Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, June 09, 1910, Image 2
svr ..... m .'j^^PPPf
A QUEER YEAR"
Up to Tbis Time We Hare Had Some
Most Remarkable Weather.
YEAR WITHOUT SUMMER
?
Arc We Going to Have * Repct'tion
of the Tear That Had Oold Weather
in Every Monti) and Had Rig
Snow Storms in the Month of
Jane.
The Augusta Herald says the seasons
so far this year have been most
peculiar. After a winter of rather
disagreeable weather spring apparently
opened up early, and during
March and the first half of April
the weather was most pleasant, with
absence of rain and the usual 'March
winds the distinguishing feature.
Then came a return of cold weather.
During the latter part of April there
was a heavy snowfall which extended
well into Georgia, and frost which
reached into Florida. And Bince
that time the weather has been cool.
Only a few days ago a heavy snowstorm
was reported from the West,
and within the past week overcoatB
were worn on the streets of Augusta.
Surely most remarkable weather!
Rut it is not without precedent.
The year 1816 was a year that must
have been similar to the weather
as we have had it up to this time.
It was referred to for years afterwards
as "the year without a summer,"
and so cold was it at times in
some sections that almost all crops
were a failure, and the year was
called by the irreverent the year i
of "eighteen hundred and starved to i
^eath." i
A gentleman in Thomasville has a
copy of an old Virginia paper, pub
lished shortly after the war, which
contains the weather conditions of
the year 1816 that was copied from
the Boston Globe, and which is of
interest now. This seems to be the
account of a pnrty who had personal
knowledge of that abnormal summer.
and who had collected some
data in regard to it. He says:
"While every one 16 speaking of
the present season as being remark- '
able in Its characteristics, I have
gathered for your readers some re- 1
liable facts of the year 1816, known
as the 'year without a Bummer.' Few
persons now living can recollect it, 1
but it was the coldest ever known
through Europe and America. The
following is a brief abstract of the
weather during each month of the
year:
January was mild, so much so aB
to render fires almost needless in
parlors. December previous was very
cold.
"February was not very cold; with
the exception of a few days it was
mild, like its predecessor.
"March was cold and boisterous
during the first part of it; the remainder
was mild. A great freshet
on the Ohio and Kentucky rivers
caused a great Iobb of property.
"April began warm, but grew colder
as the month advanced, and ended
with snow and ice and a temperature
more like winter than spring.
"May was more remarkable for 1
frowns than smiles. Buds and fruits
were frozen; Ice formed half an inch
thick; corn killed, and fields again
and again replanted until deemed
too late.
"June was the coldest ever knowin
this latitude. Frost, ice and snowwere
common. Almost every green
thing was killed. Fruit nearly all ;
destroyed Snnw fell to the Honih
of ten inches in Vermont, several in
Maine, three in the interior of New
York, and also in Massachusetts.
Considerable datpage was done at j
New OrleanB in consequence of the
rapid rise in the river. The suburbs
were covered with water, and 1
the roads were only passable with 1
boats. 1
"July was accompanied by frost
and ice. On the 5th ico was formed
of the thickness of a common window
glass througout New England,
New York and some parts of Pennsylvania,
fndian corn was nearly all
destroyed; some favorably situated
fields escaped. This was true of
some of the hill farms of Massachusetts.
"August was more cheerless, if
possible, than the summer months
already passed. Ice was formed half
an inch thick. Indian corn was so
frozen that the greater part of it
was cut down and dried for fodder.
Almost every green thing was destroyed,
both in this country and in
Europe. Papers received from England
state 'that it would be remembered
by the present generation that
the X^ar 1816 was a year in which
there was no summer.' Very little
corn ripened in the New England and
Middle States. Farmers supplied
themselves from corn produced in
1815 for the seed of the spring of
1817. It sold at from $4 to $5 a
bushel.
"Septemebr furnished about two
weeks of the mildest weather of the
season. Soon after the middle it
became very cold and frosty; ice <
formed a quarter of an inch thick.
"October produced more than its !
share of cold weather; frost and ice )
were common.
"November was cold and bluster- 1
L
CAUSES
MANY WRECKS
VESSELS IiOST AND SEVERAL
MEN DROWNED.
Th? Diiuuter Was Caused by Heavy
Fog* Along the Coast of British
Am eric*.
