Newspaper Page Text
Polithcally Independent; always for
the best.interest of the whole people
of the county.
Purity of politics; purity of the bal
lot box, and clean administration of all
places of public trust. Only paper In
county.
R. F. TATUM, Editor.
VOL. XVI.
Georgia Briefs
Items of State Interest Culled
From Random Sources.
Seventy-Six Acrea for $4.25.
g. H. Ilelveston of Camden county,
v last week granted 76 acres of
1 id in that county by Secretary of
ue Philip Cook, under the headright
ws, The total fees in conection with
t ,,, ; rant were $4.25, making the land
c it Ilelveston about 5 1-2 cent3 an
a , re. It is said to be good land.
* * *
Two Bank Examiners Added.
Two assitant state bank examiners
have been added to the force uudor
t -tate bank examiners. They are
y, .1 Eakes of Conyers and J. W.
Stevens o? Atlanta, both having had
• king experience. This gives a
force of four assistants in this depart
ment now. Under the law it is re
■’ t eil that each state bank be exam
in'd twice a year.
* * •
Prison Farm for Mrs. Freeney.
Tiif prison commission declined to
rece amend clemency for Mrs. Sallie
I V ip • v of Eastman, who was convict
mi of the murder of W. P. Harrell and
Fenced to life imprisonment in the
penitentiary.
Tiiere is little doubt, however, that
tli prison commission will be called
on fin to consider the question of
Mrs Freenev’s pardon after she has
. and a short time at the prison
farm.
* * *
Reward of $665 Offered.
At the request of citizens of Mays
\ l i \ Hanks county, Governor Smith
h : offered a reward of SIOO for the
an t of the unknown party or par
ties who, on the night of December
lo last, set fire to and burned the
dv- ding house of J. M. Rylee of that
place The citizens of Maysvi’le have,
h subscription, offered a reward, of,
s.'■6s for the same arrest, and-the total’
< standing, reward in the case is thus
$065.
* * *
Receivership May Settle Ownership.
Asa result of the receivership of
♦ Macon and Birmingham road, it
is thought that the Macon and Bir
i d.am may be added to the mileage 4
< : the Ytlanta Birmingham and Atlan
ta system. It is known that the At
lanta, Birmingham and Atlantic has
t Mil- to .secure possesion of the Ms
o n and Birmingham. The receiver
s’.ip may settle the matter by trans
ferring the road to the Atlanta, Bir
mingham and Atlantic.
* * *
Club Secretary Heavily Fined.
In the recorder’s court at Macon,
Secretary C. R. Wright of the local
order of Elks was fined SSOO with the
alternative of 90 days on the public
works, for alleged violation of the city
< (finance against the operation oT the
looker in Macon. An appeal has been
planned, and the case will be hurried
through as fast as possible.
At a lodge meeting the Elks made
I ins not to undertake to hold the
1 ■ i rs open until after the matter
bar been decided in the state supreme
court..
* * *
Changes in Georgia Postoffices.
The following changes In postmas
b : in fourth class Georgia offices are
■'e nounced by the postoffice depart
ment:
Be Witt, Mltchel county, B. Adler to
reepd H. R. Cowan, resigned: Love
joy Station. Clayton county, Andrew
W. McViceker, to succeed Isham G.
Dorsey, resigned; Munnerlyn, Burke
rr ”>nty, John W. Lewis, to succeed J C
1 rk, resigned; Pine Grove, Appling
f 'unty, Erasmus D. Music, to succeed
- L. Bohanon; Walnut Grove, Wal
nut county, R. A. Forrester, to sue-
eand J. Robinson, resigned.
* * *
Rewards Largely Increased.
Rewards for the arrest of George Bar
bm, the alleged safe blower, and John
!la rper, the condemned slayer of Sher
iff B. C Keith, of Murray county, who
in ide their escape from the Atlanta
jid, have been materially increased.
Two hundred and fifty dollars will be
paid for the apprehension and delivery
°f Barton, and S6OO for Harper.
-Mrs. Keith, widow of the murdered
' riff offers a personal reward of SIOO
for the capture of Harper, and the oth
-1 r rewards for him are $250 by the
kovenio and $250 by Sheriff Nelms of
i'ulton county. The $250 reward of
b'red for the arrest of Barton is made
u l> by an offer of SIOO from the Bank
of Sharon and $l5O by Sheriff Nelms.
* * *
Heavy Fines for Blind Tigers.
