Capital city courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1885-1893, December 15, 1888, Image 7

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Leaders in Photography.
Riley's
f(EU 5
5tudi05.
Wo mak A tpcci.tlty of the celebrated
BROMIDE
Life sized picture nml furnish the illicit
work at lowct price.
Boat Cablnota $3.00
Elegant line of Picture Frames lit utocU
anil made to order. Call and fee us.
H. W. KELLEY&CO,
iui( O Street. LINCOLN, N15IJ.
GOE. H. POEHLER,
Ice Cream and Oyster Parors
Bakery
and Confectionery.
132 O Street
LINCOLN, Ki:H.
Families and l'artics su
milled with all
Ice Cream for
Jellcaclcs at short notL-e.
party hr private 01 ders all during winter
season. Telephone 57.
R. O'NEILL,
I)KI.KK IN
Diamonds, : Jewelry,
AND OPTICAL GOODS,
impairing and Engraving a Specialty.
16 No. Tenth Street.
Crystal Steam Laundry,
Ofice', Burr Blk. Lausdry, 2 lth and 0.
Finest Work in the City.
COLLARS AND CUFFS
A SPECIALTY.
All work called for and delivered, and
satisfaction guaranteed. Leave older- at
ollice or by telephone tyS.
Monarch of the Dailies!
THE
Omaha Bee!
Delivered to any part of the
city for 20 cents a week, e cry
day in the year Leave sub
scriptions at Lincoln bureau,
I027 P street.
BARGAINS
-IN-
Dress Goods, Cloaks,
AND BLANKETS.
FRED. SCHMIDT,
921 0 Street, opp postofticc.
Hargri:ayi:s mhos,
743107450 btrect.
Wholesale Grocers,
Fruit, Produce ami Commission Merchants
s.
is.
MOORE,
1034 O Street
Dealer and Jobber in
Wall Paper.
Lace Curtains, Shade, and Intctlor Deco
rations. Got Your Laundr Work
-1KHJKAT-
TlieExcelsior Steam
Lau ndiy
sot a. uiii 8t.,
, rear entrance, Tel. Ml.
orders promptly cnllisl for ami ilrilieml. We
ptliluoursoht'soa proinptiii'M nnd Miiwriurlty
ufuork.
MlI.I.KH.t DAY, l'roprlflnrs.
I toll inoro bottlci ot
Dr. Both Arnold'
COUUII KILLKIl
tlinu of nny ntlicr rongli
Meilleliio Kept In ktock, id
tliniiRli 1 Isccp IKtccu ailo
tlos. I'M.Itu1)crtRon. forvllla.
, .-, . ,
DruggUta, 25c.r Wc., uU ?i.co,
Till! NKGKO IN DIXIK.
THE CHAFUCTEniSTICS OF THE
COLORED MAN OF TODAY.
Wlutt lio I DiiIiir fur lllmiir nml Wliut
IMurntlon lint Uono for llliiillin
Sorlnl Position of llio Color,,! liner.
Tho Colored Mllllln r South Cmolltm.
(Special CornwtH)inlciico.l
New YottK, Dec. 10. Within two
yearn It has been written that "he Is no
friend to the colored people who does not
plainly nay to thctn that their iositlon ns
citizens, In tho enjoyment of nil civil
rights, depends quite as much iion their
personal virtue und their acquiring
hnblta of thrift ns It does upon school
privileges." Nothing enn bo truer than
tills widely circulated dogma of 11 con
servntlvo Now Imglnndor. What Mr.
Charles Dudley VVnrner nnw, und bo
freely nml honestly wrote of, in Ibjfll, has
Iwen forcibly brought to mv own notice
by extended travel through Virginia, tho
two Cnrolinas and Georgia durinir tho
present year. Facts us found will bo
brlelly given. Completely dissociat
ing tho negro freedmnu from his jiosltloii
ns a K)litleal factor or ns an element of
partisan oratory, It shall lemyduty, asn
faithful ch.vuieler, to show him on tho
plantation or in houthcrn towns nud
cities on labor days or when npolntcd
cessation of work ami holiday excite
ment has nirorded mo chances for closo
olmorvntlon.
