Newspaper Page Text
r
THOUSAND PEOPLE
FALL WITH BRIDGE
Bad Accident Result of a
Fire in Chicago.
AMOUR PACKING PLANT BURNS
Oreat Crowd Were ou Viaduct
Waching Flames When
Collapse Occurcd.
DEED OE CRAZY FIEND. DR CHAPMAN’S SERMON
Love-Mad Brute Slays Whole
. Family Bt cause. He Could Not
Wed a Mere Child.
Six living corpses, scarcely yet
cold, and but one living witness', >a
helpless Infant, to the awful tragedy,
is what met the horrified eyes of Mr.
A SUNDAY DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED
PASTOR.cVANGEUSr. I
Subject! TIio Bow In the eland—A Oospol
Itennsa Filled With Swretneie mid
noli>—In Title World nt Uo.t We Oct
Only the Half of Tiling*.
[The Rev. .T. Wilbur Chapman, D. D, i*
now the most distinguished and bcit
John Kellar, as he stepped Into tuo known evangelist in the country. He was
house of Wllilam Wilkinson Monday
During the progress of a fire Friday
night which destroyed the lard refinery
of Armour & Co., in the union stock
yards, at Chicago, twenty-nine people
were injured, five of them In a man
ner which will probably cause death In
a short time. The loss of the com
pany is estimated by its officers at be
tween 9750,000 and 1900.000,' with all
chances In favor of the latter.
There were a number of accidents,
but by far the larger number of those
who were hurt received their Injuries
by the falling of a hog runway, or
viaduct, upon which they were stand
ing to obtain a better view of the fire.
The lard refinery had Just been com
pleted and was considered by its own
ers the most complete establishment
of its kind In the United States. It
was five stories high and 250 by 300
feet It was filled with new and costly
machinery, and during the day 2,000
people worked within Its walls.
The night shift numbered 700 and all
of them were in the building when the
fire broke out. It Is thought that all
escaped In safety.
The fire originated with an explosion
of three lard tanks on the fifth floor of
the building. The cause of the explo
sion is unknown, but the three tanks,
which were filled with boiling lard,
went up with a roar almost iu .the
same second. There were a score .‘of
workmen in the immediate vicinity of
the tanks, and a number of them were
burned by the scalding lard. It was
not a minute after the explosion until
the entire fifth floor was a mass of
flames. Within an hour the building
was totally destroyed.
The fire was one of the most spectac
ular that hag been seen la Chicago In
recent-years and the display attracted
an enormous crowd of people, who
swarmed by thousands ppon the via
ducts which pass through the yards at
a height of twenty feet from the
ground. Suddenly about 200 feet of a
hog runway extending from the via
duct north to the plant of Armour &
Co. gave way, precipitating fully 1,000
persona to the ground. The firemen
Instantly ceased their work on the
building and devoted their energies to
saving the people. All were taken from
the wreckage within a few minutes
and placed in an Improvised hospital.
Michael Maloy, oriver of engine
company No. 49, sustained injuries
which will cause death while carrying
his engine to the fire. The horses
plunged toward the crowd of people on
the Bide of the street.- Maloy, seeing
that somebody would be badly Injured
unless his team was checked, sprang
from his seat to the back of one of the
horses and grasping the team by the
bits, turned them against a brick build
ing. The horses struck the wall with
terrific force and Maloy was caaght be
tween the wall and one of the horses.
He was fearfully crashed.
morning near Hastings, Fla., a thriv
ing settlement IS miles from St. Au
gustine.
The dead are William Wilkinson,
aged'52; Mrs. Wilkinson, his wife;
Miss Abltha McCullough, aged 13;
Miss Wilkinson, a sister of William
Wilkinson, one child and WUllam Aus
tin, murderer and suicide, aged 25.
Crazed by this Infatuation for little 1
Abltha McCullough, a lovely girl of
a trifle over 13, but well developed for
her age, Austin killed the entire fam
ily because his advances were refused
and hts desire to wed the girl was op
posed.
The tragedy occurred at a lonely
farmhouse at 3 o'clock Monday morn
ing.
Austin went to the house on Friday
night and proposed marriage. He was
rejected and vowing he would yet
marry her, hurried to St. Augustine
and procured on Saturday a marriage
license.