Judge W. F. Eve threw a bomb
among the blind tigers of Augusta in
his sentence of J. E. Allen and Fred
Elliott, the two white men convicted
of having liquor for the purpose of sale.
It had been rumored that the sentence
"ould be served, but the reality proved
than the talk. Allen was given
a fine of SOOO and six months in jail,
a nd Elliott a fine of S4OO and four
months’ confinement.
This is believed to be the first jail
sentence for violation of the new pro
< ibition law in the whole state. Judge
Eve announced that h e expected this
would put an end to the tigers' in the
county, but if it did not he v, r ould apply
the limit to the next offenders and
give them twelve months in the chain
gang instead of sending them to jail.
* *
“College on Wheels.”
Dr. Soule, president of the SIOO,OOO
agricultural college at Athens, and who
is charge of the “colege on wheels,”
has outlined an itinerary which wiil
take in every county in the state and
will make 150 stops at which 300,000
people will be reached.
State School Commissioner Jere M.
Pound and Commissioner of Agricul
ture Hudson are also expected to trav
el with the train, from time to time,
and deliver brief lectures.
Dr. Soule has provided for five lec
tures to be delivered aboard this train
and make brief talks at each town vis
ited.
One of these lectures will go deeply
into the subject of fertilization, and
will tell of the wonderful properties
to be found in the use of cotton seed
meal as a fertilizer filler and will show
exhibits which have resulted from its
use. He will also go into the subject
of cattle raising in the south and will
explain how much more cheaply cat
tle can be raised, and how much bet
ter by the use of a mixture of cotton
seed meal and cotton seed buls than
western hay or bran. Dr. Soule has
tried the experiments, and will vouch
for the good results to be obtained.
* * *
Pandemonium in Canon Town.
Excitement over the horsewhipping
of Dr. Bailey, superintendent of Canon
city school, Is still at fever heat.
Threats are now being made to horse
whip the mayor of the town and the
chairman of the board of trustees.
The posse was allowed to go pending
trial before the mayor.
Out of an enrollment of over two
hundred pupils the women who did the
horsewhipping represented less than 10
per cent and pay less than 6 per cent
of the special tax levied for school pur
-poses.
Canon has but a small population,
and this affair-' is deeply regretted by
the best citizens. Since Dr.’ Bailey
has been principal of the school' the
town has progressed by leaps and
bounds, exceeding any town: in north
east Georgia.
It appears that the cause of the whip
ping of Dr. Bailey by the women was
certain statements which he is alleged
to have made. The women demanded a
retraction, which was made by him.
This waa followed by the demand
that he resign as principal, turn over
the keys and leave the town. Dr. Bai
ley agreed to all of these demands.
Before he could leave the building,
some of the women, it appears, could
not restrain their anger and lashed
him severely with both whips and
switches
TAFT FOR3ES SWEEP OHIO.
Result of Primaries All One Way for
Big Secretary.
The net result of the republican pri
maries held throughout Ohio Tuesday,
says a special from Columbus, was
for William H. Taft, four delegates
at large and twenty-two district dele
gates to the national convention in
Chicago and a list of delegates to the
state convention to be held March 3,
which will be unanimously in his fa
vor. Hardin county held no prima
ries.
No opposition worth mentioning de
veloped during the day. The supreme
court destroyed all chances of success
by the Foraker faction in Cuyahoga
county by declaring that the Taft com
mittee was the only valid organization
of its kind in that county, and the se
lection of delegates there went ’by de
fault, no ticket being placed in the
field against the Taft candidates.
In Knox county the opposition to
Taft had brought an “independent”
ticket into the field, the independents,
however, being all Foraker men. The
Taft candidates won easily—the vote
being about four to one in their fa
vor.
The following statement was issued
Tuesday night by Arthur I. Vorys, the
manager of the Taft presidential cam
paign :
“Ohio is for Taft. The result at
the primaries Tuesday completes the
demonstration. Every county, except
one with seven delegates, now has se
lected its delegates to the state con
vention. Every county has selected
Taft delegates. The state convention
will be unanimous for Taft, for every
one of the eight hundred and fifteen
delegates is for and is instructed for
Taft. This unanimity also demon
strates that every one of the forty-six
delegates to the national convention
will be for Taft.”
BONI FINED IN COURT.
Cousin, Whom He Thrashed, is Award
ed Twenty Cents Damages.