It has been said tlir.t n newspaper man
on tho road sees more than tho ordinary
tourist. Ho certainly has a keener,
clearer vision than tho traveler whose
only linger lioanl Is prejudice. Tearing
olT tho veils of romanco and Motion, I
shall present tho colored ruco ns it now
actually is in that section of tho United
States mo-,1 favorable to Its social devel
opment. In tho north a negro must
work, steal or starve; but ho need not
work or steal In tho south to keep from
starving. Tho climate there is his pro
tector, (coder and comfoitcr. It Is as
tonjshiug upon how little the shiftless
plantation laborer can subsist, and it is
equally surprising how much ho can eat
wlion bounty spreads nn occasional feast
in tho rude, unpaiutcd cabin.
Tho colored race in Virginia is alout
ono-third of the total population; in
North Carolina more than -It) per cent, of
tho whole; in South Carolina, 00 per
cent., and in Georgia, almost one-half.
These four states have an aggregate poi
ulatlou equal in numbers to that of Now
York nlone; but tho total negro census
of the great northern commonwealth is
less than 10 per cent, of Virginia's freed
and elTuslvely liunpy colored inhabi
tants, whilo Massachusetts has within its
borders only ono-third ns many negroes
ns aro content to live In New ork.
Heiico it is evident (hat Dixie, the land
of mild temperature and fruitful har
vests, is tho natural, ns it will long ,
rcninlji the Vl'-'". !PIo Pf cd
ored people in tins counti. They Me
Its most acceptable laborers, whether .
Working on upland farms or in tho river I
irrigated meadows. Their wants aro l
few, their children many. With them 1
superstition lingers, sloth is a life sap
ping parasite, immorality a glaring
characteristic, and religion meiely a I
shield from terrors bom of Ignorance. I
Ict out of liomlngo only u qumtur.of n
century no, they inherited civil pi hi-1
leges whicluu less Indolent race would
have solidilled into a political menace.
In this world, the negro u piosent is to
him sulllclent concern. lie cannot set
his mind ukjii the possible- rainy days of j
the future. While tho sun slilues and '
the corn sprouts ho is happy. When l
thero is no ammunition for tho shot gun
ho can always llnd bait for hisllsh hooks. '
His woodcraft fcocuros him toothsome I
morsels, for his skill with game traps is
well known. So, as far as Ids life in the
piuo dealings or on small and unsvbtcm-,
atieally worked plantations can lio de
picted, the black man is a jioor user of
time, sinew nnd opportunity. Wages
become an object to him, not ashlsiight, I
but as n meau.i to purchase necessaries or
cheap luxuries. He has no native or
acquired thrift. Money, therefore, Blips
easily tlirougli his lingers, lie is willing
to earn more when tho larder ii empty,
game ncurcc, or tho llsli refuse to bite.
This ianooveidrawn pietuio. It vividly
represents tho negro in Dixie, as ho is
most frequently seen outside tho piospor
ous villages, town or cities. lie rather
rusts out than wears out. Not tho least
marked among Ids numerous peculiari
ties Is longevity. When lib cannot drag
his rheumatic or age enfeebled limbs out
doors, tho ciude icligion which ho has
embraced with so much fervor promises
n heaven whero all labor is forbidden,
hunger unthought of, mid the angels aro
neither black nor white, I ut gilded.
Endowed universities and industrial
training schools for tho colored race have
been located in different sections of the
south. Their history and practical influ
ence, though deeply Interesting, will not
bo recited in detail here. Education is
tho bright browed consort of progress,
but her most prolific Holds have not been
found tilled by tho American fieedmen.
Yet much good has been accomplished
and greater benefits aro assured. No
stato has been 111010 liberal in legis
lative support of theso colleges for
tho colored youth than South Caro
lina. Today Iicr public schools have 1
nu attendance, of nearly 100,000 negro
children, in 1870 tho average was less '
than 2,000. At Orangeburg tho Clatlin ,
university, louiuieu tu leuu, uas a lurm
of 150 acres and a carpenter shop, where
ambitious colored students can, by
manual labor, partly defray the eost of
their instruction. Tho reason for the es
tablishment, in April. 1861, of tho Allen
university at Columbia, S. C, was: "To
aid in tho development of tho highest
typo of Christian manhood, to prove tho
negro'a ability to inaugurate and manago
n large intci est, to train him not only
for tho pulpit, tho bar, the sick room and
school loom, but for agriculture, mo
clmnics and arts; to educate in tho full
est eonsoof that comprehensivo word."
