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Intellectual Bully and a Moral Pigmy. Senator McLaurin Expresses His, Views of Tillman. Special to The State Charleston. April 20 -Senator Mc Laurin came bick at Senator Tillman this af:eroo50 io a hot interview, de fending bis course io the senate aod explaining bis vote on i:he ramification af the Paris treaty and also his fleem? ing plagiarism of the Rsv Van D> fee's sermon. He refuses to meet Senator Tillaao on the stamp .The interview speaks for itself at.d is as follows ; .*I have only this to say in reference tc Senator Tillman's interview So far , a? bis personal attack on me is concern ed, the public prints are not the place to reply I neircervcoart nor desire his friendship or good opioion. Nor do I propose for the benefit of some one else te be drawn into a controversy with him ? am ready to do my own fighting ?od wan? otber people to do the same." #9oeeroiog his vote on the Paris treaty, Senator McLaurin said : .'I did intend to vote with the major ity of the Democrats against the ratifi cation of the treaty, for reason's purely af party consideration. I neve: said anything to Senator Tillman or any one else to give bim the righi to truthfully say that 1 was "bitterly opposed5' to its ratification. It is and bas been intense ly unpleasant for me to differ from so oany of my party associates. I had just beec through a campaign full of hitternes3 and desired if possible to avoid further differences. The appeal was made to rae to defeat the treat? and secure the tactical advantage of defeat icg the administration and forcing them te eal! an extra session. It is a pretty low plane of action, bat for the ?ake of peaee and to avoid jost what has coeur ted since, concluded to vote for the rejection of the treaty l t was with this idea that I went home Saturday night. Sunday afternoon, sitting in my dining room, I heard a oewsboj calling extras sud sent out and got one I saw that the natives had opened fire on our troops and when I read the acennot sade up my mind at once tbat the treaty should he ratified so as to fix the ?tatos of the United Stales in a foreign war already on. It made the people firing on ocr troops rebels.and cot as intruders The SO days lacking before an extra session oouid be called might be pro? ductive of untold barm. I have never seeB the day since when I was not glad that i did have the strength to vote as I thooght right. I did so freely and with no promise or pledge from any san "Immediately it was pabiished to the world that I bad beeo promised Judge Sioontoo's place A more infamously false and cruel slander was never per? petrated. "There hasn't been a time ic five i years when I haveort wishrd fha: ? I c:a!d decentl? and honorably set out cf public Iiis. Wheo President McKioley .fferr-d me the place i?tendea for a ^?oocrar on the Philippine commi^si^n I declined and told him tliat I never wanted anything: for myself a? his Bauds, but thar. if through me oe could help South Caroona I wanted him to do lt. Th'8 is ail ? ever desire or expect, ?nd if I did not faei that I was helping and could help my Sta:e nothing on earth conld induce me to sobrsit one hour langer to t<ech vituperation and abuse "It is no new role," continued the aeoator, "for Senator Tillman He began bis career by abusing and slan? dering better men I have oaugbt bu* contempt for an tntelleciual bully and shameless prereoder masquerading as a statesmar, a moral pigmy posing as the champion of honesty " Concerning the charge of plagiarism McLxurio said : .'So far as plagiarising Dr Van dyke's sermon is concerned, it was largely due to accident I was much struck with its beauly of thought ard dicion ? bad a borrowed copr and dictated from 'v three or foar sentences to nay stenographer, and in th^ on^ioal, whicb any ooe can see. are the word .paraphrasing the recent utterances of a distinguished divide,' etc Tbe?e were left out of the cop?i After mak? ing the speech I weor south on the ?ext train and never paw the speech again ac til it was io pri^t My secre ?try did not cotice it, aod had di*tn hated several 'housand before my attcn tion was called to it." Io conclusion Senator Mclaurin aiade this caustic comment : "I sincerely regret the mortification to the sensitive, deiicale and r* fined Balure of my creates Honors are easy, however, f.?r I -so a^surr- him that I have fzperiencd ? rn i 1 a r pans* at fome of the 'pitchfork tunes' which be plays to the disgust of thc senate ?nd the delectation of the gallery lo^f ers " Cotton Damaged by Cold Atlanta, April 21 -A special io Thc Constitution frrm A?bary, Ga, sa^ : There seems to be no loader any rio?:ht that tre cold weather of toe {.?asr *wo Bights has seriously damaged growing cotton. In some fields .pvc-v plant bas been ki.ed and replanting wi?! be neoefSary. Telegrar.