The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, July 18, 1884, Image 6

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OITY LYRICS.
Sftt M so rare an a day la Jane
"Wja tnuapa aad auckfters are In tuae?
jaa an wita ftrawberrie to sell
fte tunas upoa the front-door, bell I
When It is aiaety In the shade,
aad boys with matches coreo to trade:
'While doira tao stiMlat- street tkere Koes
"Wad shrieks ot "'Ts-toes! oh h 'ta-toes."
"When sultnr sildnivht's dnnrnnnn
'ScboM the aeroe atosqalto's tuno;
7rora restless sleep he bids you come,
-Aad softly slag-: 7Are ycu to huai?
"When, oft as day's long heat is o'er
THhj cockroach skims alone the floor;'
When in the door-fratae snarly pressedi
u.ae mua-wasp oauas ser ciay-riDbea ni
When on the trees, so tosv swoet.
The early cherries sy: " Come, eat
-n.ua long oeioro uo set 01 sun
The robins est them, every one.
When on the clover sward von etsL
3Jy heat and tennis sore opprcied.
You nse with glad and sweeturprlso
u.ae Dee beneath tbe clover J
When loitering' down thohaded lane,
The meadow's fragrant weath to gain,
3Tou pause, erabaiTasMl, as you stray
JA. mad-dog moots youn the way.
Waoro evcrytbin; vlth feet and wings
That crawls and tickles, bites and stings,
Creeps eut of cjrg, nest and cocoon
"What Is so rare as some days In June?
. J. DunlctU, in Brooklyn Eagle.
ON THE PRAIRIE,
Our house stood alone in the midst of
vast prairie. It seemed very lonely
to ray mother, I dare say, and "though
-we children were content, I think she
lungered for the old homestead in the
fKast. Still she seldom spoke of it, and
.kept up a brave heart before father and
us children. She had, that lirst year
.after moving on the prairie, a strange
ifancy when alone of closing the doors,
-drawing the curtains', and shutting out
the sunny outer world. The earth
seems -so vast," she would say, "it
wearies mo to see it stretching into the
sky. I feel such an atom in the uni
verse." Father wasted no time in fancies or
-regrets. A mortgage had swallowed
up the old homestead, and thankful he
lived in a land where such an alterna
tive was possible, he devoted head and
liands to creating a new home for his
loved ones in the West
At tbe end of the second summer we
felt that we were well established in
our new house. Like those of our few
neighbors, it was a small, unpainted
dwelling, built very economically, with
s few angles as possible, looking
mother used to say "like an upturned
dry-goods box."
The summer had been delightful, and
the dry season, which prevails to a
.greateror less extent nearly ovcry 3'car,
camp too late to damage the growing
erop3 materially; but it dried up the
.'shallow water-courses and parched tho
drank firrass drv and brown, so that, ft
rustled drearily in tho fierce soutrJ
-winds. " $
OnR ninrninar if-, woo tlm Ortfl. nt Cn.
.. ZZZ '", '' .""" Tv u7 V
tumour a uaio written lor us in letters
of fire father started for Prairie vills
Jiow the wind raged that day! r
.liouso quivered in every beam. I
jires were not kindled, for mot'itr
.greatest dread during such winditi
Tsras ure. ouuuemy one ot tne en dozen
Tushed in, exclaiming: "J see a black
-cioua 01 smoke oil in the south!
I saw mother's faire glow whKisjJli
"Can it be a prairie lire, aud'fijBuch
.day." she exclaimod. Hying 'i'fS up-
per window for a better view. Silently
. -we crowded around her. wattjUitg the
3dark cloud that widoncd evefrfifistant.
ml wno flmwinw tsi...aMl iUH:..t.i
fright-
.iul swiftness. i
Alter a bnof survey nu
turned
:swav, saving: "It wa nraii
re! We
.must fight it, my childreu!K:
best we
-anay. licr face was pale
ilo her lips; but she srW
ath. even
an a arm
Tvoice, for our mother eou;
be a brave
.--woman when there was'j
."We fight it! Hov$
cried, in
-Auuumuuu uuurus.
1:
icre were six of U5.tMill, a delicate
oy 01 luiriccn; rcn-VMUf-o a Jamie, a
c j i- ; a. . . Lr i 1 t
-a-obust little folloyrSi;ttlo ones To
,3n- and Sadie pVe&io Sadie! h:
1)111-
iby
Jxell and I, Dora, a
01 littceu.
Mother did not
er us. bhe was
ixisuing auout n
g preparations.
: gathering up nr;
inful of woollen
-clothes from the
.for I, in my igno,
on tho wall, what
e, could not guess.
"A'ow, boys!'),
cried, "harness the
.norses to tho ir
and lift the plow
an.' Wo wUL jj,
he south side of the
inrm and do
we can. Uo w:111
-take 'eff Our c
dresses, Dora," she
iadded, "and
on our tlanuel ones.
Hien run to f
ell aud draw a tub of
nvater."
Frighteui
to silence wo oboved.
another wc
the cloths in the w'ater
sIdrow
m the well. Then, with
many pa;-
injunctions to the chil-
lrcn, we;
them.
Whenj
ached tho southern cde
of our
the panting horses were
the plow. We exnected
liitcke
rtn t.ri
few furrows and set a back-
r4mA 4 rvf
t tho liery flood pouring down
This was mother's ho do but
mponi
at.Wi
almost impossible task: for
tbe
nd was baked hard. :md thn
idled by tho summer's work.
all efforts of Willie's weak arms
it in the oround. and inmnil
d yards at a time. The panting
strained and pulled, ierked for-
and (lew back, aud on the second
w stopped short and refused to
t again.
hid-all this time the fire was rushin
Already the air becan to bo. Ullod
mil cinders. Mother rraw dosnnrato.
?t. me take tho.nlmv Willio ' cl.n
laid, f JlJll Stronor.r tlmn vnn nm iif-
'hapS ICa Imld tt Vnn ArU-nt,n J.AJL,
lead them,. whjp ti,en,t anvthw t0'
make them fe?t for even-thmg depends
on them !" v L
Again they suged on, mother
flinging desperate to the plow, now
liold.iigit with all Scanty strength,
then le ng half : dragged behind it when,
thrown out, it slid ov te ora
jerked furiously along bj the frantic
Jiorses which Jamie guides and Will
"whipped.