A dispatch from Halifax, N. S.,
says thick fog and a quickly bom
southwesterly gale are Baid to have
rAauliail (m L /v n< I *? ?# ?I? -
I VOUlkCU A U 1UC TV1CV.RIU5 1/1 BJA V f O"
sels and the loss of eight men at
various points along the rocky coast
of the Atlantic Wednesday night and
early Thursday.
While most of the crew of 25
were asleep below decks, the French
brigantine Mauve, a fishing vessel,
piled up in the fog an Point Blanche,
at the entrance of St. Plerr harbor.
Miquelon, Thursday morning, and six
men on deck were hurled overboard
and drowned. The remainding 19
made their way to shore in small
boats and rafts. The Mauve is believed
to be a total loss.
The Norwegian bark Borghild was
driven on Castor Ledges, ofT Port
Bickerton, N. S., and at once began
to go to pieces in the heavy
sea. The crew of nine men launched
their small boats, but all of them
were batered to pieces on the rocks
and two of the men were either
drowned or hurled to death on the
ledges. The remaining seven, clinging
to the wreckage of the boats,
were rescued by fishermen.
Half a mile Inside of Port Nova,
N. S., the British steamship Ben
Cruachan bound from Baltimore to
Chatham, N. B., struck the beach
so hard that it is doubtful if she
can be saved. Her crew of 26 men
were rescued. Captain Boswell, it
is said, mistook the Louisbury fog
siren for the Scattarie whistle and
st< -red a wrong course, landing in
the breakers. Several steamers and
tugs have gone to the scene of the
wreck.
"I CAN'T EXPLAIN."
Holstlaw, Illinois Senator, Talks Of
His Confession.
"I'd rather be known as a boodler
than a liar," said Senator lwiniel
Holstlaw in an interview at his home
at Inka, 111., Wednesday, speaking of
his confession to accepting a bribe
of $2 500 as a legislator.
"Maybe," he continued, "I took
the money because I saw everyone
else doing the same thing?I can't
explain."
"I made the confession because
I could not tell a lie."
"I don't know?I don't understand,"
he said, with a hopeless air
answering a question of why he, a
man owning property worth a quarter
of a million dollars, would accept
bribe.
"All I want Is to Bink out of sight
I knew the indictment charging ma
with perjury was a bluff, and it did
not frighten n.e. Rut when they
asked me whether I was paid for
voting for Senator Lorimer, I had
to tell the truth."
IA daughter of Holstlaw followed
the interviewer out of the house.
Breaking down, she exclaimed:
"To spend years of toil in building
a name and then to destroy it at
one blow. Oh, how could he do it?
My mother is prostrated. We have
not said a word to father about the
trouble, for it would break his heart.
He could not have been in his right
mind."
BONK IN THROAT KILL8.
Negro Man at Biitcshurg Dies in a
Peculiar Manner.
At Batesburg Wade Brooks, a negro
man. who lived on Mr. N. A.
Bates' place, died Wednesday under
peculiar circumstances. About ten
days ago Wade w?s eating a piece of
a Guinea fowl, and in some way he
got a piece of bone crosswise in his
throat. There it remained for a
day or two, when a doctor was summoned.
The doctor, it is said, took
an instrument and pushed the bone
down. Instead of relieving the negro
it made matters worse. The
bone was lodged further down and
the man died Wednesday.
College Moved.
Harbinson college, the colored institution
at Abbeville whose main
building was burned down by an in
cendiary first several months ago, has
decided to move to Greenville.
ing. Snow fell so as to make good
sleighing.
"December was mild and comfortable.
"The above was a brief summary
of the 'cold summer of 1816, as it
was called, in order to distinguish it
from the cold season. The winter
was mild. Frost and ice were common
in every month of the year.
Very little vegetation matured In
the Eastern and Middle States. The
sun's rays seemed to be destitute of
heat throughout the summer; all
nature was clad in a sable hue, and
men exhibited no little anxiety concerning
the future of this life.
"The average wholesale price of
flour during that year in the Philidel;ihia
market was $18 a barrel. ?
The average price of wheat in Eng- i
land was 93 shillings a quarter." <
"
STRUCK BY CYCLONE
HIGH WINDS IK) MICH DAMAGE
IN AUGUSTA. GA.
Street* Were Illocked With Trees
and Wires and the City Was in
Total Darkness.