>bic: orders tor cot too seed are ponring in from tho sur wooding ooootry. The State Summer School. Colombia, April 21 - Superintend ent of Education McMahan bas just issued some information relative to the State summer school, to bs held at Spartanburg, which will prove especially interesting to all teachers who expect to attend The attend ance, from ai! indications, promises to be yery large Arrangements have been made with the Southeastern Passenger Association by which tickets will be on sale at the rate of one fare for the round trip These tickets will be soid to the State Teachers Associa tion and wili be marked good to re? turn June 24, but by deposit with the Superintendent they will be ex tended until after the summer school cioses Teachers should ir.quire of their locai agents boforehand so as to be sure that the agents have instruc tiona In addition to these tickets the regular summer excursion tickets to Spartanburg or the mountains will be on sale The officers of Converse Collegs offer their services to the teachers during the meeting of the summer school, and wili regret it if they are left ignorant of any opportunity to contribute to the comfort and pleasure of the visitors The dormitories will accommodate three hundred teachers * There is a very pretty dining hall accommod?t ing three hundred Hot and cold baths are in each dormitory. In toe College buildings there are ten large recitation rooms ; two very pretty society halls, seating about eighty each ; one large gymnasium, 110x38 feet, handsomely fitted up with all convenient apparatus ; good appointments for laboratory work in physics There is an assembly hall, with opera chairs, seating comfortably eight hundred people ; a large audi torium that will accommodate two thousand There is a large art room, arranged with eight divisions for private work, besides the large main work room, and all arranged with good skylights and north lights The " buildings are well lighted with electricity ; in each room there is a twenty four candle power electric lamp The campus contains fifty five acres, with good bicycle paths and tennis and basket ball courts A good bowling alley is near the dormi? tory Those expecting to play tennis should bring their rackets Garret Springs, with fine cbaly beale water, is only a half-mile walk from the College The mair comes to the College by free delivery at 8 30 a ra . 2 30 p m , and 4 30 p. m , and will be put im mediately into the College posiofSce boxes for distribution On Suuday t?6 mail will be brought to the Col lege at 10 30 a ra , and a: 4 p m The cnail is carried to the trains at the st.ni- time the delivery is made The Converse College library will be at the servie*1 of the teachers The hours will be from 9 to 2, and from 4 to 6. Arrangements have b*?n made so that ?he Wofford Col lege library and the Kennedy library in the city will be open to the teach ers Arrangements have been made to have the text books and what station ery the teachers will need on sale at the college Various text books and school supply companies have been invited to make exhibits of the newest text books and school supplies for the benefit of the teachers A suitable place will be set aside for this pur pose The faculty will consist of Prof R Means Davis, history ; James Wi! liara Patterson of Chicago Art Insti tute, illustrative drawing; William Il Burnham of Clark University, Massachusetts, history aud practice of teaching ; Dr J. I McCain, Ers kine College, English grammar ; Wm C A Hammel, Maryland State Nor? mal School, physics and manual train ing ; Patterson Wardlaw, South Car oiina College, pedagogy ; W ii Hand, Chester Graded School, school supervision ; St James Cummings, Citadel Academy, English literature ; A G Kembert, Wofford College. Latin and Greek; Miss Mamie Mac feat. Winthrop College, kindergarten principles ; Miss :-arah Wnh^is. Chpster schools, primary methods ; J V Lewis Clemson College, phyei cai geography ; Miss Sarah Thur* ton, nature itudy ; Marshall D Ea?e, Furrnan, mathematics: E L Hughes, Greenville schools, practical geography : Frank Evans, Spartan burg schools, Frye's geography ; R il Peters, Converse College, v"cai music ; Miss Sarah Chandler, Spar tanburg schools, primary teaching illustrate :' ; D: James ii Carlisle, special lectures County summer schoois wii] be held as usu:?l in all of the counties of the State, where a sufficient number of teachers se-rn desirous to attend them, for tbe benefit of those who are not able to go to the Stale school, for those who vvou:d be better profited ' by more elementary courses and f.,r those who wish special instruction