Belles, beaux and brains of the 60's . n and Virginian son of Francis , his namesake and nextto Gaylord, graduated at theV. M. I., before entering thelaw and becoming his brotherspartner. He left two sons,Francis B. Clark, Jr., of Texas,and Rev. Willis G. Clark, ofMontgomery. The militarystrain of the family bloodinheres in General Louis , of the Alabama NationalGuard. His cadet companywon the first prize at theinterstate drill mentioned, andhe was later on headcjuartersstaff at Washington andChicago encampments. TheJ. Shepherd Clark and Burnetof El Comercio, the
Belles, beaux and brains of the 60's . n and Virginian son of Francis , his namesake and nextto Gaylord, graduated at theV. M. I., before entering thelaw and becoming his brotherspartner. He left two sons,Francis B. Clark, Jr., of Texas,and Rev. Willis G. Clark, ofMontgomery. The militarystrain of the family bloodinheres in General Louis , of the Alabama NationalGuard. His cadet companywon the first prize at theinterstate drill mentioned, andhe was later on headcjuartersstaff at Washington andChicago encampments. TheJ. Shepherd Clark and Burnetof El Comercio, the Spanish trade journal of New Burnet L. Clark, as Miss Armantine Oliver, was one ofthe most beautiful and charming belles of the after-warMobile. She retains both traits in her New York home, andhas loaned them to her fair young daughter. Miss youngest of the six sons of Francis B. Clark exceptLouis, is Le Vert Clark, now of Detroit. He was in the Mobilelaw firm, but married Miss Parke, of the Michigan metropolis,. GAYLORD B. CLARK(cadet at NEWMARKET) other living brothers areL. Clark, editors and owners 446 BELLES, BEAUX AND BBAINS OF THE SIXTIES and removed there. Gaylord Clark had but one sister, MissNelhe, who married Norman Brooks and resided in NewYork until widowed. Now she lives with her father andbrother, in Birmingham, while her only son, Russell SageBrooks, completes his university career. When my brilhant, yet astute, friend, Henry W. Grady, toldthe North of the New South, he knew the efficacy of arallying cry as well as did the inventors of Old Hickoryand Tippecanoe and Tyler, too! as well as did ColonelBryan when he inverted the Crown of Thorns and amal-gamized the Cross of Gold. Grady knew that there was—and could be no NewSouth. He knew that it was the same old South, bracingher every sinew and girding up her loins for a fresh strugglewith the conditions of day-after-tomorrow, out of the methodsof day-before-yesterday. He knew, thinker tha
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