A dispatch from Augusta says that
the entire city has been in darkness
since 10.13, every street is congested
with uprooted trees and disabled
wires; every telephone is out and
trolleys are disabhed, as a result
of a cyclone lasting about eighteen
minutes Thursday night.
Bo far no fatalities have been reported,
but half a dozen or more residences
have been more or lest
wrecked, and two or three warehouses
blown down.
The Casino building, at Lake Viewwhere
a night performance was jusl
concluding, was completely wrecked
but the audience escaped uuiujured
Every night enterprise depending
on electric power is tied up, and all
business uouses and residences using
current are in darkness.
The entire fire alarm system it
disabled. The cyclone passed over
into South Carolina touching Aiken,
Orangeburg and other places.
HEATS TIIK HECORD.
Englishman Flies Across English
Channel and Hack.
A Dover, England, dispatch says
the Hon. Charier Stewart Roll J. captain
in the London section of the
army motor reserve, driving a Wright
biplane, vindicated Anglo-Saxon aeronautics
by crossing the English
channel twice Wednesday evening
without alighting. He made the
round trip between Dover and Calais
in ninetv minutes
."While two Frenchmen, Louis Bleriot
and Count de Lesseps, have crossed
the channel in an aeroplane, it
remained for an Englishman, in an
American machine, to perform the
double feat. The distance across between
the two points named is 21
miles, so that ills over water flight
of 4 2 miles without a stop establishes
a new record.
Capt. Rolls left Dover at 6.30
o'clock. The atmospheric conditions
were excellent. He lost no time in
manoeuvres, but after describing a
circle, headed toward the coast of
France. In anticipation of the flight,
torpedo boats steamed at full speed
across the Straits, but the pace of
the aeroplane was swifter.
SMOKE CREATES PANIC.
In the Subway Five Hundred Feet
Beneath the Street.
Five hundred hysterical women,
screaming children and panic-stricken
men fought their way through a
dense smoke in the Mott avenue subway
station in the Bronx, New York
city, early Thursday, striving to escape.
Only one elevator was available
to take them to the street, which is
65 feet above the subway level at
this point, and the crush to reach
this exit or the five flights of stairs
which led to the surface Increased
the panic.
Fifteen persons were overcome by
smoke and two men were injured seriously
enough to require hospital
treatment. Fire in an automatic
pumping station caused the smoke.
The damage was nominal.
AUTO BURST INTO FLAMKS.
Valuable Car of Lancaster Man Destroyed
by Fire.
At Lancaster the automobile of
Mr. Chas. B. Skipper was practically
des^oyed by fire Thursday afternoon.
Mr." Skipper had just lighted the
pilot light when flames burst from
beneath the car. He had present;?
of,mind enough to push the car out
of his carage, which was very close
to his home, and turn a stream
of water on the car from the yaru
hose. Otherwise, it is probable that
his home would have been destroyed.
The car is covered by insurance.
This is the second automobile that
has been destroyed by fire at Lai caster
in the past six months
Itequisition Ri'fused.
Governor Ansel Tuesday issued bis
decision on Governor Patterson's requisition
for Shop Pearlstine of Denmark,
indicted in Charleston, Tenn.,
for embezzlement, refusing requisition
and stating t.he legal ground at
length. A few months ago Givernor
Patterson of Tennessee disallowed
Governor Ansel's requisition of C. J.
Hebert, wanted for trial here in connection
with the Seminole swindle.
Shot Self and Wife.
At Jefferson, Ind., with the words
"I don't believe you lovo me any
more," William Boatman, a former
employe of the American Car and
Foundry company, walked up to his
wife and shot her three times andthen
killed himself.
Snow In Pittsburg.
At Pittsburg. Pa., snow fell Tuesday.
The temperature was 29 degrees,
the cold* st May 31 In the re:ords
of the local weather bureau.
CHURCH GROWTH
Larger in Proportion Than the Increase
in the Population.
INCREASE VERY GREAT
, There Are Many More Women Than
%
Men Included.?In the Larger
1
Cities Catholics More Than IK>uble
Protestants, but the Latter Is
Said to be Greatly Understated.
Church growth in the United
> States has been greater than the it
crease in population between the
years 1900 and 1906, according to
, the special census report on the cen:
sub of religious bodies for 1906. In
, the principle cities of the country.