in several of the tex: books adopted by the State bf.aid of education. The administration bo^rd of tho ! State sommer school will consist of! John J. McMahan, superintendent ; B F Wilson, president of Converse; j Zick McGhee, assistant superintend ! GREAT STORM IN PENNSYLVANIA. Fifty Thousand Men Made Idle by the Flood-Railroads Blocked With Snow. Pittsburg, Pa , April 21 -The most widespread and destructive storm, from a material point of view, has passed It has left a zone of ruin 2?0 miles in diameter It was unusual in that it possessed so many different features Cities TO miles from Pittsburg were tied up by one of the worst enow storms ever known While the snowfall was from 18 inches to three feet deep, which ie not extra ordinary, the snow was so wet that it clung in weighty masses to 6hade and fruit trees and electric wires and poles, bearing them to the earth. It settled on steam and 6treet railroads like wet sand, stopping all traffic and making pedestrianism a feat for only the most hardy The fall was so heavy and spontaneous in some places that the residen'.s declare it seemed like the bursting of a snow cloud Neariy every town on the Ohio river between Pittsburg and Wheel ing is in darkness tonight Electric light plants or their wires are damag? ed and th* gas in the mains generally turned off. in previous fioods this precaution was not taken and the re suit was explosions with loss of life and property A remarkable feature of the storm is that but few fatalities attributable to this cause have been reported. A railroader, caught in a wreck caused by a landslide, and the death of an old woman from shock are the onlv ones known so far. The money loss is just as difficult to foot up It may reach ?3,000, 000 The railroads think they have lost $1,000 OOO The loss of wages to the army of workers in manufac turing plants up and down the rivers will amount to $500,000 and the re? pairs to plants will be a large sum ?- ? ? AGUINALDO FULLY COX VERTED. Believes American Rule Better Than Independence. Manila. Aonl 22 -A r?pre?enrative of Tbe Associated Press visited Agni oaldo this afternoon at 56 Solana Street, where be was removed from MaUcaoao, and foand him in a large ntocQ upstairs, furnished witn a table, a typewriting machine, three settes and 20 chairs His wife, who was enter? taining a number of Filipino women friends, sat. at one euri of the room, wbile Aguinaldo, smoking a cigar and chatting with Benito Lsgardo, occupied the opposite comer O ber? present were L'eut Co) John S. Malory of thc Forty fi-st volunteer infantry, who bas charge of Aguinal? do ; Lteut Gilbert A. Youogber of the Third artillery, and Mr Fibber, G n MacArthur's private, secretary Aguinaldo, whose bearing wa* cour reou-< and dignified. W33 dressed tn white, ana locked well, sod altogether made an excellent impression Logar ?e>, who out recn'ly retorced from the United States wa3 telling about the trip, and he seemed intensely interest? ed, smiling fr<q;i?nt!v aod ssking numer. as questions Eta inquired par? ticularly as to what President McKio? lev said, and seemed anxious to know wb.3? was thought of bini io the United States. He wa^ rather reluctant to talk for publication, -inri considered every question carefully before answer ing it He said be was doing ail ho oould to a-sist in the pacification of tbe Philippines, aod expressed himself as surprised at what tbe Americans had acoomolisbed. Wben he was first oap <ured, he weat on to say. he was great ly astonished to fiod that a majority of tbe Filipinos entertained the opinion that American sovereignty was prefer? able to independence, but DOW be was inolined to believe thar, wav himself Ha explained that, since tba dissolution nf the insurgent congress and the deoUrario'O of goerri?a warfare tbe chiefs bid operated to all intents and purposes independently They reoog o zed bim as coomaoder in chief, send ioff him resorts ocaasiooaliv, ani he iapued some orders ; but for tho last t-eveo mooth* oommanicat'On had been difficult, and he had been almost dis connected ''I am oow urging in tbe strongest manner possible," said Aguinaldo, "that all insurgents should ?ur^nder aad swear allegiance to the Uaited S-ates " London, April 22 -Special' dis patches received here "from Puris re j port trouble at the castle of Bel Loo over the bachelor debts of Prince Henry, the husband of Queer? Wilhel? mina It is said that shortly prior to his marriage he promised his creditors in Berlin and Frankfort to pay one thin) of his debts within a month of the wedding, but the money has not yet been forthcoming and ttie money lenders formally applied to Queen W ilhclmina The latter de- . clares thai h;,r husband must pay his \ own deltts out of the