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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1898)
THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT Oct. 13, 1898 2! Nebraska Jnbtpenbmt m WMALTH UAKiRS mad lUfCOUf INDtrSNDMKT. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY r tm fndipsndsijt FublUMw &o. At UIO M ltrt, LINCOLN. - NEBRASKA. TILEPHONI 63.. $1.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCB. ilimi all sommaalaatloB to. m4 rafts, areas? rdsrs. tt., pbl to TUB IMOKf KMDKMT PCS. CO., Luooli, Mas, THE WINNING TICKET. For Governor WILLIAM A. POINTER of Boost. Llu tenant Governor E. A. GILBERT of York. Secretary of State WILLIAM F. PORTER of Merrick. Auditor of Publlo Accounts JOHN P. CORNELL of Rlclrdson. Treasurer- JOHN B. MESERVE of Red Willow, op, of Publlo Instruction WILLIAM R. JACKSON cf Dolt. Land Commissioner JACOB B. WOLFE of Laaaaster. Attorn General CONSTANTINE J. SMTTD of Douglas FOR CONGRESS. First District June Manahon of Lincoln. second District Gilbert M. ITitcboock of Oi ba. Third District Join. S. Robinson of Madison. Fourth District VV. L. Stark of Aurora. Fifth District R. D. Sutherland of NeLjoo. Sixth District W. L. Green of Kearney. ' IANCASTEB COUNTY TICKET, or DJatrict Judge (to flU vacancy.) Samuel J. TutUe of Lincoln. 4r State Senator J. II. Ilarley, Lincoln, J. J. Stein, SaltiUo. For Representatives A. E. Sheldon Linco) J. II. Curyea, Waverly; , E.8iler, Lincoln. L. M. Went, Lincoln. W. C. Fhlppa, Havelocl For County Commissioner-. Wm. Schroeder, Llncolat. Republican rascality is not confined to Nebraska. New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and many other states bare suffered from the same eurse. Republi canism seems to breed rascality wher ever It is In control' If one is to judge from the Immense delinquent tax lists that are Just being printed in the weekly papers, "McKluley prosjierity," has not enabled the people of Nebrattka to pay up nearly as much of the "buck taxes" as Judge Hayward says they have, Huntington is playing the old Mark Ilaona game over again la California. He has issued a circular threatening to reduce the wages oi all the railroad em ployes If bis man is not elected governor. Railroads will never be driven out of politic until they bocouie the property of toe nation. It is strictly true that no one but bond holders Can get any of the surplus cash of the treasury for use without in terest. All the real eetat In a city put op as security would not get a dollar of it. That extra cash that ban Imwu titled out of the people is for the us of bond holdeis exclusively, "What." said one Lincoln citiiento another, "do you think the fusioa ma J.irii will V "Oh, anywhere from 20,000 to 40,000, was the reply. "I think you art mistaken," said the Orel. "There are mtalnly GO.OOOmore than one-half of the voMra of the state who want boumt gvrnmut and larg dis bursements to tb common w-booU.M A boadboUW U one of th favored easeofall the earth. II areata to h ba bora under a larky star. II doa't kav to eolleet Ms own later!. fact Ham doe that and hand it over to hint every quarter, II h wants sent ready ash, alia haata do la to pal up his bead aa4 b gt lhfah without la Wfvst. To rwtom lata nappy roadi. tna a tan afford. lo4 Mark llaaaa a (hm1 l trkta or Ursa Wm a k. Mstpu that w all lam bond M4ra IM lhn aha I4 pa U la (treat ea th b4a! Th galdbaf I art ir uWUtr tkat it alii tot dalofth gamasarat tobil4te Nrgs caaat Wai Ik are la (lam is wort atil it) l'hi p as l tky ar 4oig it. Tbay rorgst that Mur tk taael U taUl vt recall, at Waahlegloa Ul b arifv frost aaVa a4 lt Mt I tawv f4sa, ?t woadsr that tb 4itara wl Nw Yuekara pWtMa t eaaal btMki Ala). T tvpshtt afMala troitBfl tea wort at tha tViataAaJkava at ISLOOWO, WIm Pryaa pN It la aUI ikk tam U twt l Wa4laf tua. MOTE ISSUING BANKS. In all the history of note Issuing banks there is only one whose career the bank ers ever refer to as an example of what anood thing a note Issuing bank is. That lone exception is the state bank of Indiana. Of this bank they always say "It was a decided success, both from the nnlnfc of view of the publlo and that of the stock holders." Just now the gold bugs are parading It history and point ing to it with pride." It will be ac. knowledgod that it was the most suc cessful note Issuing bank that we ever had in the United States, no one denies that. But Its history will not bear a close Inspection. The lost issue of the semi-monthly Sound Currency, is wholly given up to a history of that bank', and the very account that It gives of it, shows that