. the growth both in the nunibtr of
; religious organizations and commuuI
Ities was greater in the years meu
tioned than the increase in population,
while in the area outside the
i principle cities to the rate of in
crease in the number of new chur,
ches established was approximately
the same as the rate of population
increase, although in the number of
communicants the increase in the
outside area, as in the cities, was
i In excess of that in population.
Out of every 1.000 people in the
160 principle cities of the country?
that is, those which had a population
of more than 25,000?there
were 4 69 church members while for
the area outside these cities there
were 3 64, and for the entire country
there were 391. As compared to 1890
the report shows a gain of ninety
communicants in each 1,000 of population
for the principal cities and a
gain of fifty-one outBide of them.
Female members in 1906 outnumbered
the male members by 3 2 per
cent in continental United States,
while in the principle cities the excess
of female members was proportionately
less, being 960,526, or
23.5 per cent.
The aggregate number of 32,936,4
45 communicants or members of all
religious denomination in continental
United States was reported. Of
this grand total the various Protestant
bodies reported 20,287,743, and
the Roman Catholic Church 12,era
i A >
V I & , X 1 ?- .
For purposes of comparison the
census authorities divided the principal
cities into four classes, those
having in 1900 a population of 300.000
and over, constituting the first
class; those of from 100,000 to 300,000
forming the second; those of
from 50,000 to 10,000 making the
Uiird; those of from 25,000 to 50.000
forming the fourth class.
Of the protestant aggregate there
were 1,478,145 or 7.3 per cent, in
the first class cities; 4.7 per cent in
the second; and 7.4 per cent, in
the third and fourth classes combined,
while 80.6 per cent, were outside
the principal cities.
Of the Roman Catholic Church's
total membership there was 3,375,453
or 27.9 per cent in first class
cities; 1,361,132 or 11.3 per cent in
the second class; 1.570,944, or 13
per cent in the third and fourth
classes combined, with 5,771,613 or
4 8.8 per cent, outside the principal
cities.
It is seen, therefore, that the number
of members of the Roman Catholic
Church reported in cities of the
first was considerably more than double
the number reported by all the
Protestant bodies, while outside of
the principal cities the number renorted
liv the f'nthn11i>c U'OO nnlu o
little over one third of the number
credited to the Protestants. It is'
pointed out in the report that the
strength of the Protestant bodies, as
compared with the Roman Catholic
Church, is greatly understated.
Only two of the Protestant bodies
reported a majority of their membership
in the principal cities, i. e.,
the Church of Christ, Scientist, 82.6
per cent., and the Protestant Episcopal
Church 51.2 per cent; while of
the membership of the Jewish congregations,
88.7 per cent are in the
principal cities, and of the Eastern
Orthodox churches 70.7 per cent.
Of the total number of communicants
or members reported for the
principal cities by all denominations,
6,307,529 or 60 per cent, belonged to
the cities showing the largest proportions
of Protestant communicants
are Memphis, 84.4 per cent; Toledo,
70 per cent; Kansas City, Mo., 66.2
per cent, and Indianapolis, 62.1 per
cent.
The cities showing the largest percentages
of Roman Catholic cdlnmunlcants
are Fall River, 86.5 per
cent; San Francisco, 81.1 per cent;
Maw. Orlniinu 70 7 nne ??? ?
York, 76.9 per cent; Providence,
76.5 per cent; St. Louis, 69 per cent;
Chicago, 68.2 per cent., and Philadelphia,
51.8 per cent.
In the five leading cities the proportion
of communicants to population
was: New York. 44.7 per
cent: Chicago, 40.7; Philadelphia,
3 8.8; Boston, 62.6, and St. Louis,
46.6 per cent. It is stated that, In
' general, cities which have a relatively
large Roman Catholic population
show a hither percentage of
church members than cities in which
this body has a comparatively small
representation. In Fall River 86.5
per cent of the total number of
members reported were Roman Cath- '
KTjT"."' i*"/" \ I
FIRES INTO TRAIN
SOME VANDAL CAME VERY NEA
KILLING YOl'NG LADY.
Who Wait a Passenger on the Tra
and Near Whom the Bullet H
Window.
The Augusta Chronicle 6ays Mi
Sally Morgan, a resident of Turp
Hill, Augusta, Ga., had a close ai
narrow escape from instant dea
while returning to Augusta Tuesdi
nlsht as a passenger on the C.
v?. v,. rauroaa, wnen, just as tl
train passed the aqueduct near tl
Sibbley mill, a pistol bullet crash*
t-hrough the window next to whe
she was sitting, barely missing h
head.
