The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 31, 1922, Page 4, Image 4
- Ct)? Bamberg ^cralb
ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891.
Published Weekly at Bamberg, S. C.
Entered as second-class matter April
1891, under Act of March 3, 1879.
$2.00 PER YEAR.
Volume 31. Number 34.
Thursday, August 31, 192&
Governor Harvey is having a lot of
nice things said about him lately, and
all of them appear to be well deserved.
The governor's work of law enforcement
is certainly notable, and
while his tenure of office will be only
* a few months, if he keeps up the
present record, Governor Harvey will
- have the everlasting appreciation of
the people of South Carolina. Almost
daily we read of paroles being
revoked in the interest of good order
In the state, and $ seems certain
that political pets among the lawbreakers
are going to have a hard
time during the next four or five
months.
An inspection of the assessments
of merchants' stocks as recorded on
the books of the county auditor will
reveal the fact that all this talk
iabout the state tax commission
equalizing taxes is bunk. Stocks of
merchants of Bamberg county of
practically the same actual value are
assessed at from $2,000 to $9,000,
while the Herald Book Store, which
the publishers of The Herald operate.
nays just about the same taxes
as some of the largest general merchandise
stores in the oounty?and
the hulk of the book store's business
is selling school books at a ten per
cent, gross profit, whichi, as any merchant
knows, is not a profit at all,
\ as no store on earth doing a small
business can operate on ten per cent,
profit. If the tax commission is not
abolished altogether, it certainly
^ should be given a little less power.
The Herald admits that it has never
had much opinion of the order of
me n.. Jts.. j\.., ana it now nas huh hjss
after the head office of the order in
Atlanta promulgated a circular letter
attacking one of the candidates for
state office in South Carolina. When'
. any organization gets to meddling
with politics in a secret manner it
does not speak well for the organization,
no matter whether the contents
of the letter are true or not. It de
velops that the letter was sent out
by one member of the K. K. K. from
the home town of the candidate, and
that the head office took it up and
aided in its promulgation, according
to the published statements about the
matter. Since the letter was circulated
among members of the order,
a statement has been issued by all.
of the members of the same lodge,
. excepting the author of the letter, repudiating
the circular in no uncertain
language, characterizing the
charges ?s a falsehood. But there
is nn follinp- hnw nnv voters mav
have been influenced by the original
letter. We do not believe In secrecy
In making political charges. If the
charges are true, the order and the
author of the letter would have been
conferring a favor on the voters of
the state by publishing the charges
above board to the world, instead of
hiding behind the oath of the order.
m hi
Thomas Hood's Song of the Shirt.
With fingers weary and worn,
With eyelids heavy and red,
A woman sat, in unwomanly rags,
Jfiying ner neeaie ana tnreaa.
-Stitch! Stitch!" Stitch!
In poverty, hunger and dirt,
And still with a voice of dolorous
pitch
She sang the "Song of the Shirt!"
O men, with sisters dear!
O men, with mothers and wives!
It is not linen you're wearing out,
But human creature's lives!
Stitch! Stitch! Stitch!
In poverty, hunger and dirt,
Sewing at once with a Rouble thread,
A shroud as well as a shirt !
Stitch! Stitch! Stitch!
In poverty, hunger and dirt,
And still with a voice 4of dolorous
pitch,
Would that its tone could reach the
rich!?
She sang this "Song of the Shirt!
With every rising of the sun
Think of your life as just begun.
The Past has cancelled and buried
deep
All Vecterrinva There let them sleen
Concern- yourself with but Today;
Grasp it, and teach it to obey.
Your will and plan. Since time began
Today has been the friend of man.
You and Today! A soul sublime,
And the great heritage of time.
With God Himself to bind the twain,
Go forth, brave heart! Attain! Attain!
?British Weekly.
t
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> jf
TO HANDLE S. C. TRUCK.
Company to Haul by Steamer and Dis
tribute by Automobile.
Beaufort Gazette.
