Newspaper Page Text
ALBANY HERALD
BY TUB;
ID PUBLISHING COMPANY.
H. M. McIntosh, j
PHBBIDRWT AVD KtflTmi-IN-OHIKK.
Kvory Afternoon Except ftJum/oy.
"Weekly (8 lmRus) Every Hutu relay.
TERMS OF StIIISCllIFTlON s
Daily Herald, ohm yenr V> ( *>
I, 1 -; Dully Herald, six iimuiOi* 2 r*>
Dally Jlernlil, three months Ul
Weekly, eight pages, one yenr 1 00
THE U ERA EH 18 TUB
Official Organ of tlio City of Albany.
OflU'lnl Organ of Dougherty tjounty.
‘ Official Organ of Raker County.
't>j/jrjnJ Organ of the Railroad Commission
••Of Georgia for the Hecoml CongrtfsHlonal
JfCDHtrh't.
tA.ll HubxcrlptlonH payable In advance: no
- exception to this rule In favor of anybody.
Advertising rates riiHnonnbl’3 ami madu
known on application.
Curds of thanks, ronohUloiiH of respect and
•obituary notices, other than those vrbteh
it he Editor himself tuny give as a matter iff
news, will lie charged for at I he rate of live
teents a Una.
Notices of church and society ami all other
entertainments from which a revenue Is to
he derived, beyond a brief announcement,
will lieelmruoir for at the rate of five cents
,n Him.
ly-Owriiii up stairs, west side of Wash
ington street, u<
’ streets,
street, between Ilroad mid J’lm*
TKI.K11IONE No.
:rK, isA*-*?***
It
•The ‘Herald deals with advertising
agents Y»y spoolal contract only, and no
aavertlslng agent or ag-nicy Is authorised
to make contracts for advertisements to
^Inserted In this paper*
II
you see
It’s so.
it in the Herald
If you advertise in the Herald
it goes.
8ATUHDAY. AUGUST B, 1001.
TIME EXTENDED;
When tlie Herald announced early
In the year that it would award three
cash prize, amounting to #30 for the
largest and best watermelon* grown tn
Bouthwoat Georgia and Bout to the pub.
llshcr« of thin paper during the season,
the llnst of August was named as the
itlmo for closing the contest and award,
dug tho prizes. For reasons which will
be appreciated by all, however, we have
concluded to extend the time of closing
until the 10th of -\uguit. The season le
at least fifteen days later than usual,
not only for watermelons, but for gar
den, orchard aud field oropB of every
hind, aud, we have been advised by some
of the growers that their largest melons
will not bo fnlly matured nntll after the
first of August.
Tho oaeli prizes offered by tbo Herald
are:
For the largest melon grown in
Bosthweet Georgia $10 00
For the second largest 8 00
For the sweetest aud best melon,
S nallty and not size to bo oon-
derud 8 00
Senator Hanna trusts that tbo great
.steal strike will soon be amloably settled.
The Soliloy court of Inquiry wlU help
.General Kagan’s ease Into the oblivion
•where It belongs.
The Tennlllo News observes that
•'Judge Sweat le sweating for Congress-
-man Brantley to ran for governor."
This hat boon' an oft year with all
.sort* of crops. Even the mosquitoes
have been less plentiful than heretofore.
Porto Bloo ought to get rloh tn a
hurry under the favorable conditions
•whloh are hers as a result of Thursday’s
proclamation.
Congressman Lon Livingston wants
to have Admiral Sampson oourtmar.
tialed, and so would lots of other i eople
in the United States.
Judge Johu G. Hart, of Dublin, has
snnounoed that ho will be a candidate
for attorney general of Georgia, to sue-
oeed Hon. Jos. M. Toirell.
Editor Stovall, of the Savannah Press,
rises to remark that "tho Brunswick
pulitloians are active aud aspiring. They
Anew what they want."
The Pirn National Bauk of Now
York lias inoreaBcd its capital from
$600,800 to*10,000,000, whloh makes the
largest financial institution in the couu-
try.
Admiral Sampson is said to i )e m if
Admiral Sampson realized how great is
the ooutempt in which he is held bv the
people of the United States, he would
probly be,a good deal sioker than lie is.
Congressman Mudd Is trying to oust
Historian Uoolay from his *3.50 a day
job in the navy department. But the
crowd that needs Maolay has more pall
than Congressmen Mudd.
