University of South Carolina Libraries
THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED ISM. Published every morolo* except Monday by The Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 West Whitner Street, An derson, S. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays nod Fridays L. M. GLENN....Editor and Managet Entered as second-class metter April 28, 1914, at tho post office si Anderson, South Carolins, under thc Act of March 3, 187?. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES telephone .821 SUBSCRIPTION BATES DAILY One Yeer .16.00 Bia Months.2.60 Three Months .1.2 G One Month.41 One Week . .10 SEMI-WEEKLY One Year.11.50 Els Months ..:. .76 The Intelligencer la delivered by farriers tn Uie city. < Look at the printed label on your paper. The dato thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice dst? on label carefully, and'If not correct please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring tbs address ol their psper changed, will please state In their communication both tba old and new addresses. Tb insure prompt delivery, com plaints of non-delivery In the city sf Anderson should be made to tbs Circulation Department before 9 a. m. and a copy will bs sent at ones. Ail checks and drafts should bc drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer. ADVERTISING Rates will ba furnished on applica tion. No tf advertising discontinued ex cept on written order. Tba Intelligencer will publish brief snd rational letters on subject* ol general Interest when they arc se? eompar'ed by the carnea and ad dressee af the authors and are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not bs re turned. In order to avoid delays on account et personal absence, letters to Tbs Intelligencer Invaded for publication should not be addressed to any Indi vidual connected with the papar, but ?imprr to Tho Intelligencer. SATURDAY. AUGUST 7, 1916. WEATHER FORECAST Partly cloudy Saturday and Sun day. The electrocution of, .Becker waa a .hocking affair, to say'the least -c---, Tho Kaiser seems to havo forgot ten to return thankB for the cap turo of Warsaw o Astron omero say the moon won't keep still; They wouldn't either il they were repeatedly gdttlng, full. --o-. What Mexico heeds ls not so much A. B. C. mediation but a little S. O. S. intervention on the part of Uncle Sam. -!-o Factory Superintendent Shot at Di fractara' Meeting.-headline). Moral: Stay away from directors' meetings, o ' ' Even John.Bull is waking up to thc fact that. Americans won't admit hit proprietorship of the seven seas. -o Georgia Scions Doing Nothing. headline. We were going to say something, but the pot should not call the kettle black. o ? Any, fellow who will follow the rules for "How to Live a Hundred Years" deserves to live twice that long. - -o A Massachusetts couple quarreled two years after their marriage snd determined never to speak to each other again. And they kept their word-for fifty years, living on tho same farm. .Shs lived tn the farm house and be lived In a shanty near by. The other day, the house burn ed down, and that broke the long silence.. If,.you had read that in a fiction story, wouldn't you havo call ed lt impossible? ; - ?? ?'? o- . Members ot Spartantourg'to Jury liavo pledger?, themselves to drag one mlle ?of road for a period! df*one year In their respective localities. Per fectly grand jury. Incur imagination we can see sn Anderson campaign crowd cheering General Villa!? remark t?st If the Unheil States government . don't like mn lt can go to hell."-Sp&rtanburg Journal. Aw, for Gie love of Mlko. Booker. Wo know what you mean, but resnemberest then the "rotten egging" of the mayor of the metr? polis ot South Carolina when bo spoke in a SpartanLurg theatre Against Oie same individual? A HU H HSU KM, KIMMI MA N M NC. Disp?tenos appearing in afternoon , papen of lite State yesterday under a t Columbia dute-line read UH follows: In u slntenient gires out today Co vernor Matting denies incon HlMteney In offering rewards for de rapture of persons accused of erlme.. The statement uns mude In ?len of t??e criticism of his of? ier of a rewnrd for au alleged negro murderer of Abbeville, who 1 hld lieeu reported lynched hut had escaped to Alabama lt Ix thought. "I hate rein MM} rewards In cases asked where there wan no special reason except that the criminal had not been arrested" stated the governor. When rewurds were offered he avrrred the alleged criminals had made good their escape. Relative to the Anderson county case the governor said a reward was re? quested before the officers had a fair chance to apprehend the al? leged criminal. "I rannt do my duty as 1 see it even though I am criticised for so doing" con cludes the statement. 