Colored firemen, policemen, letter car
riers nud militia aro scon in all tho
larger touthein cities. Ono even
ing on tho East Hattery nt Charles
ton I nsked n btalwnrt negro peace guar
dian how ho camo to join tho force. Ho
told mo that it was less tiresome more
respectable nnd better pay than his regu
lar trade of shoo making. Fifty dollars
a month goca a long way in the mind's
oyo of a herculean darky when he Is nt
tired in municipal blue with brass but
tons, It would bo n novel sight if tho
governor of Now Yoik left Albany for
tho mctropoll'j to roviow live leglmcnts
of colored infantry, yet Governor Rich
ardson, of South Carolina, last Fourth
of July camo Horn thu executive man
biou nt Columbia, 1U0 miles to
Charleston, nud stood, dignified and
self Hssessed, on a hotel balcony
while a full brigade of the stato national
guard, nil negroes, tiled past him on
holiday parade. They looked martial,
BtopH'd lively and kept their eyes
squarely to the front.
As master mechanic or opoit nillsan,
employer, salesman orcloikigung boss or
day lalKiier, burlier, jHiiter, waiter, valet
or ice cream jHMldlcr, the ell v bred negro
In tho south keep paco with his most
enterprising northern brother. He often
saves money, dons custom mado clothes,
drives his own team and aHects all the
airs and graces of the prosperous whilo
man. In time hn becomes a liondlioldor
and owner of real estate. Mr William
Alkon Kelly, assessor of the city of
Charleston, In his latest annual re-iott,
notes the interesting fact that tho col
ored residents are apcurlug as a factor
In the local tax lists. For exceptional
prominenco ns n citi.eu, the southern
negro is yet to be hcuid from.
llr.Nitv Cl.AY Lt'KCNS.
LOCATING SUNKEN VESSELS.
How It In Doun In Tlirm, llnjn of tin
piovrd Aiilliini'i'.
(8xt'lal CorniotiiJciHi'.
Nr.w Yohk, Deo. 111. "The steniner
Ilierla was promptly located south of
Ixing Island, not far from Flro Island
inlet, lying in seven fathoms of water.
A diver sent down reports that the ves
sel cannot be raised, hut that the larger
part of the cargo can ho saved. The
work of removing will Ugln at once, tho
consignees having made a contract to
that eirect." Thus a recent dispatch.
"It grows easier o cry day," said one of
tho olllcnrs of a New Y01 k wrecking com
pany which has charge of tho work men
tioned in the iiImivo dispatch, "to locate
sunken vessels. The old method, which Is
still desciibod in novels, was to use small
boats, propelled by oars or hails and
(Itted with grapnels, grappling lions nnd
(latent hooks. This method was slow,
uiiccitain and usable only in smooth
water.
"Tho first great Improvement was the
substitution of the steam lug foi oilier
soitsof vessels. A good tug can work
in almost any weather, and will cover 11
hundred times as much territory'as the
swiftest sailer. Tho next improvement
was thu wrecking tug, whleli Is a fast
and powerful steam lug, cqulpiod with
steam cranes, patent anchors, divert,
divers' outllts, dynamite cartridges ami
all Hie instruments forsuhiuariuesenich
iug. Among the latter nro some remark
ably ingenious mechanisms, invented, 1
believe, by Edison, but improved to meet
tho rough work thrown upon them by
use on the ocean. Oueof these Is similar
to tho odd electrical contrivance with
which the doctors tried to find the bullet
in President Gurllcld's body. It consists
essentially in n strong magnet so in-
I J
I.OCATINO A Sl'NKKN SUIT.
cased in a frame work that it can only
bo moved by tho near presence of a large
mass of iron. Then when it moves it
induces n current in a coil of wire which
rings n bell.
"Tho drag containing tho magnet and
coil is towed behind tho wrecking tug,
tho wiro from thu tug running to the
pilot house. The moment tho drag ap
proaches a sunken iron ship the magnet
Udellected, the electrio bell lings and
the pilot stops tho lioat and anchois. If
tho sea is very rough ho buoys tho placo
und returns when tho weather moder
ates. A diver is scut down to examine,
the wreck nud tho thine, is done. Iiriro
size inatriietio needles are sensitive to
vast bodies of iron for nt least (lfty feet,
though somo electricians claim that tho
sensibility can bo Increased to 000, This
is all very well theoretically, but won't
work In practice. The !es.t plan is to
suspend 0110 electrical drag fioiu the
bteru of the wrecking tug and one each
from tho ends of two spars fifty feet
long placed nt right angles to the sido of
tho boat. This makes three drags, sixty
feet apart, and allowing foity feet for
tho sensitiveness of tho magnets gives us
a path 00 feet wide uncler the water.