Reference was made to the organi
zation of this company in our issu<
of August 4th, and which stated tha
the company was organized for th<
purpose of plying between the port:
of Jacksonville, Savannah and Beau
fort, in the south; and Bridgeport
Conn., in the north?with a view r<
handle the increasing citrus fruit:
a T *' J " " ^11 4- V* /\o wlrr 4?mn1
01 r lurxuct, its wcu as iuc caw/ nut'.
stuff grown in and around Beaufort
The citrus fruit business, as wei
as the truck shipments from Beau
fort, has grown into enormous pro
portions; and, as it is believed, th<
business is yet but in its infancy. Th<
plans of the company, as now ar
ranged, cover the leasing from th<
shipping board sufficient number o
thousand ton steamers to give a tri
weekly service running out of Jack
sonville, Savannah and Beaufort; th<
steamers then to run direct to Asl
nrl?n?n flio Aftmnonw Ttflll hav<
wharfage facilities covering aboul
two thousand feet frontage, anc
twenty foot depth of water?sufficient
to float any vessel of the company's
fleet. These steamers are
expected to make the trip between
Beaufort and Bridgeport (or Fairport
Harbor) in two days and three
nights, and be provided with refrigerating
apartments, and thus not only
beat rail transportation by from
twenty-four to forty-eight hours; but
also do away with the necessity of
the refrigeration of cars on produce
destined for New England, and also
deliver the produce at northern port
terminal in (better condition by reason
of the smoother carriage by boats
than can be done by rail.
A part of the plan is the delivery
' ? M iw oil Matt
| OI VLtV UUll auu ^iuuutc <u an nun
England cities direct from steamer
to store door by auto service, running
! in connection and controlled by the
j steamship company?thus avoiding
excessive freight charges and thrible
handling.
Connected with the company will
be a buying and commission branch
of the business, with agents located
at loading points in the south, and
who will either handle the fruits
and produce on commission for the
growers or buy for the account of the
* - .?? --A A
company; who win act as miciuiouiary
agents between grower and consumers.
I It is well known that per acre of
territory, New England has more
mouths to feed than any other section
of the United States?barring
alone the Manhattan district; and
there is tonage enough in sight already
to make such a line very profitable,
even at much less rates than
what the railways must or do charge;
and as it eliminates many go-betweens
between grower and consumer,
and is more sure of a delivery of
products in better condition than can
be done under the present method,
there is every inducement for the es
tablishment of the line.
Beaufort now exports to northern
cities truck products to the value of
around three million dollars, with
carrying charges to destination and
wliich is mostly in the New York
market, of about $250,000 annually.
While Florida, with its great orange
and grapefruit shipments will top
this figure greatly.
Aside from the perishable products
which the line will cater for, will
h? that tonaee embraced in cotton
in bales, as well as manufactured
goods coming down the C. & W. C.
Ry. from the hill section of South
Carolina and which oan be sold in
the New England states in competition.
with the product of Ney| England
mills.
For tonage coming south. The
line depends largely on manufactured
goods made in New England, and
coarse freights like Portland cement,
of which there is a great demand on
the' Atlantic coast ports, and where
no Portland cement mills are located.
President Harris, of the Savannah
nf Trad p. has exDressed him
I A/VUA Vfr V* ^ . ^ J ?
self as being most favorable to the
proposition, and arrangements are
in process of negotiation looking to
prominent parties in Jacksonville and
the orange belt district, looking to
becoming interested in the line.
The promotion of the line is in
charge of Alfred S. Perry, of Fairfield?a
suburb of Bridgeport, and
who has been extensively engaged in
promotion work in connection with
John C. Noble, promotor of the line
from Pensacola to Shawneetown, 111.,
and with Ward D. Williams, of the
Mercantile Marine Navigation Co.
Mr. Perry has interested in the pro
Ject Mr. W. A. Clark, the president
of the Remington Oil Engine Co., oi
Stamford, Conn., as well as many
other men of finance and business located
in New England and at Atlanta.
The company has the option to secure
by lease four one-thousand ton
steamers, but their plans are to build
and own steamers specially design
ed for this business, as well as a 2eet
of automobiles to be used for deliv
ery of the tonage throughout New
England, taken direct from the stea
mers on landing.
The accompanying picture of the
new Connecticut river bridge will
give our readers an idea of the mag
nitude of business in New England
is ?this bridge being located but a few
t miles above the writer's Connecticut
* river farm, and the practical head
s of navigation on the Connecticut riv
- ? ? ? ? ! * - Z 4? A/1 f ^ o f Vs^o,cr_
t;i , Ull Wii 1ULL U JO CAJJCV/ICU ujj.CH, ujwj.
ct; on .which it is expected that barg^
freight direct to Hartford and Springs
field.