I, compelled to lo idle, stooo. watch
ing to catch the lirst glimpse of the ad
vancing flames. They had just returned
to the starting-point," leaving lour fcr
xows a ragged line behind them, whea
saw a tongue of llame, and then an
other and another, flash out through
the dense smoke which had now rolled
P out a mile away, and screaming :
--Here it comes!" scrambled from mv
perch and ran with the news to mother.
She and Will had seen it, and stood
looking in each other's faces with
frightened, -despairing eyes, but only
tor an instant
''Turn the horses loose, boys!" she
ried: "and, Dora, give me the matches
nd help me start a back-fire; .you
ronght the matches, didn't you, child?"
e exclaimed, seeing my look, of dis
y as I thrust my band into my
.pocket aad brought it out esipiv aaii
&
tmmmr
mm
fvBB
LBBF
S'aV I rasrjad?! tboorflt T0
dM' r ' I
Tb boys. too,9?
! Tain, anri ihZlth dreadM aink-
inr at nnr Tiftwe realised tke P-
palline truth o perfect helplcw-
neaw. in ther uu .-wnuaiuu, mc
" - - - A 9 AM A a . m A
matcbec hav00611 i"gwnt sou wo
were left wja no defence ive the pitiJ Zi
fully uiAjMuato one of those fewr iucjjf
rows!
fW
Mo
ran lor the wet ciotns, aw.
ino to each, stationed us at iij
mvmj
fjave vls oar orders m hurrf.4
iervar
tonJ taking herself tbe most dan 't-
fib, and tiien we waited- '4 ij?-
Like a terrible picture the isa
ebefore me as I write. Thftri ia aii
awful sublimity in a prairie fir I-?s
there is in a storm at sea, wsrfjjtfjto
familiarity can efface. Whajf ;jsta.
must it have been to the .UcaiMfng
woman and children who babe4i-t in
its awful splendor for the firiijf wm
On it came in the longfJYasiiipe I
have since learned to kov swcll.
The head-tire, the point 'm Vtf'Y. a
rushing tongue of names,-;loalig into
the air sixteen or eightoeeii ftift, and,
like fiends ravenous fair7 tMr prey,
springing forward, so toft t&fir sum
mit was some feet in aiifr.nesjf of their
oase. from tnis apex,-vaia with a
furious wind will ofX-'.tvml a fast
horse, the side-fire strojr bsjslffar away.
The crackling roarlrtnslgthe dense
smoke ihick with cintevs,pere appall
ing; while soon the Ust';MsWheat smote
our faces like a blast? '.roaif a furnace.
Small were ouriiresfyet we deter
mined to battle tost'.i at. We little
knew the mad streirrthjif our foe, and
with the bravery o dtiperation with
stood the fierc'a h aaVaml it was not
1111 tne aensesmoK'jscMned almost over
hanging us thatjwa & from our posts.
e ran as fast' as ur wearied limbs
would carry us? llie horses were all
out, we led out' tbrcalf from the barn,
and dragged everything movable to the
plowed groiiii?,'im the midst of which
the house 6trxX ;
Tbe fire wi upon us almost before
we finished' tjwas evident that the
stable wagf'isiStcd to destruction, as
woll as the oats which were stacked
within a fevr feet of it. All our fears
were now foe? our wheat-rick, which
stood a Pttiaj aside. The grass was
tramped rjrowul it. and it seemed that
wo migy, save tht- We four stood
guard,y setting the lire down as it
reach ea fltsflow grass.
It wayilesperatc struggle, the flames
leaped jnypj in our very faces, singeing
eyebrcrtnand hair; and but for moth
er's pMftutinn in the matter of dress,
we niutrcertainly have been enveloped
in II'ijms. Our shoes became so that
the; birned our feet. Yet neirer and
nerrtitlie greedy fire ate its way. Wo
nujUM it in one direction only to have
it
ll upon us from another, while the
from our swollen eyes ran over
tf
c
Smoke-begrimined faces, which,
74Mbur hands, were burned almost to
blisterinir. Hut when the tire had sub-
sisjed our stack till stood, though sur-
rfnmieu oy a DiacKcucu line wmen ai
ibst touched it.
When the need of cxertipu was over,
other sank on the ground nearly faint-
ng, aud wc all dropped beside her,
"breathless, scorched and utterly ex
hausted. " I am thankful that our homo and
children are spared," she sighed:
" there is little else left, and Imust go
to my babies now," she added. "Poor
father, this will be a sad home-coming!"
" Ah, how sad we little dreamed!
We opened the door upon a pitiful
picture. Baby Nell had cried herself
to sleep, and" on the floor beside her
crib, lay Tommy with his little troubled,
tear-stained face. Our entrance roused
him, and he sat up in drows3 bewilder
ment. "You poor children!" mother cried,
"vou have had a lonely time; but where
is'Sadie?"
"I don't know, mamma," he an
swered, his lip quivering. "She runned
oil': said she wanted to see the big fire
too. 1 couldn't lock the door, and so
she went."
" Where did she go, child, and when?"
cried mother.
"She went towards the stable. O
mamma! 3011 don't s'pose she's got
burned up. do you?" be added, asking
with childish frankness tho question
which was knocking at all our hearts.
As he spoke, mother's overtaxed ,
strength gave .way. and with a wailing
cry she sank fainting to the floor, the
ry.
cry awoke the babv, and she and Tom
my burst into a doleful chorus of wail
ing, in which wo older ones silently
joined.
We laid mother on the lounge and
applied water to her face, and in a few
minutes she opened her heavy eyes and
sprang to her feet, but sank back from
utier exhaustion.
"Oh, don't stop for me, children!
run! search evervwhere!" she cried,
wildly. "Go! go"!"
As she stopped speaking, I heard the
thud of hoofs. Father had seen the
smoke, aud leaving the wagon and one
horse, had galloped home on the other.
"Thank tJod, you are all safe!" he
exclaimed as ho entered.
No one told him. Who could tell?
"What ails you all?" he asked,
huskily: "Is it worse than I. sea?"
We told him then. Ho shivered with
horror, and groaning, " Please Heaven,
wo will find her yet!" rushed from the
house.
Suddenly we heard a cry of agonv,
and looking out, I saw that father was
standing in a swale where the fire had
raged the fiercest, fed by resin-weeds,
which shot up nine and ten feet hi"-h.
Almost benumbed with dread. I draped
myself to the spot.