allowance made bin) by the Stale It is now eai? the creditors have ? ?rmed a syndicate ? and propos" to negotiate tho Prince i consort's paner on the Amsterdam bourse and Queen Wilhelmina ?3 re | ported to be very angry. The Dams May Not Withstand the Present Flood. Hagood, April 20 -The heaviest ram of the season fell her? yesterday. It started about 6 o'clock in the no om iog and continued ail day At times it poured in torrents Lanas have been badly washed and much damage done to crops which have just been planted All streams are out of their banks and some anxiety is felt for the di ks? on the State farm They stood the last two freshets, which wete higher ones, but if the river goes any high this time ;hey may not stand. Toe oat crop on the river bottoms is j the finest the State has ever had and ; it would be a grest loss if the dams ; were to break and this crop be de- : 8troyed Cotton planting is well under way but the heavy rain yesterday put a 6top to it and it Vvill be a week or ten days before the lands will be in condition for planting to begin again The weather still continuos unusually cool for this season of the year and uirstil there is a change no seed that has been planted can germinate. The stock at the ?tate farm has t>>en increased lately by the addition of 16 brood mares and a fine jack. The jack ia the finest of the kind that was ever seen in this section of coun? try Hereafter the penitentiary will endeavor to raise what mules they will need on the farms This new enterprise will be closely watched by our farmers and it is thought it will prove successful Dr M S. King recently bought the residence of the late Dr S H. Sanders at Hagood and mored in with his family last night. Is the Stock Law a Failure ? Tho March weather that has been prevalent 6ince the beginning of this month has much retarded the work j cn the farms. The heavy rains fol- j lowed by the colds winds have hin- j dared ail kinds of work, and the j planting of corn and cotton is very j much behind in this section, although | the farmers have been making every day count when they could do so ? ride of twenty five mile? through the upper section of the county has been a revelation to us in some re? spects, as it has been two or three years since we had the privilege of going in that direction One thing which surprised us is that the country is fast becoming denuded of forest trees, and where great stretches of woods existed a few years ago not a stick of timber ?8 to be seen The lander are open for cultivation, and it is perceptible that cotton is tbe cause of 80 much clearing being done. The resuit of this state of thing? must necessarily produce an arid condition in this country, which betokonR more frequent and greater droughts than we have ever known before. Tree planting is an unknown policy in South Carolina, and the restoration of tbs forests is in the distant future Twenty five years ago the stock law was inaugurated in this State, and one of the reasons for its enact? ment, which some of us urged with much persistence, was to compel the preservation of the forests as a means cf retaining the moisture and prevent ing drougts The theory is all right, j but the practice since that time has otterly destroyed the maio purpose of the law Morp land has been cleared in Greenville county since the stock law went into effect than for 50 years prior to its enactment, and the clear? ing has been done mainly on account cf the fact that the farmers no longer need rail timber of any consequence, which caused the forests to be kept intact on every farm Possibly a mistake was made when the etock iaw was passed, and most assuredly many farmers have made grievous mistakes in cutting down their tim? ber to euch an estent that the mois? ture' produced by nature throueh large bodies of timbered land has been virtually destroyed. it seems to be evident that the cause of this destruction of timber is traceable io the creze for growing cotton Lands can be rented to plant cotton when they wouid lie idle otherwise, and this temptation bas induced many farmers to cut down their woods Grain and grasses are ihe natural products of the soil in this couDty, especially in the upper portion, but tri riding along the 3uncombe road and the White Horse road in returning to the city, we were impressed with the fact that the grain crop is much less than last year, and that the cotton acreage will b.i increased from 10 to -0 per cent on a majority of tbe farms. IVheat, oats and barley present a good appearance, and without disas ter the farmer who ha8 acted wisely in this respect is likely to reap good harvests while the cottontot is going to toil ail the summer and take what he can get fur his crop next fail. Fifteen