Count Boni de Castellane, the di
vorced husband of Madam Gould, who
was Miss Anna Gould, was fined
S2O in the correctional court at Paris
Tuesday for his recent attack upon
his cousin, Prince Helie de Sagan.
Damages to the amount of twenty
cents were awarded the prince, who
had been attacked and beaten by Boni,
THIRD TERM TALK
Set Going Again By Roose
velt Supporters,
HIS MESSAGE THE CAUSE
More Conservative Political Prophet*
Confidently Predict That President
Will Absolutely Control the
Chicago Convention.
A Washington special says: Tho
RoosveLt third term talk has been re
vived with an abruptness and vigor
that is disconcerting to the “reaction
aries.” The president’s recent mes
sage to congress and the spontaneous
and not always discriminating praise
accorded that message by democrats
has brought this about.
The president’s convincing proof
that there is still a great deal of fight
left in him started the talk. His most
ardent supporters are pointing to the
message as evidence that he cares
more for the success of the program
he has outlined than for any personal
victory. He is believed to be frankly
and sincerely in favor of Mr. Taft,
whom he depends upon to continue the
fight for the establishment of the
Roosevelt policies. But, if the coun
try refuses to have Mr. Taft, and if
the reactionary element threatens to
control the party, the president will
take charge of the situation personally,
and the result will be inevitable.
The more conservative political
prophets predict that the president’s
control of the next national convention
of his party will be absolute. His In
fluence -will govern in the selection of
a candidate, they say, and the princi
ples and policies outlined in his recent
message will bo converted into plat
form declarations.
If the power of the president is so
complete and his influence is controll
ing in the convention, there will, of
course, be no occasion for him to throw
hin-.self into the breach- but, should the
delegates g£t away trom Mr. Taft, the
president’s friends will stampede the
convention for Roosevelt.
The present outlook is for Taft on
the first ballot cr Roosevelt on the
second. There has been a great deal
of comment of late upon this line, and
the impression is growing that if the
country refuses the man whom the
president favors, the only alternative
will be the president himself. In the
Washington Times of recent issue ap
peared on the editorial page, a predic
tion is made with the confidence and
lack of reserve that ordinarily marks
the publication of a straight item of
news.
Immediately under the editorial page
heading, set in conspicuous type and
in double column appears the follow
ing:
“An analysis of the political situa
tion today, and a careful estimate of
the personal and running strength of
the various candidates in the presi
dential race, point emphatically to the
conclusion that Mr. Roosevelt will be
nominated in spite of himself. And his
reuomination will mean his re-election
by a majority of matchles dimen
sions.”
Saturday Representative Clayton of
Alabama, who introduced early in De
cember a resolution in the house de
claring against a third term for any
president, announced that he proposed
to make a fight to have the committee
report his resolution and to have it
pass the house. The resolution lias
lain for several weeks in the commit
tee on the election of president and
vice president, and it was thought no
further attention would be paid to it,
but recent agitation has evidently
made Representative Clayton deter
mined to put the matter through. In
discussing the matter, lie said:
“On the day the president announc
ed his adherence to his election night
promise not to be a candidate nor to
accept another nomination, • I intro
duced in the house a second resolution
congratulating him upon his loyalty to
the precedent set by Washington and
Jefferson, and commending him for his
wisdom and patriotism.
“I have not been able to get a hear
ing on either resolution before tht
committee on election of . president
and vice president, of which Mr. Gaines
of West Virginia is chairman. I was
assured by him that he would call the
committee together in a few days and
would have full hearings on this and
other ‘ election measures now pending
in the committee.”
MORE PAY FOR SOLDIERS.
Committee on Military Affairs Favors
an Increase.
It was decided Tuesday by the house
committee on military affairs to in
corporate in the army appropriation
bill provision for an increase of pay
for enlisted men. The rate has not
been determined, nor has the commit
tee yet decided to recommend increase
for officers.
TRENTON, GA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY IJ, 1903.
TEDDY TURNED DOWN.
Exceeded Authority in Appointing Ros
siter Tempor* y Head of Govern
ment.. minting Office.