It was one of thoso sights it will take
a lifetime to eflace.
itirv i
Sadie. Nearh nil of w oWi,;., i..i
uuuaru, i;i wuai naa Deen our
been burned, and tho sweet dimpled '
flosh nuil hrio-i.f ot-i , .i:, !
colored and burned.
What a death for our darling! Father
bore her homeward, sending me before
to break the news to mother: but mv
face told the story before mv trembling
lips.
"Is sho much disfisnred?" she fal
Z3 w v.v uiiv liio I
tered
reacneo. -vor. f,,
. s 1
struggle.
"Thank Goa?thatrshe ejaculated,
fervently. I heategj theiiext
bSrdt enterei his precIous
She gave one shudderingg.- d
then again came the blessing ot-Wyon.
sciousness; and for a few 'lours shT t"
got her anguish. --"j
I scarcely remember how the next
few days passed. I know that friends
came, "that they were very kind; and
-that before they left, lit Sadio was
laid to sleep beneath the white lilac that
had been brought from the old hose in
tbe East
Our neighbors showed their sympathy 1
in our desolatioa wjjth tbe hearty ood-
,(v i t j ,..i -- airo. while at breakfast, his
v - .3.;lUu, mc me an "iTeorn? I wish vou would cfve un ' V -uai ws overooani, ana what results u ouio cacct in
her face. The smoke was very dense I ,iSSSlii J i.S0.i LI we sot there bailing and half sckr: to Jes!
viere,,Madded.brinMnfortliascantV '.'" "T-T ?L A w death. j ..0h ves men chew um
crr ( n r. "j".t" i.. ,i. iauxious while vouare awav that 1 can't .,..,. I . un: -, . m . l .. ,'zum
i..lvumiull -auu u iumiSui,Nic ,.,,,- - --Accment.-' 1 couldn't iv mvt them uo. its a naor. mat
luu- ' 2"'e suffocated before the tire r tLu..-i'i euzui i.AM.i A likely it was. Shnrt fr..M Ct-o tho one. It's fearful fas-nation is
uieru uau ucuu iiu t
characteristic of nettlera !n
ntrv. And but for the loss
;hing could replace, we would
that ther strou, earnest ex
and acts of kindness in crreat
sf
p4
mpensated for the terror and the
i H . -S
that had. come to us in tow our
rperience of a prairie tire. -Belle
LWitc Fierce, in Youth's Companion
Some Penalties of Wealth.
mbablv nobodv will ever believe
flncerely that it is not better to be rich
thau poor; and certainly it is best for
Civilization that the difficulty of reach
ing that belief is practically insupera
ble. From the foundation of" Christiani
ty to the present day, to go no further
back, men have sought riches with all
their energies, and in tho majority of
cases have enjoyed them when found;
and though writers, who are imagina
tive people, are seldom practical, have
often pretended that decent poverty is
better than wealth, as a rule they" did
not believe these assertions themselves,
and certainlv tho world has refused to
accept them. A frank statement of the
average creed on the subject would un
questionably involve the admission that
wealth is better than most other things;
Jil whiln it i tirnnr thffirptifnllv in
j deprecate an intense desire for it, most
,-lMm . .. - W-W v.. WV . .. - w
people make it their Alpha and Omega;
that as regards the current talk about
its burdens, nearly everybody is willing J
to assume them at a moment's notice. I
The world, in short, loves money, ap
preciates it, seeks it, pays respect to it.
Vet, when all this is fully recognized,
the fact remains -that wealth sometimes
has its penalties.
Here, for instance, is Mr. Garrison,
who, to everybody's astonishmont, has
just made an assignment. So far as
can be ascertained, the fundamental
cause of this action is the fart that the
old gentleman's money hs become
stronger than he is, and has literally
overwhelmed him. Age and infirmity
incapacitated him from attending daily
to his many investments. But in theso
days of rapid change, constant vigi
lance is the price of linancial stability.
The Commodore could not give tho
necessary attention to his affairs, and
the result is that everything has got into
confusion. Take other cases: those of
men who hae the largest fortunes in
the country or the world. They are all
necessarily hard workers. Their wealth
constrains them to ceaseless supervision
and watchfulness. Doubtless with some
there is a pleasurable excitement about
this, but at all events there are penal
ties which can not be evaded, and which
attach to great fortunes. Thcro is, in
fact, not much exaggeration in the say
ing that in many of such cases the
money owns the men rather than the
men the money.
Perhaps these drawbacks
are mtro-
iliifoil fnr tho ovnrnsa Tinrtitci rtf rrin.
sonng the masses to whom gieat wealth
, ,- ,een denied. Thev can :it least trv
I to hnliovi! tliat th nai-ns nf thn rinh RX-
ceed their pleasures; and once in
awhile thcro occurs an even, which
seems to justify the adage that "all is
not gold that glitters, ' and which
shows that wisdom lay in the prayer o!
Agar, when he said: "Give mo neither
poveity nor riches;" for it is after all in
the happy mean between the two ex
tremes that the most satisfactory condi
tions are tound, and that mean for
tunately exists in greater proportion
! among the American people than any
where else in tho world. A. 1. lriu
tine. The Early Fly.
If the origin of all things Is a mys
tery, the genesis of tho early Hy is" a
still greater one. Nor is this statement
antagonized by an ancient and well
worn notion that the wholo is greater
than any of its parts or, if it is. then
so much the worse for the old axiom.
It is easy
enough to see how the origin
of e.vistenco iu general should be
. - a w
general should he a
mvsterv
Existence in general is some
thing large and vague, and it is not
specially mortifying to confess one's
ignorance in regard to tiie origin ol
some tremendous generality. But the
fly the early fly in particular is not
general, nor vague, nor large. He is
particular in hi attentions, if not in
his diet ami very deiinite, and small.
It is therefore the more wonderful that
he should spring into existence out ol
apparent nothingness. But that is
what he does. Nobody knows whence
i,e comes, but on the first really warm
U:IV he is bere aml rc:uiv for business.
tin ,- ua .,..,. ,:.-w.f nt i.j..jj :
fancy, either. He begins full-grown
and self-reliant. He clinirs. to bo sure.
but it is not for support. We never yet
heard of a fly who was not fully able
to support himself. And yet he soon
becomes insupportable.
But to return to his origin. It is the
general bel of of children that he grows
on window panes, and wo do not know
that any better theory has been devised.