1 Zounds, not much "Inconsistency" in that, eh? Just plain, every-day ; common sen<re. But it is no less than i we expected. In discussing this mat 1 ter previously, we asserted that wo ,. were confident that Governor Mnn ' mug would give from -the stump next 1 summer, in the event he stands for re-election, an account of his stewnrd , phip ti nt woud be entirely satlsfac t( ry to his followers- and confounding to his critics and enemies. Governor Manning chooses to give this account in g, with respect to the re ward business, at-the. present Instead of walting un til next summer and giving it from tho stump. ' It's no use arguing about the mattar further. Manning is dead right about tho proposition, and that is all there ls to lt. Those who have "Jumped on" him about the matter of offering a reward in one instance and not of fering a reward in another in stance, cither went off half-cocked or belong to that class of "metaphysicians" who deny that "circumstances alter cases" and that a man must be consistent at ; any price, doing the same tiling every time, In every instance and in the same manner, regardless of circum stances. Might as well argue that the taking of human life is murder, regardless of whether the. circum stances surrounding the act make lt puro and unadulterated murder, man slaughter, a killing in self defense or > an accidental killing. 3o much for that But mark you the ?? 'i of the mah: "I must do my f .< at I see lt. even though I am cr Unified for so do? lng." That's Richard I. Manning. A man - who dare? to do right who dares to obey his conscience and who dares <o perform his duty as he sees it, re gardless of the cons?quences?. Nor. much of a "politician," you aay. No, thanks be to God, there's not Governor Manning's mistaken have been mistakes,, of "policy," and noth ing more; his intentions haye boen good. "Policy" and "politics" have io place in bis make-up. South Caro lina has suffered for "policy's" and politicians'" sake" so long it la a ro 1 lief to havo at the helm a skipper who darna to drive his ship athward tho current of "politics." SUCCESS. Under a spreading . chestnut 4r?e the village blacksmith Hes In a com fortable hammock smoking a two-for n-quartor cigar. His name te Matthew McNulty, and the chestnut tree stands tn front of his cheerful farmhouse Just outside Lafayette, Ind. Day in, day out from morn till night aa the poet sung, you could hoar McNulty*s bellows roar, for nearly sixty years-If you . stuck around that long: During tha?e years ho shod more than half a million horses and mules. He used to have a monopoy on shoeing tho tow-path : mules that hauled the canal boats be tween Lafayette and Toledo. McMulty baa retired now, with a ' fortune of $40,000 and a farm, over 'and above Ahe good riving he's made In his blacksmith shop all these years. And It'd a safe bet that no retired city banker or merchant gets move satisfaction out of his career and lita' millions than McNulty gets out ot hts anvil memoria . hts little farm and his Forty Tbt'vssd. NMJTR/ LITT. At the convention of the Gencan Amenican National Alliance In Son Francisco, Dr. C. J. Mexamer Ita pres ident ?..imotwtrated the genuine ncro irai Hy of tho organization as follows: "I do not want to he prophetic, bi t I believe that tho future will prove us right f?j?W???j?, ?a* must conic when the American, even the holdout Anglo-American, will ud mlt thut the German-American "is the mont Americanized and therefore tho most human of ull neutral American citizens." And he capped his argument with th?- words: "Hall and victory to German and Austrian arms on the seas, on land and In the air." After that but bu mt, when Dr. fleas mor adds. "I must say that I have been proud of my country lately," a plain American who can never hope to rise to such hyphenated heights of neutrality may be for?lven for asking, "Which country?" AUTOMOBILE SPEEDING. ^Several complaints have already bren hoard on the a.reels in regard to thc reckless driving of automobiles, which seems now to be getting an every day occurrence in Anderson. At tills particular time, when many of tho streots are torn up because of the street paving and traffic be comes isomewhat congested on certain sections of the open streets, more caution than