miiiiou bales at 5 cents a pound will yield $225,000.000 and ten million bales at 8 cents will yield ?400.000,000 The average cotton grower prefers to take his chances on tbe 5 cents a pound -Greenville Mountaineer Frankfort, Ky, April 20-The jury today retuiocd a verdict of not guilty i.. thc case of Capt Ripley, wha has been on trial for ooospir&oy io the Goobel assassination. A LONDON CRIMINAL. THE FOG THIEF AND HOW HE PLIES HIS PECULIAR TRADE. Ife Oppralrs Boldly Both In the City and on tho Thaiues-Carrie? Off His riundpr From Vans anti Cs bu Shrouded I? the Dense Gloom. Thousands of thieves long for fog with a great longing. Incredible as it may seem, property won h tens of thou? sands of pounds is every year stolen from vans and lorries alone iu London streets. Quite nine-tenths of this prop? erty disappears during fogs. The leaders of the fog thief gangs usually have some little capital to start with. One of them affects to he a car;age contractor on a small seale. He takes very quiet premises that have a high boarding round and that are not overlooked, if he has plenty of cellarage, ail the better. He has at least one smart trap and horse and two and sometimes three rogues to go with iL It is during the late foggy afternoons and early evenings of winter that the hauls are made. Streets with ware? houses-and not shops that are lighted brilliantly and early-on each side and that are often congested with traffic are mostly chosen. The small and smart though dingy and inconspicuous looking trap plunges into the thick of the traffic. It soon. In the gloom and murk, places Itself immediately behind a van or lorry piled with packages of various kinds. The men in the quick trap are all on the alert. One of them, a man chosen for his immense physical strength, goes to the head of the pony on some pre? text. He soon has a package down from the van in front. He is provided with sharp cutting instruments, and he has a powerful piece of strap with a hook at one end. If there is a boy sit? ting behind the van, the men In the trap contrive to get him down by di? verting his attention. Even with a view to distracting the possible atten? tion of carters, the thieves generally get up an altercation, or "barney," among themselves or with others. They are men of colossal impudence and powers of abuse, and all attention be? comes riveted upon them. In one case not far from Farringdon street last De? cember they carried off one parcel -of furs worth ?700, the van boy being temporarily blinded, as alleged, by a lad with the thieves blowing some snuff into his face from a pea shooter and then disappearing. One of the most notorious of these fog thieves was a lithe young fellow who crept along the back of a pony to its head, American jockey fashion, and hooked what he could from out of the van In front. The great hauls of these men are when they follow cabs and private car? riages from a railway station. In such cases they generally use two traps and horses. A cab is marked that has ap? parently valuable luggage on the top. This is followed till some dark street is reached where the way is narrow or congested: then the driver of one of the traps, that has a very swift pony harnessed to it. deliberately drives across the head of the cab or carriage horse. Of course there is an angry alterca? tion, and while tl:is is going cn the thieves cv. the other trap have got into the immediate rear of the luggage la? den vehicle. One of the thieves goes along his horse's back and lifts the lug ;a?e down. One of the hauls effected last winter in this war was worth ?S.000 and was the property of Mr. de Silva, an Argen? tina millionaire. Thc robbery took place not far from St. Pancras' church just before the shops were lighted up. As the summer sun brings forth myriads of living creatures, so does a Thames fog bring out upon the dark ano apparently deserted river a vast horde of thieves. At least a dozen of the wharf and lighter owners complain of losing from their respective wharves as much as from one to six hundred pounds' worth of coal alone every year. The reader can learn at any river? side house frequented by tugboat men that there are scores, literally scores, of tugs on the river that have never bought a pennyworth of coal for great numbers of years. The Thames police would tell that same reader that men have retired on competences who have been reported to hare made their whole fortune out of coal stolen with im? punity on the river. The police are helpless over the vast expanse' of river and in the labyrinth ine backwashes. IT they raid one of the pirate boats in the gloom and dark ness, the spoil is turned <>i:t to the bottom of the river in a tr.ee. If this sort of tiling can he dene to such an extent with a commodity !;!