That is where he makes his hrst ap
appearance, at any rate. A manufact
urer of window-glass who should patent
a process for making paues that would
not produce or nourish flies would make
a fortune out of it. We do not believe,
however, that such a process is possi
ble. It seems to be an inherent and
essential propert- of window-panes to
produce Hies. It certainly is an inhe
rent and essential property of flies to
produce or aggravate pains. And yet,
strictly speaking, flics have no property
of their own. They live altogether on
other people's property. Perhaps that
is the reason that such persons as Mr.
Ferdinand Ward are sometimes called
"too ny." At all events, flics are very
expensive animals. The coming of the
early fly terrifies the housekeeper into
providing wire-screens for his doors and
windows, at a cost of one hundred dol
lars or more. It necessitates the en-
wffl
f ?BPr
for there face- shrouding or cnamieucrs anu piuiuru
la u' ' firamn. When the swarm arrives in
. .. , ,,..! ..
force it is verv hard on shoos. The only
consolation possible is the reflection
that next November the fiv will have
ovnft
almost as suddenly and myste
riously as he came. A. J. Jlau and
Express.
.
Why She Trembled,
An Austin gentleman is in the habit
of -etting up ven- earlv and going to
the'river to bathe. A few mornings
wife said:
thiuk that his wife cared so much for
his welfare, and he said to her consol
ingly: "Don't be alarmed, dear, about my
getting drowned. The water is quite
shallow, and I am a first rate swim
"
mer.
t
It is not that at all, but I am afraid
some sneak-thief, seeingyou go off, and
fcamwing there is no man about the
hosaa.-Bjay get in and steal the silver
spoons my ma gave me. You can't
imagine how much I suffer when you
are off bafcing," she replied, with a
tterry laugh. Texas Sifting t.
Carl Schurx Ja
lectures in Hew Catand nexv
M9tt0m SermUU
, fifty
a
Uacle Bill Baadj wU Ub Xjteria
Uabrella.
la the neighborhood of North Ninth
street and Franklin avenue was ob
served, the other day, an old darky
whose hair h.ad become almost white
from the frosts of more than sixty win
ters. He stood on the edge of the side
walk, and was noticed to shake his
nead ominously and heard to mutter a
ly ana
few words a
he eved most intentlv a
large umureiia he
held up in front of
him. Despite his apparent seriousness
there was something about the expres
sion of his face that indicated there was
considerable fun in the old fellow.
"Hello, uncle, what are you thinking
about so earnestly that causes you to
stand there like a" cigar sign?" " asked
the writer, who happened along.
"NufFs de matter, sah, to cause any
man what's seen a heap uv dis worn!
to think de judgment dayaint fur ofT,"
respouded the old man. "
He continued to shake his head,
looked up and down the street, and
then remarked: "'Taint no us to tell
you all dat's gwine on in dis brain uv
mine at de present minit, kaze vou
wouldn't bleeve it no way; an' if it's
one thiug what 'sturte me more'n
another, it's ter have a man think I'd
say what I don't 'bleve myself, an'
specially a white gemman.
"Out with it! What has happened?"
was asked.
" Well vou see dis umberrella. Puttv
good truck in dis old rain kiver, ain't it
boss? Many a white man what clerks
in a bank wouldn't miuo totin' a um
berrella like dis. Deed he wouldn't.
Now den, de strange part nv what I'se
tellin' you am hard ter 'bleeve, but jes
as sho' as eracklin' bread an' home
made sassage is good, dis same um
berrella what you see, staid right here
ou de public street for two hours an'
more, whar I don lef it, an' no one,
nigger ne'r white man. ain't tech it.
When I git home 'bout two hours arter
I done lef her dar my ole 'oman say:
'Billy, whar do name er goodness am
de umberrella?' Bless grashus. my
heart come right spang up in my mout,
kaze times is mighty hard, specially
wid hones' cullud fokes let lone stniar'
white men; an' boss, I '-gun ter think
dat ole pairsoll was a goner, sho."
" You don't mean to say that you left
a-good umbrella like thaton the public
streets for more thau two hours aud
then found it, do vou?"
"Dat's what I done, sah; jes so sho'
as you am staudin1 on yo' feet. I did
liab idea dat fokes was gittm wuss an
wiiss all de time, but de sperwnee uv dis
day would er upsot me altogedder but
fer what my ole 'oman tole me when she
Iicerd de
umberrella was safe an'
soun
n
He paused awhile, then laughed to
himself and proceeded: "I ruu jes as
hard as my legs would 'low me, an'
when I git here what you reckon I
seed? A great, big, black, hungry
roustabout nigger, wid his eyes sot
S'piar' on my umberrella: but, boss, dat
nigger ain't tech her. He je stan' on,
he did, .an' eyed her. an 'twant no
p'lctcenien 'bout needer. Putty soon
here come 'long a young white hood
lum 1 hates hoodlums wuss dan de
ole bo- hate a good Christian- an' he
seed her sett n' dar in do cornder, an'
he look like he gwine take her, sho'.
But he stan' back, ho did, an' he nebber
tech her. None uv 'em aint dar' tech
her, an' dat make me laff away down
in my bosom."
"Strange, indeed, old man!"
"I reckon 'twas strange. But my ole
'oman done tricked it, an' ef you don't
know what trick mean, why she done
conjured it, an1 dat was de onliest rea
son some rogue aint had her hist up
'fore dis. My ole
know'd I was sich a
'oman say she
fool 'bout talkin'
poiertics, au' standin' on de street
gwine over ole times wid my cronies,
dat in order to keep dat umberrella in
de family she was erolecdged to trick
it She did dat: an' here's de umber
rella, an' bore I is; an' dis minuit I bet
my ole 'oman is lafling to hersef while
she cookin' .supper at home."
"How can you trick an umbrella?"
was asked.
"Now, will you lissen at dat?" said
the old man, as ho laughed immoder
ately. "I aint savin' what sho (lone it
riu, O.HI. uut n jli "Uiail "b UC ,
luff in de mountains uv Teniies. an'
lav she's always loaded, an dey aint
e "man. nigger" 'er white man." what
iu, siiu. um mv uiu uuiiiii ;oi ue
stuff in de mountains uv T
I
tie
kin git away wid us long as dat stull
lasts."