? As matters relating to the propos
ed line, our readers will be kept fully
1 informed. Its establishment means
- much to Beaufort.
Personally endorsing the company:
3 Hon. Fred A. Burr, mayor of Fair*
field, Conn.; John C. Chamberlain,
- attorney and banker, Fairfield,
1 "O Dn??n noritaliot
7 L/Uilil* ^ r iaiiV/15 u* i en j) I
f Fairfield, Conn.; Hon. Bacon Wake-/
- man, judge of the probate court,
- Fairfield; Adam Abet, publisher,
Fairfield, Conn.; Alfred S. Perry, industrial
developer, Fairfield, Conn.;
and many other well known men in
Connecticut.
The capital of the company is $1,000,000,
and at this date it is be- i
lieved to have been all underwritten.
MUST PROVIDE MAIL BOX. . ,
> ,
. Postoffire Department Sends Out In- ,
stractions.
i ]
; Washington, Aug. 26.?Instruc- ,
! tions were sent to all postmasters to- i
day by First Assistant Postmaster
i General Bartlett to require all house- ^
; holders within four months to install ,
. boxes or cut slots in doors to facili- ^
i tate the delivery of mail. Such offices
as do not meet the requirement
may have the delivery of their mail
discontinued, Mr. Bartlett said.
(
"On account of the delays caused
to carriers at dwelling houses where
i no door slot or mail receptacle is provided
and the fact that a large majority
of the dwellings are thus equip~?t?./Nrt/*TT
" fVia noaiatant nnstmast.-.
JJ&LL aucauj) tuv
er general's instructions said, "it
seems timely, within a reasonable period,
to require all who are to receive
mail by street carriers at their
dwellings to provide such accommodations,
t<he expense of the same being
small. . . The length of the notice
should not exceed four months,
although there may be exceptionable
cases where postmasters should use
reasonable discretion or ask for instructions."
Mr. Bartlett estimated that more
than 70 per cent of the dwelling
houses of the country now have mail (
recepta.cles. 1
EIGHT CONVICTS ESCAPE.
1
Ope-legged Negro Said to Have Been ]
Leader. t
1
St. Matthews, Aug. 26.?Under the ]
alleged leadership of Gus Buyck, the (
one-legged negro who has spent a a
great part of his life at various times c
upon the gang, eight convicts made a
their escape from the county chain g
gang Thursday night. The means of t
escape was by means of a hole cut in
the bottom of the steel cage in which c
they are kept at night. It seems that j
I Buyck had succeeded in securing a
saw, and while those on guard slept,
he sawed the way to escape. Frank
Evans, the automobile thief, who
made a temporary escape some weeks
ago, was among those who gained
their freedom last night. The country
is being scoured in every direction
today. Sheriff Hill and many
deputies are taking every precaution
to apprehend them. The camp is located
at Beaver Creek Hill on the
State road, and the vicinity about
there with its many hillr and ravines
lends much assistance j fleeing fugi
tives. ,
_ i
Women Protest Weeks's Speech.
The Lawrence, Kan., W. C. T. U. '
more than 250 members strong, has
instructed its secretary, Mrs. R. N.
Hale, to lodge a protest through me 1
against "The action of Secretary
Weeks, a member of the cabinet, de- *
livering commencement addresses 1
1 1 omandniflnt tn '
&oCtIUSL I LLC pi UUlUlLluu umv,uumvub ov
the Constitution of the United
- States."
In public addresses made Independ- 1
' ?nee day, President" Harding and (
Senators Lenroot and Frelinghuysen *
made strong pleas for the observance *
of the Volstead Act and national pro
1 hibition. It seems they are not with 1
Secretary Weeks who in addresses to 1
! college students encourages them to 1
flout the laws and the American Con- 1
' stitution, with his wine and beer 1
propaganda.?Evchange 1
Recruits.
First Bootlegger?"How's busi- f
ness, Bill?" 1
Second Bootlegger?"Fine, fine, i
l I'Te got two new mayors and a dis- 1
1 trict attorney on my payroll, and two :
judges, a chief of police and a probi- <
; bition officer are ready to sign up
next week."?The Liberator.
EARLY CAROLINA HISTORY.