the goldbug theory of an "elastic" currency is rotten to the core. Those who favor a currency issued by the government, claim that a, note issu ing bank is always elastic in the wrong direction. In the time of a panic, when nothing will stay the fall of prices but more money, tie note Issuing bank is always forced to contract its Issue of notes. The history of the state bank of Indiana that Sound Currency gives shows that was just what the state bank of Indiana always did. Tne bank bad been running along for quite a while under "a suspension of specie payments," a thing that no note issuing bank ever failed to do, when the legislature, lu January, 1842 ordered it to resume specie payments. In record ing this, Sound Currency says: "The re sult was that resumption was effected with perfect safety to the bank." Then follows these wordwhich proves the cos against this and all other note Issu ing banks. "Whether it was without great inconvenience to the people Is not so easily determined, for the reduction In circulation was over a million and a quarter during the first ten months of 1843. Yet one feels inclined to say that resumption at any cost was better than the previous condition." The redemption of notes in specio, or according to the latter day philosophy, in gold, is the sine qua non of an elastic currency as expounded by all the gold bug philosophers, But when the state bank of Indiana was ordered by the legis lature to resume, it did not redeem Hi notes In specie as Is shown by this very record, In the president's report of De cember 7, 1842, occurs these words: "He (the president of the bank,) Is taking up aU the Indiana; baokbilbj be can find either with brokers or business men and paying for them with Kentucky or southern funds." So it seems that the model bank redeemed its notes, not in specie, but with the notes of other banks. Of ths million and quarter notes "re deemed," only 350,000 were redeemed in specie, and that is the history of the most successful "coin redemption" that is known in the records of banking. We don't want any more of that sort of business and what is more, we are not going to have it. The Walker-McCleary-Gage system of wild cat banking will never be tried again. Once was enough. GOT THE FLOP-A-DOODLKS. Last Sunday old Tiddle-de-winks, after tuking a glance at the head linos of the country weeklies on tfle subject of butterine, got one of its crazy spells. Being entirely out of its bead, it jab bered after the following fashion: "The fusionists do not believe this flap-a-doodles about economy at the state house or that these pass grabbers have caused an advance in the value of state warrauts." "Not only was the" credit of Nebraska below par, but the credit of very man la the state and every bust-! ness firm was below par, the credit of the national government was below par. That editor must hav seen snakes a hundred fuet long. II says that Cleve land sold f Jrt'J.000,000 of bouds at four per eent. He doa not say that th credit of th government was so good that th banker paid a premium on tbemorthat th bunker thought th rrvdtt of th government was o good and wanted th bond so badly that tuy formed a ring to telud ouUlder from getting any of theat, and that th banker were only abl to work that tha after curtog th aid of Tom Hoed and all th Wading rvpubtteaa a a tor. Joha Nherntaa. Hoar. 1-odg. AIIUoo, llaly aadom thirty mor of th rpublk-aa senator hekd (lv land and th baaker. That aettoa ol Ik rvpublleaa eaator aabki (1v laaJ aa4 J. 1W poat Morgaa to rak la sboat flO.tXM.txK) of pro At at th paa at U taipajm. I! very day vkU tht rhtra was (wing okl, KtpalMta, stiver rpvblte-aa aad ilff dwrraU arua aad pro tt4 ea th fl.H of taa anaat aad tay woalj hat do th ai thing la Uskoxwu: tkyoIJ aava tad th tkaax Uitv aa dsaad4 that it WmdamastM olJ, Uy aaghl tab oM la th tark bat th rV lima woaMa't Jkw It, At taa ry lima that taa IVrpoat Morgaa sjadt al takiag la Ik bead, I4 to It by th a4 af riahihaaaa A U Lg aa4 It, th goffatattdit a an good that 1 waa k44kt U d m Ik W all lrt tvk kaag. A Iwar r ml oa4, wJkag ataffo aiia c4 what M TuUIW-d. wtakt tklkktlaa that wta r4it of th aatkaii gtmaawat Wtoa far. P Ik 44 tklag snakes and has got the "flap-a-doodles" and no one should be bard on it. THENKWTOKK DEMOCIIACT. The New York Journal is supporting the Van Wycke ticket, but under a pro test. After the convention that failed to endorse the Chicago ticket, Mr. Hearst published a signed editorial in which he made some very pointed re marks. Among them the following: "As the flrst result of tbla failure