ever before ought to be taken by automobile drivers. A lit tle extra precaution will not cost much and probably mean the avoid ance of serious accidents. On the main streets of tho city automobiles aro seen running at a very rapid rate every day, especially at night itbne. Some of the streets ure taken for regular speedways and someone is going to run a little too fast some of these nights and thereby cause a serious accident. Anderson baa been very fortunato In thc past In not naving serious' auto mobile accidents, and much of this is duo to the "drive to tho right" signs and the vigilance of the police. Tis summer timo now and the peo plp are having a good time, but they must not forget that by running their automobiles at a reckless speed they not only endanger their own lives but thoso of others also. They do not moan to speed and be reckless, but it they do forget, the police will have to kindly tell them that ?iey are hav ing too good a time and are not thoughtful enough of tho value of hu man lives. ANONYMOUS COMMUNICATIONS. The Intelligencer takes the trouble to print each day at the top of the first column of the editorial page this notice, among others: " Anonymous communications will not be noticed." And yet in spite of this we receive frequently items of nows and articles tn tho nature of statements setting forth views of the writer on some subject which arc not accompanied by the name ot the person writing or sending in the same. In view of the rule of this paper to discard anony mous communications, Uieso unsigned news items, announcements, state men ta etc. fail to appear In the columns of the paper. And no doubt persons sending in such items "get sore" when tiley fail to see them in print, never knowing that lt ls a'rigid rule ot all newspapers to publish ho article of which the author is not known. The Intelligencer does not require the names ot authors of communica tion.) tor the purpose publishing the writers' name, but must havo tho names aa an evidence of good f:-'th In other words, wo have to know whether the author of a communica tion ia a responsible person and that what he writes ls trustworthy. It ls simply h precaution that all newspa pers are forced to take, and one that they adhere to rigidly the country over. Some days ago we received a com munication in which a vitrollo attack was made upon a merchant of Ur!? city by one who signed himself mere ly "Anderson MUI Worker." As this paper does not knowingly publish ar ticles of a defamatory ^nature, even when \h?y are accompanied by the signature of the author, this com munication, ot cours?, found its way Into the waste basket We bave before us at present a communication reading "Dcatb of John M. Jolly." The artirie ls a, proper one for publication, so far as we know, but there is no mark shoat lt to Indicate Its authorship. As uh terned communications of any and All sorts s re consigned to the waste basket immediately upon receipt, this would be the natural course this com munication would take. But we are making an exception In thia ins rance, for we realise that the article, which concerns the death of a good cltlson, ought to be published. We will hold lt until tho author of the article makes himself known to ns, and then we wEl proceed to print U. But under ?br rule ot. rejecting. all unsigned com ?uaicat?ons-a rule .which ts adhered to most stricOy-we cannot publish lt uutll the aulbor ia known. IPIIOLDING OL'lt CITIZENSHIP If un iiiiiii'/-.rant wants to go back j and fight for hts fatherland, that iu ! nobody's business but his own. Hut < If be &9 4n the way of becoming an American citizen lin must start ali over ugaln when he returns to Amer ica. This ffcet, important to hundreds of thousands of men from many lands, ls j,dinted out by the federal depart ment of labor in a recent announce ment. Our laws provide that an ap plicant for citizenship must have re sided In tho UnSTed .States for live years confnuously Immediately pre ceding tlie filing of hi j final petition. The courts arc holding that absence from the country for the sake of per forming military duty in a foreign land breaks that continuity. They hold, further, that thu original decla ration of the immigrant of his Inten tion to become a citizen ls "vitiated" by the oath of allegiance to a foreign soverlgn which ls required in all, or nearly all, European armies. The ruling 1s not made expressly to meet conditions of the present war. It Is based on a judgment handed down in the case of a Greek who de clared his intention of becoming an .