The first hale of new crop cotton to be
sold at Galveston brought 15 cents per
pound at on auottoneaieou Wednesday.
It is a pity that prioe can’t be relied on
to held good till Christmas.
AS A PRECEDENT.
In the Macon News of Satnrday after
noon we find the following editorial
under the oaptlon, "Is it a Precedent ?" :
Doe* tlio action of tho Democratic State Ex
ecutive Oonmdtteo of South Carolina In reading
Senator McLaurln out of tho Democratic party
establish nucli a precedent hh may induce com-
mitteett of other HtatoH to go and do like wise?
Thin 1h an interesting question.
The Ailmny Herald haa been Instating all
along that the next platform of the Democratic
party must he written by tho QfiOOflOO Demo
crats who were truo to the platforms and can
didates of 18WJ and 1000.
And now cornea the Newnnn Nowa saying:
The Albany Herald tnkfw the very correct
|H>sitlon thrtt the Into Democratic 1 Milters should
not be tho party binders now. Nor should that
idea be lout sight of. Now Issues have arisen,
and It Is manifestly evident that some pruning
of party policy La necessary, but none except
tlm loyal Democrats who stood squarely by the
party In 1800 and 1000 should be tho’ primers.
Many did not agree to tho platforms In toto,
but went with the majority and worked faith
fully for the nominees, Tim sulkers have no
rights to platform making now. There are
thousands of the lojal and ‘elect’ who can do
that, and will do it patriotically.’
Wo cite thotio papers to indicate that there
are those even now In Georgia who are becom
ing disused to throw up the bars of the party
fold Against thoso who threw obstacles in Mr.
Bryan’s way In the past campaigns and to put
out of tho fold entirely those who favor tho
adoption of policies which nro of Republican
devising.
Therefore the same question which became
ho acute in Mouth Carolina, causing tha com
mittee to deal with it ho boldly and severely,
may become- oqunlly acute in Georgia and
other Houthorn Htates.
Wo feel surn t-liat our esteemed Macon
contemporary would not Intentionally
misrepresent tho Heiialp. It is clear
from tho abovo, however, that it haa
olther misinterpreted or misapplied
some of tho utterances of thiB paper
with reference to those Democrata wily
refused to acoept the partv platform
and support tho party ticket In 1806 and
11)00 aud the status to he given them In
the party iu tho uoxtoampalgn, especial,
ly when it comes to framing the plat
form. '
. If tho Nows has read tho Herald of
last Saturday afternoon it now fully
understands that, Instead of viewing
with favor the action of the South
Carolina Stato Domooratio Ooramtttee
With reference to Souator MoLonrln, as
a precedent for the Democratic party
organization iu other states, wo regard
ft as not only unfair, bnt unwise, tm-
polltio aud revolutionary. The Demo-
orotio party In other states eannot afford
to make a precedent of the aetlon of the
South Carolina oommlttee. The aotlon
of the South Carolina oommlttee was,
as we all know, forced by Ben Tillman,
aud was, In the Herald’s opinion, as
oowardly os it was uufalr, narrow and
extreme. '
Now, as to those who are, as oar
Maoon oon temporary suggests, "dis
posed to throw up the bars of the party
fold against those,who threw obstacles
tn Mr. Bryan’s way In the past cam
paigns." This would be vlndiotive,
narrow-gauge and intolerant, and the
Herald never has stood for anything of
that kind In polttios, and never will,
under its present management. Throw
np the ban against none. Let all who
will, inoludlng those who have bolted
or boon pouting or baoktliding, oome
Into the fold, and let the glad hand be
held out to them. That’s the kind of
Demoorat the Herald it.
Bat, at the same time and neverthe
less, we are not willing to let the bolters
and reoalottrants come in and take
uharge of the party and relegate the
faithful and loyal to the rear. Nor are
we, as one of the "8,600,000" who stood
by the party and Its oandldate in 1SD6
and 11)00, ready to say to the 138,000
who weut off with the Olevelandite
Palmer and Bnokner orowdand assisted
the Republicans—
You were right and we were wrong;
You take tho lead now, and we will
follow;
You abuse aui revile Bryan and
call those who supported him fools aud
Populists, and we Will say, ‘Amen’
Y on make a party platform that you
are willing to stand on, and we will
stand on tt."
