The Newberry herald and news. (Newberry, S.C.) 1884-1903, March 20, 1903, Image 1
tatm.t.ebaD ie
ESTABLISHED 1865. NEW BERRY, S. C., FRI)AY, MARCII 20, 1908. TWICE A WFJEK, $ .50 A YEAR
THI BLUU AND THE GRAY.
Government Will Compile a Complete Roster
Of Those on both Sides In the
Civil War.
By direction of Secretary Root the
war department has embarked on the
extensive work of compiling and pub
lishiug a complete roster of the ofi
cers and enlisted men of the Union
and Confederate armies. This is the
seoret ary's own project and he sue
coded in impressing Congress with
the idea that it would be just and
fair to the South to place on official
lists the names of Confederate sol.
diers in order that their descendants
may trace their family histories with
accuracy. The North, through sep.
arate State publications, has covered
pretty well fhis ground for its own
soldiers But the Southern records
and archives, never very complete,
were scattered and destroyed owing
to the outcome of the war and it is
known that many frauds are prac
ticed on the benevolent and many
families lack important links in their
histories because of the loss of these
records. Socrotary Root in calling
this matter to the attention of Con
gress said that the department was
constantly in receipt of appeals from
State oflicials, historical societies and
patriotic or memorial associations
for transcripts of the military records
of State troops, to answer which
would cost more than a million dol
lars, so that the most economical way
would be to publish a complete ros
ter.
The publication will be enormous
in size, including no less than 30
volumes "as large as the rebellion l
records.
The Northern names will be pub
lished with the Southern because it
is desired to have all of these data in
one compilation instead of being
scattered through various State books.
Moreover, it is felt to be a grace.
ful thing to bracket the names of the
men who wore the blue and the gray.
In order to carry out this purpose
Secretary Root today sent the follow
ing letter to the governors of all the
States which furnished troops for
the Confederate armies:
War )opart ment, Vashington, March
16, 1903.
The Governor of the State of ---
Sir: There is a very general do
sire on the part of the surviving par
ticipants of lhe great struggle in
which the country was engaged from
1861 to 1805, and on the part of the
descendants of those who have passed
away, for a publication that shall be
accessible to thle general p)ublic and
shall show the names of those who,
either as ofli--ors or enlisted men,
bore arms for the Union or for the
Confederacy d1uring the great war.
In the op)inion that this dlesire is one
that should be gratified, ini great
measure at loast, by compiling and
publishinrg, as a continuation of the
publication known as the "oficial
record of thle Union and Cornfederate
armies," a completo list or roster of
the oflicer~s and men who served1 in
~:those armies during* the Civil war,
this department411 recomimnded at the
last sessin of Congress thueonact
m ient of a law authorizing the com
pilation aind preparation of such a
roster for publicat ion. TIhiat recomn
m'und(at ion was fol lowed by the enact
m~ernt of a provision of law which is
embo(Idd in t he legislat ive, executive
anid judicial appropriat ion act, ap
proved Feb. 25, 1 903I, and which is
as fellows:
"That nnder the direct ion of the
secretary of .war the chief of the
record1 and1( pension oflice shall comn
pile, from such official records as are
in the p)osse~ssioni of the Uniited States,
and from such other records as may.
beC obtained by loan from the various
States and other oflicial sources, a
complete roster of the oflicers and
enlisted men of the Union and Con
federate armies."
The depart menit is prepared to
enter at once uipon thle work of maik
ing the comnpilastion thius ant horized
and( to push it to compilletion as rap.
idly as possible. Thorn will be little
or no difficulty ini making thle Union
part of thle roster coimplot e, but. thero
will be great dilliculty with regard
to the Confed'rate records iln the
possession of this denpartmernt. It. is
of the first importance, therefore, that
no effort shall be spared to secure
the temporary loan to the war de
partment, for the purpose of copying,
of any and all authentic Confederate
records that can be found anywhere.
Many of these records are in pos
session of the various States and it
is hoped will be readily accessible,
but there are others that are widely
scattered among historical and memo
rial associations and private citizens.
The problem of how to find and pro
cure the loan of these scattered
records is a difficult one, but it is one
that must be solved in order that the
Confederate soldier shall receive the
full credit that is due him in the
roster that is to be compiled.