Before the old man shuflled oft he
said: "Billv Bundy is mv name: I
useter 'blong to de Johnsings in Ten- I
nessee; I was in de wah wid mV marster, i
an
now I is heah for good an' all.
t.f
11 '
ver want to know 'lout good ole times, i
an' heah what I thinks uv things in '
i,,r..l i vnn linnf mo i.r, Ua
,... ...., j T.. ....... .y, ,.j,, v.j.-,, rw.t:
ct 'rtmon t unfa I ' . Lr .li.. T I
.-- . .i
oughter bin in Congress ?sted uv dese I
Ail Mij otuuii tiiuirvo A. Ill .111 11. kill I
niggers what s so mighty Inghforlootiif ,
and still doaa know nuthin'. ' St. Louis
Republican.
Adreatares with Sharks.
'Yos, it was a close shave and I
crnt
off easy with this." The speaker, who
was a Gulf coast piiot, held up an arm
done up in splints "I came ua from
Pensacola to take a schooner to Tampa,
but I shall have ti lie off for aenimlo nf
weeks or so. It happened in this wav:
T st.irtwl fnr Fort I'icL-ona n :L '
boat under sail about two weeks ago I
and when we wem h-ilf.w. Ann Yu
" ----- uurru LUC
way down the
man
with me speaks ut and v-1
speaks up and savs:
Captain, sharks is sorter thick.' And
I'm dogged if they warn't. Their fins
was a-cutting water all around the boat
for'ard, astern and on both sid -a. some
going one way and some another, and
I should reckon there was twenty a-fol-lering
us. I didn't like the Iooks'of 'em
myself, but I says: thev can't daniae
us in the dingy.' I hadn't no moreen
got the words out o mv 1ms when.
U:.t .. t-. , 7 . r- "--t
",31 "ci us, uiraancil lor n.
Af f-lll.VJ - .-S, l. 1. . 1 m
minute. .
sending one of the oars into the air, and
"?.fn f"'"n 5" hea1 around, and, as I ,
?Ja,, ?,for :he l !er Jo &Vti ll a
, ', . ne LtaIi c.ome agJn my arm and
i m two. in a minute
water when they're choeil vnd it may
uum. uwut a nuneen-ioot shark clean , aeductive nature appeal.?. .Men chew a
out of the water. We both gave a jump crUOd deal. I can't say how much zam
to the wind ard, and the fish struck E; sold in Chicago, but ro doubt the fig
about a third in witn a crash that a!-:rs if th-v could be rxt at are aonall-
not have seen the boat, but we didn't ' are yielded to. Then; is ay oung fellow
waste anytime after that I can tell vou. ' that buys of me steadily "who Is a vic
Tiie splash of the fish had collected tim of the habit- Be "complains and
mem until the water was full of 'em.
. '
and I didn't feel safe until I was on the
beach."
"Will thevmV?' asked the listener.
44 Will a duck swim?'1 replied the pilot.
'Why, my friend, in Jnlror now. I'd
just "as soon swim a lae of red-hot
pitch as to swlia over from Pensacola
to Fort Pickens. There are not so many
.nerident on record there, because peo
ple know tha daagera and look out fori
them, tot I know el at Jeas-a.aoza
ie. The lass ewe happened last
ftiimtnrr. A reaeel caase in port- for a j
tad oi lBber, aad tie Capiaia's ojt,i
quite a good-$ized lad. in fooling about
the rigging, fell oerboard. Tbr mon
heard a scram and ruhcd to the mi'.
but the only sign they saw w.-v t rod
cloud in thewatcr. Thy got out the
boat and final! v recovere-I'the bod v.
but the head ami limb ..ere gone. An
other time a Mildiur trini to de.-ert from
the fort and was eat.n bv shark. You
see the brutes follow vosls in from oil
shore, and get in the habit of swallow-
incr nwrvthincr f liit innu.c .li.. ... I
tt-lun ?i limn trrww ,,t-,ir),u,.! ,1,. r..j'n
fnr ft.n cf-l. l'-.v -.. -. I
htH-s. They geucrallv swnn slowlr
when not chased, but thev can work up
a tremendous race when they are
chafed, and I've seen one jump twenty
feet into the air.
"To show vou how hanl they can
bite." said the pilot, I have seen one
take a piece o.it of an oar. Another
that was hauled alongside of a small
boat took the cutwater in its mouth and
nearly crushed it to a jelly, leaving
twenty or thirty teeth in tho wood.
" Some time ago a Spanish gun-boat
dropped in there, arid the officers
amused themselves shark fishing. They
had qu.te a circus. They would take a
small dynamite cartridge, bind a piece
of salt pork to it. and hx it to a float
and wire, and "send it two hundred foot
astern. Pretty soon a shark would take
it, and they would tiro bv the wire, and
the fish would tly into a thousand pieces.
If one was wounded the others went
for him and ate him up.' .V. J. Sun.
m
Dr. (Jross's Advice to a Patient.
I heard a storv about tho late Prof.
dross which everybody who knew h.m
will recognize as characteristic. It was
while he was practicing in Kentucky,
where he is remembered as a fine sur
geon and physician and a splendid man
before he received the flattering propo
sals that drew him to Philadelphia. A
prominent jurist, the father of tho man
who told me the story, had an ear trou
ble which threatened to destroy his
hearing. He had consulted one d'L-t.n-guished
physician after another. Kvery
one had pretended to Imj abl to cure
him. ami had "doctored" him uutd ho
grew weary. He had .spent a small for
tune in fees. t length a friend sunt
him to Dr. Gross. He stated his case.
The Doctor made au examination. "Can
you do auvthing for me?" asked the
Judge. "Yes," said the Doctor, "on
one condition." "What is it?" a-ked
the Judge. "That you obey my in-true-tions
implicitly." replied the Doctor. "I
will." sait! the Judge, auticipatingsomu
terrible physical ordeal. "Well," .'.nid
the doctor, "I can not euro you; no one
can do that. But if you obey me you
will never be any wore than" you "are
to-day. If you do not you my bo
stone deaf to the end of your da'vs."
"I will obey vou to the letter" saiI the
Judge. "Well." said tho doctor, "go
home, take good care of your ears, but
put nothing in them aud allow uo ono
to examine them or prescribe for them.