He went to church on Sunday
night and told every one he met that
he was to be married that night
About 3 o’clock in the morning sev
eral pistol shots were heard, but no
one went to Investigate until next
morning, when Wilkinson failed to
second only "to Dr. Tabu age, but since the
of that famous preacher Dr. Chap
man has the undisputed possession of the
Pulpit as the preacher to influence the
pi&ra people. His services as an evangel
ist are in constant demand. His sermons
have'stirred the hearts of men and women
to a degree uuapproached by any latter-
day divine. J. Wilbur Chapman was borft
in Richmond, Ind., June 17, 1859. He was
educated at Oberlin College and Lake For
est University, and graduated for the min
istry from the Dane Theological Semin
ary, Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1882. His ser
mons are simple and direct, so that their
influence is not so much due to exciting
the emotions as to winning the hearts and
convincing the minds of those who hear
him. Dr. Chapman is now in charge of
the Fourth Presbyterian Church, New
York City.]
New Your City.—The following sermon
is ene prepared for publication by tho
Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman, America’s best-
known evangelist, who is now preaching to
overflowing congregations in this city. It
is entitled "The Bow in the Cloud,” and is
founded on the text, Genesis 9; 13. “I do
set My bow in the cloud, and it shaii be
for a token of a covenant between Me and
the earth.”
It may seem at first thought as if this
were a queer text to choose from which to
give a gospel message, and yet all the
works'of God are so wonderful that one
has but to get the key to unlock the door
leading into them to find them filled with
sweetness and with help. The rainbow is
no exception to this rule. It is hardly
possible for one to look upon the bow that
spans the clouds after a stonn without an
1 exclamation of delight.
One would think that it would grow mo
notonous, for we have seen it so many
times, but quite the opposite is true. Sun
sets differ; they are os unlike as two things
with the cloud of ain across a man’s mind
ho can have no real conception of the
Bible; ho must certainly be prejudiced |
against the church. Scatter the darkness
that hpvera over your mind, and the Bible
will become to you the very thought of
God, while the church will compel your ad
miration.
II.—ACROSS THE CLOUD GOD CAST
HIS BOW.
To see a bow three things are necessary.
First, there mutt be a cloud; we certainly
have that in the world’s sin. Second, the
sun must be shining; we have this condi
tion met in the fact that God is light, and
in Him there is no darkness at all. Third,
the rain must be falling. We have this in
Isaiah 53: 10,11—"For as the rain comcth
down, and the enow from heaven, and re-
turneth not thither, but waieretn the
earth, and maketh it bring forth and bud.
that it may give seed to the sower, and
bread to the eater; ao shall My Word be
that goeth forth out of My mouth; it shall
not return unto Me void, hut it shall ac
complish that which I please, and it shall
prospeT in the thing whereto I sent it.”
Or, we might put it—first, in order that
we may bo saved, we must acknowledge
ourselves to be sinners. This is the cloud.
Second, we must have some conception of
God’ii hatred of sin. This is the light.
SOUTHERN
& FLORIDA
RAILWAY.
1JOWM JW
Sciieuujtf in Effect May 4, 190—
SOUTHBOUND.
IQutckl Dixie] ShoolValdo
I Step! Flyer] Fly|Exps.
Jasper
White Bpr...
Lake City ...
Lake Butler
Snmp. City .
Hampton ...
Flora home .
Ar. Palatka ....
Station?.
turn up at a neighbor’s house, where ; cou i d p0 ss’ibly be. Indeed, it must he true
V. _ .4 I_ L. -.Lt . . ...... • iU.l ... ..... U»t
he was engaged in harvesting a crop
of potatoes.
Mr. Ketlar, a farm hand, was sent
to Wilkinson’s house and he found the
whole family murdered and Austin
with a bullet hole In his breast and a
revolver clutched In his hand.
that one is never like the other. But rain
bows are always the same. And yet in
spite of this we are charmed as we look,
and inspired as we study.
The first mention of a bow is in the
text. It is not said that this is tho first
time the raliibow has appeared, for from
the very nature of the case it has always
been in existence since the worlds began
to be, hut thie is said to bo the first use
Word of the tragedy was transmit- j % £ °Th e list menSon of a rainbow is
ted to St. Augustine on the morning Revelation 4: 3: .“And He that oat woe to
train and Sheriff Perry and the coro* j look upon like a jasper and a sardine atone;
Lv. Me con .
Kathleen
Qrovanta ,
Unadllla
Vienna .