I earnestly invite your cooperation
with the department in an effort to
make this compilation as nearly com
plete as it is possible to make it,
and I shall be glad to have the bene
lit of any suggestions that you can
make as to the manner in which that
mnd can be best attained. The work
will be in the immediate charge of
Brig. Gen. F. C. Ainsworth, chief of
the records and pension oflice of this
iepartment, and I beg leave to sug
;est that if the plan herein outlined
meets your approval you designate
iome official of your State to com
nunicate with him relative to the do.
ails of the work and the steps to be
aken in furtherance of it.
Very respectfully,
Elihu Root,
Secretary of War.
SOUTH CAROLINA NEWS.
tems of More or Less Interest Condensed
In the State.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Caldwell
mere married in jail at Greenwood
)n Monday. The couple were to go
efore a judge on a preliminary hear
ng, but upon the advice of attorney
.he father consented to the marriage
ind the preliminary was changed into
he marriage ceremony.
Rev. C. W. DePew, a Wesleyan
1lethodist minister of Memphis,
Penn., but who was formerly a resi
lent of Williamston, was shot to
leath on Thursday night by a car
-iage driver whom he had discharged.
:[r. DePew had filled appointments
n Methodist churches at Pelzer,
Piedmont, and Anderson.
The constables in Greenville
Jounty have made several successful
-aids recently, capturing illicit dist.il
ories and blind tigers.
(3. P. Sims, a lawyer for the do
'eniso, knocked down the prosecutor,
h. W. Boyd, duinig the progress of
case in Magistrate Kirby's conrt in
spartanburg on Monday. Boyd was
sonductinig his owVn casPo and maiide a
emark which Sims did niot like.
Three dleserters from the Port
R~oy al Maxrine bar racks have been'
saptured anid carried1 baick to bar
acks. Ton dollars is a standing re
yard for the return of each deserter.
A negro was found (lead with his
icad smashed on the railroad near
HIars Bluff in Florence County Mon
lay. HeI jumped from a moving
rain, it is thought.
Satfe blowers used nit ro glycorine
'n the safe of D). L. Caito at Mornetta
n Saturday night last. The at ore
an whbich the safe wats located was
,osiderably wrecked, b)ut. the safe
arackoers secu1redl no cash.
(Governor Heyward, with one' ox
ieept ion, has signied all Acts passed
by thle General Assemblly. T1he one
except ion wasI thre Bill to allow Union
to subscribe to a Carnegie library, it
being coveredl by ainot her Blill allow
trg all cities of over o,000) t his pnrivi
loge.
At the rate at which the work is
now being carried ont it is thIought
that. there will bre no dliflicurlt y ini
having Columbia's sk3 scratper comit
llted b)y the first (lay of July.
T1hie Anderson Spoo)tl and lBobb)in
Mfg. Co. has given riot ice of its ini
tenrtion to increase its c!apitalizationr
from $4,000 to $20,000 an incerease
of $16,000 and of 40(0 per cenIt.
The company controlling the Isle
of Palmre, at Chiarleston, has been
given nerrmmmn to increas its ca
ital stock from $100,000 to a quarter
of a million. This means that this
famous sulmner resort. is to be made
one of the most pretentious in the
country.
The second case of bigamy wichin
two weeks has developed in Spartan
burg County. The defendant is
Isa' o Randolph, and wife No. 1, who
is the prosecutor, before her mar
riage was Fannie Sheppard, a cotton
mill operative. Randolph was mar.
ried the second time Sunday after.
noon to Miss Annie Kirby, of the
Beaumont mills.
Prof. W. H. Morton, of Asheville,
N. C., has accepted the proffered
chair of physics and astronomy at
Converse College.
The new city council of Laurens,
prosided over by C. E. Gray, was
sworn in on Tuesday.
More t han $2,000 worth of tickets t
for Spartanburg's May Festival were
sold oil the opening day of sale. E
This included 521 season tickets. i
At a negro religions gathering in
Anderson County on Sunday after
noon a negro woman was shot and
seriously injured. The cause the
free circulation of % hiskey.
C
Governor Heyward responded to
the toast, "The State of South Caro
lua" at the 117th anniversary dinner
of the Hibernian Society, in Charles
ton, on Tuesday night. The Gover
nor's theme was the industrial pros.
perity of the State and her great
future.
The dead bndy of Lewis Pittnan,
a cotton mill operative, was found
on the track of the Southern railway
near Rock Hill Tuesday morning.