to endorse the nation's platform we have the nomination of an Independent ticket, headed by Henry George, jr. It repre sents the deepest convictions of a great body of citizens. It represents the belief that the earth was made for all its in habitants and not for Individuals who might establish claims upon certain sec tions of its surface." Then to the democratic speakers he says: "Think something, say some thing, mean something." That Is a pretty large order to give to an average Tammany politician. Of the Cbicugo platform which was not endorsed be says: "But the democracy that spoke to the country at Chicago in 1800 Is broader than any exaut platform definition of It." Now than depends whether there is a Bryan In th White House, to inter pret and execute It, or some other demo crat, It is Bryan that the gold bugs fear more than the Chicago platform. Giv them a Dave Hill or a Flower for a candidate and the Chicago platform would not trouble them even a little bit. After that, he tells the New York dem ocrats that: "Tho financial question can not be slighted or evaded. "Then he goes on to plead with them to be honest, and says: "If the New York democracy believes that the Chicago platform solves the financial problem, let it say so. If it does not believe that, let it say so." Mr. Hearst seems to feel pretty bad LAbouttlie matter. But be should re member that a solution of the flnancla problem In no way depends upon what the New York democracy does. The seat of power lies west of the Hudson river. The farmers of the west, the middle states and the south will attend to those New York bond holders and goldbug at the next election without any help from New York, UIVE IT CP, Old Tiddle-de-winks reminds one of a dispute between two English farmers. One said that the reason the raising of Indian corn did not exhaust tba soil like other crops was that it was mainly an air plant and got Its sustinance from the atmosphere like an orchid. The other replied that that could not be so, for out in Nebraska and Kansas the un hardly ever shone the whole plains region was always covored with a mist. The advocate of the atmosphere propo sition, after staring at his opponent for a minute, replied: "Well, I give it up." After the Journal launched its boomer ang on the buttering business, the whole of the reform press came back at it with the records which the republicans bad left in the auditor's office, showing that the republicans were the ones who had fed butterine to the old soldiers, and not the popocrats, and what had been bought for the convicts aud other insti tutions the republicans paid Phil Ar mour about twice what it was worth; yet on lost Sunday the Journal camo out with the following statements: "The fusion forces are making no re ply to the articles published showing up their butterine record." "Even the usual defense resorted to by the populists when their inexcusuble ucts are shown up, Is not reeorted to In the butterine case," When a public journal will indulge in such bare-faced lying as that, it shows that it would, if It thought it cculd make a point for the thieves, declare without the winking of an eye that the un never shoue In Nebraska. No won der th whole republican party of the tat bream demoralised, and that proiniuent men went around over the tat declaring that atl men wer thieve and that its would mak no difference who wa elected to ot!lw thy would teal all they could lay their hands on an how, wha they had such a pa,ra th Stat Journal aa their organ. Th publication of such a qwr i enough, aotouly to d'uioliw It own party and ntak tht ol its oltlo holder, but lo a larg itat vveryoa who radlt. While It M published, good ruillnot to do all la their por to eouatorat't ltevl laRueac, rags-Ban ags;-.3-jsj rtakliM about eoaundram do any 6a know ta tkiadayaby Judge )Wa lUkf not glv Ik rwmpUmeat last Jr 4 aetiag a rhairaiaa ol th rvpttblMia tat ttavattua? Wa It b. mh th fttaekla waabM to arv aotwaaa kl at that early data that they dida't fropoa la kv kin trtek- tag kiiui( roailaat altvf Ik hakad glta Jo lUrtW-y, Th ilaa td raa lUyaaM ka4 el Ik rt t4 lha rtabitoaa tal tkkt by i hi a high to4 atlaaa 4 rvpawwaa r(4 a veraHt tk Cbflgkt iaiisg a4 tk a'oHi rwu4 a tak traat tk Otaak IW aa4 kar4 llakv Tk fp WWaa all aWlar that tk) Jwtwit ito (oaraalwai bt tkat lky kaa a4ta afltto 1 ylki I BBoaey, Tktr Maa ra alaaja badly Ml 4. AT IT AGAIN. In 1893, after the bankers had given us an "object lesson" by which tbey suc ceeded in panperizing thousands of widows, orphans and business men, the country was filed with homeless wan