An Ancient History That Carries Profoundest
Meanings.
By (N. L. Willet.)
I am getting many commendatory
letters as to my tiiree comments as
regarding ancient history down in
Beaufort county. The facts are that
in Beaufort county some of the most
inportant history of the early days
of this country happened and to
which no publicity by historical writers
has been given. These Beaufort
dates takes priority over and antedate
many national historic events
which happened much, later and
whirh carried no ereater imDortance
to the nation, bu<t which for some
reason our historical writers have
given great emphasis. The fact is
that the lime-light has been thrown
upon the wrong object!
Columbus Landed.
Columbus landed in America in
1492 (fourteen hundred and ninetytwo.)
It was only twenty-eight years
and thirty-three years after this that
the two Spanish landings took place
on St. Helena, fifteen hundred and
twenty (1520) and fifteen hundred
tnd twent/y-five (1525.) It was only
seventy years after Columbus that
the first colony that landed on American
shores occurred?a landing by
the first French Hugenots in America
md who built the first American fort,
namely Charles Fort on Paris Island,
and who, together wWh the Indians,
built the first American ocean going
3hip. The celebrated Jamestown,
Virginia landing and the Plymouth,
Massachusetts landing, both by the
English, occurred respectively fifty
and sixty years after the Paris Is
land landing.
Other Beaufort Facts.
It is most probable that more Iniians
of the more civilized type were
jongregated in Beaufort county?
;here were six chiefs in this one coun:y?than
in any other section of our
country. Judging by the amount of
[ndian corn that was &rown and out
n the fields as we grow it and done
:our hundred years ago, it is possible
that Beaufort county led all other
jections in this most-important crop
vhich gave the American Indians
hair hread.
It is possible that the first great
igricultural development in this
country was the rice and Indigo inlustry
in Beaufort county. The
jrops were adapted to Beaufort local
;onditions. They were crops used
>oth for America and for export to
Sngland and were crops so valuable
iiat these lands sold at that time for
*ven more per acre than they sell for
:oday!
"
Jieiliwittis ivi omu?c?
I repeat again that this country,
:he State of South Carolina and our
Revolutionary Societies owe it to the
;ruth of history Ho set up an appropriate
memorial at Charles Fort,
Paris Island; and the Episcopal
jhurch by all means must take over
ind look after and beautify old Shellon
Parish church, richer by far than
my ecclesiastical ruin in the United
"D TT MnPnrdv a wpal
>?ateS. .VIX . xv. xx. .txwu. u^, ? .??
;hy New Yorker who spends his wint;rs
nearby and who owns these adja:ent
lands recently at his own exjense
put a fence around the church.
The Leading Factor.
I repeat again that it is time for
his nation to know that Beaufort
:ounty was the leading factor in the
iarly history of this country?hisoric,
civil, social, ecclesiastical and
ndustrial. Let the nation know that
3eaufort county chronologically folnrva
Prtinmhiio and that these many
)ther national events so much laud}d
by our historians, follow Beauort!
I wish to return thanks for data
'or these comments to Mr. H. D. Osvald,
of Andrews, S. ., Messrs. H.
VI. Stewart, W. R. Eve, Jr., S. F.
* T T wjiHomo onH PanfatT,
snerman, xj. u . Tnmouio wuu. ?
Pat Wall, all of Beaufort county.
Some of these gentlemen have, as
las also Mr. Winthrop Packard, of
3ostton, some exceedingly interesting
ihotographs as concerning these old
listorical days and I would have been
?lad to have incorporated some of
;hese pictures had space permitted
3ie to do so.
The Civil War.
The northern army occupied Beau*?A
fVia Vioori'nni'nc tf> fhfi
LUn CVJ Uli \.y 11KJ1L1 tuc uv^iuu?MQ
end of the Civil war. The white na;ives
all left the county. Lands were
confiscated and sold for a song to
Sea Island negroes as divided up into
ten and fifteen acre lots and these
legroes still own these buildings. You
cannot buy these homes from these
' A * +ViA nlnco r\ f t Vl A ("Civil
nc^rues xit tiic \j*. vw -w.. ?
war General Sherman swept through
She country on his way to Savannah
ind destroyed by fire every building,
whatever it be, that he came across!