If any iron shin lie in that path it Is
bound to bo tliscovercd. The drags
should keep clear of tho bottom. This
Is ery easily done every wheio along the
American coast, as the maps furnished
by the government of the coast survey
me f.o thorough in rcgaid to soundings
that a good seaman knows the depth at
any point within Bight of land. Ibis Is
especially the enso In the lower Hay of
Now York and all along the southern
Long Island and New Jersey shores.
"Another wondeful mechanism is an
apparatus for seeing under water. It Is
based uiiou the old principle of a long
tubo with a glass bottom, which is
lowered into tlio water. The Improve
ment consists of a second tube, parallel
with the llrst, at the top of which is an
electric, calcium or magnesium light.
For Mich work as wo have in New ork
bay and tho Hudson river, wlieie tho
water is full of mud and silt In suspen
sion, wo enn hco down twenty feet; but
in tho sound nud oil the coast we can see
from forty to sixty feet, A curious feat
ure of it is that when we use it at night
it brings myriads of ilshes mound below
the two tubes." Faus.
An Unnrreuui-' Opi'nitlon.
Young Housekeeper (to cook) What
in tho world nro you doing to that llsh,
Mnry?
Cook Washing it, mum, before I liako
it for our dinner tabic.
"Wash u llshl You silly crenture, don't
you know tho llsli has been In the water
all Its life." Texas Siftlngs.
Oilcloths thould never bo washed in
hot bonpsuds; they bIiouIiI tlrnt be wnshed
clean with cold water, then rubbed dry
with a cloth wet in milk. The emtio
treatment applies to a stone or slate
hearth.
TRAPPED.
1 1
Itdvr Sir. DlclVllriiii Mnttcrril Up Coiirnnn
llnonali.
"llnvoyou ever experienced tlio feoltiiR,
Mr. MelVllcan,"ial(llio young Indy nuftly,
"tlmt sotno gre.it opportunity nn within
yourgriiDp, but you Imt! hardly tlio preneiieo
of mind, tlio tlio courage, in It wen, to
nvnll yourself of III"
"Why or yw, Mli Qnlekstop, 1 Imvo
omi:tliiipi hnd a kind of fooling in If I'd Ixmjii
nort of tent for nnd couldn't go, joii know."
Miss Amanda tight! dreamily and thoro
was n paiim) (hiring which tlio two nut In tlio
f.oml darkuiM of tint Qnlekstop pur lor mid
exchanged profound tllonevs.
Tlio dooroHnod nud MIm Aniniidn'i elderly
foinalo lxlativu lookrd In.
"Tlio book you nro looking for, auntie,"
will tho jotuig Indy, with entire tvlf pstmes
lon and noiiio oinplmil, "! probably In tlio
library."
Tlio elderly fotualo relative withdrew nnd
MIm Aniiuiil.i upokougnlu In tho wft, mini
enl, tontiinlvo voleuof a trained iqplrciiiit
forelinrity,
"Mliowlll not dlnturb in ngaln, Mr, Mo
IVllean." "Hlio tlio wntn't dliturblng mo nny," he
protested.
Ami ho tit nnd looked hclplcwly nt tilt
glowing coils In tlio grate, with tlio foolltiK
Hint every breath liodrow wutn uiortlfyltiiS
nud elinntly lilinulcr.
"Ah joii wrro about to my, Mr. McFtoll-1
can," ro5iunol tlio young lady, "thvo nro
tituo w lieu It wan to all of ns that wo tntitl
tlHidt Tklmt Is hi our h tu our mlmU,"
"Yes," vaguely nntworcd tlio buwlldrred
youth, and ho tiled to remember wliou lio
Find started to say nuytlilng of tho kind;
"yes, o' eourio."