A Washington special says: William
S. Rossiter, appointed by President
Roosevelt as acting public printer in
place of Public Printer Stillings, who
is under suspension pending an inves
tigation of the affairs of his office, went
to the treasury department Friday to
have his bond approved. The depart
ment re-fused to consider the matter,
on the ground that the president had
exceeded his authority in appointing
Mr. Rossiter; that the assistant pubji
lie printer, Captain H. T. Brian, suc
ceeds to the vacancy. Under this •*
informal ruling Mr. Rossiter later iai
the day stepped aside and his place
was taken by Captain Brian, who will
administer the government printing ofi
fice as public printer for the timer
being. Mr. Rossiter, however, does not’
relinquish the work of inquiry laid out
for him by the president. His position
in the government printing office her
comes that of the president’s personal
representative and he is proceeding’
with the investigation upon which he
is to base his report to the president'
of conditions existing there and of the
best methods of putting the big plant
on a business basis.
Chairman Landis of the joint con
gressional committee, which is inves
tigating alleged irregularities in the
government printing office, has given
out the following statement:
“The printing investigation commit
tee has been for some months engag
ed in the investigation of information
A-hich will afford a complete analysis
of the problem of public printing, for
the departments and for congress for
the last three years. The commission
started this inquiry on November 13
by a letter addressed to the various
executive departments. The replies to
this inquiry will cover all of the gov
ernment publications and will divide
the printing into two classes —publi-
cations and miscellaneous. An inquiry
was also addressed to the government
printing office calling for stHl further
information. None of these reports
are as yet completed and after they
have .been submitted it ,:m likely that
several weeks will be occupied in com
piling and analyzing their data. While
a comparison of cost is not the pri
mary object of this inquiry, it is one
of the important Objects and it is the
purpose of the commission to make
the investigation as thorough as pos
sible.”
The act under which the treasury
department decided not to accept Mr.
Rossiter’s bond was that of January 12,
1895, which provides that in case of
death, resignation, absence or illness
of the public printer, the chief clerk o:
the government printing office should
perform the duties of public printer
until a successor was appointed or such
absence or illness shall cease. It also
provides that the president in his dis
cretion authorize and direct any other
officer of the government whose ap
pointment is vested in the president by
and with the advice and consent of the
senate to temporarily perform the du
ties of the vacant office. Under the
ruling of the treasury officials, Mr.
Rossiter can have no other standin&
than that of personal representative of
tho president without specific authority
In matters pertaining to the manage
ment of the office.
PENNYPACKER INVOLVED?
Name of Pennsylvania Ex-Governor is
Mentioned In Graft Case.
The names of former Governor Pen
nypaeker and former Attorney General
Hampton L. Carson were brought Into
the capitol prosecutions at Harrisburg,
Pa., by the testimony of Stanford B.
Lewis, assistant of Architect Joseph M.
Huston, at the trial for alleged cohspir
acy of Contractor J. H. Sanderson,
former Auditor General Snyder, for
mer State Treasurer Mathues and for
mer Public Buildings Superintendent
Shumaker.
MORE WORK OF NIGHT RIDERS.
Well-Armed Mob Visits Farms, Use
Torch, Guns and Lash.
Night riders between thirty J five and
fifty strong, well-armed and mounted,
visited the farms of Hugh C. Lawrence
and Wash Tucker, within three miles
of Adams, t’enn., Friday night, destroy
ed the barns on both farms, together
with 20,000 pounds of tobacco, shot
and wounded Lawrence and his son,
Bradley Lawrence, and whipped a ne
gro in an unmerciful manner.
HIGhER-UP SALARIES REDUCED.
Wages of Men Making More Than $250
a Month Cut by L. & N.
The Louisville and Nashville rail
road Wednesday reduced the salaries
of all employees making more than
$250 per month. Those receiving S4OO
and over are cut 10 per cent, while
those receiving more than $250 and
less than S4OO, suffer the reduction
of 8 per cent
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF DADE COUNTY.
STILLINGS LAID OFF
Head of Public Print Shop
Temporarily Suspended.
INVESTIGATION FENDING
President Takes Cognizance of Charge*
Made In Connection With Al
leged Mismanagement
of Office.
President Roosevelt Wednesday tem-
I porarily suspended as public printer
Charles A. Stillings and appointed Wm.
S. Rossiter temporarily to fill the du
ties of that office. The action, as ex
plained officially, is to facilitate the in
vestigation now being made of the gov
; ernment printing office by congress.
Mr. Rossiter is now chief clerk of
; the ceinsus office.
Just as the president’s action lu
\ suspending Stillings was being an
nounced, a committee of labor men of
[ Washington called at the white house
f and presented to the president reso
lutions adopted by the local Central
Labor Union, on January 20, last,
| charging Stillings with violations of
| the eight-hour law in the government
printing office.