H1e and some friends had been drink
ing and had gone to the track, where
it is supposed Pittman went to sleep
and was run over. t
A mass meeting of citizens to dis. t
cuss good roads was hold in Florence t
this week. President F. H. Hyatt,
was present, and a number of inter- t
esting talks were inade. Florence is S
thoroughly aroused upon the subject. t
c
There was a strike among the car
penters in Columbia on Monday. A
nine hour day was the demand. 7
Work on the buildings in Columbia
was stepped all day Monday, but ro
commonced Tuesday upon the de
mand being acceded to.
Ck
'Tho council of the Episcopal Dio.
cose of Sotth Carolina will meet with {
the Church of the Good Shepherd in t
Columbia on May 5th. Bishop Ca -c
pers will preside.
GENERAL NEWS NOTES.
Items of More or Less Interest Condensed
Outstde the State'.
Rudolph Forester of Virginia has
beeni ap)pointed assistant sec':etary to
the presidlent. H-e enteredl the gov
ernm]ent ser-vice in 1894I and since
1 900' has booen executive clerk to thle
Presiden,t.
'rho supreme court of Laouisiana
has roindor'ed a de&cisioii snstainiing
the right of the legislature to paiss
the law p)rovidi ng for separate ac
commhlodlat ions for whites and blacks
ini street cars.
Another South Aimericani revolu
t ion has b)rokenl out, this ti me in
U ruguay. The government of
Uruguay (1oes not. attach) anty impor
talnee to it.
The Shamrock ILI, which will (oin
test for the America's cup, was
launched oin St. Patrick's D)ay. This
is the third bot built for this pun
pose by its soris muan-gent lemnan
ownter.
Theloi nqu est ini the .Burd-(ick mn r
dler case, at Bull'alo, is in progress.
It. sems to be the. genieral desire of
wVitnesses(' to lix It' crimo1 npoin
Arthur l'eonnell, wvho was killed b)y
hiis auittioobileS a few (lays ago.
A human skeleton was found in an
isol atd po jt ini ai pastumre six i miles
frmm ihiniigtori and iden'it ihied as
thait or W. WV. Youn1ig, a white car
ponit er :-2: ye(ars ol, w ho (1isalppeared.
from his home' ini Wuimingtn on
May 3, 1900. Young hais a wife nnmd
two chiildrein living ini Columbia. Thie
wife has remarried.
CRUM TO Bli APPOINTED.
President Will Name Him Collector of
Charleston Immediately After
Special Session.
(Newts and Courior. )
Washington, March 17.--Presi.
:lent Roosevelt has closed the "Door
)f Hope" to the white citizens of
Jharleston, and will appoint Dr.
William D. Crum, a colored physi
lian, collector of the port of Char
eaton as soon as the special sssiol
>f the Senate adjourus.
Notwithstanding one alvtrse re
ort on the nomination of Dr. Crum
)y the Senate committee on com
nerce several weeks ago, and an op
)Ortunity for a seconu adverse re
)ort last Thursday, of which the op
)osition refused to take advantage,
he appointment of Crum is assured.
There is not the slightest. possibili.
y of a vote being reached oi his
tomination during the present speciali
0ssion. The disposition of the canal (
nid the Cuban treatio0, and a few
ther routine n.atters will occupy all
he time the Senate expects t ' remain
n sessioln.
Several feeble efforts havo been
ande to carry out the President's
lesire to force a roll call on the
omilnation of Dr. Crum. As a mat
er of fact the lBepublican loaders of
he Senate have no heart in the fight
lie President is trying to force oin
>ehalf of Dr. Crum.
STAND of TiE: IMo('A'I'ts.
On the other hand, the I)(mocrats
re determined that so long as thle
e dtrpubhcans fear to vote th ,eir per.
onal convictions in this case, which
vould result in the rejection of I)r.
,rum, they will prevent any parti.
an vote on this subject.
The opposition to confirmat ion is
olidly united and Democratic Sena
ors are prepared to discuss the mat.
or indefinitely. They take the posi
ion that, after (rum had once been
ejected for appointment as postumas
or of Charleston by a iepublican
ienato during the Ilarrison admtinis
ration, it was unwise and injudici
us for President loosevelt to inflict
he same man upon the white cit.1
ens of Charleston as collector of the
iort. Besides, it had been clearly
lemonstrated to the President that
lie selection of D)r. Crunm is niot
opular with the members of the
enate, as many of the leading Re
ublicans have urged him to with
Iraw the nomination since it. was ad
ersely reported from the coinmit"to. ,
*f which acting Vice President Vry
a chairman.