derers going from place to place seeking work or begging their daily bread. The plutocratic magazines then undertook to give the bankers another lift and began publishing articles purporting to be the experience of college men who bad assumed the character of tramps. The testimony of every one of these writers was to ths effect that they could always get work when they wanted it and the conclusion that tbey arrived at was, that the men who were traveling up and down the land, did so just be cause they liked that sort of life, Scrib- ner's magazine is performing at this old trick again. Its college tramp has dis covered some wonderful things, not withstanding that any man who has ever sought for work on the road or has labored on a farm, can tell at a glance that the writer of it was probably never out of a city In all bis life.' The writers who have attained to eminence In liter ature, and who have worked en farms or In the shops have something entirely different to say upon these subjects, as for Instance Howells or Hamlin Garland, This Scribner tramp discovered some wonderful things, Among them was this: "III chanced upon a farmer who had no particular quarrel with the ex isting order of things, who was conser vative and cautions and skeptical of the efficiency of change, I was quite sure to find that be was aa admirable farmer," Now if that is not a description of a regular old fogy, the very sort of a farmer who would go to mill with the corn In on end of the bag and a stone In the other, it would be bard to And one. He Is "skeptical of the efficacy of change." His father did that way, lived and died doing that way and to be "an admirable farmer" in the eyes of this fraud of a tramp, be must not advocate a change, Magazine articles of that sort are of very great value. They show what a change bos coma over spirit of the re publican party. Once It was the party of progress. Its press writers poked fun at such sentiments as that. Tbey ac cused the democrats of being old fogies and said that tbey were still voting for Andrew Jackson. As Lincoln said, tbey have completely fought themselves into the other fellow's coat. KNOW TIIEin rHIENUM, One source of gain to the populist state ticket this fail that has not been much figured on by tb politicians I that from republican school teachers in the state. A man who is well acquainted among the educational people of the state said this week that be personally knew of more than a dozen republican teachers some of them holding princi palshipsof graded schools who would vote the populist state ticket this year solely because of the improved manage ment of the school lands and funds. They were not making any fuss about the matter and were not as yet leaving the republican party, but tbey recog nized the wonderful betterment in caring for the schools of the state and were going to en cou ruge it by voting tore- elect the ofDciuls who hud made it pos sible. In many districts in the state the in crease in state apportionment makes it possible to restore teachers wages where they were cut down in the lust four or five years. In other districts it means one or two months school in the school year. There is no class that has felt more keenly the crippled condition of school finances and the shameful mistreatment of the children's school mousy than the teachers of the state. They have an In terest in this far beyond their own sal aries because they are anxious to sue the schools improve and exteud their work. School work all over th stat ha been crippled the past six or seven year partly aa a result of hard time partly a a result of th handling of th school fund In th interest ol ipcu- lators and pet banks. Th school men of Nebraska know their Irleiids and will vote for them No vember 8th. StTIONAI. HONOM nr.. It appear that Hound Mousy, hU h I Journal published la th Interest o nstloaal honor, that U, it th editor arfertal blwvd, ran do just a fearful lying a old TiddleU.iuk. la aloug litorilll Ml how America silver dollar wr only worth SO ats Santiago fur Ik aurrvader, rlpeak- isgol tbpasUb aad Aaisricaa Uvr dollar it y; MCvidtly thsr I sntkl thiaallsr with tho t dollar Ikal rk should UdlseoaaWj uahalt ha it gt ay front ham. Now tk not aa l'lr o Hoaad Monty bat ka that that stat ateat laUsv Tk AawrWaa ilf dollar, bk th AaHa graWh, k worth it laea tnaold la aaj (Mty la Ik vrld. Uka otaat dwo.uiiua Id all Ik atwUI that Ik fopwM kmj of t U Ik torrest lkoy, Tk gavaaat at tk V. M, "isp " dollar" aa 60 at worth w uvv aad ltatta,o doUtf" aa a t ol Mi worth Bulking, aad both at lka ar wHk