"And whilo 1 niu not turo Hint I ought to
lUteii to you, Mr. Md'ollcan," Nhotidd, with
dowticntt eye, "when you toak to main
this In till- kii(oiiii1 nmiiuur, yet"
Tlio joiiug iiinu could fool his puUo bontlng
n tattoo on tlio driunt of his oars, but lio mt
lll.o a hound boy at a corn luisking and until
nothing. .
"Uy tlio way," exelnhiicd Mlsi Aniaudn
prcsontly, "I Imoauuw IkkiUoC ongrnvlngs,
Mr. Mol'elioaii, that 1 nut Hiiro you will u
joy booing It U n largo boo!:, nnd you'll
Imvo to iiiovo your chnlr why, certainly,
j on can kit hero with moon tlio sofn. 1
novr thought of that I"
Tlio plettuo iluneod hoforo tho ryosof tb
young man hi blurred, coufusud Imagos.
"Isn't lliii cngrnvlni; of tlio 'Courtship ot
Floronco Doinboy ami Walter (Jay1 perfectly
lovely V
"Wh-wlileli Is Wnltr hognsjiod.
"Thcrol Ijook clotor. Don't you too hhnP
"W-uho's ho cotirtlngr'
"You'll Imvo to coiuo closer, Mr. McPblL
can. 1 declare, though," nml tlio looked
arclily at tho trvmbllng youtli, "I'm nhuost
nfrnld to let you coiuo any nearer. You look
oxnetly hko Walter In tlio picturol"
And then tlio arm of that lwlplvss young
man stole in n timid, apologetic, tuenkiua
way nioinnl vlio waist of tlio cluiriulug
Aiuhmla Qnle!:stcp, lier head tunic on hit
shoulder, and tlio book of ongruvlugs tell
neglected to tlio lloor,
' "Alfred," tho Mid, an hour Inter, ns slu
toyed with tho button of his coat, "you bold
boy I How on earth did you over muster up
tho courage to nsk mo to l your wlfof You
know well enough I uover gavoyou a partlcl4
of riicoiiragoinent,"
Tho youus man patted her condescend'
I ugly on tho h?mJ nud then tKko proiully,
with tho voleoof nn AJix defying tho light
nlng:
"When I mako up my iiilnd to do any
thing, Auiuiiil.t, no olutaclo on earth cm
ttop iiiof
Inuoeeiit j 011113 Mr. McPellcnnl Chlehgc
Tribune.
A Ilerolo (111 I.
"Oeorge, dear," ska said, with n pleading
Ainello Hives look uxm Ikt face, "turely you
nro not going thin early Havo you cenfced tc
lovo iner'
"No, dai ling, my lovo for you U ns n rock
it avIII endure," Ueorgo replied with emotion
"but early, why, it Is after 1 o'clock, and'
dropping heavily luton chair "tholtosssayi
ttint If tlio htoro Isn't ojieu nnd tho stern
washed down lieienfter ut 0 o'clock 1 loso tnj
job."
"Uo, go, George," exclaimed tho girl wltt
lioblo heroism, "tlio job is nbautnllwo wIL
havo to claim ns our own." Now York Sua
Popular Hone'.
"What Doci l.ittlo Ulrillo Sayl"
'Pollj
wants a cracker."
"Oft In tho Stilly Night." 'Tapa, I want
adwluk."
"On tho Deacli nt Long Dmnch." rioms.
"Whero Is My Hoy To-nightl" With "Hii
Det Girl," most likely.
"Hocked in tho Cradlo of tho Deop." Tin
harbor buoy.
"A I'inoOld Hiiglish Gentleman." Mlnlitei
West. Detroit Krco I'res.
rrleliteni'il.
A turgleal operation Is never n pleasant
thing to autieiiMte, ultliough It often provci
less painful than wus expected.
"I'm not B)lng to n-liool nny more," said
four-j ear-old to Ills inotlier, after his lira-,
day nt tho kindergarten.
"Why not, my dear I Don't you llko to te
tho httlo boys and girls!"
"Yes, but I don't want to go," persisted
tho boy, "Vuti-o tlio teacher Niys that to
morrow ho r.oiiig to try to put nu Idea intc
my head." Youth's Companion.
A In Moimreli..
Father Now, tny son, in a government
whut U tho souico of powcrt
Young America (promptly) Tho king.
Father llut in a country liko ours what Ii
even moro powerful than a klngl
Y011113 Amerlai (triumphantly) Tow
kings nrd nu nee. I.ifo.