Keep away from vour phv.siciaus. If
you feel yourself at any time, despite
my prediction that you will be all right,
becoming worse, then come to me. but
never go to anybody eke." "I never
w 11," said the Judge. "Now doctor,
what's your fee?" "Nothing at all.
mv-dearsir." said the doctor: "I am
said the doctor;
very glad to havu
been able to
advie
you." The Judge insisted that he
should take a fee, but Dr. dross reso
lutely declined. The Judge lived for
many years after that and never grew
anv worse, and neer had occasion to
see cither Dr. Gross or anv one else on '
... I
the car account aga n. But he never
grew wearj of telling this story.
Washinqlon Cor. Philadelphia Jlecord.
Shetland Ponies.
There is an increasing interest 5i thee
diminutive members of the hor.se fami
ly, and successful breeders find them
very profitable Docile, intelligent,
hardy and easily kept, they ate the
ideal of pet for child en. A Shetland
foal can be raised to its third year for
one half the cost of a steer at the same
age. while the former finds a ready sale
at $10D to $200. The great cs' obstacles
" .
to success in weeding "Miellies ar.se ;
from pampering them in the way of j
food anil shelter. The r native habitat
is tin the bleak, storm-swept .Shetland
. .till
I1s.on ,th,; .T",' f "rni-swi
lflK with little or no
"w"'. woolly coat, a
shelter save
nd no food
but the scanty herbag- eked out with
fish. The change from such conditions
to warm stables and abundant food, is
so violent that those which survive it nro
I,Ke,r l" ,,ecomy "arren a mv wi icn
was ""Prtcd from the slo of ell hal
ueeu rearcti so ecnisie; on wsii me
I I .1 ' . 1 .1-11
" - , ' 5"e
lhsi1t rter ll3,
OUlV learned
oniv ioou tne oarren isiaim nwonieu
arri'al in this country it
only learned to graze by imitating it
nnu' ntnmattinti i nnnnrm it nrioii
" -wiu i.uiiwu'. Mn -
. . "
,wh wh ch,w
rougnt over witn me
ponv, was fed to it while it was becom
ing gradually accu-toined to vegetable
food. A little wholesome "roughing
it" is far better for them than pamper
ing. The market value of Shetland jonies
is in an inverse ratio with their size.
Nine hands (thirty-six inches) is the
highest allowable for a well-bred ponv.
and one of only thirty-three inches ii
salable at a fully twice as much. The
foals when dropped weigh from ten to
tWelve pounds.
shapely than lh
anil are mucn more
e voung oi luu-si.eti
horses." They are as playful as kUI
and as tame and friendly as kitten.
. .. j-
Llke most "fancy s'ock. Shetland po-
nies can be bred with profit Prairie
rarmcr.
Chewing dam.
" Let me dispel an illusion," said a
dealer in gum.
"All right; dispel away."
"It i not lioardinir-sehools and semi
naries that consume all the gum made.
i Xc ,.- .Inno f-iir mrlhriod In which it
.ii. io uuw ..... .. ,.----- -- ---
ing. Only think of the vast waste ol
niuscnlar'jwwer in chewing it I have
had fanta-tlc dreams over it If it
could only tc uuhzeil thc power of
thec tho-ands and taouands of jaws
munching awav hours ana hours -why.
mecnan-
lots of
grows on
belraved
immediately its insui'ocs enticements
often says he wishes be could overcome
it But he's the oaly man customer
that complains. The rest like it- You
see, there are a good many who find the
habit beneficial, speakers for instance.
Quite a number of Board of Trade men
chew it It helps keep their voices in
, shape for the wear and tear they are
sucjecica 10 m laejr business." Ch
cage Tribune
M Aaglosaaiac mxj mot care ndr
for a royal esipof ceffee. Wt they are
srr foad of "tt" mjiitft(tMM
Temperance.
KSAMTT ASD I.VTEMrEIU.NCE.
a review r rkv. c. o. MTuuK.l
TheTemiwrance question U no longer
anc of i-cniuifiitalLsra; it can be noth-
Ijiv to-dav if not tratical. Its rulvo -
V c:in T.r n" lo.Scr ,lhe Pnr,IfP
sj
W n looger the prinlege
of the public ear. in order that they
may. with dramatic elocution, nlav
UpOU lOO
vmnnlhifM of iho nonnlnr
... . . -
BCarl.
L Tho pubticLot. cconora-t and
. . .
idal philo-ophfr prganl it a a
. qn not unworthy of th-.r do-et
a"''","u- "uw mw nct-
itudied ancr before. Men of nw
.w.... -v - -.' M4v 4 w .-
,
eulinu brains and public spirit claim
that xside from moral, whatever weak- '
ens the productive no i or of the citlen !
or restrain- the uw-t enlarged growth Manv nenon are wondering what
of his every capao ty. i a source of the women of tho W. l T. I. really
menace and ei! to the Stile. No quo.- mean bv tho term "scientific Instruc
tion has Kn ?o thoroughly studied for t,on" which tber notico more frequont
thc pat lift year a-, that of Temper- jy than formerly in article- on the juU
ance It has been oreached and prayed, j t 0 Tempcranoo; also what 'A ' aro
sung and shouted, lectured and" It.- nlmin- to accomplish by it In tho pub
toned to. till now a man who pro- iie.5eho.N If their plans are airneJ to
mulgatos a new idea in reference to it a Miccovsful l.uo.
is in positive danger of being imnmr- Manv teacher claim lo be already
lalized for his brilliant discovery. Tho teaching Tonqwrranco principle, ami
latest pha.-e of this subject U an attempt 0 thov"are In a verv mild wav, by ca--
todiscoverjusttowh.it extent the ex- uallv remarking now and then t their
ceive use of alcohol contributes to the pupil thai whi-kv drinking U morally
prevmenee ol in-anity.