One comes across today in Beauort
county the ruins of many "tabby"
buildings, buildings made of whole
oyster shells cemented by burnt oyster
shell lime. Tn the old days very
many "tabby" buildings were erected
on the Carolina coast. The history
of all of these old tabby ruins
is today lost and one who comes
upon one knows not whether it is the
ruins of an old Shermanized building
. of the Civil war or whether as a fort
or dwelling it carries a date that goes
back to the revolution or even to a
prior date! N. L. W.
[ Ail Old Church at Sheldon, S. C.
; By N. L. Willet.
; There is nothing more stirring
i than many of the fine old shrines of
i Europe and to visit and enjoy them
. shows refinement, culture and imagi,
nation. Here in America we do not
. set up shrines nor visit them?except
i in Massachusetts. But there is more
. ancient and honorable history around
i Beaufort, South Carolina, than obi
tains anywhere in Massachusetts. But
! Beaufort has no historian, while on
the contrary, the nationalized shrines
at Plymouth, Lexington and Concord
are visited yearly by thousands of
devotees. While there are several
old forts, Spanish and French, at
Beaufort that antedate probably
nnvthin? in America and which car
ry wondrous histories, yet if Beaufort
could only have two shrines of
publicity and nationalized I should
give preference to the ruins of the
old French Huguenot fort known as
Charles Fort on Parris Island, and
erected in 1562, and the ramarkable
ruins -known as the Sheldon Parish
.church, located in the old days
in Prince William parish and intimately
connected with her sister
parish nearby, St. Helena, at Beaufort.
The fort is the oldest ruins
in America as built by immigrants
and the latter is probably the oldest
and certainly the most weirdly beautiful
of all ecclesiastical ruins in the
United States. Indeed, I saw nothing
in Europe that carried such an
appeal to me as this old Sheldon
church.
The Church.
The church took Its name from
the bailiwick in which it was built.
Sheldon stood several acres south
of the church and was named from
the family seat of the Bulls in England
and its pretentious architectural
plan was identical with the family
seat in the mfother country. Besides
two colonial governors the Bull
family furnished one surveyor general
to the colony of Carolina. The
Bull grants extended from the Savannah
to the Com'bahee river. They
Trravn tr roof TVQ f rrm C nf tTlP SVl pi f? Of)
TT V/& \J Vl*w jj/Mb* vuw W4.
church. They presented it with the
silver plate which is still in use at
the Episcopal church at McPhersonville.
It is said that General Steven
Bull entertained at his glace every
Sunday sixty or seventy gentlemen
from the surrounding country.. The
church every Sunday was heavily attended
and one not infrequently saw
on Sunday sixty or more closed family
coaches drawn up in front of the
church, each with its coachman and
its footman on tne little aicaey seat.
It was known as being undoubtedly
a swell place of worship' and every
soul in Prince William parish made
it a point every Sunday to worship
in this church.
Its Burning. ,
During the revolutionary war the
woodwork of the church was partially
destroyed by an accident on
the part of General Tarleton's troopers.
The woodwork of the house
again was burned later by either loyalists
or patriots, it is not known
which, the Bull family thus being
divided in their allegiance. But the
church and the Bull residence were
again rebuilt, but both were again
burned during the civil war, this
time intentionally by Sherman's raidars.
At the time of the revolution
there stood in front of the church a
leaden equestrian statue of William, i
Duke of Orange, after whom the parish
was named. Around the old ,
church are glebe lands, ecclesiastical
and non-taxable. Twenty years ago
there was a caretaker for these old
1 ^1, /-. nocH -rcmt frop thPSA
ruiua nuu uo?u, < vuv v
glebe lands. One cannot understand
why the Episcopal church of the
south, is it ought to do, has not taken
oyer these old ruins and put them
in order and put a caretaker for
them.
Its Furniture.
The brick and furniture for the
church were all brought from England.
The walls are remarkably
thick, three and one-half to four feet,
and are in perfect repair. The doorway
and the chancel windows were
immense affairs, taking up nearly
all of the front and rear ends of the
church. Along the two sides were
large windows and into these side
walls were built semi-curcular bastions
of brick that extended from the
top to the bottom, giving it somewhat
the appearance of a fortress. The
plaster on the inside walls is in perfect
repair and probably was made
from burnt oyster shell. Along the
inside walls are still to be found tiny
little marble shelves on which the
candles which lighted up the Ibuild
TTrnra nlo
TTC1C ^IUVVU.