THEi iE51iDENT's Onsii'lN Ae.
TIhne President, however, is dot er
lined that D)r. Crum shill be collec
or of the port of Charleston, unless
majority of the members of thle
einate place t henmselves on record
flicial ly againlst hiis confirm at ion.
IT' 15 SOME (oNXoI,ATIioN.
it appears that the only conisola
ion the whiite people of Charleston
~an draw from this p)eculiar condih.
'ion of allfairs, wvhichi is pract ical ly a
aso8 of the exOeti ve braiknchi of thle
loveirmenit overr'iding thne Seniat e,
vill be thn generalI elfect the Presi
lent's act ion will hiave ini nat ionial
.ol it ics. H i'publ icanl Senaitor01s do
tot hesit ate t o say tihat t hey are
rerced1 by ex'ctiv e st ronti' tiuiios to
mulprt thle ad iist rat ion if a vote
ttaken. Onh thle other lhand, thle
D)emocrat s cointend1( thliat it is good
politics to plaice t hi President in thle
itt itutde of aippoinitinig aI man1 to 0a
purely commnercial oflico whio is c'on
fossedlly wVit hout (experiIIne in busi
[less mat ters
MIark llanna*, of Ohio, and11 J1 ohni
K(ean, or New J1ersey, is thne liatest
lloputbl icani ticket 1 lunchied on Itie
pol1it ical 501n by the sIlf coniislitted0(
President maikers in tho S'niat e.
(Cha51. Mt. Sebwabvit, a(ccompied)1 byl J
his wife, hais retulrned( from his
Eturoponni tour. Illo sayis hie is ina
[Ixcellnt heathi bitt will say niothing
'if his mritentions honfore conisultirng
hie~ friendls.
Mrs. *Jiini-o Strowbidge, of P'eni
Yani, N. V., in a passion of frenzy
on TIuesdauy, kitlledt tier aged mother
and1( her growin daughter, atnd1 then
brnmedt her h ome, honrsel f perish inrg
in the lineii
THE NEGRO V! WBD MEBDICALLY.
Unless Facts are Weighed, South May
be Done Injustice.
The Medical News, a widely known
journal published in New York city,
is aroused by the recent discussion
of the race issue to commnent upon
"Negro Supremacy from a Medical
Standpoint." In an editorial upon
that subject in its issue of February
28 the Medical News stato that in
leading papers of the North and
South have appeared editorials of
great acumen and power, "but
3one seem as yet to have dealt,
-xcept ini a superticial manner, with
,he race problem as seen from a
)iological, ethnological or medical
itandpoint." The News contiuos:
One cannot. intelligently answer the
iestion whether the negro can take
i place in the social and economic
rogress of the nation without being
11 possession of the main eorphol
)gical differences between t he Can
maian and the African, since these
ire the fundamental bases for men
Al and moral discrepancies between
he races.
That the negro more nearly ap
)ruaches in body to the quadiruimana
)r anthropoid apes is shown by the
'ollowing points: 'he arm is ab.
lormally long-in the erect position
t often reaches the knee-pans, anid
>u an avergo exceeds that of the
Jaucasian by about two inches. The
acial aigle, which is granted by all
o have a definite ethnological bear
ng, even if the function of the fron
,al lobes is still but little known,
tvorago 82 degrees in the Caucasian
imd 70 degrees in the black. Coin
identally with this is the fact that
n brain weight the white nian (ex
1oeds the negro by fully 10 onIces
ilmost as much as lhe ini Itirn exCeeds
he highest gorilla. Another p)oint
)f differonce anatomically is soon iii
hie lower ext remit y-- this is not so
vell developed as the white lan 's,
ho foot, is broad and flat, the great.
on prehensile and divergent, the
tool often projecting so far back wi d
is to merit the term "lark heel."
It is needless to dwell longer on
he well known difference which ex
sis, or to urge that they demronst.rato
i distinct, race of mankind and show
sonclusively in the negro an inferior
y'pe. Among the fair-minded this
s axiomatic.
Som years ago we were all alarm
d over the "yellow peril." Now
he "black peril" confronts us.