Mr. Stillings i* from Boston, Mass.,
and was appointed public printer In
' 1905. He had been general manager
of his father’s printing firm in New
York, and at various times manager of
the printers’ board of trade of Wash
ington and of New York. Mr. Rossi
ter also came from Massachusetts, and
had connections in New York and
Washington before assuming office in
the census bureau in 1890.
Mr. Landis made the following state
ments, in which Senator Whyte and
Mr. Perkins concurred:
“There was referred by the joint
committee to the subcom
mittee of the' printing investigation
authorized to inquire into
the general mattter of printing and
finding, composed of Senator Whyte,
udge Perkins and mygejf. a proposal
submitted to the joint committee by
the Suffolk Distributing company, of
New York, with the request to report
on the question of any relations which
might exist between the said company
and the Audit System, a corporation
employed in the government printing
office to Install a cost, audit and in
ventory system.
“The committee had been reliably in
formed that the Audit System and its
auxiliary company, the Audit System
Supply company, not only exerted what
seemed to the committee an undue and
improper influence in the government
printing office, but were also interested
in tha purchase of supplies for the gov
ernment printing office.
“The sub-committee, after the exam
ination of these witnesses, felt that the
testimony given by them, in connection
with other representations made to the
members of the committee, justified a
request, that, in fairness to Mr. Stil
lings as well as to the committee and
to the government and to all concerned,
the public printer be temporarily sus
pended pending the result of the Inqui
ry now in hand.”
BANKER MORSE SKIPS OUT.
Leaves New York on Eve of Court
Proceedings Against Him.
Following the institution of an ac
tion in the supreme court at New York
Wednesday against Charles W. Morse,
the banker, by Charles A. Haim a,
United States bank examiner, to re
cover $243,321.25, the balance due on
certain promissory notes given by
Morse to the National Bank of North
America, the receiver was informed
that Morse had probably gone to Eu
rope or departed elsowhere from New
York to be gone for an Indefinite pe
riod.
PROHIS BEFORE COMMITTEE.
Delegation Urges Barring of Whiskey
Shipments Into Dry States.
Representatives of the prohibition
party, tho Anti-Saloon League of Amer
ica, the Woman’s Christian Temper
ance Union and church organizations
appeared Thursday before the house
committee on the judiciary to urge a
favorable report on one or more of the
bills to protect “dry" districts from
receipt of interstate as well as intra
state shipments o-f liquors.
KIRBY FOUND NOT GUILTY,
Was Tried on Charge of Killing Jamas
D. Money, Jr.
The jury at Greenwood, Miss., before
whom Dr. J. W. Kirby was on trial
for two days, charged with the killing
of James D. Money, Jr., returned a
verdict adjudging Dr. Kirfy “not
guilty.” The killing was the result
of a family feudt
SPLIT IN FLORIDA
Amongthe Republicans Over
Taft and Roosevelt,
STRENUOUS CONVENTION
Contested Delegations from State Will
Go to Chicago—Two Conventions
Under Way at the Same Time
in One Hall.
Florida republicans held their con
vention in St. Augustine Thursday to
select delegates to the national con
vention, and it is said that the
uous and exciting scenes enact:•dM§|
merely a forecast of similar sc*
other southern states, caused by t’M
effort being made by the anti-RoosS
velt republicans for control in the na-,
tional convention. The gathering was
really two conventions held at the same
time in the same hall. The progress
o-f these being frequently interrupted
by sensational knock-down and drag
out fights.
The officeholders’ faction was called
to order by the chairman of tire state
committee, and they proclaimed them
selves as the regulars, but they did r*
succeed in carrying out their prear
ranged program. The Taft sentiment
was too strong for the leaders to hold
in check and strong resolutions were
adopted emphatically indorsing Wil
liam H. Taft for the presidency.
On the other side of the hall the
contesting convention chose delegates
absolutely untrammeled by any instruc
tions.
The officeholders’ convention adopted
resolutions approving e.f the policies of
the Roosevelt administration and the
conservative manner in which he has
carried them out, and instructed the
delegates elected-to the national con
vention to support the president’s poli
cies and the candidate who is in sym
pathy with and who will carry out
these policies, and then proceeded to
name William H. Taft as such candi
date.