Cordete
Arabl .
Askburn
Ar. Tlfton
Lv. Tilton
Sparks
Adel . ...
Third, we must be. persuaded ' that ‘He I Ar Valdosta
loved us and gave Himself for us. This is | Lv. Valdosta
the rain. With these conditions met. the
how of promise spans the cloud of a sinful
life.
III.—THE SEVEN COLORS
If I should hold a prism in my hand and
the light of day should touch it, there
would be refracted nt once seven colors,
ns follows: Red, orange, yellow, green,
blue, indigo and violet. Thero never has
been a rainbow in this world but these
hare been seen in more or less prominence.
In my message now, the prism is tho cross,
and the light is God’s truth. As it strikes
this long prism it breaks up into seven
colors. The seven together give us the I
rainbow.
First, forgiveness. Psalm 32: 1.—“Blessed
is he whose transgression is forgiven,
whose sin is covered.”
Tho word forgiven means taken off.
What a wonderful thought it is! Oh,
what a load of ain we had to carry! How
it did weigh ub down! How day and night
we went crying aloud, saying, "Oh,
wretched man that I am, who ahall deliver
me?" Resolution never lifted it a particle.
Reformation only seemed to make it heav
ier. Then He came, and stooped down, or
whispered to us just one sweet word,
"Forgiven!" and when we realised it the I
burden was taken off. To receive all of
this we have but to yield to God. Trying
to make ourselves better only adds to tbe |
cloud and deepens our despair.
The second color is cleansing. Psalm 51:
, -"Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be
clean; wash me, and I shall he whiter than |
snow.”
The little hunch of hyssop carries us I
hack to the Passover night, when the
lamb was slain and its blood collected. It
Was not said that one should take a brush,
AM
11 25
12 19
12 38
12 55
1 19
1 65
2 13
238
3 20
3 25
1 02
407
4 13
455
500
6 25
5 39
6 01
6 32
655
7 35
800
3 26
4 00
.4 00
4 33
4 38
4 44
5 25
5 So
5 59
6 13
635
7 06
7 30
8 20
8 46
9 01
9 45
10 25
PM
4 20
6 31
6 67
620
6 61
715
738
811
900
9 05
9 49
'966
10 03
1100
PM
PM
845
9 41
10 02
10 20
10 43
1103
1125
11 48
1186
18 80
106
110
1 16
2 00
PM
NORTHBOUND.
IQutckl DtxlelShoo IValila
I Step! Flyer! Fly|Exps.
and there was a rainbow round about the
throne, in sight like unto an emerald."
You notice that the expression used is
"round about the throne, and here for the
first time we find a rainbow in a complete
circle.
We have only seen the half of it here,
which is surely an illustration of the fact
that in this world at best we only get the
half of things. Wo only get the half of
t truth. Take the great doctrine of the
Atonement; who is able to understand it?
Qaynor and Greene Go as Result, But it i» very helpful to know that we are
not obliged to understand it, but only to
ner hastened to the scene of the trag
edy.
A wailing infant, who had been un
harmed, was found In. bed beside Its
dead mother.
A M
PM
G 23
Flnrahome . .
6 57
6 43
Hampton . ..
7 46
7 25
Samp. City ..
7 a
7 40
9 CG
8 55
Whito spr. ...
9 28
9 21
Jasper
10 00
956
10 22
10 18
Ar. Valdosta ....
11 60
1100
AM
P M
Lv. Valdosta ....
11 05
11 15
4 45
1 45
Heartplne . .
11 45
11 56
5 37
2 31
Adel
11 51
12 02
643
2 37
Sparks
11 57
12 08
5 49
2 43
Ar. Tlfton
12 30
12 45
0 35
3 25
Lv. Tlfton
12 30
12 45
6 40
3 26
Aakburn . ...
1 OS
1 22
7 27
4 07
Arabl
1 29
7 53
4 31
Cordele
2 08
1 58
8 20
4 63
Vienna
223
2 13
8 41
6 13
Unadllla . ...
2 48
2 35
9 12
6 37
Grcvnnla . ...
3 61
9 36
6 57
Kathleen . ...
3 21
10 00
6 16
Ar. Macon ../...
