinion must be removed. Millions
of young men were in the war; they
and their relatives are proud of their
achievmerits, and glory in the tri
umphs of the national arms. As vo
ters these control the election, and
at all hazards - and sacrifices they
must be conciliated. It is to please
them that Grant is nominated by the
Republicans, and their support gives
him his principal strength, and here
is the salient point for Democratic
attack.
Some persons Argue that, as the
Democratic party is the party of
law and order, it .would be inconsis
tent for them to nominate a soldier ;
but this in a short-sighted view of
the case. A party does not become
a legal party by nominating a law
yer any more than it becomes an ag
ricultural one by nominating a farm
er. Its principles are established
by its platform, its candidate is chos
en for his popularity, provided he
sustains those principles. As against
Grant, therefore, it is obviously wise
to put forward a commander who
has the love and affection ot the sol
diery, who has his honors and glory
as great as the greatest, and who
has a brilliant reputation for bravery
and success, especially if such a one
can be found who has also promi
nently exhibited his obedience to
law and a willingness to subordinate
the military to the legal power. The
ideas represented by the Democracy
are two-told; opposition to central
ization, especially military centrali
zation, and to the protection of mo
nopolists against the people. Upon
the question of the war the party dif
ferences of opinion are obliterated,
and secession is treason in both
camps to-day.
A war candidate is essential to the
Democracy, in oTder to shut the
mouths of those who would raise the
cry of traitor against every Demo
crat The charge of disloyalty - is
untrue, *but it has much foundation.
The northern wing of the Democra
cy was a true and loyal and devoted
to the Union as any portion of the
Republicans; but Southern Demo
crats were mainly Secessionists, as
were also Southern old line Whigs—
those parents of Republicanism. To
remove this taint, consequently, it
is desirable to put forward a candi
date who was conspicuous as the
bravest of the^jT ~ ~ a
while he was the truest of the true
among Democrats—a candidate
wohse name is synonymous with the
glory of our armies so long as the
war lasted, as well as With sUbmis-*
slon to the laws so soon as the laws
were re-established.
Military Generals have always
been favorites of our peace-loving
commeicial people; and, when
thrown into public life, have made
fortunate ventures, Taylor, Harrifc
on, Jackson, and even Washinfton
himself, obtained much of their pres
tige from their success on the field
of battle, and this curious ardor has
not been diminished by fate national
events. TotakeaJudga from the
bench or a Senator from his desk to
oppose a popular General would be
unwise even if the political princi
ples of the latter were quite unpopu
lar. Td follow the old maxim, we
mu st fight military fire with military
fire, and least divide the hundreds
of thousands of voters who have a
personal pride in the recollections of
our army’s triumphs. Disintegrate
that combined power—lot even the
soldiers svggest their candidate if
necessary—and our principles, pure
and simple, will have a chance for a
fair hearing, which will never be
permitted to them under the cloud
of prejudice which at present exists
in the public mind. Cut down Grant’s
military backing, and he would be
come so weak that he could be easi
ly defeated, and more votes would
be drawn off in this way than by any
rebellion yet projected within the
ranks of his rwn supporters.
BA INBRIDGE
SOUTHERN-MADE
CLOTHING.
NOEL GAINEY & GO.,
—PEELING—
That unless the Industrial Pursuits could
be sustained the country could never be truly
prosperous, have determined to manufacture
their ENTIRE STOCK in Boinbridge.
• THEY WARRANT THEIR GOODS
CHEAPER AND BETTER THAU
THE EASTERN MAKE,
And challenge comparison in Quality, Style
and Price. They also keep the
best quality of
SHIRTS AND GENTS'
FURNISHING GOODS,
O-A LINE OF SHOES AND HAT*.-**
Appealing to the people of Decatur, .we
say achieve your independence by building
up your own institutions.mch7 ly .
ON SUNDAY, 10TH INST.,
From ay plantation on Gbattahoocbee river,
a Sorrel Station, heavily built but rather low
and abort, with right bind foot white end a
email white spot in his fete-head; about six
or seven years old. The name of the thief is
Thomas Mimnte, who has light hair, a fair
complexion, blue eyes, is about five feet six
inches high, weigh* between 150 and 160
pound*, and aged about 20 year*. When last
seen he wae on the road leading from Spring
Creek to Bainbridge, supposed to be malmg
his way either to Albany, Ga., or live O*^
Fla., the tetter of which places was hi* to®**
er home, A liberal toward will be paid for
the home and flrirfi or tor other.
E. TBAIWICK.
March 11th, 1872-
Albany Central City and live Ctek HwaW
,te**e «ry to * *