TIhe article quotes the late Prof.
)gden S. Itood, of Columbia, ais aisk
fig: "1 tow car there be any <ques
ion of superiority or ir-feriority be.
wooni t wo peoples wvho develop imin
atll a)tre separated by3 a chasm of
20,000 y-ears I" Engene It. Corson, in
is conitribuntioni to the Wi lderQuar.
or Contlury B3ook, states that as a re
41i1 of a most. careful st udy of the
'eisns, arnd doepeuliet, uponi prsonali
>bsoervaition ini the city of Savanah,
lie in confident that tuberculosis and
ileohiolisi m m madi n si ult.ify ing in.
roads on thiie mnak ing negro, poor1,
weakIeed pr'odumct, t hat lie in, of
muiscogeniation.
Sir Spoenir St. ,John iiays3 of thle
titinhabitants of liInyti: ''After a res
i.lew of over tweity yr in this
isando I ain forced to t he (icnclosion
that the rnegro is meiap)abIle of hol
ing ani itidependent posit ion. In Itt i
s hw noS1 sigai of iinp rovemnt -on
the otheri hand1(, it is cons5tanrtly ret ro
to thle stage of thle dwellers of the
(Con go.' Thle MIed icalI New~s t.hius
conitiiimes its (or9istieritn:
If it is t rue, as soiune have~' perli apn
wveIl said, thaitt the time is ripe for a
recognlit ion of thle liegro, inl Sinb.
stanice rat her thann in thleory, ea rnest
thloughit shonhld be givenl b y those
who wr mId liberally3 initerpret our
laws, aund they should lbe well v'ersedl
ini the opiions of sucth muen of
sc'ience as5 we ha <i n otedt . Th'ley
tims kn L ow ani d recogniz'o t hat pro
found dIilferenies dio exist I hit one(
race is 20,000 years bnohindl lie
olther. Theyi musii it kn Iow tIhat ethni,ol.
ogicatlly, physiologically, anatoical
ly, thle n egro aiid Caucasian
muntist iilways be widely dIifforoent. If
ill4 illgi.(, is iLa lielfath. ulhitici,
thankH to t he noble ell'orts itnad( at
Tnskegeo anld similar institutions, he
suroly is, what, meantilme, is the
Caucasian doing' AdvancingY yet,
with his pliant brain eage, capable of
permitting progrsiv e dovelopment
from birth to death, he is thunder
ing ahead with a rush 11 and a speed
which no alien race can hope to fol
low.
Unless these facts are weighed in
a true baIlance bitter injustice may
be done the Soutlh. It 1s no doubt
true, as Carson aRis1ts that t le irro
vocablo law of the "Survival of the
1Ittost" will wipe the n1egro away,
but this will take centuries. ''liero
is a real and immdiate peril, as the
5euoator from North (arolina has
wel said. Science, e i neat ion, ro
ligiol, phiilnthrol y Iiay well focus
their bright rays upmn it, aund nless
our loaders follow where these trond
the South will urely sufler.
Reduced Rates via Atlantic Coast Line.
Iichmond, Va. Soutiheirn1 Educat ional
Conl ferc'nce. 'l'ickets oI sale from1
points ill Virginia. April 2th, 21st and
22nd. Final limit April 28th, I903.
Froml all other points, A pril 201h and
21st, final limit April 28th, one and one
third fares.
Savannahl, (4t.---Solitheri lBaptist
Convention andl Auxiliary Societies.
'i'clkets on sale f'rom ll points at one
fare for round Irip, ti lls twenlty-fivc
(25) cents, May .Ith to 71 inclusive,
final limit May 20th, 1903. An exten
sion of the final limit until .1me 1st
may be obtained by deposit of tickets
with Joint Agent at Savannah, on pay
ment of lee of' lifty (54)) eents.
New Orleans, l.a. litnited Confed
erate Reunion. 'Tits't: on sale May
16th to 21st.. inclusive, final limit May
24th, 1903. An extension of final limit
to June 15th, nmy be obtained by de
posit of tickets with Joint- Agent at
New Orleans on payment of fee of
fifty (50)cents. Rtate one cent per onile.