their ! I fold Ik world vr. Wka take writ was I Klaa4 k got a 4slaat to a traall araoaal t4 greenbacks which he had in bis pocket. A clerk in the bank of England paid it to him in British sovereigns. Green backs are today at a premium over gold in every city of Europe. The premium amounts to just the sum of the differ ence in transferring coin to the United States and paper money, and there is always a difference. After the sort of lying referred to above, Sound Money always goes to talking about "national honor." SOME 8PITK WOHK. Association with Mark Hanna and his committee seems to have a demoraliz ing effect upon almost every Washing ton correspondent. Now, there it W. K. Curtis, who, considering that be writes for gold bug papers exclusively, and is bound to twist things to suit his employers, is after all pretty fair. But the other day be wrote to his paper that Governor Holcomb was demanding that both tba First and Second regiments should be mustered out of the service, leaving no Nebraska troops at all. When Curtis gets to acting that way what can be expected of the rest of them? Governor Holcomb asked that the sick aud disabled men in both regiments be mustered out, but the Algerines hays concluded to keep them all in the ser vice, although Nebraska has 700 more than her quota now In the army. They think that by acting that way tbey can spite Bryan. What Bryan and Hol comb asked was sensible and commend ed itself to every honest man, What the Algerines have done is simply spite work. UK U A VHAVD, In many places the republicans have nominated fuirly good men as candi dates for the legislatgre, and tbey go out and say: "No one who has an Inter est In tho welfare of the state need hesi tate to rote for bim. If elected be will know no politics in the discharge of bis duties." Whenever that is said of a candidate for the legislature, It is equiv alent to saying that that candidate is an unmitigated scoundrel and should not receive the vote of honest men. If a man accepts a nomination from the re publican party and does not intend to vote for the republican candidate for United States senator he is not to be trusted. A man who will ' allow his friends to say for bim that in the cast ing bis ballot for a United States sena tor, be will know no politics is a fraud from the ground up. PAT KODOV S PAOMI4E. A republican paper in Otoe county gives the following reason why the peo ple of that county should vote for the republican candidate for ths legislature. It takes the cake. A vote for Patrick Roddy is a vote for the schools of Otoe connty, it Is a vote for your children; a vote to help tbem to better education. Mr. Roddy is the best man In the state to successfully carry through the school bill that has been declared unconstitutional, vote for Roddy. Pat Roddy's career enables the Indk- rENDBNT to assure the voters of Otoe that he will not fail to vote for any bill favoring the common schools if be has been assured before hand that it "has been declared unconstitutional." Oth erwise he would take the matter under advisement. AN ECONOMIC TKINITY. "There Is no surb thing as intrinsic value." Prof. Jevons. "That prices would rise and fall in price in proportion to the increase or diminution of money I assume as a fact that is Incontrovertible." Ricardo. "Ideas are no inspectors of persons. They will ssp the power ofrauk.ol wealth, of number, and of autborlty." Mncleod. IllUlt TREASON. Ths farmers who have held on to their wIimU 11m list onus to congratulate themselves. It Is now reported that th wheat crop in Russia has failed agnln aud that ther will not b enough for bom consumption. Mtal journal Now that is open banded high treasoa to th Mogley bill, and repudiation ol all th ditorlat that hav appeared la old TiddUfd-wiuka during th last two yvara. Heretofore Ithaaalway claimed that It wa XlcKluley and IHagiey mat had raised th pri o what. What ha torn over th old thing anyhow. Tk Hernias trUI loshleld Ikeai! trow tb tall of prkK eus4 by th gold standard by tariff law agaluat Anuria uisst. Tklr foatmoa popl are r; alii rat. d, rmI aad savhbk atreti, but iy '' tkat a lUtt tttor tariff ntl k thing Ail right aaia. lritt'atrtad letki city ar try. leg la si hi lailareta Mont Mr, Maaakaa la 4hliB pablWqsretUia by say lag thai "Hat dsbab kaa BttiwM.' II Ikal kaky arelksy atrakl la at Maaakaa, Th YaadstbJite kav glva T4dy R.swvslt agal"i H aklk li wak klaaa (ovgatersw at fork, tk Yds!t know akat tk araabaal, It Mr. Hwrhtt airaid ol Maaakaa ar tltat44lk iia? McKINLEY PBOSPEBITY. September 20, 1808, Judge M. L. Hay ward, republican candidate for governor, made a speech in Lincoln in which he claimed that McKinley prosperity bad enabled the people of Nebraska to pay up so much of their Sack taxes that large amounts had flowed Into tba state treasury and for that reason Meserve was able topay off 700,. 