\merlcan citizen on July 6, 1909, and then returned to Greece in December, 1912, to fight in tho second Balkan war, remaining there until March, 1914. Ho ho not disqualified from becoming a citizen, but hie citizenship ls delayed five years. This is an admirable policy. It tends not only to uphold the value of American citizenship, which many new-comers regard too lightly, but it emphasizes the fact that this nation baa no connection wt;h Hie Euro pean war, and neither directly nor Indirectly lends' any sanction to par I tlctpation in it A LI N E I o' D O P E \ The following; tourists, travelling by motor cars, stopped over at Hotel Cbiquola last night: Mr. and Mrs. J R. Benson, Miss Sallie Carr and Mrs. J. E. Lister, all Of. Uniontown, Ala bama. Dr. and Mrs. F. H. Rich and Mrs. F. J. Rich, of Atlanta. Mrs. Geo. G. Reid, Mrs. Mr? John A. Callaway and Dr. and Mrs. F. M. Hall, of Mll ledgesville, Ga. ' F. W. Howell and son and R. H. Lock, of Gaatonla, N. C. -o Many people of the city yesterday attended a Mason's picnic at Moun tain Springs and it waa stated that tht re were between 400 and BOO prcs Among the speakers was Robert A. Cooper and the fact that he was to be there ca ur-ed many to attend. Other speakers of the day Were Messrs. A. ll. Dagnall and Bryant. -c Still others from Anderson yester day attended tho Brown, reunion which' was held at Concord church. This family is one of. the most promi nent and -most widely connected lu the county and there were 20p or 301 pr fl 'eut. Speeches were made and those who attended ' ?state that tue dinner was one' of Ote nest ever put out. Nothing remains to be none on West Market street noiv hut the as halt work, the concrete base having been laid at tho C. 4k W. C. railway tracks yesterday. It will bo remem bered that this place waa skipped when the forces reached there be cause the trackn^had to be lowered to conform with the other grading of the street The concrete mixer was moved back to DcDurfle street yesterday af ternoon and the work will continue there this morning. As stated in The intelligencer yes terday. Mr. C. A. Maull. advertising agent of the Atlantic Coast Une rail way, wt ll be In Anderson next Tues day morning to meet the representa tive citixens^of the, city and to dis ant? with them, matters of vital Im portance to the business Interests of the people generally of thia section. It ls' hoped that a good crowd will bo present to bear Mr. Maull. -o Tito people of tho city will ibo glad to know that on Sunday they will have an opportunity ot hearing Mr. D. E. Camak preach at St John's Methodist church. Mr. Camek ls prin cipal of the Tuttle Ind4?rlul In stitute and is a preacher of note. j ? o I On last Saturday She Lingett and .Meyers olgarette coupon content come to a close and iliefe wa? much excite ment right st the Issi because ot large numbers of votes cast by some j of the leaders in the race. ilu.v one whole week has passed since thc contest was closed and aa WHS stated at the time, the winner will very likely be announced today. It has been a very long week for j sonic of the contesants, especially the ] three leaders, Messrs. Olin Sandon;. Kuriuan Geer and Cant. Rowen. All hov* had tweet dreams of the motor cycle but as yet none of their dreams j ha\e had an opportunity to be reallz-| ed Olin Sanders, it Is sUatcd, dreamed one night this week, that he was as sisting in capturing a noted escaped convict and was riding his motor cycle so fast that he could not stop] when the man was- overtaken and accordingly sent it into a sand bank ] on the side of the road. The crash r.wo? e bim and he found that he was J .still in his bcd and it had only been a dream. Ptirman Geer dreamed that ho rode te n lire on the machine one night and was Just tickled to death with the) way ii ran. The speed was great and he was very enthusiastic about his prize but when he awoke he was j morely riding along on the fire truck, a ga,3 concern, but not a motorcycle. Probably the best , one is told by Cart. Rowen. He dreamed that he was riding along on a perfectly good road when all at once he saw some holes ahead of him and forgetting that he was on a motorcycle and not on an interurban car, he turned on the gas. thinking he was signalling tho motorman to Blow up, and the speed was greatly increased. FaBter and1 faster went the motorcycle until at j latat it crashed into a telephone post. Daddy Bowen woke up with a start, but instead of having been hurled