It has been a sorted
ujnnv time
br
the advocate-s of total abstinence tha
strong drink is largely nt-jvjnsiblo for
the rapid spread of insanity among tho
American people. Now, "if it an be
proved that then? i a constant waste
of mind force going on in the Nation,
(which seems pretty certain) as a re
sult of intemperance, thou thore would
seem to to an additional rmton for
ciijju-iii-, uum me diauujkmhi oi jkiiu-
Lllli f.-i tr a m .. .-AH.l...w.a .. . 1 . b
ical
ecttnomv. that such a waste was
detrimental to the growth. progresand
perpetuity of the Mate. I-or it is held tlmt. they b.t sunt forth armed an.l
to b: philosophically true that Uon tho 0,,ipped to defend tho laws of a fr.-o
power of tho citizen deienL the mate. I jeplc. in .short lint thev be good clll
nal prosperity of the Commonwealth. zu,. 'jho greatest otitnc!u ihoy meet
h was wuh n dasiro to refute the XI thir path 1 Intemperance. Thoy
tho charge so often made, via that in- nn. WM,!a,,iiv tomptetl to indulge in
temperaiita pro.luces to a groat extent , t,o so called Wial (?) glass, andono of
the uisanitv of the country that Mr (J. ' tl,e most Important .pi.wtions of to dnv
Jhoniann has written a pamphlet or i ,. How -n tho Imssji bo taught to re
some sio. entitled "Heal and Imagin- It t,.. temptation which leads to tho
ary Kneets of Intemperance," of which moraf ni0Mlai nd physical ruin which
one copy has been ent to tho Vofc' i,,.s u ,ho cu wf Jirtoxicatlon? i'he
CiM.Hf. i he book is published b tho alwwur scontitlc instruction, ami
I nited State. Brewery Association t)f tu, b,.,t . whrro Bl,rh i,,struetin
ew 'iork I. itv. which is. of con no. :i nI h, ivun n ,,nr,v jjfu u , lh f)lll.
pleilgu of gtx)I faith that the author i lc 0)lloi. There an? fewtenchnr who
in favor of -beer. Tho work purport. wouj, consitler thomche Spared U
to contain "letters and statements ..ivo n-gul.ir aud systematic lemons on
from Mipermt louts of eight Atn-r- this Mib.ect without special preparation.
lean Insane Asxlums the history of five The work to lo thonmgh and perma
hundred inebriates etc.. etc A tho nunl ,mt be done as ell as that in
book is published by a ltrewerv Ao :inth,etio or grammar . step bv stop
elation, every .statement is necessarily from the .,i,,,le statement which a child
correct and none of the figure lie e ; , undersMnd lo the more difficult
therefore accept ever.thiu- said a onw, a tho pupil devoloi a capacity
thoroughly impartial, in .leferenco to fr higher gr.ole.s of mental work,
the birthplace of the volume. It is not A !on,r M u. matter of having siiel,
o.ien one sees a oook mat was ixru in
:. brewery. We are not sure but the
author lia.s immortalized himself. If tho
.statement upon the subject of insanity
are correct this is the hot look of life
vear for the lemporance cause; if false,
no great harm is .lone
I':ws,ng over the hr.t half of tho
work, which is in main instances soph
istical in argument and hetitious in his
torical data, we hae to do entirely with
what ho.as of tin insane. The author
wishes to show that intoxicants do not
j product
i but wc
rod u co msaniu to anv ;reat u.Ment.
must av that the statistic, he
cites, and tho hvsiciau he otiote., are
tory uamagiiiir to ni- cause. e snouiil
not care lo ie inu oetore a .Juugo who Thc iWaturo of Vunuont. with a
would pass sc eicc ere the testimony kcen uQUl Illtolho ,.,.,, of h
was taken rius in our opinion r fI , 1 such a bill, tho prin-
just what his authorities do upon tho c, , cbuof nhcl R..l(N '
Mtiest.on of alcohol c.nsan.ty. e are .'. u rnnctfM, ,
told that Dr. D. I). Kiehardson, Physi- Jnw of Vermont nrn ainrndl. n.t.lltirf to Urn
c:an-in-t'hief of the Philadelphia llos- . Uif re-julivl m.lirs in the t.utii. thMl.
pital sav (p. I'M)- "Asidu from her- '",'","r3r VyHohmy an.l hygu-nv whll
' i". i V I- ' Vt ! Uill irlvn ntHTlnl prninlnnriisv to thr effnets or
etlltV, I IkMIOVo there IS no ctllse so fro- I nleoholle ifrluki. ntltniilnrit an. I nnrtioikf
(iiientlv productive of insanity as the ' "," "'' ,,um,,n y"'n '
excessh-c use of intoxicants." ' Dr. II. j New Hampshire and Michigan quickly
Mathewson. of the Nebraska Asylum ! followed her example. Do you ask
for the Inanc.writcthu to the author, i w'bat is to prevent Illinois from" having
"I can not gio the statistic you ask. a similar law in oueration? Ask thos.j
I know it i bad enough -bail" beyond legislators who fid not dan to vote
comprehension" " ' against it, yet did not want it to pass
All the pin sicians whom ho author "" I" WH wa manipulated when
addressed for information were not i presenUtl Iat winter. A tlll mor.rde
oi(uaIly prepared t- answer, with thoso , .rmined effort in that direction Is to
abo;o mentioned, but nearly all point L' "i.nle. For tho sake of our future
out intemperance a an ellicionl cause -'itlen let iw plead for it. for the sako
of insanity. We glean some startling , f otfir who ould thus bo spnrud
facts from Mr. Thornann's jagcs which l,u ngny of beholding promising ioi.
.e wonder he did not break down tin- K reeling Into drunkards' graves let
tier. Af the Marshall inlinnary for the i u wrk tor it
Insane in Troy. N. Y.. in lfil'J. out of 1' every jwrson as soon a convinced
271 patents admitted. Jl. or nearly t tho need and expediency of such a
forty-two per cent, were them from law would earnestly -et to work to cori
tlrink. In the New York City Insane , vince ono other, how rapidly a little
A-yluni in the year 1877, out of VJi pa- leaven lho would leaven the wholo
tents admitted, -'J, or forty-five and Jump and public sentiment would soon
one half per cent, were insane throuirh demand such a law a a rWhr w,.t.
drink. We
-- rr k
elect at random twenty- f
three asvlums
jroui me inimiH-r no i
mentions, and we find that In the vear
lis: they contained 10:J0 patients, or
nearly ten per cent of thc wholo num-1
bcr of inmate. Ami tins estimate, it
must be remembered, doc not include
those in whom "alcohol was an excit
ing cau-e," or in other words who
were predisposed to insanity prior to . U . . w,u 'mVloy a
forming thc habit: nor doe.4 It embricc , ? dnink. But they are now
those wno. though free from the habit HT ulfft l . !Inc at lhc mnu whf ifi ln
themselves. loit their raindt through the f f habit drinking. Ho U a Kwl
habits of cither. Tills moreover? does ?,CJmn. cr a qukik and accurate Uk
not even include the feeble-minded and I i'7?rip. , aB1, oWlP d all that
idiotic lxrn of intemperate parents' a.s . nnk to rauc, Octroii Ernt
an imiirect cauvs Ir A. B. Kiehardson ' .ff
(p. 130) of the Iowa Hospital, testifies ' ,.i,MTl" S001 ork done bv the Cath
that twenty-five per cent of the pa-1 Ilc li"hoP of Albany, iu ortierin" that
tients were insane through drink ms "o more bar be permitted at Ca'thofic
direct caiiM: and twenty-five per cent. I'lcnlc in his dioc;? He .say, he Is
more .is an ir.direct factor in their in- tl?'im to discourage tho has practice
sanity, making a sum total of one-half ol bolic Churches, which i.ai hither
ot all the patients admitted. It is true to obtained, of farming out the bar a 3
the testimony of all the physicians cuf:f of reverue Uy tbe chtirclu Tb
qnoed is not equally strong. 'but we "prohibition iMiied includes la-er beer
confess we hae never read expert nion SujnrJ.