4 ID
365
11 06
7 15
PM
AM
AM
PM
BACK TO QUEBEC
Dixie Flyer” has through coach and
Pullman sleeper between Macon and
Jacksonville via Valdosta, and through
coach and local sleeper between Macon
and Palatka. Local sleeper open In Ma-
brt n bunch of hyssop, and dip it in the I con Union Depot 9:00 p. in., and remains
blood and sprinkle the posts of the door. Union Depot on return until 7:36 a.
The commonest thing that grew in. the hit-sinMn.
East wu hyssop.■ represents faith. One CO n Q and piutka. ' b
had but to Step to the door of the cottage vVM. CHECKLEY SHAW.
Vice-President, C. B. RHODES.
General Passenger Agt.,
Macon. Ga.
DAVE O. HALL. T. P. A,
Room HI Equitable Bldg.,
Atlanta. Ga.
HARRY BURNS. F. P. A..
an W. Bay St. L
of Hearing In Habeas Corpus |
Proceedings.
A special from Montreal, Quebec,
says: Colonel Gaynor and Captain
Greene have won the first skirmish In
receive it. God is’ satisfied with it, and
He fully comprehends it, and when we
■tend with Him in glory we ehall ace the
other half of the bow, qnd our hearts shall
rejoice. We only see the half of life here.
At its best it is a mystery. Over and over
again, when we wanted to go to the right
we were compelled to turn to the left, and
tho fight against extradition to the » thousand times because, of our perplexi-
. .. . ties nnd trials we have cried aloud:
United States, and the two men are “How can these things be?"
NEW LISE FOR SEABOARD.
Fast and West Railroad of Alabama
Fnrohaaed From Kelly Patate.
A Baltimore dispatch says: A era
dicate, of which Ladcnburg, Thalman
& Co., of New York, are the managers,
has bought the East and West Rail
road of Alabama from the Kelly estate
of New York. The purchase Is in the
Interest of the Seaboard Air Line, to
take that aystem to Birmingham, Ala.
The terminals at Birmingham are to
be secured by purchase of tbe Bir
mingham Belt railroad.
Short connecting lines are to be
built to unite the Seaboard with tbe
East and West railroad, which,'with
the reconstruction of the latter, will
bring the total cost up to $4,000,000.
now In the old city of Quebec, where
they believe proceedings to force them
to return to the United States to an*
swer the charge of defrauding the
United States government can be suc
cessfully fought.
At 10 o’clock Monday a special train
on the Canadian Pacific arrived from
Quebec with High Constable Gale and
assistants on board, armed with a writ
of habeas corpus. They got Into a cab
and drove to the Montreal jail, to
THIRTY-StYEX TEARS ENOUGH.
Kx-Dois of Tammany Does Pome Talk*
lag In London-
Richard Croker begafi an Interview
at London Friday concerning the af
faire of Tammany society with an em
phatic declaration that he had ceased
to meddle In New York politics. “Thlr.
ty-seven yean of political fighting la
enough for one life,” he said, “and I
am done with It, I tell yon once and
for all.”
He expressed regret that thero
shoald be trouble In Tammany and ex
pressed the hope that Mr. Nixon would
return to office.
But wc must learn the lesson that we
mutt trust Him where we cannot under*
stand Him. The day ayill come, when
seated at His feet we shall aee the other
half of the bow of our life, and wo ahall
know indeed that all things havo worked
together for good.
The last mention of the how in Revels*
tlon tells us that it is to ba like an emer
ald. This is certainly very strange, for
one has never beheld a green rainbow
here. Six other colon must oe added to it
to make it complete. The cotor, however,
i* not without its suggestiveness. Green
is the color that always rests the eye. It
is for thie reason that the hillsides, the
waving branches of the tree, and the gross
_ beneath our feet, ere so restful on a sum-
which Institution Gaynor and Greene mer day. Ia not this a hint that heaven
had been committed by Judge La Fon- is a place of rest as well as beauty?
ialne during the afternoon. The stay JJSJ, ‘nd. yXvTnd b?l°e" If you
of tho high constable was of very drop the red and put the yellow and blue
short duration. Evidently Governor together you have green os a result. Red
Vallee and his guests awaited their fc n \ h VTto ths‘thoudhl tha'Twhen one
coming, for In a short time Gale ap- passes through tbe gates of pearl he leaves
peared, accompanied by Governor suffering behind him. There is to be no
v„n„„ a red mark in heaven. Christ finished His
Vallee and Gaynor and Greene. A m(tarings u P on Calvary, and never a pang
quick drive was made ' to the Place shall meet Him again. We finish our suf-
Vlger station and an hour after the ar- feringt, too, when wc say good-bye to this
i, weary road we have traveled, and the gate
rival of the special train It departed heaven that shuts us in shuts suffering
with the much sought fugitives from out.
tho American courts on board. j I.—THE CLOUD.