through space of the contact o" the motorcycle and the post, he had only fallen off one of the seats at tho in terurban Btation where he had been talcing a little nap. The August n'' nber of the Pied mont Magazin is from the press and ia one of the most interesting copies ever published. Sevoral pages) sire d?oted to news pictures which are j really IrttersUng, especially those] given to photographs of some of Uncle j Sam's -battleships. Several good stor ies appear, all ot which are very In teresting. The Macon Telegraph suggests that Bryan is using Ute same weapon to fight for peace that Samson wielded when he slew Uie Philistines. Returning from the west. Teddy Roosevelt stopped off in Chic go and visited Lincoln Park BOO where he scratched the back ot tho meanest Royal Bengal tiger, patted the head of the fiercest lion, toyed with the head of a deadly serpent, gave the elephant au affectionate jerk of the tall and set all the other beasts and the birds screaming with delight? and yet with all that Teddy la fearfully ] afraid of a certain Donkey. In a Churchyard. How often have t stood with bared .head at the grave, of Hamilton, in the old Trinity churchyard on .Broad way! The thick-huddled gravestones seemed to elbow each other for lack of room. Tho eternal sleep of Hamil ton wss not disturbed, by the eternal roar of traille In the.streets, for Ham ilton loved big business and the sound of it cculd only be music in his ears. The slender spire of the old cathedral pointed upwards to tho Broadway patch of sky like the f?E-?e? of some marmoreal saint. from the bottom of sn abyss; for everywhere tho toppling architecture of commerce with its myriad framed, windows,' like .Argus tn spectacles, looked down on the lit tle church, and Us little steeple, add its little graveyard, and ita little head stones-all little and all looked down upuon save, to me, the big memories of the past. And even th?se seemed shrunk and shriveled in the presence of those towering, staring monuments to Mammon. The prospect wss dis piriting, and had. I been a poet X should Oien and .here have written an Elegy In a City Churchyard that would have made Grays B&egy In a Country Churchyard cheerful reading. For Ute sympobllsm was all.?here obtrusive and ominous. Materialism had triumphed! The church with alt Us minarets and towers had been dwarfed and vanquished! The brou hand of Moloch had gripped the white throat of Hhn en the cross-^Christ's monogram bad become our dollar mark.-"Truth-TJnsiness and Politi cal.' Henry D. aSstabrook, in Nation si Magasins for August. A Long-Winded Clock. On arriving in thia country Pat was j mt* at tho pier, by hts brother Mi ko | who bad been in America soma years, and was taken to. bte home. Earl? on Oto following morning Gie new aviv ai was awakened by an alarm clock, an invention that was entirely new to him. "Share and Ol say, Molke," be. ex cllmed, springing out of bed, ?the nolghta here in America muM be Che longest.av any place th the worrul.d "Bogorra, Ol dont know about I tliot," /was tho steeply rejoinder of f Brother Mike. "That makes you think sot** "Dldnt yes hear thab clock!" re turned Pat. pntnttag towfcHr$|M$Nt?j it must have struck at las -KADW-.OUy'atar. ?; Yes, we've thrown ? bomb into the prices, but not a gas bomb. Simply broken the prices to break all clearance records Here's a Partial List of Shake-d?wtis $10.00 Men's Suits Now . . $ 7.45 12.50 Men's Suits Now . . 9.45 15.00 Men's Suits Now . . 10.95 18.00 Men's Suits Now . . 12.95 20.00 Men's Suits Now . . 14.95 22.50 Mc?'s Suits Now . . ?6.95 $3.50 and $3 Boys' Suits . . . $2.45 4.50 and $4 Boys' Suits . . . 2,95 5.00 Boys' Suits . . . 3,75 6.50 and $6 Boys' Suits . . . 4.45 7.50 and $7 Boys' Suits . . . 4.95 9.00 and $8,50 Boys' Suits . . 5.95 10.00 Boys' Suits . . . . . 7.45 12,50 and $11 Boys'Suits . . 7.95 $2.50 and $2 Men's Trousers . $1.75 3.50 and $3 Men's Trousers . . 2.45 4.50 and $4 Men's Trousers . 2.95 5.00 Men's Trousers . 3.75 6.50 and $6 Men's Trousers . 4.45 $3.50 Men's Oxfords Now . $2.75 4.00 Men's Oxfords Now . . 3.25 4.50 Men's Oxfords Now . 3.45 5.00 Men's Oxfords Now . . 3.75 6.00 Men's Oxfords Now . 