The anti-Taft cor
resolutions condemning in strong terms
the attempts to Influence and control,
by use of federal ’ patronage, through
governmental officeholders, the selec
tion of delegates to the national con
vention in the interest of any presi
dential candidate.
The congressional district conven
tions of the first and seednd districts
o.f Florida, were held by each faction
Immediately after adjournment of the
state convention, and each of these
conventions elected two delegates to
the national convention and adopted
the same resolutions as the state con
ventions o.f their respective factions
had already adopted.
GRAFT IN PUBLIC PRINTERY.
“Gold Brick” Audit System Ordered
Ejected by Roosevelt.
Concurring in the recommendation
of Acting Public Printer Rossiter, the
president Thursday cancelled the con
tract of the government with the Audit
System, and ordered its ejection from
the government printing office.
The Audit System is the corporate
name of the cost ascertaining method
Installed more than a year ago by Pub
lic Printer Stilffngs. Under its oper
ation the government has paid about
$120,000 >for the simple privilege of
calculating the cost of printing.
BANDIT BUNCOES BRITONS.
—j ]
Releases MacLcah for SIOO,OOO andj
Immunity from Arrest. %
Caid Sir Harry Mac Lean, comm an dsn
of the sultan’s body guard, has arrived
at Tangier, Morocco .under an escort
from the bandit,
him
n;- -.in r J&j
! T ■
muniri fi mi urr - U
WET OR DRY ELEC^O^^^^
To Test Prohibition Question in Jack
sonville Subject of Petition.
The prohibitionists Wednesday
sented to the Duval county commisj
sionfrs at Jacksonville, Fia.,
calluig for a wet or dry election.
The prohibition leaders claim the S|
fiitiojUContains the names of 2,500 twM
istered voters, while,
only i >’ JM y
ii.il was a
• 2
was given until I'Vbruaiy
its report. JHM|
Filipinos in congfot
Two RepresenLnt: s> U Wm:
Possessions Take TheiiWßß
Representation in the house
resentatives was increased by two
Wednesday, when Benito LeGarda and
Pablo Ocampo, resident Philippine
commissioners, took their seats. They
were conducted to the capitol by Sec
retary Taft. Their entry into the
chamber was signalized by applause.
PROHIBITION IV!9
j Introduced m Senate
Georgia Wcu^B
Shipments afl :
B
; .
i; ■ll
shipments a special
•commerce, to be subject to the
police powers of the state
rival at the point of
before delivery to the
bill provides that all vinous,
spiritous liquors within a state,ag|B
its the regulation and
• < ig^|
trol. I t o;i :■.!!, s of v, hJj|
<:o:!i>'-- lit
\ JH
i jSm
tH|’
jl ' f ' J *
iran
fictitious person, or
ment to ally person or to deliver the
liquor except in accordance with the
local police regulations.
Every railroad and every officer or
employee of a railroad who shall know
ingly violate any of the provisions of.
the act shall be guilty of a misdemean
or and punishable by a fine of not less
than SSOO nor more than $5,000, and
in addition the officers and agents
shall bo liable to imprisonment for a
term of from one to tw T o years.
No interference on the part of the
state will be permitted in regard to
liquor passing entirely through the
state.
BUM MARRIAGE VOIDED.
Countess of Yarmouth, Sister of Harry
Th a?urrr/e ff '*Oi orfT H u s-
Band in Name Only.
A London dispatch says: Sir Birrell
Barnes, president of the divorce court,
Wednesday, granted the countess of
Yarmouth, who was Miss Alice Thaw
of Pittsburg, Pa., a decree nullifying
her marriage to the earl of Yarmouth.
The case was heard in prjvate and
was practically undefended, the hear-.
! ng lasting for only half an hour,
tountess was present, but the
Yarmouth was not in court. i
Only four witnessesJtere
They were the VmjAj
herseif, her maid, h *pr
the court, and an American jB
yer, who proved th? marriage.
The countess gave
port of allegation *jß
ling.* had :■ ■■■. •*u ~^l
ami s’ ! iW iB “V
and tin- < one sr had
man and wife. jSgmBSBBBm
!. ;a V, . .ri"
aria::**
The change from tin- I' r jßß' :
the earl pf. Mjfl
contest the case is ndd
<v Wjifi
'M
IS
jg
m 1
tries !)(■
At prß
by maiiß
eigi .B
i^a^B
B.
t ■
e
Mp|||
bb
■■■
*'w r nBB
ing
g
B
M
:B|||ps
A