Half an hour later tho rezulnr train 1 Wo know what the cloud was for Nnaa
Hair an nour later the regular tram , {or thu ttxt whlcll j have quoted lla , t „
for Quebec departed, having on board J® with him), and a cloud in Noah’a day
Donald MacMaster and Chief Carpen- was not unlike the cloud of yesterday;
ter. They went to answer the writ of but in the thought of the sermon tin-, cloud
habeas corpus served on Carpenter. t *f? n ^ ou , d rattke one heartsick to read the
Incidentally Mr. MacMaster will use history of sin. First, in the world, begin-
nil his efforts to see that Governor nlng with Adam, going to Noah, reaching
v.iia- mihim, i.i. „ the howling mob about the cross ou Ca.-
Vallee returns his prisoners to the vary, coming down to the present flay,.
Montreal jail. Tbe question as to when the whole world seems to be touched
whether he shall do so or not depends TT ith its.power, the most terrible thing iu
entirely upon the legality of the ar
rest. The case will be heard In Que
bec.
STEEL TRUST DOOMING.
Gigantic Combine Retires Preferred
Stock and Ilsurs More Bonds.
A special meeting of the stockhold
ers of tbe United States Steel Corpora
tion was held Monday at the New Jer
sey office of the corporation, in Ho
boken, to consider resolntions adopted
by the directors, providing for the re
tirement of $200,000,000 of preferred
stock and the Issuing of $250,000,000 of
new bonds.
Resolntions antborlxlng the chsnges
proposed by the directors were
adopted.
the world ,ia ain. Second, in the home,
blighting and blasting that which is a
tyje of ueaven, anil wrecking that whwn
God meant to be a safe vessel to carrv in
through the turmoils and strife ever round
about us. Third, in our own hesrt, giving
us wrong conceptions of God, and drag*
(ring us toward nell, even against our wifi.
The blackest thing m all the world is sin.
The cloud does two things: (1) It ob-
•cum the.sun. The cloud of sin does the
same thing.. No one ever yet has had a
true vision of Jesus Christ with the leest
particle of ain iu hi* heart or life. "Blessed
are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God."
A poor fellow converted in one of the
mlaaions in Chicago, who was thought be
fore his conversion to be hardly worth the
saving, was so wonderfully transformed
that a committee waited noon him to find
the secret of bis changed life. He answered
their question in just one sentence:
“I have aetn Jesus.”
This vision ever changes tbe lift and
transforms character.
(2) The cloud compels us to see things
in a falsa light. Goa mad* the works of
Hit hand* to be teen in the sunlight. W-
mutt not judge them un Ur the cloud. And
201 W. Bay St.,
Jackieqville, Fla.
and stoop down to pluck, a hunch of hyt-1
sop. The commonest thing in all this
world Is faith, 'We have faith in each |
other, whether we express It in this word
or not; and the faith that one hat in his
mother, in his father, in wife or husband,
f turned toward Jesus Christ would save
lit soul. It is one thing to be forgiven, hut
the color deepens, and the truth sweetens
when we know that because of the shed
offences, and was raised again for our jus-.
& S2^«rsf’®£S i, ’SaB
fiKTVlJi S i w! SHnr’VISSta,.ST
cleansing. buMhere is the memory of tho -Wherefore, unto tin children of
old life of faihira which Is ever to him 1 ke I(|rM , j tho and j wj „ brin _ yoll
a .hackle when he would run to God. Jus- rut from tmd , r the burden , oi the Egypt-
tificntion it sweeter by far than anything j j Bn4 ond j w ju P | d you ou t „f their bond-
we have, yet learned. When Christ rose Bge ’ and j w , u redcera ym) witb a stretched
for our justification He stood before God 0 5,.’ BnJ)> and ^jth greit judgments; ond I
«s a kind of receipt (at John Robertson wl „ uke you to Me fnr „ pe0D> and i wfil
has said), and when God looks upon that ba to yo ,/ a God . and ve shall know that I
receipt He knows the hill is paid. am tb ' e Jj0rd y J, ur , vb i e n brlngcth
"Jesus paid it all. All to Him I owe. | v 0 u out from under the burdens of the
Sin had left a bitter stain, Ho washed it Egyptians. And I will bring you in unto
white as snow.” J the lnnd, concerning the which I did ewear
But justification ia oven better to mo I to give it to Abraham, to Isaac and to
than this, for when one is justified before Jacob; and I will give you it lor on herit-
God he actually standi at if he never had oge: I am the Lord. ....