000.00 of the stat debt. On Sop. tember 11th J 898, the State Jour nal printed the list of delinquent ; taxes for Lancaster county and It filled sixty-eight columns in that ; naper. 4aaaaaaaa HARDY'S COLUMN, Boggs Has Quit-Who Pays-Mldule of the Road Poor Criminals Labor Troubles Yellow Journals City Ownership Two Things to Consider. What fs the matter with Boggs In the county treasurers office. Is there some thing crooked that lioogs cannot stand or Is there something crooked that the treasurer cannot stand? Who pays Vandervoort for talking this year? The same ones who paid last vearand thevenr before of eon r. Thara is lots of money for the fellow who was once a republican, mutt a pop aud after wards in the middle of the road. Mart Howe bos got Into the middle of the road with the other mighty three. It will cost ths renublicnii flff reenU more now, to run the fur. The Journal has great pity for the convicts in the Kansas penitentiary be cause they have been set to mailing pop campaign literature. Of course the poor criminals would much rather work for their own party. What an Insult to Joe Hartley to superscribe fusion documents. Now the trouble comes from laborer going from one state to another. Tbey can coma from Europe but as soon aa tbey get her tb Americans from tba southern states must not come in and take their places. Kick as much as you choose, organize labor unions and strike as often a you please, if the gold stand ard Is persisted in labor and everything else, in this country, boa got to come down to the European level. Then It will be American pauper labor against European paupers. Any newspaper that tolls the truth is called a "yellow journal" by all goldbug republicans. Ridicule and sarcasm is all they have In line of argument or reason to back np their republican rot tenness. Why do not their candidates for congress in the First and Second meet tbelr opponent in joint debate. If their cause is so glorious wh v not meet the enemy in open field. Bill Green, they say, has been pounded into the ground by joint debate, why not try it in the First and Second? They know they have no arguments for the common people and hence refuse to meet their opponent on the public stump. If llur ket and Mercer are elected tbey will un doubtedly vote for buraing the green backs and treasury noteH for that is what Wall street demands. McKiuley's treasurer also favors burning tne silver certificates uud mulling up the silver dollars leaving no silver money only halves, quarters and dimes. That menus twenty per cent further drop in all kinds of property. The three cities of the world that give the lowest rata of fr nn Hlrr. mil. roads, pay the highest wages to the men, require me suorietii nours 01 work and give the best service ere Glasgow, Leeds and Plymouth. Thn rltlns nivn nrl operate the street railroads and turn a targe surplus over year into tue city treasuries. There are two things, or conditions, that every voter in Nebraska should consider and weigh befor voting. Kvery body know how stat matters were managed by ths republican party for thirty years. Everybody knows, just as well, how they have been man aged the last two years. Now which man agement do you like beat Don't flatter voureelve that tb republican have been converted and ar now lending a new life. Th leader are the snm meu and no visible sigus of reiN-ataue or re form are on thssurfaos, Honnibody had ths half million d liar that Jo Hartley tole, thay were joint thieve with him. Thev bar th money today, what baa not Wa ea lor laaiarsln dehndiug hi in In court. Titos sams men are now running lhstat rn.ign forth re publican party. Io you want to trust Ihsm again? If so vote th retubl raii ttokst. II stat business had tt legally aad kooMlly ruanagml tho last tu yr there would not b a dollar ol ut debt Salt Rheum Intanaa luffrtng-Culd Nat ! Cwra1 y NaU' lareapanlla, 1 h4 salt iboant y arm, whWa tta4 inWusaly s4 kt w freaa aJa tag. TtMtkta a wtf miU wwUt rasfc a. My truJ tli4 I aaa sfrer tag tress blood HUals. 1 4I44 u WkctltsMrtmrsaptrllt. 414 Mv ay lwprevat with Ik fcsHtla M olla4 alia. Jfc 4Mm m4 Bit Uhiaf l MtWa I m uaio4sly are4. My aa4re ao as SMMutk a IwreUwbe," A, IUI ,,: irvj, pa, Hood'o OorooporlllQ It tk h. w tart u 04 tta I fwila, kli4 . tu an Mat, ttttouaiiMUCi W "--