Reoently, especially sinoa the Ohio
Democratic convention, some of those
who were either sulking or out of the
Democratic fold entirely in 1896 and
1900 have taken a fresh start nt de-
nonuciug the Kansas City platform and
abusing Bryan. Taking the action of
tho Ohio convention, tnoluding the
"Bryan incident,” for a preoedent, they
have become bold and aggressive
and thrown out the intimation
that they have been "vindicated”
and now propose to drive the
Democratic bandwagon. Aud right
here is where the Herald’s protest
comes lu. We are willing for them to
get on the bandwagon, and to “lot by
gones beby-gones,” but we are not will'
ing to let them seize the reins, take the
front seat and consign the "6,600,000”
to the rear.
SNAP JUDGMENT.
While tho Herald has no sympathy
whatever with the polities of the new
onlt of Dcmoorats, or self-styled Demo
crats, who propose to vefonp the Dernc-
oratio party creed by incorporating Re
publican doctrine Into It, we want to go
on record as nnqaalifiedly condemning
the snap judgment taken by the State
Democratic Executive Committee of
South Carolina at Oolambia on Thurs
day night in reading Senator McLanrin
out of the party without the formality of
arraignment or even giving him a hear
ing.
While none will question that it is
clearly within the province of the com
mittee to pass upon questions of party
fealty, the sumptuary manner in whloh
Senator McLanrin was expelled from
the party on the ex parte statements of
his political enemies and withont even
being pnt on notioe that hts party
loyalty was to be tho subject of investi
gation, was .outrageous and revolution
ary.
The Domooratio party cannot afford
to bo so intolerant as tha Sonth
Carolina State Oommitte has been
in this caso, and the gentlemen
of the committee who voted to ploco the
brand of party treaohery on Senator
McLanrin withont the right of arraign
ment and triul—a rivlit that is accorded
to even the worst orimiuals, in the estab
lished tribunals of the country—will
realize before tho noxt campaign closes
in Sonth Carolina that they have made
a party mistake.
The action ot the committee, under
’he oiroumstanoeH, gives Senator Mo-
1,. uriu a better opportunity than he oth-
«r vise wonld have bad to go before tlio
p-siplo of tho State for vindication. His
treatment at the hands of tho com
mittee, whloh was clearly dominated by
Senator Tillman, was snch that he oan
appeal with foroo to the peoplo for fair
play, and the sympathies of many good
men will go ont to him beoause they
will be oonvinoed that ho has not been
fairly treated by the highest party
tribunal of the state. Ami so this ex
treme and sumptuary action on the part ‘
of the oommlttee will provoke good
men and good Democrats to sever the
ties of party allegiance for the purpose
of rebuking a flagrant wrong.
Rear Admiral Sohley has asked for a
court of inquiry, and the investigation
of the naval soandal that has been brew
ing for more than two years past will
not be a ooart martial. Congress in
1806 established the prinoiple that no
oonrt martial oonld be held two years
after the ooonrrenoe under investigation.
This is known as the naval statute of
limitation, and while it bars a court-
martial relating to the Santiago cam
paign, it does not bar the oonrt of In
quiry. In this oase the oonrt of inquiry
would be effective only in establishing
reoords and wonld not be preliminary
to a oonrt martial. An impoitant feat
ure in the order direoting the oonrt is
that speoifying whether it shall state
only the foots found, or shall also give
an opinion based on the foots, Unless
the order expressly requires the oonrt to
give their opinion they are confined to
stating the foots fonnd. It Is considered
qalte probable, however, that in a oaee
of this importanoe the order wonld
direot the oonrt to reoord its opinion as
well as Its oonolnsion of faots.
HOPEFUL SYMPTOMS.
There is a ray of hope today for the
editor of the Macon Telegraph, who has
been wrestling for som a time past with
a most violent attack of the malady
known as Bryanpbobln. Tlio symp
toms this morning were decidedly hope
ful. Tiiis morning’s Telegraph had
threo headed editorials, and Mr. Bryun
Is the direct subject of neither, and is
reviled incidentally in bnt one of them.