tinned. I He ever waits to fill the covenant which
The fourth color is—sins covered by .the Ho has made with Christ concerning us.’
ia. Micah 7: 19—"Ho will turn again, He If we would have tho joy of salvation, wo
will have compassion upon "us; Ho will sub* I need hilt two things; first, wo must be-
due our iniquities; and Thou wilt cast all Have God; whatever our feelings may be,
their alna Into the depths of the sea.". wo must believe: second, believing God,
It is very comforting to know that there I wo must act. sa if we beitcvcd Him. The
are some depths in the ocean so deep that one gives us life. Tho other gives us joy in
they can pever be sounded. Our sins must life’s possession.
have gone at deep. ... 1
There is alto another thought of com-1 gome men ore barn to command, and
fort; if a body ia cast into the ocean where 0 i btrg get married,
the waters are not very deep, when the
storms come and the ocean is in a fury,
the storm, as if with giant hands, takes tho
dead body and casts it upon tbe shore.
But there are depths in the sea so great
WILL OF HAMPMOX FILED.
that no storm that hasever yet swept across Property of Road Admiral Goes lo
the face of the deep his stirred the waters. “
Thank* be unto God, our sins may be sunk
so deep in the sea that they will never he
east up against us again. The color deep
ens and the truth grows sweater still.
The fifth color is—sins removed. Psalm
103: 12—“As far as tbe east it from ths
west, so far hath He removed our trans
gressions from us.”
It has been proved that the distance
from east to west could never be meat
Widow With Exception of $4,(100.
The will of the late Admiral William
T. Sampson was filed at Washington
Saturday. It leaves everything to
the widow, save $4,000 life lnsuranco,
which Is left equally among the four
daughters. In tbe petition asking for
admission of the will to probate, Mrs.
ured. This is certainly inspiring. But I Sampson, who Is named as sole exe-
there is something better for me than this c „tor, says the admiral died possessed
■n the filth color, for when I am told that [ „, ho .
my sins are as far from me as the put :s
from the west I know that the east and
the west can never be brought together;
nor can the saved sinner and his pardoned
tins ever meet again.
The sixth-color U Isaiah 44: 22—“I have
blotted out, ai a thick cloud, thy transgres
sions, and, as a cloud, thy sins; return un
to Me, for I have redeemed thee."
A man cannot blot out his own tins.
Rome have tried it with their tears, and
have lost their reason. Rome have at
tempted it by worfca of mercy, ond have
R iven up in despair. But God can easily
o it. For sins to be blotted out may
of stocks and other securities valued
at $8,500 and a tract cf land at Man
chester, N. Y„ known as the Marmon
Hill farm, veined at $10,000. Tho will
Is dated Key West, Fla.. April-16,1S93.
BIGGEST BANC SOUTH.
Several Large Institutions In Now Or
leans *r« Consolidated.
The newly organised Southern Trust
mean the same as for man’a account to be I and Banking Company, with a capita!
Wetted out. I may have n bill charged lt f2,000,000, organised only a few
against me on the books, but if on the op- M v . . .
posite -tide is credited a sufficient sum of months ago In New York, has ab-
money to meet the indebtedness, it it | sorbed the Union National bank of
biottedout. But the expression must mean New Orleans and has perfected a r-
more than this. It means that when one a I - , . ... . . .
tint are blotted out by God they are as il rangements for consolidation with the
they never bad been. „ I Hibernia National bank. The new
The »*»«'th co’or «eipt thc clitnas of concern will be known as the Hibernia
S-ha^iSiMm^tird^ Ustlonal Bank and Trust Company,
to him; he hath done that which is lawful I and will star), but with $2,500,000 of
Z' r lh£,h on- sin. “4 $10,000,000 Of deposits,
have Wn targiren indVe miy'havc'been making It the largest bank ing concern
justified, when the mat day of judgment I ia the southern states,
comes wc tzxy he oj^g:a to meet them ah 1