Only Oil Horn.
I'etlJIor Is tho Iwiiof tlio houso lul
llrulgot Slio Is; nu' ycr talking to her.
"llut I mean tho other boss."
"Suro, they only Lp ono fclrl here."
Youkers Btutcsmau.
Not Strancf.
Quo cannot wonder at tlio blunders m.idi
In Wnll street 'Uiuti thero nro to many hulli
there. - llostoa Uaztttto.
Tr'n ItVTtMtW
Urn II copy roiiltniit n rATTltilf iiuikh minima
tlio lioMrr to tilt teloctlon of Any PATTtni llliittrnliil In any iiiiiiiIkt of tlii MnMxIne. nnd im Ast
or Tim hki iiiAiiiiraiturvil, etcli volinnl nt from iwrvutt tottlcinlt, or oir .TCOwoitliof pallorm
per cnr, frrn. .... .,
Yearly tntirrlillnn, S'J.OO. A trlnl will rntiTlncn ymt Mint yon rtn Rft ten timet tlio lu
of thu iiiunry pulil. Hlnglu roplct (rncli containing l'nlliru Urtli-r), SO cent..
PuliliBliuil by TVV JKNNINGS DKMOUKST, Nr.w Yon tc.
Tlio Mhito rmnlitnntlon l n tplhuilM clmnce to Ret our plr snd UtnoiiBtr't JtosTllLt at
mtluct'd rate. Hcml your tiibicrlptloiit to thlt olllcv.
YOU OUGHT TO SEE
run ni:w linu
Fall Patterns in Carpets
In Tnpcittlet, lirussclt, Dody HriiKtclt, Mo(iictts and all otlior
line lloor covcilngi. Our line of
FINE DRAPERIES
Cannot be equaled In the west. Call and
A. NI. Deivis 6c Stii.
SCRIUNElTS
MAGAZINE
Wmvim 44
SCRIBNER51
MAGAZINE
4 IT Ikf IA1lltt
I X2?XE2'!&ZZC22
' ., . .
r4 ivcs ccs rcaacrs uccraturc o laucinu imci
O m-cst nad value, it
(fefspgl illustrated and
than national circulation exceeding- 125. OOO
copies monthly. r&
ftPRlCE 25 CENTS 'A NUMBER' $5. A YEAR
tJU.X&lkw.i
Charles 5cribncr5 Jons
to offep 5CRIBNER3 MAGAZINE with the
REHja-
CAPITAL CITY COURIER,
Hoth for $4.25. 'I'l'l1 makes the price of thcCouuiKit
when taken this way oiily'$i.35
NEW FALL and
- ARK NOW IS AT-
John McWhinnie's
The Old Reliable Tailor.
First Class Workmanship, Fine Trimming, and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
305 S. Eleventh Steeet.
COOPER'S
Merchant Tailoring
ESTABLISHMENT,
Webster & Briscoe Block, 129 South nth Street.
J.W. SMITH, Representative.
We carrj a Full and Complete line of Foreign and Domestic Clotlu In all
Shade and Colors.
Altjat ,ftiidii, III., Ant int, HI. ami txv, At.
"OUR MOTTO"
Flue Work. Correct Stylos, Popular Prices
SEE THE
New Garland,
-AT-
RUDGE& MORRIS
nn N STIU5ET.
ONLY $3.25 FOR-
Tho Capital City Courier,
Ann
TJomoroat'o Monthly Magazine.
A WONIIKIIt'Oh 1'UIII.IOATIOX.
Mtnr .npiKifc
ii:nt(iur.vrN MONTiir.r
iinunrltio. 'I'lil I. n nrrnt inl.lnkj.
to Ui n fimlilon innt;nrltio.
ll iimlonlitrilly coiitnln. Ilia flm-.t I'apiiiiin Dm
rAHTf,T of nny iiintfnxlitu pnlillflml, hut llit. It
Urn rnri from thu fuel lliat pnnl ctilcrirlcniMl ex.
prflnro bio rIiciwii, to tlmt tnrh ilimilini lit It
final Ik n itinfpit.liici III lliflf In lir.Miniltr't yon
Krlt ttogi'it iiinnrlmo In our, tml riiro ninni,
Birtit nml In.triicllnii for tlio hIioIk fmiillr, II inn
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