The one in which the Nebraska statpj).
man is made to figure is beaded, "A
Short Corn Crop,” and after the de
plorable condition of the crop aud the
seriens effects of the heat and drouth
generally in the Middle' West are
brought out, the stricken victim of the
new malady gets In his swat nt the man
whom he seems to think is to blame for
everything that goes wroug in the
world, even iu connection with the
weather and the orops, as follows:
Thin 1:, .siongh to take the starch out of S ly
body or anything and St )h not anr]irislng to
hoar through a Topeka dispatch that tin, Pop
ulist organizations of Kansas art, ‘'decadent 1 ’
and that tho Domocrats of the state are trying
to snoop them in while they are comparatively
helpleea. The ruling paseiou is strong in dentil,
however. Thceo decadent Knnses Populists,
Wo are told, still "cling to Bryan and ids free
Hilver theories," and are "oven more bitter
against the Eastern, or so-called gold Defnoe-
raey, than toward tb* Republican organiza
tion." (Huch la the color of tlio genuine Bryan
!oat, it may bo remarked In passing.)
But this is not os had as it hug beeu,
and the fact that this morning’s Tele
graph oontalncd two editorials in which
Bryan was not even mentioned leads us
to hope that there have been intervening
hours of lnoid rationality. This is a
iiopefnl symptom, and if there should be
a favorable ohange in the weather who
knows but what the Maoon editor may
yet be himself again ?
The Griffin News asks, "Is Oandlor
(or Terrell?" And the Savannah PreBS
answors: "We do not know. If he Is,
Joe Terrell will have a powerful ally.
But oar understanding is that Gover
nor Candler, Juuge Hamilton MoWhor-
tor, Senator Steve Olay, Hon. George F.
Gober, aud the other men who control
in north Georgia, are oastlng tlieir eyes
over the fertile fields of Bouth Georgia',
where all the available gubernatorial
timber is planted this year and u hore
the willing horses are tied out iu the
soant underbrush. There can bo no oh
jeotion to Attorney Geuoral Terrell.
He is an able man, a faithful officer,
and a good politician, bat he should nn
dorstand that this time "the tillest,
straightest shoot” comes from the wire-
grass. We believe that the governor is
of this opinion,"
SOUTH (1E0BGIA.
Where is South Georgia? What wit,
geographically speaking, ond what
counties compose it, politically speak
ing?
In view of the fact that South Geor
gia is supposed lo have the "first say"
tn the selection of the gubernatorial
candidate for next year, tue foregoing
questions are being asked in the political
circles of the State.
Col. Dnpout Guerry asserted in an in
terview the other day that "the bound
ary lines of Sonth Georgia have never
boen laid oif or established." But
further on iu the same interview Col.
Guerry shows that he considers Sumter
and Quitman conniies clearly inside the
limits of South Georgia when ho says:
Tlu> pivlitiesl geographers si-tra to have ruled
me ont of this chosen station without question,
white 1 nus inortt of a Sonth Geovyin mall than
any discnsmsl. I wa* born nnd raared iu Sum
ter, and lived there «xd in Quitit.ua for nenrlj-
furty years."
But the llawkinsville Dispatch aud
News, iu whose bailiwick Col. J. Pope
Browu resides, haa gone into the lati
tude and longitude of tho question.
Somebody, it seems, has beon trying to
read our Pulaski county contemporary’s
"favorite soq” out of South Georgia,
and, iu rebuttal, the Dispatch and News
appeals to the compass to show that
Pulaski is very little out ol line with
Chatham, the home of Hon. F. G. do-
Bignon, au accepted South Georgia
in. In tho Nows and Dispatch we
find the following comparative state
ment of the latitude nnd longitude of
Pulnskl and Chatham counties:
3.AT1TUDK.
When Admiral Sohley goes before the
oonrt o? inquiry to have his reoord at
the battle of San.iago scrutinized and
laboriously pioked to pieces, he will be
backed by public sentiment; and publlo
sentiment is something not to be valued
lightly. It matters not how impartial
and unprejudiced the minds of the offi
cers constituting the court may be, they
will be influenced in same measure to
look with favor on tne contentions of
Admiral Schley because that distin
guished officer has hod his record as
man and os an officer of the United
States navy overwhelmingly approved
by the people of the country. After all,
it is tho people who rule, and their ver
dict will outweigh the findiug of any
officiaUtribunal that could he brought
together under auy conditions.
If the Atlanta papers are getting 15
cents a line for all the oards that ore
being pablished in their columns in con
nection with the sparring going on bn
twoen the oit-y council and the two
railway oorpratiom, it is safe to say that
pay rolls are being met promptly.