Sacred Ruins.
The church yard is a large one and
thickly studded with immense liveoaks,
at least a hundred and seventy-five
years old. and evergreen and 1
which stand like ever living sent!- j
nels about those sacred ruins and
from all the limbs of these trees and
swinging to the very ground, hangs
Spanish moss, grey and mournful,
which in some winds seem to sigh
while in other winds it seems to sing
low sweet requiems. In the church
yard and in fine repair are many
mausoleums, mostly those of the
Bull family. The inscriptions on
them tell of the lives of patricians
and noblemen and the fact that many
of them carry the date of 1776 makes
one believe that some of these old
loyalists died of a broken heart.
These old church ruins fit into
nothing of the today. To the visitor
driving over it a mile away from the
Sheldon railway station on the Augusta
and Port Royal Railroad and
who comes suddenly upon it, its
view is as strange as if there stood before
him one of St. John's visions
as let down for the moment out of
the skies.
A Center.
The old Sheldon church was the
oenter of a great rice industry that
obtained along the coast of South
Carolina. These lands in those days
were sometimes worth as much as
three hundred dollars an acre. They
produced not only the rice but the 1
indigo for this country and to some
extent for England, shipments being
made direct to England by English
ships that came up these Beaufortland
rivers. The civilization in those
days was a proud, aristocratic and
rich one. Just a little way from the
church is the spot where the old rectory
stood and there leads up to it '
today possibly the finest and oldest
avenue of live-oak trees to be found
in this country. The visitor, I repeat,
who looks into this remarkable
church yard and think3 of the his- 1
tory of the country about it can't
get away from the thought that thePnio/irtnoi
hv nnt taking1 it
UpiOV>V|/Ul VUU* V**j ~ J ? w 0 .
over, is doing nothing less than com- '
mitting an historical and ecclesiastical
crime.
Who Did It? . ?
A young negress, with a broken
jaw, rushed to the hospital. She was
evasive in her explanation of how
the injury had occurred, and at first
would only say that she had been hit \
with an object.
"Was it a large object?" inquired
the surgeon.
"Tol'rable large."
"Was it coming fast?"
"Tol'rable fasti"
"Was?" began the surgeon, when
the woman's patience snapped.
"Oh," she burst out, "if you musr
know, ah wus jes' nach'aly kicked in * /
de face by a gen'elman frien'."
Slight Correction.
Several weeks ago there was an f
account in the paper of an auto collision.
This is the correct version of
it:
While driving to church, several
weeks ago, Sarah P and father }
was runned into by a neighbor and
overthrown. Marion C , aged 14,
came up behind and wished to past.
At the sound of the Klaxon the former
turned out giving more than half /
of the road. The latter was driving
rather fast and she turned quicaiy
into the road again hence catching
the hind wheel of her car into the
front wheel of the former's sending
them into the ditch. As the motor
of Sarah's car was shut off no one (
was hurt and little damage was done.
One will reach their destination just
as soon as if they would observe the
rules of car driving.?Prattsburg Adervstier.
*
ORNAN LODGE, NO. 38, A. F. M. j
Regular communication on
Friday night, Sept. 1, 1922.
' M. degree. By order of
T. Ducker, W. T. JENNINGS,
Sec. W. M.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Lower District.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for the office of County Commissioner
from theiower district in the
Democratic primary. I pledge my- I
self to abide by the rules of the Democratic
party.
J. B. McCORMACK. 7
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for the office of County Commissioner
for the lower district, subject
to the rules of the Democratic primary
and pledge myself to support (
the nominees thereof.
GEORGE W. HUNTER.
MAGISTRATE, FISH POND.
At the earnest solicitation of numerous
friends, I hereby withdraw
from the race for County Commissioner
for the Lower District, and
hereby announce my candidacy for
the office of Magistrate of Fish Pond
Township, subject to the rules and f
regulations of the Democratic party.
R. H. JOLLY.
MAGISTRATE AT EHRHARDT.
___ ^
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for magistrate atv Ehrhardt
(Three-Mile Township), subject to
the rules and regulations of the Democratic
primary, pledging my support
to the nominees thereof. >
J. H. KINARD. 1
p
.
.