The shot came so unexpectcdl
the young lady fainted, and it tot
the kind assistance of the other pa
sengers in the coach, with the a
of ice water and handkerchiefs,
revive her. Every attention w
shown her, but it was sometime b
fore she regained complete conBciou
ness.
At the time the pistol was fire
Miss Morgan was resting her elbo
on the window sill, and she say
owing to the glare of the elctr
light she could not tell with ai
degree of certainty from which dire
tion the bullet came, but thinks
was fired from the canal bank. SJ
says further, in locating the spo
that the shot was fired near whei
the Clark assassination took plat
sometime ago.
"It scared me to death," she sa;
at her .home, "and it is a wondt
that I am not a total nervous wrecl
1 never was so prostrated in a
my life. I am unnerved right no
and will never forget the incidei
as long as I live.
"This is not the first time th;
1 have met with such an occurrenc
and the last .happened on the san
road, too. At that time some 01
hurled a large stone through tl
window glass, just missing me.
seems as if the fates are pursuing n:
and I feel wary of riding on tl
trains in the future."
It is believed that the bullet wj
fired at close range, as it cut a
even .hole through the glass, leavir
weblike crevices. It is probable thj
had it been fired from a long distant
it would have completely shattert
the glass. Even as it was. thoug
particles of the glass lodged 011 tl
trimmings of the young lady's ha
She has bits of it as a souvenir (
the narrow and most unfortunate
currence.
MANY WOK KM UN KILLED.
Fatal Explosion in I'tab (Vmei
Works Near Option.
Twenty-flve workmen were killc
in an explosion Wednesday in a qua
ry of the Union Portland Cemei
Works at Devil's Slide, Utah, thir
miles east of Ogden.
The explosion blew down the te
egraidt and telephone poles and con
munication with the scene of tl
accident was limited to a brief me
sage sent out by a courier from Mo
gan, Utah, soon after the disaster.
Most of the killed are Japanei
and Greeks, who made up the quari
gang of 70 to 100 men. The injure
are reported to number nearly
score.
The victims were blown to piece
On the hillside overlooking U
scene, portions of arms and liml
were picked up. Some of the bodit
were blown a hundred yards.
A premature explosion in a tui
nel in the hill above the cemei
plant was the direct cause of the e:
plosion below. More than tiiirt
kegs of powder were stored net
where the men were working.
BURIAL OF JAMFS DAHWI.V.
I tod y of Man Shot in Texas Laid 1
Best at Home.
The body of James Darwin, wh
formerly lived at Woodruff, was ca
neu mere ior interment 1 ucsua
Mr. Darwin was shot from ambus
several days ago in Texas by a Me:
ican. Mr. Darwin was the son <
Mrs. H. A. Darwin and is the thlr
&hild whom she has buried with!
the last fifteen months. From whi
can be learned it seems that Da
win was shot as he was going 1
his work. He was an oil inspectt
for a large oil manufacturing con
pany in Texas. His mother an
other relatives were present at tl
burial. He was married last yei
and his widow came on with U.
body.
Ragles Attack SoooHroy.
Homeward bound from school, Ii
Cottlngham was attacked by two hui
gry eagles near Kansas City, Kai
He will carry the mirks of the
talons to his grave, though he mai
aged to beat the birds off with
club.
olles and the church membership rej
resented 67.8 per cent of the poj
ulation, while in Memphis, whei
84.4 per chnt of the communleanl
reported belonged to Protestar
bodies, the church membershl
was only 30 per cent, of the popuh
tlon.
" 0?EN IN JUNE
R
The Itinerary of the State Candidates
Will Be :in Now Soon.
* WILL LAST TWO MONTHS
S8
in ^lN>n'nK Meeting Will He Hold at
Sumter and Closing Meeting at
th
ay Newberry.?Ilroak in Schedule Account
Ked Shirt Men and Reunion
ae
le of Veterans.