As the time approaches when the pro-
pie of the United States might reason
ably expeot to reap oommerclal and In
dustrial advantage from free trade with
Porto Btoo and the Philippines and from
reciprocal understanding with Cuba,
the sugar trust is sharpening its fangs
in order it possible to make the new
conditions subsidiary to the purposes of
monopoly. The proposed issue of
*16,000,000 in new stock Is confessedly
for the purpose of shaping the insular
sugar trade to the uses of the trust, and,
possibly, to seoure legislation increasing
the customs tax on refined sugar.—
Philadelphia Record.
The disappearance of negroes from
the rural districts and the consequent
soaroity of farm labor are matters that
are getting to be more than suhjeots for
mere learned dissertations in the col
umns of the newspapers. They are
problems that are confronting the
farmers and oausing them to spe
sleepless nights, for orops are suffering
and tho agricultural resources of the sec
tion are being made to suffer. Sooner or
later the matter must olaim a greater
share o( attention thau it is now reoeiv-
ing at our hands.
The uuselfish friends of Hon. W. G.
Brantley, both in his district and out of
it, will be pleased, rather than dis
appointed, at Jiis refusal to resign his
seat in Congress to enter the race for
governor. He is yet a young mail—the
youngest of the Georgia Congressional
delegation—and as he has every reason
to feel assured that the people of his
distrust are more than satisfied with
him as their representative, he can well
afford to continue to serve them in that
capacity for Borne time to come. If he
has the ambition he can be governor or
United States senator some day.
Pulnskl, SI degrees 30 minutes.
Clmtlmin, 81 degrees 85 minutes.
TjONOITUDB.
Pnlaski, 82 (legmen 18 minutes west of Green
wich.
Chatham, #1 degrees 10 minutes (vest of
Gretmwlnh.
With this to back it the News and
Dispatch submits that “Colonel Brown
and h*s friends naturally fee 1 that a dif-
ferenoe of only 85 minntes should not
weigh against him, if the oompass is to
be used in selecting the next governor.”
But tho Savannah Press, whloh paper
has deolared for Hon. H. G. Turner for
governor, seems to think that South
Georgia proper, the Mecoa, as it were,
is “somewhere between Savannah and
ThomasviUe, say iu the neighborhood of
Brooks cOuhty.** The Press, in urging
South Georgia’s claim grows eloquent
and Bays:
“Lot the nomination come to the South’ard,
where non inland cotton blooms, where the roain
creeps up the heart of tho pino, and whero the
wiuda sough through the boughs. When in 00
years lias South Georgia had a governor? The
Mtatecnn make no mistake this year in return
ing to tho land of Troupo ond Treutlen.”
Now, then, let us hear from the
Wayoross Herald on the geography of
this Sonth Georgia question.
THE ABUSE OF BRYAN.
Ex-Congressman Benjamin Frnnkl’n
Shively, of Indiana, asked for his opin
ion of the action of the recent Demo
cratic convention iu Ohio, is quoted in a
Mishawaka (Ind ) special to the Cincin
nati Enquirer as saying:
"It appears to me that a grievous mis
take was made by the Demooratio con
vention of Ohio in cutting loose from
William Jennings Bryan in an effort to
bring tlie party wings together Abuse
of Oolouel Bryan and liis nation of
friends by those professing to be Demo
crats, bnt- who have co-operated with
Republicans during the past few years,
will' never cement the Demooratio party
to bolters. It may be, however, that
tho most deplorable aots of offense to
Mr. Bryan were unintentionally made
just at a time that makes them appear
ugly.”
That was a shrewd sea captain who
sailed to and fro in his schooner off New
York harbor for several days prior to
yesterdny. His Tessel carried a cargo
of sugar from Porto Rico which waB
consigned to parties in this country.
The new free trade relations between
the United States aud Porto Rico were
inaugurated yesterday, when exportB
from the islaud first enjoyed the right
of free entry to our ports. The sea cap
tain \vi s aware of this state of affairs,
and ho cruised for several days off' New
York harbor waiting for Thursday and
the commencement of the new order of
things provided for bv Congress in
April last. It is presumed that the
sohooner with her oargo of Porto Rioan
sugar has at last landed, and that Unole
Sam has missed by several hours the
collection of many thousands of dollars
of import duty.