<e cia!, it may be imagined what befalls other valuable property on wharves or in lighters. The fraudulent picker up of the river blesses the fog. The pieker up is a man who notices (hat certain barges with valuable cargoes are moor? ed in inch way that, if they broke loose, ther would entail vast expense. The pieker up sees that these [?arges do break loose That nan of ?os work he dees in dead secret. And men. mak? ing plenty of noise about it at this stage, be rescues from danger the very barges thai he has set adrift and semi.-, io a beary salvage claim.-Loo don Answers. Acid.? That Are Den I h to Cholera. Tb<? acid of lemons and oranges is fatal to the cholera bacillus. Even if placed upon the rinds of the fruit the "ennis will ncr survive longer than a day. I.ailies' Heme Journal. In iii" Georgian language, spoken in the mountains between the Caspian and I'duck seas, dada means mother and mama father. In Taris the public authorities suppl? gratuitously sulphurous baths to all workers wh^ manipulate lead. FROM THE WIRES. Keodali?rille. l-d, April 21 -The home of John Andigo, an Auneh farmer, W?S enterrd Ia?r night bj three j men who secured ?6,000 after buroing ! the old mao's ears, nose aod fingers j with lighted matones Asheville, N. C 3 April 19 -Co! A. ! H Belo, of the firm of A H BM o & j (*o, proprietors cf the Dalia- (?'(s) ' News and the Galveston (Tex) N"ws, Ond here thi.* rucming, after s three j months'' illness. The burial will take ! place at Salem, N C , Co: B Io's booie j ID childhood Cheraw, April 21 -The jury in the Powell trato wrecking case (hat bas ;.ttrao ed such widespread at(eotiop, afrer hours of deliberation, failed to I agree, aod at midnight a mistrial was j allowed to ho entered on the docket. Ir j ts said tbe jury gtcod 9 to 3 for acquit j tal, showing that it was bard for a jury, J 36 weil cs the public, to believe the accu-ed guilty of ?neb a cbarge. Snow ar;d ?leer fell io Greenville and Laurens on Saturday New York, April 22 -Patrick Mc Evoy, a laborer employed by the New York Central railroad, in Bastings - ou the Hudson, saw a man and woman bury s two weeks' old boy alive today. As soon as McEvoy realized what was being done be ran. to the rescue aud succeeded in re? moving the loose earth from the child in time to save ita life The man and woman ran away but McEvoy gave a description of them to the police and an Italian man aud woman were arrested in Yorkers on suspicion that they were the would be murder? ers Snndar Habits. The average man does himself so much harm on Sunday tkat he does not recover until the following Wednes? day. In the first place, he loafs around the house, instead of being ac? tive, as on weekdays. In the next place, be cats his breakfast later than usual, and his diane'- earlier, and thc result ls that he is knocked out until Wednesday. The best thing to do on ?Sunda.? is TO cont'orr*. to your usual habits as much as possible.-Atchison Globe. A Poser Fron? the SnaU Boy. . Mamma-Don't boil . those canned peas, Bridget. They only want to be warmed. Little Tommy-Mamma, peas can't taik, can they? Mamma-Of course not, dear. Why' Little Tommy-Then how do you know what they want?-Philadelphia Press. A man bas no more right to say an uncivil thing than to act one, no more, right to say a rude thing to another than to knock him down. t * Pleasure in Store / for Readers of This Paper The opening chapters of a f? most delightful story will ^ appear in these columns <| soon-a story that will be <| read with pleasure and in terest, we are sure, by all ^ who begin it It is entitled ft By Joseph A. Altsheler | The plot is laid in R?volu tionary days and the three A important characters are an Y American cavalryman, a v beautiful English girl and a most intelligent horse. The young mar. makes the girl a prisoner of war. From intense hate of her captor the feelings of the heroine change by srradu?.1 stages to that of loyal love. The feeling extends to the horse and is reciprocated by both % man and beast. The story f; is charming".}' written. I Watch for the Fir<t Chapters | SS Coast Line Railroad Copan? of Ssa!!! Carolins. CONDENS?D SCHEDULE. Ir. e?feet J-icuary 13tb: :S0I. SOUTH NORTS Ko y<o No No .35 f57 ts? *32 7 *5 Lv Davirton Ar 8 15 3 3B Lv Elliott Ar 7 50 9 1? Ar Sumter Lv 6 50 ? 0 Lv Sumter Ar 6 r4 i 52 Ar Creston Lv 5 3i ft 45 Lv Creston Ar 3 SO 9 15 Ar Pre/n-tlis Lv 10 GO 5 16 Orandeburg 5 10 5 55 Denmar* 4 35 7 55 Augusta 2 40 ?. IQ am pm p na .Daily |L>*ii> except ou^day. Trains 32 md 3'? carry throczb Pullman P.ii .ce Buffet Sleeking O'.rs between New Veri: -.a i Macon vin Augusta T a BME3S0N, ? M SSIEKSOX, TratSe tfftn*eer. G n1! (*asa. Ag J K KX3?LY, Gen i V .inaner