Call on Ticket Agents for exat'l rates
and anly of her i1 fo'rmat ion, and Se 1 hat
your I ticket , read v ia I he At hult it ('oast
L,ine. A 1 proved1:
W. .1. C'raig, Gen. Pass. Agent.
II. NI. Emeloiln Traiflit Manager.
THE OLD A
bAK
P0W
Absolut
THERE IS NO
R eed end
If you are inuterost ml ini last
anid not, in a position to pay the
ailly or cin art orly, then I cani int I
anice anit ('asualty Co. 158110 a1 pc
attos jI paing losu(1ranice ml ai w
T ako a young, oniorgetic' inan,i hli
con31ta a daly, amnd in casoli lie is ido
1n05s or acliden, receive phlysici,
receive ai honefit of Seven .Ib
d tays) giving hian oie <dollar per
pluicy is iss,iud fromn I ( to) 50 et
pro~porti on. Ou nr Mn owmnlt et
W w hiebl is issi ut fo r a torin Tin
30o1 ('n11 securei $200.00) protect ic
~~ifromi dato~ of issue, amnd has t he I
At the (ol of three years, and.
andi i 1 ur render valu tes, pid ny~ in
"'for b alanice of term. Any oneo
o f, if the last one0 is aiccepited tIn
ini caist of don)Ith hIoforo policy wi
~jfrom 101 (et. to $1.00It a week.
thIe fi amoun0( lt of In su ranice is
t ogethier wvit thi le atcem nuil ait0ios
tion, if you are int erst idi. D roi
over Postit Ofhice.
The Carolina Insani
NEWBE]
AlIso A.geunt for Germiania
NEEIDBD PROTECTION.
Much Ado at Monck's Corner Because
Town Marshal Clubbed White Man.
I|The State.]
Monck's Corner, March 16 -On
last Saturday the marshal of thiR
town in making an arrest clubbed a
whito man who resisted arrest. Sev
eral of the most prominent men were
witilonsses to the eone. Tuey imme
(liatel) interfered, threatening to
lynch the mnarshal, but quiet (vas
noon established.
To the surpriso of all this morn
ing quito it crowd gathered in the
town and threat.ened to lynch the
marshal, and the intendant if he in
torforod, therefore making it neces
sary for i call upon the sheriff and
the (Iovernor for protection.
The Governor ordered Capt. W.
1'. Owens to report with his coml
panty to the sheriff, which he did im
.nodliattely, but, through the good
.pudgm)ont of tho intendant, J \V.
Orvin, Sherifi Morrison and R. V.
laines, the unfortunato affair was
iottled and everything is now quiet.
No furt.her trouble is apprehended.
Til MISSISSIPPI FLOOI.
Hope for New Orleans---All Rtecords Broken
at Memphis---General Situation
Still Serious.
I)ispatches from New Orleans say
that. the gauge of the Mississippi oil
S-un(day night read 19.3, which is two
tent.hs below the record of 1897. The
peopl' have becole iore hopeful, and
it, good weather Contines believe the
situation can be handled. It is still
very serious, however.
AT Mi:MPIIIS,
The situat.ion in and around Memphis
oil Sutd(ay was very 'serious, and it was
thought that it. would he a little short
of marvelous it' the levees should hold.
All prev:ous high water records have
in t brokeii, and there is great alarm.
?EL1A fiLE
ER
ely Pure
SUBSTITUT(
Coqsidei!
I iance, wvish to cariry p)rotectionIi
p)romlinosiI annuanlly, 84rni ani
(ro4t you. T'he Carol in a Itnur
diiiy upfonl anyl one( whot appjreci
I)y yon do nlot reahize thme cost. e
(('c1n certanily ahlford to (pay fivYe ..
itinedl from wvork ca*iued by ill..
tile attenltionl and( micin(e, also) bj
I a wt~eek (Seven conisocntivYe
day each (lay tho(r4)after. '.This
5. por1 wooek and gives benlefits in -l
lit ract~ is also very conlservati, .Y.
Yearms. IFor lFifty Con1ts a Week
mI. This policy is infll o Oitt
oillowing adtvantages:
C the yon canl Iako advanit age .
coimpan1y pays' tihe face of policy 9W
a1ture'~. WVe inssuo this contract
C policy' in carriedl to maituIrity h
plid to) policy hotlder' inl calsh,
. lnsIHI (corisider this0 explanali.
> meii a polstalI or call at. (0ICos .
De and Casualty Co.,
m1FV,. . c
ILife iniarnc, (o. of N. v.