3d
re The itinerary for state campaign
er Ibis summer was made public Mon
"
uaj auciuwun oy lipn. wine Jones,
y, of Columbia, chairman of the execjk
utive committee and member of the
is- special sub-commitfe?\ named by the
id executive committee to prepare the
to dates for the campaign speeches. The
as campaign begins June 22, and will
e- end August 27. The opening town
b- Is Sumter and the campaigners end
in Newberry,
d. The Itinerary,
iw Sumter. Wednesday, June 22.
r, iRishopville, Thursday, June 23.
ic Darlington, Friday, June 24.
iy Bennettsville, Saturday, June 25.
c- Chesterfield, Monday, June 27
it Camden. Tuesday, June 2 8.
ie Lancaster, Wednesday, Jute 29.
it, Chester. Thursday, June .30.
re Yorkville. Friday, July 1.
Winnsboro, Saturday, July 2.
Dexington. Wednesday, July C.
id Saluda, Thursday, July 7.
;r Edgefield, Friday, July 8.
k. Aiken, Saturday, July 9.
11 Bamberg, Monday, July 11.
w Barnwell, Tuesday, July 12.
it Hampton, Wednesday, July 13.
Beaufort, Thursday. July 14.
it Walterboro, Friday. July 15.
e, Charleston, Saturday. July 16.
ie St. George, Tuesday. July 19.
ie Orangeburg. Wednesday, July 20.
ie St. Matthews, Thursday, July 21.
It Manning. Friday, July 22.
ie Monck's Corner. Tuesday, July 2 6.
ie Georgetown. Wednesday, July 27.
Klngstree. Friday, July 29.
is Florence, Saturday, July 30.
in Dillon. Tuesday, August 2.
Lg Marion. Wednesday, August 3.
it Conway. Thursday, August 4.
Columbia. Saturday, August 6.
>il Union, Monday, August 8.
h. Spartanburg, Tuesday, August 9.
ie GatTnev. Wednesday, August 10.
t. Greenville. Thursday. August 11.
r,f Pickens. Friday, August 12.
c_ Walhalla, Saturday, August 13.
Week off to attend reunion of Confederates
and red shirts at Spartanburg
if desired on August 17 and 18.
Anderson, Monday, August 22.
Abbeville. Wednesday, August 24. s?
"t f ma ? T?- "
U.v i.nuuu, limrsaay, August 25.
Laurens, Friday, August 26.
Newberry, Saturday, August 27.
jd The Rod Shirts.
r. It will be observed from the above
|lt itinerary that the sub-committee has
made a break from August 12 to
August 2 2, at the request of Mr J.
C. Stribling. commander-in-chief of
>1- the Red Shirt Men of 1876, bi ora
der that the candidates may attend
le the reunion of the Red Shirt Men
s- * t;d old Confederate soldiers at Sparr
tannurg eg the 17th ?ud 18th of
August.
se After the meeting at Manning on
y July 22, the candidates may attend
d a great gathering of the surrounding
a counties nt Olanta, Florence Countv.
on July 22. T his break in th'' scheds.
ule was made at the request i>f a
ie member of the State executive cora)g
mittee. Olanta may be reach? i by
?s t~ain most conveniently from .wanel
ng.
i- Ti.e last day for paying t:*teasit
ments and filing pledg s will ho
June 21, 12 M. The assessment for
y candidates for Governor is $75: for
ir other State offices $5 0; for Congress
$125.
NEW HALLINGEK CHARGE.
^ Secretary Accused of Illegally lotting
Contract.
The last days session of the Ballinger
investigation, before the Congressional
committee, at Washington,
I). C.. resulted in 36 grievances
being filed against the Forest service
j and the Interior department, 34 of
the 36 being against the former. One
of the complaints against the Intert
ior department alleges an unjust decision
by the Land office in a bometo
stead claim, while the other charges
that the contract 'et by Secretary
Hallinger for the survey of the IdahoMontana
boundary was without competition
and therefore illegal,
le
POLITICAL SINN Kit It K CENTS
te
Tom Watson Announces ftotiirn to
Democratic Party.
ft
a- The Hon. Thomas R. Watson, onro
a. a Democratic member of Congress,
ir twice nominated by the Populist para
ty for th<- Presidency of the United
a States, and who has long been one ?
of the chief controlling factors in
politics, as a Populist, in Georgia, an[>
Bounces in a card, issued Tuesday,
a- his rettirn to the Democratic party.
*e His language is strong, forceful and
(s leaves no doubt thnt hp has re?t
turned to stay. Tie calls upon hia
p long-time political friends to defeat
i- Thomas W. llardwick for re-election
to Congress.
I