Says the Savannah News: "It ap
pears that Edgar Stanton Maolay,
author of the history that has reopened
the Sampson-Sohley controversy by its.
vicions attacks upon Admiral Sohley,
was formerly au editorial writer on the
New York Sun. So there is where the
impartial historian got his inspiration
respecting Schley, and that is the school
in which he learned to hurl inveotive
and vitriol through the medium ot dis
interested aud oalmly considered
articles. For somo inexplicable reason
the Sun has been violently autl-Sohley
ever since that gallant s dtor was put in
command of the flying squadron,”
There is a proepeot of an early settle
ment of the Bteel and tin workers' strike
against the great United States Steel
Corporation, aud it is now thought that
at a conference to be hold this week
between the officers of the Amalga
mated Association and representa
tives of the Trast terms will be
agreed to, as a result of whloh all
the striking operatives will return
to work. The Trast has kept a stiff up
per lip thus far, but it is donbtless anx
ious, despite Its bold front, to reach a
settlement with as little delay as possi
ble. Every day of the strike takes
thousands of dollars out of the Trust's
pockets; and pecuniary loss is something
that causes the most horrible night
mares to disturb the sleep of the aver-
age Trust magnate.
The New York Sun is a big paper, but
it does sbme mlghtly little things. It
has taken sides, sinoe 1898, with the
gang whioh has persistently persecutor
Bear Admiral Sohley, and now has the
nerve to refer to Edgar Stanton Maolay
as "the most distinguished living Amer
ican historian.” There is little doubt
that Mr. Maolay heartily agrees with
he San.
Entries for the gubernatorial 'race
will not be considered closed until after
the next Dill session of the legislature.
It is a great pity a jury of intelligent
Georgia farmers oannot sit on the Schley
oonrt ot inquiry. They wonld see to it
that jnstlue saw the light and that the
Ught tell where it is mast needed.
At the battle of Santiago the Brook-
lyn, the flagship of Sohley, the com
mander of the Flying Squadron, in
dieted more than fifty per cent, of the
damage to the enemy, and received
more than fifty per cent, of the enemy’s
shots. And Schley was “on deck" all
of the time, personally direoting the
pursuit of Cervern's fleet. The particu
lars of the fight are well known to the
country. In the face of them, the Cin
cinnati Enquirer says that any man who
accuses Schley of cowardioe, eveu it it
be Admiral Sampson, is contemptible.
Internal revenue receipts for the gov
ernment year euded June 30, 1901, are
stated at **806,871,069, or more than
*11,000,000 in excess of collections of the
bureau during 1900. This is the largest
revenue derived from internal taxes
sinoe the establishment of the system of
excises necessitated by the oivil war—
except in 1899, when internal taxes on
almost every taxable article yielded over
*309,000,000.
Wonder what Teddy Roosevelt thinks
of the New York Sun’s reference to
Maolay as the "most distinguished liv-
It Is probably safe to infer from all
that we have seen in the papers dnnng
the past ten days or two weeks—“in the
event," etc.—that there are a lot of dis
appointed aspiring politicians over in
the Eleventh congressional distriot over
the announcement of Congressman
Brantley that he has decided not to
resign his Beat in Congress to make the
raoe for governor.
The Olnoinnatl Enquirer says: “It
will be the President's took to get ont
of taking a hand in the quarrel in the
navy. Mr. MoKinley’B ability to avoid
a responsibility is a positive thing of
beauty.
Admiral Sampson probably never
will cease ruminating over what might
have been, or how things might have
been done at the naval battle of Santia
go, if he had been there.
Mr. Brantley Bays he is oat of it*
Next I
$100,000.00
To Loan
ON CITY PROPERTY AND FARIIf
PROPERTY IN SOUTH
WEST GEORGIA.
We Buy and Sell all Kinds ot
Real Estate on Commission.
We offer the Johnson property, im
mediately north of Chautauqua lot,
either as a whole or in small , lots, to
suit purchaser. SMALL cash paymentt
balanoe on easy terms.
Titles examined and conveyancing a
specialty. Gall on
Sam W. Smith,
At Court Hones.
mg American historian? Teddy is sev- 0 r. write to Jones & S^th^Ytorneys:
eral kinds of a historian himself. ' Albany, Ga. * 7
iU> (H
BBSS