4.90 RUSSIANS HAVE EVACUATED WHOIP LINE flf V?STOLR (CONTINUED FR?M PAGE ,ONE. believed to be the prelude to the en veloping of tbe retreating forces. Pe* trograd reports show the Russians re tired to the right bank of the Vistula, blowing up bridges both at Warsaw and Ivangorod and contesting tho German advance on the river, The vast morass of central Poland is back of the retreating Russians which Jias few railroads and primitive roods. This makes the quick movement of guns and supplies virtually impos sible, while back nf Warsaw the Only fort available as a rallying point ls Bresltovak. Tus the Russians are menaced by Beulow's columns bend ing southward and by Mackensen's southern army bending , north. Thc tall of Ivangorod proper ls reported ofHclr.lly both from Berlin ?nd Vienna. The occupation of Warsaw is center ing attention on a -?r?es of Important events being arranged. Tho first will be tire selection of the German gov ernor. Reports indicate that the ap- i pointes will be a German prince, pos sibly a son of the German emperor or ; of the Austrian archduke, who will be1 vested with authority Similar to that j Napoleon gave.his brothers and mar shals as kings of captured* territory. Berlin reports that a council, will j bo held Sunday to formulate a pro-j claniatton declaring Poland a semi autonomous State under Joint Polish and AufJtro-Hungcrlan rule This conforma with the recent decision of the Polish congress held at Pdotrkow In Russian Poland which proposed a Joint Polish Austro-Mungarian rule! with a separate Polish army and the] fullest Poliah autonomy consistent] with the strategic talereeta of Aus tria-Hungary. What the. Germans will do next In a military way 9s a matter of speculation. Conservative students think , the Germans will withdraw a part of thc eastern forces, leaving enough men to secure and maintain defensivo positions when they are dng in. Berlin Papers CoUinient Soberly. > Berlin, Aug. e.-Berlin's mo. lng fliper* publish no additional detalla ! Of the Bghtlag preceding the fail of Warsaw and Ivaagoord. Warsaw's fall trad been discounted and evoked no demonstrations. When tke,capitu lation of Ivangorod waa reported an impromptu procession waa formed. The morning papers cornmeal'rejoic ingly baa soberly. Needless Extravagant*. Cassidy (visiting warahlp) - Ivr y Urne that big gun Is fired. Dinny, alvin hundred dollar? goes, nj? ia smoke. Conley-Glory bo! Why dont they nae amokeiese powder? I The Lincoln Hornbeam Tree. It has always seemed peculiar that congress baa bot awakened to the fact that the Botanical Gardens should re ceive tlie attention Of the appropria tion committee, j Her? William H. Smith, sturdy Scotchman and lqver ot Burns, lived tor amny years in a cot tage that resembled th? home.of Bard ' of Ayreshtre. Every president abd many national celebrities haye plant ed trees in these historic gardens. Every tree and shrub seems to 'have its whispering? leaf and romantic his tory. Here towera the beautiful horn beam tree planted by Abraham Lib coin, with its myriad of branches' spreading cut, affording a wood shade typical of . the klndlly mahner of Lincoln. It has. been pronounced the most perfect tree In symmetrical form and wide-spreading branches of> any In the world. Near at hand ls a cedar of Lebanon, transplanted from the mountain foresta mentioned in .Holy Writ. Almost directly, opposite the Lincoln tree la a towering cedar planted by ?Edwin Booth, the famous actor and Innocent brother of John Wilkes Booth, slayer or thc< first mar tyre pr?sidant. Across the walk Is another tree planted ' by Lawrence Barrett another great actor. These two trees were planted prior to Gib tragedy ot April, A865, fifty years ago.-"Affairs ot Washington," Joe Mitchell Chapple, In National Maga zine for August. Aauonaclag a Victory. Gen. Iv?n Paviovltch aat in hit room and studied tho map. Then he rang the boll at his elbow. In came Sergius J?lloffski, hts aide-de-camp. "What aro your crdera, excel lency T" "Sergius Julloffskl, glauco over this map. Bo you'see this hill?" "I do, excellency." "That hill must IK captured. At-, tend to thc mutter a t I let me know when it is done." "I Will, excellency." Twenty minutes passed and there waa a knock at Gie door. Sergius st'odo in clicked his heels together, snd ?eluted. "Wei., vrhat ls lt, Sergius, my sour" "I hare the honor to announce, ex cellency. ?hat tho hill has been cap tured." "Already captured! Pine, iny eon, fine! Who occupies it?" "The Gepma?s, excellency."-New York Evening Post. Mf?take. . "ls Gals a genuine antique?" ?ak the prospective victim. VWby yea," anatwered the.- dealer "It ls moto ?han elx hundred years old." "Remarksfble! ? }t ?a dated 1?12." "Let rn? O0S lim: That's Us fsult of my eerala** aaststaat. who put the numerals on wrong. U should bo ; Itt*,' ''-BimlB?h*2* Age-Herald.