tcsUmon- on an examination of a pa- Tiir. King of Sweden neve- !, n
tient so uniformly agreed as this. Ti.e opportunity of a ing a good wol for
preponderance of evidence Ls af-ain.i Temmrranrl.. Z v..i -7r.. oru. .
alcohol though the author of thl,
pamphlet hjs written in thc interest ,
f alcohol"c Vverage.
sniements
as
alums ami lunatics;
bad excellent faHlit:
fwttfl ITr. Ui r.M.mu
r ,.... ... ..- vu uj a ,ue Bern ot
mvestiirattoa and we ran nr.t ..
be 5hoa!d not ptih the inatiiry a liufe :
farther in the interest of Temperance.
There are mamr more -s.yum tn .
j
grinning skeleton of the crazy man. j
..u'i l-VC:" a 5
The Sla f DrnW.
One of our exchanges thinks there k
"-" -. ..BKIii.
v- "rv"uw ruar-
ter to cosatwMioi ta. i.ii
or to exteauate the sia of dn
-
It is nuite possible that sosm very well
moBBimv l mmv i ii n i .. !..
sfeoM kare himImmJ wv. j f !
1 mil ii wnn nir i
oecurs. tae XssUt is aot lcm I
7. 1'. 1
the
tcKer: itisauoia t Jv i
. - - i
. x, -.- -i. .- '"j" ;
t ...Vvr.. ... Z.. . .m1 . ...
-- --. u3 - ....r nun inn ravBBfe..
u-iritVi4 uj iii'ani .!. naonrcii'iiiiui !.;, wf.L
he has evidently Jwelrr. the nr. nTZ?
es for the t.mdv tit Kinz. on Ani, Jr,f-..i .. . m
1. .1 ,...,: ..JTi.. ,". ""virc tai a lare
near xrorn. ooth in Itils country and in mr.rcuL.. -j i..r " .-U7
foreign lands. We can onlvsar that are to r 77ui C3er chlrva
if this book proves anything; grovel fa an?S S5 f aa'1 iaXxt
everything L the atW.aopasSS make oTt ?
and we would kindir sogeen that tk tra.V -CllL TVer? at-
tvij wh wavowsat9aai -
W takes that which steals a
brain and make him a brute; but wa
apprehend that the principal guilt I
charged In the court. of Heaven againt
thn jitTVm!rrr at n tnnoh iarHtrdatC than
4
1 n,.i f ihluiii.. After the aptx?
. tl0 n3, b-,:,.. a dieae. the will
1 0cr has given way and tho man L
1 Lint,ti !rn thr may be little re-
1 ,.,, -. - .-
,ponlblIttr. but hb gmlt lay in
, -tMn.sibllttv. but hi gmlt lay in hi
, rnrlPr induigmcic. when he wa hi
-n f..r- m inrndfttr the appllt to
-- ... -.. ." .-...- - , .
.u u k u r 1 KAnm i nrcr: ill
ii ii ii in- ii-a.'w - vf .-' z -
.-.titiritino nn. trfni?thoniP!r a habit
' hat hx completely Ci'tvonw him.
Wo jutk condemn him forgetting into
lhl, ninHt honcle iarpry.
whtiw w
rritudi
- . Lftotncsttc Journal.
f fw-- --- 1
tttrr rirt ni' n nt zii7aijscjv
lit!
Scientific lRtnctln.
. wruti ami that tldo-rades. dehaso and .
hit jki oris ties those who indulge in tho
habit.
To teach Temperanco truth. scientific
ally Includes much more than this. It
is to gie regular hvon on tho nature
of alcohol, it ettocU on the dltlervnt
organ ot tho human bod. and tho
chanLti that slowlv but .sure-lv take
place a tho blood "becomes poisoned
nnd carries ihU ixibon to uVUTV tart of
i tjj 5vtetU.
Tli
' of it, ehiblron and demand In return
.. T'i!ii trnvini inr iriri i-iiitTLiini
i.f, ...;.. . ti... -..). I u ..,.tt..,.nl
i is optloi
with School BoanK so long will It Imj
done in a half-hearted manner by a
large iiiiihImt of teachers, under the
impression that a change iu the adiuiu-
j htration of school affairs will perhap
, ht, lho aj , for a . in t,,
w y 'u T wclini fM.r
maiieney In this work, to Inspire teach
ers with a laudable ambition to excel iu
this lino, the State must make it ot-
I llgatory in all schools under it control;
a matter easily accomplished by pass
' ing a law requiring tho otfect of alco
hol and tobacco upon the human sv
, torn to bo regularly and scientifically
taifht
. - -fai'
legislators, whether personally farora-
w w n, or doi. would not ilan vnt
,n opposition to tho known wishes of
their constituent. Emily V. Ktcncr.
ln Cnlon Siqnul.
Teperaace I teas.
Bwi
INr,S men IisVj. rr.t ,.L. l. tt.
. . ' 1 " M
ft preheat engaged worklaffila.
in Norway, and th KUmZC.it,
Ullj Jiil'
tbcrrr'
"u - uueroj uie miners wrreTevr-in?
mifi .?.!. .i ci-n?raore
because ther are fart "the Jnr o
give satbfacttm '
men to
Ait v.. .1... ,. ...
. --v 4,iiC 121 IB
fere with other S S,r. u"
hononof iavmihZ
InvivHnra. st . . r --
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or
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out:
ante amU rl-.f ti r .
rI??!' fUcal, it ,ill oahr
K IN Bnf Mu. .k- .ii. . ii
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